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+<title>Studies in Zechariah. (by A. C. Gaebelein)</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Studies in Zechariah, by Arno C. Gaebelein
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Studies in Zechariah
+
+Author: Arno C. Gaebelein
+
+Release Date: May 24, 2011 [EBook #36216]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STUDIES IN ZECHARIAH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Keith G. Richardson
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#Forward">Forward</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#Intro">Introduction</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#I">Chapter I</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#II">Chapter II</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#III">Chapter III</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#IV">Chapter IV</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#V">Chapter V</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#VI">Chapter VI</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#VII">Chapter VII</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#VIII">Chapter VIII</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#IX">Chapter IX</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#X">Chapter X</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#XI">Chapter XI</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#XII">Chapter XII</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#XIII">Chapter XIII</a></p>
+<p class="pnn"><a href="#XIV">Chapter XIV</a></p>
+<p style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:267%;margin-top:1.0em;margin-bottom:0.4em">
+STUDIES</p>
+<p style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:183%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0.4em">
+IN</p>
+<p style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:267%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0">
+ZECHARIAH.</p>
+<hr style="width:5em;margin-top:4.5em;margin-bottom:4.5em">
+<p style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:67%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0.7em">
+BY</p>
+<p style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:125%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0">
+A. C. GAEBELEIN.</p>
+<hr style="width:6em;margin-top:3.7em;margin-bottom:1em">
+<p style="text-align:center;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0">
+<i>EIGHTH EDITION.</i></p>
+<hr style="width:6em;margin-top:1.3em;margin-bottom:4em">
+<p style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:67%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:12em">
+PRINTING BY<br>
+FRANCIS E. FITCH, INC,<br>
+47 BROAD ST., NEW YORK.</p>
+<hr style="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:24.5em">
+<p style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:67%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:1.5em">
+Copyright 1911, by A. C. Gaebelein.</p>
+<hr style="margin-top:26em;margin-bottom:3em">
+<h1 style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:125%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0">
+<a name="Forward" id="Forward">FOREWORD TO THE EIGHTH
+EDITION.</a></h1>
+<hr style="width:6em;margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:1.3em">
+<p class="pn">This little exposition of the Prophecies of
+Zechariah was written almost 15 years ago. We are thankful to God
+that it has been a help to so many. The sixth edition has been
+sold and a seventh has become necessary.</p>
+<p class="pn">We were somewhat reluctant to print another
+edition. When this book was written the writer did not at all
+have a clear vision in the prophetic Word concerning the great
+predicted end events of the times of the Gentiles. Like so many
+others he did not distinguish between the personal Antichrist and
+the King of the North. He then held the view, which is still
+taught by many, that the first beast in Revelation xiii is the
+personal Antichrist. This belief led into incorrect views about
+that part of Revelation.</p>
+<p class="pn">Since writing the book it has pleased the Lord to
+give the writer better light on these great prophetic unfoldings
+and for this reason some of the interpretations given, especially
+on pages 135, 136 and 137, are no longer looked upon by the
+author as being scripturally correct. In our later books “The
+Harmony of the Prophetic Word” “Joel,” and especially “Exposition
+of Daniel,” the truth as revealed in Prophecy concerning the two
+beasts and the King of the North, is given. We therefore request
+the reader to consider this when studying this volume.</p>
+<p class="pn">We are sure the Lord will continue to bless the
+simple unfolding of the greatest Post exile Prophet. So little is
+written on this great book that we feel that we should not
+withhold this imperfect exposition from the students of the Word
+of Prophecy. May the Lord continue to bless it.</p>
+<p class="rt">A. C. GAEBELEIN.    </p>
+<p class="pn">Sept. 30, 1911.</p>
+<hr style="margin-top:5em;margin-bottom:5em">
+<h1 style=
+"text-align:center;font-size:150%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:1em">
+<a name="Intro" id="Intro">INTRODUCTION.</a></h1>
+<p class="pn">Zechariah, the name of the prophet whose visions
+and prophecies we desire to study, is not an uncommon name in
+divine history. Its meaning is <i>Jehovah remembers</i>. He is
+called the son of Berachiah, <i>Jehovah blesses</i>, the son of
+Iddo, <i>the appointed time</i>. There is here, as in many other
+instances in the Bible, a great significance in the Hebrew names.
+The name of the grandfather of Zechariah (who probably brought
+him up, as his father must have died early), his father’s name
+and his own read in English translation, <i>the appointed
+time</i>, <i>Jehovah blesses</i>, <i>Jehovah remembers</i>. The
+Holy Spirit has inspired these very names; they are in themselves
+a commentary to the prophecies and visions God gave to Zechariah,
+for they speak of an appointed time of God’s blessings for
+Jerusalem and of His loving remembrance.</p>
+<p class="pn">Zechariah was born in Babylon in the captivity, for
+when he returned to the land of his fathers he was but a child.
+Like some other prophets he was a priest as well as a prophet.
+His work as a prophet was commenced by him when he was a young
+man, for thus he is called in one of the visions. The time of his
+opening address to the people is two months after Haggai had
+opened his lips in Jehovah’s name. Haggai received the word of
+the Lord in the sixth month in the second year of Darius, and
+Zechariah in the eighth month of the same year of the reign of
+that King, about 520 before Christ.</p>
+<p class="pn">Both prophets had the same thought given, namely,
+to encourage the Jewish remnant in the blessed work of rebuilding
+the house of the Lord. This work had suffered an interruption;
+the Samaritans were the cause of it. They had applied to join in
+the work, but as the remnant considered them idolators and as not
+belonging to God’s people, the application was rejected. These
+Samaritans tried after that in various ways to hinder the
+rebuilding, which had so blessedly begun. At last they succeeded
+in obtaining a decree which forbade the building of the Temple.
+All work had to be stopped and ceased for about fourteen years.
+But when the King who had forbidden the prosecution of the work
+had died and Darius became King, the building of the Temple was
+once more made possible. The leaders of the people in the
+enterprise were Serubbabel and the High Priest Joshua. But again
+they were hindered from the outside, while on the other hand the
+people themselves had lost much interest and possessed no longer
+that love and zeal for God’s house, which was so prominent after
+their return. Thus Haggai said: <i>This people say, It is not the
+time for us to come, the time for the Lord’s house to be built .
+. . It is a time for you to dwell in your ceiled houses, while
+this house lieth waste</i>. Haggai, chapter 1.</p>
+<p class="pn">In that critical moment these two prophets made
+their appearance, and God gave them visions of comfort and glad
+tidings to encourage the disheartened, selfish and unbelieving
+people.</p>
+<p class="pn">The visions and prophecies of Zechariah, however,
+do not only give an assurance that there could be no failure in
+the work the remnant had taken up anew, but more than that in
+them the glorious future of Jerusalem and Zion is unfolded. They
+lead up to the grand finale of the history of God’s ancient
+people, the time when Israel, redeemed and restored forever, will
+sing the grand and glorious Hallelujah.</p>
+<p class="pn">It is, of course, true that Zechariah did a blessed
+work for the people who lived in his day; he had a special
+mission to perform and succeeded in it, but the Spirit of God in
+the message of comfort for that time gives the history of events
+then in a distant future. The Babylonian captivity of Israel
+foreshadows their greater dispersion in which they are to-day
+wanderers all over the earth, and the restoration which took
+place in the time of Zechariah is highly typical of that coming
+restoration for which we hope and pray.</p>
+<p class="pn">Zechariah may therefore be fitly called the Prophet
+of the Restoration. Surely it is a deplorable blindness in some
+teachers of the Word, who see in the book of Zechariah nothing
+but past history, and who claim that all has been fulfilled in
+the return of the small Jewish remnant from the captivity, and
+whatever promises of mercy given to Jerusalem and the land of
+Judah find now their spiritual fulfilment in the church.</p>
+<p class="pn">It will be our aim in a series of studies in
+Zechariah to consider mostly the relation of these visions to the
+end of this age, and the beginning of the next, the millennial
+glory. We shall find that instead of the book of Zechariah being
+all fulfilled prophecy, as some would have it, it is indeed
+mostly unfulfilled, and even some of the prophetic promises which
+on the surface seem to have been seen a fulfilment, were only in
+part realized. And how important at this time to study the book
+of Zechariah! We are living in the time when that greater
+restoration with all its events forerunning and connected with it
+are about to come to pass. It is needless to say that we firmly
+believe that Zechariah wrote all of the book which bears his
+name.</p>
+<p class="pn">Several of the Jewish commentators confess an
+inability to explain the book. The well-known Jewish commentator
+Solomon Ben Jarchi (generally known by the name Rashi), says:
+“The prophecy (of Zechariah) is very dark, for it contains
+visions much like dreams, which want interpreting, and we will
+never succeed in finding the true meaning until <i>the Teacher of
+righteousness arrives</i>.” Abarbanel makes a similar
+confession.</p>
+<p class="pn">We praise God that the Teacher of righteousness has
+come, even the Spirit of Truth, who guides into all truth and
+reveals the things to come.</p>
+<h1><a name="I" id="I">CHAPTER I.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The Opening Address of the Prophet to His
+Nation. The Night Visions and Their Meaning. The First Night
+Vision.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The opening address of the prophet (chapter i: 1-6)
+forms an excellent introduction to the visions of comfort and
+warning which he had and revealed to the people. It is a very
+pointed and earnest call to repentance: <i>The Lord has been sore
+displeased with your fathers.</i> They were disobedient and
+stiffnecked. The former prophets, Jeremiah and Isaiah, had called
+them to turn from their evil ways, but they did not hear. And
+now, where are the fathers? They had passed away like the
+disobedient ones in the wilderness; God’s judgment and
+displeasure had overtaken them. But the faithful God of Abraham,
+Isaac and Jacob, whose gifts and calling are without repentance,
+comes once more to His chosen people, the seed of Abraham, and
+the Spirit, through Zechariah, speaks a direct message to return,
+and utters the promise that the Lord will also return unto them.
+<i>Thus saith the Lord of Hosts: Return unto me saith the Lord of
+Hosts, and I will return unto you saith the Lord of
+Hosts.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The name Jehovah appears three times in this short
+exhortation. Each time the name is in another connection. Jehovah
+speaks, they are to return to Jehovah, and Jehovah will return to
+them. Surely in profane literature such a repetition would be
+rejected as useless and superfluous, but in the Book where every
+word and phrase is God-given, we cannot pass it by as having no
+significance. Like in many other passages in the Old Testament we
+have here a revelation of the one God as Father, Son and Spirit.
+This revelation was often made in divine history, and when the
+measure of Israel’s apostacy was at last filled up, they had
+indeed rejected Jehovah in rejecting Jehovah-Jesus, and also
+Jehovah, the Spirit. And while this exhortation was one for
+Zechariah’s contemporaries, it is the great exhortation to the
+Jewish remnant for all times. The nation having forsaken Jehovah
+in His revelations as Father, Son and Spirit, will have to return
+and listen to Jehovah who speaks, to Jehovah whom they rejected,
+and Jehovah in His merciful and loving manifestations will return
+to them as a nation and to their land.</p>
+<p class="pn">This return of Israel to which Zechariah exhorts
+will take place in a set order clearly revealed throughout the
+word of God. We hear in Romans ii. that Paul speaks of a remnant
+according to the election of grace. That remnant is the remnant
+which turns to Jehovah now during this dispensation, and, of
+course, all Jews who are now turning to Jehovah-Jesus, and to
+whom Jehovah, the Spirit, also comes, are <i>members of the body
+of the Lord Jesus Christ</i>. As soon as the <i>church</i>, the
+witnessing body in the earth, is removed by that glorious event
+which is our blessed hope, another Jewish remnant is called, and
+that remnant will be Jewish throughout, “keeping the commandments
+and having the testimony of the Lord Jesus Christ.” Of course
+that remnant will have returned to Jehovah, and will be the
+witnessing and the <i>suffering</i> body in the great
+tribulation. The believing and longing cry of that remnant,
+“Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord,” will at last
+welcome Him, the Pierced One and King of Israel as well as King
+of Glory, to this earth, and then the remnant of the nation in
+all lands will turn to Him. This is the divine programme for
+Israel.</p>
+<p class="pn">After these opening words, delivered probably to
+the assembled people, Zechariah received his wonderful night
+visions. They were not mere dreams, but the events which he
+describes passed before him in visions. He saw them all in one
+night. They are eight in number, and have not found many
+interpreters. They were not only given in one night, but just as
+one followed rapidly the other, so are they all closely
+connected, and giving events which are to follow one after the
+other. That we have here a revelation which may fitly be termed
+<i>the Apocalypse of Zechariah</i> is unquestionable. After all
+these visions had passed, Joshua, the High Priest, is crowned
+with two crowns foreshadowing Him who is to be a Priest upon His
+throne. This crowning is a climax in Zechariah’s night visions
+which lead up to that coronation. Divine interference in behalf
+of Jerusalem and the land of Judah, God’s displeasure upon the
+nations for their abominations, and the overthrow of Israel’s
+enemies are clearly depicted in the first two night visions,
+while in the others we see the promised prosperity returning to
+the land, God’s glory appearing once more, the nation once more
+inhabiting the land and cleansed from their guilt, filled with
+the Spirit, wickedness judged, Babylon set up and overthrown, and
+the chariots of God appearing.</p>
+<p class="pn">The first night vision is especially suited for a
+close study for our times, for the events and conditions in that
+first vision are a true picture of the peculiarities of the times
+in which we live. Indeed we are rapidly nearing the fulfillment
+of this first night vision.</p>
+<p class="pn">This is the vision: Zechariah sees a man riding
+upon a red horse and he halts in a valley among myrtle trees. He
+is surrounded by a large army of angels upon red, sorrel and
+white horses, and the man upon the red horse becomes the centre
+of the hosts of heaven. The angels give their reports unto the
+man in the midst, who is also called the Angel of the Lord. These
+angels had walked to and fro through the earth (like the evil
+spirit and his demons, Job i., so the good angels walk to and fro
+through the earth), and they report to the Angel of the Lord,
+telling him that all the earth sitteth still and is at rest.
+Prosperity and peace seems to be what the angels saw, but over
+against this bright picture there is the dark scene—Jerusalem
+trodden down, the house of the Lord unfinished, a persecuted
+suffering remnant.</p>
+<p class="pn">And now the Angel of the Lord becomes the
+intercessor for Jerusalem and turns to Jehovah, the Lord of Hosts
+sitting upon His throne. <i>O Lord of Hosts, how long wilt Thou
+not have mercy on Jerusalem and on the cities of Judah against
+which Thou hast had indignation these three score and ten
+years?</i> He receives an answer of comfortable words. God is
+once more jealous for Jerusalem, and very angry and sore
+displeased with the nations, the nations who are in greater part
+responsible for the condition of His inheritance—they <i>have
+helped forward their affliction</i>. God promises to return to
+the city with prosperity, and that the house shall be built in
+it, and the Lord shall yet comfort Zion and shall yet choose
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p class="pn">The first question which arises in the
+interpretation of this vision is concerning the person who leads
+the angelic hosts. He is called a man riding upon a red horse.
+This does not mean that he was nothing but a man, but it means
+that he appeared in the vision to Zechariah as a man, he had a
+human body. Later he is called the Angel of the Lord, and as
+such, he acts as successful intercessor for Jerusalem, and
+receives a loving answer from Jehovah. The leader must have been
+a divine person incarnate. The name Angel of the Lord is one of
+the Old Testament names for the <i>Son of God</i>, and there can
+be only one satisfactory interpretation of who the rider upon the
+red horse is, and that is, He must be the Son of God. There are
+three chief reasons for this interpretation. In the first place,
+the color of the horse which He rode was red; this denotes blood,
+and is the color of the Son of God, for He is the Lamb of God
+slain from the foundation of the world, and He is the Lion from
+the tribe of Judah, who will arise and slay His enemies, coming
+to judge the nations (Isaiah lxiii). He is the Leader as well as
+the Centre of the heavenly hosts, for to Him all power is given
+in <i>Heaven</i> and in the earth, and all things are in His
+hands; and in the third place, the intercession which the Angel
+of the Lord makes is the intercession which belongs to the Son of
+God. The heavenly company comes to a stop in a deep valley, and
+the Angel of the Lord stands there among the myrtle trees.</p>
+<p class="pn">Jewish interpretation (in the Yalkut) says: He was
+staying among the myrtles which were in the <i>Metzullah</i>
+(depths). Now myrtles (Hadassim) mean nothing else than saints,
+as it is said (Esther ii: 7), and He was bringing up Hadassah
+(Esther), and the depths means nothing else than Babylon. We
+believe this as correct an interpretation as any. Myrtles denote
+lowliness and sweetness, and the dark, dreary valley stands for
+persecution, suffering, and being outcast. All this was true of
+the remnant, and it is true as well of the church. What a comfort
+it must have been to the patriotic prophet and to all true
+believers among the returned exiles, to learn that in that vision
+it was made so clear that Jehovah, the Angel of the Lord, was
+with them in all their lowliness and suffering. The Angel, who so
+wonderfully delivered their father Jacob, and whom he called the
+Angel the Redeemer, and who had so often appeared in the
+miraculous events of the past, this same Angel, with all the army
+of heaven at His command, was still with them, though the cloud
+of glory was missing.</p>
+<p class="pn">May we not forget that the Angel of the Lord, the
+Son of God, our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, is still
+with His people Israel. He has indeed not cast them away, whom He
+foreknew. He is their King and their Priest, and for all we know,
+the mighty angels who are under His direction, may be assembled
+now as they were in Zechariah’s vision, and He Himself ready to
+reveal His love and mercy to Jerusalem.</p>
+<p class="pn">And what is the report of the angels to their
+leader? They have walked to and fro through the earth, they have
+found nothing but prosperity. All the earth sitteth still and is
+at rest, the nations at ease, a perfect picture of prosperity.
+The nations are seen in a flourishing state, but His nation is in
+trouble and His inheritance laid waste, the nations having like
+wild beasts trampled it into the dust. While the large cities of
+the nations are increased and have plenty, the city of a great
+King is forsaken. History shows that indeed at that time there
+was no war, but peace everywhere and prosperity enjoyed selfishly
+by the nations. Should not these nations have an interest in that
+land and in that people? But they were living for their own ease
+and comfort. What does it matter if there is yonder a poor and
+suffering people?</p>
+<p class="pns">Prosperity, universal prosperity, and with it
+universal peace, is the cry at the close of another century, and
+will be more so as we advance towards the end of this age.
+Civilization, world conquest, commercial extension and a
+universal peace, seem to be the leading thoughts among the
+nations of our times. Truly it is realized by some that our
+boasted civilization, liberty and prosperity is nothing but a
+smouldering volcano which may burst open at any moment and make
+an end of all boasting, but the majority of the people even in
+Christendom are sadly deluding themselves with idle dreams. And
+what of God’s thoughts and His eternal purposes? What of His
+oath-bound covenant promises? They are being misinterpreted, set
+aside and forgotten. Thus it will continue till the climax is
+reached, so clearly foretold in the second Psalm,</p>
+<p class="p1">“Why do the nations rage</p>
+<p class="p1">And the peoples imagine a vain thing?</p>
+<p class="p1">The kings of the earth set themselves</p>
+<p class="p1">And the rulers take counsel together,</p>
+<p class="p1">Against the Lord and against His anointed.</p>
+<p class="p1">Let us break their bands asunder</p>
+<p class="p1s">And cast away from us their cords.”</p>
+<p class="pn">This is a true picture of the nations as the King
+of Kings at last will find them when He returns with and in His
+glory. The great sin of the nations, which is
+<i>Anti-Semitism</i>, will be considered later.</p>
+<p class="pn">The nations at ease, prosperous and increased, and
+Jerusalem trodden down, the land waste and desolate, in the hands
+of the enemy, is the mark of this age up to its end.</p>
+<p class="pn">But now comes the interference of Him who sitteth
+in the heavens. The angel of the Lord intercedes and cries to the
+Lord of Hosts, “How long?” It has been so much overlooked that He
+who is our Intercessor, the Great High Priest in the Heavens, is,
+according to the flesh, of the seed of Abraham, and He stands
+there in His place in His glorified humanity. If the High Priest
+in the Old Testament carried upon a breast-plate nearest to his
+heart the names of the twelve tribes of Israel, may we not assume
+that the true High Priest, who is the King of Israel as well, has
+them just as near to His loving heart? He loves His own, and
+longs for the time when they will crown Him Lord of all. And is
+it not very significant that the Spirit at this present time
+teaches so many children of God to pray for the peace of
+Jerusalem, that He may establish and make Jerusalem a praise in
+the earth? The Spirit and the Bride say “Come,” and surely the
+dearest thought in the Saviour’s heart is being laid upon the
+hearts of His children, in whom the Spirit dwells, to pray and
+intercede with Him for the peace of Jerusalem. This prayer, heard
+from so many lips to-day in the church waiting for her Lord, is
+but an echo of His “How long?” and prayer for His people.</p>
+<p class="pn">The interceding angel of the Lord is not left
+without an answer from the Lord of Hosts whom he has addressed in
+behalf of Jerusalem. It must be noticed that the answer is not
+the one which Jehovah gives to the angel of the Lord, but the
+answer is transmitted by the Lord through another angel who
+talked with the prophet. <i>So the angel that talked with me said
+unto me, Cry thou, saying, Thus saith the Lord of Hosts: I am
+jealous for Jerusalem and for Zion with a great jealousy.</i>
+Then follows the message in its details. <i>And I am very sore
+displeased with the nations that are at ease: for I was but a
+little displeased, and they helped forward the affliction.
+Therefore thus saith the Lord: I am returned to Jerusalem with
+mercies; my house shall be built in it, saith the Lord of Hosts,
+and a line shall be stretched forth over Jerusalem. Cry yet
+again, saying, Thus saith the Lord of Hosts; My cities through
+prosperity shall yet be spread abroad; and the Lord shall yet
+comfort Zion, and shall yet choose Jerusalem.</i> We desire to
+take up separately some of these comfortable words. We firmly
+believe that the time of their fulfillment is not only at hand,
+but that we are really living in the days when God once more
+remembers His suffering people and is about to rise in judgment
+upon His and their enemies, and turn in mercy to Zion.</p>
+<p class="pn">First then stands the declaration that God is
+jealous for Jerusalem and for Zion with a great jealousy. The
+word used in the original for jealous means burning, and is
+correctly translated with that word, for jealousy is a burning
+emotion. Men are jealous of that which is their own when it is in
+the hands of another or in danger of being taken away and
+misused. In this sense God is likewise jealous of His own.
+Jerusalem is His city, the city of a great king; Zion is His holy
+hill, and Israel His own people. All has fallen into the hands of
+the Gentiles and is injured by them. His people scattered and
+dispersed, the holy hill desecrated and Jerusalem trodden down by
+the Gentiles. True, God has permitted it all, prophets have
+spoken of it, and their prophecies concerning Jerusalem’s
+desolation have all been literally fulfilled, but now God is seen
+to rise and to claim once more in great jealousy that which is
+His Own. We look away from the partial fulfillment of this
+prophecy in Zechariah’s time. God looked down from heaven then,
+and His eyes beheld the sad picture of the desolate land, the
+unfinished temple and the disheartened and punished people. At
+the end of our dispensation, God looks down from heaven, and
+while the nations are prosperous and at ease, He sees His city
+controlled by His enemies. The holy hill of Zion, where Jehovah
+revealed Himself so often, has become the place of idolatry. His
+name is not honored but dishonored. Indeed, the Land and
+Jerusalem attracts once more the attention of the world. Nations
+are desirous of owning the Land and gaining a foothold there. The
+visit to Palestine of the German Emperor, the representative of
+Lutheranism and the avowed friend of one of the darkest
+characters of our times, the man whose throne seems almost
+unshakable, and who holds the Land in the grasp of his bloody
+hands, is highly significant. All the other nations have watched
+this visit, and Zionism especially rejoices in the fact of the
+friendship of the Protestant Emperor with the Sultan and hopes
+much from it for the realization of its well planned schemes. It
+is to be expected that as the end draws nearer, Palestine will
+become the great centre around which the nations gather. Scheming
+nations, religious and political ambitions for world rule and
+world power, and connected with it Commercialism, which seems to
+become more and more the god of this world, are the programme for
+the near future, and upon the entire scene are the eyes of the
+covenant-keeping God of Abraham, and with His burning eyes He
+looks on with jealousy for Jerusalem and very great jealousy for
+Zion. (Joel ii: 18.)</p>
+<p class="pn">These are only the opening words of the revelation
+which is given to Zechariah. It is God’s attitude. Zechariah
+hears now a very plain and important statement from the lips of
+the interpreting angel. The statement is threefold.</p>
+<p class="pn">1. <i>I was but a little displeased.</i> Jehovah is
+speaking concerning His inheritance that He was, on account of
+their apostasy and idolatry, but a little displeased. This was
+primarily true of the Babylonian captivity. It was but for a
+moment God was angry. It is so now, though the children of Israel
+have been in dispersion for well-nigh twenty centuries, but still
+it is true even now. <i>For a small moment have I forgotten thee.
+In overflowing wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment, but
+with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the
+Lord, thy Redeemer.</i> His displeasure with His people is never
+final, it is only temporary. This is clearly seen in the entire
+Word of God. If it were final, if God would be displeased forever
+with Israel, we might just as well close the Bible, join the
+higher critics and end in unbelief, apostasy and perdition. <i>I
+will make a full end of all the nations whither I have scattered
+thee, but I will not make a full end of thee; but I will correct
+thee with judgment and will in no wise leave thee unpunished.</i>
+(Jeremiah xxx: 11.)</p>
+<p class="pn">2. <i>They have helped forward their
+affliction.</i> The Lord is now speaking of the nations who are
+at ease. He holds them responsible for a greater affliction than
+He really had designed to come upon His people. By their attitude
+towards chastised Israel they have made their affliction much
+worse than God meant it to be. Of course, it was true during the
+seventy years God’s people spent in Babylon, but how much more
+true is it in the dispersion which has been their lot for so many
+sad centuries.</p>
+<p class="pn">Where shall we begin in treating the awful truth
+which is put here in such simple language? Where shall we find
+words earnest enough to picture the terrible facts in connection
+with it and sound a warning for our times? Some time ago a person
+said, “The Jews are to-day more stiff-necked and blinder than
+ever before.” Who has made them thus? Surely judicial blindness
+and hardness of heart; ears which do not hear are given by God,
+but, alas, the nations, or so-called Christendom, have helped
+forward their affliction; they have made matters worse a thousand
+times, and Satan, who hates Israel, has been the author of all
+things calculated to increase the affliction of poor down trodden
+Israel. Surely the increased stiff-neckedness and the increased
+blindness is one which is traceable to the nations. Every reader
+knows something of the history of the Jews, what it has been
+since they left the home land—a long, long tale of suffering,
+tears and blood. Most unjust outrages have been committed against
+them; torture upon torture; the stake and worse than that; and
+all in the name of Jesus. It is a shameful history. Many a time
+Jews, after hearing the Word preached, have stood up and opened
+in answer this awful book of history with its blood-stained
+pages, asking the question, “Can He be our Redeemer, whose
+followers have treated us thus in His name?” And not a few can
+tell us of their own sufferings in being banished from foreign
+lands. Hardly a month passes without some new outrage upon the
+generally harmless and innocent people in Eastern Europe.
+Cruelty, injustice, wickedness and crime are practiced against
+them, and thus their affliction has been increased.</p>
+<p class="pn">The same is true of the counterfeits of the
+Christian religion. Is it a wonder that the Jew turns away in
+disgust from religions which demand worship of pictures, statues,
+holy places, etc.? Satan has used it all to keep Israel from a
+true knowledge of Him, who is the King of Israel. And in
+Protestant lands the Jew does so rarely see that pure and true
+love of Him who came to fulfil the law and in whom God as love
+has been manifested. Instead of treating the Jew as a brother,
+beloved for the Father’s sake—nay, for Jesus’ sake, who was a Jew
+according to the flesh—he has been despised, ridiculed,
+ostracized and treated as inferior to Gentiles. Still there are
+worse days coming yet. The nations of Christendom in the past
+have helped forward their affliction, but Satan, through these
+very nations, will once more afflict Israel—once more stretch out
+his hand to touch the nation of destiny. As never before in the
+history of the world, God’s own chosen people—the Jews—make
+themselves felt, and correspondingly as never before the Gentile
+nations are getting ready to rise up against the Jew to down him
+if it were possible. The enemy, thus prophecy tells us, will try
+to exterminate the wonderful nation through nations who are
+doomed to destruction. This is still future. However, these
+coming events are rapidly approaching. Anti-Semitism is
+increasing all over the world, and only God’s Spirit and the
+prayer of the Church keeps back the outbreak which will mark the
+beginning of Jacob’s trouble. (Jeremiah xxx: 7.)</p>
+<p class="pn">3.—<i>I am very sore displeased.</i> This is God’s
+anger with the nations who have sinned against His people. The
+crowning sin of the nations is Anti-Semitism, which means
+anti-Bible, anti-Christ and anti-God. If Christendom would
+believe the Word of God it could never be the enemy of Israel.
+Our age will end in the judgment of nations, and that judgment
+will be on account of the sins committed against His people. For
+behold in those days and in that time when I shall bring again
+the captivity of Judah and Jerusalem, I will gather all nations
+and will bring them down into the valley of Jehosophat, and I
+will plead with them there for my people and for my heritage,
+Israel, when they have scattered among the nations and parted my
+land. (Joel iii: 1-3.) Haste ye and come all ye nations round
+about and gather yourselves together thither; cause thy mighty
+ones to come down, O Lord; let the nations bestir themselves and
+come up to the valley of Jehosophat; for there will I sit to
+judge all nations round about. Put ye in the sickle, for the
+harvest is ripe; come, get ye down, for the wine-press is full,
+the vats overflow, for their wickedness is great. Multitudes,
+multitudes in the valley of decision! for the day of the Lord is
+near in the valley of decision. The sun and the moon are
+darkened, the stars withdraw their shining, and the Lord shall
+roar from Zion and utter His voice from Jerusalem; and the
+heavens and the earth shall shake; but the Lord will be a refuge
+unto His people and a stronghold to the children of Israel. (Joel
+iii: 17, etc.) For behold the Lord will come with fire, and His
+chariots shall be like the whirlwind, to render His anger with
+fury and His rebuke with flames of fire. For by fire will the
+Lord plead and by His sword with all flesh, and the slain of the
+Lord shall be many. (Isaiah lxvi: 15.) This judgment of nations
+is likewise referred to in Matthew xxv. by the lips of our Lord.
+Generally the last part of that chapter is taken to mean the
+universal judgment, the great white throne. This is an error.
+<i>The Son of Man shall come in His glory and all the angels with
+Him.</i> Thus the passage reads: <i>Then shall He sit on the
+throne of His glory, and before Him shall be gathered all the
+nations, and He shall separate them one from another as the
+shepherd separateth the sheep from the goats.</i> The judgment
+takes place and nations are punished and rewarded according to
+their treatment of the brethren of the Son of Man, the King of
+Glory.</p>
+<p class="pn">At that time, when the enemies of Israel are
+overcome and punished for their wickedness, Israel, once more
+miraculously saved, will break forth in praise of the Lord and
+sing the glorious psalms of victory which to-day are still
+prophetic. If it had not been the Lord who was on our side, when
+men rose up against us, then they would have swallowed us up
+alive when their wrath was kindled against us; then the waters
+would have overwhelmed us, a stream would have gone over our
+soul; then the proud waters would have gone over our soul. Praise
+to Jehovah! who has not given us as prey to their teeth. Our soul
+is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the fowler! The snare is
+broken and we are escaped. Our help is in the name of Jehovah,
+who has made heaven and earth. (Psalm cxxiv.)</p>
+<p class="pn">The words which follow, and which are really the
+good and comfortable words, contain the divine programme of the
+restoration of His people Israel. What is mentioned here in a few
+sentences is given in detail in the fourth and fifth night vision
+as well as in the closing chapters of the prophet. <i>I am
+returned to Jerusalem with mercies.</i> This does not mean a
+spiritual return or a return of God’s mercies to Jerusalem only,
+but it means likewise His literal return when He appears the
+second time; and connected with this second appearing of the
+great Jehovah in Jesus Christ will be seen the Shekinah cloud as
+Israel had it in the wilderness and the first temple. This is
+seen in the second chapter. The Lord had withdrawn from His
+people. <i>I will go away and return to my place.</i> (Hosea v:
+15.) <i>For behold your house is left unto you desolate. For I
+say unto you, ye shall not see me henceforth till ye shall say,
+Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord.</i> (Matthew
+xxiii: 38, 39.) The Lord being absent in His person from His
+people, Israel is forsaken, the land desolate. There can be no
+true restoration of Israel till He has come whose right it
+is.</p>
+<p class="pn">So many good people think that the present
+Zionistic movement of the Jews is that promised salvation for the
+scattered nation. This is not so. It is an attempted restoration.
+Here in the good and comfortable words Zechariah hears, the
+return of the Lord stands first. Then His house is to be built.
