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												Verse 1Malachi 3:1. Behold, &c. — To 
												silence the cavils of 
												unbelievers, spoken of in the 
												last verse of the preceding 
												chapter, the prophet here 
												foretels the coming of the 
												Messiah, who should set things 
												in order; and of his harbinger, 
												who should prepare men for his 
												reception. I will send my 
												messenger — It is God who speaks 
												here, for John the Baptist, who 
												is here intended, was God’s 
												messenger, and had his 
												commission from heaven and not 
												of men, Matthew 21:25-26; being 
												sent by the same divine 
												authority by which the prophets 
												were sent, and for the same 
												purposes, namely, to call men to 
												repentance and reformation; and 
												he shall prepare the way before 
												me — Before Jehovah, the fulness 
												of whose Godhead dwelt in Christ 
												bodily. Whoever compares this 
												verse with Isaiah 40:3, &c., 
												will easily see that both 
												passages speak of the same 
												person. The messenger here 
												spoken of as sent to prepare the 
												way before the Lord, who is 
												described as coming immediately 
												after this his forerunner, is 
												represented in Isaiah as 
												preparing the way of the Lord, 
												who is spoken of as coming, and 
												his glory as just ready to be 
												revealed, Malachi 3:5-9. Both 
												passages, according to the 
												evangelists, were intended of 
												John the Baptist, and indeed are 
												applicable to no other person 
												whatever. He is promised under 
												the name of Elias in the 
												following chapter, whom all the 
												Jews, both ancient and modern, 
												expected should come as the 
												forerunner of the Messiah. This 
												messenger, or prophet, (see the 
												note on chap. Malachi 2:7,) here 
												represented as the Lord’s 
												harbinger, was to be as much 
												inferior to the Lord himself, as 
												servants are to a great person, 
												of whose arrival they give 
												notice. This John himself often 
												confessed, Matthew 3:11; John 
												1:26; John 3:28; and so much 
												appears by the following words. 
												Instead of the reading here, 
												which is the literal translation 
												of the Hebrew, we read in three 
												places of the New Testament, 
												(see the margin,) I send my 
												messenger before thy face to 
												prepare thy way before thee, 
												namely, before the Messiah, to 
												prepare his way before him; the 
												Messiah acting in the name of 
												his Father, the Father being in 
												him and he in the Father, John 
												14:10-11. John prepared the way 
												of Christ by calling men to the 
												practice of those duties which 
												would qualify them for the 
												reception of the blessings of 
												the Messiah’s kingdom; and by 
												taking them off from all 
												confidence in their relation to 
												Abraham as their father, which 
												they thought would ensure the 
												favour of God to them without a 
												Saviour; and by giving them 
												notice that the Messiah was now 
												at hand, and so raising their 
												expectation of him that they 
												might readily enter into his 
												measures for the setting up of 
												his kingdom in the world.
 
 And the Lord, whom ye seek — 
												That promised Lord or Shiloh, of 
												whom you have such great 
												expectations, and whose coming 
												you so much desire; and who, if 
												you obey him, will bring the 
												greatest good to your state, and 
												will also make foreign nations 
												partakers of your blessings; 
												shall suddenly come — That is, 
												soon after the messenger, or 
												unawares, as Christ’s first 
												coming was, and second will be; 
												to his temple — The second 
												temple at Jerusalem, lately 
												built by Zerubbabel and Joshua. 
												All the Jews, before the birth 
												of Christ, firmly believed that 
												the Messiah was to come into 
												that very temple, according to 
												what the Prophet Haggai had 
												expressly declared, Haggai 2:8. 
