Remember ye the law of Moses my servant, which I
commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel, with the statutes and judgments.
(Malachi 4:4)
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.
Since the Jews are to be 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 comes.
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. (Commentaries)
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