+While it meant in the prophet’s time the building of the second
+temple, it means in connection with the coming restoration the
+building of that great millennial temple which Ezekiel saw in
+visions and describes in detail—the temple which will be indeed a
+house of prayer to all nations, and the glory of this latter
+house shall be greater than the former. The rebuilding of the
+city of Jerusalem is next in order. A line is to be stretched
+forth upon Jerusalem. The city is enlarged, for from henceforth
+Jerusalem is to be the centre of the earth. (Ezekiel xxxviii:
+12.) <i>My cities in prosperity shall overflow.</i> The blessing
+will not be confined to the Temple and to Jerusalem, but there
+will be an overflow, and all the cities in the land will flow
+over with prosperity. <i>For the Lord shall comfort Zion; He will
+comfort all her waste places, and He will make her wilderness
+like Eden and her desert like the garden of the Lord. Joy and
+gladness shall be found therein, thanksgiving and the voice of
+melody.</i> (Isaiah li: 3.)</p>
+<p class="pn">Oh, happy time! when wilt thou come? Even so come,
+Lord Jesus, our Lord and Israel’s King! Other visions will show
+us that Jerusalem will then indeed be a praise in the earth, for
+many nations will then be joined to the Lord, and the streams of
+living waters will overflow and bring joy, salvation and healing
+to the nations around who join in the Hallelujah chorus of
+Jeshurun.</p>
+<h1><a name="II" id="II">CHAPTER II.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The second night vision. The four horns and the
+four smiths. The third vision. The man measuring Jerusalem.
+Restoration and glory of Jerusalem foretold.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The second night vision of Zechariah is closely
+connected with the first. In the first vision the time is given
+when the Lord will turn in mercy to Jerusalem—the time when the
+nations are at ease, and, having helped forward the affliction of
+His people, are ripe for judgment. The scenes have passed away,
+and now the prophet lifts his eyes again and he sees <i>four
+horns</i>. The question he asks of the angel is answered by him,
+that <i>these are the horns which have scattered Judah, Israel
+and Jerusalem</i>. Then <i>four smiths</i> appear, and the angel
+informs the prophet that <i>these are come to fray them</i> (the
+four horns), <i>to cast down the horns of the nations which
+lifted up their horn against the land of Judah to scatter it</i>
+(chapter i: 18-21.) The four horns are the powerful and proud
+enemies of the people of God. Why four horns? Some have said
+because the enemies of Israel have come against the land and
+Jerusalem from all four cardinal points of the compass, and have
+scattered the people east and west, north and south. Others
+mention different nations who were at Zechariah’s time in
+existence and instrumental in scattering Israel. The horn is a
+symbol of power and pride, and in prophecy stands for a kingdom
+and for political world power. The ten horns which Daniel saw on
+the terrible fourth beast rising from the sea denote ten
+kingdoms, and in Revelation xvii: 12 we read, “The ten horns that
+thou sawest are ten kings.” The four horns in this second vision
+must be therefore kingdoms—world powers. The number four, as it
+is well known to every student of the prophetic Word, is found
+twice in the book of Daniel. Nebuchadnezzar’s great image was
+divided into four parts, each standing for a world power, namely:
+the Babylonian, the Medo-Persian, the Graeco-Macedonian and the
+Roman power. The latter is still in existence and will be till
+the stone smites the image at its feet and pulverizes it.
+Daniel’s vision (chapter vii) brings before him four mighty
+beasts, the last having ten horns, just as the limbs of the image
+ended in feet with ten toes. With such a revelation in the book
+of Daniel it is very easy to understand that the four horns can
+mean nothing else than the same powers of Gentile rule and
+supremacy existing during the entire time when the kingdom has
+been taken from Israel. These four world powers are horns. They
+unite strength and pride, and are bent upon scattering Israel.
+They are the enemies of Israel, and therefore the enemies of God.
+And now the four smiths appear on the scene to fray them—to cast
+down the horns of the nations. Four horns are overcome and broken
+down completely by four smiths. It does not follow that the four
+smiths must be four other powers. The vision seems to teach two
+facts: first, the horns will be broken and cast down; and in the
+second place, God has for every hostile power which has sinned
+and sins against his people a corresponding greater power to
+overcome it, break it into pieces and cast it down. However, we
+believe the vision will have its fulfillment in the time of
+Jacob’s trouble. The elements of all the four world powers will
+then in some way be concerned in the onslaught on Jerusalem—a
+confederacy of nations; representatives of many nations will come
+up against Jerusalem, and it will be then that the four horns are
+broken by the four smiths and the casting down will be done.</p>
+<p class="pn">The third night vision is one of the most
+interesting and instructive. As the third one, it forms the
+climax of the good and comfortable words which were spoken
+concerning Jerusalem. The number three stands in the Word of God
+for resurrection, life from the dead. Thus in Hosea, concerning
+Israel, “After two days Thou wilt revive us, and on the third day
+Thou wilt raise us up” (Hosea vi: 2). In this third vision
+Zechariah sees the glorious restoration of Israel, which has been
+the burden of so many prophecies, and the glory which is
+connected with that restoration. In this night vision Zechariah
+hears of a restoration and of a glory which has never yet been
+fulfilled in the history of God’s people. Those teachers of the
+Word who see in Zechariah’s night visions nothing but fulfilled
+prophecy, cannot answer certain questions satisfactorily, and
+their only refuge must be a spiritualizing of this restoration.
+Another thought before we take up this third vision. The vision
+of restoration comes after the enemies of Israel have been cast
+down. That prophecy might be fulfilled; prophecy about a
+believing, suffering Jewish remnant; prophecy concerning Jacob’s
+trouble, etc., a mock restoration, generally termed a restoration
+in unbelief, is to take place. There can be no doubt whatever
+that we are privileged to see the beginning of this restoration
+of part of the Jewish nation to the land of the fathers in
+unbelief: It is one of the signs of the nearness of that event
+for which the Church hopes, prays and waits—“our gathering
+together unto Him.” The world and the lukewarm Christian does not
+see it, but he who loves the Word and lives in the Word, has eyes
+to see and a hearing ear and knows what is soon coming. The true
+restoration, however, will only come as it is seen so clearly in
+these night visions after the enemies have been overcome, the
+horns cast down, the image smashed—in other words, after the Lord
+has come.</p>
+<p class="pn">We may divide the third night vision into two
+parts. In the first part a man is seen with a measuring line
+measuring Jerusalem, and the restoration of the city and its
+enlargement is promised; and in the other part promises of
+blessings are given as well as glimpses of the glory which will
+attend the restoration.</p>
+<p class="pn">Zechariah sees a man with a measuring line in his
+hand. The prophet asks him, Whither goest thou? And he answers,
+<i>To measure Jerusalem, to see what is the breadth thereof and
+what is the length thereof.</i> There is nothing here which
+indicates that the man who starts out to measure the city is
+identical with the man on the red horse of the first vision. This
+man here seems to be only a person appearing to impress the
+coming enlargement of Jerusalem upon the prophet’s mind. Similar
+visions where measuring takes place are found in Ezekiel xli,
+where the temple of the Millennium is measured, and in Revelation
+xi, where a reed is given to John to measure the temple of God,
+which is the temple standing in Jerusalem during the time of
+Jacob’s trouble. Here in Zechariah’s vision it is the measuring
+of Jerusalem. What Jerusalem is it? Of course, the Jerusalem in
+Palestine, which will, in its restoration, become the centre of
+the earth. In the new earth, after the thousand years, there will
+be another Jerusalem in the earth, the new Jerusalem come down
+out of heaven from God (Rev. xxi: 2). Of this new Jerusalem we
+read, “And the city lieth four square, and the length thereof is
+as large as the breadth: and he measured the city with a reed
+twelve thousand furlongs. The length and the breadth and the
+height thereof are equal” (Rev. xxi: 16). Here is the measurement
+of the new Jerusalem: As long as it is broad and extending upward
+into the air. What a wonderful city that will be, the glorious
+centre of a new heaven and a new earth, our home for all
+eternity! The man in Zechariah’s third vision measures only the
+length and the breadth of the city because in the coming
+restoration of Jerusalem there is no height to be measured.</p>
+<p class="pn">Now follows the appearing of another angel who
+meets with the one who had been speaking to Zechariah, and he
+brings from the throne of God a message for the prophet. He said,
+<i>Run, speak to this young man saying, Jerusalem shall be
+inhabited as villages without walls, by reason of the multitude
+of men and cattle therein.</i> The influx of men and cattle to
+Jerusalem will be so enormous that the city must be enlarged and
+it will spread out into the plain. Another prophet, the seer of
+Israel’s glorious future, Isaiah, has spoken likewise of this
+enlargement in the following beautiful words: “As for thy waste
+and desolate places, and thy land which has been destroyed,
+surely now shalt thou be too strait for the inhabitants, and they
+that swallowed thee up shall be far away. The children of thy
+bereavement shall yet say in thine ears, The place is too strait
+for me, give place to me that I may dwell” (Isaiah xlix: 19, 20).
+Notice the city is to be inhabited as villages. This denotes the
+peace which Jerusalem will then enjoy. A blessed security for the
+city which for so long a time was trodden down by the Gentiles.
+There will be no walls. No need of walls to shelter men and
+cattle, for the enemies of Israel have been scattered and broken
+down, the warfare of Jerusalem is accomplished. At the end of the
+Millennium, which will have been a thousand years of unbroken
+peace for the land which for thousands of years knew no peace,
+Satan, with Gog and Magog, will come against the land and its
+inhabitants. This last final struggle the Holy Spirit revealed
+through the prophet Ezekiel (chapters xxxviii and xxxix). It is
+interesting to notice there the condition of the land and the
+people as the enemy who comes up against the land finds them:
+Thus says the Lord God: It shall come to pass in that day, that
+things shall come into thy (enemy) mind, and thou shalt devise an
+evil device: and thou shalt say, I will go up to the land of
+unwalled villages. I will go to them that are quiet, that dwell
+securely, all of them dwelling without walls, and having neither
+bars nor gates: to take the spoil and to take the prey: to turn
+thine hand against the waste places that are now inhabited, and
+against the people that are gathered out of the nations, which
+have gotten cattle and goods, that dwell in the centre of the
+earth (Ezekiel xxxviii: 10-12). What a wonderful Word our God has
+given us! How everything is harmony! Zechariah’s vision shows
+what Jerusalem will be in the beginning of the Millennium, and
+Ezekiel, by the Spirit of God, puts before us the same conditions
+at the end of the thousand years.</p>
+<p class="pn">The reason of Jerusalem’s peace, security and
+prosperity will be the glory of the Lord. This glory will be in
+the midst of the city, and will also form a wall of fire around
+the city. For I, saith the Lord, will be unto her a wall of fire
+round about the city, and I will be the glory in the midst of
+her. Glory and defence are here combined. They always go
+together. This has been in a degree already the happy lot of
+Israel in the past, for He guided them with His glory. It was a
+cloud by day and a fire at night by which the Lord had revealed
+Himself to His people, and out of that glory cloud He protected
+them and punished their enemies. How much greater will that glory
+and defence be in that time of fullness when Israel is no longer
+a disobedient, stiff-necked people, but the holy people, the
+kingly nation. What a glory that will be when the King comes back
+with His kingly glory, attended by the many, many brethren who
+have suffered with Him and now share His glory! What a glory that
+will be when He, who is our life, will be manifested, and we with
+Him in His glory! It will be unspeakable glory. Cry aloud and
+shout thou inhabitant of Zion, for great is the Holy One of
+Israel in the midst of thee. And it shall come to pass, that He
+that is left in Zion and he that remaineth in Jerusalem shall be
+called holy, even every one that is written among the living in
+Jerusalem when the Lord shall have washed away the filth of the
+daughters of Zion, and shall have purged the blood of Jerusalem
+from the midst thereof by the blast of judgment and burning. And
+the Lord will create over the whole habitation of Mount Zion and
+over her assemblies a cloud and smoke by day, and the shining of
+a flaming fire by night, for over all the glory shall be spread a
+canopy. There shall be a pavilion for a shadow in the day time
+from the heat, and for a refuge and for a covert from storm and
+from rain. (Isaiah iv.) This glory during the Millennium will no
+doubt not only hover over the land, but will be visible over the
+entire earth, and the knowledge of the glory of the Lord will
+cover the earth as the waters the sea.</p>
+<p class="pn">It is interesting to see how Talmudical literature
+falls in with these thoughts. A few quotations from these old
+writings of the Jews will no doubt be acceptable to the reader.
+Rabbi Isaac Napcha says: The Holy One said, I kindled a fire in
+Jerusalem (in wrath) Lament. iv: 11, and I am going to build her
+up again with fire, as it is said, “I will be unto her, saith the
+Lord, a wall of fire round about. He that kindled the fire shall
+surely make restitution.” The Pesikta Rabethi has this: What is
+this: “And for a Glory I am in the midst of her.” Is it not the
+case that the glory of the Holy One is none other than on high,
+as it is said, “His glory is above the heavens.” The glory is in
+order to show every creature in the universe the superior
+excellence of Israel, since it is on their account that the Holy
+One brings down the Shekinah from the highest heaven and lets it
+dwell in the earth.</p>
+<p class="pn">We have now in the vision a continued description
+of that happy condition of Jerusalem and all that is connected
+with it. First, we notice the summons for the Jews who are then
+still in dispersion. <i>Ho, ho, flee from the land of the North,
+saith the Lord, for I have spread you abroad as the four winds of
+the heaven, saith the Lord. Ho, Zion, escape that dwellest with
+the daughter of Babylon.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">It is not to be expected that when the glory
+appears and the King of Glory comes again and His feet stand
+there on the Mount of Olives, that the entire Jewish nation will
+then live in the land. This will not be the case; only a part of
+the nation was restored in unbelief, and in the midst of them a
+believing remnant, whose faith, suffering and salvation we hope
+to describe later. Two-thirds of all the inhabitants of the land
+will be swept away in the great tribulation. After the Lord has
+come, the others will be restored. It is significant that the
+land of the North is mentioned here, Late; in the eighth chapter,
+we read: “I will save my people from the East country and from
+the West country,” but those living in the land of the North come
+first. Of course, Babylon was meant as far as this vision had
+anything to do with the restoration which had taken place in part
+from the Babylonian captivity. The North country, which figures
+in the coming restoration, is not Babylon, but another land.
+Russia is directly north of Palestine, and in this northern land,
+the territory once inhabited by Gog and Magog, about one half of
+the Jews now living have their homes. About six millions of Jews
+are living to-day in European and Asiatic Russia. Their
+deplorable condition in that land of the North is well known, and
+there, likewise, the national awakening has been the most marked
+and Zionism has its most ardent advocates. A large multitude is
+getting ready in the North country for a mighty exodus. Like
+their forefathers in Egypt, they will flee from the land of the
+North, and thus prophecy is literally to be fulfilled.</p>
+<p class="pn">Zion is to separate from the daughter of Babylon.
+What is Babylon? We hope to answer this question and give a
+description of her when we come to consider the seventh night
+vision, the woman in the Ephah. In this third vision of
+restoration we hear next what is to take place after the glory.
+The expression “after the glory” means undoubtedly the glorious
+appearing of the Lord coming with all His saints, sitting upon
+the throne of His glory, and His glory thus manifested. <i>After
+the glory hath He sent Me to the nations which spoiled you: for
+he that toucheth you toucheth the apple of His eye.</i> Who is
+the one who is being sent to the nations? It is without a
+question He, whom the Father sent. He sent Him once, the only
+begotten, into the world in the form of a servant, when He made
+Himself of no reputation, but Jehovah will send Him again. And
+when He again bringeth in the Firstborn into the inhabited earth
+He saith, And let all the angels worship Him. (Heb. i: 6, 7.) The
+Father sends Him again to establish His glory, and after the
+manifestation He is sent to the nations which spoiled Israel. All
+Scripture speaks of this. While He will in His coming overcome
+the armies of nations who are gathered in that day against
+Jerusalem, He will likewise continue, after His glory, to judge
+nations. He will rule in the midst of His enemies. He will do
+that among the nations what the second psalm declares, thou shalt
+break them with a rod of iron, Thou shalt dash them in pieces
+like a potter’s vessel. <i>For, behold I will shake Mine hand
+over them, and they shall be a spoil to those that served
+them.</i> In this rule and judgment the Lord of glory will be
+assisted by the saints. Know ye not that the saints shall judge
+the world? (1 Cor. vi: 2.) Israel will likewise be used in that
+judgment. While He is the lion of the tribe of Judah who now
+roars to the dismay of all His enemies, Israel, His people,
+becomes the lioness. “Behold the people riseth up as a lioness,
+and as a lion does he lift himself up. He shall not lie down till
+he eat the prey and drink the blood of the slain.” (Numbers
+xxiii: 24.) Israel will then no longer be the tail but has become
+the head. The true form of government for the earth has been
+restored, a Theocracy through His chosen and restored people, the
+seed of Abraham. Things will then be changed completely. The
+nations shall take them (the children of Abraham) and bring them
+to their place, and the house of Israel shall possess them in the
+land of the Lord for servants and for handmaids, and they shall
+take them captive whose captives they were, and they shall rule
+over their oppressors. (Isaiah xiv: 2.) Strangers shall stand and
+feed your flocks and aliens shall be your vine dressers. (Isaiah
+lxi: 5.)</p>
+<p class="pn">We must not overlook the loving words concerning
+Israel, He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of His eye.
+Israel is the apple of the eye of God. Through Moses God declared
+the same truth. He kept him as the apple of His eye. (Deut xxxii:
+10.) In Hebrew the pupil of the eye is called the gate, because
+through it enters the light. Thus Israel is the pupil, the gate,
+through which the light has come and comes, for salvation is of
+the Jews. And what is so sensitive, so delicate and easily
+injured as the apple of the eye? And against this apple of the
+eye of God the nations and Christendom have sinned. May we
+believing Gentiles understand more fully that Israel is the
+beloved one and may we be kept from doing harm to His people.</p>
+<p class="pn">The overcoming of the enemies of Israel, the
+spoiling of these nations which spoiled Israel, and all that is
+connected with it by the sent One of God, the Son of God will be
+the evidence for Israel that Jehovah has sent Him. <i>And ye
+shall know that the Lord of Hosts has sent Me.</i> The same
+statement is repeated in this vision, but we shall see in another
+connection. It is, so to speak, constitutional with the Jew that
+he wishes to see and then believe, and surely he will see and
+believe, or rather know, when the Lord comes.</p>
+<p class="pn">In the tenth verse of the second chapter of
+Zechariah we read now that the daughter of Zion will sing and
+rejoice. The reason of her song and joy is, <i>For lo, I come and
+I will dwell in the midst of thee.</i> To-day orthodox Jews are
+chanting in Hebrew the magnificent psalms which speak of a coming
+deliverance and manifestation of God’s glory, but it is only with
+their lips, and the heart is still hardened and the eye blinded.
+The dark night is rapidly approaching, the night in which a
+believing remnant of Jews will fulfill much of that suffering,
+waiting, and blessed assurance of salvation which is so clearly
+outlined in the psalms. And after that, the whole nation will
+break out in mighty songs of joy, and while there, in the
+Father’s house, the blood-bought hosts will sing their
+hallelujah, a delivered, cleansed and spirit-filled nation in the
+earth will shout her hallelujah, in which nation after nation
+will join, till at last it has been done what seer after seer saw
+and heard, the earth as well as the heavens filled with His
+glory, the Kingdom come, and His will done in the earth as it is
+done in Heaven.</p>
+<p class="pn">Again, the promise is given that the Lord will
+dwell in the midst of her. How is this to be understood? Will the
+Lord dwell continually in person, after his second coming, in
+Jerusalem? Will He be seen there in His Holy Temple by all who
+come up to Jerusalem? Some Scriptures indicate that He will be
+present in His blessed person at different seasons. The strongest
+statement in this direction is Zechariah xiv: 16. In this passage
+we have the fact of a yearly coming up to Jerusalem of nations
+(probably representatives of nations) to worship the King, and
+that at the feast of tabernacles. His throne, no longer His
+Father’s throne, upon which He sits now, but his own throne
+during the Millennium, will no doubt be in the New Jerusalem
+which, as a bright and glorious vision, will be seen then by all
+who live in the earth way up in the firmament, and the angels of
+God <i>ascending</i> and descending upon the Son of Man. A
+vice-regent, a Son of David, will occupy David’s throne in
+Jerusalem. The Glory of the Lord will appear in the Holy City,
+and the new name of Jerusalem will be Jehovah Shamah, the Lord is
+there. It is impossible to give the details of these glories, for
+they are not clearly revealed. It is enough to know that the
+Church, His Body, shall truly be united with her glorified head,
+and meet her Beloved, her Bridegroom and her Lord. It is enough
+to know that Israel will surely see the King in His beauty and
+crown Him Lord of all. Even our brightest imaginations will not
+reach the glories of that day. Indeed, not half has been
+told.</p>
+<p class="pn">The Lord cometh to dwell in Zion. <i>Many nations
+shall join themselves to the Lord in that day and shall be My
+people.</i> This promise is likewise followed that this will be
+evidence from which the people will know that the Lord of Hosts
+has sent Him. How often the orthodox Jew has come to us and told
+us that when Messiah comes all their enemies will be cast
+down—there will be peace for Jerusalem and the nation Israel; and
+then saying, Ah, where is that peace?—behold our enemies! When
+Messiah comes we shall know Him by what He does for us in
+overcoming our enemies. Likewise the orthodox Jew will say, Where
+are the many nations who join themselves to the Lord, the nations
+who worship the Lord of Hosts? When Messiah has come, he will
+say, We will know Him by the fact that nations shall join
+themselves unto the Lord. It will hardly do to tell the well
+informed Hebrew that there are now Christian nations in
+existence. Thus the Jew waits for the fulfillment of these
+prophecies at some future time, and seeing them accomplished he
+hopes to know then his Messiah and King. Only the small remnant,
+according to the election of grace, sees Him now by the eyes of
+faith—Him who is altogether lovely, and in whom alone these
+prophecies can find their fulfillment. To-day individuals from
+Jews and Gentiles are joining themselves to the Lord, but in that
+day of His appearing and manifestation nations will be converted,
+and many nations shall go and say, “Come ye and let us go up to
+the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob, and
+He will teach us His ways and we will walk in His paths.” “Lift
+up thine eyes and see: they all gather themselves together—they
+come to Thee. Thy sons shall come from far and thy daughters
+shall be carried in the arms. Then thou shalt see and be
+lightened, and thine heart shalt tremble and be enlarged, because
+the abundance of the sea shall be turned unto thee. The wealth of
+the nations shall come unto thee, the multitudes of camels shall
+cover thee—the dromedaries of Midian and Ephah, they all shall
+come from Sheba; they shall bring gold and frankincense, and
+shall proclaim the praises of the Lord.” (Isaiah lx:4-7.) Only
+then will India and China, South America and Africa be won to
+Christ and the world converted to God. But the land of Judah is
+to be the portion of the Lord (verse 12).</p>
+<p class="pn">This vision of restoration and the coming of glory
+ends with one of the sublimest exhortations in the Word of God.
+<i>Be silent, all flesh, before the Lord, for He is waked up out
+of His holy habitation.</i> The exhortation does not belong
+really to the restoration. It is an appeal to all flesh to be
+silent before the One who is raised up—the coming One. Now is the
+time when God is silent. He is silent to the wicked deeds of men.
+He is silent in regard to the nations who are treading down
+Jerusalem and who are scattering Israel. The flesh speaks now and
+is not silent, and the language it speaks is rebellion against
+God and against His Anointed. And louder and louder speaks all
+flesh, and in the midst of a boasted civilization, at the dawn of
+a new century, the days of Noah and the days of Lot are at hand.
+Gain, pride, possession, expansion, is the universal cry—a mad
+hunt after Mammon is seen in individuals and in nations; and
+while the flesh speaks thus, and its language becomes more and
+more defiant, God keeps silence. But our God shall come and keep
+silence no longer. Rapidly His day—the terrible day of the
+Lord—is approaching; the day in which He will roar out of Zion.
+Oh, what a hush there will come upon those that dwell in the
+earth when the darkened sun and the falling stars will herald the
+approach of a God who will keep silence no longer. Oh, dear
+reader, Jew or Gentile, listen! The signs of the times truly tell
+us that the Lord who is to come must have already <i>risen</i>
+from His holy habitation. He is coming. Soon He will gather His
+saints unto Himself before the day of wrath breaks, when neither
+gold nor silver will deliver. Wilt thou not become silent before
+Him, the coming One? Will not every reader yield himself to that
+wooing spirit of Him, whose power does silence the flesh? Be
+silent all flesh! He is waked up out of His holy habitation!</p>
+<h1><a name="III" id="III">CHAPTER III.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The fourth vision.—Joshua the high priest
+accused by Satan, but cleansed by the angel of the Lord—The
+branch.—The stone and the sewn eyes upon it.—The coming
+peace.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The fourth vision is like the first and second,
+closely connected with the foregoing one. It gives the crowning
+event of Israel’s restoration. The prophet recognizes in the
+figure which is seen by him Joshua the high priest, who is
+standing before the angel of the Lord, while at his right hand
+stands Satan to oppose him. Joshua was not clothed with his
+clean, priestly robes, but he wears filthy garments. Jehovah
+rebukes Satan and terms Jerusalem a brand plucked from the fire.
+After the accuser is rebuked, the filthy garments of the high
+priest are removed, his iniquity is forgiven, and he is clothed
+with festal raiment. The prophet is so carried away with the
+vision that he asks that a clean mitre is to be put upon his
+head. And now, after the high priest is thus clothed, the angel
+of the Lord charges him with an important message: If thou wilt
+walk in My ways and keep My charge, thou shalt judge my house and
+also keep my courts. I will give thee access among those standing
+here, etc. The servant—the branch—is promised, and the stone
+which is laid before Joshua is to have seven eyes. The iniquity
+of this land is to be removed in one day, and the vision closes
+with the peaceful scene, every man inviting his neighbor under
+the vine and under the fig tree.</p>
+<p class="pn">The authorized version has a superscription for
+this chapter. “Under the type of Joshua the restoration of the
+<i>church</i> is promised.” This is not alone very misleading but
+also erroneous. No restoration of the church is necessary, and as
+far as fallen, apostate Christendom is concerned, there is no
+promise of restoration, but the Lord will spew her out of His
+mouth. Others speak of this vision as a type of the justification
+of the sinner, but we need not spiritualize Old Testament visions
+to get assurance of our justification. The Epistle to the Romans
+is sufficient for that. The High Priest Joshua stands here for
+Jerusalem and for the sinful nation Israel. The calling of Israel
+to be a nation of priests is too well known, so we need not to
+enlarge on it. But it is a nation stiff-necked, disobedient,
+unclean and defiled. Disobedience and sin have been the cause of
+Israel’s misfortune and Jerusalem’s ruin. What would be a
+restoration of Israel to the land without a healing of their sins
+and a regeneration of the nation? It is this divine forgiveness
+and cleansing of the nation, which so many prophets uttered in
+Jehovah’s name, which is here so wonderfully shown in this
+vision. Like the priests in the temple, standing before Jehovah,
+thus Joshua and Israel is before the Lord. Though Joshua is
+standing before the Lord in filthy garments, yet he is still the
+High Priest. The filthy garments do not change the office to
+which God had called him. Oh, wondrous truth, which we meet all
+through the Word! Israel, though in dispersion and in sin, is
+still the priest, called by Him who is a covenant-keeping God!
+And is it not a perfect picture of Israel as it is yet to-day? A
+priest, but defiled and unclean. In Isaiah lxiv we have part of
+that wonderful prayer which the remnant of Israel is yet to
+utter. It begins with that sublime prayer, Oh, that Thou wouldest
+rend the heavens, that Thou wouldest come, that the mountains
+might flow down at Thy presence. And then follows the confession:
+We are all become as one that is unclean, and all our
+righteousness is as a polluted garment. Alas, how little Israel
+knows at this present time of such a confession. On the day of
+atonement the lips confess sin and unrighteousness in similar
+words, but it is still the lips and not the heart. But at last
+Israel will confess her guilt and the bloodguiltiness like David
+did.</p>
+<p class="pn">In the vision Satan is seen. This is not the enemy
+who at Zechariah’s time tried to hinder the rebuilding of the
+temple, but it is Satan, the old serpent, the accuser of the
+brethren, the adversary. He is the enemy of Israel. He has tried
+in the past to hurt and to destroy the nation of destiny. He
+knows the purposes of God concerning Israel better than many a
+learned doctor of divinity, and therefore, he has opposed that
+people and opposes them still. His opposition has been mostly
+through nations. How much could be said on this topic! The end of
+this age will reveal the enemy of Israel, the adversary, as never
+before in the history of the world. There is to be war in heaven;
+Michael and his angels going forth to war with the dragon; and
+the dragon warred, and his angels, and they prevailed not,
+neither was their place found any more in heaven. And the great
+dragon was cast down, the old Serpent, he that is called the
+Devil and Satan, the Deceiver of the whole world, he was cast
+down to the earth and his angels were cast down with him. (Rev.
+xii: 7-9.) His wrath will be directed against Israel and
+Jerusalem. It is the time of which Daniel spoke. And at that time
+shall Michael stand up, the great prince which standeth for the
+children of thy people; and there shall be a time of trouble such
+as never was since there was a nation, even to that same time.
+(Daniel xii: 1.) Once more Satan will try to destroy the people,
+but the Lord shall rebuke him. Israel will be again, as so often
+before, like a brand plucked out of the fire. So it has been in
+the past. Way back when Israel was in Egypt and God was about to
+send the deliverer, He called Moses from out of the burning
+bush—Israel’s true type, burning, but never consumed. Oh, how the
+fire of persecution and adversity has been raging, but again and
+again the hand of God snatched the burning brand out of the fire
+at the right moment. The Lord who hath chosen Jerusalem will
+rebuke Satan. This has not yet come. The coming Lord will
+commission an angel out of heaven, having the key of the abyss
+and a great chain in his hand. And he will lay hold on the
+dragon—the old Serpent which is the Devil and Satan—and bind him
+for a thousand years, and cast him into the abyss and shut it and
+seal it over him. (Rev. xx: 1, 2.) Then follows the cleansing of
+Israel and the new charge, all so clearly given in this
+vision.</p>
+<p class="pn">The filthy garments are removed by those that stand
+before the angel of the Lord. The iniquity is taken away, and in
+place of the filthy garments there is the rich apparel and the
+fair mitre upon the head. How blessedly all this is waiting for
+its fulfillment in Israel’s regeneration! When He appears after
+the times of overturning, He whose right it is, His people Israel
+will be found by Him in true penitence, acknowledging their
+offence. It will be a national repentance, a mourning on account
+of Him, which Zechariah describes in detail in the twelfth
+chapter.</p>
+<p class="pn">This will be followed by national cleansing,
+forgiveness of sin for the entire remnant which is left, and the
+new birth of the nation by the outpouring of the Spirit. Israel
+is the nation to be born in a day (Isa. lxvi: 8). This great
+miracle of divine grace, the regeneration of Israel by the blood
+of the once rejected King, is spoken of again and again in the
+Word. The Church has taken it all for herself or spiritualized
+these promises. We can refer only to a few: “He will turn again
+and have compassion upon us; He will tread our iniquities under
+foot; and Thou wilt cast all their sins into the depths of the
+sea” (Micah vii: 19). “I will take you from among the nations and
+gather you out of all countries, and will bring you into your own
+land. And I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be
+clean. (How <i>ridiculous</i> that teachers and preachers refer
+to this text in defence of <i>sprinkling</i> as a mode of
+baptism.) From all your filthiness and from all your idols will I
+cleanse you. A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit
+will I put within you, and I will take away the stony heart out
+of your flesh and I will give you a heart of flesh” (Ezek. xxxvi:
+24-26). “I, even I, am He that blotteth out thy transgressions
+for Mine own sake, and I will not remember thy sins” (Isa. xliii:
+25). “I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions,
+and as a cloud thy sins; return unto Me for I have redeemed thee.
+Sing, oh ye heavens, for the Lord has done it; shout ye lower
+parts of the earth; break forth into singing ye mountains, oh
+forest, and every tree therein; for the Lord has redeemed Jacob
+and will glorify Himself in Israel” (Isa. xliv: 22, 23). And this
+is Israel’s triumphant song: “I will greatly rejoice in the Lord,
+my soul shall be joyful in my God; for He has clothed me with the
+garments of salvation, He has covered me with the robe of
+righteousness, as a priest decketh himself with a garland, and as
+a bride adorneth herself with her jewels” (Isa. lxi: 10).</p>
+<p class="pn">And now comes a very solemn charge. <i>Thus saith
+the Lord of Hosts: if thou will walk in my ways, and if thou will
+keep my charge, then thou also shalt judge my house, and shalt
+also keep likewise my courts, I will give thee places to walk
+among these that stand by.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">Israel was disobedient and did not keep the first
+charge. It is now repeated. It is likewise conditionally as was
+the first, but no apostasy can follow, for a complete healing has
+made that impossible. In analyzing this charge, we see clearly
+what Israel’s earthly calling is and wherein Israel’s millennial
+glory and work will consist: (1) <i>Judging</i> in the house of
+the Lord, and from there ruling and judging of nations, by Israel
+the head of the nations. The Church will be higher than this,
+sitting with Him in His throne, and likewise judging, being with
+the glorified Head over it all; (2) Israel will <i>keep His
+courts</i>. In the new millennial temple there will be
+ordinances, and that temple will be a house of prayer for all
+nations, while the Church will be in the temple above; (3) Israel
+will have <i>places to walk</i> among these that stand by. This
+may have a double meaning—walking among the ministering angels
+which will ascend and descend upon the Son of Man, and places to
+walk among those that stand by—the nations. Israel’s cleansing
+will take place not in heaven but in the earth, and nations as
+well as angels will be witnesses of it. Among these nations
+redeemed Israel will have places to walk. The Church will occupy
+the many mansions in the Father’s house, and go in and out in
+blessed fellowship with the Lord of glory and all His saints;
+and, perhaps, for all we know, there may be places to walk for
+the Church in distant worlds.</p>
+<p class="pn">The whole redeemed and restored nation will then be
+a miracle. <i>Hear now, O Joshua, the high priest, thou and thy
+fellows that sit before thee, for they are men which are a
+wonder: for behold I will bring forth my servant the
+Branch.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The Jews are now God’s standing miracle, but how
+much more will they be a wonder when the Spirit has filled them!
