Verse 1
Zechariah 13:1. In that day —
When the Lamb of God shall be
offered up a sacrifice for
mankind, and the gospel shall be
preached, in which the glad
tidings of our redemption are
published. This seems to be a
continuation of the prophecy
begun at the ninth verse of the
preceding chapter; and the
meaning to be that, through the
atoning sacrifice of the
Messiah, the repentance and
humiliation there described
should be accepted of God, and
followed with a full pardon and
gracious communication of
sanctifying grace to the
penitent. There shall be a
fountain opened — “The blood of
Christ, which cleanseth from all
sin, (1 John 1:7,) is manifestly
here intended, the Jews being,
upon their repentance and
conversion, to be admitted to
all the privileges of the
Christian covenant.” Probably
there may be an allusion in the
words “to the one great spring
at Jerusalem, (mentioned Isaiah
7:3,) which served the uses of
king and people.” See Vitringa.
The spouse of Christ, his
church, is a spring shut up, a
fountain sealed, Song of Solomon
4:12; but Christ is to sinners a
fountain opened: under the law,
he was as the waters of the
temple for the Jews; but now his
merits are opened to us
Gentiles, free for all, and of
easy access, and of sovereign
virtue to heal. For sin and for
uncleanness — The original words
here used, חשׂאתand נדה, are
“legal terms; the former denotes
sin generally, or any
transgression of the law which
required atonement, and is
sometimes put for the means of
purification from it, Numbers
19:9-17; the latter is used for
that uncleanness, or legal
defilement, which secluded a man
from all intercourse with God,
and holy things. Now whatever
efficacy the blood of bulls and
of goats, and the ashes of a
heifer, sprinkled on the
unclean, had to purify from
legal sin and defilement, the
same is ascribed to the blood of
Christ in the Christian
dispensation, for purging the
conscience of a sinner from the
guilt of dead works, or moral
pollution.” — Blayney. The legal
washings were but shadows and
types of this matchless,
healing, purifying fountain,
which never fails to heal all
those that apply to it. It must
be observed, likewise, that
spiritual graces and influences,
communicated by the Holy Spirit,
are also compared to a fountain,
Joel 3:17; and by these sinners
are represented as being washed
and cleansed, Ezekiel 36:25;
Titus 3:5.
Verse 2
Zechariah 13:2. I will cut off
the names of the idols — I will
utterly destroy idols and
idolatry. The Jews were
forbidden to mention the names
of the heathen idols, Exodus
23:13; Joshua 23:7; and when
idolatry should be utterly
extirpated, the names of the
idols should be buried in
oblivion. “It has been urged, in
proof that this prophecy was
uttered before the Babylonish
captivity, that idolatry and
groundless pretensions to
prophecy were common among the
Jews at that time, which has not
been the case since. But,
admitting the Jews not to have
been addicted to idolatry, or
false prophesying, at any
particular period, [since the
Babylonish captivity,] who can
say they will not fall into both
those transgressions at some
future time? It is probable they
will do so; for Ezekiel,
confessedly prophesying of the
latter times, when Israel and
Judah, incorporated again into
one nation, shall return into
their own land, says, to the
same effect as Zechariah,
Neither shall they defile
themselves any more with their
idols, nor with their detestable
things, nor with any of their
transgressions, Ezekiel 37:23.
But besides, supposing the Jews
themselves to remain untainted
with those corruptions, it
surely will not be denied that
they do and may still prevail
among other nations, who may be
included in the term הארצ, taken
in its most general sense, the
earth; and so I conceive it
should be: for we are taught to
expect that the conversion of
the Jews will be followed by a
further reformation in the
world, Romans 11:15; and that
the time will come, when the
kingdoms of this world shall
become the kingdoms of our God
and of his Christ, Revelation
11:15; and the beast, the emblem
of idolatry, and with him the
false prophet, shall be cast
into a lake of fire and
brimstone, Revelation 19:2.” —
Blayney. I will cause the
prophets — The false prophets;
and unclean spirit — This seems
to mean those that prophesy by
means of an unclean spirit: see
Acts 16:16; Revelation 16:13;
and what is said in the next
verse of any one that shall
prophesy, must be understood of
those that undertake to prophesy
by means of an impure spirit, or
other false pretences.
