Verse 2
Zechariah 8:2. I was jealous for
Zion with great jealousy — With
great care that she should not,
as formerly, sin against my love
and her own welfare, and with a
great desire to do her good, and
rescue her from her enemies.
Jealousy is properly the passion
of a lover, or husband, made up
of love, care, and anger, in
their highest degrees, for his
beloved, and against all that he
thinks hurtful to her. Thus God
had greatly loved Zion, had been
careful of her honour and
welfare, and displeased with her
sins, which first hurt her, and
then with the Chaldeans, who
violated her. And I was jealous
for her — Or toward, or against
her, as להmay be rendered; with
great fury — Hebrew, חמה, heat,
or wrath, namely, for her sins.
In a note on Zechariah 1:14,
Blayney gives it as his opinion,
that the jealousy there spoken
of was God’s resentment against
his people for their disloyalty
and misbehaviour toward him. “In
this opinion,” he here says, “I
am confirmed by the present
passage, where not the least
mention is made of the
persecuting nations. That God’s
jealousy bespeaks wrath toward
the object of it, needs no other
proof than his own words,
Numbers 25:11.”
Verse 3
Zechariah 8:3. I am returned
unto Zion — “I have punished her
infidelities with all the rigour
of despised and abused love;
but, though sensible of her
fault, my tenderness has
continued, and my love is
rekindled for her, upon her
change in conduct, and return in
true repentance to me. I have
received her, restored my love
to her, and will render to her
my former kindnesses.” And will
dwell in the midst of Jerusalem
— Once more, as of old, I will
manifest my presence and fix my
residence there: according to my
promise, repeated to my people,
Jerusalem shall be my
dwelling-place: see the note on
Zechariah 2:10. Jerusalem shall
be called, A city of truth —
That is, it shall be such: the
truth of God shall be known,
believed, loved, and adhered to
therein; the true God, and he
only, shall be worshipped there,
and that in sincerity and truth,
and in the manner which he hath
prescribed. Its citizens shall
love and speak the truth, shall
practise and execute true
justice and judgment, and be
faithful to Jehovah; and the
mountain of the Lord, The holy
mountain — On account of the
pure and holy worship performed
there, and the holy conduct of
its inhabitants. We see a shadow
of the accomplishment of this
prophecy in the Jews, after
their return from captivity; but
this faithful city, this city of
truth and holiness, in the
strictness of the letter, is no
other than the Christian Church,
that chaste and faithful spouse
of Jesus Christ, Ephesians 5:27.
Verse 4-5
Zechariah 8:4-5. There shall yet
old men, &c., dwell in Jerusalem
— Namely, both at this time and
afterward. Formerly war, or
famine, or pestilence, or
wasting diseases cut off men and
women before they grew to old
age; but now it shall be
otherwise: I will bless the
people with a state of peace,
and with health and long life.
And every man, or, every one,
man or woman, with his staff in
his, or her, hand for very age —
It shall not be from weakness
and diseases that they lean upon
their staves, but mere old age
shall bring them to do it. And
the streets, &c., shall be full
of boys and girls — Strong,
brisk, and lively; playing in
the streets — As in a time of
perfect peace and security.
Verse 6-7
Zechariah 8:6-7. If it be
marvellous — If these things
promised appear difficult, and
in a manner impossible; in the
eyes of the remnant of this
people — In the judgment and
opinion, or rather to the
unbelief, of this people, who
are few in number, exceedingly
poor, and perpetually surrounded
with dangers; in these days —
Which are days of small things;
should it also be marvellous in
mine eyes — Impossible, or so
much as difficult to me, who am
the Almighty God. Thus saith the
Lord of hosts — Here God engages
his almighty power to make good
his promise. Behold, I will save
my people — Or, bring them safe;
from the east country — From
Persia and Media, which lay east
from Jerusalem, and were now
masters of Babylon; and from the
west country — From the
countries of Europe, in which
many of the Jews were, or would
afterward be dispersed. The
original words may be literally
rendered, From the rising to the
going down of the sun, including
all parts of the world. This
implies the general restoration
of the Jewish nation from all
their dispersions: an event
foretold by most of the prophets
of the Old Testament: see note
on Isaiah 11:11. The west
country here mentioned, has a
particular relation to their
present dispersion, great
numbers of them being, in these
latter ages, settled in the
western parts of the world. “The
Jews, upon the completion of the
Babylonish captivity, returned
from the north, or from the
east, but not from the west: nor
can any other time here be
pointed out, than the last
return of the Jews; when they
shall flow from all parts of the
world to the New Jerusalem, and
there constitute a new republic,
the fame of whose sanctity shall
allure and draw to it many
nations, as is foretold at the
end of this chapter. We cannot
understand this either of the
Jews or of the Gentiles, who
embraced the faith upon the
preaching of the apostles. Not
of the Jews, because the Lord
did not save at that time the
Jewish nation, which he was
about to disperse in a very
short period; — not of the
Gentiles, because the Gentiles
were not the people of God, (my
people,) before he had called
them from the east and from the
west.” — Dodd.
