Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Lesson Eight: Haggai and Zechariah 1-8


EXILE IN BABYLON 597 to 538

The theme of this period was a struggle to understand what was essential to their faith.

Ezekiel

Torah (first five books put together largely as we have them now)

Many think most of Job written during this period

Most scholars think Isaiah 40-55 written during this period

 

POST-EXILIC PERIOD WITH PERSIA AS THE DOMINANT WORLD POWER

Cambyses (530-522) One could read Ezra 1-4 at this point.

Darius 1 Hystaspes (522--486) One could read Ezra 4:24-6:22 at this point.

Most scholars think that Isaiah 56-66 were written at this time.

 

8  Haggai (August 29, 520 to December 18, 520, 2 Chapters) and


Haggai prophesied from August 29, 520 BC to December 18, 520 BC. Zechariah (name means “The Lord has remembered”) 1-8 represents prophecies from February 15, 519 to December 7, 518.

            Darius I (the Great) ruled the Persian Empire from 522 to 486 B.C., strengthening and enlarging its administrative infrastructure that his more military minded predecessors, Cyrus and Cambyses, had neglected. Although the biblical references to his support for the rebuilding of the Jerusalem temple may glow more than the historical reality behind them, it would not have been entirely out of character for Darius to support the restoration of the civic, religious and social institutions that gave meaning — and contentment — to the client populations of the Persian Empire. Antiquity knew Darius for having supported, for example, the reorganization of scribal schools in Egypt, which was part of his empire’s vast reach.

Soon after the decree of Cyrus, which allowed not only for the return of the Jewish exiles to their homeland, but which also ordered, according to biblical tradition, the rebuilding of the Jerusalem temple (Ezra 4:3), work began under Sheshbazzar to rebuild the physical structure and restore the worship of Yahweh in it. The effort languished, however, apparently from a number of causes — natural hardships, lack of enthusiasm, active opposition from rival religious and political factions — until the prophet Haggai, as part of the second generation of returning exiles, injected new life into the endeavor.

Klaus Koch[1] will say that Haggai and Zechariah usher in the post-exilic age. He disagrees with the judgment of many scholars that they are narrow-minded, political nationalists, exclusive, and focus on the absolutism of the law that leads to righteousness by works. Yet, as Elizabeth Achtemeier points out, we hear a strange message here, since many prophets had been critical of worship in the temple. We do not know what to do with either prophet. The pre-exilic prophets (those who preached before the exile and while Solomon’s temple was still standing) also cherished God’s house. Nevertheless, they chided the people for relying too much on temple attendance and on the religious rituals practiced there — including animal sacrifices, tithing and festivals — while ignoring the weightier matters of justice and mercy. Jeremiah, for example, warned the people, “Amend your ways and your doings ... Do not trust in these deceptive words: ‘This is the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord”(Jeremiah 7:3-4). Haggai, on the other hand, urges the people to get serious about rebuilding the temple.

The intellectual world of Haggai depends on the priestly dichotomy between a holy world and an unclean world. They encouraged the people to rebuild the temple, concluding that project in 515 BC. Political realities had changed so that they could do this, but they make no mention of this, for their focus is on the authority of the Lord. In the opinion of some, they do so out of their desire to restore the symbol of their national pride. However, this accomplishment did not have the result these prophets had hoped. Rogern N. Carstensen (Interpreter’s Bible) notes that the people experienced hardship because of disease in crops. The prophets suggested this would continue as long as there was no visible symbol of the presence of God. Their messages culminate in the approaching coming of the Lord and the imminent establishment of the reign of God that they closely connect to the rebuilding of the temple. The point was that while the temple is in ruins, the people lived in their own homes. The message is close to saying that with Zerubbabel as a world-wide ruler and Joshua as high priest, all they need to do is rebuild the temple, and they would set in motion end-time events. In other words, Haggai and Zechariah name the coming anointed one. He would defeat the powers of the world through the spirit of the Lord rather than military might. Of course, Zerubbabel did not become the worldwide king that they expected. Von Rad[2] suggests the establishment of the kingdom must await the rebuilding of the Temple.  Koch will say that in viewing essential eschatological saving figures as people they know, they go beyond all previous prophecy. Of course, one could say that 500 years later, some Jewish people would proclaim another person, Jesus of Nazareth, as that figure. Haggai rejects Samarian help in rebuilding the Temple.  He also envisions an imminent time when all nations shall worship the Lord.  The time of the Messiah would be a time of universal religion.  He designates Zerubbabel, a descendent of David, to be the anointed one, the grandson of Jehoiachin.  The reality was that he never came to the throne.

