Sunday, May 31, 2026

Zechariah 1-6 Eight visions


Zechariah 1

Zechariah 1:1 Zechariah prophesied the same year as Haggai. (Haggai 2:1,2:10)


Zechariah 1:2-6 The message that you reap what you sow was repeated by virtually every minor prophet, in one form or another. Here, at least, is the acknowledgement that the Israelites learned their lesson after the spanking. They ignored God’s commands and warnings, and found out He was serious. The hard way. There a curious contrast between 1:2 and 1:15. Just how angry was the Lord? 


Zechariah 1:7-11 The first of eight visions: Zechariah sees several horses that are red, brown, and white, standing among Myrtle trees. Since the Lord sent them to scout the entire earth, they must be angelic. That they found the world at rest and in peace is the opposite of the four horses released when the first four seals will be broken by the Lamb standing before the throne at the end times. (Revelation 6:1-8) Those horses will bring conquest, war, famine, and death as dimensions of judgment on the earth. This peace in Zechariah’s day was under Persia’s rule.


Zechariah 1:12-17 The angel of the Lord appears many times in the Old Testament. Many think this is the pre-incarnate Christ, although he may be the highest ranking of the created angels. A separate discussion. Rather than God speaking directly to the prophet, the angel of the Lord asked a question of Him, and then relayed His answer to the prophet. He will stretch His measuring line over Jerusalem, to give comfort and prosperity to His people. The measuring line returns in the third vision, but in other passages, it appears to signify God’s standards, the eternal metrics that govern eternity and the spiritual realm. (Isaiah 28:17, 34:11; Ezekiel 47:3) That He will bless Jerusalem with prosperity and comfort conveys to us that His eternal standards bring prosperity and comfort. His kingdom is not one  of suffering and meager provision, it is just that prospering in the spiritual dimension requires us to shed worldly things that seem to us to be wealth and comfortable. 


Zechariah 1:18-21 The second of eight visions: The four horns that scattered the disobedient Jews are not new. Daniel saw them in a vision decades earlier. (Daniel 7:8-11) But here we have the judgment of these nations, who acted as wild beasts in dismembering Israel, Judah, and Jerusalem. God raised up skilled laborers to dethrone and destroy those savage warriors in the spiritual realm, who led the other nations against the Jews to scatter them. There is a possible interpretation of this passage relating to spiritual warfare. While humans may not have the powers of demonic fallen angels, if they are faithful to study God’s word and His ways, and commit themselves to faithfully do what He calls them to, they may have authority in spiritual realms to bind, even to cast down those evil spirits. This is not something to be done lightly, but some have this calling. They will need the skill that can only come by spiritual exercise and training. (Mark 10:42; Luke 10:19) The authority belongs to Christ but He shares it with those skilled craftsmen that He can entrust it to. (Colossians 2:10) 


Zechariah 2


Zechariah 2:1-2 The third of eight visions: A man with a measuring line is measuring Jerusalem.  This seems to signify God’s transcendent standards, that govern the eternal and spiritual realm, as mentioned above.  This is perhaps akin to Ezekiel’s vision of the measurement of water trickling from the temple that becomes a mighty river that no one could cross. (Ezekiel 47:1-5) This passage continues in a different direction.


Zechariah 2:3-5 The angel Reveals to Zechariah that Jerusalem would be so populous that walls could not contain it. In Zechariah’s day, there would have been danger in not having defensive walls, but the Lord promises that His defense, as a wall of fire, will protect them. Not only that, but He will reveal His glory within it, which will be seen as fire. (Acts 2:3) This vision clearly was not a description of the returning exiles in Zechariah’s day. But a similar description is later given of the new Jerusalem, after the end of the millennium, when God establishes His kingdom permanently on earth. (Revelation 21:2-4, 10-27) 


Zechariah 2:6-9 The Lord calls the people of the diaspora to come. It seems odd that He would call Babylon a daughter, but that is where many of His people are. Zion is His daughter (2:10) He allowed His people to be taken and He now wants them to return. 


Zechariah 2:10-13 Adding to this, He will live among them so that they truly will be His people, as promised to Moses. (Leviticus 26:12) In Moses’ day, the Lord was among them as a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. (Exodus 13:21-22) Jesus came as a man who walked and taught and showed them God’s true nature and character - the divine in bodily form. (Hebrews 1:3) Since we have the gospel, we are used to the idea of the incarnation, but to the Jews of that day, this was a pagan concept, akin to Greek mythology, of the gods masquerading as humans so they could fulfill their own desires. But Jesus would come (a few hundred years later) to show that what the one true God desires is fellowship and lives lived in accordance with His holiness and His agape love, that Jesus lived.


