The Concise Ones:
The Minor Prophets
by Chuck Missler
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Last month, we reviewed a couple of the "minor prophets"
(so labeled simply because they are smaller - shorter, more terse and concise):
Joel and Amos. This month we'll take a glimpse at a few more.
Habakkuk
Why do bad things happen to good people? This is one of Habakkuk's main
themes. (This involves what is called "theodicy": a defense of God's
goodness and omnipotence in a world of evil.) Habakkuk was probably a priest
before he was called as a prophet, as was Jeremiah, and at about the same time.
He thus was also a contemporary of Daniel and wrote in the declining days just
prior to the Babylonian captivity. One of his most pivotal passages
is:
The Just
shall live by faith. - Habakkuk 2:4
This verse became the primary prompting of Martin Luther which led to the
Reformation and which also appears as a unifying quotation in a "Trilogy" of
Paul's epistles:
Who are "the Just"? Paul answers that in the Epistle to the
Romans.1 How shall they "live"? Paul answers
this in his Epistle to the Galations.2 "By
faith!" Paul focuses on this in the Epistle to the Hebrews.
3
In fact, this quote immediately precedes the famous "Hall of Faith" of
Hebrews 11! (This also is one of the reasons we believe Paul was the
author of this unsigned epistle.)
His book is not about being initiated by God into the ministry, but rather he
is initiating a dialog with God about the ministry: he is the initiator and God
is the responder. He starts out by wrestling with God and ends up worshiping
Him.
Zephaniah
Born in the latter reign of Manasseh,4 Zephaniah
was a great-great-grandson of Hezekiah, and, thus, of royal blood. His
name means, "whom the Lord hides (or protects)." While he was almost a
contemporary of Habakkuk, his focus is more distant: the Day of the Lord (as was
the focus of Joel, discussed last month).
There are many fascinating hints in this tiny but remarkable book: the fact
that in the end times, when Israel would be regathered in the land, there would
be a return to pure Hebrew;5 that Ethiopia would
ultimately bring the Messiah a special gift on Mt. Zion;6
and it even contains a hint of the Rapture!7 A very brief, but rewarding book!
Haggai
Haggai was the first of the post-exile prophets, and focuses on the
rebuilding of the Temple after the return from Babylon. (As does Zechariah on a
more visionary level; Haggai is more practical.) His focus is that work is
the measure of life.8
His audience was the believing remnant. They were the right people, living in
the right place, wanting to do the right work, and for the right reasons.
(Does that sound like us?) But their priorities were not right. They were
caught up in their own pursuits, living for themselves rather than for God's
glory. (Ouch! Does that also sound like us?)
Malachi
We sometimes jokingly call this the "Italian prophet" (by mispronouncing his
name, accenting the second syllable), but this last book of the Old Testament
also features a post-exile prophet. This book, among other things, includes one
of the most fascinating personal challenges found in the Bible. Several
times in the Scriptures, Jesus emphasizes that we are not to "test" God.
9 In fact, this issue is included among the famed
"temptations" of Christ.10 Yet, here we find an
astonishing exception, where God actually dares us to put Him to a test!
Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that
there may be meat in mine house, and prove me now herewith, saith the LORD of
hosts, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a
blessing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it. -Malachi 3:10
Here the Divine Ruler of the Universe puts Himself "into a box" of commitment
and dares us to "prove Him now herewith" by accepting His challenge! It is
the answer to all financial problems, if we will but take advantage of this
audacious promise. This book closes the Old Testament record with a prophecy of
a return "in the spirit of Elijah," and ushers in the 400-year period that
scholars call the "silent years" between the testaments. The New Testament
opens with John the Baptist, the person that ends the Old Testament.
11
Our expositional commentaries on these small but provocative and rewarding
books are featured on the facing page. In addition to the various topical
excursions encountered within these pithy little books, our commentaries also
include a number of discursive addenda: The Myth of "the Ten Lost Tribes;"
The Pictographs of Pre-Babylonian Hebrew; Research on Broken Families; The
Secrets of Personal Financial Management; Ezekiel's Mysterious 430 Years; and
Rapture Models in the Old Testament. The Holy Spirit always rewards the
diligent. Good hunting!
* * *
The Commentary on these four books is now available on CD-ROM.
**FOR A MORE IN-DEPTH STUDY**
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The Minor Prophets - Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai & Malachi - MP3 Commentary - Chuck Missler
While called "minor" prophets, these four books of the Bible contain amazingly rich studies that are often overlooked.
Click for more information - MP3 on CD-ROM
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**NOTES**
- Romans 1:17.
- Galatians 3:11.
- Hebrews 10:38.
- 686-642 B.C.; 2 Kings 21:16.
- Zephaniah 3:9.
- Zephaniah 3:10; Isaiah 18; and see our briefing pack, The Seat of Mercy.
- Zephaniah 2:3. Cf. Isaiah 26:19-21.
- Haggai 1:8, 14; 1 Corinthians 15:58.
- Deuteronomy 6:16.
- Matthew 4:7; Luke 4:12.
- Matthew 11:13; Luke 16:16.
**ADDITIONAL RELATED RESOURCES**
 |
The Minor Prophets - Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai & Malachi - MP3 Commentary - Chuck Missler
While called "minor" prophets, these four books of the Bible contain amazingly rich studies that are often overlooked.
Click for more information - MP3 on CD-ROM
|
**RELATED ARTICLES FROM KOINONIA HOUSE**
Undiscovered Treasures: Two 'Minor' Prophets - Chuck Missler
The Concise Ones: The Minor Prophets - Chuck Missler
Hosea, Can You See?: Hosea's Challenge to America - Chuck Missler
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