Chapter 1:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Haggai Malachi
Zechariah 1
Complete Concise
In this chapter, after the introduction (v. 1), we have, I. An
awakening call to a sinful people to repent of their sins and return to God (v.
2-6). II. Great encouragement given to hope for mercy. 1. By the vision of the
horses (v. 7-11). 2. By the prayer of the angel for Jerusalem, and the answer
to that prayer (v. 12-17). 3. By the vision of the four carpenters that were
employed to cut off the four horns with which Judah and Jerusalem were scattered
(v. 18-21).
Verses 1-6
Here is, I. The foundation of Zechariah's ministry; it is laid
in a divine authority:
The word of the Lord came to him. He received a
divine commission to be God's mouth to the people and with it instructions
what to say. He received of the Lord that which also he delivered unto them.
The
word of the Lord was to him; it came in the evidence and demonstration of
the Spirit, as a real thing, and not a fancy. For the ascertaining of this, we
have here, 1. The time when the word of the Lord came first to him, or when the
word that next follows came to him: it was
in the second year of Darius.
Before the captivity the prophets dated their writings by the reigns of the
kings of Judah and Israel; but now by the reigns of the kings of Persia, to whom
they were subjects. Such a melancholy change had sin made of their
circumstances. Zerubbabel took not so much state upon him as to have public acts
dated by the years of his government, and in things of this nature the prophets,
as is fit, complied with the usage of the time, and scrupled not to reckon by
the years of the heathen kings, as Dan. 7:1; 8:1. Zechariah preached his first
sermon in the
eighth month of this
second year of Darius; Haggai
preached his in the sixth month of the same year, Hag. 1:1. The people being
readily obedient to the word of the Lord in the mouth of Haggai, God blessed
them with another prophet; for to him that has, and uses well what he has, more
shall be given. 2. The name and family of the prophet to whom the word of the
Lord came; He was
Zechariah, the son of Barachiah, the son of Iddo, and
he was
the prophet, as Haggai is called
the prophet, Hag. 1:1.
For, though in former ages there was one Iddo a prophet (2 Chr. 12:15), yet we
have no reason to think that Zechariah was of his progeny, or should be
denominated from him. The learned Mr. Pemble is decidedly of opinion that this
Zechariah, the son of Barachiah, is the same that our Saviour says was
slain
between the temple and the altar, perhaps many years after the rebuilding of
the temple (Mt. 23:35), and that our Saviour does not mean (as is commonly
thought) Zechariah the son of Jehoiada, for why should Jehoiada be called
Barachiah? And he thinks the manner of Christ's account persuades us to think
so; for, reckoning up the innocent blood shed by the Jews, he begins at Abel,
and ends even in the last of the holy prophets. Whereas, after Zechariah the son
of Jehoiada, many prophets and righteous men were put to death by them. It is
true there is no mention made in any history of their slaying this Zechariah,
but Josephus might industriously conceal that shame of his nation. Perhaps what
Zechariah spoke in his prophesying concerning Christ of his being sold, his
being wounded in the house of his friends, and the shepherd being smitten, was
verified in the prophet himself, and so he became a type of Christ. Probably,
being assaulted by his persecutors, he took sanctuary in the court of the
priests (and some think he was himself a priest), and so was slain between the
porch and the altar.
II. The first-fruits of Zechariah's ministry. Before he came
to visions and revelations, and delivered his prophetic discourses, he preached
that which was plain and practical; for it is best to begin with that. Before he
published the promises of mercy, he published calls to repentance, for thus
the
way of the Lord must be
prepared. Law must be first preached, and
then gospel. Now,
1. The prophet here puts them in mind of the controversy God had
had with their fathers (v. 2):
"The Lord has been sorely displeased with
your fathers, and has laid them under the tokens of his displeasure. You
have heard with your ears, and your fathers have told you of it; you have seen
with your eyes the woeful remains of it. God's quarrel with you has been of
long standing, and therefore it is time for you to think of taking it up."
Note, The judgments of God, which those that went before us were under, should
be taken as warnings to us not to tread in their steps, and calls to repentance,
that we may cut off the entail of the curse and get it turned into a blessing.
