Verses 1-3
Haggai 2:1-3. In the seventh
month, &c. — For the further
encouragement of the people to
proceed in rebuilding the
temple, Haggai was sent again to
them, about a month after he had
been sent the first time, to
assure them from God, that the
glory of this latter temple, how
little appearance soever there
might be of it now, should be
greater than that of the former.
This message, or prophecy, of
Haggai, was communicated a
little before Zechariah was sent
to them for the like purpose.
Who is left among you that saw
this house in her first glory? —
About sixty-six years had
elapsed from the destruction of
the former temple, (before
Christ 587,) to the time when
this prophecy was delivered;
(see notes on Ezra 6:15, and
Blair’s tables;) nevertheless,
it appears by this question of
the prophet, that some of the
Jews there present had seen the
former temple when young, before
they were carried to Babylon,
and could remember what a
magnificent building it was. Is
it not in your eyes as nothing —
That is, in comparison of the
former. The words are an elegant
Hebraism. We learn from Ezra
3:12, (where see the note,) that
when the foundation of the
second temple was laid, in the
second year of Cyrus, many of
the ancient men, that had seen
the first house, wept to see how
much this second was likely to
fall short of the glory of it.
Undoubtedly the slender
substance of the Jews at this
time, and the haste they were in
to rebuild the temple, that they
might have a place for public
worship, made them lay the
foundation of it at first of
much smaller dimensions than
those of the former temple, and
also to build it with less
strength and magnificence.
Verse 4-5
Haggai 2:4-5. Yet now be strong,
O Zerubbabel — Do thou and all
the rest of you exert
yourselves, and proceed in
rebuilding the temple with
spirit and pleasure; for I am
with you, saith the Lord of
hosts — And will enable you to
bring the work to a happy issue.
According to the word that I
covenanted with you — I will
fulfil to you what I promised to
your ancestors, namely, that I
would be their God, and that it
should be well with them, if
they obeyed my voice; that I
would keep them from evil, and
moreover, bless and prosper
them; (see the margin;) and so
will I act toward you upon the
same conditions, namely, your
obeying my voice. So my Spirit
remaineth — Rather, So my Spirit
shall remain among you, namely,
as a source of strength and
courage, of wisdom and
understanding, of zeal and
fervency, to carry you through
this work. Fear ye not — Let no
discouraging fears or
apprehensions have place in your
minds, or weaken your hands.
Verse 6-7
Haggai 2:6-7. Yet once — Or,
once more, ετι απαξ, as the LXX.
render it, whom St. Paul
follows, Hebrews 12:26. The
phrase implies such an
alteration, or change of things,
as should be permanent, and
should not give place to any
other, as the apostle there
expounds it. The expression,
says Bishop Newcome, “has a
clear sense, if understood of
the evangelical age: for many
political revolutions succeeded,
as the conquest of Darius
Codomanus, and the various
fortunes of Alexander’s
successors; but only one great
and final religious revolution;”
namely, a revolution, not
introductory to, but consequent
upon the coming of the Messiah;
the change of the Mosaic economy
for that of the gospel. A little
while — Though it was five
hundred years from the time of
the uttering of this prophecy to
the coming of the Messiah, which
was the event here intended, yet
it might be called a short time,
when compared with that which
had elapsed from the creation to
the giving of the law, or from
the giving of the law to the
return of the Jews from Babylon,
and the erection of this second
temple. And I will shake the
heavens and the earth, &c. —
These and similar figurative
expressions are often used in
the prophetical Scriptures, to
signify great commotions and
changes in the world, whether
political or religious. The
political ones here intended
began in the overthrow of the
Persian monarchy by Alexander,
within two centuries after this
prediction, which event was
followed by commotions,
destructive wars and changes
among his successors, till the
Macedonian empire, which had
overturned the Persian, with the
several kingdoms into which it
was divided, was itself subdued
by the Roman. The expressions,
the sea and the dry land, are
added as a particular
explication of what is meant by
the general term earth, and
signify only what is expressed
without a figure in the next
clause. I will shake all nations
— All nations were more or less
involved in, and shaken by, the
wars that overthrew the Persian
kingdom, and still more in and
by those that overturned the
empire of the Greeks. Grotius
explains this prophecy as being,
in part, at least, accomplished
by the extraordinary phenomena
in the heavens, and on the
earth, at the birth, death, and
resurrection of Christ, and
mission of the Holy Spirit. But
certainly the other is the
interpretation chiefly intended.