Zechariah 3


Zechariah 3:1-5 The fourth of eight visions: Joshua, the high priest, is symbolically reclothed with fine garments and a clean turban.


Zechariah 3:1 Jesus is our high priest (Hebrews 8:1-2), Joshua (or Yeshua) being the original Hebrew version of His name, translated into English as Jesus. 



Zechariah 3:2-5 This Joshua, the earthly high priest in Zechariah’s day, was symbolically dressed in dirty clothes, as he lived in a culture that was still heavily polluted by sin, as the Jews were recovering from the pre-exilic sins that caused God to allow Babylon to conquer them. They had been spanked, but now had to acquire new lifestyles and behaviors. And the promise given to the returning Jews is that the Lord will not only forgive their sins, He will also clothe their lives with healthy lifestyles through His power. Jesus took away Joshua’s sin. (John 1:29, Romans 11:27, 1 John 3:5) His indwelling His people, through the Holy Spirit (in the New Testament) will empower them. (John 14:15-17)


Zechariah 3:6-7 A conditional promise: If you will walk in obedience and keep His commandments, then you will have your place among the heavenly court. Receive what God has given you, and you will be eternally blessed!


Zechariah 3:8-9 A promise laden with symbols is explained. The Lord’s servant, the branch, is coming. He was also spoken of by other prophets, and then Jesus is explicitly identified in the New Testament. (Isaiah 4:2, Jeremiah 33:5&15; John 15:1-6) Jesus is the vine of true life and He can only give us His life if we are connected to Him. In Revelation, the seven eyes of the Lamb are seven spirits of God sent out to the earth. (Revelation 5:6) God sees everything that happens everywhere on earth - there is no place where you or your enemies can hide from His sight. He will remove sin in a single day, on a hill called Calvary (which means, the skull) five hundred years later.


Zechariah 3:10 Isaiah also invoked the fruit of the vine (grapes) and fig tree, both sweet to the taste (without any refined sugar needed) as symbolic of the fruit in our lives that will flow in that day, from this promised life in Jesus. (Isaiah 36:16; Matthew 26:27-29)


Zechariah 4


Zechariah 4:1-14 The fifth of eight visions: A golden lamp stand and two olive trees.


Zechariah 4:1-5 Zechariah sees the vision and asks the angel what these things are. The angel seemed surprised that he didn’t know. The golden lamp stand’s description matches that of a menorah, which burns olive oil. Olive trees represent peace, so this represents peace through light. In John’s vision of Christ, Jesus is standing in front of seven golden lamp stands. (Revelation 1:12) Not sure what the significance is of the difference. 


Zechariah 4:6 Often quoted verse. The point is, we can’t do it by ourselves, no matter how powerful or capable we are. To accomplish God’s purposes and build His kingdom, we need the power of the Holy Spirit.


Zechariah 4:7 Mighty mountains are not a problem for those walking in God’s power. Jesus went further than saying they will become level ground, promising that those with faith could command mountains to be cast into the sea. (Matthew 21:21; Mark 11:23) And then, the capstone to the Temple will be blessed. This was fulfilled by Jesus a few hundred years later. (Mark 11:9-10)


Zechariah 4:8-10 After the foundation of this earthly temple is laid and the capstone is brought by Zerubbabel the seven eyes of the Lord will rejoice. (3:9)


Zechariah 4:11-14 The two olive branches are two people who are anointed to serve the Lord. While Joshua and Zerubbabel were thus designated in Zechariah’s day, in the last days, they will be two witnesses who are anointed with power for 1,260 days. (Revelation 11:3-6)


Zechariah 5


Zechariah 5:1-4  The sixth of eight visions: A flying scroll. Zechariah sees an enormous flying scroll, 4.57 meters wide and 9.14 meters long. This scroll is a curse, likely as described by Moses for lawbreakers. (Deuteronomy 27:26, 28:15) Two specific commandments are identified as having been broken: stealing and lying. (Exodus 20:15-16) Exile is prescribed. (Deuteronomy 28:36) This is exactly what had happened to Israel. The warning is not to repeat the same mistake. The curse of the scroll, however, is destruction of the house of the lawbreaker. (Proverbs 14:11) Question - while 5:4 identifies timber and stones, does destroying the house of a person really refer to the persons family, their descendants? A physical house can be replaced, but the loss of all one’s offspring is the irreversible end of that house.


