| Adam Clarke's 
				Bible Commentary in 8 Volumes 
			
			
				
				Volume 
				
				4
			
				
				The Book of the Prophet Malachi
			
			 Chapter 
				2 | 
| 
 Notes on Chapter 2. 
 Verse 2. If ye will not 
hear What I have spoken, lay it to 
heart, and let 
it sink down into your souls. 
Give glory unto my name That honor that is due to me as 
a Father, and 
that fear that belongs to me as a Master, chap. 1:6. 
I will even send a curse upon you I will dispense no 
more good. 
I will curse your blessings Even that which ye have 
already shall not 
profit you. When temporal blessings are not the means of leading 
us to 
God and heaven, they will infallibly lead us to hell. In 
speaking of the 
abuse of temporal blessings, one of our old poets, in his homely 
phrase, 
expresses himself thus: 
Thus Gods best gifts, usurped by wicked ones, To poison turn by 
their 
con-ta-gi-ons. 
Yea. I have 
cursed them already This may refer, generally, to unfruitful 
seasons; or, particularly, to a dearth that appears to have 
happened about 
this time. See Haggai 1:6-11. 
 
Newcome translates,  I will take away from you the shoulder. 
This 
was the part that belonged to the priest, Leviticus 7:32; 
Deuteronomy 
18:3. 
Spread dung upon your faces Instead of receiving a 
sacrifice at your 
hands, I will throw your offerings back into your faces. Here 
God shows 
his contempt for them and their offerings. 
 
That my covenant might be with Levi I gave the 
priesthood and the 
service of my altar to that tribe. 
 
 
 
 
This has happened repeatedly since, to several classes of 
priests. Not 
maintaining, by purity of life and soundness of doctrine, the 
dignity of the 
ministerial function, they became contemptible before the 
people; their 
Uneager preaching was disregarded, and their persons at last 
cast out as a 
general loathing to the universe! See what happened to the truly 
abominable priesthood of France and Rome 1796-8. They were the 
sole 
cause of that infidelity that brought about the revolution. They 
are now 
partially restored; and are endeavouring to supply by grimace, 
paltry 
superstition, and jesuitical cunning, what they want in purity 
of morals, 
soundness of doctrine, and unction from God. They must mend, or 
look 
for another revolution. Mankind will no longer put up with the 
chaff of 
puerile and fanatical ceremonies in place of the wheat of Gods 
word and 
worship. 
 
Why do we deal treacherously Gain the affections of the 
daughter of a 
brother Jew, and then profane the covenant of marriage, held 
sacred among 
our fathers, by putting away this same wife and daughter! How 
wicked, 
cruel, and inhuman! 
 
Verse 11. Daughter of a 
strange god. Of a man who worships 
an idol. 
Verse 12
The 
master and the scholar He who teachers such doctrine, 
and he who follows this teaching, the Lord will cut off both the 
one and 
the other. 
 
 
 
Yet had he the residue of the Spirit, he could have made 
millions of pairs, 
and inspired them all with living souls. Then wherefore one? He 
made one 
pair from whom all the rest might proceed, that he might have a 
holy 
offspring; that children being a marked property of one man and 
one 
woman, proper care might be taken that they should be brought up 
in the 
discipline of the Lord. Perhaps the holy or godly seed,  
Take heed to your spirit Scrutinize the motives which 
induce you to put 
away your wives. 
 
Covereth violence with his garment And he also notes 
those who frame 
idle excuses to cover the violence they have done to the wives 
of their 
youth, by putting them away, and taking others in their place, 
whom they 
now happen to like better, when their own wives have been worn 
down in 
domestic services. 
 
Every one that doeth evil Ye say that it is right in 
the sight of the Lord 
to put away a wife, because she has no longer found favor in the 
sight of 
her husband. And because it has not been signally punished 
hitherto, ye 
blaspheme and cry out, Where is the God of judgment? Were he 
such as 
he is represented, would he not speak out? All these things show 
that this 
people were horribly corrupt. The priests were bad; the prophets 
were 
bad; the Levites were bad; and no wonder that the people were 
irreligious, 
profane, profligate, and cruel. |