Haggai raises the question of who can worship in the temple, and suggests that they must not throw open the doors of the sanctuary to anyone felt drawn to it. Rather, they must offer worthy sacrifices. He did this, recognizing the prophecy of Isaiah and the warning against foreign alliances. Given the historical reality that whatever Israel experienced at this time occurred in Jerusalem, it is little wonder that the Zion tradition was especially meaningful for these prophets. They are part of a long Zion tradition that looked forward to a time when the nations would come to Jerusalem and worship Yahweh.

The way Zechariah puts it, the reign of God will come when they rebuild the temple. The rebuilding of the temple is the dawn of salvation. He records eight visions, a different medium than most prophets. God does not speak directly to him. Rather, God has intermediaries, angels in particular, who will talk with the prophet. We might speculate that if the remoteness of God became a theme, they developed a way for representatives of God to communicate. He has a brief appearance of Satan in 3:1-2.

Haggai 1:1-15 has the theme of the restoration of the temple. It was Sukkoth, the Feast of Booths, commemorating the flight of Israel from Egypt, when the people lived in temporary dwellings in the wilderness of Sinai (Leviticus 23:42-43). On August 29, 520 BC the word of the Lord came through Haggai to Zerubbabel, governor of Judah, and to Joshua, the high priest. In Ezra 5:1-2, Haggai is among those who helped rebuild the Temple. According to Ezra 10:18, some of the descendants of Joshua would marry foreign women. It seems the people say the time has not yet come to rebuild the house of the Lord. Joyce Baldwin says that it was harvest time, so they may have thought they could not both harvest and build the temple. They may also have thought that God would build the temple that Ezekiel described. The prophet wonders, however, if the time is ripe for them to live in their paneled houses, while the house of the Lord is in ruins. He asks them to consider how they have fared, and in doing so, is challenging their priorities. They were putting the palace for the governor and their homes before the House of the Lord. They have sown much, and harvested little. They eat, but they never have enough. They drink, but never have their fill. They clothe themselves, but they are not warm. The earn wages, but the bags into which they put the money has holes. Again, consider how they have fared. The Lord invites them to go up to the hills, bring wood, build the house, so that the Lord may take pleasure in it, and receive honor. Baldwin says this is the central message of Haggai. By obeying, they will turn their backs on indifference. They will bring glory to God by this work. They have looked for much and it came to little. The reason for all this is that the house of the Lord is in ruins, while they built homes for themselves. Therefore, they have received no rain and little fruit from the land. The Lord has called for a drought. The prophet is making a connection between the plight of the people and their failure to build the temple. We now hear the response to the prophet. With these words from the prophet, Zerubbabel, Joshua, and the remnant of the people obeyed the voice of the Lord through Haggai, as the Lord sent him. The people feared the Lord. Then Haggai, the messenger of the Lord, said to the people that the Lord is with them, offering a comforting and encouraging word. The Lord stirred up the spirit of Zerubbabel, Joshua, and the remnant of the people, working in a quiet way among them and in them, to the point that they worked on the house of the Lord. 23 days, September 21, 520, would lapse between the prophecy and the beginning of the work.

Haggai 1:15b-2:23 are oracles of encouragement. He receives a new word from the Lord on October 17, 520. He delivers the message in the last ordinary day of the Feast of Booths.  He addresses the two leaders, Zerubbabel the secular leader and Joshua the high priest, but this time he addresses the remnant as well. Do some of them remember the House of the Lord in its former glory? How does it look to them now? It seems as nothing. The elders must have spoken nostalgically about that.  The verse may refer not just to the physical structure but also to the political realities of a Judean kingdom vs. the little province of Yehud. Yet, the leaders and the people are to take courage. The Lord is with them. For Haggai, the bottom line for a place of worship was not about how it was constructed or how it looked, but who was there. Strength comes from the presence of the Lord. The prophet knows this, for the Lord promised that when the Lord brought them out of Egypt, the Lord would be with them. Therefore, the key architectural criterion for sacred space is that it is a place where God’s “spirit abides among you.” They could take courage in that reality. It will not be long until the Lord will shake the heavens, earth, sea, and dry land. The Lord will shake the nations. It will not be long before the Lord shakes all creation.  The whole universe will experience an "earthquake."  The gentiles will bring their treasures to Jerusalem.  The silver and gold belongs to the Lord. The manifestation of that divine power will be the convulsions of nature and culture. Such are typical reactions to the march of the divine warrior that is rooted in the earliest layers of Israel’s religious imagery. Prosperity will come to all nations. The result of that divine intervention is that vast foreign wealth will flow to the rebuilding effort, yielding a temple surpassing Solomon’s for splendor. The Lord will give them prosperity, the word here being shalom, the blessing of the Messianic age. That the eventual product fell far short of the prophetic vision is unremarkable in the long interplay between prophetic vision and historical reality in the Old Testament. The Lord owns all wealth. 