Verse 3
Zechariah 13:3. And when any
shall yet prophesy — Namely,
falsely; then his father and his
mother shall say unto him — His
dearest friends shall discourse
with him, and inform him what
the law of Moses directs in this
case; Thou shalt not live — This
probably is not to be considered
as the condemnatory sentence;
for, being private persons, they
had no right to pronounce such a
sentence; but it is a repetition
of the law, which saith, that a
false prophet ought not to be
suffered to live, Deuteronomy
13:6-8. For thou speakest lies
in the name of the Lord — Thou
fallest under the sentence of
the law. And his father and his
mother shall thrust him through
— Even the parents of such a
person shall be forward to put
in execution against him the
penalties inflicted by the law
upon false prophets and
seducers. “They shall treat such
a one in the same manner as
their fathers did the true
prophet, the Messiah; they shall
pierce or thrust him through.” —
Lowth. The purport of this
passage seems to be, that very
vigorous and decisive measures
shall then be taken against
every kind and degree of
idolatry.
Verse 4-5
Zechariah 13:4-5. The prophets
shall be ashamed every one of
his vision — That is, of the
extraordinary communication
which he pretended to have
received, when he uttered a
prophecy which he knew to be
false. Neither shall they wear a
rough garment to deceive — The
true prophets were wont to wear
rough or hairy garments, and
therefore the false ones did the
same, in order to pass off their
impostures; but the words here
imply that they should do this
no longer. But he shall say, I
am no prophet — The name they so
much affected before, they shall
quite disown. I am a husbandman;
man taught me to keep cattle
from my youth — Disclaiming all
pretensions to the character of
a prophet, he shall profess
himself to be no other than a
plain, ordinary labouring man,
employed in husbandry from his
youth. Mr. Harmer’s observations
on this passage, which he justly
parallels with the declaration
of Amos 1:14, go to show the
incompatibility of such active
and laborious employments with
the retired and sedentary life
of those who were trained up in
the schools of the prophets, in
order to qualify themselves for
that profession.
Verse 6
Zechariah 13:6. What are these
wounds in thy hands — “Two
ancient usages,” Blayney thinks,
“are alluded to; the one, that
of the idolatrous priests and
prophets, who sought to engage
the attention and favour of
their deity by cutting and
slashing themselves, as the
priests of Baal did, 1 Kings
18:28; the other, that of those
who cut themselves, as a token
of their grief and mourning for
their deceased relations and
friends:” see note on Jeremiah
16:6. It appears, also, from
Jeremiah 48:37, that these
cuttings were performed on the
hands in particular. “When
therefore the man, now ashamed
of his pretensions to prophesy,
came to be challenged for those
scars that were visible on his
hands, he would deny them to
have proceeded from any
idolatrous cause; but would have
them thought to be marks left by
those wounds which he gave
himself in the house of his
relations and friends, in the
paroxysms of his grief for the
loss of them.” The word מכות,
however, here rendered wounds,
may be translated strokes, or
marks, and is thought by many
learned interpreters to signify
some particular marks or
characters, imprinted on the
body of the person here spoken
of, in honour of the particular
God he worshipped. Thus the
worshippers of Bacchus had an
ivy leaf imprinted on their
bodies. These impressions were
most frequently made on the
hands, to which the expression,
Revelation 13:16, receiving the
mark of the beast on the right
hand, alludes; so that,
according to this
interpretation, the meaning of
what is said here must be that,
in the times here spoken of,
inquiry would be made of those
in whose hands any marks or
characters were perceived, by
what means they came there, and
what they signified. These
marks, Bishop Lowth observes, on
Isaiah 44:5, “were made by
punctures rendered indelible by
fire, or by staining; thus the
slave was marked with the name
of his master; the soldier of
his commander; the idolater with
the name or ensign of his god.
