Verse 1
Zechariah 11:1. Open thy doors,
O Lebanon — The prophet, having
signified in the foregoing
prophecy that the Jewish nation
should recover its prosperity,
flourish for some time, and
become considerable; and having
announced to Zion the coming of
Messiah her king, and
congratulated her on the
peaceable nature and great
extent of his kingdom, with the
blessed effects which his rule
should produce, proceeds now to
foretel the ruin which should
come on the body of the Jewish
nation for rejecting him, with
the destruction of their temple
and capital city. To this only
can the first three verses of
this chapter relate; for no
calamities happened to that
people, from the time of
Zechariah till that event, of
which the expressions here used
can with propriety be
understood. Lebanon itself
cannot be here addressed, which
had no doors or gates: but it is
figuratively put, either for the
temple, built of the cedars of
Lebanon, as it is Ezekiel 17:3;
and Habakkuk 2:17; or for the
city of Jerusalem, whose lofty
buildings resembled the stately
ranks of trees in a forest: but
the former is more probably
intended. And, if the Jewish
writers may be credited, such
was the application made of this
prophecy by the Rabbi Johanan,
when the doors of the temple
opened of their own accord, a
little before the temple was
burned, a circumstance attested
by Josephus, Bell. Jud. lib. 6.
cap. 5: “Then R. Johanan, a
disciple of R. Hillel, directing
his speech to the temple, said,
‘I know thy destruction is at
hand, according to the prophecy
of Zechariah:’ Open thy doors, O
Lebanon, &c.” That the fire —
Either, figuratively, the wrath
of God and the rage of the
enemy, or, literally, fire
kindled by the enemy; may devour
thy cedars — Thy palaces and
other fabrics built with cedars.
Verse 2-3
Zechariah 11:2-3. Howl, fir-tree
— By the several sorts of trees
here mentioned, seem to be meant
the several orders and degrees
of men, who should be sharers in
the common destruction: see
Isaiah 2:13; Isaiah 10:33-34;
and the notes. The fir-tree
seems to denote the lower
people, who are bid to howl
because even their superiors,
signified by the cedar, could
not withstand the storm. Howl, O
ye oaks of Bashan — O ye rich,
great, and powerful people of
the land; Bashan was famous for
its stately oaks. For the forest
of the vintage — Or rather, a
forest, the fenced one, is come
down — “As the inhabitants are
represented under the image of
the trees, the city is aptly
denoted by a forest; to which is
added by way of distinction הבצר,
the fenced one, the article
הbeing emphatic, and marking the
extraordinary strength of its
fortifications, or fence, which,
however, proves insufficient for
its security.” There is a voice
of the howling of the shepherds
— That is, of the princes and
rulers of the people. For their
glory is spoiled — Their
magnificent houses are
destroyed. A voice of the
roaring of young lions — Those
who are in the foregoing
sentence called shepherds, are
here called young lions, because
they were devourers of the
people by their extortions and
oppressions. The pride of Jordan
is spoiled — By the pride of
Jordan, those woods and thickets
are primarily intended that rose
proudly above the banks of that
river, and greatly decorated the
scene. But as those were the
receptacles of lions, they are
here, in a secondary and
metaphorical sense, put for the
residences of those princes and
grandees, who are denominated
lions in the preceding clause
for the reason now mentioned.
Verse 4-5
Zechariah 11:4-5. Feed the flock
of the slaughter — That is, the
people, who are so denominated,
because they were devoted to
ruin by the following
mischievous counsels of their
false teachers, and the
oppressions of their rulers.
This command seems to be
addressed to Zechariah; but an
insuperable objection lies
against its being understood as
given to him in his own person,
because he did not live in such
times as are here described; for
Zerubbabel the governor, and
Joshua the high-priest, it
appears, were men of
extraordinary piety and virtue;
and no doubt the rest of the
princes or rulers of the people
at this time were good men. We
can, therefore, understand it in
no other manner, as addressed to
Zechariah, than as he typified
Christ; and so God commanded him
to do that which he had
appointed Christ to do, namely,
to gather and feed the lost
sheep of Israel, which their
shepherds scattered and
destroyed. Whose possessors slay
them — Whose governors and
teachers are the cause of their
destruction. Those are not
improperly said to do a thing
who are the cause of its being
done. And hold themselves not
guilty — Are not aware of the
great guilt of their conduct;
or, act as if they thought they
might lawfully make merchandise
of men’s bodies or souls, for
their own lucre or advantage.
