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Text -- Malachi 4:4 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
Restoration through the Lord
4:4 “Remember the law of my servant Moses, to whom at Horeb I gave rules and regulations for all Israel to obey.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Horeb a mountain; the place where the law was given to Moses
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel
 · Moses a son of Amram; the Levite who led Israel out of Egypt and gave them The Law of Moses,a Levite who led Israel out of Egypt and gave them the law


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Sinai | Pentateuch | Ordinance | Obedience | Malachi, Prophecies of | Malachi | MOSES | Law | Horeb | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Mal 4:4 - -- Now take leave of prophecy, for you shall have no more 'till the great prophet, 'till Shiloh come, but attend ye diligently to the law of Moses.

Now take leave of prophecy, for you shall have no more 'till the great prophet, 'till Shiloh come, but attend ye diligently to the law of Moses.

Wesley: Mal 4:4 - -- So long as they should be a people and church.

So long as they should be a people and church.

Wesley: Mal 4:4 - -- Be not partial; statutes and judgments, that is, the whole law must you attend to, and remember it as God requires.

Be not partial; statutes and judgments, that is, the whole law must you attend to, and remember it as God requires.

JFB: Mal 4:4 - -- "The law and all the prophets" were to be in force until John (Mat 11:13), no prophet intervening after Malachi; therefore they are told, "Remember th...

"The law and all the prophets" were to be in force until John (Mat 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 (Luk 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.

JFB: Mal 4:4 - -- Ceremonial "statutes": "judgments" in civil questions at issue. "The law" refers to morals and religion.

Ceremonial "statutes": "judgments" in civil questions at issue. "The law" refers to morals and religion.

Clarke: Mal 4:4 - -- Remember ye the law of Moses - Where all these things are predicted. The Septuagint, Arabic, and Coptic, place this verse the last.

Remember ye the law of Moses - Where all these things are predicted. The Septuagint, Arabic, and Coptic, place this verse the last.

Calvin: Mal 4:4 - -- This passage has not been clearly and fully explained, because interpreters did not understand the design of Malachi nor consider the time. We know t...

This passage has not been clearly and fully explained, because interpreters did not understand the design of Malachi nor consider the time. We know that before the coming of Christ there was a kind of silence on the part of God, for by not sending Prophets for a time, he designed to stimulate as it were the Jews, so that they might with greater ardor seek Christ. Our Prophet was amongst the very last. As then the Jews were without Prophets, they ought more diligently to have attended to the law, and to have taken a more careful heed to the doctrine of religion contained in it. This is the reason why he now bids them to remember the law of Moses; as though he had said, “Hereafter shall come the time when ye shall be without Prophets, but your remedy shall be the law; attend then carefully to it, and beware lest you should forget it.” For men, as soon as God ceases to speak to them even for the shortest time, are carried away after their own inventions, and are ever inclined to vanity, as we abundantly find by experience. Hence Malachi, in order to keep the Jews from wandering, and from thus departing from the pure doctrine of the law, reminds them that they were faithfully and constantly to remember it until the Redeemer came.

If it be asked why he mentions the law only, the answer is obvious, because that saying of Christ is true, that the law and the Prophets were until John. (Mat 3:13.) It must yet be observed, that the prophetic office was not separated from the law, for all the prophecies which followed the law were as it were its appendages; so that they included nothing new, but were given that the people might be more fully retained in their obedience to the law. Hence as the Prophets were the interpreters of Moses, it is no wonder that their doctrine was subjected, or as they commonly say, subordinated to the law. The object of the Prophet was to make the Jews attentive to that doctrine which had been delivered to them from above by Moses and the Prophets, so as not to depart from it even in the least degree; as though he had said, “God will not now send to you different teachers in succession; there is enough for your instruction in the law: there is no reason on this account that you should change anything in the discipline of the Church. Though God by ceasing to speak to you, may seem to let loose the reins, so as to allow every one to stray and wander in uncertainty after his own imaginations, it is yet not so; for the law is sufficient to guide us, provided we shake not off its yoke, nor through our ingratitude bury the light by which it directs us.”