												The word here rendered Lord, 
												אדון, is the same that is used 
												by David, Psalms 110:1, where he 
												calls the Messiah his Lord, and 
												properly means a basis, or 
												foundation, and also a 
												proprietor, and governor. It is 
												a term peculiarly proper to 
												Christ, who is at once the 
												foundation and governor of his 
												church, and was the Lord of that 
												temple in which he was to make 
												his appearance. Even the 
												messenger [or angel] of the 
												covenant — A phrase, says 
												Secker, found nowhere else in 
												Scripture. “It may mean the 
												person by whose intervention the 
												covenant is made, or by whom a 
												covenant proposed by one party 
												is sent to the other.” The same 
												person is meant who is termed 
												the angel of God’s presence, 
												Isaiah 63:9; who delivered the 
												law upon mount Sinai, as St. 
												Stephen speaks, Acts 7:38, and 
												as the apostle’s words imply, 
												Hebrews 12:25-26. He is both the 
												revealer and mediator of the new 
												covenant, which the prophets 
												foretold would take place under 
												the Messiah, Jeremiah 31:31; 
												Isaiah 42:6; Isaiah 55:3; even 
												that blessed one that was sent 
												from heaven to negotiate a peace 
												and settle a correspondence 
												between God and man; 
												commissioned from his Father to 
												bring man home to God by a 
												covenant of grace, who had 
												revolted from him by the 
												violation of the covenant of 
												innocence. By his mediation this 
												covenant is procured and 
												established; and though he is 
												the prince of the covenant, as 
												some read the clause here, yet 
												he condescended to be the 
												messenger of it, that we might, 
												upon his word, have the fullest 
												assurance of God’s goodwill to 
												man. Whom ye delight in — Whose 
												coming ye so much desire, the 
												time of it being the subject of 
												your earnest inquiry and 
												diligent search, and the 
												expectation of it your comfort 
												and delight. Behold, he shall 
												come — The promise is repeated, 
												and that in the name of the Lord 
												of hosts, to give the fullest 
												assurance of its accomplishment. 
												There were few among the Jews 
												who did not please themselves to 
												think of the Messiah’s coming, 
												though from various motives; the 
												pious among them doubtless 
												expecting spiritual blessings, 
												such as a further revelation of 
												God’s will, and larger 
												communications of his grace and 
												Spirit; but the great bulk of 
												the nation looking for mere 
												worldly advantages under a 
												temporal kingdom, which they 
												expected he would set up.
 
 Verse 2
 Malachi 3:2. But who may abide 
												the day of his coming — The LXX. 
												read, τις υωομενει ημεραν 
												εισοδου αυτου, who shall be able 
												to bear the day of his coming? 
												So also the Chaldee. “Quare 
												hoc?” “Why this?” says Grotius: 
												“Because he himself shall bear 
												the cross, that he may come to 
												the kingdom, and shall show the 
												same way to his followers.” The 
												day of his coming, with respect 
												to the Jews, includes all the 
												time from the beginning of his 
												preaching, to the total 
												destruction of their temple and 
												city by the Romans: and his 
												coming, here and in several 
												other places, comprehends all 
												the effects and consequences of 
												his coming, as well the 
												judgments which arose from it to 
												the disobedient, as the mercy 
												that flowed from it to the 
												obedient. So that the meaning of 
												the question is, Who shall be 
												able to stand under the weight 
												of those trials and tribulations 
												which at that time will fall on 
												all sorts of men? great crosses 
												being to be borne by the 
												believing and pious, and great 
												calamities to be endured by the 
												unbelieving and refractory. In 
												the same light John the Baptist 
												represents the effects of 
												Christ’s coming, Matthew 3:7-12, 
												Who hath warned you to flee from 
												the wrath to come? meaning, 
												primarily, the wrath about to 
												come on that rebellious people: 
												whose fan, he adds, is in his 
												hand, and he will thoroughly 
												purge his floor, and burn up the 
												chaff with unquenchable fire. 
