THE PROPHET AND THE
REFORMERS
Zephaniah 1-Zephaniah 2:3
TOWARDS the year 625, when King Josiah had passed
out of his minority, and was making his first efforts at religious
reform, prophecy, long slumbering, woke again in Israel. Like the
king himself, its first heralds were men in their early youth. In
627 Jeremiah calls himself but a boy, and Zephaniah can hardly have
been out of his teens. For the sudden outbreak of these young lives
there must have been a large reservoir of patience and hope gathered
in the generation behind them. So Scripture itself testifies. To
Jeremiah it was said: "Before I formed thee in the belly I knew
thee, and before thou earnest forth out of the womb I consecrated
thee." {Jer 1:5} In an age when names were bestowed only because of
their significance, both prophets bore that of Jehovah in their own.
So did Jeremiah’s father, who was of the priests of Anathoth.
Zephaniah’s "forbears" are given for four generations, and with one
exception they also are called after Jehovah: "The Word of Jehovah
which came to Sephanyah, son of Kushi, son of Gedhalyah, son of
Amaryah, son of Hizkiyah, in the days of Joshiyahu, Amon’s son, king
of Judah." Zephaniah’s great-great-grandfather Hezekiah was in all
probability the king. His father’s name Kushi, or Ethiop, is
curious. If we are right, that Zephaniah was a young man towards
625, then Kushi must have been born towards 663, about the time of
the conflicts between Assyria and Egypt, and it is possible that, as
Manasseh and the predominant party in Judah so closely hung upon and
imitated Assyria, the adherents of Jehovah put their hope in Egypt,
whereof, it may be, this name Kushi is a token. The name Zephaniah
itself, meaning "Jehovah hath hidden," suggests the prophet’s birth
in the "killing-time" of Manasseh. There was at least one other
contemporary of the same name-a priest executed by Nebuchadrezzar.
Of the adherents of Jehovah, then, and probably of royal descent,
Zephaniah lived in Jerusalem. We descry him against her, almost a
clearly as we descry Isaiah. In the glare and smoke of the
conflagration which his vision sweeps across the world, only her
features stand out definite and particular: the flat roofs with men
and women bowing in the twilight to the host of heaven, the crowds
of priests, the nobles and their foreign fashions: the Fishgate, the
New or Second Town, where the rich lived, the heights to which
building had at last spread, and between them the hollow mortar,
with its markets, Phoenician merchants, and money-dealers. In the
first few verses of Zephaniah we see almost as much of Jerusalem as
in the whole book either of Isaiah or Jeremiah.
For so young a man the vision of Zephaniah may seem strangely dark
and final. Yet not otherwise was Isaiah’s inaugural vision, and as a
rule it is the young and not the old whose indignation is ardent and
unsparing. Zephaniah carries this temper to the extreme. There is no
great hope in his book, hardly any tenderness, and never a glimpse
of beauty. A townsman, Zephaniah has no eye for nature; not only is
no fair prospect described by him, he has not even a single metaphor
drawn from nature’s loveliness or peace. He is pitilessly true to
his great keynotes: "I will sweep, sweep from the face of the
ground; He will burn," burn up everything. No hotter book lies in
all the Old Testament. Neither dew nor grass nor tree nor any
blossom lives in it, but it is everywhere fire, smoke, and darkness,
drifting chaff, ruins, nettles, salt-pits, and owls and ravens
looking from the windows of desolate palaces. Nor does Zephaniah
foretell the restoration of nature in the end of the days. There is
no prospect of a redeemed and fruitful land, but only of a group of
battered and hardly saved characters: a few meek and righteous are
hidden from the fire and creep forth when it is over. Israel is left
"a poor and humble folk." No prophet is more true to the doctrine of
the remnant, or more resolutely refuses to modify it. Perhaps he
died young.