2. He calls them, in God's name, to return to him, and make
their peace with him, v. 3. God by him says that to this backsliding people
which he had often said by his servants the prophets:
"Turn you to me
in a way of faith and repentance, duty and obedience, and
I will turn to you
in a way of favour and mercy, peace and reconciliation." Let the rebels
return to their allegiance, and they shall be taken under the protection of the
government and enjoy all the privileges of good subjects. Let them change their
way, and God will change his. See Mal. 3:7. But that which is most observable
here is that God is called here the
Lord of hosts three times:
"Thus
saith the Lord of hosts. It is he that speaks, and therefore you are bound
to regard what he says."
Turn you to me, saith the Lord of hosts
(this intimates the authority and obligation of the command),
and I will turn
to you, saith the Lord of hoststhis intimates the validity and value of
the promise; so that it is no vain repetition. Note, The consideration of God's
almighty power and sovereign dominion should both engage and encourage sinners
to repent and turn to him. It is very desirable to have the Lord of hosts our
friend and very dreadful to have him our enemy.
3. He warns them not to persist in their impenitence, as their
fathers had done (v. 4):
Be you not as your fathers. Instead of being
hardened in their evil courses by the example of their fathers' sins, let them
rather be deterred from them by the example of their fathers' punishment. We
are apt to be governed very much by precedent, and we are well or ill governed
according to the use we make of the precedents before us. The same examples to
some are a savour of life unto life, to others a savour of death unto death.
Some argued, "Shall we be wiser than our fathers? They never minded the
prophets, and why then should we mind them? They made laws against them, and why
should we tolerate them?" But they are here taught how they should argue:
"Our fathers slighted the prophets, and God was sorely displeased with them
for it; therefore let us the more carefully regard what God says to us by his
prophets." "Review what is past, and observe,"
(1.) "What was the message that God sent by his servants
the prophets to your fathers:
The former prophets cried to your fathers.
cried aloud, and did not spare, not spare themselves, not spare your fathers;
they cried as men in earnest, as men that would be heard; they spoke not as from
themselves, but in the name of
the Lord of hosts; and this was the
substance of what they said, the burden of every song, the application of every
sermon
Turn you now from your evil ways, and from your evil doings; the
very same that we now preach to you. Be persuaded to leave your sins; resolve to
have no more to do with them. A speedy reformation is the only way to prevent an
approaching ruin:
Turn you now from sin to God without delay."
(2.) "How little this message was regarded by your fathers:
But they did not hear, they did not heed. They turned a deaf ear to these
calls:
They would not hearken unto me, saith the Lord. They would not be
reclaimed, would not be ruled, by the word I sent them; say not then that you
will do as your fathers did, for they did amiss;" see Jer. 44:17. Note, We
must not follow the examples of our dear fathers unless they were God's dear
children, nor any further than they were dutiful and obedient to him.
(3.) "What has become both of your fathers and of the
prophets that preached to them? They are all dead and gone," v. 5. [1.]
Your
fathers, where are they? The whole generation of them is swept away, and
their place knows them no more. Note, When we think of our ancestors, that have
gone through the world and gone out of it before us, we should think,
Where
are they? Here they were, in the towns and countries where we live, passing
and repassing in the same streets, dwelling in the same houses, trading in the
same shops and exchanges, worshipping God in the same churches. But where are
they? They are somewhere still; when they died there was not an end of them.
They are in eternity, in the world of spirits, the unchangeable world, to which
we are hastening apace. Where are they? Those of them that lived and died in sin
are in torment, and we are warned by Moses and the prophets, Christ and his
apostles, to look to it that we
come not to that place of torment, Lu.
16:28, 29. Those of them that lived and died in Christ are in paradise; and, if
we live and die as they did, we shall be with them shortly, with them eternally.
[2.]
The prophets also,
did they live for ever? No, they are gone
too. The treasure is put into earthen vessels, the water of life into earthen
pitchers, often cracked, and brought home broken at last. Christ is a prophet
that lives for ever, but all other prophets have a period put to their office.
