Verse 1-2
Zechariah 1:1-2. In the eighth
month — This month, according to
that reckoning which begins the
year with the month Abib, or
Nisan, Exodus 12:2, falls in
with the latter part of our
October, and the beginning of
November. Haggai had begun to
exhort the Jews to resume the
work of building the temple two
months before this, and they had
actually resumed it on the 24th
day of the sixth month, that is,
in the beginning of September.
In the second year of Darius —
That is, Darius the son of
Hystaspes, as Dr. Blayney and
many other learned men have
proved to a demonstration. Came
the word of the Lord to
Zechariah — Here we see the
prophet did not run before he
was sent, or undertake a work to
which he was not called: as
also, that what he communicated
to the people, was first
communicated to him by the Lord.
Saying, The Lord, &c. — Blayney
here supplies, Speak unto all
the people of the land, saying,
&c. He supposes that some words,
expressive of that or a similar
sense, have been omitted by the
carelessness of some
transcriber. The Lord hath been
sore displeased with your
fathers — He was so long and so
much provoked, that his
displeasure at last broke out
into that flame which consumed
your city and temple, and even
desolated your country, nay, and
punished the inhabitants
thereof, and their children,
with the captivity of seventy
years; yet now he declares
himself willing to be reconciled
to you upon your repentance.
Verses 3-6
Zechariah 1:3-6. Therefore say —
Rather, but say thou unto them,
Thus saith the Lord, Turn ye
unto me — The word turn, as it
related to the people, signified
that they should change their
corrupt manners and turn to God
in newness of life; and by God’s
turning to them, was meant, that
he would take them again into
his favour, and perform for them
acts of manifest kindness,
instead of displeasure. Be ye
not as your fathers — Do not
persist in impenitence as your
fathers did. Instead of being
hardened in your evil courses by
the example of your fathers’
sin, rather be deterred from
those courses by the example of
your fathers’ punishment. Your
fathers, where are they — Where
are your disobedient fathers?
Were they not consumed with
famine and the sword, as God
threatened them? And the
prophets, do they live for ever
— Though the prophets, and those
to whom they delivered their
message, are dead, yet the
commandments delivered by their
ministry still continue in full
force; which appears by the
judgments that came upon your
fathers, for not hearkening to
them; as they themselves could
not but acknowledge. And the
same punishments will overtake
you, if you continue
disobedient. But my words — The
dreadful menaces which I
delivered; and my statutes — The
decreed judgments which I
resolved to execute on them: did
they not take hold on your
fathers? — Overtake them as a
pursuing enemy overtakes and
seizes on the object of his
hostility? In other words, Did
not the evils which I had
denounced by the prophets come
upon your fathers? And they
returned, &c. — They were forced
to acknowledge with sorrow, that
all those calamities which I had
threatened against them, and
forewarned them of, if they did
not obey my voice, were actually
come upon them.
Verse 7-8
Zechariah 1:7-8. Upon the four
and twentieth day of the
eleventh month — That is, about
three months after he had
received the former vision;
which is the month Sebat — This
was the Chaldee or Syriac name
of the eleventh month, not the
Hebrew name. This month
corresponded with the latter end
of January and the beginning of
February. Came the word of the
Lord unto Zechariah — This
second revelation contains eight
distinct visions, following each
other in the same night. “The
first vision is of an angel in a
human form, sitting on
horseback, in a low valley among
myrtle-trees, attended by others
upon horses, of different
colours. The prophet asks the
meaning, and is informed that
they were the ministers of
Providence, sent to examine into
the state of the whole earth,
which they report to be quiet
and tranquil. The angel hereupon
intercedes for Judah and
Jerusalem, which he represents
to have suffered under the
divine indignation seventy
years. He receives a consolatory
answer. The prophet is directed
to proclaim, that God’s wrath
against Judah was at an end;
that he would cause the temple
and Jerusalem to be rebuilt; and
would fill the country with
good, as a token and consequence
of his renewed favour, Zechariah
1:7-17.” — Blayney. Saying, I
saw, &c. — That is, the word
came to the prophet, who said, I
saw, &c., or, thus recited the
divine vision which had been
sent him. What now follows
(which extends to the end of the
sixth chapter) was uttered when
the people had made a great
progress in the work of the
temple, and were now to be
excited to the new labour of
fortifying Jerusalem. And behold
a man — The prophet terms him
so, according to his appearance;
till, perceiving by his answer,
Zechariah 1:10, that he had a
divine commission, he afterward
gives him the respectable title
of the angel, or messenger of
Jehovah; riding upon a red horse
— A horse of a red or bloody
colour was an emblem of the
slaughters of war, as appears
from Revelation 6:4. But the
myrtle being a tree of pleasure,
and an emblem of peace,
therefore the red horse
appearing among the myrtle-
trees, signified that the
slaughters of war were, or soon
would be, repressed or
restrained by a profound peace,
namely, in the Persian empire,
for that is here referred to:
and accordingly there was a
profound peace in it in the
fourth, fifth, and sixth years
of Darius. It is doubtful what
angel or other being was
represented by the figure of a
man on this red horse. Some
suppose Michael, whom the
Prophet Daniel seems to mention
as the guardian angel of the
Jews, or the angel presiding,
under God, over the affairs of
their nation, and taking care of
them. Others suppose the λογος,
or Son of God, is meant; which
opinion seems probable. The
reason of his appearing in a
bottom, or low place, amidst
myrtles planted by the waters,
is thought to have been to mark
out the affliction, humiliation,
and sorrow to which Judea was
reduced. The myrtle flourishes
best in shady and watery places.
