Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Malachi 3:2
But who may abide the day of his coming? and who shall stand when he appeareth? for he [is] like a refiner’s fire, and like fullers’ soap:
2. a refiner’s fire ] Comp. Mat 3:12.
fullers’ sope ] “The process of fulling or cleansing cloth, so far as it may be gathered from the practice of other nations, consisted in treading or stamping on the garments with the feet or with bats in tubs of water, in which some alkaline substance answering the purpose of soap had been dissolved. The substances used for this purpose which are mentioned in Scripture are nitre, Pro 25:20; Jer 2:22, and soap, Mal 3:2. The juice also of some saponaceous plant, perhaps Gypsaphila struthium, or Saponaria officinalis, was sometimes mixed with the water for the like purpose, and may thus be regarded as representing the soap of Scripture.” Dict. of Bible, Art. Fuller. But probably borax is meant.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And who may abide the day of His coming? And who shall stand when He appeareth? – The implied answer is, No one; as in the Psalm Psa 130:3, If Thou, Lord, wilt mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? Joel had asked the same , The day of the Lord is great and very terrible; and who can abide it? How can the weakness of man endure such might; his blindness, such light; his frailty, such power; his uncleanness, such holiness; the chaff, such a fire? For He is like a refines fire. Who would not fail through stupefaction, fear, horror, shrinking reverence, from such majesty?
Malachi seems to blend, as Joel, the first and second coming of our Lord. The first coming too was a time of sifting and severance, according as those, to whom He came, did or did not receive Him. The severance was not final, because there was yet space for repentance; but it was real, an earnest of the final judgment. Joh 9:39, for judgment, our Lord says, I am come into this world, that they which see not may see, and they which see might be made blind; and again Joh 12:31, Now is the judgment of this world; and Joh 3:18, He that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed on the name of the Only-Begotten Son of God; Joh 3:36. He that believeth not the Son, shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him. As, on the other hand, He saith Joh 6:54. whoso eateth My Flesh and drinketh My Blood hath eternal life; and Joh 6:47, he that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life; hath, He saith; not, shall have; hath it, in present reality and earnest, though he may forfeit it: so the other class is condemned already, although the one may repent and be saved, the other may Eze 33:18. turn from his righteousness and commit iniquity; and if he persevere in it, shall die therein.
It is then one ever-present judgment. Every soul of man is in a state of grace or out of it; in Gods favor or under His wrath; and the judgment of the Great Day, in which the secrets of mens hearts shall be revealed, will be but an outward manifestation of that now hidden judgment. But the words, in their fullest sense, imply a passing of that judgment, in which men do or do not stand, as in those of our Lord Luk 21:35-36. As a snare shall that day come on all those that dwell on the face of the whole earth. Watch ye, therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things which shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of Man; and Paul Eph 6:13. Take unto you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and, having done all, to stand; and in the Revelation Rev 6:16-17. They said to the mountains and rocks; Fall on us, and hide us from the wrath of Him that sitteth upon the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb. For the great day of His wrath is come, and who shall be able to stand? Asaph says of a temporal, yet for this life, final destruction; Psa 76:6-7, At Thy rebuke, O God of, Jacob, both the chariot and horse are cast into a deep sleep. Thou art to be feared, and who may stand in Thy sight, when Thou art angry?
For He is like a refiners fire, and like fullers soup – Two sorts of materials for cleansing are mentioned, the one severe, where the baser materials are inworked with the rich ore; the other mild, where the defilement is easily separable. He shall come like a refining fire; Psa 50:3-4, a fire shall burn before Him, and it shall be very tempestuous round about Him. Then He shall call the heaven from above, and the earth, that He may judge HIs people; streams of fire shall sweep before, bearing away all sinners. For the Lord is called a fire, and a Deu 4:24. consuming fire, so as to burn our 1Co 3:12. wood, hay, stubble. And not fire only, but fullers soap. To those who sin heavily, He is a refining and consuming fire, but to those who commit light sins, fullers soap, to restore cleanness to it, when washed.
Yet, though light in comparison, this too had its severity, for clothes which were washed (of which the word is used) were trampled on by the feet. The nitrum and the fullers soap is penitence. Yet the whiteness and purity so restored, is, at the last, perfected. Inspiration could find no more adequate comparison for us, for the brightness of our Lords raiment from the glory of the Transfiguration, than Mar 9:3, exceeding white as snow; so as no fuller on earth can white them.
Our Lord is, in many ways, as a fire. He says of Himself; Luk 12:49, I am come to send a fire upon earth, and what will I, if it be already kindled? John Baptist said of Him Luk 3:16, He shall baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire. He kindles in the heart a fire of love, which softens what is hard, the will.
Wash whateer of stain is here,
Sprinkle what is dry or sere,
Heal and bind the wounded sprite;
Bend whateer is stubborn still,
Kindle what is cold and chill,
What hath wandered guide aright.
But as God is a consuming fire, Who must burn out the dross, unless we be Jer 6:29-30 reprobate silver which the founder melteth in vain, either He must, by His grace, consume the sin within us, or must consume us with it, in hell.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Mal 3:2
But who may abide the day of His coming?
The coming of the Lord
Look at this subject in two points of view.
I. As a question of solemn remonstrance. That the Lord has come, we know; that the Lord will come, we profess to believe. The Scripture tells us much about that coming, but leaves much that is uncertain. One thing is clear–the return is to be sudden. But the very suddenness of that return teaches us that when the time comes for the Lords appearing, then the time of preparation is past. When our blessed Lord does come suddenly, He returns for judgment; no nice distinctions will then be drawn; party spirit must then sleep, and sleep for ever. Then shall it be seen who have worshipped God in spirit and in truth. A difference, however, will be made, absolute and relative–absolute to the right or to the left–relative, for we know there are degrees in glory. At the Lords coming no secret shall be hidden, the mere outward appearance of religion will be unavailing. Then we shall learn who can abide His coming. There is a true and a false profession: and then the false profession will be detected, the veil of hypocrisy will be rent, and the mere formal hypocrite will be made known to all. It seems that the very teacher may then be lost. Then search and see whether there is Christian practice with the Christian profession. Those who have crowded together to hear the Word of God will then be detected.
