Verse 1-2
Zechariah 14:1-2. Behold, the
day of the Lord cometh — A day
of the Lord’s great wrath and
indignation will soon overtake
you, O sinful, unthankful,
bloody Jews! A day remarkable
for the execution of divine
vengeance upon you, and your
city, Jerusalem. This chapter
ought to have been joined to the
preceding; for here the prophet
continues to foretel the
execution of the threatenings
contained in the latter part of
the former chapter; namely, how
the unbelieving Jews should be
destroyed by the Romans. Thy
spoils shall be divided in the
midst of thee — All that thou
hast, O Jerusalem, shall become
a prey to thine enemies, who
shall be such absolute masters
of thee, that, in the greatest
security, they shall divide
among themselves whatever spoil
they take from thee, in the very
place where they take it. For I
will gather all nations — “The
Romans, being lords of the known
world, had the strength of all
nations united in their forces.
Thus, (Jeremiah 24:1,)
Nebuchadnezzar is said to fight
against Jerusalem with all the
kingdoms of the earth.” — Lowth.
And the city shall be taken —
For God is its enemy, and who
can stand before him, or before
nations gathered by him? Where
he gives commission, he will
give success. And the houses
rifled, and the women ravished —
The Roman soldiers shall
exercise those acts of lust and
violence which are too frequent
among conquerors. That all the
outrages were committed, and the
miseries endured, which are here
predicted, when the Romans took
Jerusalem, we have abundant
proof from Josephus and other
historians: see notes on
Deuteronomy 28. And half of the
city shall go into captivity —
The Hebrew word rendered half,
may be translated a portion. It
must be observed, that the city
only is here spoken of; but
chap. Zechariah 13:8, where
mention is made of two parts
being cut off and dying, refers
to the whole land. And the
residue of the people shall not
be cut off — “The Romans spared
the young and useful part of the
Jews: Josephus, Bel. Jud., 6.
9:2. However, these were either
condemned to the mines in Egypt,
or exposed to the sword and to
wild beasts in the provincial
theatres, or sold for slaves.
Ibid. It must be observed, that
the forty thousand who were
permitted to go where they
pleased, were Idumeans: Bel.
Jud., 6. 8:2.” — Newcome. “But
it is probable that the remnant
of the Jews, who survived this
almost exterminating
destruction, and their
descendants, who have for so
many centuries been preserved a
distinct people, in order to
their future restoration, are
intended.” — Scott.
Verse 3
Zechariah 14:3. Then shall the
Lord — After he hath
sufficiently punished Jerusalem
and the rest of the Jewish
nations; go forth — Out of his
holy place, as a warrior
prepared for battle. This is
spoken after the manner of men;
and fight against those nations
— Which had taken and destroyed
Jerusalem, and oppressed his
people. As when he fought in the
day of battle — As in those days
when he evidently fought for his
people. The meaning is, that in
after times God would discomfit
and destroy the posterity of
these nations, namely, the Roman
idolaters and those under their
empire; that when he had made
use of them as a scourge to his
people, he would execute his
judgments upon them, as when he
fought against the enemies of
his church formerly, the
Egyptians, Canaanites, and
others. Observe here, reader,
the instruments of God’s wrath
will themselves be made the
objects of it; for it will come
to their turn to drink of the
cup of trembling; and whom God
fights against, he will be sure
to overcome. It is observable
that the Roman empire never
flourished after the destruction
of Jerusalem as it had done
before; but God evidently fought
against it, and against all the
nations under its dominion, or
in alliance with it, till at
last it was subverted and
destroyed, its richest cities
taken and plundered, and its
various provinces ravaged by the
Goths and Vandals, and other
barbarous invaders.
Zechariah 14:4-5, And his feet
shall stand in that day upon the
mount of Olives, &c. — It is
very difficult to say to what
time this prediction refers, or
what is its precise meaning.
