C, Second Sunday of Advent - Malachi 3:1-4 "My Messenger"
The text on TikTok, and the notice printed in the local paper read, “Jesus Christ appearing this Sunday morning at such and such a place and at such and such a time.”
Would
you be surprised God might use such a message to announce the coming of his Son
to a spot near you? The advertisement is
nothing grand; its text does not stand out from other texts. What if God chose to send a messenger or a
message in this way, how might you react on hearing or reading of his coming?
For
the purpose of this exercise let’s say the message is not false, but entirely
true and Jesus Christ is coming to a venue near you. The words of the ad are the preparation for
his coming and the way he comes is to your church this Sunday.
Excited?
Scared? Perplexed? Thrilled? Perhaps you’re just a bit apprehensive that he’s
coming, “Why’s he coming to my church?” you ask yourself. “Where’s he comin’ from and how’s he gettin’
here anyway?” Rightly you’d be sceptical!
Malachi
receives an oracle from the Lord. He is
a prophet, and this oracle is a word from God; a word of burden on Malachi’s
heart if he doesn’t pass it onto the people.
It’s a word or an utterance which has overcome his heart and mind. Put there by God himself to glorify God and
raise the attention of those called to hear it.
This word was given to lift up, stir up, sit up, shake up, shape up! But also, to ease, to exalt, to forgive, heal
and help.
Malachi
spoke in a time after some of the exiles returned to rebuild the temple in the
days of Nehemiah and Ezra. However, the
messianic age did not occur with the reconstruction of the temple. What they built was a building which stood in
the shadows of the former temple of King Solomon’s day.
This
temple lacked the physical appearance of the former temple, and also noted was
a spiritual vacancy. It seemed God no
longer spoke as he had in previous times prior to their exile into the custody
of the Babylonians. The Israelites and Jews looked back to the days when God
spoke through the Judges, the priests like Samuel and Nathan, the prophets like
Elijah, Elisha, Isaiah, and Jeremiah.
God had spoken, and no one listen, and now God had stopped speaking.
Malachi
was the last prophet to speak some 430 years before Christ was born. He was the last to speak on God’s behalf
against the perversions of popular practice. He was a lone voice echoing from
the silence of God before God went completely silent for some 400 years.
Malachi’s
name literally means “my messenger”, he was a messenger, and we hear him herald
the coming of two messengers, the last prophet, and then a great messenger, who
himself would be the message.
“Behold,
I send my messenger, and he will prepare the way before me. And the Lord whom
you seek will suddenly come to his temple; and the messenger of the covenant in
whom you delight, behold, he is coming, says the Lord of hosts. But who can endure the day of his coming, and
who can stand when he appears? For he is like a refiner’s fire and like
fullers’ soap. He will sit as a refiner
and purifier of silver, and he will purify the sons of Levi and refine them
like gold and silver, and they will bring offerings in righteousness to the
Lord. Then the offering of Judah and
Jerusalem will be pleasing to the Lord as in the days of old and as in former
years. (Malachi 3:1–4 ESV)
Malachi’s
message is harsh and sharp. They have
not been treating the Lord as their God; their righteousness was not acceptable
as righteousness before the Lord. They
were not following God in the way he had willed them; in righteousness “to” the
Lord. Their worship of the Lord was a
show which God was going to test as a blacksmith would refine metals, and as a
fuller would cleanse and whiten fibre for fabric.
To
be clear what the washing agent was for a fuller in their day, was human
urine. Not the fresh stuff, but that
which was left to sit for a while, so the ammonia content was stronger and
better for cleaning and bleaching the fabric.
So,
the show was going to be refined by fire and stood on like fibre worked in
ankle deep urine. But this is only a
picture of who is to come. To whom is
the refiner’s and the fuller’s image referring?
The
one to come came some 400 years after the fact.
John the Baptist came to prepare the way of the refiner, the fuller.
…during
the high priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas, the word of God came to John the son
of Zechariah in the wilderness. And he
went into all the region around the Jordan, proclaiming a baptism of repentance
for the forgiveness of sins. (Luke 3:2–3 ESV)
But
whom was he preparing and of whom did he proclaim? He was calling the Jews and the Israelites to
repentance for their sins against the Lord.
A preparation for the cleansing which was to come! This was preparation
to make the people ready for the refiner, for the fuller.
John
answered them all, saying, “I baptize you with water, but he who is mightier
than I is coming, the strap of whose sandals I am not worthy to untie. He will
baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. (Luke 3:16 ESV)
So,
Malachi left his fellow Jews with a picture of one coming to wash in the widdle
of one’s own waste fluid and made pure with fire to remove the impurities.
And
this one is the One and Only Son of God, Jesus Christ. He has come once, and he is coming
again. Yet he has already put the
refinement and washing process into place.
And he is coming again to finish what he has started. He is coming to gather the gold and the
fabric gleaming in God’s glory.
Now
depending on how one might look at this we might see the ammonia of urine and
the fire of refinement as something to be feared, as hurtful, and void of
love! We lose trust in God because of
the trials and tribulations into which we’re subjected and suffer.
When
one falls into this temptation, they are like those who love wearing dross
rather than silver or gold, who seek to swim in the proverbial piddle and poop
that comes our way in this life rather than those who wear the white garments
to come out of God’s cleansing and testing process.
On
the other hand, Christ encourages his children, those who trust him, those who
look forward in faith, to endure and persevere under the refiners and fullers
of this life as a holy preparation for that which is to come. An eternity of silver and gold, wearing robes
of righteousness as white and as bright as our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ!
For
we are told… when the goodness and loving kindness of God our Saviour
appeared, he saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness, but
according to his own mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewal of the
Holy Spirit, whom he poured out on us richly through Jesus Christ our Saviour,
so that being justified by his grace we might become heirs according to the
hope of eternal life. The saying is
trustworthy, and I want you to insist on these things, so that those who have
believed in God may be careful to devote themselves to good works. These things
are excellent and profitable for people. (Titus 3:4–8 ESV)
Therefore,
the refiner’s fire and the fuller’s soap, no matter how crude they may seem are
only agents of cleansing and hope to focus you on Jesus Christ. After all, Jesus has been submerged into the
fuller’s fluid and fired with the refiner’s fires in the place of those who
trust in him.
The
message may not be printed in the paper, or read as a text on TikTok, that
Jesus is coming to such and such a place at such and such at time. But it is written on paper, in the Word of
God. He has been coming and has come
amongst us when we gather in the Triune name, and in his Word to hear this
teaching and promise of salvation and refinement. Therefore, those who take their garments
soiled in sin can make them as white as snow by washing them in the blood of
Jesus.
You
see Jesus has been baptised by the Holy Spirit into his ministry of the cross
and with the fires of hell itself on Good Friday, so that the trials and
temptations in your life might test us so we trust all the more the putrid and
pungent plight of Christ being washed and refined for you, cleansing all of you
this Sunday and every time the Holy Spirit calls and gathers us into Jesus’
presence.
Jesus
is the messenger! He is the message! I pray he is yours too. Amen.