II. As an appeal to our Christian confidence. The Apostle says that some can stand in that day. Who? The real Christian alone: the man who has the Spirit of the living God dwelling in his heart. What is your preparation for eternity? Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is essential. The man that stands now, stands by faith. The man that does not trust Christ–I care not what his morality may be, I speak of him as one weighed in the balances of eternity. (Bishop of Carlisle.)
Christs second coming
I. Remind of some particulars in the second coming of Christ.
1. The certainty of that event. That. Christ will come is a point on which we are not left to doubt and conjecture. We have the plainest testimony which words could give (Act 1:11).
2. The manner of it. It will be glorious. The first coming was in all outward meanness and humiliation. The second is to be the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour. His coming will be sudden.
3. The purpose and consequences of it. In His state of humiliation Christ came as a Saviour; when He comes in glory, He will come as a Judge.
II. Answer the solemn question of the text. Who may abide the day-of His coming? Who will be able to bear that severe and close inquiry which will then be made into our lives and characters?
1. Those who will not be able to abide. Every open and habitual sinner. The worldly man, who has made the world his god, and has set up his idols in his heart. The hypocrite, who has the form of godliness, but is without the power of it. The man who is self-righteous, and trusts to his own merits and strength.
2. Those who will abide. The humble, penitent, believing Christian, a character widely differing from every other. His ground of confidence in that day will not be his innocence. He will claim an interest in the death of Christ. His penitence, his uprightness, his secret striving with sin, his useful life, his godly motives will be brought in evidence of the soundness and reality of his faith. The Judge Himself will own him as a friend. (E. Cooper.)
Before the Son of Man
The coming of Christ was the trial-test of the world. Men never needed Him more; were never less prepared to receive Him. It was the age of force. Society was not in a condition to hear Christ favourably. We say the time was ripe for His coming. As to necessity, yes; as to preparation, no. This was the historical day of Christ. Few were able to abide it. Few could stand when He appeared.
I. Rigid requirements of His standard. Christs coming is represented as attended by healing, comfort, and blessing. An era of peace and goodwill. But these results were not immediate. Gods promises are conditional. It is not easy to live by Christs standard. What is the nature of these requirements?
1. Consecration, which implies self-surrender. The doctrine of the Cross is but faintly understood to-day.
2. Purity. Involves thought of the heart, speech, actions. Christ raised the white standard of chastity higher than ever before.
3. Non-resistance. Must not give blow for blow. Overcome evil with good.
4. Forgiveness of injury. We are actually to love our enemies. Must pray for them, and do them good.
II. Duty of standing before Him. Christ does not judge the world in person to-day. Does this through the Gospel. Christ is the great refiner of men. It is our duty to stand before Him.
1. Because He is the only perfect standard.
2. Because it is the only way to secure His favour.
3. Because by this we reach our proper place. To hate sin, and love the sinning one–this is a Christlike prerogative. To separate the one from the other–this is a Christlike work. To stand before the Son of Man implies–
(1) That your life is in harmony with His.
(2) Watching and prayer.
(3) His favour and Divinest blessing. (Henry Schell Lobingier.)
Solemn questions
I. What did they imply?
1. A false security. Jews thought they were ready for Messiah. The prophet sees them to be self willed, dreaming of their own notions rather than desiring Gods truth. Religion only nominal.
2. The coming judgment.
3. A call to prepare.
II. They convince us of–Indifference, worldliness, indolence, self-indulgence. We need Gods call, the prophets appeal. Christ is coming: are we ready to meet Him? to be examined and tested by Him?
III. How are we to reply? We are at first struck dumb. None can stand. So says conscience, experience, observation, Scripture. Then the Gospel message of forgiveness and salvation comes to us in the person of Him who was presented in the temple in our nature unto God, and is the Mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus. In Jesus we find our refuge, our hope, our holiness, our home. (Homilist.)
The day of Christs coming
I. There is a momentous period for man to anticipate. The distinguishing characteristics of that day are–
1. It will be a day on which the Lord will visibly and personally appear in the presence of the universe.
2. It will be a day on which the Lord, by His coming, will perform great and wondrous acts. Note the inevitable certainty of that day.
II. There is a momentous question for man to consider. Who may abide the day of His coming?
1. This inquiry shall be vindicated. Our right to press and urge this inquiry is as valid as was the right of the prophets of old. On what is our right founded?
(1) On the nature of the commission which we have received in the ministry of the Lord.
(2) Upon a just estimate of the value of your intelligent and immortal spirits.
(3) Upon a just conviction of the fact, that while in a state of impenitent and unbelieving sin, you are in danger.
2. This inquiry is to be applied. To the infidel, the sensualist, the worldling, the Pharisee, the hypocrite.
3. This inquiry is to be advised upon.
(1) To embrace from the heart the appointed method of preparation for the day of the Lords coming.
(2) To embrace this method of preparation without procrastination or delay. Consider the importance of the matter at issue; the hardening influence of sin, while there is delay; and the uncertainties of human life. (James Parsons.)
The solemnities of the last great day, and the characters of those who are prepared for it
These words of the prophet relate immediately to the first advent. They naturally lead our thoughts to the second advent.
I. Lay before you some of the solemnities of that great day.
1. The actual coming of the Lord, or His appearance in His human nature.
(1) This revelation of Jesus Christ will be visible to the universal assembly of the human race.
(2) It will be unspeakably glorious.
2. The resurrection of the dead. The bodies of the unnumbered millions, who through succeeding ages have inhabited the globe, wherever laid, or however consumed, will be restored to life, and reunited to their immortal souls; that, with them, they may participate their happiness or misery.
3. The general judgment. The books shall be opened. The book of the Divine law: of Gods omniscience; the book of life.
4. The assignment of an endless doom. Our departure into everlasting punishment, or our admission into life eternal.
II. Consider the important questions of the text.
1. The profane scoffer will not be able to abide that day.
2. Neither will that numerous class of persons, who live in the habitual practice of open and flagrant sin, be able to stand before the Judge.