Commentators are not at all
agreed on the subject. Some
think the passage refers to the
time immediately subsequent to
the destruction of Jerusalem,
foretold in Zechariah 14:1-2,
and that it is to be understood
figuratively, namely, 1st, That
by the Lord’s standing before
Jerusalem on the east, is meant,
his drawing peculiarly near to
his church and people, here, as
frequently elsewhere, signified
by Jerusalem; and that he would
be at hand to succour and save
them; and would give success to,
and be manifested in, the gospel
preached by his apostles, who
received their commission on
that mount before Christ’s
ascension. 2d, That by the
cleaving of the mount of Olives
in the midst, toward the east
and toward the west, so as to
make a very great valley, is
meant the removing of the
ceremonial law, which was like
an aspiring mountain, or
partition wall, between the Jews
and Gentiles, and a great
obstruction to the conversion of
the latter, and their entrance
into the church of God: but
that, by the destruction of
Jerusalem, this mountain should
be made to cleave, as it were,
in the midst, this partition
wall be broken down, and God’s
church, the spiritual Jerusalem,
made of easy access to the
Gentiles. Thus the way of the
Lord would be prepared, every
mountain and hill brought low,
and a plain and pleasant valley,
or open way of communication, be
found in the place of them: see
Isaiah 40:4. 3d, That by the
valley of the mountains, is
meant the gospel church, to
which, as a place of refuge,
many of the Jews should flee, as
people fled formerly from before
the earthquake here mentioned,
and should hasten into it
together with the Gentiles. 4th,
That by this valley reaching to
Azal, or, to the separate place,
as the word signifies, is
signified that the privileges of
the church should not be
limited, as formerly, to any
particular nation, or people,
but should be extended to all
those who, in obedience to the
call of God, should come out
from the world, separate
themselves from sinners, devote
themselves to God, and become
his peculiar people. And, 5th,
That by the Lord’s coming, and
all his saints with him, is
signified the spiritual coming
and extension of his kingdom,
whereby a multitude of converts,
both of Jewish and Gentile
extraction, should be made, who,
through faith working by love,
should become saints, or holy
persons. This, in substance,
seems to be Henry’s view of the
passage, as it is that of many
others.
Lowth, on the other hand,
interprets it literally, as
follows: His feet shall stand
upon the mount of Olives — “The
glory of the Lord, that is, the
Shechinah, or symbol of God’s
presence, when it departed from
the city and temple, settled
itself upon the mount of Olives,
Ezekiel 11:23; so when God shall
return to Jerusalem, [that is,
to Jerusalem rebuilt and
inhabited by the converted Jews
restored to their own land, at
the beginning of the
millennium,] and make it the
seat of his presence again, it
[the Shechinah] shall return by
the same way it departed,
Ezekiel 43:2. We may add, that
when our Lord ascended from the
mourn of Olives, the angels told
his disciples, he should come
again in like manner, that is,
in a visible and glorious
appearance, at the same place,
Acts 1:11-12. And the mount of
Olives shall cleave, &c. — By an
earthquake, such as was in the
time of King Uzziah: see Amos
1:1. The middle of mount Olivet
shall cleave asunder, and sink
into a deep valley, so as to
leave the two points, or tops of
the hill, north and south, still
standing. For mount Olivet, as
we learn from Maundrell, had
three tops, or eminences; one on
the north side, another on the
south, and a third in the
middle, from whence Christ
ascended, and where the
Christians in after times
erected a cross, in memory of
his ascension there. And ye
shall flee to the valley of the
mountains — When ye see the
mount of Olives cleave asunder,
ye shall flee toward the valley
for fear. The margin reads, The
valley of my mountains, which
may be understood of Zion and
Moriah; but the Chaldee and LXX.
read, The valley of my mountains
shall be filled up; for the
valley of the mountains shall
join even to Azal, it shall even
be filled up, as it was by the
earthquake in the days of
Uzziah. Josephus writes, (Ant.
Jud., lib. 9. cap. 10,) ‘That
before the city, at a place
called ερρωγη, [or the cleft,]
one half of the mountain, on the
western side, was broken off,
and having rolled four furlongs
toward the eastern mountain,
stopped, so that the roads were
choked up, and the king’s
gardens.’ And the Lord my God
shall come, and all the saints
[or holy ones] with thee — Or
with him, as the Chaldee and LXX.
read.” “The words,” Lowth adds,
“are a description of Christ’s
coming to judgment, attended
with all the holy angels, as the
writers of the New Testament
express it, the word קדשׁים,
translated saints, often
signifying angels: see
Deuteronomy 33:2; so the word
saints seems to be used 1
Thessalonians 3:13; and St.
