HAGGAI AND THE BUILDING OF
THE TEMPLE
Haggia1, 2
WE have seen that the most probable solution of
the problems presented to us by the inadequate and confused records
of the time is that a considerable number of Jewish exiles returned
from Jerusalem to Babylon about 537, upon the permission of Cyrus,
and that the Satrap whom he sent with them not only allowed them to
raise the altar on its ancient site, but himself laid for them the
foundation-stone of the Temple.
We have seen, too, why this attempt led to nothing, and we have
followed the Samaritan obstructions, the failure of the Persian
patronage, the drought and bad harvests, and all the disillusion of
the fifteen years which succeeded the Return. The hostility of the
Samaritans was entirely due to the refusal of the Jews to give them
a share in the construction of the Temple, and its virulence,
probably shown by preventing the Jews from procuring timber, seems
to have ceased when the Temple works were stopped. At least we find
no mention of it in our prophets; and the Jews are furnished with
enough of timber to panel and ceil their own houses. {Hag 1:4} But
the Jews must have feared a renewal of Samaritan attacks if they
resumed work on the Temple, and for the rest they were too sodden
with adversity, and too weighted with the care of their own
sustenance, to spring at higher interests. What immediately precedes
our prophets is a miserable story of barren seasons and little
income, money leaking fast away, and every man’s sordid heart
engrossed with his own household. Little wonder that critics have
been led to deny the great Return of sixteen years back, with its
grand ambitions for the Temple and glorious future of Israel. But
the like collapse has often been experienced in history when bands
of religious men, going forth, as they thought, to freedom and the
immediate erection of a holy commonwealth, have found their unity
wrecked and their enthusiasm dissipated by a few inclement seasons
on a barren and a hostile shore. Nature and their barbarous
fellowmen have frustrated what God had promised. Themselves,
accustomed from a high stage of civilization to plan still higher
social structures, are suddenly reduced to the primitive necessities
of tillage and defense against a savage foe. Statesmen, poets, and
idealists of sorts have to hoe the ground, quarry stones, and stay
up of nights to watch as sentinels.
Destitute of the comforts and resources with which they have grown
up, they live in constant battle with their bare and unsympathetic
environs. It is a familiar tale in history, and we read it with ease
in the case of Israel. The Jews enjoyed this advantage, that they
came not to a strange land, but to one crowded with inspiring
memories, and they had behind them the most glorious impetus of
prophecy which ever sent a people forward to the future. Yet the
very ardors of this hurried them past a due appreciation of the
difficulties they would have to encounter, and when they found
themselves on the stony soil of Judah, which they had been
idealizing for fifty years, and were further afflicted by barren
seasons, their hearts must have suffered an even more bitter
disillusion than has so frequently fallen to the lot of religious
emigrants to an absolutely new coast.
1. THE CALL TO BUILD
CHAPTER 1
It was to this situation, upon an autumn day,
when the colonists felt another year of beggarly effort behind them
and their wretched harvest had been brought home, that the prophet
Haggai addressed himself. With rare sense he confined his efforts to
the practical needs of the moment. The sneers of modern writers have
not been spared upon a style that is crabbed and jejune, and they
have esteemed this to be a collapse of the prophetic spirit, in
which Haggai ignored all the achievements of prophecy and
interpreted the word of God as only a call to hew wood and lay stone
upon stone. But the man felt what the moment needed, and that is the
supreme mark of the prophet. Set a prophet there, and what else
could a prophet have done? It would have been futile to rewaken
those most splendid voices of the past, which had in part bean the
reason of the people’s disappointment, and equally futile to
interpret the mission of the great world powers towards God’s
people. What God’s people themselves could do for themselves-that
was what needed telling at the moment; and if Haggai told it with a
meager and starved style, this also was in harmony with the
occasion. One does not expect it otherwise when hungry men speak to
each other of their duty.
