Chapter 13:
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| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Haggai Malachi
Zechariah 13
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. Some further promises relating to
gospel-times. Here is a promise of the remission of sins (v. 1), of the
reformation of manners (v. 2), and particularly of the convicting and silencing
of false prophets (v. 2-6). II. A clear prediction of the sufferings of Christ
and the dispersion of his disciples thereupon (v. 7), of the destruction of the
greater part of the Jewish nation not long after (v. 8), and of the purifying of
a remnant of them, a peculiar people to God (v. 9).
Verses 1-6
Behold the Lamb of God
taking away the sin of the world,
the sin of the church; for
therefore was the Son of God manifested, to
take
away our sin, 1 Jn. 3:5.
I. He takes away the guilt of sin by the blood of his cross (v.
1):
In that day, in the gospel-day,
there shall be a fountain opened,
that is, provision made for the cleansing of all those from the pollutions of
sin who truly repent and are sorry for them.
In that day, when the Spirit
of grace is poured out to set them a mourning for their sins, they shall not
mourn as those who have no hope, but they shall have their sins pardoned, and
the comfort of their pardon in their bosoms. Their consciences shall be purified
and pacified by the
blood of Christ, which cleanses from all sin, 1 Jn.
1:7. For Christ is exalted to give both repentance and remission of sins; and
where he gives the one no doubt he gives the other. This
fountain opened
is the pierced side of Jesus Christ, spoken of just before (ch. 12:10), for
thence came there out
blood and water, and both for cleansing. And those
who
look upon Christ pierced, and mourn for their sins that pierced him,
and are therefore in bitterness for him, may look again upon Christ pierced and
rejoice in him, because it pleased the Lord thus to smite this rock, that it
might be to us a
fountain of living waters. See here, 1. How we are
polluted; we are all so; we have sinned, and sin is uncleanness; it defiles the
mind and conscience, renders us odious to God and uneasy in ourselves, unfit to
be employed in the service of God and admitted into communion with him, as those
who were ceremonially unclean were shut out of the sanctuary. The
house of
David and the
inhabitants of Jerusalem are under
sin, which is
uncleanness. The truth is, we are all
as an unclean thing, and deserve to
have our portion with the unclean. 2. How we may be purged. Behold, there is
fountain opened for us to wash in, and there are streams flowing to us from that
fountain, so that, if we be not made clean, it is our own fault. The blood of
Christ, and God's pardoning mercy in that blood, revealed in the new covenant,
are, (1.) A fountain; for there is in them an inexhaustible fulness. There is
mercy enough in God, and merit enough in Christ, for the forgiving of the
greatest sins and sinners, upon gospel-terms.
Such were some of you, but you
are washed, 1 Co. 6:11. Under the law there were a brazen laver and a brazen
sea to wash in; those were but vessels, but we have a fountain to ourselves,
overflowing, ever-flowing. (2.)
A fountain opened; for, whoever will, may
come and take the benefit of it; it is opened, not only to
the house of
David, but to
the inhabitants of Jerusalem, to the poor and mean as
well as to the rich and great; or it is opened for all believers, who, as the
spiritual seed of Christ, are of the house of David, and, as living members of
the church, are inhabitants of Jerusalem. Through Christ all that believe are
justified, are
washed from their sins in his blood, that they may be
made
to our God kings and priests, Rev. 1:5, 6.
II. He takes away the dominion of sin by the power of his grace,
even of beloved sins. This evermore accompanies the former; those that are
washed in the fountain opened, as they are justified, so they are sanctified;
the water came with the blood out of the pierced side of Christ. It is here
promised that in that day, 1. Idolatry shall be quite abolished and the people
of the Jews shall be effectually cured of their inclination to it (v. 2):
I
will cut off the names of the idols out of the land. The worship of the
idols of their fathers shall be so perfectly rooted out that in one generation
or two it shall be forgotten that ever there were such idols among them; they
shall either not be named at all or not with any respect;
they shall no more
be remembered, as was promised, Hos. 2:17. This was fulfilled in the rooted
aversion which the Jews had, after the captivity, to idols and idolatry, and
still retain to this day; it was fulfilled also in the ready conversion of many
to the faith of Christ, by which they were taken off from making an idol of the
ceremonial law, as the unbelieving Jews did; and it is still in the fulfilling
when souls are brought off from the world and the flesh, those two great idols,
that they may cleave to God only. 2. False prophecy shall also be brought to an
end:
I will cause the prophets and the unclean spirit, the prophets that
are under the influence of the unclean spirit, to
pass out of the land.
