The
encouraging scene Zechariah had witnessed IN THE LAST CHAPTER was suddenly replaced
by a gross and terrifying sight! Joshua the High Priest is seen
standing before the Lord in what appears to be a court scene. He was
not your regular priest. The High Priest was appointed to represent
Israel before Yahweh. After sacrificing a bull for his own sin, he
could enter the Temple's Holy of Holies with the animal's blood as an
atonement for the people's sin. But what makes this filthy vision so
detestable is the excrement splattered all over his white robes!
Guilt is written all over, as the Accuser (Satan) calls for his
condemnation. The scene is charged with tension, fear and a
sense of hopelessness.
The
fifth vision introduces us to Joshua the High Priest who later in
this chapter symbolizes THE
BRANCH. Joshua was
the High Priest at the time the Jews returned from Babylon some
sixteen years before (Ezra
2:2; 3:1-3). Joshua
represented Israel before the Lord. There is no reference to his
personal character as a man but as High Priest representing Israel he
is standing before the “Angel
of the Lord” in
filthy clothes.
Verse
1:
“Then
he showed me Joshua the high priest standing before the angel of the
Lord, and Satan standing at his right side to accuse him.”
The
vision is a court scene that is both dramatic and moving. Joshua is
seen standing before the “Angel of the Lord” in filthy garments
while Satan is at his right side. A hush seems to fill the court
room after the prosecuting attorney finished deliberating. The words
of the Accuser are not stated but a guilty verdict is implied by the
Defense Attorney’s response! The malicious Adversary stands in the
presence of the Lord to proclaim Israel’s sins and their
unworthiness to receive any mercy. John
Mac Arthur comments:
“the
situation is crucial: if Joshua is vindicated, Israel is accepted; if
Joshua is rejected, Israel is rejected. The entire plan of God for
the nation was revealed in the outcome. Israel’s hopes would
either be destroyed or confirmed ”
(MacArthur Study
Bible, p.1342).
Verse
2-4:
The Lord
said to Satan, “The Lord rebuke you, Satan! The Lord, who has
chosen Jerusalem, rebuke you! Is not this man a burning stick
snatched from the fire?” Now Joshua was dressed in filthy clothes
as he stood before the angel. The angel said to those who were
standing before him, “Take off his filthy clothes.” Then he said
to Joshua, “See, I have taken away your sin, and I will put rich
garments on you.”
The
Defense Attorney is Christ Himself as “the angel of the Lord!”
His past covenant
with Israel was an incontestable promise to Abraham and later to king
David. Israel can never be eradicated as a nation in spite of her
sins and He is the only One who judges the outcome. God wrote the
Script and no one can alter it! Israel’s accusation is futile
because God has already revealed his will for the people by
delivering them from captivity and sovereignly choosing
Jerusalem.
They are described as “a
burning stick snatched from the fire”(v.2).
The
Accuser’s charge may have been legitimate because the people had
violated Yahweh’s demands for holiness. They became vile in His
sight, falling short of His desire for them to be “a priestly
kingdom” (Ex.19:6)
But Satan’s charge is met by Yahweh’s rebuke “the
Lord rebuke you, Satan.”
Our
attention now turns to the High Priest, Joshua (v.3). We would
expect him to be clothed in white raiment with the ephod on his chest
and a turban on his head. But we are shocked and repulsed at the
sight! His garments are filthy as he stands before the Lord. The
root word for “filthy”suggests human excrement or vomit. The same
Hebrew word is found in Deut.23:14;
Isa.28:8; Isa. 36:12.
The
phrase pictures the habitual condition of defilement of the
priesthood and its people. McComiskey
is graphic at this point:
“Feelings of
revulsion turn to wonder: Must God turn his back on this repulsive
sight and vent his anger at this affront to his holiness? It seems
that the accuser is justified in calling for God’s judgment on the
sin this filth represents.”
But
suddenly the scene changes in verse
4 as God’s justice
turns to mercy: “Take
off his filthy clothes.”
The removal of the soiled garments silenced the Accuser, making his
charge baseless, because the Supreme Judge has done the unthinkable:
He has removed
Israel’s guilt by a sovereign act of grace.
But notice what follows! Not only do the angels remove his filthy
clothes but they replace them with rich, white garments. The High
Priest now stands in glorious splendor! The Lord assures him: “See,
I have taken away your sin, and I will put rich garments on you.”