He calls it the law of Moses, not because he was its author, but its minister, as also Paul calls the gospel “my gospel,” because he was its minister and preacher. At the same time God claims to himself the whole authority, by adding that Moses was his savant: we hence conclude that he brought nothing of himself; for the word servant is not to be confined to his vocation only, but also to his fidelity in executing his office. God then honored Moses with this title, not so much for his own sake, as in order to give sanction to his law, that no one might think that it was a doctrine invented by man. 275 He expresses the same thing still more clearly by saying, that he had committed the law to him on Horeb; for this clause clearly asserts that Moses had faithfully discharged his office of a servant; for he brought nothing but what had been committed to him from above, and he delivered it, as they say, from hand to hand. Many give this version, “To whom I committed, in the valley of Horeb, statutes and judgements;” but I approve of the other rendering — that God makes himself here the author of the law, that all the godly might reverently receive it as coming from him. Horeb is Sinai; but they who describe these places say, that a part of the mountain towards the east is called Horeb, and that the other towards the west is called Sinai; but it is still the same mountain.

By saying To all Israel, or to the whole of Israel, he confirms what I have already said — that he had committed to them the law: that the Jews might be the more touched, he expressly says, that the law was given to them, and that this was a singular privilege with which God had favored them, according to what is said in Psa 147:20,

“He has not done so to other nations, nor has he manifested to them his judgements.”

For the nations had not been laid under such obligations as the Jews, to whom God had given his law as a peculiar treasure to his own children. And that no one might claim an exemption, he says, to the whole of Israel; as though he had said, “Neither the learned nor the unlearned, neither the rulers nor the common people, can have any excuse, except they all with the greatest care attend to the law, yea, all from the least to the greatest.”

What follows may admit of two explanations: for חוקים , chukim, and משפטים , meshephethim, may be referred to the verb זכרו , zacaru, remember; but as he says Which I have committed, we may take statutes and judgements as explanatory. As to the subject itself, it signifies but little which view we may adopt. There is no doubt but that God by these terms commends his law for its benefits; as though he had said, “The law includes what the Jews ought rightly to observe, even statutes and judgements.” We know that other terms are used in Scripture, such as פקודים , pekudim, precepts; מצותים , metsutim, commandments; and עדותים , odutim, testimonies; but here the Prophet is content brief to remind the Jews that their ingratitude would be less excusable if they departed from the law of God, for this would be openly to reject statutes and judgements; and this is what I have stated, that they were here taught by the Prophet that the doctrine of the law is profitable, in order that they might attend to it more willingly. 276 It follows —

TSK: Mal 4:4 - -- the law : Exod. 20:3-21; Deu 4:5, Deu 4:6; Psa 147:19, Psa 147:20; Isa 8:20, Isa 42:21; Mat 5:17-20, Mat 19:16-22, Mat 22:36-40; Mar 12:28-34; Luk 10:...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Mal 4:4 - -- Remember ye the law of Moses, My servant - Gal 3:24. "The law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ."They then who were most faithful to...

Remember ye the law of Moses, My servant - Gal 3:24. "The law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ."They then who were most faithful to the law, would be most prepared for Christ. But for those of his own day, too, who were negligent both of the ceremonial and moral law, he says "Since the judgment of God will be so fearful, remember now unceasingly and observe the law of God given by Moses."

Which I commanded - o

Unto him for - (literally upon, incumbent upon) all Israel Not Moses commanded them, but God by His servant Moses; therefore He "would in the day of judgment take strict account of each, whether they had or had not kept them. He would glorify those who obeyed, He would condemn those who disobeyed them."They had asked, "Where is the God of judgment? What profit, that we have kept the ordinance?"He tells them of the judgment to come, and bids them take heed, that they did indeed keep them, for there was a day of account to be held for all.

The statutes and judgments - Better, "statutes and judgments,"i. e., consisting in them; it seems added as an explanation of the word, law, individualizing them. Duty is fulfilled, not in a general acknowledgment of law, or an arbitrary selection of some favorite commandments, which cost the human will less; as, in our Lord’ s time, they minutely observed the law of tithes, but Mat 23:23 : "omitted weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith."It is in obedience to the commandments, one by one, one and all. Moses exhorted to the keeping of the law, under these same words: Deu 4:1-2, Deu 4:5, Deu 4:8, Deu 4:14, "Now, therefore hearken, O Israel, unto the statutes and judgments which I teach you, to do them, that ye may live. Ye shall not add unto the word that I command you, neither shall ye diminish it. Behold, I have taught you statutes and judgments, even as the Lord my God commanded me. What nation so great, that hath statutes and judgments, righteous as all this law, which I set before you this day? The Lord commanded me at that time, to teach you statutes and judgments, that ye might do them in the land, whither ye go to possess it."