1:14, quoting the prophecy of
Enoch, says, The Lord cometh
with ten thousand of his saints,
or holy ones: a place exactly
parallel with this of the text.”
One observation seems needful to
be made here: if the visible and
personal coming of Christ be
intended in these verses, it
certainly cannot be his coming
to raise the dead and judge the
world in righteousness, because
that view of the passage would
not, by any means, be consistent
with what is said in the two
next verses concerning the
continually increasing light of
knowledge, holiness, and
happiness in the gospel church,
till, at length, at evening time
it shall be quite light: but it
must rather be understood of his
coming to introduce, establish,
and perfect his millennial
reign, believed in and expected
generally in the first Christian
church. The reader will consider
these different interpretations,
and will of course adopt that
which he thinks the most
probable.
Verse 6-7
Zechariah 14:6-7. And it shall
come to pass in that day —
Namely, when the Lord shall come
forth to fight against the
enemies of his church, the
nations that fought against
Jerusalem, as foretold Zechariah
14:3; or, in that day when he
shall come to convert and
restore the Jews, and spread his
gospel through all the world;
the light — Namely, of
knowledge, holiness, and
happiness in his church; shall
not — Namely, at first; be clear
— Like that of the perfect day;
nor dark — As perfect night, but
shall be a kind of twilight, a
mixture of light and darkness,
of knowledge and ignorance, as
to divine things, of holiness
and sin, of happiness and
misery, or of prosperity and
adversity. But it shall be one
day — One continued day; there
shall be no setting of the sun
to make it quite night; but God
will invariably pursue the end
he has in view, and always act
in order to it, namely, the full
salvation of his spiritual
Jerusalem. Which shall be known
to the Lord — The Lord will
always have his eye upon this
progressive day, and upon all
the events of it. He will
continually take notice of them,
and order and dispose of all for
the best, according to the
counsel of his own will. But at
evening time —
When natural days end, and when,
perhaps, the shades of the
evening may appear to be coming
on, and there may be an
apprehension of returning
darkness; it shall be light —
This spiritual day shall be full
of light and glory, Isaiah 48:8;
and Isaiah 60:19-21. Mr. Scott
considers these verses as
containing a compendious
prophecy of the state of the
church, from its establishment
in the apostles’ days, to those
glorious times which are
expected; a prophecy foretelling
that, “for a long season, the
light would neither be clear nor
dark: it would be greatly
obscured by ignorance, heresy,
superstition, and idolatry, yet
not wholly extinguished: and the
state of the church would be
much deformed by sin and
calamities; yet some holiness
and consolation would be found.
This period could neither be
called a clear, bright day,
cheered and illumined by the
shining of a summer’s sun, nor
would it be dark, as if the sun
were set or totally eclipsed;
but it would contain a great
mixture of truth and error, of
holiness and sin, of happiness
and misery. Yet it would form
one day, and never be
interrupted by a night of total
darkness. It would also be known
unto the Lord, as to the degree
of its light, and the term of
its continuance; and he would
watch over, and take care of,
his cause and people all the
time of it. But his people would
hardly know whether to call it
day or night, or a compound of
both: yet, at length, toward the
evening of the world, the Sun of
righteousness would break forth
and shine with unclouded
splendour, dispelling the gloom
of ignorance, heresy, idolatry,
and superstition, and
illuminating the church and the
earth with knowledge,
righteousness, peace, and
consolation.”
Verse 8-9
Zechariah 14:8-9. And it shall
be in that day — Spoken of
Zechariah 14:6, when the light
shall not be clear, nor dark,
that is, during the whole of the
forementioned period; living
waters shall go out from
Jerusalem — The enlightening,
quickening, and saving truths of
Christianity, accompanied by the
power of the Holy Spirit, shall
proceed from the church of
Christ, the true spiritual
Jerusalem; half of them toward
the former sea — The eastern
sea; and half of them toward the
hinder sea — The western sea.
