1. Israel’s
True Repentance – (12:1-13:9)
The previous
chapter left us with questions about Israel’s future. The breaking
of the staff “favor” opened the door for hostile predators
to invade the land (v.10)
and enslave its people. If Zechariah’s prophecy ended at 11:9&10:
“I will not be your shepherd...I took my staff called favor and
broke it, revoking my covenant,” we might be somewhat
uncertain about Israel’s promised future. But these final chapters
speak of triumph and victory as they focus on Israel’s repentance
and Christ’s return.
Verse
1: An Oracle. This is the word of the
Lord concerning Israel. The Lord, who stretches out the heavens, who
lays the foundations of the earth, and who forms the spirit of man
with him.
As we noted
in 9:1, so also this chapter begins with an “Oracle”
or “burden” from the Lord. The first “Burden”
is said to have been laid upon Hadrach, a gentile nation.
This second section “concerns Israel”
and her final refinement which transforms her into Jehovah's holy
nation. No matter how dark the circumstances or
uncertain the future, God's unconditional promises will prevail.
This Oracle begins by affirming the future impregnability of
Jerusalem.
Verses
2-3: I am going to make Jerusalem a cup that sends
all the surrounding people reeling. Judah will be besieged as well
as Jerusalem. On that day, when all the nations of the earth are
gathered against her, I will make Jerusalem as immovable rock for all
the nations. All who try to move it will injure themselves.
The final
battle described in Revelation 16:16 as the Battle of Armageddon, is
what Zechariah envisions in these verses. Israel has always been the
hub of prophetic Scripture. The Abrahamic, Davidic, and new covenant
all point to Messiah’s earthly reign from Zion “the city of
the great king” (Matt. 5:35). However, Satan has been the
chief protagonist of Christ throughout history. His last ditch
effort will be to gather the nations of the world around Israel to
prevent His coming and to try to exterminate all Jews from the face
of the earth. But Jehovah is aware of his stealthy plot and states:
“I will keep a watchful eye over the house of Judah, but I will
blind all the horses of the nations” (v.4). As
McComiskey explains: “The metaphors
of Jerusalem’s impregnability continue with a reference to the
attacking horses and riders. It is a picture of mass confusion, with
the horses shying in terror, their riders unable to carry the battle
to success because they are confused like madmen. As Yahweh fights
on behalf of his people, he does not strike about indiscriminately,
for he ‘opens his eyes’ on the house of Judah, protecting them in
this onslaught” (The Minor Prophets, p.1210).
Chapter 12
mentions “that day” seven times (18 times throughout
Zechariah). This expression, occurring many times in Scripture,
refers to “the Day of the Lord” which extends from
the Great Tribulation through Christ’s earthly reign. The signing
of a seven-year peace treaty with Israel and antichrist triggers the
beginning of “this Day” (Dan.9: 17).
The day of the Lord is the theme of the Book of Joel.
Malachi refers to it as “the coming of the great and dreadful
day of the Lord” (4:5), and Jeremiah 30:7
calls it “the time of Jacob’s trouble.” In
the Olivet Discourse, Jesus refers to this same period as: “The
great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world
to this time, no, nor ever shall be” (Matt.24:
21). Later Peter concludes: “the day of the Lord will
come as a thief in the night, in the which the heavens will pass away
with a great noise, and the elements will melt with fervent heat;
both the earth and the works that are in it will be burned up”
(2 Peter 3:10).
As the events
described in the Olivet Discourse begin to converge on the last stage
of human history, the nations of the world will begin their move
toward Palestine. Israel will be surrounded on all sides. The call
for their extermination will build momentum as antichrist breaks his
seven year treaty moving his throne from Rome to the Temple in
Jerusalem (2 Thess.2: 4; Rev. 13:7-8) In the midst of
mayhem and carnage, surrounded on all sides by their enemies, Israel
will cry out for Yahweh’s help and “in that
day the Lord will save the dwellings of Judah... on
that day, the Lord will shield those who live in Jerusalem
…on that day I will set out to destroy the
nations that come against it”(v.7-9).
