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 Malachi 3:1 translate, not "by Malachi," but "by the hand of His messenger"
(compare Haggai 1:13 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 (Malachi 1:10; 3:1-10 unreformed (Nehemiah 13:5,15-22,23-30 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 (Nehemiah 6:7 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 (Ezra 2:64 intermingled with the heathen around during the sixty years passed over
by Ezra in silence (Ezra 9:6-15; Nehemiah 1:3 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" (Daniel 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
(Nehemiah 13:6 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 (Malachi 1:1-5 are reproved for neglect and profanation (Malachi 1:6-2:9 marriages, and the wrongs done to Jewish wives, are reproved
(Malachi 2:10-16 (Malachi 2:17-3:6 (6) Contrast between the godly and the ungodly at the present time, and
in the future judgment; exhortation, therefore, to return to the law
(Malachi 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 (Matthew 11:10; 17:12; Mark 1:2; 9:11,12; Luke 1:17; Romans 9:13