Nor does Haggai deserve blame that he interpreted the duty as the
material building of the Temple. This was no mere ecclesiastical
function. Without the Temple the continuity of Israel’s religion
could not be maintained. An independent state, with the full courses
of civic life, was then impossible. The ethical spirit, the regard
for each other and God, could prevail over their material interests
in no other way than by common devotion to the worship of the God of
their fathers. In urging them to build the Temple from their own
unaided resources, in abstaining from all hopes of imperial
patronage, in making the business one, not of sentiment nor of
comfortable assurance derived from the past promises of God, but of
plain and hard duty-Haggai illustrated at once the sanity and the
spiritual essence of prophecy in Israel.
Professor Robertson Smith has contrasted the central importance
which Haggai attached to the Temple with the attitude of Isaiah and
Jeremiah, to whom" the religion of Israel and the holiness of
Jerusalem have little to do with the edifice of the Temple. The city
is holy because it is the seat of Jehovah’s sovereignty on earth,
exerted in His dealings with and for the state of Judah and the
kingdom of David."
At the same time it ought to be pointed out that even to Isaiah the
Temple was the dwelling-place of Jehovah, and if it had been lying
in ruins at his feet, as it was at Haggai’s there is little doubt he
would have been as earnest as Haggai in urging its reconstruction.
Nor did the Second Isaiah, who has as lofty an idea of the spiritual
destiny of the people as any other prophet, lay less emphasis upon
the cardinal importance of the Temple to their life, and upon the
certainty of its future glory.
"In the second year of Darius the king, in the sixth month and the
first day of the month"-that is, on the feast of the new moon-"the
word of Jehovah came by Haggai the prophet to Zerubbabel, son of
Shealtiel, Satrap of Judah, and to Jehoshua, son of Jehosadak, the
high priest"-the civil and religious heads of the community-as
follows:-
"Thus hath Jehovah of Hosts spoken, saying: This people have said,
Not yet is come the time for the building of Jehovah’s House.
Therefore Jehovah’s word is come by Haggai the prophet, saying: Is
it a time for you-you-to be dwelling in houses ceiled with planks,
while this House is waste? And now thus saith Jehovah of Hosts: Lay
to heart how things have gone with you. Ye sowed much but had little
income, ate and were not satisfied, drank and were not full, put on
clothing and there was no warmth, while he that earned wages has
earned them into a bag with holes."
"Thus saith Jehovah of Hosts: Go up into the mountain"-the
hill-country of Judah-"and bring in timber, and build the House,
that I may take pleasure in it, and show My glory, saith Jehovah. Ye
looked for much and it has turned out little, and what ye brought
home I puffed at. On account of what?-oracle of Jehovah of Hosts-on
account of My House which is waste, while ye are hurrying every man
after his own house. Therefore hath heaven shut off the dew, and
earth shut off her increase. And I have called drought upon the
earth, both upon the mountains, and upon the corn, and upon the
wine, and upon the oil, and upon what the ground brings forth, and
upon man, and upon beast, and upon all the labor of the hands."
For ourselves, Haggai’s appeal to the barren seasons and poverty of
the people as proof of God’s anger with their selfishness must raise
questions. But we have already seen, not only that natural
calamities were by the ancient world interpreted as the penal
instruments of the Deity, but that all through history they have had
a wonderful influence on the spirits of men, forcing them to search
their own hearts and to believe that Providence is conducted for
other ends than those of our physical prosperity. "Have not those
who have believed as Amos believed ever been the strong spirits of
our race, making the very disasters which crushed them to the earth
the tokens that God has great views about them?" Haggai, therefore,
takes no sordid view of Providence when he interprets the seasons,
from which his countrymen had suffered, as God’s anger upon their
selfishness and delay in building His House.
The straight appeal to the conscience of the Jews had an immediate
effect. Within three weeks they began work on the Temple.
"And Zerubbabel, son of Shealtiel, and Jehoshua, son of Jehosadak,
the high priest, and all the rest of the people, hearkened to the
voice of Jehovah their God, and to the words of Haggai the prophet,
as Jehovah their God had sent him; and the people feared before the
face of Jehovah. (And Haggai, the messenger of Jehovah, in Jehovah’s
mission to the people, spake, saying, I am with you-oracle of
Jehovah.) And Jehovah stirred the spirit of Zerubbabel, son of
Shealtiel, Satrap of Judah, and the spirit of Jehoshua, son of
Jehosadak, the high priest, and the spirit of all the rest of the
people; and they went and did work in the House of Jehovah of Hosts,
their God, on the twenty-fourth day of the sixth month, in the
second year of Darius the king."