Note, Ministers are dying men, and live not for ever in this world. They are to
look upon themselves as such, and to preach accordingly, as those that must be
silenced shortly, and know not which sermon may be the last. People are to look
upon them as such, and to hear accordingly, as those that yet a little while
have the
light with them, that they may walk and work
while they have
the light. Oh that this weighty consideration had its due weight given it,
that we are dying ministers dealing with dying people about the concerns of
immortal souls and an awful eternity, which both they and we are standing upon
the brink of! It concerns us to think of the prophets that are gone, that were
before
us of old, Jer. 28:8. Those that were the glory of men withered and fell;
but the
word of the Lord endures for ever, 1 Pt. 1:24, 25. The prophets
that are now, do
we live for ever? (so some read it); no, Haggai and
Zechariah will not be long with you, and prophecy itself shall shortly cease. In
another world both we and our prophets shall live for ever; and to prepare for
that world ought to be our great care and business in this.
(4.) "What were the effects of the word which God spoke to
them by his prophets, v. 6. The preachers died, and the hearers died, but the
word of God died not; that took effect, and not one iota or tittle of it fell to
the ground." As the
rain and
snow from heaven,
it shall
not return void, Isa. 55:11. He appealed to themselves; they knew very well,
[1.] That the judgments God had threatened were executed upon their fathers, and
they were made to feel what they would not believe and fear:
"My
statutes which I commanded my servants the prophets, the precepts with the
penalties annexed, which I charged them with the delivery of,
did they not
take hold of your fathers?" Though God's prophets could not fasten
convictions upon them, the calamities threatened overtook them, and they could
not escape them, nor get out of the reach of them. God's words took hold of
them as the bailiff arrests the debtor, and takes him in execution for contempt.
Note, The unbelief of man cannot make the threatenings of God's word of no
effect, but, sooner or later, they will take place, if the prescribed course be
not taken to prevent the execution of them. God's anger will certainly take
hold of those that will not be taken hold of by his authority; for when he
judges he will overcome. [2.] That they themselves could not but own the
accomplishment of the word of God in the judgments of God that were upon them,
and that therein he was righteous, and had done them no wrong:
They returned,
and said (they changed their mind, and when it was too late to prevent the
ruin of their nation they acknowledged),
Like as the Lord of hosts thought to
do unto us according to our ways and doings, to reckon with us for them,
so
has he dealt with us, and we must acknowledge both his truth and his
justice, must blame ourselves only, and have no blame to lay to him.
Sero
sapiunt PhrygesIt is late before the Phrygians become wise. This
after-wit, as it is a proof of the truth of God, so it is a proof of the folly
of men, who will look no further than they can see. They would never be
persuaded to say in time, "God will be as good as his word, for he is
faithful; he will deal with us according to our deserts, for he is righteous."
But now they see both plainly enough when the sentence is executed; now he that
runs may read, and publish the exact agreement that appears between the present
providences and the former predictions which then were slighted, between the
present punishments and the former sins which then were persisted in. Now they
cannot but say,
The Lord is righteous, Dan. 9:11-13.
Verses 7-17
We not come to visions and revelations of the Lord; for in that
way God chose to speak by Zechariah, to awaken the people's attention, and to
engage their humble reverence of the word and their humble enquiries into it,
and to fix it the more in their minds and memories. Most of the following
visions seem designed for the comfort of the Jews, now newly returned out of
captivity, and their encouragement to go on with the building of the temple. The
scope of this vision (which is as an introduction to the rest) is to assure the
Jews of the care God took of them, and the eye of his providence that was upon
them for good, now in their present state, when they seem to be deserted, and
their case deplorable. The vision is dated (v. 7)
the twenty-fourth day of
the eleventh month, three months after he preached that sermon (v. 1), in
which he calls them to repentance from the consideration of God's judgments.
Finding that that sermon had a good effect, and that they returned to God in a
way of duty, the assurances he had given them are confirmed, that God would
return to them in a way of mercy. Now observe here,
I. What the prophet saw, and the explication of that. 1. He saw
a grove of
myrtle-trees, a dark shady grove, down
in a bottom,
hidden by the adjacent hills, so that you were not aware of it till you were
just upon it. This represented the low, dark, solitary, melancholy condition of
the Jewish church at this time. They were over-topped by all their neighbours,
buried in obscurity; what friends they had were hidden, and there appeared no
way of relief and succour for them. Note, The church has not been always
visible, but sometimes hidden, as the
woman in the wilderness, Rev. 12:6.
