THE BOOK OF MALACHI Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT INTRODUCTION MALACHI forms the transition link between the two dispensations, the Old and the New, "the skirt and boundary of Christianity" [TERTULLIAN], to which perhaps is due the abrupt earnestness which characterizes his prophecies. His very name is somewhat uncertain. Malachi is the name of an office, rather than a person, "My messenger," and as such is found in Mal 3:1. The Septuagint favors this view in Mal 1:1; translate, not "by Malachi," but "by the hand of His messenger" (compare Hag 1:13). Malachi is the last inspired messenger of the Old Testament, announcing the advent of the Great Messenger of the New Testament. The Chaldee paraphrase identifies him with Ezra wrongly, as Ezra is never called a prophet but a scribe, and Malachi never a scribe but a prophet. Still it hence appears that Malachi was by some old authorities not regarded as a proper name. The analogy of the headings of other prophets, however, favors the common view that Malachi is a proper name. As Haggai and Zechariah, the contemporary prophets, supported Joshua and Zerubbabel in the building of the temple, so he at a subsequent period supported the priest Ezra and the governor Nehemiah. Like that ruler, he presupposes the temple to have been already built (Mal 1:10; 3:1-10). Both alike censure the abuses still unreformed (Ne 13:5, 15-22, 23-30), the profane and mercenary character of the priests, the people's marriages contracted with foreigners, the non-payment of the tithes, and want of sympathy towards the poor on the part of the rich (Ne 6:7) implies that Nehemiah was supported by prophets in his work of reformation. The date thus will be about 420 B.C., or later. Both the periods after the captivity (that of Haggai and Zechariah, and that of Malachi) were marked by royal, priestly, and prophetic men at the head of God's people. The former period was that of the building of the temple; the latter, that of the restoration of the people and rebuilding of the city. It is characteristic of the people of God that the first period after the restoration was exclusively devoted to the rebuilding of the temple; the political restoration came secondarily. Only a colony of fifty thousand settled with Joshua and Zerubbabel in Palestine (Ezr 2:64). Even these became intermingled with the heathen around during the sixty years passed over by Ezra in silence (Ezr 9:6-15; Ne 1:3). Hence a second restoration was needed which should mould the national life into a Jewish form, re-establishing the holy law and the holy city--a work effected by Ezra and Nehemiah, with the aid of Malachi, in a period of about half a century, ending with the deaths of Malachi and Nehemiah in the last ten years of the fifth century B.C.; that is, the "seven weeks" (Da 9:25) put in the beginning of the "seventy" by themselves, to mark the fundamental difference between them, the last period of Old Testament revelation, and the period which followed without any revelation (the sixty-two weeks), preceding the final week standing out in unrivalled dignity by itself as the time of Messiah's appearing. The seventy weeks thus begin with the seventh year of Artaxerxes who allowed Ezra to go to Jerusalem, 457 B.C., in accordance with the commandment which then went forth from God. Ezra the priest performed the inner work of purifying the nation from heathenish elements and reintroducing the law; while Nehemiah did the outer work of rebuilding the city and restoring the national polity [AUBERLEN]. VITRINGA makes the date of Malachi's prophecies to be about the second return of Nehemiah from Persia, not later than 424 B.C., the date of Artaxerxes' death (Ne 13:6). About this time Socrates was teaching the only approach to a pure morality which corrupt Athens ever knew. MOORE distinguishes six portions: (1) Charge against Israel for insensibility to God's love, which so distinguished Israel above Edom (Mal 1:1-5). (2) The priests are reproved for neglect and profanation (Mal 1:6-2:9). (3) Mixed marriages, and the wrongs done to Jewish wives, are reproved (Mal 2:10-16). (4) Coming of Messiah and His forerunners (Mal 2:17-3:6). (5) Reproof for tithes withheld (Mal 3:7-12). (6) Contrast between the godly and the ungodly at the present time, and in the future judgment; exhortation, therefore, to return to the law (Mal 3:13-4:6). The style is animated, but less grand, and the rhythm less marked, than in some of the older prophets. The canonicity of the book is established by the references to it in the New Testament (Mt 11:10; 17:12; Mr 1:2; 9:11, 12; Lu 1:17; Ro 9:13). CHAPTER 1 Mal 1:1-14. GOD'S LOVE: ISRAEL'S INGRATITUDE: THE PRIESTS' MERCENARY SPIRIT: A GENTILE SPIRITUAL PRIESTHOOD SHALL SUPERSEDE THEM.