3. Nor that more respectable class who, nevertheless, are wholly devoted to the world.
4. Nor those who pay attention to the duties of religion in a proud and self-complacent spirit.
5. Nor those who acknowledge that salvation is of grace, but forget that we are created in Christ Jesus unto good works. They insist much on faith, but are lamentably deficient in its fruits. Who then may abide the day of His coming? Only the Christian who is worthy of the name. The man absolved by the Judge is one who, condemned by himself for his transgressions, has deeply repented and sought pardon on the ground of Christs meritorious obedience unto the death of the Cross, and works out his salvation with fear and trembling. (John Natt, B. D.)
Divine manifestations
Scepticism abounded, but no moral gloom could deaden the prophets faith. God, whose authority was contemned, would reveal Himself.
I. Divine manifestations are searching. If God were fully to disclose Himself no flesh could live. Veiled in material glory, His ancient saints found it difficult to bear His appearing. The manifestation of God in Christ, though veiled in the weakness of human flesh, was not easy to bear. Men felt it as a piercing light. Corrupt and oppressive rulers, selfish and self-satisfied moralists, hypocritical religionists, and ruthless evil-doers could not bear His presence. Some could bear His coming, and stand when He appeared. They were those–
1. Who were willing to feel, confess, and turn from their sinfulness.
2. Those who were sincerely waiting for His coming, as Simeon.
3. Those who had within them true faith, or spiritual receptiveness, as the Roman centurion and the Syrophenician woman. These could bear the most searching day in the worlds history, when the Lord appeared among men.
II. Divine manifestations are separating. He is like a refiners fire. The appearance of the Lord on the earth tested and separated men. Society was then like seething, molten metal. The good were revealed and refined; the bad, like recrement, were separated from them, to be cast away. In His presence men discovered of what sort they were, and ranged themselves for Him or against Him. As fire, His Spirit still tests and separates men. Fire has been by several nations regarded as a symbol of the Deity. As a Divine heat, enkindling shame, disgust, and remorse at our failures and sins. He will not consume us, but our impurities.
1. That we have much dross in our natures need not lead us to despair.
2. We should be thankful that God manifests Himself to us as a refining heat.
3. We should seek for continued manifestations of God to our souls.
III. Divine manifestations are cleansing or destroying. He is like fullers soap. The fullers trade was one well-known in Judaea. White garments were worn by the Jews on all festive occasions; these the fuller cleansed from all stains, and whitened them by rubbing them with a kind of marl. Creta limolia was probably the earth most commonly used. His soap (borith) was a vegetable alkali obtained from numerous plants, such as the Salsola huli, the Ajram, the Gilloo, and a heath which grows abundantly in the neighbourhood of Joppa. If a garment could not bear the work of the fuller, it was destroyed by it. So the coming of Christ would either cleanse men or hasten their destruction. Christ Himself is the cleansing power. He can wash out the most inveterate stains. None but He can cleanse men. If men will not bear His cleansing, their corruptions will destroy them. All Divine manifestations are essentially the same. There is one yet in the future for mankind. He who came in lowliness to redeem men will come in awful majesty to fix their doom. Who may abide that day of His coming? Who will be able to stand then? Only those who could have borne His first advent–the contrite, the sincere, the believing. (W. Osborne Lilley.)
The coming of Christ and the purification of the Church
Thoughts suggested by the day. As Christ was presented pure in the temple, so it should be our prayer that by His blood and righteousness, and by the sanctifying power of His Spirit, we may be presented unto God by Him, at the last day, pure and spotless. We will consider–
I. The coming of the Lord.
I. John the Baptist prepared the way for that event–
(1) By giving warning that it was near at hand.
(2) By calling men to repent.
2. Christ is called the messenger of the covenant, because that covenant began to be spoken by Him (Heb 2:3). He who was also the prince of the covenant, condescended to be its messenger.
3. Whom ye delight in. Christ is called the desire of all nations. (Hag 2:7); but especially was He the desire of the Jewish nation, because He was especially promised to them, and was to be one of themselves.
II. Who may abide the day of his coming? Not the hypocrite, not the formalist, not the self-righteous, not the lukewarm Laodicean, not the stony-ground hearer who is ashamed when tribulation or persecution because of the Word ariseth; but he who can endure the refiners fire and the fullers soap.
III. Christ shall sit as a refiner and purifier of silver.
1. By this process He will purify His visible Church, by sifting and testing it.
2. He will purify His own people by purging them.
3. The refiner of silver always sits, in order that he may watch the silver carefully; for if it be a minute too long or too short a time in the fire, the whole is spoiled, or at least injured. The sign which tells him when the silver is fit for use is his being able to see in it his own image. All this is a picture of the manner in which Christ purifies His people by trial, and of the end which He aims at. (Ven. Archd. Whately, M. A.)
The appearing of Christ
This truth was once brought out in an unusual manner at a gathering of literary men. After some general conversation it occurred to them to speculate how they would feel were certain of the illustrious dead suddenly to appear in their midst. Think, said one, if Homer were to enter this room, or Dante! How should we meet them? Or suppose, exclaimed another, Milton or Shakespeare were to come? We should stand in profound respect; we should honour the great seers and singers of the past. Ah, added one who had not yet spoken, and if Jesus Christ stood before us? That would be wholly different, was the instant and united response; He is above all. We should fall down on our knees and do homage to Gods Son and mans Saviour.
The coming of Christ not the same thing to all
Did you ever hear the sound of the trumpets which are blown before the judges as they come to a city to open the assizes? How different the feelings of the different people who hear the sound. The innocent man against whom there is no charge hears them unmoved. But the poor wretch waiting his trial in yonder cell, they tell him the day of his trial has arrived. Soon he will stand at the bar of justice, and receive his sentence. So will it be when Jesus comes; some will rejoice, but others will be afraid to meet Him. (Home Magazine.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 2. But who may abide the day of his coming?] Only they who shall believe on his name; for they that will not, shall be blinded, and the unbelieving nations shall be destroyed by the Romans.