2. He saw
a man mounted upon
a red horse, standing in the midst of
this shady myrtle-grove. This man is no other than the
man Christ Jesus,
the same that appeared to Joshua with
his sword drawn in his hand as
captain
of the host of the Lord (Jos. 5:13, 14) and to John with his
bow and
his
crown, Rev. 6:2. Though the church was in a low condition, yet Christ
was present in the midst of it. Was it hidden by the hills? He was much more
hidden in the myrtle-grove, yet hidden as in an ambush, ready to appear for the
seasonable relief of his people, to their happy surprise. Compare Isa. 45:15,
Verily
thou art a God that hidest thyself, and yet
Israel's God and Saviour
at the same time, their
Holy One in the midst of them. He was
riding,
as a man of war, as a man in haste,
riding on the heavens for the help of
his people, Deu. 33:26. He rode on a
red horse, either naturally so or
dyed red with the blood of war, as this same victorious prince appeared
red
in his apparel, Isa. 63:1, 2. Red is a fiery colour, denoting that he is
jealous
for Jerusalem (v. 14) and very angry at her enemies. Christ, under the law,
appeared on a red horse, denoting the terror of that dispensation, and that he
had yet his conflict before him, when he was to
resist unto blood. But,
under the gospel, he appears on
a white horse (Rev. 6:2. and again ch.
19:11), denoting that he has now gained the victory, and rides in triumph, and
hangs out the white, not the bloody flag. 3. He saw a troop of horse attending
him, ready to receive and obey his orders:
Behind him there were some red
horses, and some
speckled, and some
white, angels attending
the Lord Jesus, ready to be employed by him for the service of his church, some
in acts of judgment, others of mercy, others in mixed events. Note, The King of
the church has angels at command, not only to do him honour, but to minister for
the good of those that are his. 4. He enquired into the signification of this
vision. He had an angel talking with him, as his instructor, besides those he
saw in the vision; so had Ezekiel (ch. 40:3), and Daniel, ch. 8:16. Zechariah
asked him (v. 9),
O my Lord! what are these? And, it should seem this
angel
that talked with him was Christ himself, the
man on the red horse,
whom the rest were attendants on; to him immediately Zechariah addresses
himself. Would we be acquainted with the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, we
must make our application, not to angels (they are themselves learners), but to
Christ himself, who is alone
able to take the book, and open the seals,
Rev. 5:7. The prophet's question implies a humble acknowledgment of his own
ignorance and an earnest desire to be informed. O let me know what these are!
This he desired, not for the satisfying of his curiosity, but that he might be
furnished with something proper for the comfort and encouragement of the people
of God, in their present distress. 5. He received from the
angel that talked
with him (v. 9), and from
the man that stood among the myrtle-trees
(v. 10), the interpretation of this vision. Note, Jesus Christ is ready to
instruct those that are humbly desirous to be taught the things of God. He
immediately said,
I will show thee what these are. What knowledge we
have, or may have, concerning the world of spirits, we are indebted to Christ
for. The account given him was,
These are those whom the Lord has sent:
they are his messengers, his envoys, appointed (as his eyes are said to do, 2
Chr. 16:9) to
walk, to
run, to fly swiftly
through the earth,
to observe what is done in it and to execute the divine commands. God needs them
not, but he is pleased to employ them, and we need the comfort arising from the
doctrine of their administration.
II. What the prophet heard, and what instructions were thereby
given him. Faith comes by hearing, and, generally, in visions there was
something said.
1. He heard the report or representation which the angels made
to Christ of the present state of the world, v. 11. They had been out abroad, as
flying posts
(being hastened by the King of kings' commandment, Esth.
