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Text -- Malachi 1:8-14 (NET)

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1:8 For when you offer blind animals as a sacrifice, is that not wrong? And when you offer the lame and sick, is that not wrong as well? Indeed, try offering them to your governor! Will he be pleased with you or show you favor?” asks the Lord who rules over all. 1:9 But now plead for God’s favor that he might be gracious to us. “With this kind of offering in your hands, how can he be pleased with you?” asks the Lord who rules over all. 1:10 “I wish that one of you would close the temple doors, so that you no longer would light useless fires on my altar. I am not pleased with you,” says the Lord who rules over all, “and I will no longer accept an offering from you. 1:11 For from the east to the west my name will be great among the nations. Incense and pure offerings will be offered in my name everywhere, for my name will be great among the nations,” says the Lord who rules over all. 1:12 “But you are profaning it by saying that the table of the Lord is common and its offerings despicable. 1:13 You also say, ‘How tiresome it is.’ You turn up your nose at it,” says the Lord who rules over all, “and instead bring what is stolen, lame, or sick. You bring these things for an offering! Should I accept this from you?” asks the Lord. 1:14 “There will be harsh condemnation for the hypocrite who has a valuable male animal in his flock but vows and sacrifices something inferior to the Lord. For I am a great king,” says the Lord who rules over all, “and my name is awesome among the nations.”
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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Mal 1:8 The LXX and Vulgate read “with it” (which in Hebrew would be הֲיִרְצֵהוּ...

NET Notes: Mal 1:9 After the imperative, the prefixed verbal form with vav conjunction indicates purpose (cf. NASB, NRSV).

NET Notes: Mal 1:10 The rhetorical language suggests that as long as the priesthood and people remain disobedient, the temple doors may as well be closed because God is n...

NET Notes: Mal 1:11 My name will be great among the nations. In what is clearly a strongly ironic shift of thought, the Lord contrasts the unbelief and virtual paganism o...

NET Notes: Mal 1:12 Heb “fruit.” The following word “food” in the Hebrew text (אָכְלוֹ, ’okhlo) ap...

NET Notes: Mal 1:13 Heb “from your hand,” a metonymy of part (the hand) for whole (the person).

NET Notes: Mal 1:14 The epithet great king was used to describe the Hittite rulers on their covenant documents and so, in the covenant ideology of Malachi, is an apt desc...

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