Chapter 3:
| 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
Zechariah 3
Complete Concise
The vision in the foregoing chapter gave assurances of the
re-establishing of the civil interests of the Jewish nation, the promises of
which terminated in Christ. Now the vision in this chapter concerns their
church-state, and their ecclesiastical interests, and assures them that they
shall be put into a good posture again; and the promises of this also have an
eye to Christ, who is not only our prince, but the high priest of our
profession, of whom Joshua was a type. Here is, I. A vision relating to Joshua,
as the representative of the church in his time, representing the disadvantages
he laboured under, and the people in him, with the redress of the grievances of
both. 1. He is accused by Satan, but is brought off by Christ (v. 1, 2). 2. He
appears in filthy garments, but has them changed (v. 3-5). 3. He is assured of
being established in his office if he conduct himself well (v. 6, 7). II. A
sermon relating to Christ, who is here called "The branch," who should
be endued with all perfections for his undertaking, should be carried
triumphantly through it, and by whom we should have pardon and peace (v. 8-10).
Verses 1-7
There was a Joshua that was a principal agent in the first
settling of Israel in Canaan; here is another of the same name very active in
their second settlement there after the captivity; Jesus is the same name, and
it signifies
Saviour; and they were both figures of him that was to come,
our chief captain and our chief priest. The angel that talked with
Zechariah
showed him Joshua the high priest; it is probable that the prophet saw him
frequently, that he spoke to him, and that there was a great intimacy between
them; but, in his common views, he only saw how he appeared before men; if he
must know how he stands before the Lord, it must be shown him in vision; and so
it is shown him. And men are really as they are with God, not as they appear in
the eye of the world. He stood
before the angel of the Lord, that is,
before Christ, the Lord of the angels, to whom even the high priests themselves,
of Aaron's order, were accountable. He
stood before the angel of the Lord
to execute his office, to minister to God under the inspection of the angels. He
stood to consult the oracle on the behalf of Israel, for whom, as high priest,
he was agent. Guilt and corruption are our two great discouragements when we
stand before God. By the guilt of the sins committed by us we have become
obnoxious to the justice of God; by the power of the sin that dwells in us we
have become odious to the holiness of God. All God's Israel are in danger upon
these two accounts. Joshua was so here, for
the law made men priests that had
infirmity, Heb. 7:28. And, as to both, we have relief from Jesus Christ, who
is made of God to us both
righteousness and sanctification.
I. Joshua is accused as a criminal, but is justified. 1. A
violent opposition is made to him.
Satan stands at his right hand to resist
him to be a
Satan to him, a law-adversary. He stands at his right
hand, as the prosecutor, or witness, at the right hand of the prisoner. Note,
The devil is the accuser of the brethren, that
accuses them before God day
and night, Rev. 12:10. Some think the chief priest was accused for the sin
of many of the inferior priests, in marrying strange wives, which they were much
guilty of after their return out of captivity, Ezra 9:1, 2; Neh. 13:28. When God
is about to reestablish the priesthood Satan objects the sins that were found
among the priests, as rendering them unworthy the honour designed them. It is by
our own folly that we give Satan advantage against us and furnish him with
matter for reproach and accusation; and if any thing be amiss, especially with
the priests, Satan will be sure to aggravate it and make the worst of it. He
stood
to resist him, that is, to oppose the service he was doing for the public
good. He stood
at his right hand, the hand of action, to discourage him,
and raise difficulties in his way. Note, When we stand before God to minister to
him, or stand up for God to serve his interests, we must expect to meet with all
the resistance that Satan's subtlety and malice can give us. Let us then
resist him that resists us and he shall flee from us. 2. A victorious defence is
made for him (v. 2):
The Lord (that is, the Lord Christ)
said unto
Satan, The Lord rebuke thee. Note, It is the happiness of the saints that
the Judge is their friend; the same that they are accused to is their patron and
protector, and an advocate for them, and he will be sure to bring them off. (1.)
Satan is here checked by one that has authority, that has conquered him, and
many a time silenced him.
The accuser of the brethren, of the ministers
and the ministry,
is cast out; his indictments are quashed, and his
suggestions against them as well as his suggestions to them, are shown to be
malicious, frivolous, and vexatious.
The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan! The Lord
said (that is, the Lord our Redeemer),
The Lord rebuke thee, that is,
the Lord the Creator. The power of God is engaged for the making of the grace of
Christ effectual.