Zechariah 5:5-11 The seventh of eight visions: A basket holding a woman of wickedness. The basket itself represents iniquity, and it contains wickedness. Perhaps this represents Ishtar, if the returning Israelites had brought some Babylonian religion with them.  In this case, two women with stork-like wings carry the basket to Babylon. Perhaps this represents cleansing Israel, but at the cost of further contaminating Babylon. At the end times, Babylon will be filled with and represent the epitome of evil. (Revelation 18:1-3) This will happen when the times are ripe, when everything is ready. 


Zechariah 6


Zechariah 6:1-8 The last of the eight visions: The four chariots. A notable match to the horses’ colors seen by John on the Island of Patmos. (Revelation 6:1-8) Zechariah asks for an explanation, which is given that these are spirits of heaven that go out into the whole earth. In Zechariah’s case, those in the north have given God’s Spirit rest, represented by the chariot with black horses. In John’s vision, the white horse carried a conqueror, the red horse’s rider had the power to take away peace and make men kill each other, the black horse’s rider brought famine and scarcity, and the pale horse’s rider was named death and brought hades with him. The significance of the chariots that Zechariah saw, as contrasted with riders on horses that John saw, is possibly cultural. Chariots are instruments of war, while riders are more likely messengers or spies. 


Zechariah 6:9-15 Zechariah is instructed to get gold and silver from three returning exiles, and take them to a metal smith to have him make a crown for Joshua the high priest.  Joshua, Yeshua, will be named the branch. This symbolizes that he will branch out to build the temple of the Lord and sit and rule on his throne. This sounds a lot like Jesus! And during the last supper Jesus identified Himself as the vine, and His disciples as branches. (John 15:1-6) 

How does a priest become a ruler? He is clothed with majesty by the supreme power. This is described in the epistle to the Hebrews in which Jesus’ obedience led to Him being designated a high priest according to the order of Melchizedek. (Hebrews 5:5-10) This was after He was already identified as having sat down at the right hand of the majesty on high. (Hebrews 1:1-4) Jesus did this after having made purification of sins. It was the self-sacrificial love of Jesus that qualified Him to be both king and high priest. Joshua, by name, represents a foretaste of the future work of Christ.

Monday, May 25, 2026

Haggai

Haggai 1


Haggai is mentioned by name twice in Ezra (5:1,6:14). The timelines are intertwined.

  • Ezra 3:8 In the second month of the second year after their arrival in Jerusalem, Zerubbabel and Joshua began to work on rebuilding the temple. This was during the reign of Cyrus.
  • Ezra 4:6–23 During the reign of Xerxes, the people around the Jews accused the Jews of conspiracy to rebel. During the reign of Artaxerxes they sent a letter to him, and he issued an order for work to stop.
  • Haggai 1:1 in the second year of Darius, on the first day of the sixth month, Haggai gave the word of the Lord
  • Haggai 1:14-15 on the 24th day of the sixth month the people began work. 
  • Ezra 5:1-2 At Haggai’s prophecy, work was restarted.
  • Haggai 2:1 In the second year of Darius on the 21st day of the seventh month, Haggai spoke the word of the Lord
  • Haggai 2:10 In the second year of Darius on the 24th day of the ninth month, Haggai spoke the word of the Lord
  • Haggai 2:20 In the second year of Darius on the 24th day of the ninth month (the same day), Haggai received and spoke another word from the Lord
  • Ezra 6:15 The temple was completed on the third day of the month Adar in the sixth year of the reign of Darius. Adar is the twelfth month of the Jewish calendar.


Haggai 1:1-2 The date of the first prophecy and its recipients, which align with the historical narrative of Ezra. Zerubbabel and Joshua are both mentioned as getting to work in response to Haggai’s prophecies. (Ezra 5:2)


Haggai 1:3-4 The Lord reprimands the people for living in comfortable and luxurious houses while His house lies in ruins. This is somewhat different than what David was told when he planned to start building a temple, and was told not to. David felt guilty for living in a palace while the Lord lived in a tent. (2 Samuel 7:1-2) The Lord spoke to David through Nathan the prophet that he was not to build it, but that His descendent would. (2 Samuel 7:4-16) In that prophecy, it is clear that the Lord had in mind Jesus building His church, that His throne would endure forever. (2 Samuel 7:13) 


Haggai 1:5-11 The result of prioritizing human activity is that it fails to deliver, because God was not being honored. But comparison with Isaiah’s words puts perspective on what God is really looking for. 