They shall spread themselves
eastward and westward, and on
all sides; and even the sea,
whether on the east or west,
shall not be able to obstruct
their progress; but, having
watered and refreshed,
enlightened, renewed, and
cheered the continent, they
shall make their way into the
islands, and diffuse their
renovating and gladdening
influence even over them. In
summer and in winter shall it be
— Perpetually, without
intermission; these waters shall
never dry up, be obstructed in
their course, or lose their
healing, fructifying, and
refreshing virtue. In other
words, “the gospel, attended by
the influences of the Holy
Spirit, having begun its
progress from Jerusalem, shall
continue its course on every
side, amidst all those changes
of which summer and winter are
an emblem: so that nothing shall
totally impede its progress,
till the Lord shall become King
over all the earth, not only in
right but in fact; till neither
idols, false religion, nor
antichristian power, shall
remain as his rivals; till all
princes shall submit to and
serve him; and all the earth
shall agree in one object and
way of worship, and unite in
submission and obedience to one
Lord.” — Scott.
Verse 10-11
Zechariah 14:10-11. All the land
— The whole land of Judea, a
type of the whole earth, the
seat of the universal church,
filled with the knowledge of
God, and abounding with
multitudes of converts: shall be
turned as a plain — All high,
uneven places, all rocky and
barren grounds, shall be changed
into fruitful vineyards. So the
church of Christ shall be
fruitful, humble, and lovely.
From Geba — The north boundary
of the land; to Rimmon — The
south boundary. And it — That
is, Jerusalem; shall be lifted
up — Raised out of the dust, to
which its enemies had brought
it, through God’s permission.
Jerusalem, taken mystically, is
the church of Christ in gospel
days; and by the repair of all
parts of this Jerusalem, as here
described, is shadowed out the
complete building of the church
on all sides, north, south,
east, west. From Benjamin’s gate
— That is, this gate was
probably to the north of
Jerusalem; unto the place of the
first gate — Or, as Newcome
reads it, the former gate,
supposed to be that called the
old gate, Nehemiah 3:6; Nehemiah
12:39, placed by Lightfoot
toward the south- west. Unto the
corner-gate — See 2 Kings 14:13.
And from the tower of Hananeel —
Placed by Cocceius eastward; who
observes, that the tower and
corner-gate seem mentioned as
two extremities of the city.
Unto the king’s wine-presses —
Near the king’s garden
southward. So Cocceius. “These
points are given, no doubt, to
signify that Jerusalem shall
again occupy as much space as
ever it did in its most
flourishing times. The same
intention appears Jeremiah
31:38-40. Both these places may
derive some illustration from
comparing them together, and at
the same time inspecting the
plan of Jerusalem in the Ancient
Universal History, vol. 1. b.
1., which seems to have been
laid down pretty accurately,
according to the circuit of the
walls made by the two companies,
Nehemiah 12:40, and the
information collected from other
parts of Scripture.” — Blayney.
And men shall dwell in it —
Many, for number; eminent, for
worth. And there shall be no
more utter destruction — They
that dwell in it shall dwell
securely, and there shall be
none to make them afraid. There
may be afflictions, but there
shall be no more of that utter
destruction that formerly laid
both town and country waste.
There shall be no more curse, as
the latter part of the sentence
may be translated. In the new
state of things, here foretold,
the curse which sin brought into
the world shall be, at least in
a great measure, if not
entirely, removed. Similar
words, recorded Revelation 22:3,
seem to be taken from this
place. But Jerusalem shall
safely be inhabited — A promise
often repeated by the prophets.
See Jeremiah 23:6, and the note
there.
Verse 12-13
Zechariah 14:12-13. And this
shall be the plague, &c. — Those
that do not die in battle, nor
fall by the hand of their
brethren, shall be destroyed by
famine, or consumption. Their
flesh shall consume away while
they stand upon their feet —
They shall be miserably
emaciated, even while they stand
in arms ready to fight; or so
suddenly, that they shall hardly
have time to lie or sit down.
