You have wearied the Lord with your words. “How have we wearied him?” you ask. By saying, “All who do evil are good in the eyes of the Lord, and he is pleased with them” or “Where is the God of justice?”
Malachi 2:17
Have you ever been wearied by someone’s words? Maybe you have a friend or a spouse who is a talker and it just wears you out? In these verses, Malachi tells God's people that God feels that way about them! Only, it wasn’t that they were talking too much. It was what they were saying that wearied the Lord.
God's people were attacking the very character of God! They said “God is pleased with those who do evil.” They asked “Where is the God of justice?" They wanted God to make the wicked pay. They wanted Him to punish their enemies and bless them.
Can you relate? Do you ever feel like the wicked are prospering? Does it seem to you that God either doesn’t care or doesn’t see what the wicked are doing? If so, then maybe you too have questioned God’s justice.
Judah would soon learn the error of their ways. They would soon learn that wickedness wasn’t just a problem out there… among the pagan nations. It was also a serious problem within their own hearts. But they couldn’t see it because they had grown blind to their own sin. That’s how Judah ended up calling for judgment, when it desperately needed mercy.
There are lessons we can learn here. First, never attack God’s character or question His justice. Who are you to sit in judgment of the Almighty God?! Your perspective is far too limited to evaluate His justice. You barely see your own sin, you have no right to tell Him how to judge the sins of others.
And second, before you cry out for God’s judgment to fall on the wicked, you better make sure you aren’t counted among them. Often, you and I would be better off begging God for mercy and a changed heart, than calling for judgment.