The full truth, however, is that Zephaniah, though he found his
material in the events of his own day, tears himself loose from
history altogether. To the earlier prophets the Day of the Lord, the
crisis of the world, is a definite point in history: full of
terrible, Divine events, yet "natural" ones - battle, siege, famine,
massacre, and captivity. After it history is still to flow on,
common days come back and Israel pursue their way as a nation. But
to Zephaniah the Day of the Lord begins to assume what we call the
"supernatural." The grim colors are still woven of war and siege,
but mixed with vague and solemn terrors from another sphere, by
which history appears to be swallowed up, and it is only with an
effort that the prophet thinks of a rally of Israel beyond. In
short, with Zephaniah the Day of the Lord tends to become the Last
Day. His book is the first tinging of prophecy with apocalypse: that
is the moment which it supplies in the history of Israel’s religion.
And, therefore, it was with a true instinct that the great Christian
singer of the Last Day took from Zephaniah his keynote. The "Dies
Irae, Dies Illa" of Thomas of Celano is but the Vulgate translation
of Zephaniah’s "A day of wrath is that day."
Nevertheless, though the first of apocalyptic writers, Zephaniah
does not allow himself the license of apocalypse. As he refuses to
imagine great glory for the righteous, so he does not dwell on the
terrors of the wicked. He is sober and restrained, a matter-of-fact
man, yet with power of imagination, who, amidst the vague horrors he
summons, delights in giving a sharp realistic impression. The Day of
the Lord, he says, what is it? "A strong man-there!-crying
bitterly."
It is to the fierce ardor, and to the elemental interests of the
book, that we owe the absence of two features of prophecy which are
so constant in the prophets of the eighth century. Firstly,
Zephaniah betrays no interest in the practical reforms which (if we
are right about the date) the young king, his contemporary, had
already started. There was a party of reform, the party had a
program, the program was drawn from the main principles of prophecy
and was designed to put these into practice. And Zephaniah was a
prophet and ignored them. This forms the dramatic interest of his
book. Here was a man of the same faith which kings, priests, and
statesmen were trying to realize in public life, in the assured
hope-as is plain from the temper of Deuteronomy-that the nation as a
whole would be reformed and become a very great nation, righteous
and victorious. All this he ignored, and gave his own vision of the
future: Israel is a brand plucked from the burning; a very few meek
and righteous are saved from the conflagration of a whole world.
Why? Because for Zephaniah the elements were loose, and when the
elements were loose what was the use of talking about reforms? The
Scythians were sweeping down upon Palestine, with enough of God’s
wrath in them to destroy a people still so full of idolatry as
Israel was; and if not the Scythians, then some other power in that
dark, rumbling North which had ever been so full of doom. Let Josiah
try to reform Israel, but it was neither Josiah’s nor Israel’s day
that was falling. It was the Day of the Lord, and when He came it
was neither to reform nor to build up Israel, but to make visitation
and to punish in His wrath for the unbelief and wickedness of which
the nation was still full.
An analogy to this dramatic opposition between prophet and reformer
may be found in our own century. At its crisis, in 1848, there were
many righteous men rich in hope and energy. The political
institutions of Europe were being rebuilt. In our own land there
were great measures for the relief of laboring children and women,
the organization of labor, and the just distribution of wealth. But
Carlyle that year held apart from them all, and, though a personal
friend of many of the reformers, counted their work hopeless:
society was too corrupt, the rudest forces were loose, "Niagara" was
near. Carlyle was proved wrong and the reformers right, but in the
analogous situation of Israel the reformers were wrong and the
prophet right. Josiah’s hope and daring were overthrown at Megiddo,
and, though the Scythians passed away, Zephaniah’s conviction of the
sin and doom of Israel was fulfilled, not forty years later, in the
fall of Jerusalem and the great Exile. Again, to the same elemental
interests, as we may call them, is due the absence from Zephaniah’s
pages of all the social and individual studies which form the charm
of other prophets. With one exception, there is no analysis of
character, no portrait, no satire. But the exception is worth
dwelling upon: it describes the temper equally abhorred by both
prophet and reformer-that of the indifferent and stagnant man. Here
we have a subtle and memorable picture of character, which is not
without its warnings for our own time.