1. burden--heavy sentence.
2. I have loved you--above other men; nay, even above the other
descendants of Abraham and Isaac. Such gratuitous love on My part
called for love on yours. But the return ye make is sin and dishonor to
Me. This which is to be supplied is left unexpressed, sorrow as it were
breaking off the sentence
[MENOCHIUS],
(De 7:8;
Ho 11:1).
3. hated--not positively, but relatively; that is, did not choose
him out to be the object of gratuitous favor, as I did Jacob (compare
Lu 14:26,
with Mt 10:37;
Ge 29:30, 31;
De 21:15, 16).
4. Whereas--"But if" Edom say
[MAURER]. Edom may strive as she
may to recover herself, but it shall be in vain, for I doom her to
perpetual desolation, whereas I restore Israel. This Jehovah states, to
illustrate His gratuitous love to Israel, rather than to Edom.
5. from the border of Israel--Ye, restored to your own "borders" in Israel, "from" them shall raise your voices to "magnify the Lord," acknowledging that Jehovah has shown to you a gratuitous favor not shown to Edom, and so ought to be especially "magnified from the borders of Israel."
6. Turning from the people to the priests, Jehovah asks, whereas His
love to the people was so great, where was their love towards Him? If
the priests, as they profess, regard Him as their Father
(Isa 63:16)
and Master, let them show the reality of their profession by love
and reverential fear
(Ex 20:12;
Lu 6:46).
He addresses the priests because they ought to be leaders in piety to
the rest of the people, whereas they are foremost in "despising His
name."
7. ye offer, &c.--God's answer to their challenge
(Mal 1:6),
"Wherein have we despised?"
8. Your earthly ruler would feel insulted, if offered by you the
offering with which ye put off God (see
Le 22:22, 24).
9. now . . . beseech God that he will be gracious--Ironical. Think
you that God will be persuaded by such polluted gifts to be gracious to
you? Far from it.
10. Who . . . for naught--Not one even of the least priestly functions (as shutting the doors, or kindling a fire on the altar) would ye exercise without pay, therefore ye ought to fulfil them faithfully (1Co 9:13). DRUSIUS and MAURER translate, "Would that there were absolutely some one of you who would shut the doors of the temple (that is, of the inner court, in which was the altar of burnt offerings), and that ye would not kindle fire on My altar in vain!" Better no sacrifices than vain ones (Isa 1:11-15). It was the duty of some of the priests to stand at the doors of the court of the altar of burnt offerings, and to have excluded blemished victims [CALVIN].
11. For--Since ye Jewish priests and people "despise My name"
(Mal 1:6),
I shall find others who will magnify it
(Mt 3:9).
Do not think I shall have no worshippers because I have not you; for
from the east to the west My name shall be great among the Gentiles
(Isa 66:19, 20),
those very peoples whom ye look down upon as abominable.
12. Renewal of the charge in
Mal 1:7.
13. what a weariness is it!--Ye regard God's service as irksome, and
therefore try to get it over by presenting the most worthless offerings.
Compare
Mic 6:3,
where God challenges His people to show wherein is the "weariness" or
hardship of His service. Also
Isa 43:22-24,
wherein He shows that it is they who have "wearied" Him, not He who has
wearied them.
14. deceiver--hypocrite. Not poverty,
but avarice was the cause of their mean offerings.
CHAPTER 2 Mal 2:1-17. REPROOF OF THE PRIESTS FOR VIOLATING THE COVENANT; AND THE PEOPLE ALSO FOR MIXED MARRIAGES AND UNFAITHFULNESS. 1. for you--The priests in particular are reproved, as their part was to have led the people aright, and reproved sin, whereas they encouraged and led them into sin. Ministers cannot sin or suffer alone. They drag down others with them if they fall [MOORE].
2. lay . . . to heart--My commands.
3. corrupt, &c.--literally, "rebuke," answering to the opposite
prophecy of blessing
(Mal 3:11),
"I will rebuke the devourer." To rebuke the seed is to forbid
its growing.