Verses
10-14: 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 pieced, and they will mourn for
him as one mourns for an only child, and grieve bitterly for him as
one grieves for a first born son. On that day the weeping in
Jerusalem will be great, like the weeping of Hadad Rimmon in the
plain of Megiddo. The land will mourn, each clan by itself, with
their wives by themselves: the clan of the house of David and their
wives the clan of the house of Nathan and their wives, the clan of
the house of Levi and their wives, the clan of Shimei and their
wives, and all the rest of the clans and their wives.”
As God begins
to move on behalf of His ancient people with “the spirit of
grace and supplication” their hearts will begin to respond in
repentance. We are not told for certain if this word “spirit”
refers to the Holy Spirit or the human spirit. Scholars differ
in their interpretation. We know, however, that when God’s Spirit
works, the human spirit is quickened. Paul reminds us in Romans
11: 25-26: “Israel has experienced a hardening in
part until the full number of the Gentiles has come in. And so all
Israel will be saved, as it is written: ‘The deliverer
will come from Zion; he will turn godlessness away from Jacob.”
God gives them a new spirit, prompting them to respond from their
hearts. The spirit of grace precedes the spirit of supplication.
With God’s “justice” we get what we deserve; with God’s
“mercy” we don’t get what we deserve; but with God’s “grace”
we get what we don’t deserve. Since God laid on Him the iniquity
of us all (Isa.53: 6), imputed grace comes to mean
God’s Riches At Christ’s
Expense. This applies both to the Church today as
well as Israel’s future.
The spirit of
grace and supplication turns to “mourning”
when they see “the one they have
pierced” descend from heaven to the Mount of Olives.
When Jesus first appeared to His disciples following His
resurrection, Thomas was absent. Thomas refused to believe the news
unless he personally put his hand into His nail prints. The next
time He appeared, Jesus invited Thomas to put his finger into the
prints of His hand and thrust his hand into His side. His response
was immediate: “my Lord and my God.” The
New Testament refers to Zechariah 12:10 on two
occasions: John 19:37 applies the piercing of this
verse to the piercing of Christ’s side by Roman soldiers, and
Revelation 1:7 alludes to the same event when he
states: “every eye will see him, even those who
pierced him.” Godly sorrow does lead to repentance
(2 Cor.7: 10) and Israel’s sorrow will be deep and
convicting. The mourning is described as being like “the
mourning of Hadad Rimmon in the valley of Megiddo,”
apparently alluding to 2 Chronicles 35: 21-25 where
great mourning takes place over the death of King Josiah by the
Egyptian forces of Pharaoh Necho in the valley of Megiddo.
The
expression “each clan by itself” and “their
wives by themselves” (v.12) seem to emphasize the
sincerity of their repentance. This is more than just a public
emotional outcry. It is individual and corporate expressions of true
penitence on a national scale. This mourning begins from the top
with the royal house of David and the family of his son Nathan (2
Sam.5: 14), filtering through religious leadership of the
house of Levi and the family of Shimei son of Gershom (son of Levi).
While the civil and religious leadership leads this national
repentance, it extends to every clan in Israel.
As the Holy Spirit
continues His work of conviction, repentant Israel will begin
to feel divine cleansing like a gushing spring. When
this rushing fountain “opens to the house of David and the
inhabitants of Jerusalem” (13:1), idolaters and false prophets
will be removed. False prophecy was still a problem in the
postexilic period (Neh, 6:12-14). Jesus and His Apostles also
foresaw this problem in the end times (Matt.24: 4-5,11,15,23-24; 2
Thess.2: 2-4; Rev.9: 20; 13: 4-15). Antichrist will embody this
“spirit of iniquity” by spreading his false
teaching in an attempt to deceive the whole world. Zechariah 13:
1-6 indicates that the Lord will not only expel these false
prophets from Israel but also eliminate the powerful delusions that
led them astray. This “Day” previously alluded to
in the symbolic flying scroll of 5: 1-4 and the
ephod of 5: 5, both depicting the evil that plagued Israel,
are removed by the Lord Almighty from the Land in one day (3:
1-10).