Zephaniah heard God say: "And it shall be at that time that I will
search out Jerusalem with lights, and I will make visitation upon
the men who are become stagnant upon their lees, who say in their
hearts, Jehovah doeth no good and doeth no evil." The metaphor is
clear. New wine was left upon its lees only long enough to fix its
color and body. If not then drawn off it grew thick and
syrupy-sweeter indeed than the strained wine, and to the taste of
some more pleasant, but feeble and ready to decay. "To settle upon
one’s lees" became a proverb for sloth, indifference, and the muddy
mind. "Moab hath been at ease from his youth and hath settled upon
his lees, and hath not been emptied from vessel to vessel; therefore
his taste stands in him and his scent is not changed." {Jer 48:11}
The characters stigmatized by Zephaniah are also obvious. They were
a precipitate from the ferment of fifteen years back. Through the
cruel days of Manasseh and Amon hope had been stirred and strained,
emptied from vessel to vessel, and so had sprung, sparkling and
keen, into the new days of Josiah. But no miracle came, only ten
years of waiting for the king’s majority and five more of small,
tentative reforms. Nothing Divine happened. They were but the
ambiguous successes of a small party who had secured the king for
their principles. The court was still full of foreign fashions, and
idolatry was rank upon the housetops. Of course disappointment
ensued-disappointment and listlessness. The new security of life
became a temptation; persecution ceased, and religious men lived
again at ease. So numbers of eager and sparkling souls, who had been
in the front of the movement, fell away into a selfish and idle
obscurity.
The prophet hears God say, "I must search Jerusalem with lights" in
order to find them. They had "fallen from the van and the freemen";
they had "sunk to the rear and the slaves," where they wallowed in
the excuse that "Jehovah" Himself "would do nothing-neither good,"
therefore it is useless to attempt reform like Josiah and his party,
"nor evil," therefore Zephaniah’s prophecy of destruction is also
vain. Exactly the same temper was encountered by Mazzini in the
second stage of his career. Many of those who with him had eagerly
dreamt of a free Italy fell away when the first revolt failed-fell
away not merely into weariness and fear, but, as he emphasizes, into
the very two tempers which are described by Zephaniah, skepticism
and self-indulgence.
All this starts questions for ourselves. Here is evidently the same
public temper, which at all periods provokes alike the despair of
the reformer and the indignation of the prophet: the criminal apathy
of the well-to-do classes sunk in ease and religious indifference.
We have today the same mass of obscure, nameless persons, who oppose
their almost unconquerable inertia to every movement of reform, and
are the drag upon all vital and progressive religion. The great
causes of God and Humanity are not defeated by the hot assaults of
the Devil, but by the slow, crushing, glacier-like masses of
thousands and thousands of indifferent nobodies. God’s causes are
never destroyed by being blown up, but by being sat upon. It is not
the violent and anarchical whom we have to fear in the war for human
progress, but the slow, the staid, the respectable. And the danger
of these does not lie in their stupidity. Notwithstanding all their
religious profession, it lies in their real skepticism.
Respectability may be the precipitate of unbelief. Nay, it is that,
however religious its mask, wherever it is mere comfort,
decorousness, and conventionality; where, though it would abhor
articulately confessing that God does nothing, it virtually means
so- says so (as Zephaniah puts it) in its heart, by refusing to
share manifest opportunities of serving Him, and covers its sloth
and its fear by sneering that God is not with the great crusades of
freedom and purity to which it is summoned. In these ways,
respectability is the precipitate which unbelief naturally forms in
the selfish ease and stillness of so much of our middle-class life.
And that is what makes mere respectability so dangerous. Like the
unshaken, unstrained wine to which the prophet compares its obscure
and muddy comfort, it tends to decay. To some extent our respectable
classes are just the dregs and lees of our national life; like all
dregs, they are subject to corruption. A great sermon could be
preached on the putrescence of respectability-how the ignoble
comfort of our respectable classes and their indifference to holy
causes lead to sensuality, and poison the very institutions of the
home and the family, on which they pride themselves. A large amount
of the licentiousness of the present day is not that of outlaw and
disordered lives, but is bred from the settled ease and indifference
of many of our middle-class families.
It is perhaps the chief part of the sin of the obscure units, which
form these great masses of indifference, that they think they escape
notice and cover their individual responsibility. At all times many
have sought obscurity, not because they are humble, but because they
are slothful, cowardly, or indifferent. Obviously it is this temper
which is met by the words, "I will search out Jerusalem with
lights." None of us shall escape because we have said, "I will go
with the crowd," or "I am a common man and have no right to thrust
myself forward." We shall be followed and judged, each of us for his
or her personal attitude to the great movements of our time. These
things are not too high for us: they are our duty; and we cannot
escape our duty by slinking into the shadow.