And the Christians seem to have
imitated this practice, by what
Procopius says, ‘Because many
marked their wrists, or their
arms, with the sign of the
cross, or with the name of
Christ.’“ Then he shall answer,
Those with which I was wounded
in the house of my friends —
This is given as the answer
which the person who had been
addicted to idolatry, and had
received the marks of some false
god in his hands, would make to
the above-mentioned inquiry; he
would conceal the truth, and
pretend that they were not marks
belonging to any god, but marks
which he wore in his flesh by
way of honour to, or in token
of, his dependance on the family
which had taken him under their
patronage. Several interpreters
understand this verse of the
wounds of Christ, and the rather
because a remarkable prophecy of
his being wounded for our
transgressions, by the sword of
divine justice, follows in the
next verse. And certainly the
passage is very capable of such
an interpretation; for, as the
Jews professed to be the friends
of the promised Messiah, and he
had conducted himself in the
most friendly manner toward
them; when he was scourged,
nailed to the cross, and
pierced, he might, with great
propriety, be said to have been
wounded in the house of his
friends.
Verses 7-9
Zechariah 13:7-9. Awake, O
sword, against my shepherd —
Here “the prophet goes back to
the great subject of prophecy,
the Messiah, after having
foretold some events posterior
to his appearance; and he then
proceeds to other events
subsequent to that grand epocha
in the history of the Jews, and
of mankind; some near it, and
some remote.” — Newcome. That
the sufferings and death of
Christ are here predicted, is
certain from Christ’s having
applied this prophecy to
himself, a few hours before he
was apprehended in order to be
put to death, as St. Matthew
(Matthew 26:31) and St. Mark
(Mark 14:27) inform us, where,
foretelling to his disciples
that they should all be offended
because of him that night, he
added, For it is written, I will
smite the shepherd, and the
sheep shall be scattered; and
his applying it so directly to
himself and his disciples, is as
much as if he had said, in
direct terms, that this was a
prediction of what should happen
to himself and them; so that it
seems an entire perversion of
the passage to apply it to any
other subject. He alone,
strictly speaking, was and is
God’s shepherd and the man, his
fellow, or friend, or very near
to him, as Houbigant renders
עמית, and as it certainly
properly signifies, no thing or
person being so near and dear to
God as his beloved Son; the
consequence of whose crucifixion
was the scattering for a time of
his disciples. And I will turn
my hand upon the little ones —
Houbigant reads, instead of
smite, I will smite the
shepherd; but I will turn, or
bring back, my hand upon the
little ones: that is, upon that
third part of the people, which
was to be tried as gold in the
furnace. This is that part
which, it is said, Zechariah
13:9, shall call on the name of
the Lord: whence it is justly
inferred that the two other
parts of the Jewish nation,
which were to perish, were those
Jews who received not the
gospel, and who were slain by
the Romans: for it is said of
the third part, They shall call
on my name, in opposition to the
two parts who should be cut off
and die, Zechariah 13:8. But,
even of that third, many Jews,
who had believed the gospel,
fell away, as when gold or
silver is tried, much dross is
found among it. So that the
number of Jews who should
continue in the faith of the
gospel is left very small; which
the event sufficiently proves,
as we learn from the Acts of the
Apostles: see Houbigant. Upon
the whole we learn from these
verses, as Dr. Sharpe observes,
the following particulars: “That
the shepherd, called the fellow
of God, was to be smitten; the
sheep were to be scattered; two
parts of all that inhabited the
land were to be cut off, and
die; a third only left, which
was to be brought through the
fire, refined as silver, and
tried as gold. Then it follows,
Zechariah 13:9, They shall call,
&c. The like events happened
under the gospel: the shepherd
was smitten, the sheep were
scattered, they were to endure
severe trials, and their faith
was to be more precious than
gold tried with fire. To the
Jews, our Saviour said, Behold,
your house is left unto you
desolate; and verily I say unto
you, ye shall not see me until
the time come when ye shall say,
Blessed is he that cometh in the
name of the Lord. Our Saviour
here foretels the desolation and
destruction of Jerusalem; and,
instead of comforting the Jews
with the prospect of a third
temple, and the restoration of
bloody sacrifices, in some
future age, or advent of the
Messiah, he expressly declares
they shall see him no more, till
they shall acknowledge him by
saying, Blessed is he that
cometh in the name of the Lord.”
— Dr. Sharpe’s 2d Argument, p.
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