Zechariah 9:1-4 Lands to the north of Israel will be judged. Damascus continues to exist to this day, and figured significantly in the New Testament in the process of evangelizing the gentiles. Tyre, on the other hand, once was significant in Israel’s history as Hiram had provided resources for Solomon to build the temple. But in Ezekiel 26 we read of Tyre’s complete destruction, which Alexander the Great carried out in 332 BC.
Zechariah 9:5-8 The land of the Philistines, modern-day Palestine, will also be judged, but not totally destroyed. Mongrel people is speaking an insult, in that day, half breeds who were the result of being overrun. In our day, people of mixed race are seen as just other people, we have websites to help people figure out the geographic origin of their ancestors based on DNA. In this context, the reference to the Jebusites speaks of Israel’s conquest of Jerusalem (1 Chronicles 11:4-5) but failure to eradicate them as God had originally commanded Joshua. The modern day inhabitants of Palestine continue to share in that curse, living in poverty, constant warfare, ruthless and evil leaders who pretend to care for them for the sake of power and prestige. God promises peace and prosperity to Israel, but not in the way they expect….
Zechariah 9:9-11 The One who will rule from sea to sea and proclaim peace to the nations will enter Jerusalem meekly, riding on the colt of a donkey. This passage is quoted in the New Testament in describing Jesus’ triumphal entry on Palm Sunday. (Matthew 21:5, John 12:25) Jesus’ way of bringing peace is not an overpowering army of soldiers, but the power of His blood to overcome sin. He will release prisoners from the pit of hades through His blood, preaching the good news to them. (1 Peter 4:6)
Zechariah 9:11-13 Jesus will enable prisoners of sin who hope in Him to return to life with Him. The warriors of His kingdom will defeat Greek philosophy and religious worship of false gods with the Sword of the Spirit, the rhema of God. (Ephesians 6:17)
Zechariah 9:14-17 When the day of reckoning arrives, the Lord will appear in the sky. The angel of the Lord will give a trumpet blast. (Matthew 24:30-31, 1 Thessalonians 4:16) The Lord will shield His servants from the flaming darts of the evil one when they put their faith in Him. (Ephesians 6:16) The glory of the crown will be the people He has saved and transformed. (1 Thessalonians 2:19)
Zechariah 10
Zechariah 10:1 The Lord gives generously - rain and crops - to everyone.
Zechariah 10:2-3 Idols and diviners speak lies and deceive people with comfort in vain. The Lord’s anger burns against the supposed shepherds who lead people astray. This is expressed elsewhere. (Jeremiah 23:1; Ezekiel 34:2) The truth that is in the law of Moses provides enough insight into life that people can live good, healthy, and productive lives. The lies that bad shepherds tell result in people having distorted understanding of what God and eternity look like and are like, to dream about things that don’t exist or are impossible, and to be comfortable in their sins. These things ruin their lives, in fact, ruin society as a whole. (Look at the world we live in now!) The Lord Himself will shepherd His flock. (John 10:11-14) Whether the ruin that accepted sin causes flows from cause and effect or from God’s rejection of the actions, the end result is the same.
Zechariah 10:4-5 The cornerstone of a society built on a firm foundation is coming. (Psalm 118:22-23; Isaiah 28:16; Matthew 21:42) Those He shepherds, who build their lives on this cornerstone, will be mighty warriors in the spiritual war against evil, and they and He will prevail. (Ephesians 6:10-17)
Zechariah 10:6-12 A further elaboration on how the children of God will be restored, both geographically and spiritually. The Lord scattered them to teach them a lesson. (Lamentations 5:16-21) Zechariah speaks the Lord’s words that He will indeed restore them and deal with those nations that mistreat them. This message is timeless. Even today, the nations that respect and honor Jews (who, even though they have not accepted Jesus are still God’s chosen people) are blessed, and those who don’t are cursed. And this goes beyond Jews to Christians as well. Nations where Christians are persecuted are cursed - economically, politically, socially. It is the choice that Satan made, better to reign in hell than serve in heaven. (John Milton, Paradise Lost)
It is both a principle of life and eternity and a maxim that can be verified by life and history, that lives that are built on overcoming and persevering through incredible trials are those which matter most in the long run, that accomplish sustained values that outlive them. Those whose lives are easy, for whom everything goes smoothly, end up living comfortably, however long they live, but leave no enduring works of value.
Zechariah 11
Zechariah 11:1-3 A warning to the nations immediately north and east of Israel. The shepherds will mourn because their trees, pastures, and thickets are ruined.
Zechariah 11:4-6 Shepherds who sell all their sheep will seem temporarily rich, but they have no long-term flock. No one will rescue them in the day of trouble. They have no allies and nothing of value to offer. This is the outcome of the worldly mindset that focuses only on short-term riches.
Zechariah 11:7-9 It is not clear whether Zechariah is speaking on his own or is speaking for the Lord, in taking over as the head shepherd. The two staffs for shepherding are intriguing:
- Favor, Strong’s H5276, can mean agreeable, beauty, delight, pleasantness. It suggests shepherding sheep by offering them easy and pleasant life circumstances. The rewards of obeying God are blessings.