Note how the narrative emphasises that the new energy was, as it
could not but be from Haggai’s unflattering words, a purely
spiritual result. It was the spirit of Zerubbabel, and the spirit of
Jehoshua, and the spirit of all the rest of the people, which was
stirred-their conscience and radical force of character. Not in vain
had the people suffered their great disillusion under Cyrus, if now
their history was to start again from sources so inward and so pure.
2. COURAGE, ZERUBBABEL! COURAGE, JEHOSHUA AND ALL
THE PEOPLE!
{Hag 2:1-9}
The second occasion on which Haggai spoke to the
people was another feast the same autumn, the seventh day of the
Feast of Tabernacles, {Lev 23:34; Lev 23:36; Lev 23:40-42} the
twenty-first of the seventh month. For nearly four weeks the work on
the Temple had proceeded. Some progress must have been made, for
comparisons became possible between the old Temple and the state of
this one. Probably the outline and size of the building were
visible. In any case it was enough to discourage the builders with
their efforts and the means at their disposal. Haggai’s new word is
a very simple one of encouragement. The people’s conscience had been
stirred by his first; they need now some hope. Consequently he
appeals to what he had ignored before, the political possibilities
which the present state of the world afforded-always a source of
prophetic promise. But again he makes his former call upon their own
courage and resources. The Hebrew text contains a reference to the
Exodus which would be appropriate to a discourse delivered during
the Feast of Tabernacles, but it is not found in the Septuagint, and
is so impossible to construe that it has been justly suspected as a
gloss, inserted by some later hand, only because the passage had to
do with the Feast of Tabernacles.
"In the seventh month, on the twenty-first day of the month, the
word of Jehovah came by Haggai the prophet, saying:-"
"Speak now to Zerubbabel, son of Shealtiel, Satrap of Judah, and to
Johoshua’, son of Jehosadak, the high priest, and to the rest of the
people, saying: Who among you is left that saw this House in its
former glory, and how do ye see it now? Is it not as nothing in your
eyes? And now courage, O Zerubbabel-oracle of Jehovah and courage,
Jehoshua, son of Jehosadak, O high priest; and courage, all people
of the land!-oracle of Jehovah; and get to work, for I am with
you-oracle of Jehovah of Hosts-and My Spirit is standing in your
midst. Fear not!"
"For thus saith Jehovah of Hosts: It is but a little while, and I
will shake the heavens, and the earth and the sea and the dry land;
and I will shake all nations, and the costly things of all nations
shall come in, and I will fill this House with glory, saith Jehovah
of Hosts. Mine is the silver and Mine the gold-oracle of Jehovah of
Hosts. Greater shall the latter glory of this House be than the
former, saith Jehovah of Hosts, and in this place will I give
peace-oracle of Jehovah of Hosts."
From the earliest times this passage, by the majority of the
Christian Church, has been interpreted of the coming of Christ. The
Vulgate renders Hag 2:7 b, "Et veniet Desideratus cunctis gentibus,"
and so a large number of the Latin Fathers, who are followed by
Luther, "Der Trost aller Heiden," and by our own Authorized Version,
"And the Desire of all nations shall come." This was not contrary to
Jewish tradition, for Rabbi Akiba had defined the clause of the
Messiah, and Jerome received the interpretation from his Jewish
instructors. In itself the noun, as pointed in the Massoretic text,
means "longing" or "object of longing." But the verb which goes with
it is in the plural, and by a change of points the noun itself may
be read as a plural. That this was the original reading is made
extremely probable by the fact that it lay before the translators of
the Septuagint, who render: "the picked," or "chosen things of the
nations." So the old Italic version: "Et venient omnia electa
gentium." Moreover this meaning suits the context, as the other does
not. The next verse mentions silver and gold. We may understand what
he says, writes Calvin, "of Christ; we indeed know that Christ was
the expectation of the whole world; but as it immediately follows,
‘Mine is the silver and Mine is the gold,’ the more simple meaning
is that-which I first stated: that the nations would come, bringing
with them all their riches that they might offer themselves and all
their possessions a sacrifice to God."