And their eyes shall consume
away in their holes — A dreadful
and exemplary blindness shall
seize them. A great tumult —
That is, confusion; from the
Lord — Hebrew, of the Lord, that
is, one caused or permitted by
him; shall be among them — Shall
take place and prevail, as a
punishment of their hostility to
God’s church. Those that are
confederated and combined
against God and his people, will
be justly separated, and set
against one another; and their
tumults raised against God will
be avenged in tumult among
themselves. And they shall lay
hold every one on the hand of
his neighbour — That is, they
shall seek help from one
another, but instead of helping
they shall turn their arms
against one another. And his
hand shall rise up, &c. — The
sum of the verse is, that
intestine divisions and
hostilities shall be added to
the foregoing divine judgments.
Verse 14-15
Zechariah 14:14-15. And Judah
also shall fight at [or rather,
for] Jerusalem — The meaning
seems to be, that while the
enemies of Jerusalem are engaged
in fighting with each other,
Judah also (Hebrew, וגם יהודה,)
will come up and join their
forces with those of the
inhabitants of Jerusalem, will
fall upon the weakened nations,
and take from them great spoil.
And the wealth of all the
heathen, &c., shall be gathered
together — And shall fall into
the hands of God’s people. Thus
the wealth of the sinner is
often laid up for the just; and
the Israel of God are enriched
with the spoil of the Egyptians.
And so shall be the plague of
the horse, &c. — The very cattle
shall share in the plagues with
which the enemies of God’s
church shall be cut off, as they
did in divers of the plagues of
Egypt.
Verse 16
Zechariah 14:16. And every one
that is left of all the nations
— Such as escape the
fore-mentioned strokes of divine
judgment, and are by mercy
preserved; of all the nations
which came against Jerusalem —
That is, many among all these
nations shall consider God’s
hand, repent, and submit to his
law. Such a change shall the
grace of God, sanctifying his
judgments, make upon them. Of
Christ’s foes, as some shall be
made his footstool, so others
shall be made his friends; and
when the principle of enmity is
slain in them, their former acts
of hostility are pardoned to
them, and their services are
accepted as though they had
never fought against Jerusalem.
Shall even go up to worship, and
keep the feast of tabernacles —
That is, they shall join in the
solemn acts of Christian
worship. The prophets, as we
have repeatedly had occasion to
observe in the course of these
notes, often describe, the state
of the gospel by the usages of
their own times. The feast of
tabernacles, being kept in
remembrance of God’s conducting
and preserving the Israelites
forty years in the wilderness,
and afterward bringing them into
the promised land, was observed
with extraordinary expressions
of rejoicing. Here this one
solemn festival is, by a figure,
put for all the days consecrated
to God for holy worship; and
that very properly, because of
those two great graces which
were, in a special manner,
signified and required in that
feast, namely, contempt of the
world and joy in God, Nehemiah
8:17. The life of a true
Christian is a constant feast of
tabernacles, and in all our acts
of devotion we must retire from
the world and rejoice in the
Lord, or worship as the truly
pious did in that feast.
Verse 17-18
Zechariah 14:17-18. Whoso will
not come up of all the families
of the earth — If there be any
remiss herein, and neglect to
worship the Lord; even upon them
shall be no rain — They shall be
punished with want of rain, and
of the blessings which plentiful
and seasonable rains produce;
their land shall be barren, and
they shall suffer a famine.