See 2 Peter 2:3. And they that
sell them — Who betray their
persons, or liberty, or
property, for profit; or sell
them for slaves to foreigners;
or, by their exactions and
oppressions, reduce them to such
poverty that they are obliged to
sell themselves; say, Blessed be
the Lord, for I am rich — That
is, they hypocritically and
impiously pretend to return God
thanks for having put it in
their power to acquire riches by
such ungodly practices! And
their own shepherds — That is,
their chief priests, princes,
and rulers, as above; pity them
not — Destroy them without
remorse. In Christ’s time, which
seems to be here referred to,
“the chief priests and the
elders, who were the possessors
of the flock, by their
traditions, the commandments of
men, and their impositions on
the consciences of the people,
were become perfect tyrants,
devouring their houses,
engrossing their wealth, and
fleecing the flock instead of
feeding it. The Sadducees, who
were Deists, corrupted their
judgments; the Pharisees, who
were bigots for superstitious
observances, corrupted their
morals by making void the
commandments of God, Matthew
15:6. Thus they slew the sheep
of the flock; thus they sold
them. They cared not what became
of them, so they could but gain
their own ends, and serve their
own interests.” — Henry.
Verse 6
Zechariah 11:6. I will no more
pity the inhabitants of the land
— I will no more spare them than
their shepherds do. The
inhabitants of the land are to
be distinguished from the poor
of the flock in the next verse.
By the former are meant those
who in their respective stations
were as wicked as the rulers,
chief priests, and others,
termed their shepherds,
Zechariah 11:5; by the latter,
those who were oppressed and
were piously disposed. But I
will deliver the men every one
into his neighbour’s hand —
“This verse assigns the reason
for calling the people, the
flock of slaughter. Nor can
words more aptly describe the
calamities which befell the Jews
in the war which ended in the
taking of Jerusalem by the
Romans; when the people, having
first, by their intestine
broils, destroyed one another,
as is set forth at large by
Josephus, at length fell into
the hand of him whom they had
owned for their sovereign, (‘we
have no king but Cesar,’ John
19:15,) and who completely
desolated the land for their
rebellion against him.” —
Blayney.
Verse 7
Zechariah 11:7. And — Or rather,
but, I will feed the flock of
slaughter, even you — Or,
especially you, O poor of the
flock — Zechariah here,
representing Christ the true
shepherd, says, he will enter
upon his office, and undertake
the care of the flock appointed
for the slaughter; even you, O
poor of the flock — This clause
is explicatory of the former,
and by the repetition of it we
are shown, that God, in his
charge to the prophet, as a type
of Christ, and to Christ the
antitype, distinguishes clearly
between different sorts of
people among the Jews; between
those that were poor, despised,
weak, and humble, and those that
were tyrannical, proud, and
cruel, and made a prey of their
inferiors: these were left out
of the pastoral charge; the
others were to be taken care of.
And I took unto me two staves —
These were the proper
accoutrements of a shepherd, and
these the prophet assumed as a
badge of his office, and gave
them significant names, which
are partly explained, Zechariah
11:10-14. “The shepherds of old
time,” says Lowth, “had two
rods, or staves, one turned
round at the top, that it might
not hurt the sheep: this was for
counting them, and separating
the sound from the diseased,
Leviticus 27:32; the other had
an iron hook at the end of it,
to pull in and hold the straying
sheep. The psalmist mentions
both these, Psalms 23:4, Thy rod
and thy staff comfort me.” The
one I called Beauty — Or,
pleasantness, or, delight, as
the word נועםmay be rendered,
signifying, says Lowth, his
favour, gentleness, or kindness
toward his people; which was
remarkably verified in Christ,
whose gracious words, and
beneficial works, were
conspicuous through the whole
course of his life. The other I
called Bands — Which the same
author interprets of the bond of
the new covenant, whereby he
intended to unite both the
kingdoms of Israel and Judah
under himself, as their head and
king, Ezekiel 37:22; and then
afterward to unite the Jews and
the Gentiles into one church, by
breaking down the partition wall
that was between them. Newcome
considers the former, Beauty, as
intended to “denote how
beautiful and pleasant the land
would have been, if its
inhabitants had kept their
covenant with God.” The other,
Bands, “ as signifying the union
which ought to have subsisted
between Judah and Israel.” Mr.