Littora myrtetis lætissima, says
Virgil. See Calmet. Behind him
were red horses — With riders on
them, as appears from Zechariah
1:10, “who were angels,
Zechariah 1:11. They had horses
to show their power of celerity;
and horses of different colours,
to intimate the difference of
their ministries.” — Newcome.
Or, as others explain it, to
signify the various events of
the wars waged by Darius, which
were sometimes fortunate, at
other times unsuccessful.
Verses 9-11
Zechariah 1:9-11. Then said I, O
my Lord, what are these — What
is the meaning of these
appearances, or visions? And the
angel that talked with me said —
“This was another heavenly
minister, sent, probably, to
present the visions to the
prophet’s imagination, as well
as to explain them. Angelus
comes et interpres, “an
accompanying angel and
interpreter.” And under his
direction the prophet receives
satisfactory information from
the month of the first angel and
his attendants.” — Blayney. I
will show thee what these be —
“I will cause that it shall be
explained to thee by the angel
who stands first among the
myrtles. This may have been done
by a sign given to that angel,
or by words omitted in the
relation.” — Newcome. And the
man that stood among the
myrtle-trees — This was an angel
of an order superior to him
mentioned in the preceding
verse, who either prevents that
angel, and takes upon him to
return an answer to the
prophet’s question, or else
sends his answer to Zechariah by
that angel, as Christ sent his
revelation to St. John by an
angel, Revelation 1:1. These are
they whom the Lord hath sent —
They are the messengers or
ministering spirits of Jehovah.
And they — The rest of the
angels, implied at the end of
Zechariah 1:8, and who came
after the first; answered, We
have walked to and fro through
the earth — We have been
diligent to execute that office
which was allotted to us. And
behold all the earth sitteth
still, &c. — This must be
understood here, and in many
other places, in a restricted
sense, for all the nations with
whom the Jews had a connection.
It means here chiefly the
Persian empire, which enjoyed
peace at that time. But the
state of the Jews was unsettled:
see Zechariah 1:16 : which
circumstance gives occasion to
the following intercession.
Verse 12
Zechariah 1:12. Then the angel
of the Lord said — “Christ the
mediator,” as Bishop Hall
explains it, “prayed for the
salvation of his church, which
was now troubled, when all the
countries around were at rest.”
But, as we find by the next
verse that God’s answer to this
petition was given to the angel
interpreter, or the angel who
talked with the prophet, this
seems to determine that the
petition was made by that angel.
How long wilt thou not have
mercy on Jerusalem — At this
time Jerusalem lay without any
walls or defence, and was not
wholly rebuilt; and on the
cities of Judah — These still
lay wholly in ruins; against
which thou hast had indignation
these threescore and ten years —
There are three ways of
computing the seventy years of
the captivity, taken notice of
in Scripture. The first is,
beginning from the fourth year
of Jehoiakim to the first of
Cyrus: this is Jeremiah’s
account, Jeremiah 25:1; Jeremiah
25:11; which Daniel follows,
Daniel 9:2. Another may be
computed from the besieging of
Jerusalem in the ninth year of
Zedekiah, in the tenth month,
for which a solemn fast was kept
by the Jews: compare 2 Kings
25:1, with Zechariah 8:19. This
computation ends with the second
year of Darius, which is the
reckoning Zechariah here
follows. Or lastly, if we
compute the beginning of the
seventy years from the
destruction of Jerusalem and the
first temple, which came to pass
in the eleventh year of the same
reign, they will be accomplished
in the fourth year of Darius,
and this computation agrees with
what is said Zechariah 7:1;
Zechariah 7:5. The last two ways
of reckoning the seventy years
may be reduced to one, only by
supposing, that the prophet, in
this verse, sets down a complete
for an incomplete number, and
calls that space of time seventy
years, which wanted but little
of it: a way of speaking of
which several instances may be
produced.
