BELIEVE GOD LOVES YOU
What you believe to be true about God is the most important thing (A.W. Tozer), if you have wrong thinking about God, you will find it hard to love, obey, and trust Him completely. The problem is, we are not fully convinced about God’s love for us. When God told them “I have loved you”, with an everlasting love (Jeremiah 31:3) it shows that God knows everything about us and extends His lovingkindness to us. How did God show this to His people? God responds to the question: He loved Jacob, and “hated Esau” (Malachi 1:2-3). The Bible uses this language in a comparative sense (see Luke 14:6 for another example); it emphasizes contrast. If we focus our love for other things, it reduces our capacity to truly love God with all our hearts. If we do the latter, it increases our capacity to love others too! God told Rebekah that her younger son one will become the favored one, and the older one (Esau) will serve the younger (Jacob) (Genesis 25:23). This is what Malachi was talking about – even before Esau and Jacob can do anything, God already made an unconditional choice. God’s love is unconditional, uncoerced, undeserved, & unmerited!
Malachi 1:3 proclaims the future of Edom (Esau’s land) – we must be reminded that both Israel and Edom were sinners, and both deserved judgment from God. But for the Israelites, there was a promise of restoration, but the Edomites have ceased to exist. To understand God’s love for us during times of trials, we should not judge God based on circumstances, but judge our circumstances based on who God is.
BRING GOD YOUR BEST
Worship is a by-product of what you believe about God. The problem was that not only were the people unaware of God’s amazing love, but also, their worship of Him was not their best (Malachi 1:6-10). They choose the lame, blind, and sick animals to offer to the Lord. Their offering was not pleasing to God. God even rebukes their feelings during worship – they find serving and worshipping God as something boring or tiring (v.13). Is God happy with our offering of worship to Him? What does it mean to give God your best? It means to do what God wants us to do. God established some ground rules for their offering (Leviticus 1:2-4) and has theological implications. It symbolizes the principle of substitution – sin is so serious, and it cannot be paid for by good works. The animal sacrificial system is a picture of the coming of Christ. The book of Hebrews tells us (Hebrews 10:4,11-14) – Jesus is the one sacrifice we all need! 1 Peter 3:18 tells us about the principle of substitution. We ought to give God our best. Today we don’t need to offer animal sacrifices, so in response to what Jesus did, we do as Romans 12:1 tells us – to present our bodies as “living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God” – and this is our spiritual service of worship! Ours is not just a religion, it is a relationship with God, and He deserves the best.
BE CONSISTENT IN YOUR PRIVATE, PUBLIC, & FAMILY LIFE
There must be no hypocrisy in our worship of God. In Malachi 2:1-2, the rebuke was spoken to the priests, and God cursed even their blessings, because they “are not taking it to heart”. Our life must be consistent – public life, private life, and family life. Malachi reminds them of their value as priests (Malachi 2:7-8), and for us today, Peter reminds us in 1 Peter 2:9 that we are also a royal priesthood, chosen as God’s own possession. The problem with these people in Malachi 2 was that they have corrupted their lives. Malachi 2:13-14 tells us the wrong things they were doing: corrupting their own marriages, divorce, and choosing to give in to their union with foreign women who worship other gods!
Deuteronomy 30:15-20 reminds us of how great God’s love is for His people. He gave us the boundaries “by design”, since He knows what is best for us. You need to surrender your all and believe God loves you, bring your best to Him, and be consistent in your life – living a life that pleases God. The power for us to do that is through Jesus Christ alone!
1. How has God expressed His love for you? How will you respond to His love?
2. What is your “best” that you can bring to God as offering of praise?
3. How do you live a life of worship consistently in your relationships with others?