3:15), and, having returned, they give this account to the
Angel that stood
among the myrtle-trees (for to the Lord Jesus angels themselves are
accountable):
We have walked to and fro through the earth, and, behold all
the earth sits still and is at rest. We are taught to pray that the will of
God may be done by men on earth as it is done by the angels in heaven; and here
we see what need we have to pray so, for it is far from being so. For, (1.) We
find the world of angels here very busy. Those that are employed in the court
above rest not day nor night from praising God, which is their business there;
and those that are employed in the camp below are never idle, nor lose time;
they are still
ascending and descending upon
the Son of man (Jn.
1:51, as on Jacob's ladder, Gen. 28:12); they are still
walking to and fro
through the earth. Thus active, thus industrious,
Satan owns himself
to be in doing mischief, Job 1:7. It is well for us that good angels bestir
themselves as much to do good, and that here in this earth we have guardians
going about continually seeking to do us a kindness, as we have adversaries
which, as roaring lions, go about continually, seeking to devour us. Though holy
angels in this earth meet with a great deal that is disagreeable, yet, while
they are going on God's errands, they hesitate not to
walk to and fro
through it. Their own habitation, which those that fell liked not, they will
like the better when they return. (2.) We find the world of mankind here very
careless:
All the earth sits still, and is at rest, while all the church
is made uneasy,
tossed with tempests and not comforted. Those that are
strangers to the church are secure; those that are enemies to it are successful.
The Chaldeans and Persians dwell at ease, while the poor Jews are continually
alarmed; as when
the king and Haman sat down to drink, but the city Shushan
was perplexed. The children of men are merry and jovial, but
none grieve
for the affliction of God's children. Note, It is sad to think what a deep
sleep the world is cast into, what a spirit of slumber has seized the generality
of mankind, that are under God's wrath and Satan's power, and yet secure and
unconcerned! They sit still and are at rest, Lu. 17:26, etc.
2. He heard Christ's intercession with the Father for his
afflicted church, v. 12. The angels related the posture of affairs in this lower
world, but we read not of any prayers they made for the redress of the
grievances they had made a remonstrance of. No; it is
the Angel among the
myrtle-trees that is the great intercessor. Upon the report of the angels he
immediately turned heavenward, and said,
Lord, wilt thou not have mercy
on thy church? (1.) The thing he intercedes for is
mercy; as Ps. 85:7,
Show
us thy mercy, O Lord! Note, God's mercy is all in all to the church's
comfort; and all his mercy must be hoped for through Christ's mediation. (2.)
The thing he complains of is the delay of this mercy:
How long wilt thou not
have mercy! He knows that
mercies through him
shall be built up
for ever (Ps. 89:2), but thinks it long that the building is deferred. (3.)
The objects of compassion recommended to the divine mercies are, Jerusalem, the
holy city, and the other cities of Judah that were now in ruins; for God had had
indignation against them now
threescore and ten years. He mentions
seventy years because that was the time fixed in the divine councils for the
continuance of the captivity; so long the indignation lasted, and though
now
for a little space grace had been
shown them from the Lord their God,
to
give them some reviving (Ezra 9:8), yet the scars of those seventy
years' captivity still remained so deep, so painful, that this is the
melancholy string they still harp uponthe divine indignation during those
seventy years. Dr. Lightfoot thinks that whereas the seventy years of the
captivity were reckoned from Jehoiakim's fourth year, and ended in the first
of Cyrus, these seventy years are to be computed from the eleventh of Zedekiah,
when Jerusalem and the temple were burnt, about nineteen years after the first
captivity, and which ended in this second year of Darius Hystaspes, about
seventeen years after Cyrus's proclamation, as that seventy years mentioned ch.
7:5 was about nineteen years after; the captivity went off, as it came on,
gradually. "Lord, we are still under the burden of the seventy years'
wrath,
and wilt thou be angry with us for ever?"
3. He heard a gracious reply given to this intercession of
Christ's for his church; for it is a prevailing intercession, always
acceptable,
and him the Father heareth always (v. 13):
The Lord
answered the angel, this angel of the covenant,
with good words and
comfortable words, with promises of mercy and deliverance, and the
perfecting of what he had begun in favour to them. These were comfortable words
to Christ, who is grieved in the grievances of his church, and comfortable to
all that mourn with Zion. God often answers prayer with good words, when he does
not immediately appear in great works; and those good words are real answers to
prayer. Men's good words will not feed the body (Jam. 2:16), but God's good
words will feed the faith, for saying and doing with him are not two things,
though they are with us.