+They will heal the sick and do the same works Jesus their Elder
+Brother did. What will then come to this sin-cursed earth through
+Israel’s fullness? A miracle—life from the dead. But never before
+He, whose name is the Branch, appears. Oh, how necessary it is
+for us to be reminded that it will take place when He appears and
+the Branch is brought forth.</p>
+<p class="pn">Next comes the <i>stone laid before Joshua</i>, and
+upon the stone seven eyes, and engraving is seen on it. Generally
+this stone is interpreted as meaning Christ. One of the names of
+Christ is—a stone, a rejected stone, corner stone, a precious
+stone, etc. The true believers are likewise termed stones, living
+stones. The stone in Nebuchadnezzar’s dream, falling out of
+heaven, smashing the image and becoming a great mountain which
+filled the entire earth, is both Christ and His kingdom, which is
+not of this earth (it is and comes from above). However, it seems
+to us that the only correct interpretation of the stone upon
+which are the seven eyes is that it means Israel restored, and as
+such, the nucleus of the kingdom of God and His Christ in this
+earth. The seven eyes speak of the sevenfold Spirit which will be
+upon Israel; the engraving of the stone stands for the beauty and
+glory with which God will bless His covenant people. That this
+interpretation is the only correct one becomes at once evident
+when we reach the closing sentence of the ninth verse, <i>and I
+will remove the iniquity of that land one day.</i> What land? It
+is Israel’s land, and therefore the whole vision must stand in
+vital connection with His people. The one day, of course, in the
+first line, must be that day when Christ died for our sins and
+Israel’s sins as well, when the veil was rent. But alas, the Jews
+cried then, “His blood be upon us and upon our children!” How
+terribly this awful prayer has been answered! Truly the blood has
+been upon them and their children. But soon—oh may it be very
+soon—another day will come when the blood shall be once more upon
+them and their children—when the blood shall cleanse and wash
+away Israel’s sin—one day when Calvary’s blood, the blood of the
+Son of God, will remove the iniquity of that land and its
+inhabitants.</p>
+<p class="pn">All is waiting for that. There can be no kingdom of
+God in the earth, no conversion of the world, no millennium
+before Israel has been cleansed, redeemed, restored, and the
+iniquity of the land is removed. This all-important truth is
+likewise mentioned in a few words at the close of this, the
+fourth night vision of the prophet: <i>In that day, saith the
+Lord of Hosts, shall ye call every man his neighbor under the
+vine and under the fig tree.</i> This is the picture of
+prosperity, peace and love. No prosperity and peace till the
+millennium has come, no millennium until Israel is restored; no
+true restoration of Israel until the Lord comes with His saints.
+What Zechariah hears about that blessed time of peace Micah and
+other prophets received also from God, “Every man shall sit under
+his vine and under his fig tree; and none shall make them afraid”
+(Micah iv: 4).</p>
+<h1><a name="IV" id="IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The fifth vision.—The candlestick and the two
+olive trees.—The great mountain becoming a plain.—Zerubbabel the
+prince finishing the house of the Lord.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The first three chapters of Zechariah are the
+foundation of the entire book. The events in these chapters are
+again and again touched upon in the following visions and
+prophecies of Zechariah. For this reason have we paid special
+attention to these three chapters, which speak so clearly of the
+time of Israel’s restoration, the restoration itself and the
+different events connected with it, and much which might be said
+on the visions of the prophet which now follow can be omitted, as
+the reader has the key to the situation in the studies made.</p>
+<p class="pn">There was a rest for the prophet between the fourth
+and fifth night vision. He had fallen into a deep sleep. He may
+have been overcome by the grand and important visions, and is now
+awakened by the angel with the question, “What seest thou?” The
+new vision is a very striking one. A golden candlestick appears
+before the seer. An oil receiver is seen on top, from which the
+oil flows to the seven lamps of the candlestick through seven
+pipes. Two olive trees stand alongside of the candlestick and
+hang their fruit-laden branches over the golden bowl, filling it
+with oil, which flows through the seven pipes into the seven
+lamps. The question of the prophet, “What are these, my Lord?” is
+answered by the angel with this statement, “This is the word of
+Jehovah to Zerubbabel, saying, Not by might and not by power but
+by my Spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts. Who art thou, oh great
+mountain, before Zerubbabel? Be a plain! He shall bring forth the
+topstone with shoutings of grace, grace unto it. The hands of
+Zerubbabel who have laid the foundation shall also finish it, and
+they shall rejoice and see the plummet in the hand of
+Zerubbabel—even the seven. The eyes of the Lord shall run to and
+fro through the entire earth.” For the third time the prophet
+asks for information about the two olive trees and receives the
+answer: “These are the two sons of oil, that stand by the Lord of
+the whole earth.”</p>
+<p class="pn">The vision of the candlestick and the two olive
+trees is one of the most difficult in the Bible and needs
+prayerful and thoughtful study.</p>
+<p class="pn">The general interpretation is that the golden
+candlestick represents the Church, that she is the golden
+light-bearer, so valuable and precious. She is the light in the
+dark world. The oil and the seven pipes are the Holy Spirit who
+fills the lamps of the candlestick; the two olive trees, Joshua
+and Zerubbabel, Priest and King. The victory which the Church is
+to gain is one not by power or might but by His Spirit, etc. This
+interpretation seems to fit in with a number of passages in the
+New Testament, the seven candlesticks in Revelation first chapter
+and the teaching of the New Testament about the Holy Spirit and
+His work. However, it is hardly a satisfactory explanation. We do
+not doubt for a moment that the Church is represented by a
+candlestick, especially the Churches; or rather, the Church in
+her seven periods. Of course the Holy Spirit’s type is oil, and
+He is the one who accomplishes the work, etc. All this we do not
+and cannot doubt for a moment, but after considering it all it
+does not satisfy us, and we feel that we must look for a better
+and a deeper meaning of the fifth night vision. If its fullest
+meaning is the Church and the work of the Holy Spirit in the
+Church, how could it be then harmonized with the first night
+visions of Israel’s restoration? The above interpretation seems
+to us overlooks entirely the fact that the vision of the
+candlestick being given with the others in one night, must be
+connected with them in some way. In other words, the vision of
+the golden candlestick must have some relation to the restoration
+of Israel.</p>
+<p class="pn">We desire to call attention to the fact that the
+vision is one which speaks of perfection, completion, fullness.
+The perfect and divine number seven is found three times in the
+vision, seven lamps, seven pipes, and seven eyes. The seven lamps
+are united to one stem, this is union, and above it, is a golden
+bowl. The Spirit conquers, and not power or might does it, but
+His power. The great mountain becomes a plain. The topstone is
+brought forth and crowns the building which is finished by
+Zerubbabel. Shoutings, “Grace, grace, unto it,” are heard, and
+the seven eyes run to and fro the whole earth. It is a vision of
+fullness and accomplishment. The candlestick shines and sheds its
+glorious light, its pure gold glitters and reflects the light of
+the seven lamps. The bowl is filled with oil, and the two olive
+trees give a continual supply. The high mountain removed, the
+temple finished, joy and victory abound. The candlestick in the
+vision is exactly like the one in the tabernacle, only the two
+olive trees are something new. The candlestick in the tabernacle
+represents Christ, the Light of the world, and is likewise a type
+of the Jewish theocracy. Theocracy, the government of this earth
+by the immediate direction of God, is once to be established, and
+when it is, it will be like a bright and glorious candlestick
+shedding light and dispersing the darkness. We think the
+<i>Yalkut</i> on Zechariah (a Hebrew commentary), is not so very
+far out of the way when it says, “The golden candlestick is
+Israel.” It seems to us very clear that the vision represents the
+Jewish theocracy restored, Israel in their glorious inheritance
+as the light of the world. But what about the Church as a
+candlestick? The Lord is seen in Revelation to walk among
+<i>seven</i> candlesticks, which represent the seven Churches and
+prophetically the seven periods of this dispensation, ending with
+Laodicea. The end of this age will not be a bright and glorious
+candlestick, filled with oil, conquest and glory, but it will be
+failure and the removal of the candlestick which failed in giving
+the light. The nominal Church is far from being the light of the
+world, and Christendom nears rapidly a dark and dreary night. The
+true believer, who is filled with the Spirit, of course, is the
+light of the world as an individual, he reflects the light and
+glory of His Master, and thus every child of God is a light. But
+the home of the true Church, the body of the Lord Jesus Christ,
+is not the earth, to remain here permanently, but her home is the
+Father’s house, her destination, union with her glorified Head
+and sharing His glory. Israel and Gentiles will be left in the
+earth, while the Church is with her Lord. When He appears, the
+King of Israel and King of Glory, it will not be to re-establish
+the Church in the earth, for she is to sit with Him in heavenly
+places, but Israel, His beloved people, will become the
+light-bearer, the light which is to enlighten the Gentiles and
+fulfill its original calling. It is a true saying, whatever is
+spoken of Christ is also spoken of His Church, and it is just as
+true, whatever is spoken of Christ is also spoken of Israel. Of
+the coming Messiah, we read in Isaiah xlix., “I will give thee
+for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation
+unto the end of the earth,” but this is likewise true of his
+brethren according to the flesh, Israel will be a light to the
+Gentiles.</p>
+<p class="pn">The candlestick of pure gold, precious, and uniting
+seven lamps filled with oil, represents Israel’s glorious
+fullness. All will be united under one Head, and no longer seven
+candlesticks and confusion of religions teachings, but there will
+be one Shepherd and one fold. This will be accomplished not by
+power or might but by His Spirit. He will accomplish God’s
+blessed purpose in Israel by the wonderful outpouring which is
+promised through Joel, and which was only partially fulfilled on
+the day of Pentecost in Jerusalem, and never since. The Jew feels
+still in some degree his mission, and what else is this awakened
+national life as it is now known by the name of Zionism, than a
+reaching out for it. But there is still the blinding, money,
+political powers, in reality their enemies, different influences
+and combinations are looked upon by them as the means to bring
+about that which is born into every Jewish heart—supremacy and
+rule. It is not by power or might, but by the Spirit. He will
+come yet upon the nation and fill them with His blessed power as
+He filled once their own rejected Brother Jesus, and what He was
+Israel will be for the nations left in the earth. Zerubbabel, who
+is now mentioned, was Israel’s prince at the time of Zechariah. A
+mountain is seen which is before him, a mighty obstacle, but it
+sinks and falls, becomes a plain. The Hebrew has it in the form
+of a command—“Be a plain!” The mountain represents a kingdom, a
+power, and seems to stand here for anti-Christ and His power.
+Zerubbabel as prince is the type of the Prince of Peace, Israel’s
+King. His hands have laid the foundation, just as Zerubbabel had
+laid the foundation of the temple, and just as Zerubbabel
+finished it, bringing forth the headstone which crowns the new
+house of the Lord, thus Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews,
+who has laid the foundation and who is the foundation, the
+precious stone, He will finish it. He is the Author and Finisher,
+and it is all grace. When the foundation of the temple was laid
+there were mighty shoutings, and likewise when it was finished.
+The priests and the Levites sang one to another in praising and
+giving thanks unto the Lord, for He is good, and His mercy
+endureth forever toward Israel, and all the people shouted with a
+great shout (Ezra iii: 11). What shoutings there will be when at
+last the fullness of the Gentiles is come in and all Israel is
+saved, when the headstone will be brought forth, what mighty
+hallelujahs will be heard in the heavens and in the earth,
+praising—grace—all of grace. Without pointing out the other
+details of this vision which are now easily understood, we desire
+to make a few remarks on the two olive trees standing at the
+right and at the left of the candlestick supplying the same with
+oil. There can be no doubt that these sons of oil, as they are
+called, represented Joshua and Zerubbabel, living at the time of
+Zechariah, the one the priest and the other the king. What deeper
+meaning is here? It is probably the easiest explanation to say
+that these two olive trees are types of Him who is a Priest upon
+His throne and whose blessed Person will supply the candlestick
+with the oil, His own Spirit!</p>
+<p class="pn">These two olive trees are likewise seen in
+Revelation, the eleventh chapter. Here they are the two witnesses
+who give their testimony during the great tribulation in
+Jerusalem, and who stand in direct relation to that theocracy
+which is then about to be established in Israel. We believe that
+these two witnesses are Moses and Elijah, the same who appeared
+with our Lord upon the mountain of transfiguration.</p>
+<h1><a name="V" id="V">CHAPTER V.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The vision of the flying roll—The vision of the
+woman in the Ephah.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The three remaining night visions are of a
+different character. The first visions the prophet had were
+visions of comfort for Jerusalem and the dispersed nation, the
+overthrow of Babylon and all their enemies, divine forgiveness
+and the theocracy restored. Now follow the last three visions,
+and these are visions of judgment. Judgment precedes Israel’s
+restoration, and is very prominently connected with it.</p>
+<p class="pn">The sixth night vision is the one of the flying
+roll. The prophet’s eyes seem to have been closed after the fifth
+vision, for we read, “And I lifted up my eyes again.” The flying
+roll he sees is twenty cubits long and ten cubits broad. The
+interpreting angel tells the prophet that it is the curse that
+goeth forth over the face of the whole land; for every one that
+stealeth shall be cut off on this side according to it, and every
+one that sweareth shall be cut off on that side according to it.
+The Lord of hosts has brought it forth and it is to enter into
+the house of the thief, and into the house of him that sweareth
+by His Name to a falsehood, and it shall lodge in the midst of
+His house and consume it, both its wood and its stone.</p>
+<p class="pn">That this vision means judgment is evident at the
+first glance. Ezekiel had a similar vision. “And when I looked,
+behold, an hand was sent unto me; and, lo, a roll of a book was
+therein; And he spread it before me; and it was written within
+and without: and there was written therein lamentations, and
+mourning, and woe” (Ezek. ii: 9, 10). Ezekiel was to eat that
+book. This reminds us at once of the books in Revelation
+(chapters v. and x.), which are likewise connected with God’s
+judgments in the earth. The flying roll is written on both sides,
+signifying the two tables of stone, the law of God. Stealing and
+swearing falsely are mentioned because the one is found on the
+one side of the two tables of stone, and the other on the other
+side. However, it is no longer “Thou shalt not,” but on the
+flying roll are written the curses, the awful curses against the
+transgressors of God’s law which are now about to be put into
+execution. The curse is found in its awful details, as it refers
+to an apostate people, in Deuteronomy xxvii. and xxviii. The roll
+is of immense size, and on it are the dreadful curses of an angry
+God. The vision must have been one of exceeding great terror.
+Imagine a roll, probably illumined at night with fire, moving
+over the heavens, and on it the curses of an eternal God—wherever
+it moves its awful message is seen; nothing is hid from its
+awe-inspiring presence. It reminds one of the fiery handwriting
+on the wall in the king’s palace. Surely such an awful judgment
+is coming by and by, when our God will keep silence no longer.
+One of the sublimest judgment Psalms, the fiftieth, mentions
+something similar to this flying roll. “When thou sawest a
+<i>thief</i>, then thou consentedst with him, and hast been
+partaker with adulterers. Thou givest thy mouth to evil, and thy
+tongue frameth deceit. Thou sittest and speaketh against thy
+brother; thou slanderest thine own mother’s son. These things
+hast thou done, and I kept silence; thou thoughtest that I was
+altogether such a one as thyself: but I will reprove thee, and
+set them in order before thine eyes” (Psalm 1: 18-21). The flying
+roll stands undoubtedly in connection with wickedness, theft and
+false swearing, as it is found in so many forms in unbelieving
+Israel, but it finds also a large application in the judgment of
+wickedness throughout the earth in the glorious day of His
+appearing.</p>
+<p class="pn">But the roll enters the house of the evil doer and
+remains there to punish not only the wicked persons but also to
+consume the timber and the stone. This may stand for the two
+facts: the secret places will be entered in that judgment, and it
+will be a thorough judgment which will consume all that is
+connected with wickedness. In Leviticus xiv. we read of the
+cleansing of the leper, that the leper’s house which was infected
+was completely destroyed. Elijah’s sacrifice was consumed by
+fire, and not alone the sacrifice but also the wood and the
+stones and the very water. God’s fire will again fall from heaven
+to consume the wood, hay, and stubble, nothing will be hid. Oh,
+what a burning day that day of the Lord will be when His well
+earned curses will be carried out, and none can escape.</p>
+<p class="pn">Another application still of this vision of the
+flying roll may be made in connection with the established
+theocracy during the coming age. However, space forbids an
+enlargement.</p>
+<p class="pn">The next vision is one of great interest and not a
+little difficulty. It claims our attention more than any of the
+other visions. In it we see again wickedness and judgment. The
+angel now calls the prophet’s attention to some startling vision.
+He sees an ephah going forth. And he said, this is their aim
+(literally <i>aijn</i> eye) in all the land. And, behold, a round
+piece of lead was lifted up, and this is a woman sitting in the
+midst of the ephah. And he said, This is wickedness; and he cast
+her in the midst of the ephah, and cast the weight of lead in its
+mouth. And I lifted up mine eyes and saw, and, behold, two women
+came forth, and the wind was in their wings, and they had wings
+like stork wings, and they lifted up the ephah between earth and
+heaven. And I said to the angel that talked with me, Whither are
+these taking the ephah? And he said to me, To build for her a
+house in the land of Shinar; and it shall be established and
+settled there upon its own base.</p>
+<p class="pn">That we have here a most striking and intensely
+interesting vision is at once evident. Alas! that so few students
+of the Word should pass it by without digging down to the depths
+and comparing scripture with scripture to find its true and final
+meaning! The vision is generally taken to mean wickedness in
+connection with Israel, and having its fulfilment in their
+captivity. Many other interpretations have been advanced which
+are, however, unsatisfactory. We have to look deeper and give
+this vision a very prayerful study. After much study and research
+we believe that the whole vision is identical with the final
+<i>Babylon</i>, the great harlot of Revelation, her fall and
+judgment, and all that is connected with it—wickedness put away,
+sealed up, the wicked one destroyed, and Satan chained.</p>
+<p class="pn">What are the leading figures in the vision? An
+ephah—which is a Jewish measure standing here for commerce. The
+aim (eyes) of all the land (or earth) are upon it. Commercialism
+is very prominent in Revelation in connection with the full
+measure of wickedness, the climax of ungodliness. In Revelation
+xviii merchants are mentioned who have grown rich through the
+abundance of her delicacies. Then the merchants are seen weeping,
+for no man buys their merchandise any more. And then a long list
+follows, including <i>all the articles of modern commerce</i>.
+Compare this with the awful description of the last times in
+James v. Rich men are commanded to weep and howl, for miseries
+are come upon them. They heaped treasure together for the last
+days, and it was a heaping together by fraud, dishonesty in
+keeping back the hire of the laborers. They lived in pleasure
+(luxuriously) and been wanton. Indeed, here is that burning
+question of the day, capital and labor, and its final outcome,
+misery and judgment upon commercialism, riches heaped up, and all
+in wickedness. In Habakkuk ii: 12 the woe of judgment of that
+coming glory of the Lord is pronounced upon him that buildeth a
+town with blood and establisheth a city by iniquity! The people
+are seen laboring for the fire and wearying themselves for
+vanity. Luxuries, increase, riches, etc., are mentioned in the
+second and third chapters of Isaiah, chapters of judgment. Other
+passages could be quoted, but these are sufficient for our
+purpose. They show us that the climax of wickedness as it is in
+the earth when judgment will come, and Israel’s time commences
+once more, will be connected with commerce, riches and luxuries.
+The ephah points to this.</p>
+<p class="pn">In the second place let us notice that in the
+<i>midst</i> of the ephah there is seen a <i>woman</i>. She is
+called wickedness. The Hebrew word wickedness is translated by
+the Septuagint with “ανομια” <i>anomia</i>. We find that the Holy
+Spirit uses the same word in 2 Thes. 2: 8, and then shall be
+revealed the wicked one (ανομος) whom the Lord Jesus will slay
+with the Spirit of His mouth. The woman in the ephah personifies
+wickedness. She has surrounded herself with the ephah and sits in
+the midst of it. Have we not here the great whore having a golden
+cup in her hand full of abominations and filthiness of her
+fornication? Undoubtedly. This woman is the type of evil and
+wickedness in its highest form. Let us glance at that wonderful
+description of that woman in Revelation. She is the great whore
+sitting upon many waters. She sits upon a scarlet colored beast,
+full of names of blasphemy, having seven heads and ten horns. The
+woman is arrayed in purple and scarlet decked with gold, precious
+stones and pearls. Upon her forehead is seen her name, Mystery,
+BABYLON the Great, the mother of harlots and abominations in the
+earth. She is drunk with the blood of the saints. The woman in
+the ephah represents the same great whore, Babylon the great.
+This becomes at once clear when we take into consideration that
+the woman in the ephah is carried swiftly away and a house is
+built for her in the land of <i>Shinar</i>, and it shall be
+established, and set there upon her own <i>base</i>. Now the land
+of Shinar is <i>Babylonia</i>. There it is where the God-opposing
+power has its home and when it will end in final and total
+destruction.</p>
+<p class="pn">But it is certainly worth the while to follow this
+up. The first city erected after the judgment of the first age
+was the city in the plain of Shinar. There they built a city and
+in it a tower, whose top was to reach into the heavens, to make
+themselves a name. Self, worship of the creature, had reached its
+climax, and confusion and judgment came swiftly. The Babylon of
+the Revelation is the very same attempt, only in its fullest
+development. It is Cain’s city—human strength, human wisdom,
+stored in it. A number of the wicked generation, after the
+confusion of tongues, remained in the land of Shinar as
+inhabitants of Babylon. In it wickedness, idolatry, luxuries,
+earthly glory and commerce prospered. Only a few of the inspired
+descriptions of ancient Babylon may be mentioned here: The Golden
+City, Isaiah xiv: 4. The lady of Kingdoms, Isaiah xvii: 5. Stand
+now with thine enchantments, and with the multitudes of thy
+sorceries, wherein thou hast labored from thy youth, Isaiah
+xlvii: 12. The praise of the whole earth, li: 41. Babylon! a
+golden cup in the Lord’s land, that made all the earth drunken,
+the nations have drunken of her wine, therefore the nations are
+mad, Jeremiah li: 7. It is the land of graven images, and they
+are mad upon their idols, Jeremiah l: 38. O thou that dwellest in
+many waters, abundant in treasures, Jeremiah li: 13. Babylon was
+in splendor and outward glory for the kingdoms of the world, God
+opposing what Jerusalem was for the land. Jerusalem is the city
+of a great King and Babylon may be termed the city of the prince
+of this world. According to Herodotus, the walls of Babylon were
+60 miles in circumference. They were 87 feet thick and 350 feet
+high. The city had 25 gates made of solid brass. The city
+contained 676 squares, beautifully and symetrically arranged. The
+river ran through the city, surrounded by high walls, and in it
+were brass gates and steps leading to the river banks. A
+wonderful bridge spanned the river. No such city ever stood in
+the earth again. Even the great cities of our days—Paris, London,
+New York and Berlin—do not reach the splendor, luxury and wealth
+of ancient Babylon. The king’s palace had a wall around it six
+miles long. The hanging gardens were considered the wonder of the
+world. The waterworks of Babylon, supplying the immense city and
+its hanging gardens from the river Euphrates, were more powerful
+and larger than any modern water supplies. A Roman historian
+gives a vivid description of the city.</p>
+<p class="pn">Nothing could be more corrupt than its morals,
+nothing more fitted to excite and to allure to immoderate
+pleasures. The rites of hospitality were polluted by the grossest
+and most shameless lusts. <i>Money dissolved</i> every tie,
+whether of kindred, respect or esteem. Drunkeness and the
+grossest immoralities were practised in public.</p>
+<p class="pn">The worship of Babylon was idolatry, and it is a
+fact that all idolatry can be traced to Babylon. She is the
+mother of all abominations. Babylon was destroyed, but has a
+promise of restoration and return of her glory before her final
+and total destruction comes.</p>
+<p class="pn">Roman Catholicism is generally taken to be the
+Babylon of the Revelation. It is more correct to say Rome is an
+offspring of Babylon. Ancient Babylon had a religious ceremonial
+like the Rome of to-day, Indeed, the ancient Babylonian worship
+is revived in modern Rome. Babylon is the mother and Rome is the
+living daughter; while Rome again has her daughters—the “isms” of
+Christendom. Babylon means concentration and confusion. A
+boasting, high minded Christendom—Roman and so-called
+“Protestant”—is rapidly nearing its awful apostacy and judgment.
+The cry, so popular in our times—the Fatherhood of God and the
+brotherhood of men and of a social Christianity—is really the cry
+of old, Let us make us a name; it is concentration. Money, riches
+and commercialism play a very important part in the popular
+religious enterprises. All is getting ready for Laodicea—increase
+in riches and proud boastings. Influential men, money, etc.,
+control the affairs of Christendom. Error and loose morals are
+spreading in every direction. Great schemes are planned;
+institutions of learning—in which infidelity, in the form of
+higher criticism, is taught—are erected and endowed by the
+“church” with millions of dollars, as if this earth were to be
+the home of the church for ever. The twentieth century is
+prophesied to become the most glorious, and one would not know
+where to stop if all the beautiful air castles and promises of
+would-be prophets were to be named. The supremacy of the
+Anglo-Saxon race, its civilising influences and power for good,
+etc., are harped upon at present as being a mighty factor in the
+final conversion of the world. But in the midst of this boasting
+Christendom, heaping their bricks together for their proud tower,
+blindness has already become greater than the blindness of the
+Jews. In the midst of Christendom, the sorceries and idolatries
+of ancient Babylon are being strangely revived and leading many
+astray. The luxuries of Babylon, fostered by modern inventions
+and commercialism, are seen on all hands. One only needs to study
+statistics to see what this “Christian nation” expends a year for
+luxuries and what for the preaching of the gospel, the only power
+for salvation. The near future will undoubtedly bring the long
+looked-for union of churches, concentration for reformation,
+lifting up of humanity, etc., etc., and when man in his own
+thoughts and making himself a name seems almost to have
+succeeded, He who sitteth in the heavens and who laughs at their
+foolish efforts will no longer laugh but will speak once more in
+His wrath, and Babylon will fall. Whoever has eyes opened by the
+Word and the Spirit, must see how well the <i>woman</i> has
+succeeded in putting the leaven of error and wickedness into the
+fine flour, and the leaven is doing its perfect work in leavening
+the whole lump.</p>
+<p class="pn">But we must return to the vision. The ephah is
+carried, and in it the woman, by two women with wings of storks
+into the land of Shinar, and there a house is built and it is
+established on her own base. Babylon as it is described in the
+Revelation xvii and xviii can hardly mean exclusively corrupted
+ecclesiastical systems, apostate Christendom as it is seen
+to-day. The Babylon of the Revelation is still future, and its
+fullest development falls in the time when the body of the Lord
+Jesus Christ is no longer in the earth.</p>
+<p class="pn">It is remarkable that certain prophecies concerning
+Babylon in Isaiah and Jeremiah have not yet been fulfilled. If we
+hold to a literal interpretation of the Scriptures then of
+necessity Babylon is to be rebuilt. The desolations of Babylon
+prophesied by these two prophets have not yet taken place. The
+destruction is to be suddenly by fire, and that destruction has
+never been. Still more startling is the fact that the prophecies
+of Isaiah and Jeremiah concerning Babylon and its final
+destruction are identical with Revelation xvii and xviii. The
+vision of the ephah and the woman in it being swiftly carried to
+Shinar and housed there upon her own base, as well as other
+prophecies concerning Babylon, point to an actual rebuilding of
+ancient Babylon as a great commercial center and world power as
+well as religious centralization. There are many indications in
+this direction in our times. Railroads are planned to India.
+Russia is advancing in the same direction. Maybe the restoration
+of the Jews in <i>unbelief</i> as it has commenced will hasten
+such a project as it has been already mentioned by statesmen, an
+international center for commerce and arbitration in central
+Asia. It concerns the true believer very little what the final
+Babylon will be. He does not belong to it, neither to the present
+Babylon as it exists in Christendom; nor will he see the future
+Babylon, for the Lord will then have gathered His saints. The
+removal of the church from the earth will bring about a great
+change, and all that is to be done will be done swiftly,
+indicated by the stork’s wings. What men in that gross darkness,
+when the light of God, His Spirit, and His praying church is
+removed, will do in their rebellion against God and His Anointed
+no human being can now estimate or imagine. Finally, the vision
+of the ephah and the woman, so to speak, sealed up in it, may
+denote also the overthrow and judgment of wickedness. Babylon
+fallen, cast down. Anti-Christ, the man of sin, slain by the
+brightness of His coming. Satan chained in the pit for a thousand
+years. The last vision of the prophet is likewise a vision of
+judgment, followed by the crowning of Joshua with the double
+crowns of silver and gold.</p>
+<h1><a name="VI" id="VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The Last Night Vision of the Prophet.—The
+Vision of the Four Chariots Coming from Between the Mountains of
+Brass.—The Crowning of Joshua with Crowns.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The prophet lifts up his eyes again and sees four
+chariots which come out from between two mountains which were of
+brass. In the first chariot the horses are red, in the second
+they are black, in the third white, and in the fourth speckled
+bay. The angel explains that these are the four spirits of the
+heavens which go forth from standing before the Lord of all the
+earth. The black and the white horses go forth into the north
+country, the speckled go to the south country, and the bay went
+forth and sought to go that they might walk to and fro through
+the earth, and so they did. The last verse of the vision reads:
+“And he called me and spake to me, saying, Behold, these that go
+forth in the land of the north have caused my spirit to rest upon
+the land of the north.”</p>
+<p class="pn">We notice first the similarity of the last vision
+with the first contained in the opening chapter of Zechariah. The
+visions opened with the hosts of heaven upon red, speckled and
+white horses, having walked to and fro through the earth. We
+learned from the first vision that its meaning was judgment; that
+God was displeased with the nations, and is once more jealous for
+Jerusalem and ready to turn in mercy to Zion, and the hosts of
+heaven are seen in that first vision preparing for judgment. In
+the last vision the chariots of judgment are seen coming forth to
+sweep over the earth, to be followed by the crowning with crowns
+of the high-priest. The riders of the first vision may be termed
+the advance guards of the judgment, but the chariots now put the
+divine decrees into execution. The riders halted in a valley
+amidst a myrtle grove, but the chariots rush forth to execute
+their terrible work from between two mountains of brass. These
+mountains mean undoubtedly Mount Moriah and the Mount of Olives.
+They rush through the Valley of Jehoshaphat. The brass is
+mentioned to denote the firmness and stability of these
+mountains, which shall never be moved. We do not think that in
+the four chariots there is an allusion to the four world-powers.
+The judgment of them is now come. The stone is falling and
+smiting the image at its feet and pulverizing it, putting it
+completely out of existence. The chariots are God’s powers,
+agencies for judgment in the earth, which will pass swiftly
+along, shown by the fast running chariots. In Rev. vi the seven
+seals are opened, and there go forth the four terrible riders
+upon white, red, black and pale horses. The riders in the
+Apocalypse are the riders which go through the earth during the
+great tribulation, but in the eighth night vision of Zechariah we
+see the chariots of God’s wrath. The vision falls in the time
+when heaven opens and He appears riding upon a white horse, His
+name Faithful and True, coming in righteousness to judge and to
+make war. Wonderful vision of Him who is clothed with a vesture
+dipped in blood! He is followed by the armies of heaven upon
+white horses, all clothed in fine linen white and clean. “And out
+of His mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it He should smite
+the nations, and He shall rule them with a rod of iron, and he
+treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of almighty
+God” (Rev. xix). Immediately after the appearing of the King of
+Kings and Lord of Lords with all His saints, “An angel is seen
+standing in the sun, and he cried with a load voice, saying, to
+all the fowls that fly in the midst of heaven, Come and gather
+yourselves together unto the supper of the great God; that ye may
+eat the flesh of kings and the flesh of captains and the flesh of
+mighty men and the flesh of horses, and of them that sit upon
+them, both free and bond, both small and great.” How terrible
+that wrath will be, what awful work these chariots will work in
+slaying the ungodly, rebellious people, and spoiling the armies
+of military Christendom no human pen can describe. “Before Him
+went the pestilence, and burning coals went forth at His feet. He
+stood and measured the earth. He beheld and drove asunder the
+nations; and the everlasting mountains were scattered, the
+perpetual hills did bow. The sun and the moon stood still in
+their habitation. Thou didst march through the land in
+indignation. Thou didst thresh the nations in anger” (Hab. iii).