"The Lord restrain thy malicious rage, reject thy
malicious charge, and revenge upon thee thy enmity to a servant of his"
Note, those that belong to Christ have him ready to appear vigorously for them
when Satan appears most vehement against them. He does not parley with him, but
stops his mouth immediately with this sharp reprimand:
The Lord rebuke thee,
O Satan! This is the best way of dealing with that furious enemy.
Get
thee behind me, Satan. (2.) Satan is here argued with. He resists the
priest, but let him know that his resistance, [1.] Will be fruitless; it will be
to no purpose to attempt any thing against Jerusalem, for
the Lord has chosen
it, and he will abide by his choice. Whatever is objected against God's
people, God saw it; he foresaw it when he chose them and yet he chose them, and
therefore that can be no inducement to him now to reject them; he knew the worst
of them when he chose them; and his election shall obtain. [2.] It is
unreasonable; for
is not this a brand plucked out of the fire? Joshua is
so, and the priesthood, and the people, whose representative he is. Christ has
not that to say for them for which they are to be praised, but that for which
they are to be pitied. Note, Christ is ready to make the best of his people, and
takes notice of every thing that is pleadable in excuse of their infirmities, so
far is he from being extreme to mark what they do amiss. They have been lately
in the fire; no wonder that they are black and smoked, and have the smell of
fire upon them, but they are therefore to be excused, not to be accused. One can
expect no other than that those who but the other day were captives in Babylon
should appear very mean and despicable. They have been lately brought out of
great affliction; and is Satan so barbarous as to desire to have them thrown
into affliction again? They have been wonderfully delivered out of the fire,
that God might be glorified in them; and will he then cast them off and abandon
them? No, he will not quench the smoking flax, the smoking fire-brand; for he
snatched it out of the fire because he intended to make use of it. Note, Narrow
escapes from imminent danger are happy presages and powerful pleas for more
eminent favours. A converted soul is a
brand plucked out of the fire by a
miracle of free grace, and therefore shall not be left to be a prey to Satan.
II. Joshua appears as one polluted, but is purified; for he
represents the Israel of God, who are all
as an unclean thing, till they
are washed and sanctified
in the name of the Lord Jesus and
by the
Spirit of our God. Now observe here, 1. The impurity wherein Joshua appeared
(v. 3):
He was clothed, not only in coarse, but in
filthy garments,
such as did very ill become the dignity of his office and the sanctity of his
work. By the law of Moses the garments of the high priest were to be
for
glory and for beauty, Ex. 28:2. But Joshua's garments were a shame and
reproach to him; yet in them
he stood before the angel of the Lord; he
had no clean linen wherein to minister and to do the duty of his place. Now this
intimates, not only that the priesthood was poor and despised, and loaded with
contempt, but that there was a great deal of iniquity cleaving to the holy
things. The returned Jews were so taken up with their troubles that they thought
they needed not complain of their sins, and were not aware that those were the
great hindrances of the progress of God's work among them; because they were
free from idolatry they thought themselves chargeable with no iniquity. But God
showed them there were many things amiss in them, which retarded the advances of
God's favours towards them. There were spiritual enemies warring against them,
more dangerous than any of the neighbouring nations. The Chaldee paraphrase
says,
Joshua had sons who took unto them wives which were not lawful for the
priests to take; and we find it was so, Ezra 10:18. And, no doubt, there
were other things amiss in the priesthood, Mal. 2:1. Yet Joshua was permitted to
stand before the angel of the Lord. Though his children did not as they
should, yet the covenant of priesthood was not broken. Note, Christ bears with
his people, whose hearts are upright with him, and admits them into communion
with himself, notwithstanding their manifold infirmities. 2. The provision that
was made for his cleansing. Christ gave orders to the angels that attended him,
and were ready to do his pleasure, to put Joshua into a better state. Joshua
presented himself before the Lord in his filthy garments, as an object of his
pity; and Christ graciously looked upon him with compassion, and not, as justly
he might have done, with indignation. Christ loathed the filthiness of Joshua's
garments, yet did not put him away, but put them away. Thus God by his grace
does with those whom he chooses to be priests to himself; he parts between them
and their sins, and so prevents their sins parting between them and their God;
he reconciles himself to the sinner, but not to the sin. Two things are here
done for Joshua, representing a double work of divine grace wrought in and for
believers:(1.) His filthy garments are taken from him, v. 4. The meaning of
this is given us in what Christ said, and he said it as one having authority,
Behold,
I have caused thy iniquity to pass from thee. The guilt of it is taken away
by pardoning mercy, the stench and stain of it by peace spoken to the