Verse 8
Zechariah 8:8. And I will bring
them — Though many things
interpose to hinder, none shall
prevent their returning; I will
lead the way, guard them in it,
supply their necessities, give
strength to the weak and support
to the dejected, and bring them
safe to the end of their
journey. And they shall dwell in
the midst of Jerusalem — They
shall inhabit their capital city
as in old times. And they shall
be my people, &c. — They shall
duly perform their duty to me,
and I will perform my promises
to them; they shall truly
worship me, and I will protect
and bless them. In truth and in
righteousness — If we refer
these words to God only, the
word righteousness is equivalent
to mercy, as it is often used;
and, joined with truth, implies
God’s faithfulness in performing
his gracious promises. Or, this
may be understood of the people,
implying that, as God was
faithful to them, so they should
live in obedience to him.
Verse 9-10
Zechariah 8:9-10. Let your hands
be strong — Be of good courage,
and go on with resolution and
perseverance in the work you
have begun, the rebuilding of
the temple, since you have
received such assurances from
God’s prophets, even from the
very first of your entering upon
it, that he would prosper you in
it, enable you to finish it, and
bless you on account of your
labour bestowed on it. Ye that
hear these words of the prophets
— He refers to the prophecies of
Haggai, as well as those of
Zechariah; which were in the
day, or, who spake in the day,
that the foundation of the house
was laid — The prophet speaks of
the carrying on of the building
as if it were the laying a new
foundation: see Haggai 2:18. For
before these days there was no
hire for man, &c. — Or rather,
There was no reward for man, nor
any reward for beast: so the
word שׂכר, here used, often
signifies; that is, the fruits
of the earth would not pay for
the labour of those who
cultivated it: see the margin.
For I set all men everyone
against his neighbour — I
suffered many molestations to be
given you. The enemies of the
Jews ceased not to molest them
from without, Ezra 4:1, &c.; and
civil dissensions, it seems,
prevailed within.
Verses 11-13
Zechariah 8:11-13. But now I
will not be as in the former
days — But now, seeing that ye
have proceeded in rebuilding my
temple, I will order, by my
divine providence, that things
shall happen otherwise to you
than they did before, or that
your affairs shall be more
prosperous. For the seed shall
be prosperous — This in the
Hebrew is, For the seed shall be
of peace, which seems intended
to express that they should have
peaceable times, or be a seed or
nation at peace. And, as ye were
a curse — A standing form of
imprecation; among the heathen —
Who wished that their enemies
might be as miserable as the
Jews. This was to be changed
into a blessing, to the contrary
effect; May you be as happy as
the Jews who are restored. See
Grotius and Calmet. O house of
Judah and house of Israel — By
Israel may be understood here
those of the ten tribes who
returned to Judea with the two
tribes of Judah and Benjamin.
But the mentioning both Judah
and Israel, which had been so
long separated, shows that both
the curse and the blessing here
spoken of, in their ultimate
sense, belong to the whole body
of the Jews, who, as they are
public instances of God’s
judgments now, so shall they be
hereafter of his blessings;
namely, at the general
restoration and conversion of
that nation, to which several
promises in this chapter relate.
Verse 14-15
Zechariah 8:14-15. As I thought
to punish you — As my wisdom saw
it to be fit and necessary to
punish your nation; and I
accordingly did punish it, when
your fathers transgressed my
laws in such a manner that my
justice and wisdom could no
longer suffer it; So again, &c.