Haggai 2:10-23 continue with oracles of encouragement. Verses 10-19 focus on the blessing typified by their present harvest. A new word from the Lord comes on December 18, 520. Haggai is to ask of the priests for an official ruling on a matter of Torah. If one carries consecrated mean in the fold of one’s garment, and the fold touches bread, stew, wine, oil, or any kind of food, does it become holy? The priests answer no. In contrast, ritual defilement was passed on by contact. Meyers & Meyers say that Haggai is using this ruling as a way of saying that the rebuilding of the temple has a relation to the fortunes of the people. Haggai responds that so it is with this people and nation to the Lord. The Lord finds that what the people offer is unclean. The point is that Israel had been set apart for the Lord, but now experienced defilement. The ruined temple was like a corpse in their midst. There was no cleansing available except free acceptance by God. He asks them to consider what will happen. Before people laid one stone upon another for the temple, how did they fare? Things had worsened. The grain yielded only have of what was supposed to do. The Lord struck them and their work, the latter with mildew and hail. Yet, they did not return to the Lord. This refers to Amos 4:9, where the Lord has the power to withhold harvest. They are to consider from this day onward, with the foundation of the temple laid, whether there is any seed left in the barn. Do the vine, fig tree, pomegranate, and olive tree still yield nothing? From this day onward, the Lord will bless them. The prophet is predicting an abundant harvest. One can compare this with Ezra 3:10-13, which speaks of a foundation-laying ceremony of which this book seems unaware. In verses 20-23, we find the last prophetic word of Haggai addressed to Zerubbabel, on December 18, 520, the same day as the previous oracle. The Lord is about to shake the heavens and earth, to overthrow the throne of kingdoms. The Lord is about to destroy the strength of the kingdoms of the nations, the chariots and their riders, the horses and their riders. They shall fall by the sword of a comrade. In the last days, God will act and Judah will not need to fight. On that day, the Lord will take Zerubbabel, “my servant,” and make him like a signet ring, for the Lord has chosen him. He expects the new age to begin. The sentence pronounced in Jeremiah 22:24 finds its reversal here. The Lord renews the election of the Davidic king.

 

 

9a Zechariah 1-8 (February 15, 519 to December 7, 518, 8 Chapters)


Zechariah 1:1-6 is the introduction.  In November-December 520, the word of the Lord came to Zechariah. His father here is Iddo, but in Ezra 5:1, 6:14, and Nehemiah 12:16 he is the grandfather. In Nehemiah 12:14 he is part of the priestly group that returned in 538. The Lord is angry with their ancestors, referring to pre-exilic Judeans. The exile was punishment for their sins. The prophet calls on the people present to return to the Lord, and if they do, the Lord will return to them. They are not to be like their pre-exilic ancestors. We can assume that returning to Judea and starting the rebuilding of the temple were not enough. They had prophets who urged them to turn from their evils ways and deeds. Yet, they did not hear or heed the Lord. We find these words in II Chronicles 30:7 as well. Where are their ancestors? Where are the prophets? Do they live forever? Such ironic questions are to stimulate them to learn from the past. Yet, the words and statutes of the Lord overtook them. Therefore, they repented and said the Lord of hosts has dealt with them in accord with their ways and deeds, just as the Lord planned to do, a reference to Jeremiah 25:4-5 and 35:15. Ezekiel 33:11 is also a close parallel. To return to the Lord means they must adhere to the prophets and to the Law. Zechariah is immediately connecting himself with these prophets. It provides some legitimizing of his words. He encourages reflection on the covenant. The word of the Lord now has a close connection to the Law, a process begun in the Deuteronomic tradition, as noted by Meyers &Meyers. The return to the Lord that Zechariah envisions is similar to that of Haggai, as they dedicate themselves to building the temple. The concern of Zechariah, according to Meyers & Meyers, is the significance of the work already begun on the temple. He has established the tone of his work.