Poole: Mal 4:4 - -- Now take leave of all prophecy, for you shall have no more till the great Prophet, till Shiloh come; and attend ye diligently to the law of Moses, k...

Now take leave of all prophecy, for you shall have no more till the great Prophet, till Shiloh come; and attend ye diligently to the law of Moses, keep its precepts and directions.

The law in the full extent: the moral precepts; rules of a holy and religious life for all. The ceremonial precepts; rules of your worship, so long as your temple shall stand a type of Christ to come. The judicial precepts; whilst you have any government, or power of judicatures. By a due keeping this you may escape future judgments and obtain future blessings, Le 26 De 28 : besides, by this attending to the law, they might be enabled to see the Messiah, and own him of whom Moses wrote in the law. Now though the law only be expressed, the prophets are included, who also wrote of Christ, Deu 18:15 Joh 5:46,47 Ac 13:27 . This was excellent advice to this people, who (had they taken it) had escaped the sins they ran into and the miseries they fell under; they had not crucified the Lord of glory, nor rejected their own mercy, nor pulled fiery judgments on their own heads, to their utter ruin.

Of Moses ; whose memory you venerate, in whom you glory, whose law therefore you ought to obey. My servant; who was my servant, and delivered my commands to you. I do therefore expect that my authority, and Moses’ s esteem among you, prevail with you to study most carefully this law.

Which I commanded unto him in Horeb , with most majestic circumstances, to awe you to the observance of all its precepts; and which was an emblem of that terror and majesty wherein the Lawgiver would appear to judge, to give rewards, or adjudge to punishments.

For all Israel ; so long as they should be a people and church.

With the statutes and judgments ; be not partial; statutes and judgments, i.e. the whole law, must you attend to, and remember it as God requires, not turn aside from any of its prescripts.

Haydock: Mal 4:4 - -- Law. This must be your guide and comfort. No more prophets shall appear before [John] the Baptist. (Calmet)

Law. This must be your guide and comfort. No more prophets shall appear before [John] the Baptist. (Calmet)

Gill: Mal 4:4 - -- Remember ye the law of Moses my servant,.... Who was faithful as such in the house of God, in delivering the law to the children of Israel, which was ...

Remember ye the law of Moses my servant,.... Who was faithful as such in the house of God, in delivering the law to the children of Israel, which was given him; and who are called upon to remember it, its precepts and its penalties, which they were apt to forget: and particularly this exhortation is given now, because no other prophet after Malachi would be sent unto them, this is what they should have and use as their rule and directory; and because that Christ, now prophesied of, would be the end of this law; and this, and the prophets, were to be until the days of John the Baptist, spoken of in the next verse Mal 4:5; and the rather, because in this period of time, between Malachi and the coming of Christ, the traditions of the elders were invented and obtained, which greatly set aside the law, and made it of no effect:

which I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel; for though the law came by Moses, and is therefore called his, yet God was the author and efficient cause of it; Moses was only a servant and minister; and this was given in Horeb, the same with Sinai: these are names of one and the same mountain, at least of the parts of it; one part of it was called Horeb, from its being a dry desert and desolate place; and the other Sinai, from its bushes and brambles. So Jerom o says,

"Horeb, the mountain of God, is in the land of Midian, by Mount Sinai, above Arabia in the wilderness, to which are joined the mountain and wilderness of the Saracens, called Pharan; but to me it seems the same mountain is called by two names, sometimes Sinai, and sometimes Horeb;''

see Exo 31:18. Agreeably to which Josephus p calls Horeb, where Moses fed his flock, and saw the vision of the burning bush, Mount Sinai; and says, it was the highest of the mountains in those parts, very convenient for pasture, and abounded with excellent herbage. Some say q the eastern part of it was called Sinai, and the western part Horeb; it is very likely they joined together at the bottom of the mountain, and were the two tops of it. This being mentioned shows, that the law, strictly taken, and not the prophets, is here designed, for no other was commanded, ordered, or delivered in Horeb; and that was for all the children of Israel in successive ages, until the coming of the Messiah, and for them only, as to the ministration of it by Moses.