4. He heard that reply which was given to the angel repeated to
himself, with a commission to publish it to the children of his people, for
their comfort.
The revelation of Jesus Christ which God gave to him he
signified
to his servant John, and by him
to the churches, Rev. 1:1, 4. Thus
all the good words and comfortable words of the gospel we receive from Jesus
Christ, as he received them from the Father, in answer to the prayer of his
blood, and his ministers are appointed to preach them
to all the world.
Now that God would
speak comfortably to Jerusalem, Zechariah is
the
voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare you the way of the Lord. The
voice said, Cry. Cry then. The prophets must now cry as loudly to show God's
people their comforts as ever they did formerly to show them
their
transgressions, Isa. 40:2, 3, 6. And if he ask,
What shall I cry? he
is here instructed. (1.) He must proclaim the wrath God has in store for the
enemies of Jerusalem. He is
jealous for Zion with great jealousy, v. 14.
He takes himself to be highly affronted by the injuries and indignities that are
done to his church, as he had been formerly by the iniquities found in his
church. The earth
sat still and was at rest (v. 11), not relenting at
all, nor showing the least remorse, for all the mischief they had done to
Jerusalem, as Joseph's brethren, who, when they had sold him, sat down to eat
bread; and this God took very ill (v. 15):
I am very sorely displeased with
the heathen, that are at ease, and have no concern for the afflicted church.
Much more will he be displeased with those that are
at ease in Zion (Amos
6:1), with Zion's own sons, that sympathize not with her in her sorrows. But
this was not all; they were not only not concerned for her, but they were
concerned against her:
I was but a little displeased with my people, and
designed to correct them moderately, but those that were employed as instruments
of the correction cast off all pity, and with the greatest rage and malice
helped
forward the affliction and added to it,
persecuting those whom God had
smitten (Ps. 69:26) and insulting over those whom he had troubled. See Isa.
47:6; 10:5; Eze. 25:12, 15. Note, God is displeased with those who help forward
the affliction even of such as suffer justly; for true humanity, in such a case,
is good divinity. (2.) He must proclaim the mercy God has in store for Jerusalem
and the
cities of Judah, v. 16. He must cry,
"Thus saith the
Lord, I have returned to Jerusalem with mercies. I was going away in wrath,
but I am now returning in love.
Cry yet to the same purport," v. 17.
There must now be line upon line for consolation, as formerly there had been for
conviction.
The Lord, even the Lord of hosts, assures them, [1.] That the
temple shall be built that is now but in the building. This good work which they
are now about, though it meet with much discouragement, shall be perfected, and
they shall have the tokens of God's presence, and opportunities of conversing
with him, and worshipping him, as formerly. Note, It is good news indeed to any
place to hear that God will build his house in it. [2.] That Jerusalem shall
again be
built as a city compact together, which had formerly been its
glory, Ps. 122:3.
A line shall be stretched forth upon Jerusalem, in
order to the rebuilding of it with great exactness and uniformity. [3.] That the
nation shall again become populous and rich, though now diminished and
impoverished. Not only Jerusalem, but other cities that are reduced and lie in a
little compass, shall yet
spread abroad, or be diffused; their suburbs
shall extend far, and colonies shall be transplanted from them; and this
through
prosperity: they shall be so numerous, and so wealthy, that there shall not
be room for them; they shall complain that
the place is too strait, Isa.
49:20. As they had been scattered and spread abroad, through their calamities,
so they should now be through their prosperity.
Let thy fountains be
dispersed, Prov. 5:16. The cities that should thus increase God calls his
cities; they are
blessed by him, and they are
fruitful and multiply,
and replenish the land. [4.] That all their present sorrows should not only
be balanced, but for ever silenced, by divine consolations:
The Lord shall
yet comfort Zion. Yet at length, though her griefs and grievances may
continue long, God has comforts in reserve for Zion and all her mourners. [5.]