And the Desire of all nations —
Christ, most desirable to all
nations, and who was desired by
all that knew their own misery,
and his sufficiency to save
them; who was to be the light of
the Gentiles, as well as the
glory of his people Israel: such
a guide and director as the wise
men among the heathen longed
for; and whose combat was the
expectation of the Jewish
nation, and the completion of
all the promises made to their
fathers. And I will fill this
house with glory — A glory not
consisting in the magnificence
of its structure, its rich
ornaments, or costly sacrifices,
which would have been only a
worldly glory; but a glory that
was spiritual, heavenly, and
divine.
Verse 8-9
Haggai 2:8-9. The silver is mine
— Solomon’s temple was more
richly adorned with silver and
gold than this, and I, that am
the Lord of all the world, could
easily command the riches of it,
and bring them together for
beautifying this my house, if I
took delight in, or wanted any
thing of this sort. A like
expression as this is used,
Psalms 50:10, with regard to
sacrifices. The glory of this
latter house, &c. — The glory of
this second temple shall exceed
that of the former, not in
riches or costly ornaments, but
in this, that there the prince
of peace shall make his
appearance, and there the gospel
of peace shall be preached and
published. See Isaiah 9:6; Micah
5:5; Ephesians 2:14.
“Notwithstanding the former
temple had the Urim and Thummim,
the ark containing the two
tables of the law, (written with
the finger of God,) the pot of
manna, Aaron’s rod that budded,
and the cloud that overshadowed
the mercy-seat, and was the
symbol of the divine presence;
yet the glory of this latter
house shall be greater by the
appearance, doctrines, and
miracles of Christ. Some
interpret this passage of the
richer decorations in the latter
temple; but it may well be
doubted whether the second
temple could exceed that of
Solomon in the splendour and
costliness of its ornaments. The
presumption is, that the former
temple was more magnificent and
sumptuous in its furniture than
the latter, though inferior to
it in point of magnitude.
Prideaux values the gold, with
which the holy of holies alone
was overlaid, at four million
three hundred and twenty
thousand pounds sterling. P.I.B.
3. Ann. 534.” — Newcome. What
were the magnificence and beauty
which adorned the former temple?
What was even the Shechinah, the
resplendent cloud of glory,
which rested upon the
mercy-seat, compared with the
emanations of the divine
perfections from Immanuel: the
almighty power and boundless
goodness exerted in acts of
beneficence which shone forth in
Christ, when the blind and the
lame came to him in the temple,
and he healed them; and the
infinite wisdom displayed in his
divine discourses, when he
taught daily in the temple, Luke
19:47, and his doctrine dropped
as the rain, and his speech
distilled as the dew? And never,
surely, was such peace given to
men by any other as was imparted
by and through him; peace
between God and man, between
Jews and Gentiles, and between
man and man, wherever his
religion is received in the
truth and power of it: peace,
spiritual, internal, and
heavenly; peace of conscience,
tranquillity of mind, serenity
of heart; a peace which, as the
apostle observes, passeth all
understanding, all purely
rational conception, or, which
no one can comprehend, save he
that receives it.