+O how our hearts as believers should praise our God and our Lord
+Jesus Christ who has delivered us from that wrath to come. And
+while the tribulation is not yet, and wrath will come after the
+tribulation, how should we redeem the time and witness of that
+great salvation to Jew and Gentile, and teach in the words of the
+second Psalm, “Kiss the Son.” His wrath shall soon be kindled.
+The time is short, and soon the scenes of terror, tribulation,
+and wrath will be enacted in the earth. The removal of the Church
+from the earth will be the signal for the beginning.</p>
+<p class="pn">The angel interprets to the prophet that the
+chariots are the four spirits of the heavens which go forth from
+standing before the Lord of the earth. These agencies for wrath
+were with God standing before Him the Lord of all the earth, but
+now at His command they descend to scatter death and destruction.
+They go forth in sets, and the north country and south country
+both so prominent in the prophetic word are mentioned. The bay
+horses, however, are not confined to one direction, they go
+through the entire earth. At last in the judgment of the land of
+the north the Spirit is caused to rest. The overthrow of the
+enemies of Israel is complete and the Spirit is quieted. How long
+may the wrath last and for how long may the chariots do their
+deadly work? Perhaps longer than we now think. The millennial
+reign of Christ, as foreshadowed in the bloody rule of David,
+followed by the peaceful reign of Solomon, may teach us lessons
+in this direction. The night visions have ended. They may be
+termed the Apocalypse of Zechariah. Daniel, Zechariah and
+Revelation go together in a wonderful harmony and explain each
+other. Alas! that just these three parts of the Bible should be
+so little studied and so little understood.</p>
+<p class="pn">The long night of visions for the young prophet
+Zechariah had passed by and the noise of the speeding chariots
+had left his ears. The morning must have been when he opened his
+eyes after beholding such wonderful things, and now the Word of
+the Lord comes to him.</p>
+<p class="pn">A command is given to the prophet, which has a
+sublime prophetic meaning. The command will surely be once more
+carried out by Israel on that glorious morning when the Sun of
+righteousness has risen after a dark and dreary night of sin and
+tribulation as well as wrath is past. What is the command? Take
+from the exiles, from Cheldai, from Tobiah, and from Jedaiah, and
+go thou on that day, go into the house of Josiah the son of
+Zephaniah, whither they have come from Babylon. Take silver and
+gold and make crowns, and set them upon the head of Joshua the
+son of Josedek, the high priest, and speak to him, saying, Thus
+speaketh the Lord of Hosts, saying, Behold a man whose name is
+Branch, and from his place he shall grow up and build the temple
+of Jehovah. Even He shall build the temple and bear majesty, and
+shall sit and rule upon His throne, and shall be a priest upon
+His throne, and the counsel of peace shall be between them both.
+And the crowns shall be to Chelem, and to Tobiah, and to Jedaiah,
+and to Hen, the son of Zephaniah, for a memorial in the temple of
+Jehovah. And they that are afar off shall come and shall build in
+the temple of Jehovah, and ye shall know that the Lord of Hosts
+has sent me to you, and it will come to pass if ye will hearken
+unto the voice of Jehovah your God.</p>
+<p class="pn">Some consider this to be the ninth vision of the
+prophet. It is, however, the Word of the Lord which comes to the
+prophet. There can be no doubt but the command was actually
+carried out and Cheldai (robust), Tobiah (God’s goodness), and
+Jedaiah (God knows), gave their silver and gold, and crowns were
+made out of it and placed upon the head of Joshua the high
+priest. But the action had a much deeper meaning. It was a highly
+typical one. It must have astonished Joshua and the people to
+hear such a command, for the royal crown did not belong to the
+high priest but to the descendant of David. He must have
+understood that the whole command had a symbolical bearing.
+Joshua hears it from the Word of the Lord that another person is
+only typified by him, “Behold the man whose name is the Branch.”
+It is this man the Branch who will be a priest upon the throne.
+This, of course, is our Lord Jesus Christ. The name of the high
+priest Joshua is in itself very significant, for the meaning is,
+God is salvation, Saviour, Jesus. Pontius Pilate was fulfilling
+prophecy when he stood there leading out Jesus of Nazareth before
+that tumultuous multitude, and when he said “Behold the man.” If
+the assembled Jews had known the Scriptures they would have
+recognized the phrase. But how did he then come forth? He wore a
+crown of thorns upon His meek and loving brow, and the people
+gazed into the blood-stained face of the Lamb of God now ready to
+be placed upon the altar and slain. But once again it will sound
+forth, “Behold the man,” for when He appears it will be after He
+has gathered His saints, and then He will come as the Son of Man
+in the heavens, and the sign of the Son of Man will be seen
+there. He will be crowned again, too, but not with the crown of
+suffering and shame, but with the crowns of glory. Thus he is
+seen in Revelation xix: 12 as wearing many crowns.</p>
+<p class="pn">He comes to build the temple of Jehovah, bearing
+majesty, sitting and ruling upon His throne. He is now the
+builder of the spiritual temple which is composed of living
+stones (Eph. ii: 21; 1 Peter ii: 5). But when He comes again
+there will be the building of another temple. It is now no longer
+His Father’s throne but His own, upon which He is a priest as
+well. The King of Kings and the Lord of Lords has now taken
+possession of His inheritance. The times of overturning are over
+and He whose right it is has come. There is a very instructive
+thought in the fact that the persons of the exile, as mentioned
+above, were to bring the silver and the gold out of which the
+crowns were to be made. The time will come when the whole exiled
+nation, so long scattered and peeled, though even in dispersion,
+the richest nation of the earth, will bring their silver and
+gold, their glory and their all and lay it at the feet of the
+King.</p>
+<p class="pn">The CX Psalm will then find its fulfillment: “Thou
+art a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek.” Melchizedek
+united the offices of a king and a priest in one person. “For
+this Melchizedek, king of Salem, priest of the Most High God, who
+met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the kings and blessed
+him; to whom also Abraham gave a tenth part of all; first, being
+by interpretation King of Righteousness, and after that also King
+of Salem, which is King of Peace. Without father and without
+mother, without descent, having neither beginning of days, nor
+end of life, but made like unto the Son of God; abideth a priest
+continually” (Heb. vii: 1-3). The whole will be realized in the
+restoration of the kingdom to Israel. Perhaps the fourteenth
+verse will also find a literal fulfillment then after the
+crowning of the King by His own people who rejected Him once, and
+a memorial of that event will be seen in the temple throughout
+the millennium.</p>
+<p class="pn">They that are afar off are now seen coming, and
+build not the temple of the Lord but in the temple. The Gentiles,
+of course, are they that are afar off and who are even now
+building in a certain sense in the temple of the Lord, but when
+He has returned and sits upon His throne this prophecy will find
+its final fulfillment. And when shall it all come to pass? An
+answer is given which refers us to the opening words of the first
+chapter. “And this shall come to pass, if ye will diligently obey
+the voice of the Lord your God.”</p>
+<p class="pn">In the whole command of the crowning of the high
+priest, Israel’s future glory is likewise seen. Their great and
+high calling will be realized in that day when the man the Branch
+comes forth and turns away ungodliness from Jacob. Israel will be
+as His earthly people like the Priest upon His throne, a royal
+priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people. The kingdom has
+then come, and the will of God is being done in earth as it is
+done in heaven. And oh how blessedly for the believer’s heart to
+think God’s own thoughts and move in the purposes of God. Our own
+individual salvation eternally assured, we ought to cry
+continually “Even so, come Lord Jesus.”—Amen, Amen!</p>
+<h1><a name="VII" id="VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The question put to the Prophet concerning the
+Fast.—The Rebuke given and their Failure shown.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The night visions had come to an end. In them, as
+we have seen, the whole future of Israel, their restoration to
+the land and regeneration, as well as the theocracy and the
+judgments connected with it, were revealed. Nearly two years had
+passed by since that memorable night of visions, and during these
+two years the people had, obedient to the heavenly visions and
+encouraged by them, built the house of the Lord. Soon the temple
+was to be completed and worship once more to be restored. A
+question rose then in the minds of some of the people about the
+keeping of certain fast days by which they commemorated events of
+judgments upon their nation and city. The principal day of
+fasting was the day set apart for remembering the destruction and
+burning of the city of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar. This day was
+kept by the Jews on the tenth day of the fifth month. Messengers
+are sent with this question to the prophet, and this occasion is
+used by the Lord to give a new message to the nation through the
+prophet.</p>
+<p class="pn">The seventh chapter is divided into three sections.
+1. The occasion for the prophecy (verses 1-4). 3. The rebuke
+(verses 4-8). 3. Looking over the past (verses 8-14). But the
+seventh chapter does not answer the question put to the prophet.
+If a reader of the word stops reading with the seventh chapter,
+and does not continue to read the eighth, he will be much
+perplexed. The seventh and eighth chapters of Zechariah go
+together; in fact they should form only one chapter. The eighth
+chapter contains two sections. 1. Promises of blessings again and
+teachings concerning their walk (verses 1-17). 2. The solemn fast
+days will be no more; instead of them there will be feast days.
+Whole nations will seek the Lord and be joined to Israel. Thus
+the end of chapter eight answers the question of the people
+concerning the fast days. At the first glance we notice that
+these two chapters, though starting from a desire of the people
+in the prophet’s day, are yet awaiting their final and greatest
+fulfillment. Israel still fasts and is still the forsaken. Still
+there is mourning and weeping over the departed glory, and once a
+year is the solemn fast kept which reminds the seed of Abraham of
+the sad fate of Jerusalem and the Temple, twice destroyed on the
+same day.</p>
+<p class="pn">But let us glance at these sections in these
+chapters, and make a short comment on them.</p>
+<p class="pn"><i>Chapter VII: 1–4. The question</i>—It comes from
+the people of Bethel. The two men who represent the people have
+Assyrian names—Sherezer, meaning prince of the treasury, and
+Regemmelech, the official of the King. Perhaps they were born in
+exile and received their names there, and may have held the
+position indicated by their names. Their concern for a human
+institution not at all commanded in the word of the Lord, as it
+was the case with the fast day in question, shows the lack of
+spirituality in them. They should have been more concerned about
+true obedience than with an insignificant ceremony. It has always
+been so with the people. When the Lord came He said to the
+leaders, “Ye blind guides, which strain at a gnat and swallow a
+camel” (Matthew xxii: 24). And they are still concerned with
+ceremonials and know not the true obedience. But the same
+conditions, alas! exist too in Christendom. The question itself
+about weeping on that day for so many years shows that they were
+tired of it. It was a burden to them. If they had the true faith
+and in it obedience, they would not have come with that question
+at all, but with joy and gladness would they have looked to the
+future, and known that the promised restoration as seen by the
+prophet was surely to come.</p>
+<p class="pn"><i>II. The reproof. Verses 4-7.</i>—The word of the
+Lord comes now to the prophet. The message is for all the people
+and for the priests. The two fasts are mentioned. The one in the
+fifth month as already stated was the one in remembrance of the
+destruction of the city. The fast of the seventh month was kept
+on the anniversary of the murder of Gedaliah at Mizpah (Jeremiah
+xli). But why did they keep these fast days? Why do they keep
+these days indeed still? The Lord asks, “Is it unto me, unto me?”
+No, it was not for the honor and glory of God, but their own
+selfish interests were at the bottom of it. Indeed God had never
+asked them to fast. These institutions were man-made, and highly
+displeasing to Jehovah. And is it not so now, not alone with the
+Jews but with Christendom? Oh, the manmade institutions and
+outward observances which only dishonor God and are for the
+selfish interests of the people! The eating and drinking, the
+fast being over, was not unto the Lord, but unto themselves. It
+was obedience the Lord required. Had they listened to the words
+spoken by the prophets they would not have been in captivity,
+there would have been no need for a solemn fast. Unbelief was at
+the bottom of it all, and so it is still with the nation in
+dispersion.</p>
+<p class="pn">III. The closing verses of the seventh chapter
+<i>look over past history</i>. In the first place the Lord says
+what he desires to see done by them: True judgment executed,
+mercy and truth shown by every man to his brother, oppress not
+the widow and the fatherless, the stranger nor the poor, let none
+of you imagine evil against his brother in your heart. These
+precepts were spoken to them by the prophets before the
+captivity. “Wash ye, make you clean; put away the evil of your
+doings from before mine eyes; cease to do evil; learn to do well;
+seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, plead
+for the widow” (Isaiah i.) But they did the very opposite, and
+continued in an outward service without obedience of the
+heart.</p>
+<p class="pn">This disobedience became their ruin and brought on
+the disaster. The description of their waywardness fits that
+people in their entire history. They refused to attend and
+offered a rebellious shoulder. They made their ears too heavy to
+hear, their heart they made an adamant that they might not hear
+the law and the words which Jehovah of hosts sent by His Spirit.
+These conditions prevailed in a still intenser form when our Lord
+Jesus Christ appeared among them. At last God Himself put
+judicial blindness upon them and still their heart is like
+adamant, but that heart of stone will be removed at last by the
+Spirit of God and a heart of flesh given in its place. (Ezek.
+xxxvi).</p>
+<p class="pn">And now follows the manifestation of the wrath of
+Jehovah of hosts. He had cried and they did not hear, and now
+they called but He did not hear. The prayers of orthodox Judaism
+especially on their fast days are beyond description and pleading
+for mercy. Still there is no answer to the many prayers. “Your
+new moons and your appointed feasts my soul hateth: they are a
+trouble unto me; I am weary to bear them. And when ye spread
+forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you; yea, when ye
+make many prayers, I will not hear; your hands are full of
+blood.” (Is. i: 14, 15. ) Alas! it is worship with the lips. The
+believing remnant alone in the future will be heard in their
+pleadings, and the Lord will send at last the salvation out of
+Zion, and the Deliverer will come who turns away ungodliness from
+Jacob. The fourteenth verse puts the dispersion and the judgment
+before us in a nutshell. They are whirled among all the nations
+whom they know not. The land itself becomes desolate behind them.
+As soon as the people leave whose land it is, the land flowing
+with milk and honey becomes a wilderness, and when they return it
+will be again the land of blessing.</p>
+<p class="pn">What a testimony the land and the people is! Both
+speak of God’s righteous judgment, and the truth of His word. A
+whole nation scattered among all the nations and still kept
+intact. Their land trodden down by the Gentiles, waste and
+desolate. The land mourneth, indeed. Prosperity will come to that
+land again, but not by human efforts and human wisdom. The
+attempts of unbelieving Israel now in transforming the wilderness
+may prove successful, and colonies after colonies will be
+established. The time of Jacob’s trouble, however, will sweep it
+all away.</p>
+<p class="pn">The question concerning the fast is answered in the
+next chapter. The great and wonderful future of the land, the
+people, and of Jerusalem, prosperity and blessing is clearly
+shown in it. No more mourning, but joy; no more shame, but honor;
+no desolation, but restoration and His people saved from the East
+and West, nations at last being converted through Israel’s
+blessing and testimony. We will look at these promises and let
+them pass before us in our next chapter.</p>
+<h1><a name="VIII" id="VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The Gracious Answer to their Question.—Promises
+of Blessing, Restoration, Prosperity and Salvation.—No more Fast
+Days.—Nations to be added to Jerusalem.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The eighth chapter contains the most blessed
+promises concerning the future of Jerusalem and the people
+Israel. Now the question concerning the fasts is answered in a
+way the petitioners never expected. The promises which are given
+in this chapter were only partially fulfilled in Zechariah’s day
+in the returned and believing remnant, the actual fulfillment is
+still future. In the first night vision we heard the words, Cry
+yet saying, Thus says the Lord of hosts, My cities through
+prosperity shall yet be spread abroad, and the Lord shall yet
+comfort Zion and shall yet choose Jerusalem. The eighth chapter
+gives the details of the promised prosperity. The perfect picture
+of Jerusalem’s glorious future is unrolled before our eyes.
+Though still future, with the eyes of faith we can look at it and
+rejoice in the vision when at last the covenant keeping God of
+Abraham has established Jerusalem and made her a praise in the
+earth. It is a grand and glorious prophecy which is before us,
+and while we now consider it as believers and members of His
+heavenly people, we may well think of the time when He, who is
+our Lord and Israel’s King, shall come and we with Him, and when
+in Him all these blessings will be carried out. Not long ago we
+saw teachings on this chapter consisting of entirely spiritual
+applications for believers’ comfort, prosperity and increase,
+etc. The New Testament contains all the comfort and blessing for
+believers, and we need not rob Israel of promises belonging to
+them and connected with their future.</p>
+<p class="pn">We divide the chapter into eight sections, which we
+will now briefly review:</p>
+<p class="pn">1. <i>The Restoration Announced.</i> Verses 1-3.
+The jealousy of the Lord for Jerusalem is again stated, like in
+the first chapter, I am jealous for Jerusalem (14th verse). Here,
+however, is the word fury added. The Hebrew verb signifies, I
+have been and am still jealous of her with great fury. The fury
+denotes the wrath which fell upon the ungodly nations, the horns
+of the second night visions, which are now passed out of
+existence, broken to pieces. Now to Jerusalem, no longer trodden
+down by the Gentiles, the enemies being scattered, the Lord
+Himself has returned and His glory is seen there again. It had
+departed, but now the sign of his presence and favor is again
+given. The city becomes a new city, called The City of Truth. How
+different this name is from the others which Jerusalem bore and
+which so fittingly described her fallen condition and
+abomination. She was called the city which had grievously sinned,
+like an unclean woman (Lament. i: 8, 17), a harlot and a murderer
+(Isaiah i: 21) spiritually called Sodom and Egypt (Rev. xi), but
+now a new name is given her, The City of Truth. He who is the
+Truth has turned the lie and ungodliness from Jacob, and truth is
+the characteristic of the city. The mountain of the Lord of hosts
+becomes the holy mountain.</p>
+<p class="pn">2. <i>Jerusalem will have Rest and be Largely
+Inhabited.</i> Verses 4 and 5. What a picture in comparison with
+the former desolation! Jerusalem was forsaken and a desolation, a
+city of heaps. It is even so now, few cities of the earth present
+such an awful misery as modern Jerusalem does. It will all be
+changed, and just as great as the misery and desolation was the
+blessing and the increase will be. Old men in the streets, bowed
+down by old age, and alongside of them boys and girls who run
+about in childish play. No more fear, they shall dwell safely and
+none shall make them afraid. The increase in descendants is even
+now very great among the Jews and the city is rapidly becoming a
+Jewish city again, and thus everything is preparing for the final
+conflict. Only after Jerusalem’s warfare is ended will there be
+peace.</p>
+<p class="pn">3. <i>They are Brought back from the Captivity.</i>
+Verses 7, 8. When they heard of a restoration they thought this
+very marvelous. Had they not been scattered into the four winds?
+Could they ever be brought together again? Therefore the Lord
+says, Because it is marvelous in the eyes of the remnant of this
+nation in those days, shall it be marvelous in My eyes also?
+saith the Lord of hosts. At this present time Jews and Gentiles
+doubt the promises of restoration, it is marvelous in their eyes.
+But He who scattered Israel will gather them again. He knows also
+where the so called Lost Tribes are, the house of Israel, and we
+need not try to help God to find them. When the time comes He
+will bring them all back. In the second chapter we noticed that
+the North Country is mentioned, and we called attention to the
+fact that the North Country, Russia, is inhabited by nearly
+one-half of the entire Jewish race. In that land the persecutions
+are the greatest and also the desire for a return to the land.
+The restoration in unbelief is one especially from the Jews in
+the North Country. Here in the eighth chapter the East and the
+West countries are mentioned, the far East, India, China, etc.,
+and the West, our own country and the isles of the sea. The rich
+Jews may now be satisfied in the countries, away from the
+homeland, where they prospered, but at last they will return and
+the Lord will send fishers to fish them and hunters to hunt them
+out. (Jer. xvi: 16.) The Gentiles will bring them back to their
+own land (Isaiah lxvi: 20). All will then be His people and He
+will be their God.</p>
+<p class="pn">4. <i>The Land is Blessed.—Fruitfulness and
+Plenty.—The Remnant to Possess all these Things.</i> Verses 9-12.
+What a contrast there is now seen! For before these days there
+was no hire for man, nor any hire for beast . . . Little fruit
+was had from the ground, there was nothing for man and beast . .
+. Neither was there any peace to him that went out or came in on
+account of the affliction . . . There was no rest, no peace, but
+uncertainty and affliction. Those that went out from the land had
+no peace, and they that came into the land found no peace. The
+curse said, No rest for the sole of their feet, and how literally
+it has been fulfilled. Again the people seek a resting place in
+the land without their God and their Saviour, all in the
+confidence of the flesh. They will succeed in their restoration
+plans only to find themselves at last in greater difficulties and
+facing worse afflictions than ever before. Then every one will be
+against his neighbor (verse 10). Money spent by the millions in
+building channels for irrigation, planting of trees and vines,
+building railroads, etc. (just what modern Zionism proposes and
+has undertaken to do), may succeed in transforming the land in
+spots into a fruitful garden, but the time of Jacob’s trouble
+will sweep that all away. The Lord will be gracious to the very
+land in the day of His manifestation. There will be a seed of
+peace, the vine will give her fruit, the ground her increase, the
+heavens their dew. They shall build houses and inhabit them, they
+shall plant vineyards and eat the fruit of them (Isaiah lxv: 21).
+For ye shall go out with joy and be led forth with peace, the
+mountains and the hills shall break forth before you into
+singing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.
+Instead of the thorn shall come up the firtree, and instead of
+the briar shall come up the myrtle tree, and it shall be to the
+Lord for a name, for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut
+off (Isaiah lv: 12-13). The remnant of the people left after the
+great tribulation will inherit this all.</p>
+<p class="pn">5. <i>The Curse Changed into Blessing.</i> Verses
+13-15. They had been a curse among the nations, but now at last
+the nations of the earth blest in the seed of Abraham. As He had
+punished them so He blesses them now. Comfort ye, comfort ye my
+people, says your God, speak ye to the heart of Jerusalem and cry
+unto her, that her warfare is accomplished, that her iniquity is
+pardoned, for she has received of the Lord’s hand double for all
+her sins (Isaiah xl: 1, 2). Literal were the curses threatened
+concerning Israel and Israel’s land, literally they were all
+fulfilled. And are there not many more promises of blessing for
+the people and for the land spoken by the same true and faithful
+God who uttered the threatenings and carried them out to the very
+last? And will not the Lord fulfill these promises of blessing
+literally to the minutest details? Assuredly He will. It is
+remarkable that this simple truth is not seen and understood in
+Christendom of to-day. According to the popular idea God has
+punished the Jews and will continue to do so, and the church has
+taken Israel’s place and inherited all the blessings. It is this
+false notion which is responsible in a great measure for the
+dreadful confusion existing in Christendom. The thing against
+which Paul warned is practiced in Christendom, Boast not against
+the branches . . . Be not highminded, but fear. For if God spared
+not the natural branches (Jews) take heed lest He also spare not
+thee (Gentiles). God is able to graft them (Israel) in again.
+(Romans xi.)</p>
+<p class="pn">6. <i>Israel will be a Holy People.</i> Verses 16
+and 17. These are the words ye are to do, speak ye every man the
+truth to his neighbor, execute the judgment of truth and peace in
+your gates; let none of you imagine evil in your hearts against
+his neighbor and love no false oath, for all these are things
+which I hate, saith the Lord. Untruth, false oath, speaking one
+against the other are characteristic sins of Israel. But the
+character of the nation is now to be entirely changed. They are
+now indeed to be a holy people, with hearts circumcised, loving
+God with all their hearts and their neighbors as themselves. A
+new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put
+within you; and I will take away the stony heart out of your
+flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh. And I will put My
+Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye
+shall keep my judgments and do them. (Ezekiel xxxvi: 26, 27.)</p>
+<p class="pn">7. <i>No more Fast Days, but Feast Days.</i> Verses
+18 and 19. The fast of the fourth month and the fast of the fifth
+and the fast of the seventh and the fast of the tenth, shall be
+to the house of Judah joy and gladness and cheerful feasts;
+therefore love the truth and the peace. This is now the answer to
+their question. The fasts of the fifth and seventh month were the
+fasts commemorating the burning of the temple and the taking of
+the city by Nebuchadnezzar, and the other the anniversary of the
+murder of Gedeliah and his friends. The fast of the tenth month
+was kept in remembrance of the siege of Jerusalem which was
+commenced in that month and the fast of the fourth month was kept
+on account of the taking of Jerusalem. These fasts commemorated
+therefore all national calamities. A greater calamity happened of
+course later when at the same time Jerusalem was destroyed by the
+Roman armies, the temple and the city burned to the ground and
+not a stone left upon another. The Jews are still keeping
+national fasts on account of these calamities. Not alone in
+Jerusalem are there Jews and Jewesses going to the small piece of
+ancient stone masonry, which is said to be all left of the
+magnificent temple in Jerusalem, to mourn there especially on the
+ninth day of Ab, but the mourning among the orthodox Jews on that
+day is world-wide. In the synagogues of Russia and New York, San
+Francisco and in South Africa, everywhere where there are
+orthodox Jews the Lamentations of the prophet Jeremiah are
+chanted in a mournful tone. But the time is coming when all will
+be changed. With Jerusalem rebuilt and peacefully inhabited, a
+temple full of God’s glory, and over it all the heavenly glory
+and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of
+Man, there will be no more need of fasting and mourning, but all
+will be changed in gladness and joy. The Songs of praise which
+are found at the close of the book of Psalms will then
+undoubtedly be sung by restored Israel.</p>
+<p class="pn">8. <i>The Conversion of the World and Conquest for
+the Lord will follow Through Converted and Restored Israel.</i>
+Verses 20-23. These verses have often been spiritualized. How
+much harm there is done by taking such words and promises out of
+their connections and fitting them to a time and people for which
+they were never meant. Can God give His blessing to such teaching
+of His Word? We believe not. Thus saith the Lord of hosts, It
+shall yet be that nations will come, the inhabitants of many
+cities. And the inhabitants of one city shall go to another
+saying, Let us go speedily to pray before the Lord and to seek
+the Lord of hosts: I will go also. And many peoples and strong
+nations shall come to seek the Lord of hosts in Jerusalem and to
+pray before the Lord. This the world has not yet seen.
+Individuals have turned to the Lord, and His own are gathered out
+of all nations and languages, but such a picture as it is seen
+here has not yet been seen. The conversion of peoples and strong
+nations is still future. It will not come by modern missionary
+efforts, consisting not alone of preaching, but as it is done
+to-day, by educational work in heathen countries, as well as
+other humanitarian institutions, such as hospital work,
+orphanages, etc. Nations can never be converted by these efforts,
+nor has God given His Church promises that nations and the world
+is to be converted by the preaching of the Gospel of grace.
+Individuals, of course, are converted and will be converted by
+the Word faithfully preached. A people is thus taken out for His
+name. And to this agree the words of the prophets, as it is
+written, After this I will return and will build again the
+tabernacle of David, which is fallen down (Israel’s time
+commencing again, in restoration and regeneration) and I will
+build again the ruins thereof and I will set it up; that the
+residue of men might seek after the Lord, and all the nations
+upon whom my name is called, saith the Lord, who doeth all these
+things. (Acts xv: 14-17.) It is sad to think that Christendom
+ignores such a revelation of the divine purpose and order and
+goes on in entirely different lines. We are living now in the
+time of the outcalling of a people, the Church, the body of the
+Lord Jesus Christ is formed. When that body is completed, which
+does not mean the conversion of the world, the Lord will come for
+His outcalled saints and then with His saints in glory. This will
+be followed, according to the words of the prophets, as we have
+so clearly seen in these studies by the building again of the
+tabernacle of David and all that is connected with it, and then
+the residue of men, the nations, will seek the Lord. It is also
+to be noticed that these nations will seek the Lord of hosts in
+Jerusalem and worship there before Him. This means that Jerusalem
+will become the great center of not alone world government but
+also of worship. The last chapter in this book of Zechariah shows
+nations coming up to Jerusalem on the feast of tabernacles.</p>
+<p class="pn">The last verse of the eighth chapter is the
+grandest of all. Thus saith the Lord of hosts, in those days it
+shall be that ten men shall take hold out of all languages of the
+nations, even shall take hold of the skirt of him that is a Jew
+saying, we will go with you for we have heard that God is with
+you. This shows clearly what so often is doubted, namely, that
+the Jew converted and filled with the Spirit will be the
+instrument for the conversion of the nations. At this present
+time when a poor Jew shows himself, even in a so-called Christian
+(?) land like ours, he will occasionally be followed by ten men
+or more who will mock him and call him names and perhaps assault
+him (by no means a rare occurrence). But it will all be changed
+in the day of Israel’s glory. It will then be known that Israel
+is the blessed people, and ten men out of all languages will
+beseech the Jew to take him along to the most blessed spot in the
+earth, to Jerusalem.</p>
+<p class="pn">Thus ends one of the most striking prophecies
+concerning the future of the Seed of Abraham and Abraham’s land.
+How strange that so few Christian people care to study these
+sublime revelations, which tell us how true and faithful our God
+is and which make it so clear and plain that the Bible is divine,
+the Word of God. May He teach us, who love these truths, who love
+Him and His appearing, who is not only Our Hope but Israel’s Hope
+as well, may He teach us more and more to know His thoughts and
+purposes and to find our delight in them.</p>
+<h1><a name="IX" id="IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The Second Part of the Prophecies—The First
+Burden—Judgment upon Hadrach, Hamath, Tyre and Sidon—His People
+Kept—The King of Peace and Righteousness Announced—Victory over
+the Enemies.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">With the ninth chapter begins the second part of
+the book. In it God shows through the prophet new and glorious
+visions of the Kingdom, the conflicts which His people Israel
+will have, their victories and final deliverance, ending with the
+sublime visions in the fourteenth chapter. The Deliverer, the
+King Messiah, is seen here likewise, suffering, rejected, pierced
+and slain, the Shepherd is smitten and rejected, false shepherds
+take charge of the flock, and calamities follow till the true
+Shepherd appears again and they look upon Him whom they pierced.
+The Gentiles are seen at last coming up to Jerusalem to worship
+the King, the Lord of Hosts. Like the first part of the book, we
+have in the second a series of prophecies which are progressive,
+leading up higher and higher till the whole purpose of God is
+made known, and the summit of Glory to God in the Highest, Peace
+on earth, is reached, in the establishment of the Throne of
+Jehovah in and over the earth. Oh, how blind man is! that he
+passes by the thoughts of his God and does not consider them, nor
+find delight and pleasure in them. The words of man are read and
+studied, and the Word of God is set aside. The great mass in
+Christendom is wise in their own conceits and hastens on to the
+great waking up, when it will be too late. It is for the few to
+look into these things and to know the secrets of our God. Let us
+do it faithfully and prayerfully.</p>
+<p class="pn">Twice in this second part of Zechariah we meet with
+the phrase “The burden of the Word of Jehovah.” The first time it
+stands in the beginning of the ninth chapter, and the second time
+in the twelfth chapter. We may conclude from this that the ninth,
+tenth and the eleventh chapters were given as one prophecy, and
+the twelfth to the fourteenth were perhaps given some time
+later.</p>
+<p class="pn">The land of Hadrach against which the first burden
+in chapter ix. commences cannot be correctly located. Its close
+connection with Damascus and Hamath show that the land of Hadrach
+must have been a province of the Syrian kingdom then in
+existence. The Phoenician cities Tyre and Sidon are next, and
+then mention is made of four Philistine cities. Against these,
+Syria, Phoenicia, and the cities of the Philistines, a great
+calamity and overthrow is prophesied by Zechariah. They are
+conquered by the hosts of an enemy, and the rich treasuries of
+Tyre are heaped together in the streets—silver as the dust and
+gold as the mire—the bulwarks are smitten, and she herself
+consumed by fire. From there the conquest goes on rapidly to the
+Philistinian cities, and the King of Gaza perishes. The question
+arises, What conquest and calamity is this? Is it accomplished or
+is it still future? History records one great conqueror who
+rapidly overthrew the countries and cities mentioned in this
+burden. Alexander the Great and his expedition so successfully
+carried on is undoubtedly meant here. All students of the
+prophetic Scriptures know how prominently he likewise stands out
+in the Book of Daniel. The young monarch, after the battle of
+Issus, besieged and quickly captured Damascus. Sidon was easily
+taken, but Tyre resisted him some seven months and was burned to
+the ground. Gaza and the other cities came next. Thus the burden
+of the Word of Jehovah as uttered here by Zechariah was literally
+fulfilled in the Syrian conquest of Alexander the Great. However,
+history tells us that the armies of the youthful monarch passed
+by Jerusalem a number of times without doing harm to the city.