4. ye shall know--by bitter experience of consequences, that it was with this design I admonished you, in order "that My covenant with Levi might be" maintained; that is, that it was for your own good (which would be ensured by your maintaining the Levitical command) I admonished you, that ye should return to your duty [MAURER] (compare Mal 2:5, 6). Malachi's function was that of a reformer, leading back the priests and people to the law (Mal 4:4). 5-9. He describes the promises, and also the conditions of the covenant; Levi's observance of the conditions and reward (compare Nu 25:11-13, Phinehas' zeal); and on the other hand the violation of the conditions, and consequent punishment of the present priests. "Life" here includes the perpetuity implied in Nu 25:13, "everlasting priesthood." "Peace" is specified both here and there. MAURER thus explains it; the Hebrew is, literally, "My covenant was with him, life and peace (to be given him on My part), and I gave them to him: (and on his part) fear (that is, reverence), and he did fear Me," &c. The former portion of the verse expresses the promise, and Jehovah's fulfilment of it; the latter, the condition, and Levi's steadfastness to it (De 33:8, 9). The Jewish priests self-deceivingly claimed the privileges of the covenant, while neglecting the conditions of it, as if God were bound by it to bless them, while they were free from all the obligation which it imposed to serve Him. The covenant is said to be not merely "of life and peace," but "life and peace"; for the keeping of God's law is its own reward (Ps 19:11).
6. law of truth was in his mouth--He taught the people the truths of
the law in all its fulness
(De 33:10).
The priest was the ordinary expounder of the law; the prophets were so
only on special occasions.
7. In doing so
(Mal 2:6)
he did his duty as a priest, "for," &c.
8. out of the way--that is, from the covenant.
9. Because ye do not keep the condition of the covenant, I will not
fulfil the promise.
10-16. Reproof of those who contracted marriages with foreigners and
repudiated their Jewish wives.
11. dealt treacherously--namely, in respect to the Jewish wives who
were put away
(Mal 2:14;
also
Mal 2:10, 15, 16).
12. master and . . . scholar--literally, "him that
watcheth and him that answereth." So "wakeneth" is used of the
teacher or "master"
(Isa 50:4);
masters are watchful in guarding their scholars. The reference
is to the priests, who ought to have taught the people piety, but who
led them into evil. "Him that answereth" is the scholar who has
to answer the questions of his teacher
(Lu 2:47)
[GROTIUS]. The Arabs have a proverb, "None calling
and none answering," that is, there being not one alive. So
GESENIUS explains it of the Levite watches in the
temple
(Ps 134:1),
one watchman calling and another answering. But the
scholar is rather the people, the pupils of the priests "in
doing this," namely, forming unions with foreign wives. "Out of the
tabernacles of Jacob" proves it is not the priests alone. God will
spare neither priests nor people who act so.
13. done again--"a second time": an aggravation of your offense
(Ne 13:23-31),
in that it is a relapse into the sin already checked once under Ezra
(Ezr 9:10)
[HENDERSON]. Or, "the second time" means this:
Your first sin was your blemished offerings to the Lord: now "again" is
added your sin towards your wives [CALVIN].
14. Wherefore?--Why does God reject our offerings?
15. MAURER and HENGSTENBERG explain the verse thus: The Jews had defended their conduct by the precedent of Abraham, who had taken Hagar to the injury of Sarah, his lawful wife; to this Malachi says now, "No one (ever) did so in whom there was a residue of intelligence (discriminating between good and evil); and what did the one (Abraham, to whom you appeal for support) do, seeking a godly seed?" His object (namely, not to gratify passion, but to obtain the seed promised by God) makes the case wholly inapplicable to defend your position. MOORE (from FAIRBAIRN) better explains, in accordance with Mal 2:10, "Did not He make (us Israelites) one? Yet He had the residue of the Spirit (that is, His isolating us from other nations was not because there was no residue of the Spirit left for the rest of the world). And wherefore (that is, why then did He thus isolate us as) the one (people; the Hebrew is 'the one')? In order that He might seek a godly seed"; that is, that He might have "a seed of God," a nation the repository of the covenant, and the stock of the Messiah, and the witness for the one God amidst the surrounding polytheisms. Marriage with foreign women, and repudiation of the wives wedded in the Jewish covenant, utterly set aside this divine purpose. CALVIN thinks "the one" to refer to the conjugal one body formed by the original pair (Ge 2:24). God might have joined many wives as one with the one husband, for He had no lack of spiritual being to impart to others besides Eve; the design of the restriction was to secure a pious offspring: but compare Note, see on Mal 2:10. One object of the marriage relation is to raise a seed for God and for eternity.