The devil is an
unclean spirit; sin and uncleanness are from him; he has
his prophets, that serve his interests and receive their instructions from him.
Take away the unclean spirit, and the prophets would not deceive as they do;
take away the false prophets that produce sham commissions, and the unclean
spirit could not do the mischief he does. When God designs the silencing of the
false prophets he banishes the unclean spirit out of the land, that wrought in
them, and was a rival with him for the throne in the heart. The church of the
Jews, when they were addicted to idols, did also dote much upon false prophets,
who flattered them in their sins with promises of impunity and peace; but here
it is promised, as a blessed effect of the promised reformation, that they
should be very much set against false prophets, and zealous to clear the land of
them; they were so after the captivity, till, through the blindness of their
zeal against false prophets, they had put Christ to death under that character,
and, after that, there arose many
false Christs and false prophets, and
deceived many, Mt. 24:11. It is here foretold, (1.) That false prophets,
instead of being indulged and favoured, should be brought to condign punishment
even by their nearest relations, which would be as great an instance as any of
flagrant zeal against those deceivers (v. 3):
When any shall set up for a
prophet, and shall
speak lies in the name of the Lord, shall preach that
which tends to draw people from God and to confirm them in sin, his own parents
shall be the first and most forward to prosecute him for it, according to the
law. Deu. 13:6-11,
"If thy son entice thee secretly from God,
thou
shalt surely kill him. Show thy indignation against him, and prevent any
further temptation from him." His
father and his mother shall thrust him
through when he prophesies. Note, We ought to conceive, and always to
retain, a very great detestation and dread of every thing that would draw us out
of the way of our duty into by-paths, as those who cannot
bear that which is
evil, Rev. 2:2. And holy zeal for God and godliness will make us hate sin,
and dread temptation, most in those whom naturally we love best, and who are
nearest to us; there our danger is greatest, as Adam's from Eve, Job's from
his wife; and there it will be the most praiseworthy to show our zeal, as Levi,
who, in the cause of God, did not
acknowledge his brethren, nor
know
his own children, Deu. 33:9. Thus we must hate and forsake our nearest
relations when they come in competition with our duty to God, Lu. 14:26. Natural
affections, even the strongest, must be over-ruled by gracious affections. (2.)
That false prophets should be themselves convinced of their sin and folly, and
let fall their pretensions (v. 4):
"The prophets shall be ashamed every
one of his vision; they shall not repeat it, or insist upon it, but desire
that it may be forgotten and no more said of it, being ready themselves to own
it was a sham, because God has by his grace awakened their consciences and shown
them their error, or because the event disproves their predictions, and gives
them the lie, or because their prophecies do not meet with such a favourable
reception as they used to meet with, but are generally despised and distasted;
they perceive the people ashamed of them, which makes them begin to be ashamed
of themselves. And therefore they shall no longer
wear a rough garment,
or
garment of hair, as the true prophets used to do, in imitation of
Elijah, and in token of their being mortified to the pleasures and delights of
sense." The pretenders had appeared in the habit of true prophets; but,
their folly being now made manifest, they shall lay it aside, no more to deceive
and impose upon unthinking unwary people by it. A modest dress is a very good
thing, if it be the genuine indication of a humble heart, and is to instruct;
but it is a bad thing if it be the hypocritical disguise of a proud ambitious
heart, and is to deceive. Let men be really as good as they seem to be, but not
seem to be better than really they are. This pretender, as a true penitent, [1.]
Shall undeceive those whom he had imposed upon:
He shall say, "I am no
prophet, as I have pretended to be, was never designed nor set apart to the
office, never educated nor brought up for it, never conversant among the sons of
the prophets.