- Union, Strong’s H2256, refers to a cord, rope or union or company. However, it can also mean pain, sorrow, or destruction. Later context favors the former interpretation. He shepherds by forming cords of unity so that the flock stays and moves together.
However, he fired three under-shepherds in a month. It seems that then the chief shepherd tired of shepherding the sheep (rebellious? unwilling to be led?), so he (or He) said to let them fend for themselves and face the consequences.
Zechariah 11:10-13 Zechariah broke the staff called Favor, signifying the revoking of God’s covenant with the nations. He resigned and said to pay him or not for his month’s labor, as seemed best to them. (Presumably said to the owners of the sheep.) So he received thirty pieces of silver which he threw into the potter at the Lord’s house. Saying that this was the price at which they valued him foreshadows the price that Judas was paid for betraying Jesus. (Matthew 26:16, 27:3&9) In that case, the blood money was used to buy a field for burying the poor.
Zechariah 11:14-17 Zechariah then broke the staff called union signifying the breakage of the family bond between Israel and Judah. Back in Genesis they were father and son, but in Zechariah’s day they were two nations, Judah consisting of two tribes and Israel the other ten. The significance of this was that God would raise up a foolish shepherd who would not bother caring for the sheep, but would simply eat them. But then a woe is pronounced on this worthless shepherd, His arm and his right eye would be struck with a sword. (see also Jeremiah 23:1) In the time of the end, there will be a head of a world nation represented by a beast who will suffer similar judgment. (Revelation 13:3 & 12) Some see this passage in Zechariah as a foreshadowing of certain aspects of the antichrist in the end times.
Zechariah 12
Zechariah 12:1-5 Invoking the very creation of the heavens and the earth, and of humankind, Zechariah declares that this creator-God will defeat Jerusalem’s enemies. When He does this, all Jews will recognize Him as the one who makes those dwelling in Jerusalem strong. The gathering of all nations against Jerusalem speaks of the end times, as later described by both Jesus and John. (Luke 21:20 & 24; Revelation 20:8)
Zechariah 12:5-9 A further description of the role of the clans of Judah in this conflict. They will join in with the residents of Jerusalem in this war. As the Lord protects Jerusalem, their homes and villages will also be protected, and they will destroy by fire those who surround them. Thus the Lord will destroy all who attack Jerusalem. (As also in 14:12) In our day, we see most recently the attack by Hamas on Israel October 7, 2023, which led to a war which essentially destroyed the entire Gaza Strip. This is perhaps only a foretaste of what will happen at the end times, when all of the nations that oppose Israel will suffer a similar fate. They will start the war, but the Lord God will finish it, using Judah (modern Israel) as His tool.
Zechariah 12:10-13 That particular day, when the Lord empowers Judah to utterly destroy their enemies, will be accompanied by the visible return of Jesus, the one that the Jews had crucified thousands of years earlier. They will see Him and mourn that they did not recognize Him and hence mistreated Him. He is the uniquely-begotten Son of God and they will mourn over how they treated Him, His death. (Isaiah 53:5; Revelation 1:7)
Four specific family clans are identified, tracing back to various origins, most likely to give a picture of the breadth of the family clans of the Jews that will join in this mourning, to include their wives: the house of David, the kingly line; the house of Nathan, the prophetic line; the house of Levi, the priestly line; and the house of Shimei.
Shimei seems an odd family patriarch to be mentioned, as his appearance in history was first when he threw stones and dirt on David to mock David’s apparent downfall caused by Absalom. (2 Samuel 16:5-14) Later he repented and was granted legal protection while David was alive (2 Samuel 19:16-23); but later, on his deathbed, David charged Solomon to get revenge, which he ultimately did. (1 Kings 2:8-9, 36-46) Who do Shimei and his clan represent? Possibly it is those people who have up-and-down faith. Sometimes they are scornful of God’s chosen people, sometimes they recognize His hand on them, and sometimes they are just careless about following up on promises. In the end times, they too will see Jesus and mourn over their treatment of Him.
Zechariah 13
Zechariah 13:1 Jesus promised rivers of living water that would bubble up from inside the innermost being of believers. (John 7:37-38) In John’s later revelation, one of the elders tells him that the Lamb will lead those who come out of the tribulation to springs of living water. (Revelation 7:17)
Zechariah 13:2-6 There seem to be more than one possible interpretation of the prophets described here. Most common interpretation is that it refers to the false prophets of Israel, who lied and claimed to speak for the Lord, but were really inspired by Satan. They will recognize when they are fingered by their parents that they must deny any claim to prophetic utterance lest they be put to death. This would be the case if they prophesied lies, things inconsistent with God’s word, His nature, and his character.