												For he is like a refiner’s fire 
												— As if he had said, Some men 
												are like metals, mixed with much 
												dross, which nothing but a 
												fierce fire can purge away. Such 
												a fire shall the troubles of 
												these days be. The divine 
												judgments are often called a 
												fiery trial, such as separates 
												the pure metal from the dross, 
												purifying the former and 
												consuming the latter. See Isaiah 
												1:25; Isaiah 4:4; Zechariah 
												13:9. Our Lord is to be 
												understood in the same sense, 
												Luke 12:49, where he says, I am 
												come to send fire upon the 
												earth, namely, a fire of trial 
												and purgation, to try and purify 
												the hearts and reins of men, and 
												find out and separate the good 
												from the bad; like as the 
												refiner’s fire makes the dross 
												of the metal to appear and fly 
												off. And like fuller’s soap — 
												The word ברית, here rendered 
												soap, and Jeremiah 2:22, 
												according to St. Jerome, was an 
												herb growing in Palestine, which 
												the fullers used to take spots 
												out of clothes,
 
 Verse 3-4
 Malachi 3:3-4. And he shall sit 
												as a refiner — He shall be 
												diligently employed in his 
												office, in performing which he 
												shall resemble a refiner and 
												purifier of silver. And he shall 
												purify the sons of Levi — And 
												whereas the misconduct of the 
												sons of Levi has been very 
												great, (particularly of those 
												who have been taken notice of 
												and reproved in the foregoing 
												chapters,) the Messiah when he 
												comes will reform these abuses, 
												and purify the worship of God 
												from such corruptions. And purge 
												them as gold and silver — The 
												effect of this fiery trial, and 
												purifying furnace, shall be the 
												thorough cleansing of the 
												persons that are to pass through 
												it. Not all the sons of Levi, 
												says Houbigant, “for the 
												similitude is taken from gold 
												and silver, which being purified 
												there remains some dross behind. 
												So it happened after the 
												ministration of Jesus Christ: a 
												great company of the priests 
												were obedient to the faith, Acts 
												6:7. Of the other sons of Levi, 
												who did not believe in Christ, 
												it is just before said, Who may 
												abide the day of his coming, 
												when, the metal being purified, 
												he will cast the dross into the 
												fire.” But those who should 
												minister in holy things in the 
												Christian Church, instead of the 
												Levitical priests, are chiefly 
												intended: or rather, all real 
												Christians, who are made a holy 
												priesthood, and who, with hearts 
												and minds purified by faith, 
												offer up spiritual sacrifices 
												acceptable to God by Jesus 
												Christ, 1 Peter 2:5; yea, who 
												even offer themselves, their 
												souls and bodies, their 
												faculties and members, their 
												time and talents, all they are 
												and have, unto the Lord an 
												offering in righteousness. Then 
												shall the offering of Judah and 
												Jerusalem — The services and 
												duties of the Christian 
												ministry, and of the whole 
												Christian Church; be pleasant 
												unto the Lord — Acceptable and 
												even well pleasing to him. The 
												prophet describes the Christian 
												worship, and the various 
												services of the Christian 
												Church, and of its true members, 
												by expressions taken from the 
												Jewish service, being that with 
												which they were acquainted; as 
												in the days of old — As in the 
												purest ages of the patriarchal 
												or Mosaic dispensation, or, as 
												in the times of Abraham, Isaac, 
												Jacob, Samuel, David.
 
 Verse 5
 Malachi 3:5. And I will come 
												near to you to judgment — In 
												answer to their demand, Where is 
												the God of judgment? Malachi 
												2:17, God here tells them that 
												he will hasten the time of 
												judgment, and it shall come 
												speedily upon them, on account 
												of those sins that were general 
												among them: and that if they did 
												not repent, and reform their 
												conduct upon the preaching of 
												the gospel by the forerunner of 
												the Messiah, the Messiah 
												himself, and his apostles and 
												other servants, he would proceed 
												to the utter excision of their 
												nation. And I will be a swift 
												witness, &c. — It belongs to God 
												alone to be both witness and 
												judge; for he alone seeth all 
												the actions of men, and needeth 
												not that any should testify 
												against them, because he can 
												himself convict them of their 
												guilt, as having been present 
												and looking on when their most 
												secret sins were committed. 