3. THE POWER OF THE UNCLEAN
{Hag 2:10-19}
Haggai’s third address to the people is based on
a deliverance which he seeks from the priests. The Book of
Deuteronomy had provided that, in all difficult cases not settled by
its own code, the people shall seek a "deliverance" or "Torah" from
the priests, "and shall observe to do according to the deliverance
which the priests deliver to thee." Both noun and verb, which may be
thus literally translated, are also used for the completed and
canonical Law in Israel, and they signify that in the time of the
composition of the Book of Deuteronomy that Law was still regarded
as in process of growth. So it is also in the time of Haggai: he
does not consult a code of laws, nor asks the priests what the canon
says, as, for instance, our Lord does with the question, "how
readest thou?" But he begs them to give him a Torah or deliverance,
based of course upon existing custom, but not yet committed to
writing. For the history of the Law in Israel this is, therefore, a
passage of great interest.
"On the twenty-fourth of the ninth month, in the second year of
Darius, the word of Jehovah came to Haggai the prophet, saying: Thus
saith Jehovah of Hosts, Ask, I pray, of the priests a deliverance,
saying":-
"If a man be carrying flesh that is holy in the skirt of his robe,
and with his skirt touch bread or pottage or wine or oil or any
food, shall the latter become holy? And the priests gave answer and
said, No! And Haggai said, If one unclean by a corpse touch any of
these, shall the latter become unclean? And the priests gave answer
and said, It shall."
That is to say, holiness which passed from the source to an object
immediately in touch with the latter did not spread further; but
pollution infected not only the person who came into contact with
it, but whatever he touched.
"The flesh of the sacrifice hallowed whatever it should touch, but
not further; but the human being who was defiled by touching a dead
body, defiled all he might touch." "And Haggai answered and said: So
is this people, and so is this nation before Me-oracle of
Jehovah-and so is all the work of their hands, and what they offer
there"-at the altar erected on its old site-"is unclean."
That is to say, while the Jews had expected their restored ritual to
make them holy to the Lord, this had not been effective, while, on
the contrary, their contact with sources of pollution had thoroughly
polluted both themselves and their labor and their sacrifices. What
these sources of pollution are is not explicitly stated, but Haggai,
from his other messages, can only mean, either the people’s want of
energy in building the Temple, or the unbuilt Temple itself Andree
goes so far as to compare the latter with the corpse, whose touch,
according to the priests, spreads infection through more than one
degree. In any case Haggai means to illustrate and enforce the
building of the Temple without delay; and meantime he takes one
instance of the effect he has already spoken of, "the work of their
hands," and shows how it has been spoilt by their neglect and delay.
"And now, I pray, set your hearts backward from today, before stone
was laid upon stone in the Temple of Jehovah: when one came to a
heap of grain of twenty measures, and it had become ten, or went to
the wine vat to draw fifty measures, and it had become twenty. I
smote you with blasting and with withering, and with hail all the
work of your hands, and - oracle of Jehovah. Lay now your hearts on
the time before today (the twenty-fourth day of the ninth month),
before the day of the foundation of the Temple of Jehovah-lay your
hearts" to that time! "Is there yet any seed in the barn? And as yet
the vine, the fig-tree, the pomegranate and the olive have not borne
fruit. From this day I will bless thee."
This then is the substance of the whole message. On the
twenty-fourth day of the ninth month, somewhere in our December, the
Jews had been discouraged that their attempts to build the Temple,
begun three months before, had not turned the tide of their
misfortunes and produced prosperity in their agriculture. Haggai
tells them, there is not yet time for the change to work. If contact
with a holy thing has only a slight effect, but contact with an
unclean thing has a much greater effect (Hag 2:11-13), then their
attempts to build the Temple must have less good influence upon
their condition than the bad influence of all their past devotion to
themselves and their secular labors. That is why adversity still
continues, but courage from this day on God will bless. The whole
message is, therefore, opportune to the date at which it was
delivered, and comes naturally on the back of Haggai’s previous
oracles. Andree’s reason for assigning it to another writer, on the
ground of its breaking the connection, does not exist.