Zechariah 1:7-6:8 contain several night visions. Pannenberg,[3] in a discussion of the eternity of God, notes that heaven is the place where God makes decisions about earthly events, and where resolve and execution are the same thing for God. Thus, the future, and especially the future event of salvation, is already present for God. We see in these visions that end-time events on earth are already present in heaven. All of this suggests that heaven expresses the thought that all times are present for the eternity of God.

 Zechariah 1:7-17 is the first vision, that of horses patrolling the earth. This vision is universal. We will see a steady narrowing of the first three visions. On February 15, 519, the word of the Lord came to Zechariah. In the night, he saw a man riding on a red horse, along with other riders on white horses. Meyers 7 Meyers say that horses were not the normal means of transportation, reserved for wealthy and the military. With no chariots, the emphasis is on the swiftness. As the prophet continues, the man was standing among the myrtle trees in the glen. An angel was with him, so he asked what the vision meant. The Lord has sent them to patrol the earth. Meyers & Meyers say that this might follow the pattern of Persian system of intelligence and communication, which could be quite speedy and secret. The focus here is on divine knowledge of human activity. They spoke to the angel of the Lord that they had patrolled the earth thoroughly. The earth remains at peace. The angel of the Lord asks the Lord of hosts how long will the Lord withhold mercy from Jerusalem and Judah, with who the Lord has been angry for 70 years (see Jeremiah 25:11-12, 29:10, although it refers to Judean rule)? The question assumes that the anger of the Lord continues and that the Lord suspended the love of the Lord toward Judah. The prophet is reinterpreting the 70 years for his time. The Lord replied with gracious and comforting words to the angel. Meyers & Meyers say that we are to imagine the Lord as emperor and the angels as those who help the Lord control the realm as servant of the emperor. The angel then told him to proclaim this message. The Lord is jealous for Jerusalem and Zion. The Lord is angry with the nations that are at ease. The point is that the political situation is stable. While the Lord was a little angry, they made the disaster worst. The Lord is angry with the Persians because they have not allowed Judea its independence. Therefore, the Lord has returned to Jerusalem with compassion. The people will build the House of the Lord. The Lord will stretch the measuring line out over Jerusalem. The cities will again overflow with prosperity, will again comfort Zion, and will again choose Jerusalem. The rebuilding of the temple means the end of the anger of the Lord. Jerusalem will again become a religious and political center. The prophet still has hope for political independence and Davidic rule.

Zechariah 1:18-21 is the second vision, the four horns and the four smiths. This vision narrows from the universal to Judah. The horns are a symbol of might, while four refers to the ends of the earth. Combined, it refers to the might of the earth. Meyers & Meyers suggest the vision is retrospective, interpreting the recent history of Judah. Zechariah looked up and saw four horns, and he asks the angel what they are. The angel answers that they are the horns (Assyria and Babylon) that have scattered Judah, Israel, and Jerusalem, referring to the exile. The Lord showed him four blacksmiths, and he asked what they are coming to do. The Lord answered that they are the horns that scattered Judah, so that no head could rise. However, the blacksmiths (Persians), agents of the will of the Lord, have come to terrify them, to strike down the horns of the nations that lifted up their horns against Judah and scattered its people. The metalworkers will reverse the policies of the nations in scattering Judah.

Zechariah 2:1-5 is the third vision, the man with the measuring cord. This vision narrows further to Jerusalem. Zechariah looks up, sees a man with a measuring line in his hand, and asks what he is doing. The man answered that he is to measure Jerusalem for its width and length. The angel previously referred to and another came forward to meet him and said he is to run that young man (an official other than Zechariah) and say that Jerusalem shall be inhabited like villages without walls due to the people and animals in it. The Lord will build a wall of fire all around it and the Lord will be the glory within it. Meyers & Meyers stress that this measuring anticipates a Jerusalem that will be full with a rebuilt city and restored temple. The boundaries are related to the restored Davidic line. The messengers of God are in motion, suggesting the active role of God in the world. All of this suggests to Meyers & Meyers that this vision is eschatological. The eschatological vision has its grounding in the Persian reality, but the prophet does not take the reduced role of Judah and Jerusalem as permanent.