For all this wickedness and indifference Zephaniah sees prepared the
Day of the Lord-near, hastening, and very terrible. It sweeps at
first in vague desolation and ruin of all things, but then takes the
outlines of a solemn slaughter-feast for which Jehovah has
consecrated the guests, the dim unnamed armies from the north. Judah
shall be invaded, and they that are at ease, who say "Jehovah does
nothing" shall be unsettled and routed. One vivid trait comes in
like a screech upon the hearts of a people unaccustomed for years to
war. "Hark, Jehovah’s Day!" cries the prophet. "A strong
man-there!-crying bitterly." From this flash upon the concrete he
returns to a great vague terror, in which earthly armies merge in
heavenly; battle, siege, storm, and darkness are mingled, and
destruction is spread abroad upon the whole earth. The first shades
of Apocalypse are upon us.
We may now take the full text of this strong and significant
prophecy. We have already given the title. Textual emendations and
other points are explained in footnotes.
"I will sweep, sweep away everything from the face of the ground
oracle of Jehovah-sweep man and beast, sweep the fowl of the heaven
and the fish of the sea, and I will bring to ruin the wicked and cut
off the men of wickedness from the ground- oracle of Jehovah. And I
will stretch forth My hand upon Judah; and upon all the inhabitants
of Jerusalem: and I will cut off from this place the remnant of the
Baal, the names of the priestlings with the priests, and them who
upon the housetops bow themselves to the host of heaven, and them
who swear by their Melech, and them who have turned from following
Jehovah, and who do not seek Jehovah nor have inquired of Him."
"Silence for the Lord Jehovah! For near is Jehovah’s Day. Jehovah
has prepared a slaughter, He has consecrated His guests."
"And it shall be in Jehovah’s day of slaughter that I will make
visitation upon the princes and the house of the king, and upon all
who array themselves in foreign raiment; and I will make visitation
upon all who leap over the threshold on that day, who fill their
lord’s house full of violence and fraud. "And on that day oracle of
Jehovah-there shall be a noise of crying from the Fishgate, and
wailing from the Mishneh, and great havoc on the Heights. Howl, O
dwellers in the Mortar, for undone are all the merchant folk, cut
off are all the money-dealers. "And in that time it shall be, that I
will search Jerusalem with lanterns, and make visitation upon the
men who are become stagnant upon their lees, who in their hearts
say, Jehovah doeth no good and doeth no evil. Their substance shall
be for spoil, and their houses for wasting "Near is the great Day of
Jehovah, near and very speedy. Hark, the Day of Jehovah! A strong
man-there!-crying bitterly A Day of wrath is that Day! Day of siege
and blockade, day of stress and distress, day of darkness and murk,
day of cloud and heavy mist, day of the war-horn and battle-roar, up
against the fenced cities and against the highest turrets! And I
will beleaguer men, and they shall walk like the blind, for they
have sinned against Jehovah; and poured out shall their blood be
like dust, and the flesh of them like dung. Even their silver, even
their gold shall "not avail to save them in the day of Jehovah’s
wrath, and in the fire of His zeal shall all the earth be devoured,
for destruction, yea, sudden collapse shall He make of all the,
inhabitants of the earth."
Upon this vision of absolute doom there follows a qualification for
the few meek and righteous. They may be hidden on the day of the
Lord’s anger; but even for them escape is only a possibility Note
the absence of all mention of the Divine mercy as the cause of
deliverance. Zephaniah has no gospel of that kind. The conditions of
escape are sternly ethical-meekness, the doing of justice and
righteousness. So austere is our prophet.
"O people unabashed! before that ye become as the drifting chaff
before the anger of Jehovah come upon you, before there come upon
you the day of Jehovah’s wrath; seek Jehovah, all ye meek of the
land who do His ordinance, seek righteousness, seek meekness,
peradventure ye may hide yourselves in the day of Jehovah’s wrath."
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