conscience, and the power of it broken by renewing grace. When God forgives our
sins he
causes our iniquity to pass from us, that it may not appear
against us, to condemn us; it passes from us
as far as the east is from the
west. When he sanctifies the nature he enables us to
put off the old man,
to cast away from us the filthy rags of our corrupt affections and lusts, as
things we will never have any thing more to do with, will never gird to us or
appear in. Thus Christ
washes those from their sins in his own blood whom
he
makes to our God kings and priests, Rev. 1:5, 6. Either we must be
cleansed from the pollutions of sin or we shall,
as polluted, be put from
that
priesthood, Ezra 2:62. (2.) He is clothed anew, has not only the
shame of his filthiness removed, but the shame of his nakedness covered:
I
will clothe thee with change of raiment. Joshua had no clean linen of his
own, but Christ will provide for him, for he will not let a priesthood of his
own instituting be lost, be either contemptible before men or unacceptable
before God. The change of raiment here is rich costly raiment, such as is worn
on high days. Joshua shall appear as lovely as ever he appeared loathsome. Those
that minister in holy things shall not only cease to do evil, but learn to do
well; God will make them wise, and humble, and diligent, and faithful, and
examples of every thing that is good; and then Joshua is clothed with change of
raiment. Thus those whom Christ makes spiritual priests are clothed with the
spotless robe of his righteousness and appear before God in that, and with the
graces of his Spirit, which are ornaments to them.
The righteousness of
saints, both imputed and implanted, is the fine linen, clean and white, with
which
the bride, the Lamb's wife, is arrayed, Rev. 19:8.
III. Joshua is in danger of being turned out of office; but,
instead of that, he is reinstalled and established in his office. He not only
has his sins pardoned, and is furnished with grace sufficient for himself, but,
as
rectus in curiaacquitted in court, he is restored to his former
honours and trusts. 1. The crown of the priesthood is put upon him, v. 5. This
was done at the special instance and request of the prophet: I said,
"Let
them set a fair mitre upon his head, as a badge of his office. Now that he
looks clean, let him also look great; let him be dressed up in all the garments
of the high priest." Note, When God designs the restoring or reviving of
religion he stirs up his prophets and people to pray for it, and does it in
answer to their prayers. Zechariah prayed that the angels might be ordered to
set the mitre on Joshua's head, and they did it immediately, and
clothed
him with the priestly
garments; for no man took this honour to
himself,
but he that was called of God to it.
The angel of the Lord
stood by, as having the oversight of the work which the created angels were
employed in. He stood by, as one well pleased with it, and resolved to stand by
the orders he had given for the doing of it and to continue his presence with
that priesthood. 2. The covenant of the priesthood is renewed with him, which is
called God's
covenant of peace, Num. 25:12. Mr. Pemble calls it
the
patent of his office, which is here declared and delivered to him before
witnesses, v. 6, 7. The angel of the Lord, having taken care to make him fit for
his office (and all that God calls to any office he either finds fit or makes
so), invests him in it. And though he is not
made a priest with an oath
(that honour is reserved for him who is a priest after the order of Melchisedek,
Heb. 7:21), yet, being a type of him, he is inaugurated with a solemn
declaration of the terms upon which he held his office. The angel of the Lord
protested to Joshua that, if he would be sure to do the duty of his place, he
should enjoy the dignity and reward of it. Now see, (1.) What the conditions are
upon which he enters into his office. Let him know that he is upon his good
behaviour; he must
walk in God's ways, that is, he must live a good
life and be holy in all manner of conversation; he must go before the people in
the paths of God's commandments, and walk circumspectly. He must also
keep
God's charge, must carefully do all the services of the priesthood, and
must see to it that the inferior priests performed the duties of their place
decently and in order. He must
take heed to himself, and to
all the
flock, Acts 20:28. Note, Good ministers must be good Christians; yet that is
not enough: they have a trust committed to them, they are charged with it, and
they must keep it with all possible care, that they may give up their account of
it with joy, 1 Tim. 6:14. (2.) What the privileges are which we may expect, and
be assured of, in the due discharge of his office. His patent runs,
Quamdiu
se bene gesseritDuring good behaviour. Let him be sure to do his part,
and God will own him. [1.]
"Thou shalt judge my house; thou shalt
preside in the affairs of the temple, and the inferior priests shall be under
thy direction." Note, The power of the church, and of church rulers, is not
a legislative, but only a judicial power. The high priest might not make any new
laws for God's house, nor ordain any other rites of worship than what God had
ordained; but he must judge God's house, that is, he must see to it that God's
laws and ordinances were punctually observed, must protect and encourage those
that did observe them, and enquire into and punish the violation of them. [2.]