Zechariah 2:6-13 is an expansion on the themes of the first three visions. First, the prophet offers a call to the exiles to leave their homes in Babylon and return to Zion. The Lord says they must flee from the land of the north, the land from which invaders from Babylon came, for the Lord has spread them abroad like the four winds of heaven. The Lord is responsible for the exile, which is global. They are to escape to Zion, if they live with “daughter Babylon.” Thus, this prophesy concerns only those exiled to Babylon. Second, the prophet makes it clear that Judah still occupies a special place in the plans of god in spite of Persian rule. The Lord of hosts speaks to the prophet after “the glory,” the divine presence sent him, regarding the nations that plundered them. The language is close to Jeremiah 50:9-16. However, it could refer to Persia here. If so, it expresses the belief that all foreign domination must cease. One who touches Judah touches “the apple of my eye.” They are to look carefully, for the Lord is going raise a hand against them, and they shall become plunder for their own slaves, the servant becoming the master. The point is that God will arouse destructive action against anyone who is against Judah. God is the one who ensures the well-being of Judah. Then they will know the Lord has sent Zechariah. Third, the prophet envisions the universal dominion of the Lord and the return of the presence of the Lord to Jerusalem. Daughter Zion is to sing and rejoice, for the Lord will come and dwell in their midst. Many (meaning all) nations shall join themselves to the Lord on that day and shall be “my people.” This suggests a day when Judah and the nations shall be equal before the Lord. The Lord will dwell in their midst. The prophet envisions a time when the Lord will rule the world from Jerusalem. All of this suggests an eschatological vision, using the terminology of covenant. They shall know the Lord has sent them. The Lord will inherit Judah as a portion belong to the Lord in the holy land (only occurrence in the Old Testament), and will again choose Jerusalem. The people are to be silent before the Lord, for the Lord has aroused from the divine holy dwelling.

Barth[4] will discuss the history of the Jewish people, acknowledging that if we look at it seriously, it becomes an actual demonstration of the divine ruling or governance of this world. Even after 70 AD, God did not abandon this people. In fact, God turned toward them and accepted solidarity with them. While often faithfulness, their election and covenant with God remains. This election finds fulfillment in Jesus Christ, and therefore, the Jews stand in world history. He thinks of this as the secret of their continued existence, a mystery of divine faithfulness and grace. Their race, language, culture, or Law is not the source of their preservation, but the faithfulness and grace of God. They often disobeyed, and they scorned Jesus. Yet, because they are the people of God, even when they did not want to be or choose to be, they remain within world history. The Jews are this people, and therefore, they are the apple of the Lord’s eye. No one can touch this apple. Therefore, the Jews are despised, hated, oppressed, persecuted, and assimilated, but one cannot really touch them or exterminate them. One cannot destroy them. They are the only people that necessarily continue to exist, with the same certainty as that God is God, and that what God has willed and said is not whim. The history of the Jews is the embodiment of this theme of all world history. What confronts us is a trace of divine world governance, a trace in which we recognize who it is that exercises the divine control.

Zechariah 3:1-10 is the fourth vision involving Joshua and the priestly vestments. Meyer & Meyer suggest that it not be part of the numbered visions because it is so different from the other visions. Meyers & Meyers suggest this vision may be part of the historical installation service for Joshua. The also think the text shows some nervousness among the people for not having a king. They think that we are to imagine a scene at the heavenly court over which the Lord presides. The Lord showed Zechariah the high priest Joshua standing before the angel of the Lord, as Joshua is the issue before the court today. Satan stood at his right to accuse him as a prosecuting attorney. The angel of the Lord is the defender. The accuser, however, does not get a chance to speak. Having already decided the case, the Lord rebuked Satan. The Lord chooses Jerusalem and rebukes Satan. Joshua is a brand plucked from the fire, an image found in Amos 4:11 as well. Zechariah notes that Joshua wore filthy clothes, possibly the result of being in exile. The angel told all those standing before him to take off his filthy clothes. To Joshua, the angel said that he removes the guilt of Joshua and clothes him with festal apparel. Zechariah wanted them to put a clean turban on his head, so they did so, for which see Exodus 29:5-7 and Leviticus 8:7-9. The angel assured Joshua that if he will walk in the ways of the Lord and keep the requirements of the Lord, then he shall rule the House of the Lord and have charge of the courts of the Lord. The Lord will give him the right of access among those who stand there. These would appear to be expanded duties from the pre-exilic times. The priest will have access to the divine council, whereas before only prophets had such access. He is to listen carefully, for those who are with him are an omen of things to come. The Lord is going to bring “my servant the Branch.” Zechariah is trying to deal with David traditions of ideal Israel. The branch or shoot is the first growth of a vine or tree. It may refer to Zerubbabel. The agricultural background gives way to prophetic and Davidic hopes. See Jeremiah 23:5 and 33:5. Such a notion would arouse Persian authorities, for they would not allow him to be king. The Lord will set a stone before Joshua with seven facets and engrave its inscription. The Lord will remove the guilt of this land in a single day. “On that day,” which could refer to the completion of the building of the temple or to the day of the Messiah, they shall invite each other to come under the fine and fig tree.