Scott explains “the former word
of the honour, privilege, and
ornament which the Jews
possessed, according to their
national covenant, in the
oracles, instituted worship, and
temple of God; and especially by
the ministry of Christ and his
apostles, who preached the
gospel to them first.” The
other, he thinks, means, “the
connection of the nation under
one government, and the harmony
that had, in some measure,
hitherto united them, as the
flock of God.” Many other
interpretations are given of
these two names, but as they all
are, and must be, in a great
measure, founded on conjecture,
the reader is not here troubled
with them.
Verse 8
Zechariah 11:8. Three shepherds
also I cut off in one month —
The prophet may be said to do
what God did; either in the
punishment of certain false
prophets, or of certain wicked
governors. Some think, that by
these three shepherds were
figuratively signified the chief
priests, scribes, and elders of
the Jews. Christ exposed these
as blind guides, and thereby
lessened their authority among
the people, which contributed
very much to the spreading of
the gospel. Blayney, who thinks
the common translation
encumbered with insuperable
difficulties, renders the
clause, and I set aside the
authority of the shepherds in
one month. His reasons for this
interpretation have certainly
considerable weight, but cannot
with propriety be introduced
here. One argument, however, in
favour of it, to which he
appeals, may be noticed. It
evidently suits that application
of the prophecy which most
commentators adopt. “Let us now
see,” says he, “what happened to
him, of whom Zechariah is
evidently set forth as the type.
Our Saviour’s teaching was in a
style so far superior to that of
the professed guides of the
people in his days, that, stung
with jealousy, they exclaimed,
Perceive ye how ye prevail
nothing? Ye have lost all your
wonted influence; behold the
world is gone after him, John
12:19. Even so it may be
presumed the purity and
disinterestedness of Zechariah’s
instructions may have gained so
far upon the minds of the people
as to deprive the corrupt and
selfish teachers of that
ascendency which they once
possessed.” And my soul loathed
them — Or, was straitened toward
them, as the Hebrew, תקצר בהם,
may be literally translated,
that is, I was straitened in my
affections to them. I was less
tender toward them than toward
the poor of the flock, because
they showed themselves to be
averse from my person and
doctrine. So the Vulgate,
contracta est anima mea in eis.
The LXX., however, read,
βαρυνθησεται η ψυχη μου, my soul
shall be burdened; and Bishop
Newcome, my soul was grieved at
them. The word בחלה, rendered
abhorred, in the next clause,
does not occur elsewhere in the
Scriptures, but, according to
Bishop Newcome, bears that sense
in the Syriac. The LXX. render
it, αι ψυκαι αυτων επωρυοντο επ’
εμε, Their souls howled,
bellowed, roared, or, raised a
horrible outcry against me, an
expression strikingly
descriptive of the fierce and
vehement accusations of the
Jewish chief priests, scribes,
and elders against Christ, and
of the violent, loud, and
oft-repeated clamours of the
people for his condemnation and
crucifixion. Of which see Luke
23:5; Luke 23:10; Luke 23:18-24.
Verse 9
Zechariah 11:9. Then said I,
will not feed you — I will no
longer exercise a tender
paternal care over you; that
that dieth, let it die — Or
rather, the dying let it die;
that which has a deadly disease,
let it perish by that disease.
Or, that which is ready to die,
and will not be cured, but hath
rejected the shepherd’s love and
skill, let it die. Thus Jesus
said, If ye believe not, ye
shall die in your sins. For this
seems to be spoken of the
miseries to which the Jewish
people were delivered up for
their manifold sins, and in
particular for their rejection
of Christ, which filled up the
measure of their iniquity. And
that that is to be cut off —
Namely, by the sword of the
enemy; let it be cut off; and
let the rest eat every one the
flesh of another — Either live
to be besieged till hunger and
famine make the living eat the
dead, or cruelly kill their
children and others, that they
may eat their flesh; a calamity
threatened, Deuteronomy
28:52-58; or else, by seditious
and bloody intestine quarrels,
destroy each other; all which
happened to them in the siege of
Jerusalem by the Romans.