Like fuller’s soap] keborith, from barar, to cleanse, any thing that deterges. Kali, or fern ashes, or such things. I doubt whether the composition which we call soap, was known in ancient times.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
But, Heb. And. Who may abide the day of his coming? among the Jews were two sorts of inquirers after the day of the Messiahs coming: some inquired with doubt of the truth of the promises, that he should come to set all right, like them Mal 2:17,
Where is the God of judgment? Others inquired hoping for preferment in the kingdom of the Messiah: of these, who shall be able to endure, to abide this day, when the unparalleled afflictions of that time shall cut off so many Jews, when the sword of the God of judgment shall destroy the ungodly scoffers, when so many must, as in Zec 13:8,9,
be cut off, and so many must pass through the fire? This will be a terrible day to these ungodly ones. Nor will it be much better with those who, disappointed of the expected worldly grandeur of the Messiah, shall stumble and fall, and be snared and broken; who will reject that Messiah who appears in a character so extremely different from that they had preconceived; and when God shall punish for the rejecting the Messiah, it will be a dreadful day, as it is described, Mat 24:6-8, &c.; Mar 13:2,8,12-14; the righteous will scarcely be saved; what then will become of the sinner?
Abide; think of, as the Latin Vulgate: the forethought of those calamities would be a burden; who shall be able to stand under the heavy weight of those crosses which in that day will fall on all sorts of men?
The day of his coming: this day was from his preaching till the utter destruction of the city Jerusalem, about seventy years after the birth of Christ: days they were, had they not been shortened, which would have worn out all; but for the elects sake they were shortened, Mat 24:22.
Who shall stand when he appeareth? an elegant ingemination, to confirm the thing, and to affect us with it.
For he is like a refiners fire: some are like metals, which nothing but a fierce fire can purge; such fire shall the troubles of these days be.
And like fullers soap; another allusion; though this may express the troubles of those times somewhat more tolerable, yet troublesome enough. The boiling waters into which spotted clothes are thrown, where they lie soaking ere they are taken out; the rubbing of them with the soap, by which the clothes are whitened and cleansed indeed, but withal fretted, weakened, and in time worn out: so that day of the Lord will prove to all a day of great trial, to purge and refine.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
2. (Mal 4:1;Rev 6:16; Rev 6:17).The Messiah would come, not, as they expected, to flatter thetheocratic nation’s prejudices, but to subject their principles tothe fiery test of His heart-searching truth (Mt3:10-12), and to destroy Jerusalem and the theocracy after theyhad rejected Him. His mission is here regarded as a whole from thefirst to the second advent: the process of refining and separatingthe godly from the ungodly beginning during Christ’s stay on earth,going on ever since, and about to continue till the final separation(Mt 25:31-46). Therefining process, whereby a third of the Jews is refined as silver ofits dross, while two-thirds perish, is described, Zec 13:8;Zec 13:9 (compare Isa1:25).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
But who may abide the day of his coming?…. When he should be manifest in Israel, and come preaching the Gospel of the kingdom; who could bear the doctrines delivered by him, concerning his deity and equality with God the Father; concerning his character and mission as the Messiah, and his kingdom not being a temporal, but a spiritual one; concerning his giving his flesh for the life of the world, and eating that by faith; concerning distinguishing and efficacious grace; and all such that so severely struck at the wickedness of the Scribes and Pharisees, and their self-righteous principles; and especially since for judgment he came, that they might not see? nor could they bear the light of this glorious Sun of righteousness; and he came not to send peace and outward prosperity to the Jews, but a sword and division, Joh 9:39 very few indeed could bear his ministry, or the light of that day, it being so directly contrary to their principles and practices:
and who shall stand when he appeareth? in his kingdom and glory, to take vengeance on the Jews for their rejection of him and his Gospel; for this coming and appearance of his include all the time between his manifestation in the flesh and the destruction of Jerusalem; and so all those sorrows and distresses which went before it, or attended it, and were such as had never been from the creation of the world; and unless those times had been shortened, no flesh could have been saved; see
Mt 24:3:
for he [is] like a refiner’s fire; partly by the ministry of the word, compared to fire, Jer 23:29 separating pure doctrines from ones of dross; and partly by his fiery dispensations and judgments on the wicked Jews, when he distinguished and saved his own people from that untoward generation, and destroyed them:
and like fuller’s soap; or “fuller’s herb”, as the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions render it, and Jarchi interprets it: and so R. Jonah s interprets it of an herb which fullers use: and in the Misna t this is one of the seven things used to take out spots, namely, “borith”, the word here used; and which Maimonides u says is a plant known by the name of “algasul” and “gazul” in the Arabic language: it signifies something by which filth is washed away; and so Bartenora w says it is a plant which purifies and cleanses; and Jerom x relates that this herb grows in Palestine, in moist and green places, and has the same virtue as nitre to take away filth; agreeably to which some other versions render it “fuller’s weed”, or “soap weed” y. The Syriac version is,
“as sulphur that makes white;”
and fullers, with the Romans, were wont to make use of that along with chalk to take out spots; and so Pliny z speaks of a kind of sulphur which fullers make use of. A metaphor signifying the same thing as before, the removing of spotted doctrines or spotted persons, the one by the preaching of the Gospel, the other by awful judgments, as spots in garments are removed by the fuller’s herb or soap.