Zechariah 4:1-14 is the fifth vision, having the theme of the lampstand and olive trees. Revelation 11:1-14 likely uses the images here for the two witnesses at the last time. The angel who talked with Zechariah came to him again, awakening him, the prophet realizing that his visions give him a new grasp on reality, as different as sleep is from being awake. He asked what he saw. Zechariah said he says a lampstand all of gold, with a bowl on top of it. According to Meyers & Meyers, this does not match the description of the lampstands in either Exodus or Kings. Zechariah would never have seen them, since according to II Kings 25:15 the Babylonians melted the gold objects. He might rely upon an oral tradition. He identifies the lampstands with the pre-monarchy situation, even while he lives in a non-monarchy situation. By it are two olive trees, one on the right of the bowl and the other on its left, symbolizing the High Priest and the Governor. The angel asked Zechariah what these things are. He said he did not know. The angel the word of the Lord is that not by might, nor by power, but by the spirit of the Lord. The prophet affirms the involvement of God and divine control of world events, as well as affirms the status quo. Are you a great mountain? Before Zerubbabel, you shall become a plain. Referring to Mount Zion, Zerubbabel shall bring out the top stone (a stone from the old temple used in the new construction, for which see Ezekiel 3:10-12) amid shouts of “Grace, grace to it!” The word of the Lord is also that the hands of Zerubbabel have laid the foundation of the House of the Lord. His hands shall also complete it. The community needed a connection between the old and the new temple, and Zerubbabel was that connection. Then they will know the Lord has sent Zechariah to them. For whoever has despised the day of small things shall rejoice, and shall see the plummet in the hand of Zerubbabel. One can assume that since Zerubbabel was a Persian appointee his legitimacy would be in question. All of this suggests acceptance of non-monarchy reality, even while having the hope for a dynasty in the future. These seven (important number in this vision, possibly referring to the Year of Jubilee) are the eyes of the Lord that range through the whole earth, emphasizing the omniscience of God. Zechariah asked about the two olive trees on the right and the left of the lampstand. Further, he wonders about the two branches of the olive trees that pour out the oil through the two golden pipes. The angel marvels that he does know what they are. The angel tells him they are the two anointed ones who stand by the Lord of the whole earth, suggesting the equality of the priestly and political leaders. The affirmation provides a universal conclusion to the vision. They are legitimate successors to leadership in post-exile Judah.

Zechariah 5:1-4 is the sixth vision, which is that of the flying scroll. Meyers & Meyers do not think it fits well with previous visions. The theme is the rule of law in the community. The likelihood is that the scroll symbolizes the Torah. Zechariah looks up and sees a flying scroll. The angel asked what he sees, and the prophet identifies it as a flying scroll and its length as 20 cubits and its width as 10 cubits, or 10 meters by 5 meters, giving the scroll the dimensions of a billboard. The dimension would be suitable in heaven. The angel says the scroll is the curse that goes out over the land, suggesting the curse embedded in the legal contract of the time. The blessing of the covenant can occur only if the Law takes hold. Of course, this curse appeals to the Ten Commandments, for which see Jeremiah 7 and Hosea 4. Everyone who steals the Lord shall cut off, in accord with the writing on one side of the scroll. Everyone who swears falsely the Lord shall cut off, in accord with the writing on the other side of the scroll. The Lord has sent it out and it shall enter the house of the thief and the house of anyone who swears falsely. It shall abide in that house, consuming it.