These poor colonists, in their hope deferred, were learning the old
lesson, which humanity finds so hard to understand, that repentance
and new-born zeal do not immediately work a change upon our material
condition; but the natural consequences of sin often outweigh the
influence of conversion, and though devoted to God and very
industrious we may still be punished for a sinful past. Evil has an
infectious power greater than that of holiness. Its effects are more
extensive and lasting. It was no bit of casuistry which Haggai
sought to illustrate by his appeal to the priests on the ceremonial
law, but an ethical truth deeply embedded in human experience.
4. THE REINVESTMENT OF ISRAEL’S HOPE
Hag 2:20-23
On the same day Haggai published another oracle,
in which he put the climax to his own message by reinvesting in
Zerubbabel the ancient hopes of his people. When the monarchy fell
the Messianic hopes were naturally no longer concentrated in the
person of a king; and the great evangelist of the Exile found the
elect and anointed Servant of Jehovah in the people as a whole, or
in at least the pious part of them, with functions not of political
government but of moral influence and instruction towards all the
peoples of the earth. Yet in the Exile Ezekiel still predicted an
individual Messiah, a son of the house of David; only it is
significant that, in his latest prophecies delivered after the
overthrow of Jerusalem, Ezekiel calls him not king any more, but
prince.
After the return of Sheshbazzar to Babylon this position was
virtually filled by Zerubbabel, a grandson of Jehoiakin, the second
last king of Judah, and appointed by the Persian king Pehah or
Satrap of Judah. Him Haggai now formally names the elect servant of
Jehovah. In that overturning of the kingdoms of the world which
Haggai had predicted two months before, and which he now explains as
their mutual destruction by war, Jehovah of Hosts will make
Zerubbabel His signet-ring, inseparable from Himself and the symbol
of His authority.
"And the word of Jehovah came a second time to Haggai on the
twenty-fourth day of the ninth month, saying: Speak to Zerubbabel,
Satrap of Judah, saying: I am about to shake the heavens and the
earth, and I will overturn the thrones of kingdoms, and will shatter
the power of the kingdoms of the Gentiles, and will overturn
chariots and their riders, and horses and their riders will come
down, every man by the sword of his brother. In that day - oracle of
Jehovah of Hosts-I will take Zerubbabel, son of She’alti’el, My
servant-oracle of Jehovah-and will make him like a signet-ring; for
thee have I chosen-oracle of Jehovah of Hosts."
The wars and mutual destruction of the Gentiles, of which Haggai
speaks, are doubtless those revolts of races and provinces which
threatened to disrupt the Persian Empire upon the accession of
Darius in 521. Persians, Babylonians, Medes, Armenians, the Sacae
and others rose together or in succession. In four years Darius
quelled them all, and reorganized his empire before the Jews
finished their Temple. Like all the Syrian governors, Zerubbabel
remained his poor lieutenant and submissive tributary. History
rolled westward into Europe. Greek and Persian began their struggle
for the control of its future, and the Jews fell into an obscurity
and oblivion unbroken for centuries. The "signet-ring of Jehovah"
was not acknowledged by the world-does not seem even to have
challenged its briefest attention. But Haggai had at least succeeded
in asserting the Messianic hope of Israel, always baffled, never
quenched, in this re-opening of her life. He had delivered the
ancient heritage of Israel to the care of the new Judaism.
Haggai’s place in the succession of prophecy ought now to be clear
to us. The meagerness of his words and their crabbed style, his
occupation with the construction of the Temple, his unfulfilled hope
in Zerubbabel, his silence on the great inheritance of truth
delivered by his predecessors, and the absence from his prophesying
of all visions of God’s character and all emphasis upon the ethical
elements of religion-these have moved some to depress his value as a
prophet almost to the vanishing point. Nothing could be more unjust.
In his opening message Haggai evinced the first indispensable power
of the prophet: to speak to the situation of the moment, and to
succeed in getting men to take up the duty at their feet; in another
message he announced a great ethical principle; in his last he
conserved the Messianic traditions of his religion, and though not
less disappointed than Isaiah in the personality to whom he looked
for their fulfillment, he succeeded in passing on their hope
undiminished to future ages.
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