In verse 5,
Zechariah seems to jump to his feet:
“Then I
said,
'put
a clean turban on his head'”(v.5)!
In quoting Pusey's commentary, David
Baron suggests: “the act of placing the crown on the head of
Joshua, the high priest, pictured not only the union of the offices
of Priest and King in the person of the Messiah, but that He should
be King, being first
our High Priest” (The
Visions and Prophecies of Zechariah, p.193)
The High Priest
re-clothed, symbolizes God's promise to Israel both for the present
and the future (12:10-13:1;
Rom.11:25-27).
The
application for the Christian is profound! Just
think of what we were before Christ and what we are now in Christ!
We are all as an unclean thing and “all
our righteousness are as filthy rags (Isa. 64:6)
with result:“the
wages of sin is death” (Rom.6:23).
But God who is rich
in mercy has offeres us the rich garments of His righteousness so
that “by grace
you have been saved through faith”
(Eph.2:8)
Salvation is the
beginning of the Christian life. Sanctification is the process by
which the Holy Spirit transforms us from within. “And
we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being
transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes
from the Lord, who is the Spirit”
(2 Cor.3: 18). We
too need cleansing because our daily walk is often contaminated by
sin. Yet, “if
we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our
sins and purify us from all unrighteousness”
(I John 1:9)
In
these last five verses, the Angel of the Lord again speaks words of
assurance to Joshua who represents Israel.
It is a call for His
people to live holy lives if they are to serve Him.
Verses
7-10: This
is what the Lord Almighty says: “If you will walk in my ways and
keep my requirements, then you will govern my house and have charge
of my courts, and I will give you a place among these standing here.
Listen, O high priest Joshua and your associates seated before you,
who are men symbolic of things to come: I am going to bring my
servant, the Branch. See, the stone I have set in front of Joshua!
There are seven eyes on that one stone, and I will engrave an
inscription on it,” says the Lord Almighty, and I will remove the
sin of this land in a single day. In that day each of you will
invite his neighbor to sit under his vine and fig tree” declares
the Lord Almighty.
The
summons to hear imparts a sense of urgency to this section. There is
new material to be understood; “Listen,
O high priest Joshua and your associates seated before you.”
The summons to listen included Joshua and his companions. His
companions were most likely fellow priests over whom Joshua exercised
spiritual authority. But a quantum leap seems to be suggested from
the early verses to these verses. The Lord identifies these men as
“symbolic of things
to come!” You may
wonder why Joshua is not associated with these men? Perhaps it is
because “my servant,
the Branch” fulfills
the role of Joshua by becoming Himself both High Priest and King.
Both Servant
and Branch
have messianic significance! The Servant
concept appears in Isaiah as someone who would one day bring
redemption to His people: “my
righteous servant will justify many, and he will bear their
iniquities”
(Isa.53:11). Later. Jeremiah talks about The
Branch
associated with king David: “I
will raise up to David a righteous branch, a king who will reign
wisely” (Jer.23:5;
33:15). The Branch
reappears in Zechariah 6:11-12 also as King. Thomas
McComiskey adds:
“whom God will
bring forth into the arena of world history….Joshua and his fellow
priests symbolizes the work of this servant-priest”
(The Minor Prophets,
p.1078).
Dr.
G. Coleman Luck makes
an interesting analysis of the Branch
as it relates to the Gospels. “In
the Old Testament prophecy this title ‘the Branch’ is used of the
Messiah in four principal ways. Each of these four ways corresponds
to an aspect of Christ’s character emphasized in one of the four
Gospels of the New Testament:
(1)
Messiah is called ‘a Branch of David’ (Isa.11:1; Jer.23:5;
33:15). This speaks of His being the rightful promised King of
Israel. The Gospel of Matthew clearly shows the fulfillment of this
prophecy.
(2)
Messiah is called by God ‘my servant the BRANCH (3:8) The gospel
of Mark presents the Messiah---the Lord Jesus--as the suffering
Servant of the Lord, obedient even unto death.
(3)
Messiah is called ‘the man whose name is The BRANCH’ (6:12-13)
Luke’s gospel pictures Christ as the perfect Man--the only perfect
and sinless man who has ever lived.
(4)
Messiah is called ‘the branch of Jehovah’ (Isa.4:2) speaking of
His Emmanuel character, of the fact that He is “God with us”
(Zechariah: A Study
of the Prophetic Visions of Zechariah p.43).