Verses 13-17
Zechariah 1:13-17. And the Lord
answered the angel — “By a
voice, or impulse; and the angel
communicated the reply to
Zechariah.” — Newcome. So the
angel said, Cry thou — Now
publish what thou hearest, and
assure God’s poor, captive,
empoverished church, that he
will do her good. Saying, Thus
saith the Lord of hosts — The
God of armies, and the Father of
his people; I am jealous for
Jerusalem — I have been jealous
against, but now am jealous for
Jerusalem; my love is now raised
to a very high degree of
compassion for my people, and of
indignation against her enemies
and oppressors. The words may be
rendered, I am jealous for
Jerusalem with great zeal, for
so the word קנאהoften signifies.
So that the meaning is, I have a
great concern for the welfare of
my people, and I will not any
longer suffer them to be ill
treated. I am very sore
displeased with the heathen, &c.
— The remnant of the
Babylonians, Philistines,
Edomites, Samaritans, &c., which
had not been made such examples
of God’s severity as the Jews
were. For I was but a little
displeased —
Namely, with the Jewish nation;
and they — Namely, their
enemies; helped forward the
affliction — They added to, or
lengthened out, the time of the
affliction, namely, by hindering
the accomplishment of Cyrus’s
decree in favour of the Jews:
see Ezra 4:1-6. Or the meaning
is, “Mine anger did not rise so
high, as the punishment which
the enemies of my people
inflicted.” I made the
Babylonians instruments of my
vengeance; but they exceeded
their commission, and acted as
they were prompted by their own
ambition and cruelty; and I was
displeased with them for their
extreme cruelty, and with the
nations who insulted over my
people in their distress.
Therefore I am returned to
Jerusalem with mercies — I will
have compassion on Jerusalem,
and cause her to experience the
effects of my favour. And a line
shall be stretched forth upon
Jerusalem — That is, the
architect’s measuring-line, for
laying out the buildings. And
Jerusalem shall be wholly
rebuilt, and fortified with
walls, &c. This accordingly was
fulfilled not many years after,
as we read Nehemiah 3:4. My
cities through prosperity shall
yet be spread abroad — Over the
face of Judea: or, the cities of
Judea shall be rebuilt,
enlarged, and adorned,
throughout the land. And the
Lord shall yet comfort Zion — By
showing his wonted kindness to
her after her affliction.
Verses 18-21
Zechariah 1:18-21. Then, behold,
four horns — Horns often signify
the power of princes or people,
the metaphor being taken from
those cattle whose strength lies
in their horns. The horns here
mentioned denote the powers
which had scattered Israel and
Judah, or that should scatter
them, as a bull, in his fury,
tosses into the air whatever
opposes him. It is uncertain
whether the number four is here
used indefinitely, or to denote
that specific number; and if the
latter, what particular powers
are pointed out by it. Calmet
supposes the Assyrians,
Chaldeans, Persians, and
Egyptians. But “the most ancient
and prevailing opinion among the
Jews themselves, and perhaps the
most probable of any, is, that
the four great empires, the
Assyrian, or Babylonian, the
Persian, Grecian, and Roman, are
intended; namely, the empires
alluded to by the four beasts,
Daniel 7. By each of these the
Jewish nation hath been in turns
oppressed, and all of them have
been successively brought down
and annihilated; although, from
the depression of the last, the
Jews have not as yet apparently
derived any considerable
advantage.” — Blayney. The Lord
showed me four carpenters — Or
workmen, as Bishop Newcome
renders the word, observing,
“Vitringa supposes that the
horns were iron, and that these
were fabri ferrarii malleis
dolabris que intructi,”
blacksmiths furnished with
hammers and axes. Then said I,
What come these to do? — He
inquires not who or what they
were, but what was their
business and design. And he
spake, (or said,) These are the
horns — In order to satisfy the
inquiry of the prophet, the
angel first points to the four
horns, mentioned Zechariah
1:18-19, as if he had said, See,
there are four horns, which have
scattered Judah. The LXX. add,
και την ισραηλ κατεαξαν, and
have broken Israel. Instead of
which addition the Arabic has,
and destroyed Jerusalem. So that
no man did lift up his head — No
one had either strength or
courage to make any resistance:
so dispirited and dejected were
all the people. But these are
come to fray them — These are
principal commanders, or powers,
raised up by God to dismay and
deter them. To cast out the
horns of the Gentiles — To
break, or cast down, the power
of these nations; which lifted
up their horn over the land of
Judah — Who employed their
strength, and used all possible
efforts, to hinder the Jewish
people from flourishing again in
Judea. Observe, reader, in what
way soever the church is
threatened with mischief, and
whatever opposition is given to
its interests, God can find out
ways and means to check the
force, or restrain the wrath of
its enemies, and make it turn to
his praise. |