16. putting away--that is, divorce.
17. wearied . . . Lord-- (Isa 43:24). This verse forms the transition to Mal 3:1, &c. The Jewish skeptics of that day said virtually, God delighteth in evil-doers (inferring this from the prosperity of the surrounding heathen, while they, the Jews, were comparatively not prosperous: forgetting that their attendance to minor and external duties did not make up for their neglect of the weightier duties of the law; for example, the duty they owed their wives, just previously discussed); or (if not) Where (is the proof that He is) the God of judgment? To this the reply (Mal 3:1) is, "The Lord whom ye seek, and whom as messenger of the covenant (that is, divine ratifier of God's covenant with Israel) ye delight in (thinking He will restore Israel to its proper place as first of the nations), shall suddenly come," not as a Restorer of Israel temporally, but as a consuming Judge against Jerusalem (Am 5:18, 19, 20). The "suddenly" implies the unpreparedness of the Jews, who, to the last of the siege, were expecting a temporal deliverer, whereas a destructive judgment was about to destroy them. So skepticism shall be rife before Christ's second coming. He shall suddenly and unexpectedly come then also as a consuming Judge to unbelievers (2Pe 3:3, 4). Then, too, they shall affect to seek His coming, while really denying it (Isa 5:19; Jer 17:15; Eze 12:22, 27). CHAPTER 3 Mal 3:1-18. MESSIAH'S COMING, PRECEDED BY HIS FORERUNNER, TO PUNISH THE GUILTY FOR VARIOUS SINS, AND TO REWARD THOSE WHO FEAR GOD.
1. Behold--Calling especial attention to the momentous truths which
follow. Ye unbelievingly ask, Where is the God of judgment
(Mal 2:7)?
"Behold," therefore, "I send," &c. Your unbelief will not prevent My
keeping My covenant, and bringing to pass in due time that which ye say
will never be fulfilled.
2. (Mal 4:1; Re 6:16, 17). The Messiah would come, not, as they expected, to flatter the theocratic nation's prejudices, but to subject their principles to the fiery test of His heart-searching truth (Mt 3:10-12), and to destroy Jerusalem and the theocracy after they had rejected Him. His mission is here regarded as a whole from the first to the second advent: the process of refining and separating the godly from the ungodly beginning during Christ's stay on earth, going on ever since, and about to continue till the final separation (Mt 25:31-46). The refining process, whereby a third of the Jews is refined as silver of its dross, while two-thirds perish, is described, Zec 13:8, 9 (compare Isa 1:25).
3. sit--The purifier sits before the crucible, fixing his
eye on the metal, and taking care that the fire be not too hot, and
keeping the metal in, only until he knows the dross to be completely
removed by his seeing his own image reflected
(Ro 8:29)
in the glowing mass. So the Lord in the case of His elect
(Job 23:10;
Ps 66:10;
Pr 17:3;
Isa 48:10;
Heb 12:10;
1Pe 1:7).
He will sit down to the work, not perfunctorily, but with
patient love and unflinching justice. The Angel of the Covenant, as in
leading His people out of Egypt by the pillar of cloud and fire, has an
aspect of terror to His foes, of love to His friends. The same
separating process goes on in the world as in each Christian. When the
godly are completely separated from the ungodly, the world will end.
When the dross is taken from the gold of the Christian, he will be for
ever delivered from the furnace of trial. The purer the gold, the
hotter the fire now; the whiter the garment, the harder the washing
[MOORE].
4. as in the days of old-- (Mal 1:11; 2:5, 6). The "offering" (Mincha, Hebrew) is not expiatory, but prayer, thanksgiving, and self-dedication (Ro 12:1; Heb 13:15; 1Pe 2:5).
5. I . . . come near . . . to
judgment--I whom ye challenged, saying, "Where is the God of
judgment?"
(Mal 2:17).
I whom ye think far off, and to be slow in judgment, am "near," and
will come as a "swift witness"; not only a judge, but also an
eye-witness against sorcerers; for Mine eyes see every sin,
though ye think I take no heed. Earthly judges need witnesses to
enable them to decide aright: I alone need none
(Ps 10:11; 73:11; 94:7,
&c.).