Verse 10-11
Zechariah 11:10-11. And I took
my staff, even Beauty — Or,
pleasantness, or delight. See
note on Zechariah 11:7 :
emblematical, as of God’s
favour, gentleness, or kindness
to his people, and of the honour
and privilege which they
possessed in his oracles,
instituted worship, and temple;
so especially of God’s covenant
with them, and all the blessings
of it. And cut it asunder — To
signify that, as they had
rejected God and his favour, and
refused to comply with the terms
of his covenant, so that God had
now annulled it, and rendered it
utterly void. That I might break
my covenant — This, in some
measure, illustrates what is
meant by the staff Beauty. While
it was unbroken, the covenant
between God and the Jews was
whole and unbroken. And it is to
be observed, Christ calls it his
covenant, for he was the
mediator of it: namely, to bring
us to God in repentance, faith,
and holy obedience; and to
reconcile God to us in mercy and
grace. Which I had made with all
the people — Hebrew, כל עמים,
literally, all people, that is,
all the tribes of Israel; and
all other people that, by being
proselyted to their religion,
were incorporated into their
nation. The Jewish Church is
thus represented as being now
stripped of all its glory, its
crown profaned and cast to the
ground, and all its honour laid
in the dust, God being departed
from it, and resolved no more to
own it for his church. When
Christ told the Jews that the
kingdom of God should be taken
from them, and given to another
people, then he broke the staff
of Beauty, Matthew 21:43. And it
was broken in that day, though
Jerusalem and the Jewish people
were spared yet forty years
longer; and though the great men
did not, or would not,
understand Christ’s words
uttered on that occasion as a
divine sentence, but thought to
put it by with a cold, God
forbid, Luke 20:16. Yet the poor
of the flock, that waited upon
him — Namely, who knew the
Messiah, believed in him,
observed his doctrine, miracles,
and life, and obeyed him; who
understood with what authority
he spoke, and could distinguish
the voice of their shepherd from
that of a stranger; knew that he
was the word of the Lord — Saw
and acknowledged God in all
this, trembled at his word, and
were confident that it would not
fall to the ground.
Verse 12-13
Zechariah 11:12-13. And I said
unto them — Namely, upon
parting. The prophet, still
personating Christ, or acting as
a type of him, reminds the Jews
of his concern for their
welfare, the care he had taken
of them, and the labour he had
bestowed on instructing them;
and refers it to them whether
his services had not deserved
some reward, and, if they had,
what that reward ought to be;
saying, If ye think good, give
me my price — Or rather, my
wages or hire of service, as the
word שׂכרundoubtedly signifies;
and if not, forbear — If you
dismiss me without wages I shall
be content. So they weighed for
my price thirty pieces of silver
— That is, as is supposed,
thirty shekels, of the value of
about 2 Samuel 4 d. each, which
was the price of a slave. This
showed how little they regarded
him, or his labours; that is,
how little value the Jews would
put on the ministry of Christ;
or on his labours and sufferings
for their salvation. For,
according to St. Matthew 26:15;
Matthew 27:9, this symbolical
action was fulfilled when the
chief priests and elders of the
Jews paid that sum to Judas for
betraying Christ to them, and
putting his life in their power.
And the Lord said unto me — Unto
the prophet, personating Christ;
Cast it unto the potter — Hereby
intimating that it was a reward
only suitable to a potter’s
labour, and a price only
adequate for such wares as he
sold, which were of the meanest
value. A goodly price that I was
prized at of them — Thus the
prophet ironically remarks on
the high estimation in which he
and his services were holden: or
rather, God here upbraids the
shepherds of his people, who
prized the great Shepherd no
higher. And I cast them to the
potter, &c. — Or, cast them into
the house of the Lord for the
potter: I cast them back into
the treasury in the temple,
whence afterward they were
taken, and laid out in
purchasing the potter’s field.
