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The
Sun of Righteousness
Malachi: The Sun of
Righteousness Will Rise
.
In the final Old Testament picture of Christ, we meet a Savior who
does for us what we could never do for ourselves. When he comes, he will “rise”
as the sun rises in the sky. When he comes, he will banish the darkness, his
light will fill the world, he brings the light of God’s righteousness with him.
At Bethlehem a baby arrived from heaven “with healing in his wings.” But here
is the good news of Christmas: Jesus came to save sinners. He came for you! He
rises with healing in his wings. Jesus is all you need for everything you will
face today - He heals the brokenhearted, and he sets the captive free
Ray Pritchard
“The Sun of Righteousness will rise with healing
in his wings” - (Malachi 4:2).
The Old Testament ends with one final picture of
our Lord.
When he comes, he will “rise” as the sun rises in the sky.
When he comes, he will banish the darkness.
When he comes, his light will fill the world.
But his coming does more than bring light into
the darkness.
When he comes, he brings the light of God’s
righteousness with him.
Here is good news for every weary sinner who
feels the heavy weight of his own failures.
Are you a sinner? If you are honest, you must
answer yes.
Have you fallen short of the glory of God? You
must answer yes.
Do you despair of ever pleasing God? Think
before you answer!
In one of her books, Ruth Graham, the late wife
of Billy Graham, writes of a day when she felt overwhelmed by a sense of her
own sinfulness:
“I am a weak, lazy, indifferent character;
casual when I should be concerned, concerned when I should be carefree;
self-indulgent, hypocritical, begging God to help me when I am hardly willing
to lift a finger for myself; quarrelsome where I should be silent, silent where
I should be outspoken; vacillating, easily distracted and sidetracked.”
Who among us could not say the same thing,
multiplied many times over? Then she adds these words:
"What would I do," wrote Chalmers, "if God did not justify
the ungodly?"
And "What would I do," said
Thomas Boston of Scotland, "but for the imputed righteousness?"
There it is. All that I am not, He is; all
that I am and should not be, He forgives and covers (from It’s My Turn, pp. 104-105).
In the final Old Testament picture of Christ, we
meet a Savior who does for us what we could never do for ourselves.
At Bethlehem a baby arrived from heaven “with
healing in his wings.”
Here is the doctrine of justification in one
simple question: "What would I do if God did not justify the ungodly?"
Ask yourself that question. What would you do?
Where would you go? Where would you be if God
were not willing to justify the ungodly?
But here is the good news of Christmas: Jesus
came to save sinners.
Are you a sinner? He came for you! Is your heart
heavy today? He rises with healing in his wings.
Jesus is all you need for everything you will
face today.
He heals the brokenhearted, and he sets the
captive free.
Lord Jesus, we come to you just as we are. We come broken and ask
you to heal us.
We come guilty and ask you to make us right with
God.
We do not come because we are worthy, but
because you are the Sun of Righteousness.
Heal us and help us and make us whole again.
Amen.
Musical bonus: I hope you enjoy this rousing version of Hark! The Herald Angels Sing by Pentatonix.
You can reach the author at ray@keepbelieving.com. Click here to sign up for the free email sermon.
Dr. Ray Pritchard
Author, Speaker, President of Keep Believing Ministries
https://www.christianity.com/blogs/dr-ray-pritchard/malachi-the-sun-of-righteousness-will-rise.html
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