s Apud Kimchi in Sepher Shorash. rad. . t Niddah. c. 9. sect. 6. u In Misn. ib. w In ib. x Comment. in Jer. ii. 22. y “ut lanaria fullonum”, Drusius; “radicula, [vel] saponaria”, Vatablus. z Nat. Hist. l. 35. c. 15.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
With the coming of the Lord the judgment will also begin; not the judgment upon the heathen, however, for which the ungodly nation was longing, but the judgment upon the godless members of the covenant nation. Mal 3:2. “And who endures the day of His coming? and who can stand at His appearing? for He is like the smelter’s fire, and like washers’ lye: Mal 3:3. And will sit smelting and purifying silver, and will purify the children of Levi, and refine like gold and silver, that they may be offering to Jehovah His sacrifice in righteousness. Mal 3:4. And the sacrifice of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasant, as in the days of the olden time, and as in the years of the past.” The question “who endures the day” has a negative meaning, like in Isa 53:1: no one endures it (for the fact itself compare Joe 2:11). The prophet is speaking to the ungodly. The second clause is synonymous. , to remain standing, in contrast with falling, or sinking under the burden of the judgment. The reason for this is given in the second hemistich. The Lord when He comes will be like a smelter’s fire, which burns out all the corrupt ingredients that are mixed with the gold and silver (cf. Zec 13:9), and like the lye or alkaline salt by which clothes are cleansed from dirt (cf. Isa 4:4). The double figure has but one meaning; hence only the first figure is carried out in Mal 3:3, a somewhat different turn being given to it, since the Lord is no longer compared to the fire, but represented as a smelter. As a smelter purifies gold and silver from the dross adhering to it, so will the Lord refine the sons of Levi, by whom the priests are principally intended. The yashabh (sit) serves as a pictorial description, like amad (stand) in Mic 5:3. The participles m e tsareph and m e taher describe the capacity in which He sits, viz., as a smelter and purifier of silver. : to strain, or filter; a term transferred to metals, because in smelting the pure metal is allowed to flow off, so that the earthy ingredients are left in the crucible (Psa 12:7; Job 28:1, etc.). The fact that the sons of Levi are named, as the object of the refining action of the Lord, is to be explained from what is mentioned in Mal 1:6. concerning their degeneracy. Since they, the supporters and promoters of the religious life of the nation, were quite corrupt, the renovation of the national life must begin with their purification. This purification, however, does not consist merely in the fact, that the individuals who are displeasing to God will be cut off from among them (Koehler), nor merely in their being cleansed from the sins and crimes adhering to them (Hitzig), but in both, so that those who are corrigible are improved, and the incorrigible cut off. This is implied in the idea of purification, and is confirmed by the result of the refining work of the Lord, as given in the last clause of the verse. They are to become to the Lord offerers of sacrifices in righteousness. Bits e daqah does not refer to the nature of the sacrifices, viz., righteous sacrifices, i.e., such as correspond to the law, but to the moral character of the offerers, viz., that they will attend to the offering of sacrifice in a proper state of heart, as in Psa 4:6. is a constructio periphr. to denote the permanence of the action (cf. Ewald, 168, c). The tsaqeph – qaton does not compel us to separate (compare, on the contrary, Gen 1:6 for example). Then, namely when the priests offer sacrifices in righteousness again, will the sacrificing of the whole nation be pleasant to the Lord, as was the case in the olden time. The days of the olden time and years of the past are the times of Moses, or the first years of the sojourn in the desert (Jer 2:2), possibly also the times of David and of the first years of the reign of Solomon; whereas now, i.e., in the time of Malachi, the sacrifices of the nation were displeasing to God, not merely on account of the sins of the people (Mal 2:13), but chiefly on account of the badness of the sacrificing priests (Mal 1:10, Mal 1:13). Moreover, we must not infer from Mal 3:3 and Mal 3:4, that Malachi imagined that the Old Testament worship would be continued during the Messianic times; but his words are to be explained from the custom of the prophets, of using the forms of the Old Testament worship to depict the reverence for God which would characterize the new covenant.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
The Prophet in this verse contends more sharply with the Jews, and shows that it was a mere presence that they so much expected the coming of the Mediator, for they were far different from him through the whole course of their life. And when he says that the coming of Christ would be intolerable, what is said is to be confined to the ungodly; for we know that nothing is more delightful and sweeter to us than when Christ is nigh us: though now we are pilgrims and at a distance from him, yet his invisible presence is our chief joy and happiness. (Rom 8:22.) Besides, were not the expectation of his coming to sustain our minds, how miserable would be our condition! It is therefore by this mark that the faithful are to be distinguished, — that they expect his coming; and Paul does not in vain exhort us, by the example of heaven and earth, to be like those in travail, until Christ appears to us as our Redeemer.
But the Prophet here directs his discourse to the ungodly, who though they seem to burn with desire for God’s presence, do not yet wish him to be nigh them, but they flee from him as much as they can. We have met with a similar passage in Amos,
“
Wo to those who desire the day of the Lord! What will it be to you? for it will be darkness, yea darkness and not light, a day of sorrow and not of joy.” (Amo 5:18.)
Amos in this passage spoke on the same subject; for the Jews, inflated with false confidence, thought that God could not forsake them, as he had pledged his faith to them; but he reminded them that God had been so provoked by their sins, that he was become their professed and sworn enemy. So also in this place, Come, the Prophet says, come shall the Redeemer; but this will avail you nothing; on the contrary, his coming will be dreadful to you. We indeed know that Christ appeared not for salvation to all, but only to the remnant, and to those of Jacob who repented, according to what Isaiah says. (Isa 10:21.) But since they obstinately rejected the favor of God, it is no wonder that the Prophet excluded them from the blessings of the Redeemer.
Who then will endure his coming? (246) and who shall stand at his appearance? as though he had said, “In vain do ye flatter yourselves, and even upbraid God, that he retains the promised Redeemer as it were hidden in his own bosom; for he will come in due time, but without any advantage to you; nor will it be given you to enjoy his favor; but on the contrary he will bring to you nothing but terrors; for he will be like a purifying fire, and as the herb of the fullers (247) The latter clause may be taken in a good or a bad sense, as it is evident from the next verse. The power of the fire, we know, is twofold; for it burns and it purifies; it burns what is corrupt; but it purifies gold and silver from their dross. The Prophet no doubt meant to include both, for in the next verse he says, that Christ will be as fire to purify and to refine the sons of Levi as gold and silver. With regard then to the people of whom he has been hitherto speaking, he shows that Christ will be like fire, to burn and consume their filth; for though they boasted with their mouth of their religion, yet we know that the Church of God had many defilements and pollutions; they were therefore to perish by fire. But Malachi teaches us at the same time, that the whole Church was not to perish, for the Lord would purify the sons of Levi
There is here a part stated for the whole; for the promise belongs to the whole Church. The sons of Levi were the first-fruits, and the whole people were in the name of that tribe consecrated to God. This is the reason why he mentions the sons of Levi rather than the whole people; as though he had said, that though the Church was corrupt and polluted, there would yet be a residue which God would save, having purified them. The words which I had omitted are these –
(246) For “who will endure,” the Vulgate, after Jerome, has, “ quis poterit cogitare — who can think of?” etc. But this is inconsistent with the Septuagint and the Targum, and with the context. The verb indeed is capable of being derived from כל as well as from יכל; but the latter is the meaning alone suitable to this passage. — Ed.