This whole transaction,
performed by Zechariah in a
vision, as Lowth, Doddridge, and
many other interpreters suppose,
or, as others think, in reality;
“was designed to be an exact
representation of the several
circumstances that should attend
the betraying of Christ by
Judas, the price the chief
priests would put upon him, (to
whom, as the governors of the
temple, the money was returned,)
and the use to which the money
would be applied. And this whole
prophetic scene was transacted
in the single person of
Zechariah, just as Ezekiel
sustained the type or figure
both of the Chaldean army that
should besiege Jerusalem, and of
the Jews themselves that should
be besieged, Ezekiel 4:1-12.” So
Lowth, who adds, “This is one of
those prophecies whose literal
sense is fulfilled in our
blessed Saviour, and cannot be
applied to any other person but
in a very remote or improper
sense.” The like instances may
be seen Psalms 22:16-18; Psalms
69:21; Hosea 11:1. The Jews
themselves have expounded this
prophecy of the Messiah. “There
can be no doubt,” says Blayney,
“that this is the passage
referred to Matthew 27:9, though
under the name of Jeremiah, (put
by mistake of some transcriber
of St. Matthew’s gospel,)
instead of Zechariah. But a
question arises, how the
transaction related by the
evangelist can be said to be a
fulfilling of that which was
spoken by the prophet,
considering the striking
difference in some of the
circumstances. In the one case,
thirty pieces of silver were
given as wages for service; in
the other, they were paid as the
price of a man’s blood: in the
one they were thrown with
contempt to the potter; in the
other, they were cast down in
the temple in a fit of remorse,
and taken up by others, who
employed them in the purchase of
the potter’s field. But
notwithstanding these
differences, considering that
all passed under the special
direction of Divine Providence,
it is impossible not to
conclude, from a review of both
transactions, that there was a
designed allusion of the one to
the other, and not a mere
accidental resemblance between
them. But the quotation, it is
said, is not just: for no such
words are to be found in the
prophet, which the evangelist
hath pretended to cite from him.
To this it may be answered, that
though not the precise words,
the substance of them is given,
so that the passages are at
least equivalent,” as a
collation of them in the
original will show: see the note
on Matthew 27:9.
Verse 14
Zechariah 11:14. Then — As soon
as I saw what little value they
put upon me, and my pastoral
care over them, and services for
them; I cut asunder mine other
staff, even Bands — The prophet
did this in type, and Christ in
reality; that I might break the
brotherhood between Judah and
Israel — That I might declare,
or foreshow, that the friendship
and union which had existed
between the two tribes and the
remnant of the ten tribes, was
broken. “From the time that the
people returned from Babylon,
the Jews and Israelites had
formed one society, both of
religion and polity, which
society continued till the last
destruction of Jerusalem, when,
the Jewish kingdom being
subverted, the bands were
broken, and a disunion in
religion was made; some of the
Jews continuing attached to
their ancient law as much as
they could without the temple,
and others professing the
Christian faith.” — Houbigant.
The design of the prophet’s
commission, says Blayney, was to
endeavour to bring about a
reformation, upon which would
depend the continuance of the
brotherhood, or political union,
between Judah and Israel. The
second crook, or staff, was
therefore called Bands. But when
the commission ended without
producing its effect, the
breaking of the crook prefigured
the dissolution of that
brotherhood. What that
brotherhood was, is well
explained by Mr. Lowth, who
says, that “upon the destruction
of Jerusalem, which was the bond
and cement of all their tribes,
being the seat and centre both
of their civil power, and of the
divine worship, (Psalms
132:3-5,) the consequence was
the entire dissolution of the
nation, and the dispersion and
confusion of all their tribes,
whose families could no longer
be distinguished after the loss
of their genealogies.” Calmet
thinks that, in this verse,
Israel denotes the unbelieving
Jews, who rejected Christ, and
Judah the faithful ones who
believed in him.
Verse 15
Zechariah 11:15. And the Lord
said, Take thee yet [or once
more] the instruments of a
foolish [or unwise] shepherd —
The prophet, having hitherto
represented the good shepherd,
is now directed to assume the
dress and equipage of one of a
contrary character. As folly in
the Scripture is equivalent to
wickedness, by a foolish
shepherd here may be meant, not
only unskilful, but likewise
ill-designing governors, or
teachers, who should only intend
their own advantage, and have no
regard for the good of the
flock, or people committed to
their charge. The instruments of
such a shepherd must be suitable
to his own disposition and
indiscretion, such as a crook
armed with iron, which, whenever
it was used, would wound the
flock; and a scrip, or bag,
which contained nothing useful
for the sheep, and the like. The
prophet here follows the order
of time, that he may foretel the
madness and blindness of the
shepherds; that is, of the
priests, rulers, and teachers of
the Jewish nation, till the last
destruction of Jerusalem; who
not only disregarded religion,
and the safety and welfare of
the sheep, but even devoured
such of them as were worth
devouring.
Verse 16
Zechariah 11:16. For lo, I will
raise up a shepherd in the land
— A shepherd, in the singular
number, denotes a succession of
such shepherds as are described
in the following words. So a
succession of priests is
represented under the single
person of Levi, Malachi 2:5-6.