6. the Lord--Jehovah: a name implying His immutable faithfulness in
fulfilling His promises: the covenant name of God to the Jews
(Ex 6:3),
called here "the sons of Jacob," in reference to God's covenant with
that patriarch.
7-12. Reproof for the non-payment of tithes and offerings, which is
the cause of their national calamities, and promise of prosperity on
their paying them.
8. rob--literally, "cover": hence, defraud. Do ye call defrauding God
no sin to be "returned" from
(Mal 3:7)?
Yet ye have done so to Me in respect to the tithes due to Me, namely,
the tenth of all the remainder after the first-fruits were paid, which
tenth was paid to the Levites for their support
(Le 27:30-33):
a tenth paid by the Levites to the priests
(Nu 18:26-28):
a second tenth paid by the people for the entertainment of the Levites,
and their own families, at the tabernacle
(De 12:18):
another tithe every third year for the poor, &c.
(De 14:28, 29).
9. cursed-- (Mal 2:2). As ye despoil Me, so I despoil you, as I threatened I would, if ye continued to disregard Me. In trying to defraud God we only defraud ourselves. The eagle who robbed the altar set fire to her nest from the burning coal that adhered to the stolen flesh. So men who retain God's money in their treasuries will find it a losing possession. No man ever yet lost by serving God with a whole heart, nor gained by serving Him with a half one. We may compromise with conscience for half the price, but God will not endorse the compromise; and, like Ananias and Sapphira, we shall lose not only what we thought we had purchased so cheaply, but also the price we paid for it. If we would have God "open" His treasury, we must open ours. One cause of the barrenness of the Church is the parsimony of its members [MOORE].
10.
(Pr 3:9, 10).
11. I will rebuke--(See on Mal 2:3). I will no longer "rebuke (English Version, 'corrupt') the seed," but will rebuke every agency that could hurt it (Am 4:9).
12. Fulfilling the blessing
(De 33:29;
Zec 8:13).
13-18. He notices the complaint of the Jews that it is of no profit
to serve Jehovah, for that the ungodly proud are happy; and declares He
will soon bring the day when it shall be known that He puts an
everlasting distinction between the godly and the ungodly.
14. what profit . . . that we . . . kept,
&c.--(See on
Mal 2:17).
They here resume the same murmur against God.
Job 21:14, 15; 22:17
describe a further stage of the same skeptical spirit, when the skeptic
has actually ceased to keep God's service.
Ps 73:1-14
describes the temptation to a like feeling in the saint when seeing the
really godly suffer and the ungodly prosper in worldly goods now. The
Jews here mistake utterly the nature of God's service, converting it
into a mercenary bargain; they attended to outward observances, not
from love to God, but in the hope of being well paid for in outward
prosperity; when this was withheld, they charged God with being unjust,
forgetting alike that God requires very different motives from theirs
to accompany outward observances, and that God rewards even the true
worshipper not so much in this life, as in the life to come.
15. And now--Since we who serve Jehovah are not prosperous and "the
proud" heathen flourish in prosperity, we must pronounce them the
favorites of God
(Mal 2:17;
Ps 73:12).
16. "Then," when the ungodly utter such blasphemies against God, the
godly hold mutual converse, defending God's righteous dealings against
those blasphemers
(Heb 3:13).
The "often" of English Version is not in the Hebrew.
There has been always in the darkest times a remnant that feared God
(1Ki 19:18;
Ro 11:4).
17. jewels--
(Isa 62:3).
Literally, "My peculiar treasure"
(Ex 19:5;
De 7:6; 14:2; 26:18;
Ps 135:4;
Tit 2:14;
1Pe 2:9;
compare
Ec 2:8).
CALVIN translates more in accordance with
Hebrew idiom, "They shall be My peculiar treasure in the day
in which I will do it" (that is, fulfil My promise of gathering My
completed Church; or, "make" those things come to pass foretold in
Mal 3:5
above [GROTIUS]); so in
Mal 4:3
"do" is used absolutely, "in the day that I shall do this."
MAURER, not so well, translates, "in the day which
I shall make," that is, appoint as in
Ps 118:24.
18. Then shall ye . . . discern--Then shall ye see the
falseness of your calumny against God's government
(Mal 3:15),
that the "proud" and wicked prosper. Do not judge before the time till
My work is complete. It is in part to test your disposition to trust in
God in spite of perplexing appearances, and in order to make your
service less mercenary, that the present blended state is allowed; but
at last all ("ye," both godly and ungodly) shall see the eternal
difference there really is "between him that serveth God and him that
serveth Him not"
(Ps 58:11).