Zechariah 5:5-11 is the seventh vision, which is the woman in the bushel measure. The angel commands Zechariah to look up and see what is coming out. The prophet asks what it is. The angel points to the basket or barrel of grain, which he identifies as the iniquity in all the land. Someone lifted the lead cover. A woman stood in the basket, reminding that the dimensions are likely large, since the vision occurs in heaven. It could refer to the statue of a goddess. The angel said that this is Wickedness, which could refer to idolatry. The angel thrust her back into the basket, pressed the cover down on its mouth. Then the prophet looked up and saw two women coming forward. The wind was in their wings. The imagery suggests cherubim. They had wings like that of a stork, also a female image. They lifted up the basket between earth and sky. The prophet asked the angel where they were taking the basket. The angel said to the land of Shinar, to Babylon, to build a house for it. When someone prepares the house, the two women will set the basket down on its base. The prophet is intentional in having wickedness go to Babylon.

Zechariah 6:1-8 is the eighth vision, which is that of four chariots. The first vision also had four horses. The chariot suggests warlike purpose. Zechariah looks up, seeing four chariots coming from between two mountains of bronze, seemingly signifying that they come from God. The first had red horses, the second black horses (going north), the third white horses (going west), and the fourth dappled gray horses (going south). He asked the angel what they are. The angel answered that they are the four winds of heaven going out. They have already presented themselves before the Lord of all the earth, reminding us that God is in charge over what happens on the world scene. They were impatient to patrol the earth. The angel told them to do so. As they did so, the cried out to Zechariah that those who go toward the north country have set my spirit at rest in the north country. We should note that a universal divine presence begins and ends this vision. The spirit of God is present and active in world events now. The spirit of God in the north, which is either Babylon or Persia, gives legitimacy to what is happening now. The Lord is policing the Persian system.

Zechariah 6:9-15 is an oracle concerning the crowning. The word of the Lord came to Zechariah to collect silver and gold from the exiles, identifying Heldai, Tobijah, and Jedaiah. They have arrived from Babylon. The passage is addressing the problem of the relation between those still in Babylon and those who have returned. They are also to go to Josiah, the son of Zephaniah, a priest taken to Babylon, according to Jeremiah 21:1 and 52:74ff. With the gold and silver they are to make a crown and set it on Joshua. He is to say to him that here is the man whose name is Branch. He shall branch out in his place. He shall build the temple of the Lord. He shall bear royal honor. He shall sit upon his throne and rule. All of this suggests to Meyers & Meyers that the building of the temple is a future eschatological event. A priest shall be by his throne, with peaceful understanding between the two of them. The four men named shall care for the crown, for it will be a memorial in the temple of the Lord. Those who are far off shall help build the temple. Then they shall know the Lord has sent Zechariah to Joshua. This will happen if Joshua diligently obeys the voice of the Lord, suggesting that the result of obedience will be a Davidic dynasty. Zechariah is dealing deliberately with the idea of a priest with some royal responsibilities. It acts as a commentary on Jeremiah 33:17. While some think this passage unites priest and royal authority into one, Meyers & Meyers do not think so. They think the priest is to receive crown now, while the crown for the king must await the future. They think Zechariah has accomplished much by giving the Davidic king an eschatological role, while giving the priest a present role, facing the present situation with some realism. The point is the present situation is not permanent. The prophet restores the non-monarchic beginning of Israel to the present post-exile situation, while the monarchic success of David moves toward an eschatological vision of the future.

Zechariah 7:1-6 introduces a set of oracles related to fasting. The word of the Lord came to Zechariah in the fourth year of King Darius. Darius commanded the recording of the law of Egypt, so he could easily have done so with the Jewish people as well. The situation was that the people of Bethel, 12 miles north of Jerusalem, experiencing destruction in either 480 or 460, had sent Sharezer and Regem-melech and their servants to ask a favor of the Lord. They recognize the growing authority of Jerusalem in this post-exile time. They asked the priests of the house of the Lord and the prophets whether they should mourn and abstain in the fifth month (the destruction of the temple), as they have done for so many years, suggesting the institution of an official lament. We should also observe that the priests were the natural leaders. In response, the answer transcends a cultic detail. The word of the Lord becomes a question of whether for 70 years they have fasted for the Lord. He wonders that when they eat and drink, do they do so only for themselves. Assuming that the oracle came in the 70th year, the year is 517 BC. We see Zechariah dealing with an authoritative legal system, even as he has already dealt with the temple and the priesthood. The focus of the oracle is on what their practices have accomplished in these 70 years. They have behaved in certain ways and sustained cultural identity without monarchy.