Since the Jews had rejected the
true Shepherd, God threatens to
send, or permit to arise, among
them, such shepherds to rule or
teach them as should be
notorious for their negligence
and avarice, their cruelty and
oppression. This may be
understood either of the blind
guides of whom Christ speaks,
and whose character he describes
at large, Matthew 23:13-33;
namely, the scribes and
Pharisees, the priests and
doctors of their law; or of the
avaricious, tyrannical, and
unmerciful princes, that should
rule them with rigour, and make
their own land as much a place
of bondage to them as ever Egypt
or Babylon had been. And when
they had rejected him by whom
princes decree justice, it was
just that they should be given
over into the power of those who
should decree unrighteous
decrees. It is probable, also,
that there is a reference here
to the false prophets and false
Christs, which, as our Lord
foretold, Matthew 24:5, should
arise. Many such there were,
who, by their seditious
practices, provoked the Romans,
and hastened on the ruin of the
Jewish nation: but it is very
remarkable that they were never
deceived by a counterfeit
Messiah till they had refused
and rejected the true Messiah.
The prophet proceeds to describe
the character of these foolish
shepherds, in the following
words: 1st, They should be
negligent; which shall not visit
those that be cut off — Or, as
the LXX. render it, το
εκλιμπανον, that which is
missing, or has wandered from
the flock; and it may signify
that which is ready to perish.
Neither shall seek the young one
— Which are most apt to perish
through weakness; he alludes to
the lambs which, on account of
their tender age, are not able
to follow the flock. Nor heal
that which is broken — Which has
received some hurt, but shall
leave it to die of its wounds.
Nor feed that that standeth
still — Not able to go forward.
Blayney renders the word, made
to stand, or set up again after
sickness. “Such,” says he,” it
is well known, require much care
to nourish and support them, in
order to their regaining
strength; a care which the
foolish shepherd will not bestow
upon them.” Or, as the LXX.
render it, το ολοκληρον ου μη
κατευθυνη, nor shall direct that
which is whole, mentioned in
opposition to those that wander,
or are diseased. 2d, These
shepherds would be luxurious; he
shall eat the flesh of the fat —
That is, instead of preserving
the best of his flock, in order
to increase it, he kills them to
indulge his own appetite: or,
enriches himself by oppressing,
or otherwise taking from those
that are persons of property:
like that wicked servant that
said, My lord delays his coming,
he eats and drinks with the
drunken, serving his own belly.
3d, They are tyrannical and
cruel to the flock. And tear
their claws [or, as it ought to
be rendered, break their hoofs]
in pieces — This implies the
same as when it is said (Ezekiel
34:4) of such shepherds, With
force and with cruelty have ye
ruled them. The unwise shepherd,
instead of being tender and
gentle with his flock, is
supposed to drag them about with
his iron crook, or to over-drive
them in rough and stony ground,
so as to break their hoofs. Or,
he imposes burdens and hardships
upon them that they are unable
to bear. Upon the whole, a
sluggish, negligent, covetous,
riotous, oppressive, and cruel
government, priesthood, or
ministry, is here shadowed out
by a foolish shepherd.
Verse 17
Zechariah 11:17. Wo to the idol
shepherd — Or the shepherd of
nothing, or of no value, as רעי
האלילshould be translated; he
who calls himself the shepherd,
ruler, or teacher of the people,
but is in reality nothing less.
So רפאי אליל, Job 13:4,
signifies physicians of no
value. That leaveth the flock —
Who taketh no care of the flock,
and minds nothing but making his
own profit out of them. Such a
shepherd is no better than an
idol, that is profitable for
nothing, (Isaiah 44:10,) and
hath only the outward form and
appearance of a shepherd. The
sword shall be upon his arm, and
upon his right eye — As he has
abused his power and his
understanding, signified by his
arm and his right eye, God shall
in his just judgment, deprive
him of the use of both those
faculties. The sword is put for
any instrument of the divine
vengeance. As the word חרבhere
rendered sword, also means
desolation, Blayney renders the
clause, Because of his arm is
desolation, and because of his
right eye: observing, “The
purport of the passage is, that
since, through the
misapplication of his power, and
through his negligence in
watching over the flock, they
are subjected to desolation or
the sword; therefore, as of
strict justice, he shall be
punished with a deprivation at
least of those faculties which
he so fatally misused.” Some
think the right arm and right
eye of the people are intended,
and observe, that the arm of the
Jews was dried up from that time
when they were no longer able to
bear arms, or to defend
themselves; as their right eye
has been darkened to the true
knowledge of the Scriptures,
which they read as with a veil
before them. |