"Thou
shalt also keep my courts; thou shalt have oversight of what is done in all
the courts of the temple, and shalt keep them pure and in good order for the
worship to be performed in them." Note, Ministers are God's stewards, and
they are to keep his courts, in honour of him who is the chief Lord and for the
preserving of equity and good order among his tenants. [3.]
"I will give
thee places to walk among those that stand by, among these angels that are
inspectors and assistants in this instalment." They shall stand by while
Joshua is at work for God, and shall be as a guard to him, or he shall be highly
honoured and respected as an
angel of God, Gal. 4:14. Ministers are
called
angels, Rev. 1. 20. Those that
walk in God's ways may be
said to
walk among the angels themselves, for they do the will of God as
the angels do it that are in heaven, and are their
fellow-servants, Rev.
19:10. Some make it a promise of eternal life, and of a reward of his fidelity
in the future state. Heaven is not only a palace, a place to repose in, but a
paradise, a garden, a place to walk in; and there are walks among the angels, in
society with that holy and glorious company. See Eze. 28:14.
Verses 8-10
As the promises made to David often slide insensibly into
promises of the Messiah, whose kingdom David's was a type of, so the promises
here made to Joshua immediately rise as far upward, and look as far forward, as
to Christ, whose priesthood Joshua's was now a shadow of, not only in general,
as it kept up the line of Aaron's priesthood, but especially as it was the
reviving of that happy method of correspondence between heaven and earth, to
which a great interruption had been given by the iniquity and captivity of
Israel. Christ is a high priest, as Joshua was, for sinners and sufferers, to
mediate for those that have been under guilt and wrath. And it was fit that
Joshua should understand the priesthood of Christ, because all the virtue of his
priesthood, its value and usefulness to the church, depended upon and was
derived from the priesthood of Christ. See,
I. To whom this promise of Christ is directed (v. 8):
"Hear
now, O Joshua! Thou hast heard with pleasure what belongs to thyself; but,
behold, a greater than Joshua is at hand.
Hear now concerning him,
thou
and the rest of the priests,
thy fellows, who sit before thee, at thy
feet, as learners, but whom thou art to look upon as
thy fellows, for all
you are brethren; let the high priest, and all the inferior priests, take notice
of this, for they are
men wondered at." They are set
for signs,
for types and figures of Christ's priesthood. What God now did for Joshua and
his fellows was a happy omen of the coming of the Messiah promised, and would be
so interpreted, with a pleasing wonder, by all that had understanding of the
times. Or they are men
wondered at for their singularity, hooted at as
strange sort of people, because they
run not with others to the same excess
of riot (1 Pt. 4:4), or for their strange afflictions and surprising
deliverance out of them, as Ps. 71:7,
I am as a wonder unto many. They
are
men of wonder; they are a wonder to themselves, are amazed to think
how happily their condition is altered. God's people and ministers are, upon
many accounts, men wondered at. The high priest and his fellows here (as the
prophet and his children, Isa. 8:18) are for signs and for wonders. But men's
wonder at them will cease when the Messiah comes, as the stars are eclipsed by
the light of the sun; for
his name shall be called Wonderful.
II. The promise itself, which consists of several parts, all
designed for the comfort and encouragement of Joshua and his friends in that
great good work of building the temple, which they were now engaged in. An eye
to Christ, and a believing dependence upon the promises relating to him and his
kingdom, would carry them through the difficulties they met with in that and
their other services. 1. The Messiah shall come:
Behold, I will bring forth
my servant the branch. He has been long hid, but the fulness of time is now
at hand, when he shall be brought forth into the world, brought forth among his
people Israel. God himself undertakes to bring him forth, and therefore, no
doubt, he will own him and stand by him. He is God's servant, employed in his
work, obedient to his will, and entirely devoted to his honour and glory. He is
the branch; so he was called Isa. 4:2,
The branch of the Lord. Isa. 11:1,
A branch out of the roots of Jesse. Jer. 23:5,
A righteous branch;
and Jer. 23:15,
The branch of righteousness. His beginning was small, as
a tender branch, but in time he should become a great tree and fill the earth,
Isa. 53:2. He is the branch from which all our fruit must be gathered. 2. Many
eyes shall be upon him. He is
the stone laid before Joshua, alluding to
the foundation or chief corner-stone, of the temple, which probably was laid,
with great solemnity, in the presence of Joshua. Christ is not only the branch,
which is the beginning of a tree, but the foundation, which is the beginning of
a building; and, when he shall be brought forth,
seven eyes shall be upon
him. The eye of his Father was upon him, to take care of him, and protect
him, especially in his sufferings; when he was buried in the grave, as the
foundation-stones are under ground, the eyes of Heaven were still upon him,
buried out of men's sight, but not out of God's. The eyes of all the
prophets and Old-Testament saints were upon this one stone; Abraham rejoiced to
see Christ's day, and he
saw it and was glad. The eyes of all believers
are upon him; they look unto him and are saved, as the eyes of the stung
Israelites were upon the brazen serpent. Some understand this
one stone
to have the seven eyes in it as the wheels had in Ezekiel's vision, and think
it denotes that perfection of wisdom and knowledge which Jesus Christ was endued
with, for the good of his church.