An alternative interpretation might be that Jesus came to banish idolatry. But His followers would not be accepted so this passage is paraphrasing the accusations made against His people, who will humbly deny any prophetic ministry, claiming only to be tilling spiritual soil, perhaps with the words of Jesus Himself. Every believer in Christ has direct access to God through the Holy Spirit and therefore the church would not have need of prophetic gifts given to only a few. But then the reference to the wounds given in a friends’ house would seem to refer to Jesus. (John 20:20-27)
Zechariah 13:7-9 Reference to striking the shepherd is clearly messianic as Jesus quoted this verse at the Last Supper just before He was arrested. (Matthew 26:31; Mark 14:27) It is unclear what the perishing of two-thirds means, whether it is that the majority of those who believe in Jesus will die a martyr’s death (Revelation 7:9-17), or that a majority of those who are presented the gospel will reject it, as perhaps was the case of the Jews in the first century. Refining of believers like silver and gold is a frequent theme in Scripture. (Psalm 66:10; Malachi 3:3; Revelation 3:18)
There seem to be four different ways to view bad things happening.
- The result of cause and effect. Sinful acts carry within them the basic consequences. Sexual immorality leads to unwanted pregnancy and venereal diseases. Lying and stealing lead to social ostracism and rejection since no one will trust them. Murder leads to being punished by the government, or else revenge being sought by the victim’s relatives. At its worst, widespread immorality leads to social collapse and anarchy. One does not need to believe in God to see this relationship.
- The judgment of God. In the case of Israel, after they repeatedly flouted Him and His commands, He let them be carried into exile to learn their lesson. He sent prophets to speak to them, warn them, and call them to repent. This theme is repeatedly repeated in both the books of history, the books of the prophets, and the writings of Psalms and Proverbs, probably the majority of the Old Testament. The Jews of Jesus’ day believed this, for example in the question the disciples asked about the man born blind. (John 9:1-2) Job’s “comforters” took it for granted. (Job 4:7-8)
- Refining fire, the formation of spiritual character in a person. As in the passages above in Zechariah, the Lord is making us into the person He has planned for us, which may involve troubles that are not based on any of our own actions. He wants us to exhibit love and forgiveness and joy in the presence of others who do wrong. This is a hard road, but saints through the ages testify to this. God is not just disciplining us for our faults, He is building virtues into us.
- The transcendent glory of God. In the story of the man born blind, Jesus response is that this happened so that God’s glory could be revealed. (John 9:3-4ff). The Incarnation, what God’s inscrutable nature and character, His power and glory, look like in human form, was revealed for all to see. As Paul quoted Isaiah, eye has not seen and ear has not heard, nor has it entered the human heart, all that God has prepared for those who love Him. (Isaiah 64:4, 1 Corinthians 2:9) When Job finally saw God, he had the same reaction. (Job 42:2-3)
When bad things happen, especially when there are unanswered prayers, it is a test of our faith, our trust in God, which of these viewpoints we take.
Zechariah 14
Zechariah 14:1 The day of the Lord is coming for Jerusalem. At first this seems odd because this book is believed to have been written circa 520-470 BC, while Jerusalem was destroyed in 586 BC. Of course, Jerusalem was also destroyed in 70 AD. However, the context of the rest of this chapter point to an end-times event. In reading this description, we should be motivated to live every day as though this might happen today.
Zechariah 14:2-5 The terrors inflicted on Jerusalem by invaders is countered by the arrival of the Lord, who will create a new valley for them to flee through when He arrives with His holy ones. This event is referred to elsewhere by Zechariah (12:3, 14:14-16) and also in the New Testament. (Luke 21:24, Revelation 14:20, 20:7-9) Before this event the gospel will be preached to all nations, so the nations that gather against Jerusalem will have heard the gospel, and rejected it. (Matthew 24:14)
Zechariah 14:6-7 The arrival of the Lord will fundamentally change the structure of day and night. There will be light from the Lord and hence no night. (Revelation 21:23, 22:5)
Zechariah 14:8 Living water will flow both east and west, and bring life to the Dead Sea. (Revelation 7:17, 22:1)
Zechariah 14:9 Jesus will rule the whole earth. (Revelation 12:5)
Zechariah 14:10-11 Jerusalem will be secure.
Zechariah 14:12-15 The plague inflicted on the nations gathered who attack Jerusalem sounds very much like the effects of a nuclear weapon. (Revelation 20:10) Invading armies attacking one another has precedent, notably during the reign of Jehoshaphat. (2 Chronicles 20:22-23)
Zechariah 14:16-19 The surviving nations will come to Jerusalem every year to celebrate Succoth, the festival of tabernacles. This is the last of the annual feasts prescribed in the Mosaic law. (Leviticus 23:33-43) Just as Passover foreshadowed Calvary, and the feast of weeks foreshadowed the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost, the feast of booths foreshadows the ultimate privilege of the nations coming before Jesus every year to worship in His presence.
Zechariah 14:20-21 Almost as an afterthought, the details of holiness will reach to every pot in Jerusalem, and no unclean or rebellious person will enter the house of the Lord.