(247) The version of the Septuagint is “ ὡς πῦρ χωνευτηρίου καὶ ὡς πόα πλυνόντων — as the fire of the crucible (or, of the furnace) and as the herb of the washers.” The word, מצרף, may be either a participle or a noun—the refiner or the place or instrument of refining. See Pro 17:3. The latter sense is most suitable to this place. “Herb” is rendered “ smegma — soap,” by Picator, — “ Lanaria -cudwort,” by Drusius, —and “alkaline salt,” by Michaelis. It was probably the salt-wort mentioned by an author quoted by Parkhurst, a plant very common in Judea. It was burned, and water was poured on its ashes. This water became impregnated with strong lixivial salt, “proper for taking,” he says, “stains and impurities out of wool or cloth.” It is not supposed that what we call “soap” was known to the Jews. — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(2) This coming of the Lord to His temple acts as a crucial test (comp. Luk. 2:35); the people ought, therefore, seriously to have considered how far they were prepared for that advent before they desired it so eagerly and impatiently.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
2. However, they will be disappointed when he appears, for he will come to execute a terrible judgment (compare Amo 5:18-20).
Who may abide who shall stand The moral and spiritual condition of the contemporaries of Malachi was such that it would be difficult for any one to endure the manifestation of Jehovah, for it meant death and destruction to everything impure.
Day of his coming when he appeareth As announced in Mal 3:1. This is the day of Jehovah (see on Joe 1:15).
Refiner’s fire Which burns up all the impure ingredients that are mixed with the precious metal (compare Zec 13:9).
Fullers’ soap The process of fulling “seems to have consisted in washing the material with some preparation of lye, beating or rubbing it, and exposing it to the rays of the sun.” This preparation of lye, which was intended to remove all impurity, is here called soap (compare Jer 2:22). That the day of Jehovah is a day of purging and purification is an idea frequently expressed in the Old Testament (Isa 4:2-4; Zec 13:9; compare Mat 3:12).
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Mal 3:2. But who may abide the day, &c. Though the Jews promised themselves great felicity from the coming of the Messiah, yet he was to be considered by them in the character of a severe and just judge: for, however they delighted themselves with the hopes of his coming, the prophet declares that it should eventually prove no matter of joy to them; for the day of his coming should be a day of exact retribution; when he appears, he shall be like a refiner’s fire, and as fuller’s soap; he shall separate the metal from the dross, and punish the impenitent with impartiality; and then they should be able to answer their old question mentioned in the former chapter, Mal 3:17. Where is the God of judgment? The divine judgments are often called a fiery trial, such as separates the genuine metal from the dross, purifies the former, and consumes the latter. The word boreth, translated soap, was, according to St. Jerome, the name of an herb growing in Palestine, and used by the fullers. This passage may be understood of the second coming of the Lord Jesus Christ, or of John the Baptist, who reproved with the greatest freedom and force the sins of the people. See Bishop Chandler, p. 53. Calmet, and Jer 2:22.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
The question is solemn, who may abide the day of his coming, whether we consider the Lord’s first coming to a sinner in a way of grace, or hereafter in a day of judgment. Who can describe the soul exercises of the former? And none among the living can know the awfulness of the latter. But, among the faithful, we know that God the Holy Ghost, in his first awakening the soul, becomes the Comforter. And the same Almighty Spirit, by a voice from heaven declared, those dead blessed that die in the Lord. This is a striking character of Christ, a Refiner and Purifier of Silver. And so Jesus is, when by his word and fire he breaks the hardened heart of sinners, and melts the soul into softness and love. Oh! the blessedness, when that Almighty Refiner hath fulfilled his promise in purging away all the dross of his people, and taking away all their sin. Isa 1:25 . Sweet is then the offering of a regenerated, renewed soul, when in Jesus, and through Jesus the offering is made! It will be pleasant to Jehovah, because it is wholly of himself; and to himself in Christ.
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Mal 3:2 But who may abide the day of his coming? and who shall stand when he appeareth? for he [is] like a refiner’s fire, and like fullers’ soap:
Ver. 2. But who may abide the day of his coming? ] The prophet Isaiah asketh “Who shall declare his generation?” Isa 53:8 , that is, the mystery of his incarnation (that habitatio Dei cum carne, which the magicians held impossible, Dan 2:11 ); or the history of his birth, life, and death (as some sense it), whose tongue shall be able to speak it or pen to write it? Who can think of the day of his coming? so the Vulgate reads this text; viz. of all the glory, graces, benefits of that day? But the Hebrew word is the same as Pro 18:14 “The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity”; and is so rendered here by the Chaldee and Kimchi. Who can sustain or abide the day of his coming, sc. in the flesh? What wicked man will be able to endure it? for, “he shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth” (that is, the consciences of carnal men glued to the earth), “and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked,” Isa 11:4 . And this is spoken of the Branch that grew out of the root of Jesse, Isa 11:1 , when that goodly family was sunk so low, as from David the king to Joseph the carpenter. With what terror struck he the hearts of Herod and all Jerusalem by the news of his nativity! Mat 2:3 . And si praesepe vagientis Herodem tantum terruit, quid tribunal iudicantis? If Christ in the cradle were so terrible, what will he be on the tribunal? The text that troubled those miscreants was Mic 5:2 , which some (taking tsagnir in the neuter gender) render thus: And thou, Bethlehem Ephratah, it is a small thing to be among the princes of Judah; out of thee shall come a ruler, &c. This Herod and his complices could not hear of without horror; as neither could that other Herod, of the fame of Christ’s mighty works, Mat 14:1-2 , such a glimpse of divine glory shone in them. “The sinners in Zion are afraid; fearfulness surpriseth the hypocrites”; and they run as far and as fast as they can from Christ, with these frightful words in their mouths: “Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? who shall abide with the everlasting burnings?” The ruffian soldiers were flung flat on their backs when he said no more but, “I am he,” Joh 18:6 . Quid autem Iudicaturus faciet, qui iudicandus hoc fecit? What will he do when he comes to judgment, who was thus terrible now that he was to be judged? (August.). Oh that the terror of the Lord might persuade people to forsake their sins, and to kiss the Son, lest he be angry. Though a lamb, he can be terrible to the kings of the earth; and though he break not the bruised reed, Mat 12:20 , yet his enemies he will break with a rod of iron, and dash them in pieces like a potter’s vessel. Be wise now therefore, O ye kings, &c., Psa 2:9-10 . And as the sun, moon, and eleven stars in Joseph’s vision did obeisance to him; so let our souls, bodies, all our temporal, natural, moral, and spiritual abilities, be subject and serviceable to Christ, as ever we hope to look him in the face with comfort.