His eyes run to and fro through the earth.
3. God himself will beautify him, and put honour upon him:
I will engrave the
graving thereof, saith the Lord of hosts. This stone the builders refused,
as rough and unsightly; but God undertakes to smooth and polish it, nay, and to
carve it so that it shall be the
head stone of the corner, the most
beautiful in all the building. Christ was God's workmanship; and abundance of
his wisdom appears in the contrivance of our redemption, which will appear when
the engraving is perfected. This stone is a
precious stone, though laid
for a
foundation; and the
graving of it seems to allude to the
precious stones in the breast-plate of the high priest, which had the names of
the tribes
graven upon them, as the
engraving of a signet, Ex.
28:21, 22. In that breast-plate there were twelve stones laid before Aaron, and
for aught that appears those were lost; but there shall be one worth them all
laid before Joshua, and that is Christ himself. This precious stone shall
sparkle as if it had seven eyes; there shall appear a perfection of wisdom and
prudence in the oracles that proceed from the breast-plate of judgment. And God
will
engrave the engraving thereof; he will entrust Christ with all his
elect, and he shall appear as their representative, and agent for them, as the
high priest did when he went in before the Lord with the names of all Israel
engraven in the precious stones of his breast-plate. When God gave a remnant to
Christ, to be brought through grace to glory, then he
engraved the graving
of this
precious stone. 4. By him sin shall be taken away, both the guilt
and the dominion of it:
I will remove the iniquity of that land in one day.
When the high priest had the names of Israel engraven on the precious stones he
was adorned with he is said to
bear the iniquity of the holy things (Ex.
28:38); but the law
made nothing perfect, Heb. 10:1. He bore the iniquity
of the land, as a type of Christ; but he could not remove it; the doing of that
was reserved for Christ, that blessed
Lamb of God, that takes away the sin of
the world; and he did it
in one day, that day in which he suffered
and died; that was done by the sacrifice offered that day which could not be
done by the sacrifices of ages before, no, not by all the days of atonement
which from Moses to Christ returned every year. This agrees with the angel's
prediction (Dan. 9:24): He shall
finish transgression and make an end of sin.
And some make the engravings wherewith God engraved him to signify the wounds
and stripes which were given to his blessed body, which he underwent for our
transgression,
for our
iniquity, and
by which we are healed. 5. The effect of all
this shall be the sweet enjoyment which all believers shall have of themselves,
and the sweet communion they shall have with one another (v. 10):
In that day
you shall call every man his neighbour under the vine and the fig-tree,
which yield most pleasant fruit, and whose leaves also afford a refreshing shade
for arbours. When iniquity is taken away, (1.) We reap precious benefits and
privileges from our justification, more precious than the products of the vine
or the fig-tree, Rom. 5:1. (2.) We repose in a sweet tranquillity and are quiet
from the fear of evil. What should terrify us when iniquity is taken away, when
nothing can hurt us? We sit down under Christ's shadow with delight, and by it
are sheltered from the scorching heat of the curse of the law. We live as Israel
in the peaceable reign of Solomon (1 Ki. 4:24, 25); for he is the prince of
peace. (3.) We ought to invite others to come to partake with us in the
enjoyment of these privileges, to
call every man his neighbour to come
and sit with him, for mutual converse, under the vine and fig-tree, and to share
with him in the fruits he is surrounded with. Gospel-grace, as far as it comes
with power, makes men neighbourly; and those that have the comfort of
acquaintance with Christ themselves, and communion with God through him, will be
forward to court others to it.
Let us go unto the house of the Lord.
Chapter 3:
| 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
Copyright 2000-2009 BibleClassics.com