I am a husbandman, and was bred to that business; I was
never taught of God to prophesy, but
taught of man to keep cattle"
Amos was originally such a one too, and yet was afterwards called to be a
prophet, Amos 7:14, 15. But this deceiver never had any such call. Note, Those
who sorrow after a godly sort for their having deceived others will be forward
to confess their sin, and will be so just as to rectify the mistakes which they
have been the cause of. Thus those who had
used curious arts, when they
were converted
showed their deeds, and by what fallacies they had cheated
the people, Acts 19:18. [2.] He shall return to his own proper employment, which
is the fittest for him:
I will be a husbandman (so it may be read);
"I will apply myself to my calling again, and meddle no more with things
that belong not to me; for
man taught me to keep cattle from my youth,
and cattle I will again keep, and never set up for a preacher any more."
Note, When we are convinced that we have gone out of the way of our duty we must
evince the truth of our repentance by returning to it again, though it be the
severest mortification to us. [3.] He shall acknowledge those to be his friends
who by a severe discipline were instrumental to bring him to a sight of his
error, v. 6. When he who with the greatest assurance had asserted himself so
lately to be a prophet suddenly drops his claims, and says, I am no prophet,
every body will be surprised at it, and some will ask,
"What are these
wounds, or marks of stripes,
in thy hands? how camest thou by them?
Hast thou not been
examined by scourging? And is not that it that has
brought thee to thyself?"
(Vexatio dat intellectumVexation sharpens
the intellect.) "Hast thou not been beaten into this acknowledgment?
Was it not the rod and reproof that gave thee this wisdom?" And he shall
own, "Yes, it was; these are the
wounds with which I was wounded in the
house of my friends, who bound me, and used me hardly and severely, as a
distracted man, and so brought me to my senses." By this it appears that
those parents of the false prophet that
thrust him through (v. 3) did not
do it till they had first tried to reclaim him by correction, and he would not
be reclaimed; for so was the law concerning a disobedient sonhis parents must
first have chastened him in vain before they were allowed to bring him forth to
be stoned, Deu. 21:18, 19. But here is another who was reduced by stripes, and
so prevented the capital punishment; and he had the sense and honesty to own
that they were his friends, his real friends, who thus wounded him, that they
might reclaim him; for
faithful are the wounds of a friend, Prov. 27:6.
Some good interpreters, observing how soon this comes after the mention of
Christ's being pierced, think that these are the words of that great prophet,
not of the false prophet spoken of before. Christ was wounded in his hands, when
they were nailed to the cross, and, after his resurrection, he had the marks of
these wounds; and here he tells how he came by them; he received them as a false
prophet, for the chief priests called him a deceiver, and upon that account
would have him crucified; but he received them in the house of his friendsthe
Jews, who should have been his friends; for
he came to his own, and,
though they were his bitter enemies, yet he was pleased to call them his
friends,
as he did Judas
(Friend, wherefore hast thou come?) because they
forwarded his sufferings for him; as he called Peter
Satanan adversary,
because he dissuaded him from them.
Verses 7-9
Here is a prophecy,
I. Of the sufferings of Christ, of him who was to be pierced,
and was to be the fountain opened.
Awake, O sword! against my Shepherd,
v. 7. These are the words of God the Father, giving order and commission to the
sword of his justice to awake against his Son, when he had voluntarily made his
soul an offering for sin; for
it pleased the Lord to bruise him and
put
him to grief; and
he was stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted, Isa.
53:4, 10. Observe, 1. How he calls him. "As God, he is
my fellow;"
for he thought it
no robbery to be equal with God. He and
the Father
are
one. He was from eternity by him, as one brought up with him, and, in
the work of man's redemption, he was his elect, in whom his soul delighted,
and the counsel of peace was between them both. "As Mediator, he is
my
Shepherd, that great and good Shepherd that undertook to feed the flock,"
ch. 11:7. He is the Shepherd that was to lay down his life for the sheep. 2. How
he uses him:
Awake, O sword! against him. If he will be a sacrifice, he
must be slain, for without the shedding of blood, the life-blood, there was no
remission. men thrust him through as the good Shepherd (compare v. 3), that he
might
purchase the flock of God with
his own blood, Acts 20:28. It
is not a charge given to a rod to correct him, but to a sword to slay him; for
Messiah
the prince must be cut off, but not for himself, Dan. 9:26. It is not the
sword of war that receives this charge, that he may die in the bed of honour,
but the sword of justice, that he may die as a criminal, upon an ignominious
tree. This sword must awake against him; he having no sin of his own to answer
for, the sword of justice had nothing to say to him of itself, till, by
particular order from the Judge of all, it was warranted to brandish itself
against him. he was the Lamb
slain from the foundation of the world, in
the decree and counsel of God; but the sword designed against him had long
slumbered, till now at length it is called upon to awake, not, "Awake, and
smite him; strike home; not with a drowsy blow, but an awakened one;" for
God
spared not his own Son.