Verses 10-14
Haggai 2:10-14. In the four and
twentieth day of the ninth month
— At which time, as appears from
Haggai 2:16; Haggai 2:19, (the
materials being collected,) they
began to go on again with the
building of the temple. Ask now
concerning the law — What the
law saith in this case. The
question was put to the priests,
whose office it was to put a
difference between holy and
unholy, between clean and
unclean, Leviticus 10:10 : that
is, to be thoroughly acquainted
with all the ceremonial laws,
and to instruct others
concerning them. If one bear, or
carry, holy flesh — Part of the
sacrifice, legally sanctified,
or made holy, by the altar on
which the whole was sanctified;
in the skirt — In the lap; of
his garment — Or in any other
cloth; and if this cloth touch
any common thing, as bread, &c.,
shall that become legally holy?
And the priests said, No — By
the answer of the priests in
this, compared with the
following verse, we find, that
legal holiness was not so easily
communicated as legal impurity:
for the holy flesh did not make
any thing that was touched by it
holy; but the touch of a person
who was unclean rendered holy
things unclean. Thus is vice
much more easily contracted than
virtue! Broad and easy is the
way that leadeth to sin. but
narrow and difficult is that
which leads to holiness! Then
said Haggai — Now a second case
is proposed; If one that is
unclean by a dead body touch any
of these — Namely, the things
mentioned in the former verse,
bread, pottage, wine, &c.; shall
it be unclean? — Shall that
which the unclean person doth
touch become unclean? Though a
touch of what is holy will not
make holy, yet, will not a touch
of what is polluted defile? and
the priests answered, It shall
be unclean — The law was plain
in this case: see Numbers 19:11.
The least defect is sufficient
to make a thing evil, whereas,
to make it good and perfect, a
concurrence of all good
qualities is requisite. So is
this people before me — In like
manner, saith God, your neglect
of my temple, and your disregard
of my worships have made you
unclean, as if you had
contracted legal pollution by
touching a dead body; and
rendered every thing you
undertake, even the sacrifices
you offer on my altar, unclean
and unacceptable.
Verses 15-17
Haggai 2:15-17. And now,
consider from this day, &c. —
Reflect on what has happened to
you, from the time that a stop
was put to the building of the
temple, after the first
foundation of it was laid, till
you began again to rebuild it.
And upward — Or, forward. He had
bid them look back, Haggai 1:5;
Haggai 1:7; now he bids them
look forward. Since those days —
All the time the temple lay
neglected. When one came to a
heap — Namely, of corn, which
seemed likely to produce twenty
measures; there were but ten —
Only half the quantity expected
was found to be produced,
through the poverty of the ear.
The verse, it must be observed,
according to the present
rendering, is very elliptical;
but if the first clause be
explained by the second, which
it ought to be, the sense will
clearly appear to be this: When
one came to a heap for twenty
measures; that is, when a person
came to a heap of corn on his
floor, either of sheaves
unthrashed, or of corn
unwinnowed, and expected that it
would have produced twenty
measures after it was thrashed
and winnowed, to his great
disappointment he had but ten
out of it. Such also was the
case of those who came to draw
out fifty measures of wine from
the wine-press. I smote you with
blasting —
Burning and scorching winds; and
with hail — Which even in cold
countries many times destroys
corn, fruits, and trees, by its
violence; but in those hot
countries does it much oftener.
In all the labours of your hands
— In all that you sowed or
planted; yet ye turned not to me
— Ye did not lay my judgments to
heart, nor consider that they
were inflicted for your sin, in
neglecting to rebuild my temple,
and restore my worship in it.