												Against the sorcerers, and 
												against the adulterers, &c. — 
												The sins enumerated in this 
												verse were very prevalent in 
												Malachi’s time. Diviners, 
												dreamers, and such as consulted 
												oracles at the idols’ temples, 
												are reproved, Zechariah 10:2; as 
												are the false pretenders to 
												prophecy, Nehemiah 6:12-14. 
												False swearing and oppression 
												are complained of, Zechariah 
												5:4; Nehemiah 5:3, &c. Their 
												marrying strange women, and 
												putting away their former wives 
												to make room for them, was no 
												better than adultery, and a 
												breach of that solemn oath with 
												which they had bound themselves, 
												Nehemiah 10:29-30. And the same 
												sins seem to have been commonly 
												practised before and at the time 
												of Christ’s appearance, till the 
												destruction of Jerusalem. No 
												nation was more given to charms, 
												divinations, and 
												fortune-telling, than the Jews 
												were about that time, as Dr. 
												Lightfoot has shown out of their 
												own authors. Adulterers were 
												then so common, that the 
												Sanhedrim ordained that the 
												trial of an adulteress, 
												prescribed Numbers 5., should no 
												longer be put in practice, as 
												the same author observes out of 
												the Talmud. Josephus informs us 
												that magicians swarmed in Judea, 
												under the government of Felix, 
												and afterward. The denunciation 
												here, that God would come near 
												to judgment with all these, and 
												be a swift witness against them, 
												was fulfilled by that terrible 
												destruction which was made of 
												them by the Romans when 
												Jerusalem was taken, and such 
												havoc was made of the nation as 
												never happened to any people 
												before.
 
 Verse 6
 Malachi 3:6. I am the Lord — 
												Hebrew, Jehovah; I change not — 
												In my nature or perfections 
												there is no change, or shadow of 
												turning, and therefore I have 
												and always must have an 
												unchangeable hatred to all sin: 
												and my long- suffering also 
												changes not, and therefore ye 
												sons of Jacob are not consumed — 
												Are not destroyed and sent into 
												eternal misery in your sins. 
												God’s wisdom also changes not, 
												but remains the same to dispense 
												rewards to the good, and 
												punishments to the wicked, in 
												the fittest season, and 
												therefore neither the one nor 
												the other are consumed, but 
												preserved to the time appointed 
												of God. Or, the sense may be, 
												Because I am the same yesterday, 
												to-day, and for ever, as my name 
												Jehovah imports, and I am true 
												to my former promises, (see 
												Exodus 6:3-6,) therefore you 
												still continue a people, and are 
												not consumed, as your iniquities 
												deserve. And I will still 
												preserve a remnant of you to 
												fulfil to them the promises I 
												made to your fathers: see Romans 
												11:29.
