Malachi 4:5–6 (NKJV)
5 Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet Before the
coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord.
6 And he will turn The hearts of the fathers to the children, And
the hearts of the children to their fathers, Lest I come and strike the earth
with a curse.
When
God created the world, He created it a realm of righteousness and peace – a
place of blessing. When human beings rebelled against Him, however, the entire
creation became twisted and distorted, it came under judgment. Where once there
was only blessing now curses touched the animate and inanimate creation.
This
was no surpise. After all, God Himself had announced that were our first
parents to reject His Word they would surely come under His judgment. Further,
since God Himself is the source of righteousness and peace, to turn away from
Him is to sever ourselves from all that is good and right, from that which gives
us blessing; even as a lamp depends for its light upon the electrical outlet,
we depend for blessing and joy upon the living God. To reject God and imagine
that we could preserve righteousness, peace, and joy is foolish – yet this was
the sin of our first parents – and it is a sin repeated by countless millions
of human beings to this day.
The
ultimate end of rebellion is always judgment. Satan’s intention in tempting the
man and the woman was to destroy all creation, to destroy that which God had
designed and made, by bringing it like himself under God’s wrath and curse.
Human beings became his tools, his instruments, to accomplish this objective.
But
God had other plans. God intended to rescue the world not abandon it to the
folly of our first parents or to the malevolence of the Evil One. He would
rescue His creation. And it it this intention that is celebrated every Epiphany
Sunday when Jesus was revealed to foreign kings, to the magi. It is also this
intention that is announced one final time in the closing verses of the Old
Covenant:
Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet Before the
coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord.
And he will turn The hearts of the fathers to the children, And the hearts of
the children to their fathers, Lest I come and strike the earth with a curse.
Uniformly
the NT interprets the promise of Elijah’s arrival to refer to John the
Baptizer. He is Elijah who was to come before the arrival of the Messiah; he
was the one commissioned to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and
the hearts of the children to the fathers – a worthy theme for discussion in
and of itself. But I’d like you to note the reason God gives for sending John.
Why send John to restore family relationships and bring people back to the Lord?
“Lest,” the Lord declares, “I come and strike the earth with a curse.”
God sent John as the forerunner of His plan of salvation, His plan to rescue
the entire creation from the bondage in which it was trapped.
And
this is precisely what Jesus declares to us. “For God so loved the world, the kosmos, the creation which He had so
lovingly and painstakingly crafted, that He sent His only Son that whosoever
believes in Him may not perish but have eternal life…He did not send the Son
into the world to judge the world but that the world might be saved through
Him.” God acted in Christ to rescue the creation from its bondage to decay.
And how did He accomplish this?
Remember
that the ultimate end of rebellion is always judgment. In justice our rebellion
must be judged. And so, wonder of wonders, the eternal Son of God took on human
flesh by being born of the Virgin Mary, he lived among us, suffered under
Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried. He bore the judgment that was
due to us because we had rebelled against Him. And what’s more, God raised
Jesus from the dead. In this way, He broke the power of death, reversing the
curse that once enslaved all creation. He came lest the earth be struck with a
curse; he came to rescue all creation.
So
what of you? The ultimate end of rebellion is always judgment. Either we face
that judgment ourselves – the end of which will be our condemnation – or we
turn in faith to the Lord Jesus Christ, who bore the judgment for all His
people, and so receive blessing from the Lord in Him. None of us can face the
Lord in ourselves; we have all rebelled against Him. And so, as we enter into
His presence this day, He commands us to seek refuge from judgment through
Jesus. Reminded of our need for a Savior, let us kneel and confess our sins to
the Lord.
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