Verse 18-19
Haggai 2:18-19. Consider now,
from this day and upward — That
is, forward. In the 15th verse
the prophet exhorted them to
reflect upon the calamities they
had suffered, from the time the
rebuilding of the temple was
intermitted. Now he bids them
look forward, from the day the
building was recommenced, (see
Haggai 1:15,) and they would
find a visible change in their
affairs for the better. Even
from the day that the foundation
was laid, &c. — The prophet
expresses the carrying on of the
building as if it were laying
the foundation anew, because the
work had been so long
interrupted; (compare Zechariah
8:9;) but yet there is no doubt
to be made that they built upon
the same foundation which had
been laid some years before, of
which we have an account Ezra
3:8, and did not lay a new
foundation. Is the seed yet in
the barn — Is the harvest
already laid up in the barn? or
any fruits of the earth gathered
in? No, certainly: for this is
but the ninth month, (answering
to our November,) when no
judgment can be formed what will
be the increase of the year
following; yet, from this time,
I promise you the blessing of a
fruitful year, as an
encouragement to you to carry on
the building. Yea, as yet the
vine and the fig-tree hath not
brought forth — No sign yet
appears what vintage you shall
have, what store of wine, oil,
figs, and pomegranates; yet by
the word of God I tell you, you
shall be blessed in them all,
and have a large produce.
Verses 20-22
Haggai 2:20-22. Again the word
of the Lord came unto Haggai —
Probably on the same day that he
uttered what precedes, from
Haggai 2:10; speak to
Zerubbabel, governor of Judah —
The same title which is given to
him chap. Haggai 1:1; in which
character he was the type of the
Messiah, to whom the following
words chiefly belong. I will
shake the heavens and the earth
— I will cause great commotions,
and bring great things to pass.
I will overthrow the throne of
kingdoms — This is supposed to
be spoken of the overthrow of
the Persian empire, in Egypt,
which, lying near to the Jewish
territories, was regarded by
them with great awe; and
therefore its subversion was
foretold to them, to encourage
them to go on in the rebuilding
of the temple. I will destroy
the strength of the kingdoms of
the heathen — Or, of the
nations. The strength of the
Persians, whose empire consisted
of many kingdoms, or nations,
was broken in a most remarkable
manner by the little country of
Greece. Such vast overthrows,
both by sea and land, as they
received from the Greeks, are
scarcely to be paralleled. The
horses and their riders shall
come down — Shall fall to the
earth; every one by the sword of
his brother — That is, of his
fellow-creature. Perhaps the
different nations which should
be concerned in these
commotions, namely, the
Persians, Egyptians, and Greeks,
are here called brothers,
because they were all idolaters,
or worshippers of fictitious
gods.
Verse 23
Haggai 2:23. In that day will I
take thee, O Zerubbabel, &c. —
Amidst the commotions which I
will cause in the world, I will
so order it, that Judea shall
remain safe under thy
government, O Zerubbabel, and
thy successors, and be molested
by none. A signet, or seal,
particularly a royal one, is
kept with great care; therefore
the promise of making Zerubbabel
as a signet, signified keeping
him safe, or preserving him as a
person of great estimation. For
I have chosen thee — To be the
ruler of my people. This whole
prophecy, from Haggai 2:21,
addressed to Zerubbabel, is
considered by Bishop Chandler,
Mr. Lowth, and many others, as
parallel to that contained in
Haggai 2:6-9; that the same
commotions and shaking of
nations are intended in both
passages; and therefore that by
Zerubbabel here, the Messiah,
typified by him, is chiefly
intended. That the prediction
could not be properly and fully
accomplished in Zerubbabel,
personally considered, is
evident, as in all likelihood he
did not live many years after
the finishing of the temple, and
certainly did not see any of
those great changes here
foretold; and therefore the
Messiah must be here described
under the name of Zerubbabel, as
he elsewhere is under that of
David. He is, indeed, the signet
on God’s right hand; for all
power is given to him, and
derived from him, he being
constituted Head of the church,
and Judge of the world. In him
the great charter of the gospel
is signed and sanctified, and it
is in him that all the promises
of God are yea and amen. And
what is foretold, Haggai 2:22,
respecting the overthrow of the
throne of kingdoms, may probably
ultimately refer to his second
coming, or to that illustrious
display of divine power, whereby
a period shall be put to all
anti-christian empires, and the
kingdoms of this world shall be
made the kingdoms of our God and
of his Christ, Daniel 2:44;
Revelation 11:15. |