The
“stone with seven
eyes set in front of Joshua”
speaks of perfect intelligence and wisdom. Only in Christ could this
be fully understood. The Apostle Paul states: in
whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge”(Col.2:3).
Christ is both “the rock of stumbling”
(Rom.9: 31-33) as
well as the “rock of our Salvation”.
He is the “Rock”
upon which the Church is built (Matt.16:18).
He is also the
Cornerstone of the
spiritual building of which every believer is a part (Eph.2:19-22).
It is the “Rock”
cut out of the mountain Daniel speaks about in chapter
2:35,45 that crushes
all the kingdoms of this world in preparation for His Messianic
Kingdom on earth (Revelation
20)
Christ’s
second coming coincides with Israel’s spiritual rebirth when He
removes “the sin of
his people in a single day” (v.9). Isaiah
66:8 echoes this same
theme “Can a
country be born in a day or a nation be brought forth in a moment?”
Yahweh then concludes:“And
I will pour out on the house of David and the inhabitants of
Jerusalem a spirit of grace and supplication. They will look on me,
the one they have pierced and mourn for him” (Zechariah 12:10).
Then peace will
finally come to Israel.
CLEAN
GARMENTS FOR THE HIGH PRIEST
A COURT ROOM SCENE COMES INTO
VIEW
THE HIGH PRIEST STANDS BEFORE
THE LORD
HIS FILTHY CLOTHES OF NATIONAL
SHAME
HAS GIVEN RISE TO SATAN’S
BLAME.
A SUDDEN HUSH FILLS ALL THE
ROOM
THE VIRDICT’S WORD REVEALS
THEIR GUILT
A RIGHTEOUS JUDGE MUST NOW
DEMAND
THE FULL EXTENT THE LAWS
COMMAND.
IN THEIR DEFENSE GOD TAKES HIS
PLACE
AND SHOWS A LAMB TO FILL THEIR
SPACE
THEN HE REBUKES THE SERPENT’S
HEAD
BY LIFTING JUDAH FROM THE DEAD.
“REMOVE THOSE FILTHY GARMENTS
NOW
FOR JOSHUA STANDS ON HOLY
GROUND
I HAVE FORGIVEN ISRAEL’S SIN
AND FOR THEIR SAKE I WILL BE
KING.”
THE PICTURE JOSHUA ILLUSTRATES
WITH EXCREMENT UPON HIS ROBES
REFLECTS IDOLATRY AND PRIDE
THAT JUDAH’S NATIONAL GUILT
IMPLIED.
THE CALL WENT FORTH FOR ALL TO
HEED
TO CLEANSE THEIR LIVES FROM
EVIL DEED
SO WHEN THE TEMPLE WAS COMPLETE
ALL PRAISE WOULD CROWN HIS
MERCY SEAT.
THEN JOSHUA AND HIS FELLOW
PRIESTS
SYMBOLIC OF EMANUEL’S BRANCH
WILL BE A NATION BORN TO REIGN
THROUGHOUT MESSIAH’S WORLD
DOMAIN.
THOUGHT
QUESTIONS
- THE COURT ROOM SCENE FINDS Joshua representing Israel as their High Priest while standing before the Angel of the Lord. What was represented by Joshua’s filthy garments?
- What does he mean in verse 2, “Is not this man a brand plucked out of the fire?
- In what ways do verses 1-4 parallel God’s dealing in grace with the Christian today? What assurance and hope does it give us today?
- What do clean garments and a clean turban on Joshua’s head represent for the present and the future? Note a similar picture given to the Christian in Me Peter 5:4; 2 Timothy 4:8; Rev.2:10.
- Who is symbolized by the Branch? What do the seven eyes on a stone represent? And, when is the time Yahweh removes “the guilt of this land in a single day? (vs.8-10)
2 comments:
Papa, once again you did an amazing job. If I had read that before, I wouldn't know where to begin in explaining what it meant, let alone knowing how to understand it all myself.The Lord has really blessed you to be able to understand the passages in the Bible that most people would sit and stare at ;) You really bring things alive and instead of being something one has to bear with while reading through it for devotional, you explain the simple meaning of what these visions symbolize.... Thank you!
Oh Cosette, you are such an encouragement! Thanks for your comment! One advantage of age is that you have experience to fall back on. I have spent lots of time studying and meditating on this Book. There were years that I too read Zechariah with confusion and questions. I still have so much to learn. Looking forward being with you soon. I love you.
Post a Comment