The distinction between the righteous and the wicked!
Based on Spurgeon's sermon, "The Great Difference"
(Be sure to
LISTEN to the Audio, as you READ the text below.)
Malachi 3:16-18, "Then those who feared
the Lord talked with each other, and the Lord harkened and heard. A
scroll of remembrance was written in His presence, concerning those who
feared the Lord and thought upon His name.
"They will be Mine," says the Lord Almighty, "in the day when I make up
My treasured possession... And you will again see
the distinction between the righteous and the
wicked; between those who serve God, and those who do not."
The prophet ministered in an age of spiritual declension--one much like
our own, when men scoffed at God and divine justice. They said, "Where is
the God of justice?" (Malachi 2:17). In their blindness, they mistook
God's patience, for indifference. Yet even then, God had a remnant--a few
who trembled at His Word, who feared His name, and who lived for His
glory. Of these it is written, "Then those who feared the Lord spoke often
one to another, and the Lord harkened and heard."
Here we see the distinction between the righteous and the wicked--a
difference not outward, but inward; not temporal, but eternal.
First, they feared the Lord. This holy fear is not terror,
but "reverent awe"--a gift of the Spirit that bends the heart in worship
and obedience. The fear of God set them apart as those who walk by faith,
not by sight.
Second, they spoke often one to another. Their
fellowship was not frivolous but sacred--rooted in God, and sustained by
love for Him. Like coals gathered together, their conversation burned
brighter in the cold night of unbelief. In these humble assemblies, God
Himself was present: "Where two or three are gathered in My name, there am
I in the midst of them."
Third, they thought upon His name. While others filled their
minds with personal gain and pleasure--these saints delighted in
meditating upon God, and counting Him as the sweetest subject of their
contemplations.
And what was the Lord's response? The Scripture says, "The Lord harkened
and heard." Every whisper of faith, every sigh of longing, every quiet
word of encouragement--was written down in His book of remembrance. The
righteous were not forgotten--they were recorded, loved, and
treasured!
Then comes the glorious promise: "They shall be Mine, in the day when I
make up My treasured possession!" What comfort is here! The Lord
Himself claims His chosen and redeemed people as His precious jewels.
Though now they may be overlooked, afflicted, or despised--yet in that
final great day of judgment, they will shine forth as the sun in the
kingdom of their Father.
For that day will soon arrive, when the Lord will make a just,
final, complete, and eternal distinction between the righteous and the
wicked. No longer will the proud prosper, while the humble suffer; no
longer will the mocker question God's justice. The books will be opened,
and every secret thing will be brought to light. The faithful shall then
be owned by Jesus Himself as His "treasured possession". The wicked will
then experience the full weight of His holy judgment.
"And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into
eternal life!" Matthew 25:46