And who shall stand when he appeareth?
For he is like a refiner’s fire] Intimating that the times of the Messiah would be discriminating, shedding times; and that he would separate the precious from the vile, the gold from the dross, the sheep from the goats: that Nabal should no more be called Nadib, the vile person liberal, the churl bountiful, Isa 32:5 ; but that good people should be discerned and honoured; hypocrites detected and detested, as was Judas, Magus, Demas, &c., slit up and slain by Christ’s two-edged sword, by his presence and preaching. Surely “his fan is in his hand,” though the devil and his imps would fain wring it out, “and he will throughly purge his floor,” mali in area nobiscum esse possunt, in horreo non possunt (Augustine), he will drive the chaff one way and the wheat another; for what is the chaff to the wheat? saith the Lord, Mat 3:12 Jer 23:20 ; he will purify the souls of his saints, “in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren,” 1Pe 1:22 . So that they shall be united to such, and separated from sinners. Fire, we know, congregat homogenea, segregat heterogenea; for what fellowship hath light with darkness? The spirit of Christ, called a spirit of judgment and of burning, washeth away (lo, here refiner’s fire and fuller’s soap) the filth of the daughter of Zion, and purgeth the blood of Jerusalem from the midst thereof, Isa 4:4 . By filth and blood understand their excessive bravery, mentioned Isa 3:1-26 , which now they had learned to call by another name, since their own names were written among the living in Jerusalem, Isa 4:3 . And here God made good to them that which he had promised, Isa 1:25 , that he would purely purge away their dross, and take away all their tin; and that though their sins were as scarlet, they should be white as snow; though red like crimson, they should be as wool, Isa 3:18 . Fuller’s soap (or soap weed, Saponaria, as some render it) is of singular use to fetch out stains and spots, and to whiten wool: so much more is the blood and spirit of Christ to whiten sinful souls, and to make men his candidates, ut fiant Candidati Dei. Such were those Corinthians 1Co 6:11 “Such were some of you” (that is, as bad as bad might be, lepers all over), “but ye are washed,” sc. by that fuller of souls, Christ Jesus. And if any ask, How washed? It follows, “but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified in the name,” that is, by the merit of the Lord Jesus, “and by the spirit of our God.” The Jews in their Talmud hammer at this, when they question, what is the name of Messias? Their answer is, Hhevara, leprous ( sc. by imputation, 2Co 5:21 Isa 53:6 , whence also he is said by one to be Maximus peccatorum, the greatest of sinners), and he sitteth among the poor in the gates of Rome, carrying their sicknesses, according to that, “Himself took our infirmities, and bore our sicknesses.” There are two things in guilt. 1. The merit and desert of it: this Christ took not. 2. The obligation to punishment: this he took, and so he became sin, that is, bound to the punishment of sin; which also he suffered, even to the effusion of his blood (that true Pactolus, agreement or rather Jordan), whereby he hath cleansed his people from sins, both guiltiness and filthiness. We have inveterate stains, which will hardly be got out till the cloth be almost rubbed to pieces: corruption cleaves so close to us, that fire and fuller’s soap is but needful to fetch it off, Jer 13:23 . Nature and custom have made our spots like that of the leopard, which no art can cure, no water wash off; because they are not in the skin only, but in the flesh and bones, in the sinews and in the most inner parts. Hence David prayeth again and again to be washed thoroughly, to be purged with hyssop, to be washed and wrung in this fuller’s soap of Christ’s blood, and with the clean water of his Holy Spirit. This is the only true purgatory, the king’s bath, the fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness, Zec 13:1 . Here Christ washeth his, not only from outward defilements, but from their swinish nature; that when washed clean they may not (as else they would) wallow in the next guzzle. Here are those sovereign muddifying waters of the sanctuary, which so wash off the corruption of the ulcer, that they cool the heat, and stay the spread of the infection; and by degrees heal the same. Hither poor sinners need not come, as to the pool of Bethesda, one by one, but as Turks to their Mahomet, Papists to their Lady, by troops and caravans, true Christians to their All-sufficient Saviour, how much more! In that pool of Bethesda the priests used to wash their sacrifices; because no unclean thing might come within the temple. The water was of reddish colour, and ran into that place in great abundance; and therefore it was called, saith one, the house of effusion. This shadowed out that every one of Christ’s sheep must be washed in the pool of his blood before they can be meet sacrifices, an offering unto the Lord in righteousness, as it is in the next verse. Other blood stains what is washed in it; this blood of the spotless Lamb whiteneth as fuller’s soap, and purifieth from all pollution of flesh and spirit, Rev 7:14 “This is he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood,” 1Jn 5:6 . The priests of the old law were consecrated first with oil, and then with blood; so was Christ, first with the Spirit, Isa 61:1 , and then with his own blood, for our benefit.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
who may abide. ? Compare Joe 2:11. Figure.
