ZECHARIAH
Is particularly occupied with Jerusalem,
and so shews the Lord dealing with all nations, having Jerusalem as a centre,
using one nation to cast out another, till His purposes are accomplished; and
then, when the glory has come, establishing Himself at Jerusalem. In the person
of Joshua, the high priest, He justifies her against the adversary; He declares
He will come, and puts all wisdom, the omniscience of His government, in
Jerusalem. He prophesies of the perfection of the administrative order in the
kingdom and priesthood, and the judgment of all corrupt pretension to it, which
is shewn to be Babylonish, and builds the temple of the land by means of the
Branch; judging the hostile power of the world, and using all this to encourage
them at that time in building the temple. Thus far is one prophecy (chaps.
1-6).
In the next He takes occasion, by those
who inquire whether they are yet to fast for the ruin of Jerusalem, to promise
her restoration (only now, for the present, on the ground of responsibility);
declares He will protect His house against all surrounding enemies; brings in
Christ in humiliation, but carries it on to the time of glory, and of executing
judgment by Judah upon Greece (Javan), gathering all the scattered ones. In
chapters 11-14 we have the details of Christ's rejection, and the foolish and
idolatrous shepherd, when He judges all the nations as meddling with Jerusalem,
defends Jerusalem, brings them to repentance, and opens the fountain for their
cleansing; and we then get, in contrast with the false spirit of prophecy,
Christ's humiliation, the sparing of a remnant, when the body of the people are
cut off from Judea at the end, with the final deliverance and the sanctifying
of Jerusalem by the presence of the Lord, making her the centre of all worship
upon earth.
In chapter 13: 5 we see Christ, the
servant of man, the rejected one of the Jews, and the smitten of Jehovah. Read
"for man possessed me from my youth." It then appears that it was
among His friends He had been wounded in His hands; and the great secret of all
comes out, that He is Jehovah's fellow, and smitten of Him. Note, where Christ
is owned as God, He calls the saints His fellows; and where, as here, He is in
deepest humiliation, God calls Him His fellow.
In these books, Haggai and Zechariah, the
Jews are never called God's people, except in prospect of the future.