So complete will God cleanse
Israel that He uses a hypothetical scenario in verse 3
to show what would happen to anyone who acted as a false prophet.
His own parents would follow the command in Deuteronomy 13:
6-10 by saying: “you must die, because you have told
lies in the Lord’s name” and stab him to death. Every
prophet would then feel ashamed and as one author put it, admitting
their deceptive claims and like a slithering snake, crawl back into
its hole. Kenneth Baker in The Expositor’s Bible Commentary
(p.685-686) summarizes verses 4-6 this way: “Because
of these stern measures, a false prophet will be reticent to identify
himself as such and will be evasive in responding to questioning. To
help conceal his true identity, he will not wear ‘a prophet’s
garment of hair’ (v.4), such as Elijah wore (2 Kings 1: 8).
Instead, to avoid the death penalty (v.3), he will deny being a
prophet and will claim to have been a farmer from his youth (v.5).
And if some suspicious person notices marks on his body and inquires
about them (v.6), he will claim he received them in a scuffle with
friends as discipline from his parents from childhood. Apparently
the accuser, suspects that the false prophet’s wounds were
self-inflicted to arouse his prophetic ecstasy in idolatrous rites
(as in 1 Kings 18: 28)”
In the last three verses, the
“Oracle” focuses on Israel’s plight after the
Shepherd is struck. The language clearly refers to the: “sheep”
as the people of Israel and the “Shepherd”
as Jehovah. In 11: 17, it was the false
shepherd who is struck; in 13: 7, it is the Good
Shepherd who is struck. The pierced figure in this verse is
the same figure in Isaiah 53: 5 who’s piercing and
death leads to the redemption of “the many.”
Verses 7-9: “Awake, O
sword, against my shepherd, against the man who is close to me!”
declares the Lord Almighty. “Strike the shepherd, and the sheep
will be scattered, and I will turn my hand against the little ones,
in the whole land.” Declares the Lord, “two-thirds will be struck
down and perish; Yet, one –third will be left in it. This third I
will bring into the fire; I will refine them like silver and test
them like gold. They will call on my name and I will answer them; I
will say,’ They are my people,’ and they will say, ‘The Lord is
our God.”
The voice of the Lord suddenly
sounds, summoning a sword to strike the Shepherd. The context seems
to indicate a divine cooperation within the Trinity that the
Shepherd, the Lord Jesus, should be “struck.” Peter refers this
Shepherd as a lamb “chosen before the creation of the world,
but was revealed in these last times” (1 Peter 1: 20).
When the Shepherd is killed, the sheep are scattered, in fulfillment
to judgment pronounced on disobedience (Deut.28: 64; 29: 24-25). Not
long before His death, Jesus applied this verse to the scattering of
His disciples (Matt.26: 31-32), but the context
indicates a broader application. Verse 8-9 points to
the Nation, “in the whole land,” as being
scattered. Again, Kenneth Baker is insightful: “They
depict a refining process for Israel. While what happened in A.D. 70
at the hand of the Romans may have been an initial stage in the
progressive fulfillment, the final and complete stage is yet future,
for Israel as a whole is not in the proper covenant relationship with
God described in v.9. The fact that a remnant will survive
(one-third) (v.8) reveals God’s mercy in the midst of judgment”
(The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, p.687).
The symbol of refining gold or
silver, illustrates the trials Israel will go through before Messiah
reigns. The carnage and death of A.D. 70 is a precursor of the final
conflict Israel will experience during the great tribulation. This
genocide under antichrist’s rule will wipe out two-thirds of
Israel’s population. But God’s protection of the refined “third”
will guarantee a purified and prepared people for the coming
Messianic Kingdom.
THE WARRIOR KING APPEARS
A HUSH OF AWE SURROUNDS THE STAGE
AS YAHWEH TAKES THE LEADING ROLE
IN HISTORY’S LAST PROPHETIC PAGE.
THE WARRIOR-KING STEPS FROM HIS THRONE
AS HE REVEALS THE BATTLE PLAN
THE NATIONS GATHER TO DESTROY
THE JEWISH RACE FROM OFF THEIR LAND.