Zechariah 7:7-14 is an address to the delegation from Bethel, offering further retrospection on Divine justice. The prophet asks about the words that the Lord proclaimed by earlier, pre-exilic prophets. At that time, Jerusalem had people and prosperity, along with the land around it, giving the oracle a political thrust. The word of the Lord was that they are to render true judgments, show kindness and mercy to each other, do not oppress the widow, the orphan, the foreigner, or the poor. They are not to devise evil in their hearts against each other. All of this suggests general social justice and not justice in the courts. It suggests that justice and love need to complement each other. Yet, the people refused to listen. They turned a stubborn shoulder. They refused to hear. They made their hearts adamant so that they could not hear the Law or the words of the Lord through the pre-exile prophets. Therefore, the anger of the Lord came upon them. When the Lord called, they would not hear. Therefore, when they called, the Lord did not hear. The Lord scattered them with a whirlwind among the nations they had not known. The pleasant land they left became desolate. The prophet shows knowledge of the Pentateuch, some prophetic materials, and even the Deuteronomic History.

Zechariah 8:1-17 contains seven oracles that relate to Zion and Judah restored. The first oracle is that the word of the Lord came to Zechariah that the Lord is jealous for Zion with great wrath. The commitment of the Lord to Israel is so intense that it reverses the exile. The second oracle is that the Lord will return to Zion and dwell in the midst of Jerusalem. Jerusalem shall be a faithful city (unique in the Old Testament the phrase is City of Truth) and the mountain shall be holy. The third oracle is that old men and women shall sit in the streets of Jerusalem, each with staff in hand due to their old age. The streets of the city shall be full of boys and girls playing. This oracle envisions the re-population of the city. The fourth oracle is that even though it seems impossible to the remnant, it becomes possible with the Lord. To question its possibility is to question the power of the Lord. The fifth oracle is that the Lord will save “my people” from the east and west country. The Lord will bring them to live in Jerusalem, “They shall be my people and I will be their God, in faithfulness and in righteousness.” Yet, we have no hint of people returning from Egypt. However, the prophet clearly envisions the renewal of the covenant with God. The sixth oracle is that they are to strengthen their hands. They have recently heard words of prophets present when the people laid the foundation for the rebuilding of the temple, the house of the Lord. Before then, people had no wages. They hd no safety. The Lord set them against each other. Now, the Lord will act differently with the remnant. They shall sow peace, the vine shall yield its fruit, the ground shall be productive, the skies shall deliver rain, and the remnant shall possess these things. They have been a curse among the nations because the Lord cut them off. The Lord will save them and they shall become a blessing. They are not be afraid. They are to strengthen their hands. The prophet envisions a re-structured political and economic order with the re-establishing of the covenant and the rebuilding of the temple. The seventh oracle is that the Lord had the purpose of bringing disaster upon them, when their ancestors provoked the Lord to wrath. The Lord did not relent. Yet, now the Lord has a new purpose to do good to Jerusalem. Do not be afraid. They shall speak the truth to each other (truth is to pervade the social order), render true judgments in their gates, make for peace, not devise evil in their hearts against each other, and love no false oath. The Lord hates these things. The prophet shows acquaintance with the language of the Torah here.
Zechariah 8:18-23 contains three oracles regarding Judah and the nations. The first oracle is that in Judah, the fast of the fourth (when Judean leadership fled Jerusalem), fifth (destruction of Jerusalem), seventh (death of Gedaliah), and tenth (siege of Jerusalem) months is to become a festival of gladness and cheer. Therefore, they are to love truth and peace. The second oracle is that peoples shall yet come from many cities and seek a favor of the Lord. They shall seek the Lord in Jerusalem. The third oracle is that “in those days” ten people from the nations of every language shall take hold of a Jew and desire to go with them, for they have heard God is with them. These visions are eschatological, to Meyers & Meyers, referring to a time when the nations shall come to Jerusalem. The three oracles have an ever-broadening circle of people. The nations will recognize one God and Judaism as primary. The prophet envisions that the people of the world will find their way to the Lord through those who already stand in relation to the Lord.


[1] The Prophets Volume II, 159-175.
[2] Theology of the Old Testament.
[3] Systematic Theology Volume 1, 405.
[4] Church Dogmatics III.3 [49.3] 217-9.

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