CHAPTER 4 Mal 4:1-6. GOD'S COMING JUDGMENT: TRIUMPH OF THE GODLY: RETURN TO THE LAW THE BEST PREPARATION FOR JEHOVAH'S COMING: ELIJAH'S PREPARATORY MISSION OF REFORMATION.
1. the day cometh . . . burn--
(Mal 3:2;
2Pe 3:7).
Primarily is meant the judgment coming on Jerusalem; but as this will
not exhaust the meaning, without supposing what is inadmissible in
Scripture--exaggeration--the final and full accomplishment, of which
the former was the earnest, is the day of general judgment. This
principle of interpretation is not double, but successive
fulfilment. The language is abrupt, "Behold, the day cometh! It
burns like a furnace." The abruptness imparts terrible reality to the
picture, as if it suddenly burst on the prophet's view.
2. The effect of the judgment on the righteous, as contrasted with
its effect on the wicked
(Mal 4:1).
To the wicked it shall be as an oven that consumes the stubble
(Mt 6:30);
to the righteous it shall be the advent of the gladdening Sun, not of
condemnation, but "of righteousness"; not destroying, but "healing"
(Jer 23:6).
3. Solving the difficulty
(Mal 3:15)
that the wicked often now prosper. Their prosperity and the adversity
of the godly shall soon be reversed. Yea, the righteous shall be the
army attending Christ in His final destruction of the ungodly
(2Sa 22:43;
Ps 49:14; 47:3;
Mic 7:10;
Zec 10:5;
1Co 6:2;
Re 2:26, 27; 19:14, 15).
4. Remember . . . law--"The law and all the prophets"
were to be in force until John
(Mt 11:13),
no prophet intervening after Malachi; therefore they are told,
"Remember the law," for in the absence of living prophets, they were
likely to forget it. The office of Christ's forerunner was to bring
them back to the law, which they had too much forgotten, and so "to
make ready a people prepared for the Lord" at His coming
(Lu 1:17).
God withheld prophets for a time that men might seek after Christ with
the greater desire [CALVIN]. The history of human
advancement is marked by periods of rest, and again progress. So in
Revelation: it is given for a time; then during its suspension men live
on the memories of the past. After Malachi there was a silence of four
hundred years; then a harbinger of light in the wilderness, ushering in
the brightest of all the lights that had been manifested, but
short-lived; then eighteen centuries during which we have been guided
by the light which shone in that last manifestation. The silence has
been longer than before, and will be succeeded by a more glorious and
awful revelation than ever. John the Baptist was to "restore" the
defaced image of "the law," so that the original might be recognized
when it appeared among men [HINDS]. Just as
"Moses" and "Elias" are here connected with the Lord's coming, so at
the transfiguration they converse with Him, implying that the law and
prophets which had prepared His way were now fulfilled in Him.
5. I send you Elijah--as a means towards your "remembering the law"
(Mal 4:4).
6. turn . . . heart of . . . fathers to . . . children, &c.--Explained
by some, that John's preaching should restore harmony in families. But
Lu 1:16, 17
substitutes for "the heart of the children to the fathers," "the
disobedient to the wisdom of the just," implying that the
reconciliation to be effected was that between the unbelieving
disobedient children and the believing ancestors, Jacob, Levi, "Moses,"
and "Elijah" (just mentioned) (compare
Mal 1:2; 2:4, 6; 3:3, 4).
The threat here is that, if this restoration were not effected,
Messiah's coming would prove "a curse" to the "earth," not a blessing.
It proved so to guilty Jerusalem and the "earth," that is, the
land of Judea when it rejected Messiah at His first advent,
though He brought blessings
(Ge 12:3)
to those who accepted Him
(Joh 1:11-13).
Many were delivered from the common destruction of the nation through
John's preaching
(Ro 9:29; 11:5).
It will prove so to the disobedient at His second advent, though He
comes to be glorified in His saints
(2Th 1:6-10).
May the writer of this Commentary and his readers have grace "to take heed to the sure word of prophecy as unto a light shining in a dark place, until the day dawn!" To the triune Jehovah be all glory ascribed for ever!
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