← Contents Malachi 1:1–5

Malachi 1:1–5

1 1:1The oracle of the word of the LORD to Israel by Malachi.1

2 1:2“I have loved you,” says the LORD. But you say, “How have you loved us?” “Is not Esau Jacob’s brother?” declares the LORD. “Yet I have loved Jacob 3 1:3but Esau I have hated. I have laid waste his hill country and left his heritage to jackals of the desert.” 4 1:4If Edom says, “We are shattered but we will rebuild the ruins,” the LORD of hosts says, “They may build, but I will tear down, and they will be called ‘the wicked country,’ and ‘the people with whom the LORD is angry forever.’” 5 1:5Your own eyes shall see this, and you shall say, “Great is the LORD beyond the border of Israel!”

1 Malachi means my messenger

Section Overview

God assures his people of his love for them and promises to put this love into action in his future treatment of Edom.

Section Outline
  1. I. God’s Love for Israel (1:1–5)
    1. A. Charge: God’s Love (1:1–2a)
    2. B. Question: How Have You Loved Us? (1:2b)
    3. C. Answer: God’s Destruction of Edom (1:2c–3)
    4. D. Application: The Future Destinies of Edom and Israel (1:4–5)
Response

The Lord’s confrontation of his people in the book of Malachi is difficult and unflinching. But before he exposes and challenges his people’s many failures before the law, he “confronts” them with the gospel of his love.1 It is possible to be unaware of being loved deeply by God. In Malachi’s day, as Edom looked forward to improved national fortunes, it would have appeared as if it was getting away with ugly joy over its ancient relative’s tragedy, even profiting at Judah’s expense (Ps. 137:7; Ezek. 35:13; Obad. 10–14; this may partially be the background of the people’s questions in Mal. 2:17 and 3:14–15), redoubling Judah’s pain. God’s judgment of Edom shows how seriously he takes the wrong done to his people and his commitment to justice for their sake. God’s love will be seen, in part, in the eternal memorial he establishes to the wrong Edom has done to Judah (“they will be called ‘the wicked country’”; 1:4). The final antidote to Judah’s skepticism, however, will be a kind of self-forgetfulness as they are caught up in worship of a God who through his love and judgment demonstrates his greatness in all the world.

In the same way, it is possible for an individual, a church, or God’s people in a particular place and time to be convinced that they are unloved by God, and as a result to dishonor him through lax worship. This is especially likely to happen when God’s people have suffered and God apparently does nothing about it. Malachi’s words echo beyond their original context to assure us that, very soon, God’s love and commitment to us will be visibly evident in a context as wide as creation. It is especially urgent for us new covenant believers to hear this assurance of God’s love and of his commitment to exalt himself by working out justice, since we live in the shadow of the cross, where God displayed his perfect love and justice, pouring out on his son the wrath we deserved (v. 4). At the same time, this initial promise of the full outworking of God’s love gives Malachi’s warnings a weight they might not otherwise have. We, who have benefited and will benefit from God’s determination to exalt himself in the earth, dare not refuse the one who is speaking to us (Heb. 12:25).

1 Pieter Verhoef, The Books of Haggai and Malachi, NICOT (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1987), 195.