— So now my wisdom sees it to be
fit, since you have been
reformed by your sufferings,
that I should be favourable to
you, bestow my blessings upon
you, and protect you from your
enemies.
Verse 16-17
Zechariah 8:16-17. These are the
things that ye shall do, &c. —
But these my promises of good to
you are conditional, and the
performance of them will depend
upon your observing the laws of
justice and righteousness; Speak
ye every man the truth to his
neighbour — Let no one deceive
another by guile or falsehood.
Execute the judgment of truth —
True judgment; and peace in your
gates — Use all means to restore
and establish peace among you.
Or, Let those who have the
administration of justice
committed to their charge
endeavour to search out the
truth from the witnesses, in the
trials which come before them;
and decide according to the law,
and do all in their power to
uphold truth and integrity, and
maintain the public peace. The
judges, it is to be remembered,
used to execute their office at
the gates of each city, and
therefore it is said here,
Execute judgments, &c., in your
gates. Let none of you imagine
evil in your hearts — See note
on Zechariah 7:10. And love no
false oath — See note on
Zechariah 5:3-4. For all these
are things which I hate — God,
as he essentially, by his
nature, loves that which is good
and excellent, so must he hate
that which is the contrary.
Verse 19
Zechariah 8:19. The fast of the
fourth month and of the fifth,
&c. — See the note on Zechariah
7:5. The siege of Jerusalem was
begun in the tenth month, and in
the fourth of the year following
the city was taken. God here
informs the people, by his
prophet, in answer to the
question proposed, chap.
Zechariah 7:3, that they might
now disuse these fasts, and lay
aside the mournful ceremonies
with which they had been
solemnized, the judgments, which
had given occasion to them,
being removed. Therefore —
Rather, but, love the truth and
peace — But take care to have a
regard to truth in your dealings
and conversation with each
other; and cultivate a meek and
peaceable disposition; which
will be far more pleasing to God
than any of your outward
performances. Such divine
instructions as these prepared
men’s minds for the reception of
the gospel. See Jeremiah 31:33.
Verses 20-22
Zechariah 8:20-22. It shall yet
come to pass, &c. — The design
of this and the three following
verses is evidently to show the
high degree of estimation in
which Jerusalem and the Jews
would hereafter be held, by
foreign nations, when those
among them, who were piously
disposed to worship Jehovah the
true God, would come to worship
him at Jerusalem, as a place of
peculiar sanctity; and those who
wanted protection would humbly
sue to the Jews for it,
convinced that the men of that
nation were especial objects of
divine favour. It must be
observed, however, that though
the prediction contained in
these verses might, in the
primary sense, refer to those
times of the Jewish republic
which should precede the coming
of the Messiah, and to the
proselytes, which should then be
made to the Jewish religion; yet
the expressions are such, that
it can scarce be doubted that
the times of the gospel are also
and more especially intended,
when many more, of various
nations, should be brought to
the knowledge of the true God,
and engaged to worship him in an
acceptable manner. There shall
come people, and the inhabitants
of many cities — Great
multitudes of different cities
and nations. Saying, Let us go
speedily to pray before the Lord
— The expressions allude to the
Jews going up in companies to
Jerusalem at the solemn feasts.
I will go also — So every single
person shall express his
willingness to go along with
them. Many people, &c., shall
come to seek the Lord in
Jerusalem — Understanding the
words literally, we find the
first-fruits of these mentioned
Acts 2:10-12; but mystically
Jerusalem means the church of
Christ. To pray before the Lord
— To perform all parts of gospel
worship.
Verse 23
Zechariah 8:23. In those days
ten men — That is, many men, a
definite number being put for an
indefinite. Out of all languages
of the nations — From many
different and remote countries,
no nation being any longer
excluded; shall take hold of the
skirt of him that is a Jew —
Christians are sometimes called
by the name of Jews, as being
confessors of the true religion,
and those to whom the promises,
made to the fathers of the
Jewish nation, chiefly belong.
In this sense especially the
word is here to be taken. To
take hold of another is a
gesture of entreating his
friendly assistance: see the
notes on Isaiah 3:6; Isaiah 4:1.
The meaning of the passage,
therefore, is, that the heathen
should apply themselves to the
Christians, particularly to
Christian pastors and ministers,
for instruction, in order to
qualify themselves for
admittance into the church. |