 
 Verse 7
 Malachi 3:7. Even from the days 
												of your fathers, &c. — Here the 
												discourse is again addressed to 
												the wicked, and from hence to 
												the end of Malachi 3:12 the 
												people are reprehended for 
												slighting the institutions of 
												divine worship, and for 
												withholding the legal tithes and 
												oblations; are assured that they 
												are under a curse for these 
												violations of the law, and that 
												an opposite conduct would bring 
												on them the divine blessing. Ye 
												are gone away from mine 
												ordinances — Those which 
												directed you respecting my 
												worship, or your dealings one 
												with another. Return unto me — 
												Namely, by repentance, and 
												amendment of life; and I will 
												return to you — I will pardon 
												and accept you, and bestow my 
												blessings upon you. But ye said 
												— Or, ye say, Wherein shall we 
												return? — You persist to justify 
												yourselves, and inquire what it 
												is you are to repent of? as if 
												your crimes were not most 
												notorious and shameful. And your 
												words, or at least your actions, 
												show that you have no sense of, 
												nor remorse for, your former 
												sins, nor any purpose of 
												forsaking them.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Malachi 3:8-9. Will a man rob 
												God — Grotius reads, “Would any 
												one dare to rob his judges as ye 
												have robbed me?” the word 
												rendered God sometimes meaning 
												judges or magistrates. Some 
												others render the clause, Is it 
												right that God should be robbed 
												(or defrauded) by man? Here God 
												gives them an answer to their 
												question in the foregoing verse, 
												Wherein shall we return; or, 
												repent and amend? But ye have 
												robbed me — Notwithstanding it 
												is so unjust and presumptuous to 
												defraud God, that men in general 
												are afraid to do it, yet ye have 
												done it. Do you ask, wherein you 
												have robbed me? I answer, In 
												tithes and offerings — By this 
												seems to be meant the 
												first-fruits of their ground and 
												cattle, and other offerings 
												which were allotted to the 
												priests, Deuteronomy 18:4, out 
												of which revenue they were to 
												provide the daily sacrifices, 
												and also maintain the Levites, 
												who attended upon the service in 
												the temple. Ye are cursed with a 
												curse — Are greatly cursed, or, 
												you lie under a heavy curse, and 
												are likely still to do so, for 
												the curse shall continue upon 
												you while you continue in this 
												your sinful course. For ye have 
												robbed me, even this whole 
												nation — This has not been the 
												crime of a few only, but ye have 
												in general defrauded me, and 
												evil shall come upon you for it. 
												In a note on Romans 2:22, where 
												the apostle ranks sacrilege with 
												idolatry, Grotius observes, “Non 
												multum distat falsos deos colere 
												et verum spoliare.” There is 
												very little difference between 
												adoring false gods and robbing 
												the true God.
 
 Verses 10-12
 Malachi 3:10-12. Bring ye all 
												the tithes — Make a punctual and 
												full payment of all tithes: and 
												in this instance make good your 
												solemn engagement with Nehemiah, 
												mentioned Nehemiah 10:29. Into 
												the storehouse — This was one or 
												more large rooms built on 
												purpose for this use; that there 
												may be meat — That there may be 
												provision for the daily 
												sacrifices, and for the 
												maintenance of my ministers, the 
												priests and Levites, who attend 
												upon the service of my temple. 
												And prove me now herewith — Make 
												the experiment in this 
												particular. If I will not open 
												you the windows of heaven, &c. — 
												There is now a scarcity of the 
												fruits of the earth, and a 
												dearth, but take the advice 
												which I give you, and try 
												whether your plenty will not be 
												in proportion to the free-will 
												wherewith you bring in your 
												tithes and offerings; and 
												whether I will not immediately 
												send you plentiful showers of 
												rain, whereby the earth shall 
												bring forth its fruit in great 
												abundance. The dearth here 
												spoken of is mentioned Nehemiah 
												5:3 : compare 2 Chronicles 
												31:10. To open the windows of 
												heaven is a proverbial speech, 
												expressing God’s showering down 
												plenty, or giving great 
												abundance of the fruits of the 
												earth; (see 2 Kings 7:2;) as 
												shutting up heaven denotes 
												scarcity, Deuteronomy 11:17; 
												Haggai 1:10-11. And pour out a 
												blessing — First of rain to 
												water the earth, next a blessing 
												of corn, wine, and oil, and all 
												other products of the earth. 