“Heaven is my throne,

    and the earth is my footstool.

Where is the house you will build for me?

    Where will my resting place be?

Has not my hand made all these things,

    and so they came into being?”

declares the Lord. (Isaiah 66:1-2)

This was quoted by Stephen just before he was stoned. (Acts 7:49-50) God takes pleasure in the Holy Spirit indwelling His people, and their response. 

There is a point here about sowing and reaping, and God using trials of life to get our attention. Perhaps this is related to God’s word about bringing the full tenth into the storehouse. (Malachi 3:10-11) It is not a matter of paying Him off. Rather, the point is that the source of true wealth is God, and that we need to show by our actions that we are looking to Him as the source of provision.


Haggai 1:12-15 The people responded in obedience and they began work.


Haggai 2


Haggai 2:1-5 Less than a month after the previous word of the Lord, Haggai brought another revelation. Construction of the second temple had just begun. He recalls the past  - the glory of Solomon’s temple, and the Law of Moses and associated promises He gave them during the Exodus. His Spirit, Ruach HaKodesh, remains with them.


Haggai 2:6-9 The Lord will shake the heavens and the earth, to remove the old and replace it with Jesus’ reign.  (Matthew 27:54, 28:2) This promise was repeated later in the New Testament so we know that it was not yet completely fulfilled, although Jesus’ death and resurrection established the foundation for His eternal kingdom. (Hebrews 12:26) But even before His death, the glory of Jesus’ physical presence graced this very temple that Shealtiel and Joshua were now building, albeit more than 500 years later. 


Haggai 2:10-19 Two months later, the prophet brought another word. First, there was an object lesson about transmitting holiness and uncleanness. The temple itself cannot make the people righteous, but their devotion to God can. It is for them, that by putting Him ahead of their own needs and wants, they will be blessed. And so, in a more general sense, laying bricks to build God’s kingdom yields blessing. Setting priorities in our lives of glorifying God and living as Jesus calls us will result in blessings on the more mundane aspects of life. They (and we) must be careful to align all of our actions with His priorities. The glory of Jesus is coming!


Haggai 2:20-23 Second, referring again to the prophesied shaking (2:6-7), when the nations and their armies are overthrown by God’s direct intervention, His faithful servants will be close to Him and act in His authority. The Lord’s authority is not focused on politics but ultimate spiritual realities. Being in God’s hand brings spiritual and moral truths to the governor’s life, to lead people by exhortation and example, with governmental power properly exercised. 

Friday, May 22, 2026

Zephaniah

 

Zephaniah 1


Zephaniah 1:1 A member of the royal family, a great-great-grandson of King Hezekiah. The genealogy makes him a second cousin of the king, since Amariah was their great-grandfather.  This prophecy seems to be fire and brimstone preaching. Not designed to be popular with the masses.


Zephaniah 1:2-13 The prophet enumerates the various ways people go astray, intermixed with the punishment that God will mete out.

  • Zephaniah 1:2 In verses 2 and 18, the universality of destruction sounds very much like a description of the end times. Perhaps we should consider how our actions at any point in history could merit this kind of cataclysmic judgment.
  • Zephaniah 1:3-5 Idolatry and worship of demons such as Baal and Moloch, and worship of the starry host, will be swept away, and along with destroying the physical means of such worship, the worshippers will also experience God’s hand. It will be a painful spanking.
  • Zephaniah 1:6-7 Those who neglect the Lord and don’t bother to seek Him will be silent. The sacrifice the Lord has prepared refers, most likely, to Jesus’ crucifixion, in which He will set apart those who respond to His invitation.  
  • Zephaniah 1:8 Rulers get distracted by their power, and forget who they are before God and their responsibility to Him for what they do in their position. Instead they focus on either exercising power or living it up.
  • Zephaniah 1:9 Characteristics of those who neglect the worship of the Lord and turn to false Gods include violence and deceit. They will reap what they sow.
  • Zephaniah 1:10-11  Those who focus solely on their careers will cry aloud with pain at the loss of their life-focus, be they fisherman, entrepreneurs, farmers, merchants, or bankers. If the Lord is not in their lives, when He comes they won’t be able to deal with Him and His ways.
  • Zephaniah 1:12 Those who think and act as though God is dead, or is a remote, detached God who doesn’t intervene in human affairs of this life, will find out they were wrong the hard way.
  • Zephaniah 1:13 The wealthy who trust in their earthly riches will lose them. 