+This is remarkable, and in accord with the prophecy of Zechariah,
+for we read in the eighth verse, “And I will encamp against mine
+house, against the army, against him that passes through and
+returns, and no oppressor shall come over them any more, for now
+I have seen it with mine eyes.”</p>
+<p class="pn">The Jewish historian Josephus gives a very
+interesting account of the oppressor, and how Alexander the Great
+punished the Samaritans, and the reason why he did not besiege
+and conquer Jerusalem. The account which Josephus gives is so
+important that we have to quote from it.</p>
+<p class="pn">“After the destruction of Tyre, the conqueror
+marched against Gaza, which was razed to the ground. While
+Alexander was at the siege of Tyre, he sent to demand the
+surrender of Jerusalem. The High Priest sent an answer in which
+he stated that Jerusalem had entered into an alliance with the
+Persian monarch. After taking Gaza, Alexander advanced suddenly
+against Jerusalem. Jaddua, the High Priest, and the entire city
+were much frightened. But in a vision God told the High Priest to
+be of good cheer, to decorate the city and open the gates wide,
+and to go forth in his priestly robes with all the priests in his
+train, and the people of the city clad in white garments. Jaddua
+obeyed and the doors were opened, and the astonished enemy beheld
+a startling spectacle. No sooner had Alexander seen the High
+Priest in his gold embroidered robes with the holy name engraved
+on the turban, then he fell upon his face and worshipped. His
+attendants were greatly astonished. The Syrian kings who stood
+around feared that Alexander had lost his reason. One at length
+asked why he, whom all the world worshipped, should do homage to
+the High Priest of the Jews. Alexander replied that he did not
+worship the High Priest but his God. In a vision in Macedonia
+that figure in that very dress appeared to me. He exhorted me to
+conquer Persia. Alexander entered with the priest into the city
+to offer sacrifices. The High Priest then acquainted him with the
+prophecies of Daniel, showing that a Greek was to overthrow the
+Persian empire.” The account is without doubt a correct one, and
+we relate it here because this prophecy of the Alexandrian
+conquest shows the wonderful escape of Jerusalem that the
+oppressor shall not come over it.</p>
+<p class="pn">However, it is to be noticed that the eighth verse
+says that no oppressor shall come over them <i>any more</i>. This
+puts before us again the final deliverance of Jerusalem and
+Israel’s land as it is seen in the last chapter. It is said that
+history repeats itself, but divine prophecy again and again
+announces events for the near future, and in it is seen a
+foreshadowing of other events, and the original prophecy awaits a
+greater and final fulfillment. The sentence quoted, that no
+oppressor shall come over them any more, brings the first burden
+of the word of Jehovah in connection with the coming final
+deliverance of Israel when they shall be planted upon their land,
+and they shall no more be plucked up. A final destructive
+visitation will be upon the enemies of Israel and Jerusalem; in
+fact, many of the ancient foes of Israel are seen revived in
+prophecy in the latter days then to be swept away, while
+Jerusalem will again be miraculously saved. In our exposition of
+the fourteenth chapter we hope to show the details of this.</p>
+<p class="pns">The second section of the ninth chapter, verses
+9-11, which is so closely connected with the burden from verses
+1-8, strengthens the above exegesis. Who would say that verses
+9-11 have seen a complete fulfillment? The greater part of it is
+still future, and so it is likewise with the third section of the
+ninth chapter. Let us quote first verses 9-11:</p>
+<p class="p1">Rejoice greatly, daughter of Zion,</p>
+<p class="p1">Shout aloud daughter of Jerusalem,</p>
+<p class="p1">Behold thy King cometh to thee,</p>
+<p class="p1">Just and having salvation,</p>
+<p class="p1">Meek and riding upon an ass,</p>
+<p class="p1">Even upon a colt, the she-ass’s foal,</p>
+<p class="p1">And I will cut off the chariot from Ephraim,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the horse from Jerusalem,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the battle bow shall be cut off,</p>
+<p class="p1">And He shall speak peace unto the nations,</p>
+<p class="p1">And His dominion shall be from sea to sea,</p>
+<p class="p1">And from the river to the ends of the earth.</p>
+<p class="p1">As for thee also, for the sake of thy covenant
+blood,</p>
+<p class="p1">I send forth thy prisoners from the waterless
+pit,</p>
+<p class="p1">Return to the stronghold—Prisoners of hope</p>
+<p class="p1s">Even to-day I declare I will render double unto
+thee.</p>
+<p class="pn">This stands in contrast to the Grecian conqueror,
+and it needs no proofs that the coming King whom Zechariah
+beholds is the King Messiah. The Jews acknowledge it as such. One
+of the greatest Jewish commentators says (Rashi): It is
+impossible to interpret it of any other than King Messiah. An
+interesting fable is based upon this prophecy, and well known
+among orthodox Jews. Rabbi Eliezer says, commenting on the words
+lowly and riding upon an ass, “This is the ass, the foal of that
+she-ass which was created in the twilight. This is the ass which
+Abraham our father saddled for the binding of Isaac his son. This
+is the ass upon which Moses our teacher rode when he came to
+Egypt, as it is said, And he made them ride upon the ass (Ex. iv:
+20). This is the ass upon which the Son of David shall ride.”
+Other interesting quotations could be given from Jewish writings,
+but this is sufficient to show that the Jews believe it to be a
+Messianic prophecy. And what blindness that they do not see Him
+who is the Messiah; but is not the so-called “higher criticism”
+existing to-day in Christendom being taught in churches and
+schools, that there are no Messianic prophecies in the Old
+Testament, much greater blindness? Alas! so it is, and the
+outcome can be nothing else in the end than the denial of the
+divinity of our Lord, or Unitarianism.</p>
+<p class="pn">Every reader of the new Testament knows that this
+prophecy is quoted in the Gospels. Let us look to the Gospels and
+see its application. First, in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter
+xxi: 5: All this was done that it might be fulfilled which was
+spoken by the prophet, saying, Tell the daughter of Sion, Behold
+thy King cometh unto thee, meek, and sitting upon an ass, upon a
+colt the foal of an ass. The context shows a great multitude
+there crying, Hosanna to the Son of David: Blessed is he that
+cometh in the name of the Lord; Hosanna in the highest. But soon
+the cry is changed into, This is Jesus the prophet from Nazareth
+of Galilee. Notice the Holy Spirit quoting from Zechariah leaves
+out the sentence, “He is just, having salvation.” This is not an
+error, but it is the divine right of the Spirit who gave the
+prophecies in olden times to apply them correctly in the New
+Testament. In the Gospel of Mark in the eleventh chapter there is
+likewise the description of Christ’s entry into Jerusalem, but
+Zechariah is not quoted. The same is true of the account given by
+Luke, chapter xix., and here He is mentioned as the King that
+cometh in the name of Jehovah, peace in heaven and glory in the
+highest. In the fourth Gospel, chapter xii: 15, the account of
+His coming to Jerusalem is much shorter than in the other
+Gospels. It says there, Fear not, daughter of Sion; behold, thy
+King cometh, sitting upon an ass’s colt.</p>
+<p class="pn">We see from this that the four Gospels give each an
+account of the entry of the Lord into Jerusalem; two of them
+quote from Zechariah and the other two do not. The quotations
+themselves are differing from the prophecy in Zechariah ix. in
+two respects. The first words, Rejoice greatly, is not at all
+used. In Matthew it is, Tell the daughter of Sion, and in John,
+Fear not daughter of Sion. The sentence, He is just and having
+salvation, is left out in both.</p>
+<p class="pn">A superficial exposition of the Word claims that
+Zechariah’s prophecy was fulfilled in the event recorded by the
+Gospels. As far as His entry into Jerusalem is concerned, riding
+upon the colt the foal of an ass (and note in Matthew it is shown
+that both the colt and the ass are brought to Him. He could ride
+of course only upon one, but the she-ass had to go along in
+fulfillment of prophecy), and the way He came, meekly, in this
+respect the prophecy was fulfilled. This entry of the Son of Man
+into Jerusalem was His formal presentation to Jerusalem as its
+King, but, as stated above, the Messianic cry of welcome Blessed
+is He, soon changes into, Jesus the prophet from Nazareth in
+Galilee, and that again in the final cry of rejection, Crucify
+Him, crucify Him! There was no salvation for Israel then, and no
+kingdom for Him, hence no rejoicing is mentioned in the
+quotations.</p>
+<p class="pn">It is His second coming to Jerusalem as the Son of
+Man in His glory which will bring the fulfillment of Zechariah
+ix: 9-11. True, the colt, the she ass’s foal, will not be the
+animal He rides, but He will come upon a white horse followed by
+the armies of heaven. He comes then truly for Jerusalem,
+fulfilling the prophecy, Just is He having salvation (marginal
+reading, Victory). There will be again the welcome cry of the
+118th Psalm, Blessed is He that cometh in the name of Jehovah,
+preceded by the plea, Hosanna, save now.</p>
+<p class="pn">The tenth and eleventh verses show clearly that the
+prophecy is yet to be fulfilled and can be only fulfilled in the
+coming of the Son of Man in His glory. One of the reasons why
+modern Judaism rejects Jesus of Nazareth, and does not believe
+Him to be the promised Redeemer, is in this prophecy. Rabbi F. De
+Sola Mendes, of New York, brings in a little book, “A Hebrew’s
+Reply to the Missionaries,” the following argument: “We reject
+Jesus of Nazareth as our Messiah on account of His deeds. He says
+of Himself: ‘Think not that I am come to send peace on the earth;
+I came not to send peace but a sword,’ etc. But we find that our
+prophets ascribe to the true Messiah quite different actions.”
+Zechariah says (ix: 10), He shall speak peace to the nations.
+Jesus says He came to send the sword on the earth; whereas,
+Isaiah says of the true Messianic time, “They shall beat their
+swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruninghooks;
+nation shall not lift up sword against nation; neither shall they
+learn war any more.”</p>
+<p class="pn">Of course the Jew is right in expecting the literal
+fulfillment of this prophecy, and it will be fulfilled when He
+comes again and the restoration of all things will follow, as
+spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets.</p>
+<p class="pn">When He appears again, in like manner as He went
+into heaven, that is not for His saints but with His saints,
+there will be peace for Ephraim and for Jerusalem, and the
+kingdom is then restored to Israel, that is, to the house of
+Judah and the house of Israel. The chariot, the horse, and the
+battlebow will be cut off.</p>
+<p class="pn">Not alone will He bring peace to the covenant
+people but to the nations. He will speak peace. “And He shall
+stand, and shall feed His flock in the strength of the Lord, in
+the majesty of the name of Jehovah His God, and they shall abide;
+for now shall He be great unto the ends of the earth. And this
+man shall be our peace” (Micah v: 4, 5). There will be abundance
+of peace (Ps. lxxii: 7). His dominion will be from sea to sea and
+to the ends of the earth.</p>
+<p class="pn">The prisoners of hope to be released, by the blood
+of the covenant, from the pit wherein there is no water, is the
+nation whose captivity is now ended. How strange that people
+should take a passage like this and interpret it as meaning the
+restitution of the wicked and the ungodly from the pit. There is
+nothing taught in the Word like that which some people term a
+larger hope. The restitution (restoration) of all things is not
+left to the fanciful interpretation of the human mind, but is
+clearly defined by the Word itself, as spoken by the prophets. In
+the vision of the dry bones in Ezekiel xxxvii, Israel’s complaint
+is, Our hope is lost. But when He is manifested, who is indeed
+the Hope of Israel, the prisoners (the captives), will be
+released and cleansed. Refrain thy voice from weeping and thine
+eyes from tears. . . . “There is hope for thy latter end, saith
+the Lord, and thy children shall come again to their own border”
+(Jer. xxxi: 17). The exhortation to return to the stronghold
+follows. Israel will then sing, “He brought me up out of an
+horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and He set my feet upon a
+rock, and established my goings” (Ps. xl: 2). Double will be
+rendered unto them, as promised, “Speak to the heart of
+Jerusalem, and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished,
+that her iniquity is pardoned, that she has received of the
+Lord’s hand double for all her sins” (Is. xl: 2). “For your shame
+ye shall have double, and for confusion they shall rejoice in
+their portion; therefore in their land they shall possess double;
+everlasting joy shall be unto them” (Is. lxi: 7).</p>
+<p class="pn">And now we come to the third section of this
+chapter. The scene changes once more. The chapter commences with
+scenes of war, strife, battles and overthrow, and it ends with
+scenes of war and words of cheer for Zion. In the middle stands
+the King and His advent, the kingdom of peace, which He will
+establish.</p>
+<p class="pn">Alexander’s successor, Antiochus Epiphanes, and
+Zion’s successful resistance, is undoubtedly the first
+fulfillment of the third section. The Prophet Daniel speaks
+likewise of this terrible man of sin, Antiochus Epiphanes (chap.
+viii). Not like Alexander, passing by Jerusalem, he invaded the
+land of Judah, and endeavored to force the idolatry of Greece
+upon the Jews. Entering Jerusalem, he slew 40,000 of the
+inhabitants, and a larger number were sold as slaves. He then
+entered the temple, seized the rich treasures stored there, and
+commanded a big swine to be sacrificed upon the altar of
+burnt-offering, and with the blood the sacred place was defiled.
+A bitter struggle commenced, for Antiochus tried to exterminate
+the Jews and their religion as well. Every observance of the
+Jewish religion was forbidden, the Sabbath had to be profaned,
+and unclean food had to be eaten. Idols were set up in the
+temple. Instead of the Jewish feasts, the feasts of idols, with
+all their shocking abominations and immoralities, were
+introduced, and the Jews were forced to join in them. Thousands
+suffered martyrdom. But all at once a few people stood up against
+the abominations, the Maccabeans, and in a struggle lasting about
+twenty-five years, they fought successfully against the enemies.
+Miraculous victories were achieved, and thousands and tens of
+thousands of the idolators slain, and Jerusalem and the land
+freed from the abomination.</p>
+<p class="pns">This terrible visitation of the land and the
+wonderful victory of the Maccabeans is foretold by the prophet in
+the closing verses of the ninth chapter. We will quote the
+passage:</p>
+<p class="p1">“I bend for me Judah and fill the bow with
+Ephraim,</p>
+<p class="p1">And I will stir up thy sons, Zion, against thy
+sons, Greece,</p>
+<p class="p1">And make thee like the sword of a mighty man.</p>
+<p class="p1">Jehovah shall be seen over them,</p>
+<p class="p1">And His arrow shall go forth like lightning,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the Lord Jehovah shall blow the trumpet.</p>
+<p class="p1">He shall go with whirlwinds of the South.</p>
+<p class="p1">The Lord of Hosts shall cover them;</p>
+<p class="p1">They shall devour and tread down slingstones,</p>
+<p class="p1">And they drink and make a noise as from wine,</p>
+<p class="p1">And they shall be filled like bowls, as the corners
+of the altar.</p>
+<p class="p1">And Jehovah their God saves them in that day, as
+the flock of His people;</p>
+<p class="p1">For jewels of a crown shall they be, glittering
+over His land,</p>
+<p class="p1">For how great is His goodness and how great His
+beauty!</p>
+<p class="p1s">Corn shall make the young men flourish, and new
+wine maidens.”</p>
+<p class="pn">But again we have to remark that this prophecy is
+only partially fulfilled. The terrible tribulation of the land of
+Judah when Antiochus Epiphanes invaded the land, is but a type of
+the great tribulation, the time of Jacob’s trouble. Antiochus
+Epiphanes, in his awful fight against Jehovah and the Lord’s
+people, is a type of the final Antichrist, and the Jewish saints
+slain by him are types of the Jewish saints which will be
+beheaded during the tribulation. Jehovah will fight then, as it
+is stated here, against those nations in that day (Zech. xiv).
+The remnant of Israel will then be victorious. Thus everything is
+seen in this chapter in a past fulfillment, but only partial, and
+in it a future fulfillment, which will be complete.</p>
+<p class="pns">We cannot leave this chapter without calling
+attention to the blessed statement:</p>
+<p class="p1s">“For jewels of a crown they shall be, glittering
+over His land.”</p>
+<p class="pn">The slain who suffered martyrdom are meant, and all
+those who fought for Jehovah’s name and honor. May not the
+statement in Hebrews xi. refer to this time? “Others had trials
+of mockings and scourgings, yea moreover of bonds and
+imprisonment: they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, they were
+tempted, they were slain with the sword they went about in
+sheepskins, in goatskins: being destitute, afflicted, evil
+entreated, of whom the world was not worthy, wandering in deserts
+and in mountains and caves and the holes of the earth” (Heb. xi:
+36-39).</p>
+<p class="pn">And all will find a repetition during the coming
+tribulation. But the time for reward has not yet come. The throne
+of glory is not yet revealed, and the jewels, the saints made up
+in a crown, glittering over the land are not yet seen. But the
+assurance is given, “They shall be Mine, saith the Lord of Hosts,
+in that day when I make up my jewels” (Mal. iii: 17). “Thou shalt
+also be a crown of glory in the hand of Jehovah, and a royal
+diadem in the hand of thy God” (Isa. lxii: 3). “And I saw the
+souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus and for
+the word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither
+his image, neither had received his mark upon their foreheads or
+in their hands, and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand
+years.” Revel. xx: 6. Oh, blessed hope of all the saints! To be
+with Christ in Glory, in His throne, and sharing His rule. In
+that day of manifestation, when Christ our life is manifested,
+and we shall be manifested with Him in glory—glory never ceasing,
+but ever increasing, in the countless ages to come, redeemed
+sinners will be the jewels of His crown, and He shall see the
+travail of His soul and be satisfied.</p>
+<h1><a name="X" id="X">CHAPTER X.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>More Blessings promised to Judah and
+Israel.—The Nation Victorious.—Judah and Ephraim blessed,
+gathered and restored, and their enemies overcome.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The tenth chapter continues to unfold Israel’s
+future blessings and restoration, and in it Ephraim, the house of
+Israel, is especially mentioned. The chapter begins with a
+contrast. In the first verse there is a call to prayer, and the
+assurance of an answer given; in the second verse the idols are
+mentioned which Israel worshipped and which give no comfort.</p>
+<p class="pn">Ask of Jehovah rain in the time of the latter rain.
+The former rain and the latter rain are often spoken of in the
+Word. It is of course first to be understood of the natural rain
+coming from the clouds upon the land. The rain withheld and the
+land becomes a desert, the rain given and the land flows again
+with milk and honey. I will give you the rain of your land in his
+due season, the first rain and the latter rain, that thou mayest
+gather in thy corn, thy wine and thine oil. . . . Take heed to
+yourselves that your heart be not deceived, and ye turn aside,
+and serve other gods, and worship them; and the Lord’s wrath will
+be kindled against you and He shut up the heavens, that there be
+no rain and that the land yield not her fruit; and lest ye perish
+quickly from off the good land which the Lord giveth you. (Deut.
+xi: 14-17.)</p>
+<p class="pn">The first rain came upon the seed placed into the
+ground, while the latter rain was necessary to ripen the fruit.
+Israel’s sin, unbelief, disobedience and apostacy have shut the
+heavens and keep them shut so that there is no rain and the land
+is a wilderness, waste and desolate. An abundance of rain is
+promised to them when Jehovah appears again. Much of late has
+been said that Palestine becomes fruitful once more. It is said
+that the statistics show that during the last years the rainfall
+has increased by so many inches. This statement is denied by
+others. Some believers make much of this rainfall and think that
+it is a sign of His coming, an indication that God’s favor is
+being restored to the land. This is incorrect. The abundance of
+rain, the latter rain, is not promised for the land at this
+present time, but it will come after the great tribulation, and
+is closely connected with the manifestation of the Lord from
+heaven in the clouds. The fruitfulness as it is seen now in the
+land—by no means general, but only in spots—is brought about
+mostly by artificial means, such as irrigation. During the great
+tribulation there will be no rain. (Rev. xi: 6.) Modern Zionism,
+in its God-dishonoring unbelief, with its immense resources of
+wealth and influence, may succeed in transforming the land of the
+Fathers. Indeed this is their scheme—building railroads, channels
+for irrigation, factories, mines, institutions of learning, etc.
+But the great tribulation will sweep it all away once more, and
+disaster will come swiftly when the plan of a Jewish Kingdom,
+without Him who is the King of the Jews, seems to be realized. It
+is not for the believer to look now for the promised latter rain.
+All this looking for signs has a tendency to foster the idea that
+the church will pass through the tribulation. If that were the
+case we might well look to the signs around us and look (as some
+believers do) where Antichrist is to come from.</p>
+<p class="pn">The latter rain stands in connection with the
+Lord’s manifestation for Israel. Let us know, follow on to know
+Jehovah: like the morning His coming is sure, and He shall come
+like the rain for us, like the latter rain watering the earth.
+(Hosea vi: 3.) O ye children of Zion, rejoice and be glad in
+Jehovah your God; He gives you the former rain in a just measure,
+and sends you in showers the early and the latter rain as in
+times of old. (Joel ii: 23.) It is time to seek Jehovah, until He
+come to rain righteousness upon you. (Hosea x: 12.) But the
+latter rain is also a type of spiritual blessings. It includes
+all the blessed promises in spiritual things, and especially does
+it stand for the full harvest which comes in after the heaven is
+opened and that great outpouring of the Spirit takes place. (Joel
+ii: 28.) It is unscriptural to expect now in this time such a
+latter rain, just as it is unscriptural to expect now the rain
+upon the land of Israel. How many prayers there are now in
+Christendom, well meant undoubtedly; prayers for the outpouring
+of the Holy Spirit, prayers for a new Pentecost, even prayers for
+the outward manifestations; all these prayers have no scriptural
+foundation, and cannot be answered now in the dispensation in
+which we live. There will be the latter rain, the outpouring of
+the Spirit upon all flesh; but it stands in connection with the
+day of the Lord and with God’s earthly people.</p>
+<p class="pn">Truly, as the beginning of Zechariah x. has it, in
+the time of the latter rain there will be prayer for it, but the
+prayer does not come from the lips of church-saints, but it comes
+from the lips of the Jewish remnant. The assurance is given that
+Jehovah will send the showers of rain, and before they come He
+will create the lightning. The lightnings stand for His wrath and
+judgment, which will proceed before the showers of blessing. In
+His coming He will be like the lightning falling from the
+clouds.</p>
+<p class="pn">The second verse puts before us another picture.
+The apostacy of the nation and their idolatry are now brought
+before us. The original word for idols is teraphim, and these
+were household gods, which were consulted by them. Spiritism (or
+as it is also called Spiritualism), this awful delusion so strong
+in the last times, is not a new thing. We can trace it to the
+remotest ages, and the nations which are still in the darkness of
+heathendom still practice it. It is very powerful in India and in
+China, and upheld by the father of lies from where it springs.
+Israel knew it likewise, and was closely connected with its
+abominations. The teraphim were little figures which in some way
+by movements or mysterious noises gave an answer to questions.
+Men did then go about as sorcerers, and mediums had visions and
+dreams. Hearken not to your prophets, nor to your diviners, nor
+to your dreamers, nor to your enchanters, nor to your sorcerers,
+which speak unto you, saying, Ye shall not serve the King of
+Babylon. They prophesy a lie unto you. (Jer. xxvii: 9.) Let not
+your diviners that are in the midst of you deceive you. . . . I
+have not sent them, (Jer. xxii: 8, 9.) What an awful sin it was
+that Israel could thus join themselves to idols and practice the
+abominable things. Soon the punishment fell upon them and they
+were carried into captivity, as the second verse states.
+Therefore they have wandered like a flock, they are oppressed
+because there is no shepherd. Jehovah had been rejected by them,
+and in this rejection is seen the rejection which followed when
+they rejected the Son. Here Hosea iii: 4 is to be taken into
+consideration. The children of Israel shall abide many days (the
+dispersion in which they are now) without a king and without a
+prince, without a sacrifice and without an image, without an
+ephod and teraphim. The next verse speaks of their conversion in
+the latter days. During their dispersion they will have neither
+the old worship of Jehovah nor will they hold any longer to the
+teraphim and ask guidance of them. How truly it has all been
+fulfilled, However there is a word which the Lord spoke, which is
+here likewise to be mentioned. It is one of the many
+misunderstood passages in the New Testament. We find it in
+Matthew xii: 43-45. When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man,
+he walketh through dry places, seeking rest and findeth none.
+Then he saith I will return to my house from whence I came out;
+and when he has come he findeth it empty, swept and garnished.
+Then he goeth and taketh with himself seven other spirits more
+wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there, and the
+last state of that man is worse than the first. Even so shall it
+be unto this wicked generation. The unclean spirit of idolatry
+had left the nation after the return from the captivity, but
+there is in that wicked generation at last a return of the same
+evil spirit with seven others worse than the spirit of idolatry,
+and the last of that man (unbelieving Israel) is worse than the
+first. This seems to us is the true application of this passage.
+Israel is rapidly nearing the time when unclean spirits with
+idols will have control over them. He who comes in his own name,
+the false Messiah, the devil’s masterpiece with all his delusions
+and lying wonders, will be worshipped by them and the outcast
+demons will enter the house again. This is clearly seen in Zech.
+xiii: 2. It shall be in that day (after the nation has looked
+upon the pierced one), saith Jehovah of hosts, I will cut off the
+names of the idols from the land, and they shall be remembered no
+more; and also the prophets and the spirits of uncleanness will I
+cause to pass out of the land. A return to teraphim, sorcery,
+divination, etc., is already noticeable in our day. The
+superstitions of talmudical Judaism are many, and the modern
+revival of the ancient teraphim, in Spiritism, through mediums,
+tables, etc., finds not a few followers among the Jews. What will
+it be when the man of sin is in the earth? All the world will
+wonder after the beast.</p>
+<p class="pn">In verses 3-5 we see once more the events which
+belong to Israel’s future. Mention is made first of the House of
+Judah. Against the shepherds His anger is kindled, and the
+he-goats will be punished (false leaders of the people and their
+enemies.) Then Jehovah visits His flock, the house of Judah, and
+He will make them like His goodly horse in war. Like heroes they
+are treading down the foes. They fight successfully against the
+enemies, for Jehovah is once more with them and the day of
+vengeance has come, and the riders on horses are put to shame by
+them. The parables of Balaam tell us what Israel will be at last,
+and how like a young lion they will spring upon the prey. Even
+now in dispersion the Jew inspires terror and is feared by the
+nations. This fear, which produces anti-Semitism (so strong in
+our times), has a good reason, for they will soon be the head of
+the nations and no longer the tail.</p>
+<p class="pn">The words in the fourth verse, From him (Judah) the
+cornerstone, from him the nail. . . have been differently
+interpreted. The nail is in the oriental house a large pin, often
+very beautifully ornamented, and the most costly things are
+hanged thereupon. And I will fasten him as a nail in a sure place
+and he shall be for a glorious throne to his father’s house. And
+they shall hang upon him all the glory of his father’s house.
+(Isaiah xxii: 23, 24.) The Shemeth rabbah, a Jewish
+interpretation, says on this verse, this is King David; as it is
+said, the stone which the builders rejected is become the chief
+cornerstone. Some say it is spoken concerning the Lord, that He
+is the cornerstone and the nail. It refers to Him no doubt, but
+what is spoken of Him finds also a fulfillment in restored
+Israel. Thus Israel is yet to be the cornerstone upon which
+everything rests in the earth, and the nail upon which hangs the
+glory.</p>
+<p class="pn">The rest of the chapter speaks of restoration of
+the house of Judah and the house of Israel. The house of Judah
+will be strengthened, and the house of Joseph (the ten tribes)
+will be saved. Ephraim, standing likewise for the house of
+Israel, shall become like a hero, and their heart shall rejoice,
+and their sons shall see and rejoice, their heart shall exult in
+Jehovah. I will hiss to them and will gather them, for I have
+redeemed them, and they shall increase as they did increase. And
+I will sow them among many peoples, and in far countries they
+shall remember me, and with their children they shall live and
+return. (Verses 7-9.) Their bringing back will be from the land
+of Egypt and from Assyria. With it is the judgment of the
+nations; they will be cast down and the restored people shall
+walk in His name.</p>
+<p class="pn">The prophecy brings before us the old question
+concerning the ten tribes or the house of Israel. These tribes
+are generally called the “lost tribes,” and as such they have
+been found perhaps a hundred times by as many different persons.
+The North American Indians, the Afghans, the Nestorians, tribes
+in the interior of Africa as well as in China, and even the
+Hottentots of South Africa, have been declared to be the lost
+tribes. We believe that this looking for the lost tribes and to
+locate them is something against which the Holy Spirit warns when
+He declares, But avoid foolish questions and genealogies and
+contentions and striving about the law, for they are unprofitable
+and vain. (Titus iii: 9.) Neither give heed to fables and endless
+genealogies, which minister questions rather than godly edyfing
+which is in faith. (1 Tim: 1-4.) We think it wrong to go into
+such speculations on matters which the Lord purposely has hid in
+His Word. We would have nothing else to say on this topic were it
+not for a very strange teaching which has fascinated many minds
+and which has become very popular both in England and in America.
+We have reference to the so-called Anglo-Israel theory. According
+to this theory the lost tribes have been found in the Anglo-Saxon
+race, and that God has kept His promises made to the house of
+Israel and fulfilled them and fulfills them now in the two
+nations, America and England. It is a theory, and the Word of God
+is used to prove it. This may be done with any theory, and
+scripture twisted out of its place can be made to prove almost
+anything. Anglo-Israel is a delusion, and it is strange that so
+many believers have become infatuated with it and suffer
+consequently from it. The theory is based upon a very serious
+mistake in the exposition of the prophetic Word. All through
+prophecy we find promises which belong to the house of Israel
+(and to Judah likewise), the conflicts, the victories over their
+enemies, temporal blessings, etc. These promises are to be
+realized in the latter days. The phrase “latter days,” however,
+is misunderstood, and believed to be the days in which we live;
+while in fact the latter days are still future and have not yet
+been reached. Prophecies which are spoken concerning the future
+are looked upon as already fulfilled.</p>
+<p class="pn">In this way the ninth verse in our chapter is
+misunderstood, And I will sow them among the peoples, and in far
+countries they shall remember me, and with their children they
+shall live and return. This passage is often quoted in
+Anglo-Israel literature, and is always put down as being
+fulfilled in the Anglo-Saxon race. We claim that it has not yet
+been fulfilled, but will be fulfilled when the house of Judah has
+been restored, and they as well as the house of Israel are in the
+land and form one people, God’s earthly kingdom people. This is
+true of all the promises which Anglo-Israelism claims to have
+found a fulfillment.</p>
+<p class="pn">It is true they are now scattered among the nations
+and the Lord knows them and He knows where they are and in due
+time He will send hunters to hunt them out and fishers to fish
+them in (Jer. xvi: 16); and they will be brought back to the land
+upon horses and in chariots, etc. (Isaiah lxvi: 20.) After that
+they will be sown among the peoples. They are then in the far
+countries and increase as they did before and are a blessing to
+the nations and not a curse. Their seed shall be known among the
+Gentiles and their offspring among the people, all that see them
+shall acknowledge them that they are the seed which the Lord has
+blessed. (Isaiah lxi: 9.) Judah’s return will be from all
+directions, but according to the tenth verse Ephraim will be
+brought back from Egypt and Assyria. Anglo-Israel is a very poor
+Ishmael attempt to help God to keep His promises.</p>
+<p class="pn">When all this takes place the Lord will pass
+through the sea and there will be affliction. The Nile is
+mentioned, and in Assyria the pride will be brought down, no
+sceptre any longer in Egypt. Only then after this manifestation
+will they walk (Judah and Israel) in His name, and not
+before.</p>
+<h1><a name="XI" id="XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>Scenes of overthrow and slaughter.—The Shepherd
+with the two staves, Beauty and Bands.—He is rejected.—The thirty
+pieces of silver.—The foolish shepherd and his
+punishment.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">The eleventh chapter presents a very dark scene. So
+far we have seen that the prophet saw in visions and heard from
+the Lord nothing but blessings and mercies for Israel,
+restoration both national and spiritual, overthrow of all their
+enemies, destruction of the world powers, establishment of the
+theocracy and world conquest; but now the scene changes
+completely. That which precedes all these blessed events, the
+events for which indeed the earth and groaning creation is
+waiting, is now unfolded in all the terrible details, Israel’s
+apostacy and dreadful punishment on account of the rejection of
+the Shepherd, and instead of Him there is given a foolish
+shepherd.</p>
+<p class="pns">We will briefly review the entire chapter before
+taking up the study of it in details. The first three verses
+contain a sublime description of the visitation which was to come
+upon the land of Israel. In the fourth verse the nation is seen
+as a flock of slaughter, and the buyers who slaughter them are
+not guilty, and their sellers are getting rich by it. The
+inhabitants of the land are not spared; all is waste and there is
+no deliverance. In the seventh verse the reason of all this
+judgment is seen. The Prophet does a symbolic act. As a shepherd
+he represents the good Shepherd of Israel, the Messiah. He comes
+to save them from the terrible calamity, but he is rejected. The
+shepherd has two staves, Beauty and Bands. He breaks one first
+and asks his price, and they offer him the price of a slave,
+thirty pieces of silver, which he at the word of Jehovah casts
+from himself. The second staff is broken. Instead of the staves
+the Prophet takes the instruments of a foolish shepherd,
+undoubtedly weapons of destruction. They perish, they stray, they
+are wounded, they suffer and are devoured. At last the foolish
+shepherd is punished. This is a birdseye view of the chapter. We
+will consider the details under three divisions: The judgment
+upon the land and the slaughter of the flock; the cause of it.