abide = endure
soap = lye; as in Job 9:30, i.e. water mixed with the ashes of certain plants containing alkali. Compare Mar 9:3.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
who may abide: Mal 4:1, Amo 5:18-20, Mat 3:7-12, Mat 21:31-44, Mat 23:13-35, Mat 25:10, Luk 2:34, Luk 3:9, Luk 3:17, Luk 7:23, Luk 11:37-47, Luk 11:52-54, Luk 21:36, Joh 6:42-44, Joh 8:41-48, Joh 8:55, Joh 9:39-41, Joh 15:22-24, Act 7:52-54, Rom 9:31-33, Rom 11:5-10, Heb 10:28, Heb 10:29, Heb 12:25, 1Pe 2:7, 1Pe 2:8, Rev 1:6, Rev 1:7, Rev 6:17
for: Isa 4:4, Zec 13:9, Mat 3:10-12, 1Co 3:13-15, Rev 2:23
like fullers’: Psa 2:7, Isa 1:18, Jer 2:22, Mar 9:3, Rev 1:5, Rev 7:14, Rev 19:8
Reciprocal: Exo 19:15 – Be ready Num 24:23 – when God Deu 8:2 – prove thee Jdg 2:22 – prove Jdg 7:4 – I will 1Sa 6:20 – General 2Ch 7:1 – the fire 2Ch 32:31 – to try him Job 23:10 – he hath Job 28:1 – where they fine it Psa 17:3 – proved Psa 50:3 – a fire Psa 96:13 – he cometh Psa 119:119 – puttest away Psa 139:23 – know Pro 17:3 – General Isa 9:5 – burning Isa 27:9 – this therefore Isa 43:2 – when thou walkest Isa 48:10 – I have refined Jer 6:29 – the founder Jer 10:10 – the nations Dan 11:35 – to try Joe 2:11 – who Amo 9:10 – the sinners Nah 1:6 – can stand Zec 13:8 – two Mat 3:11 – he shall Mat 3:12 – he will thoroughly Mat 21:12 – went Mat 24:27 – the coming Mat 25:6 – go Mar 13:1 – out Luk 3:16 – and with Luk 12:49 – come Luk 17:24 – in Joh 1:26 – whom Act 2:3 – like Act 13:40 – Beware Eph 6:13 – to stand Heb 11:17 – when Jam 1:12 – when 2Pe 1:16 – coming 1Jo 2:28 – at his 1Jo 3:2 – when
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Mal 3:2. Abide the day of his coming means to face it or feel equal to the awfulness of that day. It is because it will be very thorough in its treatment of sinners in the process of cleansing or purifying them.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Mal 3:2. But who may abide the day of his coming The LXX. read, , who shall be able to bear the day of his coming? So also the Chaldee. Quare hoc? Why this? says Grotius: Because he himself shall bear the cross, that he may come to the kingdom, and shall show the same way to his followers. The day of his coming, with respect to the Jews, includes all the time from the beginning of his preaching, to the total destruction of their temple and city by the Romans: and his coming, here and in several other places, comprehends all the effects and consequences of his coming, as well the judgments which arose from it to the disobedient, as the mercy that flowed from it to the obedient. So that the meaning of the question is, Who shall be able to stand under the weight of those trials and tribulations which at that time will fall on all sorts of men? great crosses being to be borne by the believing and pious, and great calamities to be endured by the unbelieving and refractory. In the same light John the Baptist represents the effects of Christs coming, Mat 3:7-12, Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? meaning, primarily, the wrath about to come on that rebellious people: whose fan, he adds, is in his hand, and he will thoroughly purge his floor, and burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire. For he is like a refiners fire As if he had said, Some men are like metals, mixed with much dross, which nothing but a fierce fire can purge away. Such a fire shall the troubles of these days be. The divine judgments are often called a fiery trial, such as separates the pure metal from the dross, purifying the former and consuming the latter. See Isa 1:25; Isa 4:4; Zec 13:9. Our Lord is to be understood in the same sense, Luk 12:49, where he says, I am come to send fire upon the earth, namely, a fire of trial and purgation, to try and purify the hearts and reins of men, and find out and separate the good from the bad; like as the refiners fire makes the dross of the metal to appear and fly off. And like fullers soap The word , here rendered soap, and Jer 2:22, according to St. Jerome, was an herb growing in Palestine, which the fullers used to take spots out of clothes,
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
3:2 But who {d} may abide the day of his coming? and who shall stand when he appeareth? for he [is] like a refiner’s fire, and like fullers’ soap:
(d) He shows that the hypocrites who wish so much for the Lord’s coming will not remain when he draws near: for he will consume them, and purge his own and make them clean.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
When the Lord came suddenly to His temple, no one would be able to stand before Him. Elsewhere the prophets foretold that this time would be a day of judgment on the whole world marked by disaster and death (Mal 4:1; Isa 2:12; Joe 3:11-16; Amo 5:18-21; Zec 1:14-17). Here Malachi said no one would be able to endure His coming because He would purify the priesthood, the people who stood closest to Him. As a fire He would burn up the impurities of the priests, and as a laundryman’s soap He would wash them clean (cf. Deu 4:29; Isa 1:25; Jer 6:29-30; Eze 22:17-22; Zec 3:5). The Levitical priests would then be able to offer sacrifices to Yahweh in a righteous condition rather than as they were in Malachi’s day (cf. Mal 1:6 to Mal 2:9; Isa 56:7; Isa 66:20-23; Jer 33:18; Eze 40:38-43; Eze 43:13-27; Eze 45:9-25; Zec 14:16-21). The multiple figures of cleansing and the repetition of terms for cleansing stress the thoroughness of the change that the Lord’s Messenger would produce.
"Christ’s atoning death meant that the entire sacrifice-based system could be brought to an end, its assigned purposes having been fulfilled." [Note: Stuart, p. 1354.]