Zephaniah 1:14-18 The great day of the Lord, the day of wrath, sounds apocalyptic, since the whole earth will be consumed. Jesus, the Mighty Warrior, shouts His call. Trouble and distress, darkness and gloom, will prevail. Blood and body innards will be poured out, and neither pricy offerings to God nor expensive medical treatments will save. It will be too late! The whole earth will be covered in this judgment, leaving no place to flee.


Zephaniah 2


Zephaniah 2:1-3 A prophecy for Judah. Three urges to seek, so that perhaps they will be sheltered on the day of wrath. 

  • Seek the Lord, those who do what He commands;
  • Seek righteousness, evidently for those who don’t do what He commands;
  • Seek humility, which is one of three things the Lord requires, along with justice and mercy.  (Micah 6:8)


Zephaniah 2:4-7 The land of the Philistines will be destroyed. The Philistines’ origin can be traced back to being the descendants of Egypt, the son of Ham. (Genesis 10:6 & 14). The Israelites were supposed to have wiped them out in conquering the promised land, but fell short.  This prophecy is that that will be completed. The remnant of the Jews will possess the land. We see dynamics of this unfolding in our day as the Jews continue to try to control the land of Gaza. 


Zephaniah 2:8-11 The Moabites and the Ammonites will be judged. Ironically, these descendants of Lot (Genesis 19:36-38) will experience the judgment that Lot fled from when he left Sodom and Gomorrah. (Genesis 19:24-25) But this judgment is for pride, and for mocking and insulting God’s people. Their land will be a place of weeds and tar pits which will then be given to the Jewish remnant. Distant nations will bow down to Him, when they see Him destroy all the (false) gods of the earth.


Zephaniah 2:12 The Cushites, descendants of Ham (Genesis 10:6) living south of Egypt, will be slain by the Lord’s sword.


Zephaniah 2:13-15 Assyria will be destroyed, and its capital Nineveh will be a desert, as Nahum also warned. (Nahum 1:14) The phrase “I am the one and there is none like me” recurs, with variations, periodically in the mouths of the proud, and is generally cited just before God’s judgment is announced. For example, Babylon at the end of the ages. (Isaiah 47:8; Revelation 18:7) In this case it is Nineveh, which was destroyed by the historical Babylon. As Solomon wrote, “Prides goes before a fall.…” (Proverbs 16:18)


Zephaniah 3


Zephaniah 3:1-5 Alas! Jerusalem! The rulers of the city of peace are unrighteous, the religious leaders do not serve the Lord. Yet He is that He is righteous and just - that is His nature and character. What follows is how He will make things right.

 

Zephaniah 3:6-8 He made an example of other nations by utterly destroying some of them, as described in chapter 2. But the remaining ones had no fear, even Jerusalem continued to act corruptly. Therefore the whole world will be judged (at a place called Armageddon). (Revelation 16:16-21)


Zephaniah 3:9-20 After this judgment, Israel’s remnant will be restored. This is 5counterpoint to the punishment of the wicked earlier. (1:2-13)

  • Zephaniah 3:9 They will call on the names of the Lord: YHWH ABBA, Yeshua HaMashiach, and Ruach HaKodesh.
  • Zephaniah 3:10-11 His people, around the world, will be purified from pride, on a hill called Calvary, meaning the place of the skull. (Luke 23:33)
  • Zephaniah 3:12 They will be meek and humble. (Matthew 5:3,5)
  • Zephaniah 3:13 They will speak truth. (John 14:6)
  • Zephaniah 3:14 They will worship with Pentecostal enthusiasm. (Psalm 100:1; Acts 2:9-11)
  • Zephaniah 3:15 He has taken away their punishment.  (Isaiah 53:5-6)
  • Zephaniah 3:16-17 He is a Yeshua, the Mighty Warrior who saves. (Revelation 19:11-16) He will overlook their sins because of His love. (John 17:23-26)
  • Zephaniah 3:18 He will remove those who mourn the loss of religious burdens. (Matthew 23:4; Revelation 21:8)
  • Zephaniah 3:19-20 He will gather His people from around the world, bring them home, and give them honor among and above all the other people of the earth. (Revelation 21:2-3)