+The Shepherd rejected and set aside. And in the third place the
+foolish shepherd.</p>
+<p class="pns"><i>I. The judgment upon the land, the temple, and
+the slaughter of the flock (verses 1-6).</i></p>
+<p class="p1">Open thy doors, Lebanon;</p>
+<p class="p1">Let the fire devour thy cedars.</p>
+<p class="p1">Howl, fir tree; for the cedar is fallen;</p>
+<p class="p1">Because the lofty ones are spoiled.</p>
+<p class="p1">Howl, oaks of Bashan,</p>
+<p class="p1">For the high forest is come down.</p>
+<p class="p1">A voice of the howling of the shepherds:</p>
+<p class="p1">For their glory is spoiled.</p>
+<p class="p1">A voice of the roaring of young lions,</p>
+<p class="p1s">For the pride of Jordan is spoiled.</p>
+<p class="pn">What an awful picture these three verses present to
+us, and how sublime the language! Everything is swept away by a
+mighty conflagration. It starts among the lofty cedars of
+Lebanon; the fir tree is its prey, and the oaks of Bashan as well
+as the high forest come down, and it ends at the Jordan. In the
+midst of it is heard the howling of the shepherds and the roaring
+of the young lions. We have in these three verses a description
+of the terrible and complete judgment which was to fall and which
+has fallen upon the land of Israel on account of their
+disobedience and wickedness. The destruction of the temple by
+fire is of course included in this scene of burning and
+devastation. Jewish interpretation sees especially in these
+verses the prophecy of the destruction of the temple in
+Jerusalem. The following is a quotation from the Talmudical tract
+Yoma. “Our Rabbis have learnt from tradition that forty years
+before the destruction of the temple the lot never used to fall
+to the right hand but to the left. The lamp of the evening light
+would not burn, and the doors of the temple used to open of their
+own accord, until Rabbi Yochanan, the son of Zakkai, rebuked
+them. He said to it, O Temple, Temple, why art thou terrifying
+thyself? I know well that thy end is to be destroyed, for already
+Zechariah, the son of Iddo, hath prophesied, <i>Open thy doors, O
+Lebanon, and let a fire consume thy cedars!”</i> As the time of
+Jerusalem’s overthrow and the devastation of the land drew
+nearer, after the rejection of the Lord Jesus Christ and His
+apostles, strange signs in heaven and earth were seen in
+Jerusalem and throughout the land. They were signs of warning of
+the coming doom, and must have had a special significance for the
+remnant of Jewish-Christians who still were in the doomed city.
+Josephus mentions a series of these signs: “A comet which had the
+appearance of a huge sword hang over the city for a whole year.
+While the people were assembled at the feast of unleavened bread,
+at the sixth hour of the night, a sudden bright light shone about
+the temple. On Pentecost, when the priests entered by night into
+the temple they said that they heard many voices proclaim, Let us
+depart hence. A certain Jew, the son of Ananus, began suddenly to
+cry in the temple: ‘A voice from the East and a voice from the
+West! A voice from the four winds! A voice against Jerusalem and
+against the Temple! A voice against the bridegrooms and the
+brides! A voice against the whole people!’ Day and night in the
+narrow streets he repeated this cry in a loud voice. He was
+severely beaten. He uttered neither shriek nor pain nor prayer
+for mercy, but raising his sad and broken voice he cried at every
+blow of the scourge, ‘Woe, woe to Jerusalem!’ For four years the
+son of Ananus paid no attention to anyone, and never spake
+excepting the same words, Woe to Jerusalem! He neither cursed
+anyone who struck him nor thanked anyone who gave him food, but
+continued to cry, ‘Woe, woe to the city and to the temple!’”
+(Milman’s History of the Jews, Vol. II.) The above event spoken
+of in the tract Yoma, which the pious Rabbi Yochanan thought to
+be in fulfillment of Zechariah xi:1, is also mentioned by
+Josephus. He says, “The eastern gate of the inner temple, which
+was of brass and very heavy, and had been with difficulty shut by
+twenty men, was seen to open by itself about the sixth hour of
+the night.”</p>
+<p class="pn">Once more Jerusalem is to be compassed about by
+armies and then there will be signs in earth and in the heavens.
+Earthquakes will shake the city, mountains will sink down and
+valleys will be exalted, the sun will be darkened and the moon
+turned into blood, fire and smoke will arise. The climax of it
+all will be the manifestation of the Lord who will overthrow
+Israel’s enemies.</p>
+<p class="pn">Other interpreters among the Jews declare that this
+prophecy speaks of the destruction of the temple.</p>
+<p class="pns">The correct interpretation is that it includes all
+the devastation of the land, the burning of the temple, the
+slaughter of the flock, the spoiling of the shepherds, the Jewish
+leaders and the complete overthrow of the land and of the people.
+How awful the fulfillment of the prophecy has been! The Lord’s
+voice full of tears cried, long after Zechariah’s mournful
+vision, “If thou hadst known, at least in this thy day, the
+things which belong to thy peace! but now they are hid from thine
+eyes. For the days shall come upon thee that thine enemies shall
+cast a trench about thee and compass thee round, and keep thee in
+on every side. And shall lay thee even with the ground, and thy
+children within thee, and they shall not leave in thee one stone
+upon another.” The measure was full. After terrible wars amongst
+themselves, the fire advanced in the direction from Lebanon, in
+the form of the Roman army full of vengeance, spreading ruin and
+misery wherever they went, till after a long and dreadful siege
+Jerusalem fell, the temple was burnt, and over a million human
+beings were slain. Not one stone was left upon another. Up to now
+this judgment has been the most appalling, the tribulation then,
+the greatest; but there is another tribulation coming of which
+the former destruction of Jerusalem is but a faint type, and that
+tribulation which is even now so close at hand will find a climax
+in the day of wrath, the day of vengeance of our God. The next
+three verses speak of the flock of slaughter and the last attempt
+divine love made to save the doomed nation. Zechariah is
+commanded to feed them.</p>
+<p class="p1">Thus saith Jehovah my God;</p>
+<p class="p1">Feed the flock of slaughter;</p>
+<p class="p1">Their possessors slay them and are not guilty:</p>
+<p class="p1">And they that sell them say,</p>
+<p class="p1">Blessed be Jehovah, for I am getting rich;</p>
+<p class="p1">Their own shepherds pity them not.</p>
+<p class="p1">I will no more pity the inhabitants of the land,
+saith Jehovah;</p>
+<p class="p1">I will deliver the men every one into his
+neighbor’s hands,</p>
+<p class="p1">And into the hand of his king:</p>
+<p class="p1">And they shall smite the land,</p>
+<p class="p1s">And out of their hand I will not deliver them.</p>
+<p class="pn">What a dreadful condition of the sheep of His
+pasture, the lost sheep of the house of Israel, God’s flock! Even
+so it was, strangers ruled over them, and they were their prey,
+getting rich on them and not guilty. Still worse their own
+shepherds, the civil and ecclesiastical rulers of the nation,
+spared them not. God had indeed given them up. Well may we stop
+and think for a moment of the apostacy of Christendom and its
+final overthrow and judgment so clearly seen in the book of
+Revelation. Even now the flock of slaughter is seen and all
+getting ripe for the day of wrath!</p>
+<p class="pns">The action of Zechariah by divine command, like
+the crowning of the high priest in the sixth chapter, is a
+typical one. Zechariah is a type of the good Shepherd of Israel,
+the Messiah. The disobedient nation, the flock of slaughter, had
+taken God’s servants and beat one and killed another and stoned
+another. When He sent servants more than the first, they did unto
+them in like manner (Matt. xxi: 35). After this came the last
+attempt of divine love. God sent His Son as a Shepherd to seek
+and feed the lost sheep. He was not accepted, but they rejected
+Him. We will consider this now in the second section.</p>
+<p class="pns"><i>II. The Shepherd set aside and rejected (verses
+7-14).</i></p>
+<p class="pn">“So I fed the flock of slaughter, verily the most
+miserable sheep. And I took to myself two staves; the one I
+called Beauty, the other I called Bands; and I fed the flock. And
+I cut off the three shepherds in one month; for my soul became
+impatient with them, and their soul also abhorred me. And I said,
+I will not feed you: the dying, let it die; and the cut off, let
+it be cut off; and the left over, let them devour each the flesh
+of the other. And I took my staff, Beauty, and cut it asunder,
+that I might break my covenant which I had made with all the
+peoples. And it was broken in that day, and thus the wretched of
+the flock who gave heed to me knew that this was the word of
+Jehovah. And I said unto them, If ye think good, give me my
+wages; and if not, forbear. So they weighed as my wages thirty
+pieces of silver. And Jehovah said to me, Throw it unto the
+potter; the goodly price at which I am valued of them. And I took
+the thirty pieces of silver, and threw them into the house of
+Jehovah, to the potter, Then I broke my second staff, Bands, that
+I break the brotherhood between Judah and Israel.”</p>
+<p class="pn">Much has been written on this difficult passage.
+The very first sentence in the paragraph speaks of divine love.
+He came, the mighty God, the everlasting Father, and Prince of
+Peace, in the likeness of man, as a servant and a gentle shepherd
+to feed the miserable ones. Looking at the multitudes who
+followed Him when He had come, He was moved with compassion, for
+they were distressed and scattered as sheep having no shepherd
+(Matt. ix: 36). True shepherds indeed they had not. Prophets sent
+by Jehovah had long before ceased to come, and those who ruled
+them were miserable leaders of the blind, concerning whom Jehovah
+spoke through Ezekiel, “Woe unto the shepherds of Israel that do
+feed themselves; should not the shepherds feed the sheep? You eat
+the fat and clothe yourselves with the wool, ye kill the
+fatlings, but ye feed not the sheep. The diseased have ye not
+strengthened, neither have ye healed that which was sick, neither
+have ye bound up that which was broken, neither have ye brought
+again that which was driven away, neither have ye sought that
+which was lost” (Ezekiel xxxiv: 3-5). But now Jehovah Himself has
+come to be their Shepherd, “Behold, I Myself, even I, will search
+for My sheep and find them out” (Ezekiel xxxiv: 11). And when He
+came and God was manifested in the flesh, He turned indeed to the
+most miserable of the sheep—the publicans and the outcasts,
+sinners and harlots, gathered around Him. The Prophet as the type
+of the good Shepherd has two staves. The one is called Beauty
+(marginal reading, graciousness). The second one is Bands. The
+Shepherd carries a staff to protect and guide His flock. In the
+second Psalm the returning Lord is seen shepherding the nations
+with a rod of iron, but here the two staves cannot mean
+instruments for correction, but they are the staves of comfort
+and love. God’s mercy and favor are clearly indicated in these
+two staves. The first one, Beauty, which is cut asunder first,
+and that before the wages of the Shepherd, the thirty pieces of
+silver, are given, stands no doubt for the gracious offer with
+which the King, preaching the kingdom, came among His people, to
+His own. He proclaimed that which prophets had spoken before,
+God’s mercy and love, long promised, now to be carried out. He
+Himself had come to redeem His people and deliver them from their
+mighty enemies as well as from the false leaders. But the offer,
+the kingdom preaching, is rejected, the staff, Beauty, is cut
+asunder, the covenant with the peoples (Amim in Hebrew), His own,
+is now broken. The kingdom is to be taken away and given to
+another nation. After the breaking of the staff, Beauty, there
+comes the giving of the wages, the thirty pieces of silver. The
+Shepherd who broke the staff is treated like a slave.</p>
+<p class="pn">The second staff in His hands, Bands, speaks of
+union, binding together, bringing into fellowship. It typifies
+the priestly side of the good Shepherd who died for the flock.
+This staff is broken after the thirty pieces were given for Him,
+and cast into the temple. They cried, Away with Him! we have no
+King save Caesar! Crucify Him! His blood be upon us and upon our
+children! The cross bears the superscription, This is Jesus of
+Nazareth, the King of the Jews, and from the lips of the rejected
+King and Shepherd there came the prayer for His people, Father,
+forgive them, for they know not what they do. The doom came not
+at once upon the nation. Once more the love of the Shepherd is
+preached to the miserable sheep, and the remission of sins
+offered in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, but it ends in
+rejection too; no bringing together into One followed. The
+foolish shepherd appears next, and after him the good Shepherd
+will appear again with His two staves, Beauty and Bands, kingdom
+and mercy, bringing and binding together. He will then be a
+Priest upon His throne. This interpretation is the most
+satisfactory one, and in harmony with the entire scope of
+Zechariah’s visions and prophecies.</p>
+<p class="pn">Who are the three shepherds to be cut off in one
+month by the Shepherd? Are they persons or not? Many answers have
+been given to these questions, and many theories have been
+advanced to solve the difficulty. It is not necessary to mention
+any of them. The three shepherds are not persons, but they stand
+for the three classes of rulers which governed Israel, and were
+in that sense shepherds. We read of these shepherds in Jeremiah
+ii: 8, priests, rulers, and prophets. The Lord likewise mentions
+them in Matthew xvi: 21, elders, chief priests and scribes. When
+He came He was indeed weary with them, and denounced their
+hypocrisies and wickedness. They in turn hated and abhorred Him,
+and conspired to put Him to death. The Lord Himself cut them off.
+He pronounced His woes and judgments upon them, but the judgment
+was not at once carried out. When Jerusalem was taken their rule
+came to an end and they were cut off.</p>
+<p class="pn">But there are mentioned the wretched of the flock
+that gave heed unto the Shepherd, and they knew that it was the
+word of Jehovah. These wretched ones are the faithful ones who
+followed the Shepherd, the small remnant. (Compare with chapter
+xiii: 7.) The others who rejected the King and the Shepherd were
+indeed not fed, but were dying and cut off.</p>
+<p class="pn">The wages of the good Shepherd, thirty pieces of
+silver, and these thrown into the house of Jehovah to the potter
+is to be considered next. Thirty pieces of silver was the price
+of a slave who had been killed. If the ox gore a manservant or a
+maidservant, the owner shall give unto their master thirty
+shekels of silver (Exodus xxi: 32). Oh, what unfathomable love!
+The Lord from heaven became like a slave. The love He looked for
+He found not. It was refused to Him, and instead He was insulted,
+mocked, and treated like a miserable slave. There was one of the
+twelve who was called Judas Iscariot. He went to the chief
+priests and said, What are you willing to give me, and I will
+deliver Him unto you? And they weighed unto him thirty pieces of
+silver (Matt. xxvi: 14). The money at the command of Jehovah is
+thrown away by the prophet with indignation, into the house of
+Jehovah, to the potter. Perhaps the prophet never knew the real
+significance of his act, but we know it from the New Testament.
+Then Judas which betrayed Him, when he saw that He was condemned,
+repented himself and brought back the thirty pieces of silver to
+the chief priests and elders, saying, I have sinned in that I
+betrayed innocent blood. But they said, What is this to us? See
+thou to it. And he cast down the pieces of silver into the
+sanctuary, and departed and hanged himself And the chief priests
+took the pieces of silver and said, It is not lawful to put them
+into the treasury since it is the price of blood. And they took
+counsel and bought with them the potters’ field to bury strangers
+in. Wherefore that field was called the field of blood unto this
+day. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremiah, the
+prophet, saying, And they took the thirty pieces of silver, the
+price of Him that was priced, whom certain of the children of
+Israel did price, and they gave them for the potters’ field, as
+the Lord appointed me (Matt. xxvii: 3-9). How striking the
+fulfillment. However, here is a difficulty. In Matthew it is
+stated that Jeremiah spoke the prophecy, and Zechariah’s name is
+not mentioned at all. How can this be explained?</p>
+<p class="pns">The prophecy certainly as it was fulfilled was not
+given by Jeremiah at all, but through Zechariah. There can be
+doubt that his name should appear here instead of Jeremiah, but
+that Jeremiah’s name is quoted must have a meaning. Rotherham in
+his translation of the New Testament makes a foot note in which
+he says, “Zech. xi: 12, 13: Perhaps as included in a scroll
+headed by Jeremiah.” But this is not satisfactory. The question
+would be if there is anything in Jeremiah which could have a
+connection with the typical action of Zechariah. There is a
+similar action in Jeremiah, which, as a whole, speaks of the same
+event which Zech. xi: 13 has, and which is seen in fulfillment in
+Matt. xxvii. Read in Jeremiah the eighteenth and nineteenth
+chapters. The word “<i>Topheth</i>” in Jeremiah means an unclean
+place, a burial ground. It seems as if Jeremiah’s name appears
+here so as to call attention to the fact that the prophet spoke
+of the event likewise, and that Zech. xi. and Jer. xviii. and
+xix. must be compared and read together.</p>
+<p class="pns"><i>III. The foolish shepherd (verses
+15-17).</i></p>
+<p class="pn">And Jehovah said to me, Take unto thee again the
+instruments of a foolish shepherd. For, behold, I raise up a
+shepherd in the land; the perishing he will not visit, the
+scattered ones he will not seek for, the wounded he will not
+heal, the strong he will not feed, but he shall eat the flesh of
+the fat, and their hoofs he will break off. Woe to the worthless
+shepherd that leaveth the flock! The sword upon his arm and upon
+his right eye. His arm shall be utterly withered and his right
+eye completely blinded.</p>
+<p class="pn">The prophet now impersonates another shepherd, one
+who is foolish and wicked, and in his hands he does no longer
+hold the staves of Beauty and Bands, but the instruments of the
+foolish shepherd to wound and to hurt are in his possession. This
+foolish shepherd is the opposite from the good shepherd. He came
+to heal, to seek, to save, and to feed, but the foolish shepherd
+scatters, does not heal, nor does he feed the flock; but he eats
+the flesh of the fat. The description of this false shepherd is
+like the description of the shepherds in Ezek. xxxiv., as quoted
+before. Ezekiel’s prophecy concerning the gathering of the flock
+is future still, but before He gathers the lost and scattered
+sheep of Israel and brings them back to their land and gives them
+the one Shepherd and David His servant, there will be false
+shepherds. The true One rejected, the nation becomes the prey of
+the foolish shepherds. Poor, blinded Israel! How many wicked
+shepherds they have had, and how often the prey of wicked
+leaders. False Messiahs appeared among them again and again to
+find strong and numerous following. Still the foolish shepherd,
+the last one, the very embodiment of Satan himself; the accuser,
+has not yet come. Forerunners there have been many. Herod was one
+of them, but not that man of sin, the son of perdition who will
+appear and be worshiped as God, right before the King of kings
+and the true Shepherd of His flock appears to slay that wicked
+one with the breath of His mouth and by the brightness of His
+coming (2 Thess. ii.). The Lord said, I am come in My Father’s
+name, and ye receive Me not; if another shall come in his own
+name, him ye will receive (John v: 43). That one who comes in his
+own name has not yet come, and when at last he is here, it will
+be for Israel the time of greatest trouble and tribulation for
+all them that inhabit the earth. The third section of our chapter
+finds its complete fulfillment in the Antichrist, the false
+Messiah, the beast, the little horn, the leader of the enemy, the
+false prince of Israel; thus the foolish shepherd is called
+throughout the prophetic word. The dreadful punishment will be
+executed upon the foolish shepherd in the day of the Lord’s
+coming with His saints for the salvation of His people
+Israel.</p>
+<p class="pn">The eleventh chapter in Zechariah is the darkest in
+Israel’s history. The night began with their apostasy and
+rejection of the Lord of Glory, their own brother, their loving
+Shepherd, the Lord Jesus Christ. It ends in darkness greater
+still under the regime of the foolish shepherd. But the morning
+cometh after that dark night, and Israel’s sun will never set
+again.</p>
+<h1><a name="XII" id="XII">CHAPTER XII.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The second burden, from Chapter
+xii–xiv.—Jerusalem and the nations.—The conflict of the end.—The
+chiefs of Judah and the strength promised to the feeble.—Nations
+destroyed.—Outpouring of the Spirit and looking upon Jehovah, the
+pierced One.—The great national mourning.</i></p>
+<p class="pn">We have before us the second burden, which begins
+with the eleventh chapter and closes with the fourteenth. The
+events seen in the first burden, that is in chapters ix., x. and
+xi., were in part fulfilled, but in the second burden we find
+prophecies which have seen no fulfillment whatever; they are all
+future. There is only one prophecy which is fulfilled, the one of
+the smitten shepherd at the end of the thirteenth chapter. The
+great future events which are recorded in the second burden are:
+The victory of Jerusalem over the hostile nations, the outpouring
+of the Holy Spirit, the appearing and beholding of the pierced
+One, the national repentance of Israel, the cleansing of the
+nation, the final conflict and the Lord coming with His saints,
+the complete overthrow of the enemies and the establishment of
+the kingdom in the earth, with Jerusalem as a center. These three
+chapters form indeed a glorious finale to the wonderful visions
+and prophecies which Jehovah gave to the prophet. The fourteenth
+chapter is the summit.</p>
+<p class="pn">Not a few interpreters have committed the serious
+error and have tried to find a fulfillment of these chapters
+somewhere, and if no historical events could be made to suit the
+occasion, a spiritual application had to be made and a spiritual
+fulfillment in the so-called “Israel of the New Testament,” the
+church, invented, which of course never satisfies the prayerful
+student of the word.</p>
+<p class="pn">In reading the twelfth chapter carefully, it will
+be seen at once that here we have prophecies which not alone
+refer to Jerusalem and Judah exclusively, but which cannot yet
+have seen a fulfillment. The end of the chapter shows Israel’s
+conversion. The Spirit is poured out. They look upon the pierced
+One, Jehovah; repentance and cleansing follows throughout the
+land. This brings before us the hour of Israel’s salvation, the
+same which the Holy Spirit unfolds through Paul, in Romans xi. It
+is an event which will take place after the fullness of the
+Gentiles will have come in (the church removed from the earth).
+And so all Israel shall be saved; even as it is written, There
+shall come out of Zion a Deliverer; He shall turn away
+ungodliness from Jacob: And this is my covenant unto them, when I
+shall take away their sins (Rom. xi: 25- 37). There is no saved
+Israel now and there can be no national turning of Israel unto
+the Lord at this present time, but when the Lord comes and they
+shall look upon Him, that salvation will be at hand. This coming
+of the Lord to Israel when they shall see His glory will be
+preceded by nations rising against Jerusalem. Not one nation, but
+nations, will make war once more with Jerusalem; nor will
+Jerusalem in that future siege fall into the hands of the
+enemies, but the city and the people will be victorious. The
+period of the Maccabees is not meant, nor is there anything in
+the past which could even be a partial fulfillment of Zech. xii.
+It is all future.</p>
+<p class="pns">Let us look now at the details of the chapter.
+Thus saith the Lord, who stretcheth forth the heavens, and layeth
+the foundation of the earth, and formeth the spirit of man within
+him (verse 1). The speaker is Jehovah, the Almighty One who
+created the heavens and the earth, and who formeth the spirit of
+man within him. Why such a beginning of this second burden? To
+show that He who has given all these promises is able to do it.
+Men may fail and are powerless to give help. Indeed, Israel will
+be utterly helpless then when the enemy comes in like a flood,
+but in that hour of extremity Jehovah Himself, the Omnipotent
+One, the One through Whom and in Whom and for Whom heaven and
+earth were created, will come, and in His majestic appearing
+deliver Jerusalem and His people at last. But when He appears for
+their salvation and they look upon Him, they see Jehovah whom
+they pierced, Jehovah-Jesus, the One who was once rejected, but
+who now comes in power and in glory. This first verse shows the
+speaker in the entire chapter is Jehovah, and is one of the
+strongest Old Testament passages which show that the Redeemer,
+the One who came as an obedient servant to suffer and to die, is
+Jehovah.</p>
+<p class="p1">Behold, I make Jerusalem a cup of reeling</p>
+<p class="p1">To all the nations round about;</p>
+<p class="p1">Upon Judah also shall it be,</p>
+<p class="p1">In the siege against Jerusalem.</p>
+<p class="p1">And it shall come in that day, I make Jerusalem</p>
+<p class="p1">A burdensome stone for all the peoples:</p>
+<p class="p1">All that are burdened with it shall be wounded;</p>
+<p class="p1">All the nations of the earth shall gather against
+it.</p>
+<p class="p2s">(Verses 2 and 3.)</p>
+<p class="pn">This brings us back to the first and second night
+visions concerning the nations that are at ease, and thus helped
+forward their affliction, the four horns which scattered Judah
+and Israel. The ending three chapters bring out much of the
+details of what we saw in the first three chapters in an outline.
+What an unfolding there is now! Jehovah remembers Jerusalem and
+is jealous for her, and Jerusalem is now to become a cup of
+reeling (like a drunken man) unto all the nations round about.
+Isaiah long before Zechariah saw the judgment coming. The cup of
+fury which Jerusalem drank is now to be emptied by the enemies,
+and they will have to drink the cup of reeling. Awake, awake,
+stand up, O Jerusalem, which hast drunk from the hand of the Lord
+the cup of His fury; thou hast drunken the bowl of the cup of
+reeling and drained it . . . . Behold, I have taken out of thine
+hand the cup of reeling, even the bowl of the cup of My fury;
+thou shalt no more drink it again. And I will put it in the hand
+of them that afflict thee, which have said to thy soul, Bow down,
+that we may go over; and thou hast laid thy back as the ground,
+and as the street to them that go over (Isaiah ii: 17, 22, 23).
+What a wonderful harmony in the prophetic word! Jerusalem has
+been drinking all along the cup of reeling, the cup of His fury,
+even drained the cup; but while Jerusalem is thus drinking divine
+displeasure, the nations, and with them that awful monstrosity
+called Christendom, are getting ripe for the cup of wrath. A
+judgment is hastening rapidly, and Jerusalem will be for the
+nations the cup of reeling. We saw in the first night vision that
+the nations at ease were condemned by Jehovah. He is sore
+displeased with them. They have hurt His people and His
+inheritance. Terrible accusation against Christendom too, which
+has always been and is now the great stumbling block to the Jew,
+with its man-made institutions, creeds and self-exaltation. The
+reader will understand we do not mean the church, the one body;
+this is not applicable to true believers. Man-made Christendom is
+the enemy of Jerusalem, and hates God’s loving thoughts for the
+peace of Jerusalem. If there is blindness in part upon Israel, it
+is equally true that blindness is upon the Gentiles. There is
+planning and scheming for expansion, world reformation and
+possession in Christendom, which leaves out and ignores
+completely God’s purposes, and sets aside, as higher criticism
+does, the oracles of God. No thought in Christendom that Jehovah
+will ever make good His promises to the seed of Abraham,
+therefore no thought of the Jew, no love for poor Israel; on the
+other hand they are despised and hated. It is startling, indeed,
+to see how Europe, the territory of the Roman Empire, which will
+form yet the confederacy of kingdoms under one head, is at
+present boiling over with antisemitism, and the heart of Europe,
+France, is the very hotbed of it. There was never a time when
+antisemitism was so strong and so universal as it is now at the
+end of the much boasted of nineteenth century. What will it be
+when the salt of the earth, the church, is removed? The restraint
+is then taken away and the outbreak will come. The Jew is the
+thorn in the flesh of the nations; he is hated and feared.
+However, the second and third verses of our chapter do not speak
+of the enemies of Israel, as they are away from the land of
+Israel, but the prophecies show the nations having come up
+against the city of Jerusalem. Before this can be fulfilled
+Jerusalem must be once more not alone inhabited by Jews, but be
+the city of the nation again as it was in the past, a partial
+return of the Jews to Palestine must have taken place, and great
+prosperity resting upon their endeavors for a time. Mighty armies
+are seen then coming up against the city and the land, and while
+in the land and in the city there will be tribulation, the reign
+of the false Messiah, outside the armies sent out by the
+confederacy of nations will be gathered. It is of this gathering
+of the nations before Jerusalem in the tribulation the great, the
+twelfth chapter speaks. In the exegesis of the fourteenth chapter
+we will have occasion to describe this coming siege of
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p class="pns">In speaking of these coming events it is necessary
+to bear in mind that they have nothing to do with the church.
+Believers sometimes are confused in this respect in not holding
+strictly to the coming of the Lord for His saints, and the
+absence of the church in the earth during the tribulation, and
+after this—His coming with His saints. Because the Jews are not
+yet in possession of the land and Jerusalem is not yet a Jewish
+city, some have reasoned that the coming of our Lord must be a
+good ways off yet, and on account of these events not being seen
+now, they say we cannot say that the Lord can come any moment for
+His church. There is not one scripture which teaches that before
+the Lord comes for His church the Jews must have returned or
+Jerusalem be a national headquarter for Israel once more, etc. It
+is true a partial restoration of the Jews in unbelief has
+commenced, and there is a remarkable national awakening such as
+has never been before, but the full development of this
+restoration will come after the church has left the earth and has
+been joined to her Lord in the air. An exodus of Jews will take
+place, the land will become theirs, and the well laid plans and
+schemes of the present time will be all carried out. Political
+combinations will be their chief hopes as well as others for
+success. As Pharaoh of olden times did hasten after the children
+of Israel when they had left his domain, so it seems the nations
+will come after them and besiege Jerusalem. Everything is getting
+ready for this. Let every believer rejoice in the blessed hope
+that no saint will be in the earth when at last these sad scenes
+of a passing dispensation are enacted.</p>
+<p class="p1">In that day, saith Jehovah,</p>
+<p class="p1">I will smite every horse with astonishment,</p>
+<p class="p1">And his rider with madness:</p>
+<p class="p1">I will open mine eyes upon the house of Judah,</p>
+<p class="p1">And every horse of the peoples I will smite with
+blindness,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the chiefs of Judah shall say in their
+heart,</p>
+<p class="p1">The inhabitants of Jerusalem are my strength,</p>
+<p class="p1">In Jehovah of hosts their God.</p>
+<p class="p1">In that day I will make the chiefs of Judah</p>
+<p class="p1">Like a pan of fire among wood,</p>
+<p class="p1">And as a torch of fire among sheaves;</p>
+<p class="p1">And they shall devour all the peoples round
+about,</p>
+<p class="p1">On the right hand and on the left;</p>
+<p class="p1">And Jerusalem shall dwell in her own place, even in
+Jerusalem</p>
+<p class="p2s">(verses 4-7).</p>
+<p class="pn">These verses are descriptive of the calamity which
+will befall the enemies of Israel. Jehovah will smite them. The
+stone falling from heaven will smite the image at its feet and
+will pulverize it. The enemies of Israel will suffer as complete
+a defeat and destruction as Pharaoh and his army in the Red Sea.
+In pride and blindness they had rushed on, and while pursuing
+Israel the face of the Lord looked out of the cloud and confused
+the Egyptian hosts, and the returning waters swept them all away,
+the horse and the rider and the chariots. It is but a faint type
+of what it will be when Jehovah will roar out of heaven, and His
+glory will appear. The slain of the Lord will then indeed be
+many. Judah and the chiefs will be used in that judgment. They
+shall be a devouring fire. The fourteenth chapter will lead us
+into a closer investigation.</p>
+<p class="pns">The following two verses speak of the order how
+the coming of Jehovah will save His waiting people.</p>
+<p class="p1">Jehovah shall save the tents of Judah first,</p>
+<p class="p1">That the glory of the house of David</p>
+<p class="p1">And the glory of the inhabitants of Jerusalem</p>
+<p class="p1">May not lift itself up over Judah.</p>
+<p class="p1">In that day shall the Lord defend the inhabitants
+of Jerusalem;</p>
+<p class="p1">And the feeble one among them in that day shall be
+as David;</p>
+<p class="p1">And the house of David shall be as God
+(Elohim),</p>
+<p class="p1">As the angel of Jehovah before them.</p>
+<p class="p1">And it shall come to pass in that day,</p>
+<p class="p1">That I will seek to destroy all the nations,</p>
+<p class="p1s">That came against Jerusalem (verses 7-9).</p>
+<p class="pn">Judah will inhabit the land and many will dwell in
+tents, while Jerusalem will be a strong and fortified city. The
+danger from the hostile armies will be the greatest with the
+dwellers in the tents. Accordingly, Jehovah will save the tents
+of Judah first. Jerusalem will come next. The purpose is that the
+house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem may not lift
+themselves up over Judah. The house of David is especially
+mentioned. We have not had David brought before the prophet in
+the night visions nor in the prophecies which followed, but here
+in the twelfth chapter the house of David is mentioned not less
+than five times, which is very significant. We have the glory of
+the house of David in verse seven, the strength of David and the
+supremacy of it in verse eight. The spirit of grace and
+supplication is given to the house of David, and the family of
+the house of David will mourn. Jews have a tradition which states
+that the last descendant of the house of David died in Spain
+centuries ago. There are no genealogies at present to prove that
+the kingly house of David is extinct or not, but prophecies like
+the one we have in consideration, and many others which speak of
+the prominence of David and the house of David in the day when
+Jehovah will be manifested, make it very clear that among the
+wandering sons of Israel there are yet lineal descendants of the
+house of David. If they do not know it themselves, Jehovah knows
+it, and they will know it through Him. The feeble ones, literally
+the stumblers, among His people in that day of manifestation will
+be like David. What a hero David was! A man of war and strength
+conquering always and never conquered. And now the stumbler in
+Israel, the weakest one, will have strength and courage like
+David. And David shall be as God, as the angel of Jehovah before
+them. This is a startling promise. A similar word is found in
+Exodus vii: 1, And the Lord said unto Moses, See, I have made
+thee a god to Pharaoh; and Aaron thy brother shall be thy
+prophet. The house of David will during the millennium be supreme
+in rule and in glory. A lineal descendant of David, a prince,
+will sit upon the throne of his father David and rule as a
+vice-regent of the Lord Jesus Christ, whose throne is then in the
+heavens over the earth. Thus in the earth the house of David will
+be as God and as the angel of Jehovah before them (Ezek. xxxiv:
+23, 24; xlvi.).</p>
+<p class="pns">The closing verses of the chapter claim our
+special attention, for in them we have a fundamental prophetic
+passage. The spiritual side of the salvation of Jerusalem is now
+brought out.</p>
+<p class="p0">And I will pour out upon the house of David,</p>
+<p class="p0">And upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem,</p>
+<p class="p0">The spirit of grace and supplication;</p>
+<p class="p0">And they shall look upon Me whom they pierced,</p>
+<p class="p0">And they shall mourn for Him as the mourning for an
+only son,</p>
+<p class="p0">And be in bitterness for Him as one in bitterness
+for the firstborn.</p>
+<p class="p0">In that day there shall be a great mourning in
+Jerusalem,</p>
+<p class="p0s">As the mourning of Hadad-rimmon in the valley of
+Megiddon.</p>
+<p class="pn">The mourning then is described as a universal one.