THE “DAY” DESCRIBED BY PROPHETS PAST
TAKE SEVEN YEARS TO BE FULFILLED
AS ANTI-JEWISH FORCES JOIN
AT ARMAGEDDON’S BATTLE FIELD.
THE SIEGE SURROUNDING ZION’S HILL
WILL BE A ROCK THAT CANNOT MOVE
AS HORSE AND RIDER SEEM CONFUSED
LIKE DRUNKARDS IN A STUPOR MOOD.
THE MIGHTY GOD WILL BE REVEALED
THOUGH JUDAH’S ARMY SEEMS SO SMALL
THEY WILL BECOME A FLAMING TORCH
AND HEAR THE PROMISED VICTORY CALL.
THE HEBREW RACE HAS YET TO TURN
FROM UNBELIEF TO GOD ALONE
FOR BLINDNESS STILL IN PART REMAINS
TIL THEY CONFESS THEIR HISTORY’S SHAME.
BUT WHEN THE VEIL OF UNBELIEF
IS TORN AWAY BY CHRIST’S RETURN
REPENTANT JEWS WILL TURN FROM SIN
AND CLAIM THE ONE THEY PIERCED AS KING.
YET JUST BEFORE THE TRUMPET SOUNDS
THE ANTICHRIST WILL DO HIS BEST
TO KILL THE SEED OF JUDAH’S RACE
UNTIL ONE THIRD ARE LEFT IN PLACE.
IN PREPARATION FOR HIS REIGN
MESSIAH’S REMNANT WILL GO THROUGH
THE TEST OF THOSE REFINED BY FIRE
TO SERVE AS PRIESTS IN WHITE ATTIRE.
THOUGHT
QUESTIONS
- THE LAST THREE CHAPTERS TAKES A LEAP INTO THE FUTURE AT CHRIST’S RETURN TO EARTH. HOW DOES CHAPTER 12:1-3 DESCRIBE JERUSALEM IN THE FINAL ARMAGEDDON CONFLICT? WHEN AND WHERE DOES THIS TAKE PLACE?
- SEVEN TIMES THE EXPRESSION “IN THAT DAY’ IS MENTIONED. WHAT MIGHT THIS REPETITION SUGGEST ABOUT THIS PARTICULAR “DAY?”
- WHAT CRISIS EVENT IS HAPPENING IN JUDAH THAT DRIVES THEIR ATTENTION GODWARD AND WHAT IS THEIR RESPONSE (vs.1-6)?
- CHAPTER 13 DESCRIBES THE PROCESS IN ISRAEL’S CLEANSING. HOW ARE SOME OF THOSE WAYS USED ACCORDING TO VERSES 1-6?
5.
WHAT TRAGIC EVENTS TAKE PLACE IN THIS FINAL REFINING PROCESS THAT
PREPARES THE REMAINING REMNANT TO HIS MILLENNIAL KINGDOM (VS.7-13)?
4 comments:
That was a great study, Papa! Some of the concepts and the like from Revelation and Zechariah can leave some people scratching their head, but the Lord has gifted you with a good understanding and with the ability to reveal the sometimes hidden meaning in these symbol-lionization. It's amazing to see, though it may not be near to the end times, how much of this has seemed to take place; in WWII, the plot to wipe the Jews off the face of the earth, etc... When all this does take place, it's going to be some strange time.
So do you believe, Papa, that by the time all of this occurs, with the Anti-Christ and all, that the chosen believers will already be taken home?
Thank you for sharing, Papa! You did an amazing job...
Before anti-Christ makes his 7 year treaty with Israel, the Church would have already been raptured to heaven.However, that does not mean there won't be tribulation for Christians before His return. In fact, they will continue to increase as we get farther from the truth of the Word of God as we are seeing today in America. See you soon!
This is coming along well, Dad! :) I love to see you writing on things that have always excited you so much. I used to love the Sunday evenings when you'd preach on prophecy, because it's fun to learn from someone who enjoys it so much! Thanks for doing this!
Thank you, Papa... That's always been something I've been a bit confused about, and I've never quite understood ;) I've heard several different opinions.
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