“There is a restriction,
Zechariah 14:16,” says Newcome,
“to such nations as warred
against Jerusalem.” “But if,
according to the opinion of many
commentators, by going up to
Jerusalem to worship, and to
keep the feast of tabernacles,
be only meant a conformity to
the established worship of the
one true God, or, which is the
same thing, to the Christian
religion, there can be no
objection to understanding a
strict universality of the
nations. For it is repeatedly
foretold, that a time would
come, when all the ends of the
world shall remember and turn
unto the Lord, and all the
families of the nations shall
worship before him, Psalms
22:27.” — Blayney. And if the
family of Egypt go not up, that
have no rain — Where, by the
situation of the country, there
is no rain; there shall be the
plague wherewith the Lord will
smite the heathen — That is,
although they be not visited in
the same manner as the other
nations, namely, with a want of
rain, which of itself would be
no punishment to that country;
yet, as it follows in the next
verse, they shall not be exempt
from the same punishment with
the other nations that sinned in
like manner, namely, famine,
“which would be the sure
consequence if the rains did not
fall in Ethiopia, so as to cause
an overflowing of the Nile.” —
Newcome. The reader will
observe, respecting these
predictions, that the prophet,
“foretelling the blessings
arising from the restoration of
the Jews, and the conversion of
the Gentiles to the Christian
faith, draws his images from the
old dispensation; and, as is
usual throughout the prophetic
writings, expresses the rewards
and punishments of the new
dispensation, under figures
borrowed from the old.”
Verse 20-21
Zechariah 14:20-21. In that day
— When the nations are converted
to God, as is foretold Zechariah
14:16; shall there be upon the
bells of the horses — Written,
as it were, on every common
thing; HOLINESS UNTO THE LORD —
This was the inscription on the
mitre of the Jewish high-priest,
denoting the great holiness of
his office, and how he ought to
conduct himself in a holy manner
in all things, especially in
those relating to divine
worship. Now in these days of
the gospel, when the Jews shall
be converted to Christ, and the
fulness of the Gentiles brought
in, and made a holy nation, a
royal priesthood, the grace of
God shall be so abundant and
efficacious, that common
ordinary things in the hands of
Christians, much more their
persons, shall bear the
dedicating inscription of
HOLINESS TO THE LORD, and by
their study and practice of
holiness they shall make good
their motto; they shall honour
and glorify God in all
circumstances and situations,
times and places, and use every
thing in a holy manner. And the
pots in the Lord’s house — The
meanest utensil employed in his
service; shall be like the bowls
before the altar — Shall be as
the vessels of silver and gold
used in the solemn sacrifices.
Yea, every pot in Jerusalem
shall be holiness unto the Lord
— The utensils of private houses
shall all be dedicated to God’s
service, and employed in his
fear and to his glory; with such
sobriety and temperance, such
devotedness to God, and such a
mixture of pious thoughts and
expressions, that even their
meals shall look like
sacrifices; they shall not eat
and drink to themselves, but to
Him that spreads their tables
and fills their cups. And all
they that sacrifice — In
allusion to sacrifices, the
prophet expresses all religious
affections, practice, and
worship, which shall be as
pleasing to God as were the
sacrifices of his people,
offered up with divine warrant
and approbation. Shall come and
take of them — Of those pots and
vessels, freely and without
scruple; and seethe therein —
The ceremonial distinction
between holy and unholy places
and things shall cease with the
ritual law on which it was
founded. One place shall be as
acceptable to God as another,
and one vessel or instrument of
divine service as holy as
another. For the true
worshippers shall worship the
Father in spirit and in truth,
and men shall pray and give
thanks everywhere, lifting up
holy hands without wrath and
doubting. Little regard shall be
had to the circumstance,
provided there be nothing
indecent or disorderly, while
the life, and soul, and
substance of divine worship and
service are religiously
preserved and adhered to. And
there shall be no more the
Canaanite in the house of the
Lord — There shall be no more a
profane or impious person in the
societies of the faithful. For
though persons that were
Canaanites, strangers, and
foreigners, should be brought
into the house of the Lord, yet
they should cease to be
Canaanites; they should have
nothing of the spirit or
disposition of Canaanites, or
heathen, in them. And though in
gospel times people should be
indifferent as to holy vessels
and holy places, yet they should
be very strict with respect to
church discipline, and careful
not to admit the profane to
sacred ordinances, or to
Christian fellowship with them,
but should separate between the
precious and the vile, between
Israelites and Canaanites. Yet
this will not have its perfect
accomplishment short of the
heavenly Jerusalem, that house
of the Lord of hosts into which
no unclean thing shall enter.
For at the end of time, and not
before, Christ shall gather out
of his kingdom every thing that
offends; and the tares and wheat
shall be perfectly and eternally
separated. |