+All the families will mourn; family by family apart, and their
+wives apart. Such a mourning and weeping has never before been
+seen in the earth nor will there be one like it again.</p>
+<p class="pn">But why mourning and weeping? Should there not
+rather be joy and feasting, gladness and hallelujahs? The
+hallelujahs will come during the entire millennium, but the
+beginning will be mourning, national, by Israel. The mourning is
+on account of Him, Jehovah, who has appeared in His glory and
+whom they now behold. The long expected Messiah has at last
+appeared, and He is Jehovah. His coming for their salvation is as
+Daniel saw Him, after the last beast, the terrible one, the
+nondescript with its ten horns and the little horn between, had
+risen from the sea. I saw in the night visions, and, behold,
+there came with the clouds of heaven, one like unto a Son of Man,
+and He came even unto the Ancient of days, and they brought Him
+near before Him. And there was given Him dominion, and glory, and
+a kingdom, that all the people, nations, and languages should
+serve Him; His dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall
+not pass away, and His kingdom that which shall not be destroyed
+(Daniel vii: 13, 14). A cloud appears in the heaven over
+Jerusalem. It is at once recognized as no common cloud, but as
+the divine glory cloud, (the Shekinah, which had been with Israel
+of old and was always the sign of Jehovah’s presence with His
+people). We can imagine in some measure how this sign will be
+welcomed by the remnant of Israel in the hour of their extremity
+when there is and cannot be help from man. The cloud speaks as of
+old, of divine interference. Our Lord puts the whole scene before
+us when He said in His Olivet discourse, But immediately after
+the tribulation of those days the sun shall be darkened, and the
+moon shall not give her light (what an awful darkness that will
+be! well may then the rejecters of the Gospel seek death from the
+wrath which is now coming), and the stars shall fall from heaven,
+and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken: and then shall
+appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven. Then shall all the
+tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of Man
+coming in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory. And
+He shall send forth His angels with a great sound of a trumpet,
+and they shall gather together His elect (not the church) from
+the four winds, from one end of heaven unto the other (Matthew
+xxiv: 29-31). The sign of the Son of Man which is spoken of here
+will undoubtedly be the cloud of glory which will bring Him from
+heaven to the earth. Some believers in the coming of the Lord
+have mentioned the sign of the Son of Man to be seen in the
+heaven as if that sign stood in relation to the church and would
+be welcomed by believers, the saved ones, as the sign that their
+redemption is now at hand. We read not long ago in a pamphlet in
+which certain coming signs in constellation of stars, etc., were
+mentioned, as being foretold in prophecy, and teaching the church
+that the coming of the Lord must be at hand. This is a mistake.
+There is nowhere in prophecy a sign mentioned appearing in the
+heaven to show the church that the Lord is at hand. The church,
+that is the one body, does not need such a sign. When the sign of
+the Son of Man appears in the heaven there will be no more church
+in the earth to see it. It will be “immediately after the
+tribulation of these days;” the church will not be in that
+tribulation. The sign is for Israel. Ezekiel beheld that glory
+which is then to be seen in the heavens. I looked, and, behold, a
+stormy wind came out of the north, a great cloud with a fire
+infolding itself, and a brightness round about it, and out of the
+midst thereof as the color of amber out of the midst of the fire.
+And out of the midst thereof came the likeness of four living
+creatures. . . . And above the firmament that was above their
+heads was the likeness of a throne, as the appearance of a
+sapphire stone; and upon the likeness of the throne was a
+likeness as the appearance of a man upon it above. And I saw as
+the color of amber, as the appearance of fire within it round
+about, from the appearance of his loins and upward, and from the
+appearance of his loins and downward, I saw as if it were the
+appearance of fire, and there was brightness round about him. As
+the appearance of the bow that is in the cloud in the day of
+rain, so was the appearance of the brightness round about. This
+was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord
+(Ezekiel i: 5, 26, 28). This vision will actually be seen by
+Israel in the day of the manifestation of the Lord. He will
+return in like manner upon a cloud as the glorified Son of Man as
+He went up into heaven. In Acts i: 11, where the promise of His
+return is given, it is likewise to be remarked that that promise
+does not present the Hope of the church, our blessed Hope, as
+believers. It is very often used as speaking of that Hope which
+is so dear to every believer’s heart. However, the promise given
+by the two men in white apparel, in Acts i., is a promise to
+Israel. It is the coming in like manner as He went into heaven,
+that is the coming of the Lord with His saints and not for His
+saints. There is still another passage which is in close
+connection with the appearing of Jehovah, the pierced One, in
+Zechariah xii., namely, Revelation i: 7, Behold He comes with the
+clouds, and every eye shall see Him, and they which have pierced
+Him and all the tribes of the land shall wail because of Him.
+Yea. Amen. This passage corresponds with the one before us in
+Zechariah. The tribes in Revelation are the same as mentioned in
+Zechariah, and the wailing in Revelation stands for the mourning
+with which the twelfth chapter in Zechariah closes. What a scene
+that will be when at last Israel will look upon Him! When the
+signs of His coming,—the coming of the Redeemer—Jehovah increase,
+and His coming for their salvation draweth nigh, perhaps their
+hearts will be gladdened, and there will be rejoicing. They see
+the sign in the heavens and there will be the glad shout, Blessed
+is He that cometh in the name of Jehovah, this is our God, we
+have waited for Him. And now they behold a person upon that
+cloud. He is a Son of Man. Again they look and they see that His
+hands and His feet and His side are pierced. Who can this be with
+pierced hands, feet and side, who cometh thus in power and glory
+from the heavens to save His people? The truth so long denied by
+them flashes upon them, This is Jesus of Nazareth, the King of
+the Jews, the rejected One, the One who suffered that shameful
+death on yonder hill, whose hands and feet were pierced, and from
+whose loving side and heart the Roman spear drew forth blood and
+water. Jehovah-Jesus, the pierced One, is seen again. There way
+up in the heavens He is seen! Sun and moon have been darkened, as
+we quoted above from Matthew xxiv., but instead of their light
+there flashes another light over the heavens. The veil is lifted.
+God, Jehovah, has broken the long, long silence. He speaks again.
+The proud nations tremble, fear and trembling seize hold upon all
+the children of men. The day of vengeance, the day of wrath, the
+day of burning and recompense is at hand. All eyes are turned
+upward to behold that startling vision. The cloud, and in that
+cloud a throne, and upon the throne the Lamb of God, the Lion of
+the tribe of Judah, Jehovah, the pierced One, the Lord Jesus
+Christ. Not alone are His eyes like a flaming fire, but according
+to Habakkuk’s vision (Habukkuk iii.), His glory covereth the
+heavens, brightness is round about Him and rays (of glory) come
+out of His hands and His side, and there was the hiding of His
+power. Long, long ago David had by the Spirit of the Lord entered
+into the sufferings of his Son, whom he called Lord, and in the
+Psalm which begins with the cry of the forsaken One, My God, My
+God, why has Thou forsaken Me? he speaks of His hands and His
+feet pierced. It is true that the unbelieving Jews and all the
+enemies of a verbal inspiration of the word of God, higher
+critics, etc., with them, have tried to change the word “pierced”
+in the twenty-second Psalm, and make something else out of it.
+But it is pierced and will be so in all eternity. The One of whom
+David spoke came and was rejected, suffered, sacrificed Himself
+to put away sin, was nailed on the cross, and was pierced
+through. On the third day He was raised from the dead, and for
+forty days He showed Himself in His glorified body to His
+friends. In that body of the risen Lord the nailprints and the
+pierced side were seen. Thomas, unbelieving as he was, and as
+such a type of Israel abiding in unbelief still, would not
+believe the testimony of his brethren, and demanded the return of
+the Lord and to put his hands into His side and to see in His
+hands the prints of the nails. The second time the Lord appears,
+and Thomas is called to His side to touch His body, to see the
+nailprints. Convinced because he sees he cries out, My Lord and
+my God! And when He took His own to the mountain where He gave
+them His command and His blessing, when His loving hands were
+spread out in blessing, they all saw the marks of His passion in
+His hands and there in His side. And thus He went into heaven,
+and while you read this, dear friend, He is there in the Holy of
+Holiest, appearing now in the presence of God for us, the
+all-sufficient One. Can then there be a doubt that when He does
+appear again, the second time, to build the tabernacle of David
+which is fallen down, that these marks of His suffering will not
+be seen? They will be the marks for Israel. They will know Him by
+the nailprints as the One so long rejected and hated without a
+cause.</p>
+<p class="pn">The conversion of Saul of Tarsus is a little sample
+of what is yet to be with the seed of Abraham. The light which
+shone around this blinded, self-righteous Pharisee on his way to
+Damascus, a light brighter than the Oriental noonday sun, will
+then shine out of heaven in the Lord’s own glory. The Voice which
+spoke to him, I am Jesus whom thou persecutest, will speak again
+out of that light to the prostrated nation. It does likewise
+remind us of the rejected brother who became great and a saviour
+after his rejection by his own, and who in loving words said to
+his brethren, so guilty and conscience stricken, I am Joseph your
+brother. What a wonderful event that will be when at last they
+that pierced Him shall behold Him. Suspended somewhere in the air
+will be seen the vision of the Lord in His glory, and thus every
+eye shall see Him. It will be the day when a nation is born. The
+Spirit poured out, they will look upon Him, and the great
+national mourning follows.</p>
+<p class="pn">This great mourning will be like the mourning in
+Hadad-rimmon in the valley Megiddon. To what events do these
+places refer? The second book of Chronicles, chapter xxxv.,
+verses 22-37, give us the history of that great mourning.
+Nevertheless, Josiah would not turn his face from him (the King
+of Egypt), but disguised himself, that he might fight with him,
+and hearkened not unto the words of Neco, from the mouth of God
+(these words are found in the twenty-first verse), and came to
+fight in the valley of Megiddon. And the archers shot at King
+Josiah; and the King said to his servants, Have me away, I am
+sore wounded. So his servants took him out of the chariot and put
+him into the second chariot that he had and brought him to
+Jerusalem; and he died and was buried in the sepulchres of his
+fathers. And all Judah and Jerusalem mourned for Josiah. And
+Jeremiah lamented for Josiah, and all the singing men and singing
+women spake of Josiah in their lamentations unto this day; and
+they made them an ordinance in Israel, and behold they are
+written in the Lamentations. Likewise in 2 Kings xxiii: 29. In
+Josiah’s days Pharaoh-Neco, King of Egypt, went up against the
+King of Assyria to the river Euphrates, and King Josiah went
+against him; and he slew him at Megiddon when he had seen him.
+And his servants carried him in a chariot dead from Megiddon and
+brought him to Jerusalem.</p>
+<p class="pn">Hadad-rimmon was a village nearby in the valley of
+Megiddon. The pious King Josiah died, pierced by an arrow on
+account of the evil deeds of the nation. After his death there
+was a great mourning because he had been slain, and his death was
+soon followed by greater calamities, ending with the Babylonian
+captivity. The application to the Lord Jesus Christ and the
+coming national mourning of the nation every reader can make for
+himself</p>
+<p class="pn">It is interesting to read the Jewish
+interpretations of this important chapter. We quote from the
+Babylonian Talmud: That mourning, what was it about? Rabbi Yose
+and the Rabbis differ on the point. The one says it is for
+Messiah, the Son of Joseph, when He is killed; and the other
+says, It is for the <i>Yetzer Horo</i> (evil desire, sin), when
+it is killed. All is clear in the case of him that says, It is
+for Messiah, the Son of Joseph, when He is killed, for then we
+can understand what is written, And they shall look upon Me whom
+they pierced, and they shall lament for Him (Zech. xii: 10). But
+in the case of him that says it is for sin when it is killed?
+Would it be mourning that is needed? Surely rejoicing would then
+be needed. Thus expounded, Rabbi Jehudah, of the Western house,
+in the Messianic times, the Holy One, blessed be He, is going to
+bring forth the evil desire and slay him in the presence of the
+righteous and the wicked. Unto the righteous the evil desire
+appears like a mountain, and unto the wicked he appears like a
+hair. The righteous weep and the wicked weep. The righteous say,
+How did we ever get the better of this high mountain? And the
+wicked say, How is it that we did not get the better of this
+hair? (Yalkut on Zechariah.)</p>
+<p class="pn">The Jews have invented a double Messiah, one who is
+called the Son of Joseph and the other the Son of David. The Son
+of Joseph is pierced, and after He has been slain, Jehovah will
+send Messiah, Son of David. It is not denied that the Son of
+Joseph is a Messiah, an anointed One. This teaching is to solve
+the difficulties they have in explaining the suffering Messiah
+and the victorious Messiah. We have often talked with orthodox
+Jews for hours on the fact that there is only one Messiah, and He
+whom they expect as Son of David is truly the One who died and
+was pierced through for our sins. Human words cannot describe the
+great mourning when at last it is known by His appearing in the
+clouds, that Jesus, the Son of David, is the once rejected stone
+and now become the head of the corner. The first verse of the
+thirteenth chapter belongs to the twelfth. However, we will leave
+it for the next chapter.</p>
+<h1><a name="XIII" id="XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The fountain against sin and uncleanness
+opened—Idols and false prophets destroyed—The smitten Shepherd
+and the sheep scattered—The Remnant saved—Two-thirds cut off and
+a third part refined by fire.</i></p>
+<p class="pns">As mentioned in the closing sentence of the
+exposition of the last chapter, the first verse of the 13th
+chapter belongs to the 12th chapter. The division of the Bible
+into chapters is very often at fault and helps much to obscure
+the real meaning. “In that day there shall be a fountain opened
+to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin
+and for Uncleanness.” That day will be the day when they have
+looked upon Him, Jehovah, the pierced One, and the fountain which
+is opened is the same blessed fountain of which the saints now
+sing:</p>
+<p class="p2">“There is a fountain filled with blood</p>
+<p class="p3">Drawn from Emanuel’s veins,</p>
+<p class="p2">And sinners plunged beneath that flood</p>
+<p class="p3s">Lose all their guilty stains.”</p>
+<p class="pns">The fountain was indeed in existence throughout
+all the long centuries of Israel’s dispersion. But Israel in
+blindness did not see it, only the remnant according to the
+election of grace did realize the precious blood of the Lamb of
+God, which has taken away the sins of the world. Now all is
+changed. Upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem and the house of David
+the Spirit is poured out. They have seen Him who is the
+first-born among many brethren, the second Adam, the One who is
+the Head of a new creation, and the blood of Him, the Lord Jesus
+Christ, is now cleansing them from all sin and uncleanness. Their
+guilt is pardoned and all unrighteousness and impurity is
+completely removed. This great event is everywhere spoken of in
+the Old Testament. We had it under consideration in the third
+chapter, containing the night vision of the cleansing of Joshua,
+the High priest. In that vision the blood which cleanses was not
+mentioned. Now, however, it is seen, that the cleansing is by the
+blood of the Lamb. It is the same precious blood which cleansed
+and washed the glorified saints. The great multitude, which no
+man can number, out of every nation and of all tribes and peoples
+and tongues; the saints arrayed in white robes with palms in
+their hands, who washed their robes in the blood of the Lamb, and
+who appear with Him. And while they sing their song of praise,
+Salvation unto our God which sitteth on the throne and unto the
+Lamb, Israel will be washed by the same blood and join into the
+song of worship heard from the glorified lips of the saints of
+God. In the 103d Psalm we have a prophetic expression of what
+Israel will rejoice in when that fountain is opened. The cleansed
+nation will break forth and sing:</p>
+<p class="p1">“Bless Jehovah, oh my soul,</p>
+<p class="p1">And all that is within me bless His holy name;</p>
+<p class="p1">Bless Jehovah, oh my soul, and forget not all His
+benefits.</p>
+<p class="p1">Who forgiveth all thine iniquities,</p>
+<p class="p1">Who healeth all thy diseases,</p>
+<p class="p1">Who reedeemeth thy life from destruction,</p>
+<p class="p1s">Who crowneth thee with lovingkindness and tender
+mercies.”</p>
+<p class="pn">The cleansing and healing of Israel in that day
+will be complete and final. No more going back to sin and
+apostasy after that. Now they are indeed a holy people, a kingdom
+of priests. Perfect healing is theirs, not alone in spiritual
+things, but also healing from their diseases. Jehovah is their
+healer the moment He, as the Sun of Righteousness with healing
+under His wings, has risen upon them. “And the inhabitant shall
+not say I am sick; the people that dwell therein shall be
+forgiven their iniquity” (Isa. xxxiii: 34). “Neither will I hide
+My face any more from them; for I have poured out My Spirit upon
+the house of Israel, saith the Lord God” (Ezekiel xxxix: 29).
+“And the Redeemer shall come out of Zion, and unto them that turn
+from transgression in Jacob, saith the Lord. And as for Me, this
+is My covenant with them, saith the Lord, My Spirit that is upon
+thee, and My words which I have put in thy mouth, shall not
+depart out of thy mouth, nor out of the mouth of thy seed, nor
+out of the mouth of thy seed’s seed, saith the Lord, from
+henceforth and forever” (Isa. lix: 20, 21). “For behold I create
+Jerusalem a rejoicing and her people a joy, and I will rejoice in
+Jerusalem and joy in My people, and the voice of weeping shall be
+no more heard in her nor the voice of crying” (Isa. lxv: 19).</p>
+<p class="pns">The cleansing of His people is followed by the
+cutting off of the names of the idols from the land of Israel.
+The false prophets who were indwelt by the spirit of uncleanness
+are destroyed. It is the consequence of the outpouring of the
+Spirit upon Israel. The entire paragraph beginning the 13th
+chapter speaks of this:</p>
+<p class="p1">“And it shall be in that day, saith the Lord of
+Hosts,</p>
+<p class="p1">I will cut off the names of the idols from the
+land,</p>
+<p class="p1">And they shall no more be remembered;</p>
+<p class="p1">And also I will cause the prophets and the unclean
+spirits</p>
+<p class="p1">To pass out of the land.</p>
+<p class="p1">And it shall be if a man still prophesy,</p>
+<p class="p1">His father and his mother who begat him shall say
+to him,</p>
+<p class="p1">Thou shalt not live,</p>
+<p class="p1">For thou hast spoken a lie in the name of
+Jehovah;</p>
+<p class="p1">And his father and his mother who begat him</p>
+<p class="p1">Shall pierce him through when he prophesieth.</p>
+<p class="p1">And it shall be in that day the prophets shall be
+ashamed</p>
+<p class="p1">Each of his vision when he prophesies;</p>
+<p class="p1">And shall no more put on a hairy mantle to lie,</p>
+<p class="p1">And shall say I am no prophet, I am a tiller of the
+ground,</p>
+<p class="p1">For a man has sold me from my youth.</p>
+<p class="p1">And one shall say to him</p>
+<p class="p1">What are these wounds between thine hands?</p>
+<p class="p1">And he shall answer, those with which I was
+wounded</p>
+<p class="p1s">In the house of my lovers” (verses 2 to 6).</p>
+<p class="pn">We have seen before in the 10th chapter that Israel
+will return to idolatry in the last days. The unclean spirit of
+idolatry which was cast out will at last return with seven others
+and will find the house empty, swept and garnished. And the evil
+spirit, with the seven others more evil than himself; will enter
+in and dwell there, so that the last state of Israel becometh
+worse than the first. This will happen to this evil generation.
+This section of the 13th chapter makes it very clear that when
+the fountain is opened against sin and uncleanness, that idols
+will have been in the land, and false prophets prophesy there
+immediately before the manifestation of the Lord from heaven; for
+how could the names of the idols be cut off from the land if
+there were none there? Palestine may well be put down now as the
+great centre of false worship. Greek and Latin crosses are seen
+on all sides in Jerusalem and other places, while saints, holy
+houses and places are worshipped and adored. On the spot where
+the Lord’s house stood, there stands to-day the mosque of the
+false prophet. All is idolatry. Of course when the Lord returns
+these false temples will be destroyed, and the Greek and Latin
+idolatries, as well as Islam, will forever pass out of existence.
+There will be a purging of the land from these abominations. This
+may be included in the prophecy here. Still, it is the people of
+Israel who are especially concerned in the prophecy before us.
+The land has often been the scene of idol worship, and the people
+engaged in that which Jehovah despises. It will be so again, only
+in a much worse form, when false prophets who are inspired by the
+unclean spirit, and demons themselves will be their guides.</p>
+<p class="pn">We must look to Revelation for a key. It is well
+known to all students of the prophetic word that all which comes
+after the third chapter in the last book of the Bible is future
+still. We are yet in the things which are present. When the Lord
+has taken the Church to Himself then the great visions,
+tribulations, wrath and judgment will be fulfilled. Aside from
+the scenes in heaven we learn from Revelation the events in the
+earth during the great tribulation which ends with the wrath from
+heaven.</p>
+<p class="pn">Now in the 9th chapter and the 20th verse of
+Revelation we read, And the rest of mankind which were not killed
+with these plagues repented not of the works of their hands that
+they should not worship demons and the idols of gold, and of
+silver, and of brass, and of stone, and of wood; which can
+neither see nor hear nor walk. Scripture is to be explained by
+scripture. The Holy Spirit declares through Paul the very same
+when he writes in 1 Timothy iv: 1, “But the Spirit says expressly
+that in the latter times some shall fall away from the faith,
+giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of devils through
+the hypocrisy of men that speak lies branded in their own
+conscience as with a hot iron.” For this cause God shall send
+them strong delusions that they should believe a lie, that they
+all might be damned which believed not the truth, but have
+pleasure in unrighteousness (2 Thess. ii: 11, 12).</p>
+<p class="pn">These words have not yet been fulfilled, nor has
+the time come. Truly there are many indications around us.
+Doctrines of demons are seen in more than one respect. Mysterious
+influences are felt in the earth. The hindering power, the Holy
+Spirit, is still present, and He is keeping back the full
+manifestation of evil (2 Thess. ii: 7). But when at last He has
+gone, in the removal of the body, then darkness indeed will cover
+the earth. The unclean spirits, and who can count their numbers,
+will be thrown out of heaven into the earth and take possession
+of mankind. The voice from heaven declares, Woe for the earth and
+for the sea, because the devil is gone down unto you, having
+great wrath, knowing that he hath but a short time (Rev. xii).
+When our Lord was in the earth preaching the kingdom of heaven He
+found many persons in the possession of demons, evil spirits, who
+had complete control of them, and He cast them out. Some cried
+out in terror, demanding to know if He had come to torment them
+before the time. They knew Him as the One who would at last send
+them to their final doom. But when He comes again in His glory
+from heaven, conditions will be a great deal worse. Satan and his
+hosts will be in the earth, having deceived the inhabitants of
+the earth, and seducing with lying wonders and strong delusions
+those who would not believe the truth, and lead them back to idol
+worship and to the carnal abominations connected with such a
+worship. Spiritualism, Christian Science, Buddhism in the very
+midst of Christendom, as well as the sect of devil worshipers in
+Paris, London, and Berlin, are but faint samples of the gross
+darkness which will be when the Church has been removed. There is
+no human mind which can imagine the condition of things during
+that time of tribulation, nor is there a pen which could describe
+the delusions and wickedness which will then flourish for a short
+time in this world.</p>
+<p class="pns">What praises, then, should be in the hearts of the
+Saints for having escaped that tribulation and the wrath to come.
+No, the Lord will never leave His Church in the earth when Satan
+and his demons have control. The presence of the Church in the
+earth makes it impossible that these days can come. But while
+this will be true in the earth generally, the land of Israel will
+be the center of that great storm, and there the false worship,
+idolatry, will be established. It is to be remembered that a part
+of the nation will have been restored to the land in unbelief,
+and will rebuild a temple, which is the fourth temple. Sacrifices
+are brought again, but they are an abomination, and the Lord
+hates them. The 66th chapter of Isaiah in its beginning speaks of
+this fact. We have to turn once more to the book of Revelation to
+find there a commentary. In the first quotation from the book we
+learned of the conditions in the earth in a general sense, but
+when we read the 13th chapter we find ourselves on Jewish ground,
+in Jerusalem. In that chapter we read of the worship of one who
+is termed the dragon, and this dragon gives power to a beast, who
+is likewise worshiped. And there was given him a mouth speaking
+great things and blasphemies; and there was given him authority
+to continue forty and two months (verse 5). . . And all that
+dwell on the earth shall worship him, everyone whose name hath
+not been written in the book of life of the Lamb that hath been
+slain from the foundation of the world . . . (8th verse). After
+this we read in the 11th verse of a second beast. And I saw
+another beast coming up out of the earth; and he had two horns
+like unto a lamb, and he spake as a dragon. And he exerciseth all
+the authority of the first beast in his sight, and he maketh the
+earth and them that dwell therein to worship the first beast,
+whose deadly wound was healed. And he doeth great signs, that he
+should even make fire come down out of heaven upon the earth in
+sight of men. An image of the beast is made. And he deceiveth
+them that dwell on the earth by reason of the signs which it was
+given him to do in the sight of the beast; saying to them that
+dwell on the earth, that they should make an image to the beast,
+which hath the stroke of the <i>sword</i> and lived. And it was
+given unto him to give breath to it, even to the image of the
+beast, that the image of the beast should both speak, and cause
+that as many as should not worship the image of the beast should
+be killed (14th and 15th verses). We see here a trinity revealed.
+The first is the dragon, the second the beast, and after that
+beast, which is called the first beast, the other, or the second
+beast. The dragon is the father of lies, the devil, the first
+beast is his son, the Antichrist, and the second beast is the
+evil spirit, which causes the dwellers in the earth to worship
+the beast. It is the trinity of evil as it is yet to be seen in
+the earth, and worshipped by those who rejected the Father, the
+Son, and the Holy Spirit. This beast is the false Messiah. The
+one of whom we read in 2 Thes. ii. The son of perdition, he that
+upholdeth and exalteth himself against all that is called God, or
+that is worshipped; so that he sitteth in the temple of God,
+setting himself forth as God. Now this is the great abomination
+of the great tribulation. The 13th chapter of Revelation speaks,
+as we have seen, of Antichrist having received a deadly wound by
+a sword, but he lived. It was a miracle that he lived. The dragon
+gave him power to overcome it. But not alone does he raise up the
+beast again from death, but he imparts life to the image of
+Antichrist, which is to be worshipped, so that it could speak,
+and all who refuse to worship the image are to be killed.
+Antichrist is a perfect counterfeit of the true Christ. The devil
+will then place him before the world as a substitute of Christ.
+The wound of the beast was made perhaps by those who pretended to
+love him. With the light from Rev. xiii, Zech. xiii becomes very
+plain, for the false prophets and idols mentioned in our chapter
+are connected with the winding up of this dispensation. The sixth
+verse does not speak of the Lord Jesus Christ. It is generally
+taken to be a Messianic prophecy and often quoted as such. The
+context, however, shows beyond a doubt that the person mentioned
+is the false prophet. And one shall say to him—the false
+prophet—What then are these wounds between thy hands? And he
+shall say, Those for which I was wounded in the house of my
+lovers. Nowhere is this prophecy quoted in the New Testament as
+being Messianic. Surely if it had any reference to the Lord, the
+Holy Spirit would have quoted it somewhere in the New Testament.
+We have here the description of the false shepherd, the
+Antichrist, the beast with the deadly wound. Of course there will
+be many false Messiahs in that day when Antichrist reigns. False
+messengers, lying prophets, with their delusions will go
+throughout the land and to the nations likewise. But when He
+appears whose right it is, Antichrist, all false prophets, and
+all the idols will be forever cut off and the land will be
+thoroughly cleansed of all these abominations. If it were
+possible that a man after this manifestation should still
+prophesy (speaking falsely, a lie in the name of Jehovah), his
+own father and mother would slay him for it. The true Shepherd is
+now seen once more in the closing of this chapter, and with him
+mention is made of the remnant.</p>
+<p class="p1">“Awake, O sword, against My shepherd,</p>
+<p class="p1">And against a man, My fellow, saith Jehovah of
+Hosts;</p>
+<p class="p1">Smite the shepherd and the sheep shall be
+scattered,</p>
+<p class="p1">And I will bring back My hand upon the little
+ones.</p>
+<p class="p1">And it shall be in all the land, saith Jehovah,</p>
+<p class="p1">Two parts therein shall be cut off and die,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the third shall be left therein.</p>
+<p class="p1">And I will bring the third part through the
+fire,</p>
+<p class="p1">And I will refine them as silver is refined,</p>
+<p class="p1">And will try them as gold is tried;</p>
+<p class="p1">He shall call upon My name and I will answer;</p>
+<p class="p1">I will say, It is My people,</p>
+<p class="p1s">And he shall say, Jehovah is my God.”</p>
+<p class="pn">The question comes to every student of the word,
+why is here an interruption in the events which we have followed
+and which are given chronologically? Why is there no continuation
+bringing out other phases of Israel’s salvation and the coming of
+the Lord? The change is very abrupt, and there is a going back to
+events which are the events of His first coming and His
+rejection. The solution of the difficulty would be almost
+impossible if we would interpret the sixth verse of the wounded
+one as referring to the Lord, the Messiah. But the fact that in
+the sixth verse we have the person of Antichrist answers the
+question which we have asked. The change and the interruption is
+made to show the contrast between the Good Shepherd and the false
+shepherd. The devil’s masterpiece had been in the earth; perhaps
+he pointed to his wounds in his hands and to the fact that he was
+dead and became alive again, and mockingly he spoke of Jesus of
+Nazareth and His claim of having been dead and now living. The
+true Shepherd has appeared. He too is pierced, but He was pierced
+for their sins, and to make the whole complete a new thought is
+brought out which has not been seen so far in Zechariah. It is
+the same as in Isaiah liii, the suffering One, who is a man, and
+called My fellow, the fellow of Jehovah of Hosts, Jehovah
+Himself; who speaks here, and what does He speak? The sword is to
+work against His Shepherd and against His own Fellow. The blessed
+mystery of the atonement is thus brought out. Indeed it is the
+heart of the Gospel here. For God so loved the world that He gave
+His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on Him should not
+perish but have life eternal. The Lord, laid on Him the iniquity
+of us all. It speaks of Him, the forsaken One, the Son of God,
+forsaken in the hour of His agony, the sword upon Him and against
+Him. In the New Testament we find the passage quoted in the
+Gospel of Matthew, 26th chapter and 13th verse: Then saith Jesus
+unto them, all ye shall be offended because of Me this night; for
+it is written, I will smite the Shepherd and the sheep of the
+flock shall be scattered abroad. In the last verses of the 13th
+chapter we have once more teachings concerning the remnant. These
+verses are not alone applicable to the remnant and the sheep in
+the time when our Lord was in the earth and immediately after he
+had suffered, they are not alone applicable to the remnant, which
+was in Jerusalem when the Roman armies came for destruction, but
+the application is to be made in connection with the people
+living in the land when Antichrist will reign, and the suffering
+of the remnant, the one-third, and the glorious privileges of
+that remnant are likewise future.</p>
+<h1><a name="XIV" id="XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a></h1>
+<p class="p0s"><i>The last conflict—Jerusalem surrounded by
+armies and besieged and taken—Jehovah’s intervention—The escape
+of the remnant—Living waters flowing out of Jerusalem—The enemies
+punished—The remnant of nations live as worshipers in
+Jerusalem—Jerusalem the holy city.</i></p>
+<p class="pns">The last chapter in Zechariah is a very important
+one. It is a grand summing up and description of the events which
+stand at the close of the great tribulation, and as such it is
+one of the most striking chapters in the Old Testament.