That all this will be the fruit of God's preventing distinguishing favour: He
shall yet
choose Jerusalem, shall renew his choice, renew his covenant,
shall make it appear that he has chosen Jerusalem. As he first built them up
into a people when he brought them out of Egypt, so he will now rebuild them,
when he brings them out of Babylon, not for any worthiness of theirs, but in
pursuance of his own choice, Deu. 7:7, 8. Jerusalem is the city he has chosen,
and he will not cast it off.
Verses 18-21
It is the comfort and triumph of the church (Isa. 59:19) that
when
the enemy shall come in like a flood, with mighty force and fury, then the
Spirit
of the Lord shall lift up a standard against him. Now, in this vision (the
second which this prophet had), we have an illustration of that, God's Spirit
making a stand, and making head, against the formidable power of the church's
adversaries.
I. We have here the enemies of the church bold and daring, and
threatening to be its death, to
cut off the name of Israel; such the
people of God had lately been insulted by:
I looked and behold four horns
(v. 18), which are explained v. 19. They
are the horns which have scattered
Judah, Israel, and Jerusalem, that is, the Jews both in the country and in
the city, because they were the Israel of God. They have
tossed them (so
some read it), as furious bulls with their horns toss that which they are
enraged at. They have scattered them,
so that no man did lift up his head,
v. 21. No man durst show his face for fear of them, much less give them any
opposition, or make head against them. They are
horns, denoting their
dignity and dominion
horns exalted, denoting also their strength, and
power, and violence. They are
four horns, for the Jews are surrounded
with them on every side; when they avoid one horn that pushes at them they run
upon another. The men of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and many of
Israel that joined themselves to them, set about the building of the temple; but
the enemies of that work from all sides pushed at them, and drove them from it.
Rehum, and Shimshai, and the other Samaritans that opposed the building of the
temple, were these horns, Ezra 4:8. So were Sanballat and Tobiah, and the
Ammonites and Arabians, that opposed the building of the wall, Neh. 4:7. Note,
The church's enemies have horns, and use them to the hindrance of every good
work. The great enemy of the New-Testament church has
seven heads and ten
horns (Rev. 17:3), so that those who endeavour to do the church any service
must expect to be pushed at.
II. We have here the friends of the church active and
prevailing. The prophet did himself lift up his eyes and see the four horns, and
saw them so formidable that he began to despair of the safety of every good man,
and the success of every good work; but
the Lord then
showed him four
carpenters, or
smiths, who were empowered to cut off these horns, v.
20, 21. With an eye of sense we see the power of the enemies of the church; look
which way we will, the world shows us that. But it is with an eye of faith that
we see it safe, notwithstanding; it is the Lord that shows us that, as he opened
the eyes of the prophet's servant to see the angelic guards round about his
master, 2 Ki. 6:17. Observe, Those that were to fray or break the horns of the
Gentiles, and to cast them out, were, 1.
Carpenters or
smiths (for
they are supposed by some to have been horns of iron), men who had skill and
ability to do it, whose proper business it was, and who understood their
business and had tools at hand to do it with. Note, God calls those to serve the
interests of his church whom he either finds, or makes, fit for it. If there be
horns (which denote the force and fury of beasts) against the church, there are
carpenters (which denote the wisdom and forecast of men) for the church, by
which they find ways to master the strongest beasts, for
every kind of beasts
is tamed, and has been tamed, of mankind, Jam. 3:7. 2. They were
four
carpenters, as many horns so many hands to saw them off. Note, Which way
soever the church is threatened with mischief, and opposition given to its
interests, God can find out ways and means to check the force, to restrain the
wrath, and make it turn to his praise. Some by these four carpenters understand
Zerubbabel and Joshua, Ezra and Nehemiah, who carried on the work of God in
spite of the opposition given to it. Those horned beasts broke into God's
vineyard to tread it down; but the good magistrates and the good ministers whom
God raised up, though they had not power to
cut off the horns of the wicked
(as David did, Ps. 75:5, 10), yet frightened them and cast them out. Note, When
God has work to do he will raise up some to do it and others to defend it and
protect those that are employed in the doing of it.
Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Haggai Malachi
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
Classic Bible CommentariesCourtesy of E-Word Today
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