												That there shall not be room, 
												&c. — Or, till there be enough; 
												or, till you shall say, There is 
												enough. And I will rebuke the 
												devourer for your sakes — All 
												kinds of devourers, the locusts, 
												the canker-worms, the 
												caterpillars, and all other 
												destructive insects, which, 
												though they may be in incredible 
												multitudes, yet, by a rebuke 
												from God, they will be checked 
												all at once, as if they were but 
												one insect. Neither shall your 
												vine cast her fruit — Neither 
												shall your vines, or other 
												fruit-trees, be blasted by 
												blighting winds, so as to make 
												their fruit fall off before it 
												comes to maturity, but they 
												shall carry it till it be fully 
												ripe. And all nations — All that 
												are near you; shall call you 
												blessed — Shall style you a 
												happy people. For ye shall be a 
												delightsome land — Your country 
												shall be again known by the name 
												of the pleasant land, as it was 
												formerly called. The revival of 
												religion in a land will make it 
												delightsome both to God and all 
												good men.
 
 Verses 13-15
 Malachi 3:13-15. Your words, &c. 
												— “From this verse to the end of 
												Malachi 4:3, the prophet 
												expostulates with the wicked for 
												their hard speeches; and 
												declares that God will make a 
												fearful distinction between them 
												and the righteous.” — Newcome. 
												Have been stout against me — 
												Your words have been 
												blasphemous, and void of all 
												reverence and duty. Ye have 
												spoken injuriously of me, and 
												have uttered such things as 
												dishonour me. Ye have even 
												arraigned my proceedings, and 
												spoken against them. Yet ye say, 
												What have we spoken, &c. — This 
												is to the same purport as their 
												words in Malachi 3:8, and some 
												other foregoing verses. They 
												impudently deny the charge, 
												therefore the prophet renews it 
												against them in the following 
												words; Ye have said — If not 
												with your lips, yet at least in 
												your hearts; It is vain to serve 
												God — We receive no advantage 
												from it, it is of no use to us. 
												That they should talk thus 
												impiously in the times of 
												Zerubbabel, when Malachi uttered 
												these reproofs and exhortations, 
												is not probable; but God, who 
												sees into the hearts of men, 
												saw, lurking in their hearts, 
												the seeds of that impiety which 
												broke out in the following age. 
												And what profit is it — What 
												benefit is it of to us; that we 
												have kept his ordinance — That 
												we have attended upon the 
												institutions of his worship, and 
												have governed our lives 
												according to his laws? And that 
												we have walked mournfully before 
												the Lord — Have humbled 
												ourselves before him with 
												fasting and prayer, sackcloth 
												and ashes. Their beholding the 
												prosperity of the wicked made 
												them conclude, that it was to no 
												purpose to walk according to the 
												laws of God, or to confess their 
												offences and express their 
												sorrow for them. And, or rather, 
												but, or therefore, now we call 
												the proud happy — Those who 
												behave themselves arrogantly 
												against God, the proud 
												contemners of his law. We can 
												now do no less than think them 
												happiest who do not concern 
												themselves about the observance 
												of God’s laws, but live 
												according to their pleasure, and 
												do every thing that their 
												inclination or profit prompts 
												them to do, without any fear of 
												God’s calling them to an account 
												for it. Yea, they that work 
												wickedness are set up — Are the 
												flourishing ones; are raised to 
												prosperity, as buildings are to 
												their height. Yea, they that 
												tempt God are even delivered — 
												Yea, they who, one would have 
												supposed, should have wearied 
												out God’s patience with their 
												provocations, who have seemed to 
												act as if they tried to provoke 
												him, even these men escape those 
												dangers and calamities which 
												other men are involved in. Those 
												who spake thus seem to have 
												expected an exact distribution 
												of temporal rewards and 
												punishments to be made to good 
												and bad men in this life.
 
 Verse 16-17
 Malachi 3:16-17. Then — When 
												contempt of God was grown to 
												such a height; they that feared 
												the Lord — Those that were truly 
												religious, that knew God’s 
												judgments to be a great deep, 
												and that his ways are as high 
												above our ways as heaven is 
												above the earth; spake often one 
												to another — Conversed together 
												about spiritual things the more 
												frequently: for though it is not 
												said what was the subject of 
												their conversation with each 
												other, yet we have reason to 
												believe it was as good 
												concerning God and his 
												providence as the discourse of 
												the wicked was evil. They spake 
												what was right concerning God’s 
												justice and mercy, his holiness, 
												forbearance, and long-suffering, 
												his wisdom and equity in his 
												government of the world in 
												general, and of his church and 
												the members of it in particular. 