+Post-millennialism surely fails here in trying to find some
+explanation for these prophecies. The chapter is unfulfilled
+throughout. Anyone who does not acknowledge this has only one
+other way of interpretation, and that is to spiritualize the
+whole and make out of it the development of the Church, the
+holiness of the Church, etc. this, of course, is a failure and
+cannot be done. The only true way of interpretation is the
+literal one, and that will teach us that the events seen in this
+chapter are future. This ought to be seen by any reader of the
+Word of God at the first glance. There is no siege and capture of
+Jerusalem in history which corresponds to the siege and capture
+which stands in the beginning of this chapter. The Lord never
+intervened in behalf of Jerusalem in the way that it is said here
+in going forth and fighting against those nations, nor did His
+feet stand upon the Mount of Olives for the purpose of completely
+destroying the enemies of His people. The whole chapter is of
+such significance that we have to take it verse by verse and
+illustrate it by many scriptures taken from different parts of
+the prophetic word.</p>
+<p class="p1s"><i>Verse 1.</i> “Behold a day cometh for Jehovah
+when thy spoils shall be divided in the midst of thee.”</p>
+<p class="pns">The time when this prophecy will be enacted is
+here given. A day is coming for Jehovah. Now it is man’s day and
+God keeps silence, but His day, the day of Jehovah, is coming and
+will be a day of manifestation, glory, and power. “That day is a
+day of wrath, a day of trouble and distress, a day of wasteness
+and desolation, a day of darkness and gloominess, a day of clouds
+and thick darkness” (Zeph. i: 15). “Blow ye the trumpet in Zion
+and sound an alarm in my holy mountain; let all the inhabitants
+in the land tremble, for the day of Jehovah cometh, it is nigh at
+hand” (Joel ii: 1). “There shall be a day of the Lord upon all
+that is proud and haughty” (Isa. ii:4). The great tribulation is
+about past, and now when Jerusalem is not alone besieged but
+taken, the spoil being divided by the victors in the midst of the
+city, and when the enemy seems to have succeeded, then the day
+for Jehovah will come and He will roar out of the heavens.</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verse 2.</i> “I will gather all nations against
+Jerusalem for battle,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the city shall be taken, and the houses rifled,
+and the women shall be ravished,</p>
+<p class="p1">And half of the city shall go forth into
+captivity,</p>
+<p class="p1s">And the residue of the people shall not be cut
+off.”</p>
+<p class="pn">This puts before us the last scenes of the times of
+the Gentiles, the great conflict which in Daniel and other
+prophecies is likewise described. There are difficulties,
+especially in regard to Antichrist. If he is then in Jerusalem,
+and sitting in the temple, worshipped as God, having complete
+control of Jerusalem, how can he be the leader of the hostile
+armies of the nations which come against Jerusalem? It is nowhere
+said that Antichrist is to have this place in the temple for any
+length of time. We likewise do not know the exact time when he
+will thus be worshipped. He hears while away from the land of the
+appearing of the two witnesses in Jerusalem, their success in
+preaching, and that many Jews become believers in Him who is the
+Hope of Israel. He invades the land, takes the city, and slays
+the witnesses. The armies of the nations are associated with him.
+Daniel gives the history of these events. (Daniel xi.)</p>
+<p class="pn">The armies which gather against Jerusalem in that
+day are the armies of the confederation of nations, sprung out of
+the territory of the old Roman Empire. It was stated not long ago
+from post-millennial sides that this in itself was beyond belief.
+How could it be possible that the progress of civilization could
+be arrested to such an extent, that the nations of Christendom
+would unite to march up against the Holy City? The Gospel leaven
+(?) was at work as never before, and it would be impossible that
+these nations who will become more and more thus leavened could
+be occupied with such a campaign. This indeed is the thought of
+man, but the word of God speaks in an entirely different
+language. True the leaven is at work, but truth is not leaven,
+but leaven is evil. We must not forget that Jehovah Himself says,
+I will gather all nations against Jerusalem.</p>
+<p class="pn">Much reminds us here in chapter xiv of Egypt, and
+we shall have to refer a number of times to the story of Israel’s
+deliverance from the house of bondage. Pharaoh, though he had
+witnessed the judgments of God upon his own land, tribulation and
+wrath, yet he rushed on in blindness to his doom. So it will be
+once more with the antisemitic nations. Blinded they will be,
+though they have also witnessed tribulation and wrath. Perhaps
+special commercial and financial as well as political interests
+are at stake, and will be the causes of the campaign against the
+land and the city. Joel iii speaks of this gathering of nations:
+“Proclaim ye this among the nations; prepare war; stir up the
+mighty men; let all the men of war draw near; let them come up.
+Beat your plowshares into swords, and your pruninghooks into
+spears; let the weak say, I am strong. Haste ye, and come all ye
+nations round about, and gather yourselves together; thither
+cause Thy mighty ones to come down, O Lord. Let the nations
+bestir themselves, and come up to the valley of Jehosaphat, for
+there will I sit to judge all the nations round about. Put ye in
+the sickle, for the harvest is ripe; come, tread ye; for the
+winepress is full, the fats overflow; for their wickedness is
+great. Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of decision, for the
+day of the Lord is near in the valley of decision. The sun and
+the moon are darkened, and the stars withdraw their shining. And
+the Lord shall roar from Zion, and utter His voice from
+Jerusalem; and the heavens and the earth shall shake: but the
+Lord will be a refuge unto His people, and a stronghold to the
+children of Israel.”</p>
+<p class="pns">The twenty-fourth chapter of Matthew is to be
+considered in connection with the last chapter in Zechariah, for
+it relates to the same events. Some take Matthew xxiv as having
+been in part fulfilled, others as being now fulfilled. Both are
+incorrect. The chapter will be fulfilled after the church is
+taken from the earth to be with the Lord in the air. “Ye shall
+hear of wars and rumors of wars; see that ye be not troubled, for
+these things must needs come to pass; the end is not yet. For
+nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom;
+there shall be famines and earthquakes in divers places. But all
+these things are the beginning of trouble. Then shall they
+deliver you up unto tribulation and shall kill you, and ye shall
+be hated of all nations for My name’s sake.” . . . All this is
+predictive of the great tribulation. The twenty-fourth chapter of
+Matthew makes it clear that there will be a Jewish-Christian
+remnant—not church—in the land, and a testimony will be given by
+them. (See verse 14 and compare with Revelation xiv: 6, 7.)
+Neither Zechariah xiv nor Matthew xxiv has seen a fulfillment.
+Jerusalem has never been besieged by all nations, nor was only a
+part of the people destroyed in its last siege by Titus.</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verse 3.</i> “Then shall Jehovah go forth and
+fight against those nations,</p>
+<p class="p1s">As when He fought in the day of battle.”</p>
+<p class="pn">The hour of their extremity has come and this
+brings the intervention. The great tribulation in its beginning
+found a good part of the Jewish people restored in unbelief in
+the land. Jerusalem had become again a Jewish city, and a temple
+stands in the city. The tribulation ends with Jerusalem taken,
+ruin once more, terrible slaughter and suffering, and in the
+midst a remnant hopeful, waiting for salvation from above. When
+there seems to be no escape Jehovah will appear and fight against
+those nations. The heavens will be opened and Jehovah’s glory and
+power manifested. It will be as it was in the day of battle.</p>
+<p class="pns">“And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh, King
+of Egypt and he pursued after the children of Israel; for the
+children of Israel went out with an high hand. And the Egyptians
+pursued after them, all the horses and chariots of Pharoah and
+his horse-men, and his army overtook them encamping by the sea .
+. . And the children of Israel cried unto the Lord . . . And
+Moses said unto the people, Fear ye not, stand still, and see the
+salvation of the Lord, which He will work for you to-day . . .
+The Lord shall fight for you and ye shall hold your peace . . .
+And it came to pass in the morning watch that the Lord looked
+forth upon the host of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire
+and of cloud, and discomfited the host of the Egyptians. . . .
+The Lord overthrew the Egyptians in the midst of the sea. . . .
+There remained not so much as one of them.” (Exodus xiv.)
+“Hearken ye, all Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem, and thou
+King Jehosaphat, Thus saith the Lord unto you, Fear not ye,
+neither be ye dismayed by reason of this great multitude; for the
+battle is not yours, but God’s. Ye shall not fight in this
+battle, set yourselves, stand still, and see the salvation of the
+Lord with you” (2 Chronicles xx: 15-17). These are only two
+samples of what Jehovah will do in His day and how He will save
+His people. In Matthew xxiv we find the intervention in the
+twenty-seventh verse, “For as the lightning cometh forth from the
+east and is seen even unto the west, so shall be the coming of
+the Son of Man.”</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verse 4.</i> “And His feet shall stand in that
+day upon the Mount of Olives,</p>
+<p class="p1">Which is before Jerusalem on the east;</p>
+<p class="p1">And the Mount of Olives shall be parted in the
+middle,</p>
+<p class="p1">Toward the east and toward the west, a great
+valley,</p>
+<p class="p1">And half of the mountain shall be removed
+northward</p>
+<p class="p1s">And the other half southward.”</p>
+<p class="pns">The east, the place where the sun rises, is made
+prominent in this manifestation. From the east to the west the
+lightning flashes, thus shall be the coming of the Son of
+Man.</p>
+<p class="p1">“God cometh from Teman,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the holy One from Paran</p>
+<p class="p1">His splendor covereth the heavens,</p>
+<p class="p1s">And the earth is full of His glory” (Habbak.
+iii).</p>
+<p class="pns">Teman is the country of the sons of the east, and
+Paran the desert region extending from the frontiers of Judah to
+the borders of Sinai. But there towards the east from Jerusalem
+stands a mountain. It overlooks the whole city, and right in
+front, there is the valley of Jehosaphat, the valley where the
+nations are assembled (Joel iii). What a view from this mountain
+top! There is the city, and its burning ruins are seen, there are
+the camps of the nations, with their banners and cannons gathered
+now in fear and in trembling, for the heavens declare the glory
+of the Lord. Immediately after the tribulation of these days, the
+sun shall be darkened and the moon . . . and then shall appear
+the sign of the Son of Man in the heavens. And now He Himself has
+descended from the heavens. His blessed feet stand again upon the
+Mount of Olives. He stands upon the mountain, and perhaps on the
+very spot where He stood centuries, many centuries, before, after
+His passion and His resurrection when He blest His disciples and
+had been removed from them with outstretched arms. There stood
+the two heavenly visitors in that day with their message, “Ye men
+of Galilee, why stand ye here looking into heaven? This Jesus
+which was received up from you into heaven shall so come in like
+manner as ye beheld Him going into heaven.” A long, long time
+past. Has He forgotten His promise? No, the hour had not come.
+But men disbelieved the word of promise, I will come again. “And
+in the last days mockers came with mockery, walking after their
+own lusts, saying, Where is the promise of His coming? for from
+the days that the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as
+they were from the beginning of the creation” (2 Peter ii: 3, 4).
+But now the Lord has come. He, the Son of Man, in His glory, is
+seen plainly from the city and from the valley, and with Him the
+heavenly company, His saints. The moment His feet touch the Mount
+of Olives there is an earthquake which splits the mountain into
+two halves, and a great valley is formed between these two parts.
+“The mountains quake at Him, and the hills melt; and the earth is
+upheaved at His presence, yea, the world and all that dwell
+therein” (Nahum i: 5). As in the day of battle when the Egyptian
+hosts were destroyed and He divided the sea, thus will He divide
+the mountain and make a way for His trusting people,</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verse 5.</i> “And ye shall flee by the valley of
+My mountains,</p>
+<p class="p1">For the valley of the mountains shall reach unto
+Azal;</p>
+<p class="p1">Ye shall flee as you fled before the
+earthquake,</p>
+<p class="p1">In the days of Uzziah, King of Judah:</p>
+<p class="p1">And Jehovah my God shall come,</p>
+<p class="p1s">And all the saints with Thee!”</p>
+<p class="pn">The valley is the way by which the remnant will
+flee from the city. The earthquake is mentioned only in another
+passage in the prophets. Amos received the words of the Lord and
+the visions two years before the earthquake. The details of the
+earthquake are not mentioned. Perhaps the pious in the city, the
+Messiah-expecting Jews, hoped then that the Promised One would
+appear, and they fled from the city. It was during the reign of
+Uzziah (Jehovah is strength) that it happened.</p>
+<p class="pn">Jehovah who shall come refers us back to the fourth
+verse, where He stands upon the Mount. Here He is seen not alone
+in His manifestation, but His saints are with Him. It is an
+exclamation of joyous surprise, All the saints with Thee! There
+above the Mount of Olives a startling picture is seen. Countless
+human beings, glorified, gathered out of all languages, nations,
+tribes and countries, great and small, in white and shining
+robes, are seen flowing down from the opened heaven. What
+multitudes! No man can count them. What light and what glory!
+Brighter than the noonday sun. And, oh! what hallelujahs, what
+wonderful singing in joy and praise and adoration! When the
+shepherds were on the fields near Bethlehem they heard the
+angels’ song, but when He comes again there will be singing and
+rejoicing, grander still. Then it will be indeed, Glory to God in
+the highest, Peace on earth, good will towards men. The singing
+of the redeemed will be heard. The mighty angels will not be
+silent in their wake, and all the armies of heaven will escort
+the King of kings and Lord of lords upon white horses. What a
+scene in view of the places where He once suffered and died, and
+beheld by the nations and Israel!</p>
+<p class="pns">And every saint will share His glory then. Oh,
+wonderful grace for redeemed sinners, which lifts them up to such
+glory, to come with the Son of Man in His glory, and to share His
+throne. Why is there now so little praise with His own, His
+redeemed ones? Why so often coldness? Perhaps if we would gaze
+more into these visions of glory it would be different, and there
+would be not only praise but in all the wilderness experiences
+joy and patience, the patience of the Lord Jesus Christ. Thus He,
+our Lord, the Leader and Perfecter of faith, went through this
+life. “Who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross,
+despising shame, and hath sat down at the right hand of the
+throne of God.” And when the Lord comes with His saints the
+remnant of Israel leaving the city will not be silent. Their song
+will be, “Lo, He is our God; we have waited for Him; we will be
+glad and rejoice in His salvation. For in this mountain shall the
+hand of the Lord rest” (Isaiah xxv: 9).</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verses 6 and 7.</i> “And it shall come to pass
+in that day</p>
+<p class="p1">That the light shall not be with brightness and
+with gloom,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the day shall be One.</p>
+<p class="p1">It shall be known unto Jehovah.</p>
+<p class="p1">Not day and not night</p>
+<p class="p1s">And at evening time there shall be light.”</p>
+<p class="pns">Many different interpretations of these two verses
+have been attempted, most of them in spiritual teachings. The
+details of the coming manifestation, can hardly be now all
+understood. This seems to be clear in regard to the above that we
+have a prophetic description of the phenomena in nature, in the
+heavens in that day. The Septuagint translates, There shall not
+be light, but cold and ice. This translation is incorrect. That
+day will be a day of darkness, gloominess, followed by twilight
+and ending in the bursting forth of a new light. “Woe unto you
+that desire the day of the Lord! Wherefore would you have the day
+of the Lord? It is darkness and not light” (Amos v: 18). “And it
+shall come to pass in that day, saith the Lord God, that I will
+cause the sun to go down at noon, and I will darken the earth in
+a clear day” (Amos viii: 9). “The sun shall be turned into
+darkness and the moon into blood before the great and terrible
+day of the Lord come” (Joel ii: 34 ). It is the same as in
+Matthew xxiv, the darkening of the sun and moon, the falling of
+the stars. It will be one day, a peculiar day, such as has never
+been before. In the hour of His agony upon the cross there
+prevailed a darkness over Jerusalem and the land; the same will
+be the case in His manifestation and will inspire terror. At
+evening time the light will shine, the Son of Righteousness, now
+fully risen, with healing under his wings.</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verse 8.</i> “And it shall be in that day</p>
+<p class="p1">That living waters shall go out from Jerusalem,</p>
+<p class="p1">Half of them to the eastern sea</p>
+<p class="p1">And half of them to the western sea.</p>
+<p class="p1s">In summer and in winter shall it be.”</p>
+<p class="pns">Living waters flowing out from Jerusalem speak of
+the blessings which the Lord will give through the city and the
+inhabitants to the nations of the earth. Jerusalem established
+will indeed be a praise in the earth. The Holy Spirit has been
+poured out and living waters flow from the place which is the
+center of the world. The living waters will never stop flowing.
+It will be for summer and winter. What a fruitfulness there will
+follow. The whole earth will be fruitful then, not alone in
+nature but in spiritual things. “For as the earth bringeth forth
+her bud, and as the garden causeth the things that are sown in it
+to spring forth, so the Lord God will cause righteousness and
+praise to spring forth before all the nations. Out of Zion there
+shall go forth the law and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.
+The wilderness and the solitary place shall be glad, and the
+desert shall rejoice and blossom as a rose. It shall blossom
+abundantly and rejoice even with joy and singing; the glory of
+Lebanon shall be given unto it; the excellency of Carmel and
+Sharon; they shall see the glory of the Lord, the excellency of
+our God” . . . (Isaiah xxxv). “And he brought me back unto the
+door of the house (the millennial temple); and behold waters
+issued out from under the threshold of the house eastward, for
+the forefront of the house was toward the east; and the waters
+came down from under, from the right side of the house, on the
+south of the altar. Then brought he me out by the way of the gate
+northward, and led me round by the way without unto the outer
+gate by the way of the gate that looketh toward the east; and
+behold there ran out waters on the right side. . . . Now when I
+had returned, behold upon the bank of the river were very many
+trees on the one side and on the other. Then said he unto me,
+These waters issue forth toward the eastern region, and shall go
+down into Arabah, and they shall go toward the sea; into the sea
+shall the waters go which were made to issue forth, and the
+waters shall be healed” (Ezekiel xlvii). The waters flowing from
+the threshold of the house empty into the sea . . . representing
+the nations of the earth, and they receive healing and life.</p>
+<p class="p1s"><i>Verse 9.</i> “And Jehovah shall be King over
+all the earth. In that day shall Jehovah be one and His name
+one.”</p>
+<p class="pns">The true form of government is established.
+Jehovah is King. His throne is then established over the earth,
+and from that place He rules over all the nations in
+righteousness. The shepherd with the rod of iron and the saints
+share this rule, while in the earth Israel governs with a Prince
+of the house of David at their head. True unity has come. The
+shameful divisions of Christendom, the work of the enemy, the
+harvest of the flesh ended in a mock union of a Fatherhood of God
+and brotherhood of man. Man attempts now to bring about a unity
+of the race and unity in religions. He the glorified Head of His
+body and His blessed atonement is denied. True Christendom ends
+in a unity, under one head, but he is the Antichrist. In that day
+of His coming again in glory there will be His name One, and He
+will be known as the One God, and worshipped as such. Idolatry is
+abolished. The abominations connected with it have ceased. Satan,
+the seducer of the nations, is chained and seduces the nations no
+more. Confusion is forever ended. “Then will I return to the
+nations a pure language, that they may call upon the name of
+Jehovah, to serve Him with one consent” (Zeph. iii: 9).</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verse 10.</i> “All the land shall be changed
+like the plain</p>
+<p class="p1">From Geba to Rimmon, south of Jerusalem,</p>
+<p class="p1">And she shall be lifted up and dwell in her
+place,</p>
+<p class="p1">From Benjamin’s gate unto the gate of the first
+place,</p>
+<p class="p1">Unto the corner gate,</p>
+<p class="p1s">And from the tower of Hananeel unto the king’s
+wine presses.”</p>
+<p class="pns">It is of little profit to understand the exact
+location of the places mentioned in this verse; there is some
+difficulty in doing that. The prophecy shows that in that day
+when the Lord has appeared there will be a great change in the
+surface of Palestine. Everything will become a plain. Now it is a
+land of mountains and hills. But then the hills and mountains
+will be lowered and become a plain. Jerusalem, however, is lifted
+up, and is seen shining in her earthly splendor and in it the
+magnificent temple. In the midst of the millennial Jerusalem in
+the earth will be another high place, still higher than the city.
+It is the glorious Mount Zion. “But in the latter days it shall
+be that the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be established in
+the top of the mountains, and it shall be exalted above the
+hills” (Micah iv: 1). Upon this high place the glory will rest.
+Thus it will be seen and cover the earth as the waters cover the
+deep. “And the Lord will create over the whole habitation of
+Mount Zion and over her assemblies a cloud and smoke by day, and
+the shining of the flaming fire by night; for over all the glory
+shall be spread a canopy” (Isaiah iv: 5). From that high and
+glorious place in the earth the communications and intercourse
+between the heavenlies and the earth will perhaps take place, it
+will be the ladder upon which the angels of God ascend and
+descend upon the Son of Man.</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verse 11.</i> “And they shall dwell therein,</p>
+<p class="p1">And there shall be no more curse,</p>
+<p class="p1s">But Jerusalem shall dwell safely.”</p>
+<p class="pns">The happiness of the Jerusalem in the earth. The
+curse is entirely removed. While now Jerusalem is one of the most
+miserable places in the earth, desolate and forsaken, and during
+the tribulation it will be the place of misery, sin, and curse,
+it will become the most blessed place in the Millennium. The Lord
+will show forth there His great lovingkindness, and all the
+blessings we have reviewed in the visions of Zechariah will all
+be fulfilled. “There shall be no more thence an infant of days
+nor an old man that hath not filled his days; for the child shall
+die an hundred years old, and the sinner being an hundred years
+old shall be accursed. And they shall build houses and inhabit
+them, and they shall plant vineyards and eat the fruit thereof.
+They shall not build and another inhabit; they shall not plant
+and another eat; for as the days of a tree shall be the days of
+My people and My chosen people shall long enjoy the work of their
+hands. They shall not labor in vain, nor bring forth for
+calamity; for they are the seed of the blessed of the Lord and
+their offspring with them. And it shall come to pass that before
+they call I will answer, and while they are yet speaking I will
+hear. The wolf and the lamb shall feed together, and the lion
+shall eat straw like the ox, and dust shall be the serpent’s
+meat. They shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain,
+saith the Lord” (Isaiah lxv). But that wonderful city in the
+earth, the city of Jerusalem, in all her blessing, joy, peace,
+prosperity, praise, and worship, is but a faint type of that
+still more glorious Jerusalem which is then above. The new
+Jerusalem, our glorious home, dear reader (if you are in Christ),
+is then in the air, and at the end of the thousand years it will
+come down and find its eternal resting-place in the new
+earth.</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verses 12-15.</i> “And this shall be the
+plague</p>
+<p class="p1">With which Jehovah will smite all the nations</p>
+<p class="p1">That have warred against Jerusalem:</p>
+<p class="p1">His flesh shall consume away while they stand upon
+their feet,</p>
+<p class="p1">And their eyes shall consume away in their
+sockets,</p>
+<p class="p1">And their tongue shall consume away in their
+mouth.</p>
+<p class="p1">And it shall be in that day</p>
+<p class="p1">There shall be a great confusion among them from
+Jehovah,</p>
+<p class="p1">And they shall lay hold everyone on his neighbor’s
+hand,</p>
+<p class="p1">And his hand shall rise up against the hand of his
+neighbor,</p>
+<p class="p1">And Judah also shall fight at Jerusalem,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the wealth of all the nations round about shall
+be gathered,</p>
+<p class="p1">Gold, and silver and apparel in great
+abundance.</p>
+<p class="p1">And so shall be the plague of the horse,</p>
+<p class="p1">Of the mule, of the camel, and of the ass,</p>
+<p class="p1s">And of all the beasts that shall be in those camps
+as this plague.”</p>
+<p class="pn">This is the description of the dreadful punishment
+which will befall the enemies in that day. It is to be read in
+connection with the third verse, the Lord fighting against those
+nations, and the punishment will be upon them when He appears.
+Thus it is seen in Revelation xix. He appears, and after His
+appearing there is the scene of punishment of the enemies. “And I
+saw an angel standing in the sun; and he cried with a loud voice
+to all the birds that fly in mid heaven, Come and be gathered
+together unto the great supper of God; that ye may eat the flesh
+of kings, and the flesh of captains, and the flesh of mighty men,
+and the flesh of horses and them that sit thereon, and the flesh
+of all men, both free and bond and small and great” (Rev. xix:
+17, 18). What an awful judgment it will be! In Ezekiel we have
+likewise a description of it. It is however to be remarked that
+the vision of Ezekiel xxxviii and xxxix speaks of the judgment
+which will fall upon the rebels of the last revolt at the end of
+the thousand years. Still that second punishment is foreshadowed
+in the first. “And thou, Son of man, thus saith the Lord God,
+Speak unto the birds of every sort, and to every beast of the
+field, Assemble yourselves, and come; gather yourselves upon
+every side to my sacrifice that I do sacrifice for you, even a
+great sacrifice upon the mountains of Israel, that ye may eat
+flesh, and drink blood. Ye shall eat the flesh of the mighty, and
+drink the blood of the princes of the earth. . . . And ye shall
+be filled at my table with horses and chariots, with mighty men
+and all men of war, saith the Lord God” (Ezek. xxxix: 17-23).</p>
+<p class="pn">“And they shall go forth, and look upon the
+carcasses of the men that have transgressed against me; for their
+worm shall not die, neither shall their fire be quenched; and
+they shall be an abhorring unto all flesh” (Isa. lxvi: 24).</p>
+<p class="pns">How wonderful the prophetic Word is! What a
+harmony! How dare men who call themselves Christians deny its
+divinity and infallibility? The wealth of the nations belongs
+then again to Israel. The nations spoiled them, and now all the
+riches of the Gentiles become theirs. Even so it is now during
+their dispersion. The nations who persecuted and robbed the Jews
+during the middle ages have become the most miserable and
+impoverished, while the Lord has given greater riches to the
+Jews, and often drawn from the very countries who stole their
+goods. From Egypt of old they came forth laden with silver and
+gold. It will find a repetition, only on a grander scale, in the
+day of their restoration. Now in unbelief and in dispersion they
+are the richest of all nations. Oh! that the nations would now
+understand it—the nations called Christendom—that “they are
+laboring for the fire, and wearing themselves with vanity”
+(Habak. ii: 12), and that the wealth and glory accumulated by
+them will fall a prey to the Jews. “Ye shall eat the wealth of
+the nations, and to their glory shall ye succeed” (Isa. lxi:
+6).</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verse 16.</i> And it shall come to pass</p>
+<p class="p1">All that is left of the nations which came against
+Jerusalem</p>
+<p class="p1">Shall go up from year to year</p>
+<p class="p1">To worship the King, Jehovah of Hosts,</p>
+<p class="p1s">And to keep the feast of Tabernacles.</p>
+<p class="pns">Nations will be left after the tribulation and the
+wrath—this is clear from many passages of the Word. In the New
+Testament we have the statement made at the first council in
+Jerusalem. “Brethren, hearken unto me; Simeon hath rehearsed how
+God at first did visit the Gentiles, to take out of them a people
+for His name. And to this agree the words of the prophets; as it
+is written, After these things I will return, and I will build
+again the tabernacle of David, which is fallen; and I will build
+again the ruins thereof, and I will set it up; that the residue
+of men may seek after the Lord, and all the Gentiles, upon whom
+my name is called,” etc. (Acts iv: 15-18). Number one is the
+visitation of the Gentiles, a calling out of a people for His
+name, and we are still living in number one. Number two is His
+return, the building again and setting up of the tabernacle of
+David, which can only come after the calling out of a people is
+accomplished the fullness of the Gentiles come in; and number two
+and the events connected with it we have learned from the studies
+in Zechariah. Then follows number three, the residue of men
+seeking after the Lord. In verse 16, they that are left of the
+nations correspond with the residue of men in Acts iv. The temple
+will then stand in Jerusalem as the house of glory and a house of
+prayer for all nations. There will be a perfect worship, grand
+and glorious, and it will not be confined to Israel, but the
+nations will join in it. We may learn perhaps from this verse
+that the Lord will leave every year once His place on His throne
+over the earth and come down to Jerusalem and show Himself in His
+glory before the worshipping multitudes in the earth, as He is
+seen in the New Jerusalem above. The occasion is the feast of
+Tabernacles. It is the millennial feast. It is a feast kept in
+remembrance of Israel’s wanderings through the wilderness for
+forty years and all their subsequent wanderings. It stands also
+for the ingathering of the full harvest. A feast of joy, praise,
+and thanksgiving. The Jews keep it to the present day, though few
+know the full meaning of it. Every year when it comes again they
+read this 14th chapter of Zechariah. It is strange indeed. What a
+glorious feast that will be, kept there in Jerusalem, when the
+fullness at last has come! The fullness of the Gentiles has been
+gathered in, and is in the New Jerusalem; the fullness of Israel
+has come in the earth, and their receiving has been life from the
+dead, and the Gentiles know the glory of the Lord. Some find a
+difficulty here in the fact that it is stated that the nations,
+the residue of men, are to come up to Jerusalem, and the
+difficulty is that it will be impossible for all of them to do
+that. It is not at all necessary that every individual must go up
+to Jerusalem once in a year. Perhaps every nation will send
+representatives to the feast of Tabernacles, and they come in the
+name of the different nations and bring their presents. This
+seems to be indicated in the visit of the wise men from the East,
+who came to Bethlehem to worship the new-born King (Matthew ii).
+They brought gold, frankincense, and myrrh, In Isaiah lx: 6 we
+read of the coming of the Gentiles to Jerusalem when the Lord has
+come again. They shall come from Sheba; they shall bring gold and
+frankincense (the myrrh is left out here, for it speaks of
+suffering), and shall proclaim the praises of the Lord. As the
+wise men who came to Bethlehem were representatives of nations,
+so during the Millennium the nations will send delegations to the
+feast of Tabernacles. What a scene that must be! How crowded
+Jerusalem will be by those from Greenland and from the interior
+of Africa, from India and the islands of the sea, as well as from
+the nations which composed the Roman empire. The ends of the
+earth have seen the salvation of God, and now their praise is
+heard in the city and mingling with the psalms sung by His own
+redeemed people.</p>
+<p class="p1"><i>Verses 17-19.</i> And it shall be that whoso of
+all the families of the earth</p>
+<p class="p1">Shall not go up to Jerusalem</p>
+<p class="p1">To worship the King, Jehovah of Hosts,</p>
+<p class="p1">Upon them there shall be no rain.</p>
+<p class="p1">And if the family of Egypt go not up and come
+not,</p>
+<p class="p1">Upon them shall be none.</p>
+<p class="p1">There shall be the plague</p>
+<p class="p1">Wherewith Jehovah will smite the nations</p>
+<p class="p1">Which go not up to keep the feast of
+Tabernacles.</p>
+<p class="p1">This shall be the sin of Egypt,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the sin of all the nations</p>
+<p class="p1s">Which go not up to keep the feast of
+Tabernacles.</p>
+<p class="pn">This is the other side. All those who refuse will
+be punished, and the punishment will be very swift. From this and
+other prophecies it is seen that not everything will go so
+smoothly as it is generally believed during the Millennium. God’s
+messengers in that day will be the Jews going forth to proclaim
+the truth of God, and what preachers they will make! Still some
+will be forced to submit. The end of the thousand years brings a
+revolt from the side of the nations, which is not a small matter.
+“And when the thousand years are finished, Satan shall be loosed
+out of his prison, and shall come forth to deceive the nations
+which are in the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to
+gather them together to the war; the number of whom is as the
+sand of the sea” (Rev. xx: 7, 8).</p>
+<p class="pn">From this we see that many of the nations, Gog and
+Magog, are only too willing to side once more with the enemy, and
+to shake off, if it were possible, the yoke of the rule of
+Jehovah’s earthly people.</p>
+<p class="pns">The last two verses we have to consider make the
+whole prophecy perfect. It is the declaration that Jerusalem will
+be holy.</p>
+<p class="p1">In that day there shall be on the bells of the
+horses</p>
+<p class="p1">Holiness to Jehovah,</p>
+<p class="p1">And the pots in the house of Jehovah</p>
+<p class="p1">Shall be as the bowls before the altar.</p>
+<p class="p1">Every pot in Jerusalem and in Judah</p>
+<p class="p1">Shall be holy unto Jehovah of Hosts.</p>
+<p class="p1">And all they that sacrifice shall come</p>
+<p class="p1">And take of them and sacrifice therein,</p>
+<p class="p1">And there shall be no more Canaanite</p>
+<p class="p1s">In the house of Jehovah of Hosts in that day.</p>
+<p class="pn">The most holy person in Israel, the high-priest,
+carried the inscription, “Holiness to Jehovah” around his mitre,
+but now even the little bells of the horses bear that
+inscription. In that temple which stands during the Millennium
+sacrifices will be brought, but there will be no difference in
+the vessels, which are used in Jerusalem, the meanest and
+smallest will be holy. In one word all will be holy, all will be
+consecrated to Jehovah. What a perfect service that will be of
+the people which are then, in truth, a holy people. Application
+can be made of this to believers now. Surely everything the saint
+has, and his whole life, must be thus consecrated to Jehovah, to
+the Lord. No Canaanite will be there, nothing unclean. The
+Vulgate translates the word Canaanite with merchant. It stands,
+however, with everything that is unclean and an abomination. The
+city will be completely purged from it</p>
+<p class="pn">And of the new Jerusalem it is written, “There
+shall in no wise enter into it any thing unclean, or he that
+maketh an abomination and a lie; but only they that are written
+in the Lamb’s book of life. . . . Without are the dogs, and the
+sorcerers, and the fornicators, and the murderers, and the
+idolaters, and every one that loveth and maketh a lie.” (Rev.
+xxi: 27 and xxii: 15.)</p>
+<hr style="width:6em;margin-top:1.7em;margin-bottom:1.5em">
+<p class="pn">We have reached the end of the visions and burdens
+of Zechariah, the son of Iddo, the prophet, who, indeed, may be
+termed the Prophet of Glory. We praise our Lord for what He has
+taught us in these studies, and for His Spirit, who guides His
+children into all truth and shows us things to come. May he use
+this volume for the edification of the saints and for a better
+understanding of the words of prophecy. We are living on the very
+threshold of the fulfillment of all these visions and words. Soon
+He will come for His saints, and even now the Spirit groans
+within us. Even so, come, Lord Jesus. Amen.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Studies in Zechariah, by Arno C. Gaebelein
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+</pre>
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