With the statutes and judgments; the laws ceremonial and judicial, which were given to Moses, at the same time the law of the decalogue was, to be observed by the children of Israel, and which were shadows of things to come; namely, those of them that were of a ceremonial nature, and therefore to be remembered and attended to as leading to Christ, and the things of the Gospel.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Mal 4:4 Heb “which I commanded him in Horeb concerning all Israel, statutes and ordinances.”

Geneva Bible: Mal 4:4 ( d ) Remember ye the law of Moses my servant, which I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel, [with] the statutes and judgments. ( d ) Because t...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Mal 4:1-6 - --1 God's judgment on the wicked;2 and his blessing on the good.4 He exhorts to the study of the law;5 and tells of Elijah's coming and office.

MHCC: Mal 4:4-6 - --Here is a solemn conclusion, not only of this prophecy, but of the Old Testament. Conscience bids us remember the law. Though we have not prophets, ye...

Matthew Henry: Mal 4:4-6 - -- This is doubtless intended for a solemn conclusion, not only of this prophecy, but of the canon of the Old Testament, and is a plain information tha...

Keil-Delitzsch: Mal 4:4-6 - -- Concluding Admonition. - Mal 4:4. "Remember ye the law of Moses, my servant, which I commanded him upon Horeb for all Israel, statutes and rights. ...

Constable: Mal 3:17--4:4 - --C. The coming judgment of Israel 3:17-4:3 3:17 Almighty Yahweh announced that He would honor those who feared Him as His own on the day He prepared Hi...

Constable: Mal 4:4-6 - --VIII. A concluding promise and warning 4:4-6 The final three verses of the book, which are also the final message in the Old Testament, are sufficient...

Guzik: Mal 4:1-6 - --Malachi 4 - The Sun of Righteousness A. The final resolution. 1. (1) Resolution of the wicked. "For behold, the day is coming, burning like a...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Malachi (Book Introduction) MALACHI forms the transition link between the two dispensations, the Old and the New, "the skirt and boundary of Christianity" [TERTULLIAN], to which ...

JFB: Malachi (Outline) GOD'S LOVE: ISRAEL'S INGRATITUDE: THE PRIESTS' MERCENARY SPIRIT: A GENTILE SPIRITUAL PRIESTHOOD SHALL SUPERSEDE THEM. (Mal 1:1-14) REPROOF OF THE PRI...

TSK: Malachi 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Mal 4:1, God’s judgment on the wicked; Mal 4:2, and his blessing on the good; Mal 4:4, He exhorts to the study of the law; Mal 4:5, and...

Poole: Malachi (Book Introduction) THE ARGUMENT Concerning this prophet, some have thought (but without good and sufficient ground) that he was an angel in the form of a man; others ...

Poole: Malachi 4 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 4 God’ s judgment on the wicked, Mal 4:1 , and his blessing on the good, Mal 4:2,3 . He exhorteth to the study of the law, Mal 4:4 , a...

MHCC: Malachi (Book Introduction) Malachi was the last of the prophets, and is supposed to have prophesied B.C. 420. He reproves the priests and the people for the evil practices into ...

MHCC: Malachi 4 (Chapter Introduction) (Mal 4:1-3) The judgements on the wicked, and the happiness of the righteous. (Mal 4:4-6) Regard to be had to the law; John the Baptist promised as t...

Matthew Henry: Malachi (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Prophecy of Malachi God's prophets were his witnesses to his church, each in his day, for several a...

Matthew Henry: Malachi 4 (Chapter Introduction) We have here proper instructions given us (very proper to close the canon of the Old Testament with), I. Concerning the state of recompence and re...

Constable: Malachi (Book Introduction) Introduction Title and Writer The name of the writer is the title of this book. ...

Constable: Malachi (Outline) Outline I. Heading 1:1 II. Oracle one: Yahweh's love for Israel 1:2-5 II...

Constable: Malachi Malachi Bibliography Alden, Robert L. "Malachi." In Daniel-Minor Prophets. Vol. 7 of The Expositor's Bible Comm...

Haydock: Malachi (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF MALACHIAS. INTRODUCTION. Malachias, whose name signifies "the angel of the Lord," was contemporary with Nehemias, and by some ...

Gill: Malachi (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO MALACHI This book, in the Hebrew copies, is called "Sepher Malachi", the Book of Malachi; in the Vulgate Latin version, "the Prophe...

Gill: Malachi 4 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO MALACHI 4 This chapter contains an account of the destruction of the wicked Jews, and the happiness of the righteous by the coming ...

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