II. Of the dispersion of the disciples thereupon:
Smite the
Shepherd, and the sheep shall be scattered. This our Lord Jesus himself
declares to have been fulfilled when
all his disciples were offended because
of him in the night wherein he was betrayed, Mt. 26:31; Mk. 14:27. They all
forsook
him and fled. The smiting of the Shepherd is the scattering of the sheep.
They were
scattered every one to his own, and left him alone, Jn. 16:32.
Herein they were like timorous sheep; yet the Shepherd thus provided for their
safety, for he said,
If you seek me, let these go their way. Some make
another application of this; Christ was the
Shepherd of the Jewish
nation; he was smitten; they themselves smote him, and therefore they were
justly scattered abroad, and dispersed among the nations, and remain so at this
day. These words,
I will turn my hand upon the little ones, may be
understood either as a threatening (as Christ suffered, so shall his disciples,
they shall
drink of the cup that he drank of and be
baptized with the
baptism that he was baptized with) or as a promise that God would gather
Christ's scattered disciples together again, and he should give them the
meeting in Galilee. Though the little ones among Christ's soldiers may be
dispersed, they shall rally again; the lambs of his flock, though frightened by
the beasts of prey, shall recover themselves, shall be gathered in his arms and
laid in his bosom. Sometimes, when the sheep are scattered and lost in the
wilderness, yet the little ones, which, it was feared, would be a prey (Num.
14:31), are brought in, are brought home, and God turns his hand upon them.
III. Of the rejection and ruin of the unbelieving Jews (v. 8);
and this word has, and shall have, its accomplishment, in the destruction of the
corrupt and hypocritical part of the church.
It shall come to pass that in
all the land of Israel two parts shall be cut off and die. The Roman army
laid the country waste, and slew at least two-thirds of the Jews. Some
understand by the
cutting off, and
dying, or
two parts in
all
the earth, the abolishing of heathenism and Judaism, that
Christianity, the third part, might be left to reign alone. The Jewish worship
was quite taken away by the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple. And, some
time after, Pagan idolatry was in a manner extirpated, when the empire became
Christian.
IV. Of the reformation and preservation of the chosen remnant,
those of them that believed, and the Christian church in general (v. 9):
The
third part shall be left. When Jerusalem and Judea were destroyed, all the
Christians in that country, having among them the warning Christ gave them to
flee
to the mountains, shifted for their own safety, and were sheltered in a city
called
Pella, on the other side Jordan. We have here first the trials and
then the triumphs of the Christian church, and of all the faithful members of
it. 1. Their trials:
I will bring that
third part through the fire
of affliction.
and will refine and
try them as
silver and gold
are refined and tried. This was fulfilled in the persecutions of the
primitive church, the
fiery trial which tried the people of God then, 1
Pt. 4:12. Those whom God sets apart for himself must pass through a probation
and purification in this world; they must be
tried that
their faith
may be
found to praise and honour (1 Pt. 1:6, 7), as Abraham's faith
was when it was tried by the command given him to offer up Isaac,
Now know I
that thou fearest me. They must be tried, that both those that are perfect
and those that are not may be
made manifest. They must be refined from
their dross; their corruption must be purged out; they must be brightened and
bettered. 2. Their triumphs. (1.) Their communion with God is their triumph:
They
shall call on my name, and I will hear them. They write to God by prayer,
and receive from him answers of peace, and thus keep up a comfortable communion
with him.
This honour have all his saints. (2.) Their covenant with God
is their triumph:
"I will say, It is my people, whom I have chosen
and loved, and will own;
and they shall say, the Lord is my God, and a
God all-sufficient to me; and in me they shall boast every day and all the day
long.
This God is our God for ever and ever."
Chapter 13:
| 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
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