
Wherein?
The minor prophets reserved their sharpest rebukes for a people who had reduced faith to routine. G. Campbell Morgan brings that same prophetic urgency to his exposition of Malachi, a book many readers overlook yet which cuts to the bone of spiritual complacency. These were addresses delivered to students at D.L. Moody's Bible School in Chicago and to Morgan's own congregation, later revised for this volume. Morgan does not simply explain Malachi's prophecies; he presses them against the listener's conscience, demanding to know whether our worship is genuine or merely habit. The prophet's piercing questions, 'Wherein shall we return?' 'Wherein have we robbed thee?', become questions for every generation. This is not academic biblical commentary but wartime preaching from a man who understood that form without power is nothing, and that a Church merely going through the motions has already forgotten its God. For readers seeking substance over ceremony, Morgan offers both challenge and hope: the God of Malachi still speaks, still calls, still promises.