												And by their pious discourse 
												they endeavoured to arm each 
												other against the impressions 
												which such wicked suggestions as 
												those above mentioned might 
												otherwise have made upon their 
												minds; and to confirm one 
												another in piety and virtue. And 
												the Lord hearkened and heard — 
												Took a special notice of what 
												these pious persons did and 
												said. And a book of remembrance 
												was written — It was as safely 
												laid up in his memory as if it 
												had been entered into a 
												register, in order to be 
												produced at the day of judgment 
												to their praise and honour: see 
												the margin. The words are a 
												beautiful allusion to the 
												records kept by kings, Esther 
												6:1. And they shall be mine — It 
												shall appear how dear they are 
												to me, when the time comes in 
												which I shall separate the 
												precious from the vile, the 
												vessels of honour from those of 
												dishonour, 2 Timothy 2:20. In 
												the day of the execution of my 
												judgments they shall be 
												distinguished and preserved 
												safe, as choice jewels are wont 
												to be. And I will spare them as 
												a man spareth his own son, &c. — 
												They shall be spared, pitied, 
												and loved, and I will preserve 
												them from those calamities which 
												shall fall upon the wicked and 
												unbelieving, with the same 
												tenderness which a father shows 
												to a dutiful son. The period 
												especially referred to may be 
												the Roman war under Titus. When 
												God should utterly cut off the 
												Jewish Church and nation for 
												their infidelity, the remnant 
												among them, that should be found 
												to believe his word, and having 
												waited for the Messiah, the 
												consolation of Israel, should 
												welcome him when he came; these, 
												being admitted into the 
												Christian Church, should become 
												a peculiar people to God, and 
												God would take care of them, 
												that they should not perish with 
												the unbelievers, but that they 
												should be hid in the day of the 
												Lord’s anger against that 
												nation. These pious ones should 
												have all the glorious privileges 
												of God’s Israel appropriated to 
												them, and centring in them. They 
												should be a peculiar treasure 
												unto him, when the rest were 
												rejected; should be vessels of 
												mercy and honour when the rest 
												should be made vessels of wrath 
												and dishonour. This, however, is 
												very applicable to all the 
												faithful people of God, and the 
												distinction he will put between 
												them and others, in the great 
												day of final accounts.
 
 Verse 18
 Malachi 3:18. Then shall ye — Ye 
												contemners of God and religion; 
												return and discern — See 
												clearly, and distinguish 
												perfectly; between the righteous 
												and the wicked — Between the 
												characters and the portion of 
												the truly righteous, and of 
												those who are not so. How 
												different the lot is, and to all 
												eternity will be, between the 
												former and the latter; between 
												him that serveth God — And makes 
												conscience of his duty to him, 
												and him that serveth him not — 
												But puts contempt upon his 
												service. You that now speak 
												against God, as making no 
												difference between the good and 
												bad, and therefore say, It is 
												vain to serve him, Malachi 3:14, 
												you shall be made to see your 
												error: and you that speak for 
												God, but know not what to say to 
												this, that there seems to be one 
												event to the righteous and the 
												wicked, and that all things come 
												alike to all, will then have the 
												matter set in a true light, and 
												will see to your everlasting 
												satisfaction the difference 
												between the holy and the 
												profane, the godly and the 
												ungodly. Then shall ye return — 
												That is, change your minds, and 
												come to a right understanding of 
												this most important matter. For 
												then every man’s character will 
												be both perfected and perfectly 
												discovered; and every man appear 
												in his true colours; and every 
												man’s condition, likewise, will 
												be both perfectly happy or 
												miserable, without mixture or 
												alloy, and everlastingly 
												determined.
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