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												Verse 1-2Zechariah 1:1-2. In the eighth 
												month — This month, according to 
												that reckoning which begins the 
												year with the month Abib, or 
												Nisan, Exodus 12:2, falls in 
												with the latter part of our 
												October, and the beginning of 
												November. Haggai had begun to 
												exhort the Jews to resume the 
												work of building the temple two 
												months before this, and they had 
												actually resumed it on the 24th 
												day of the sixth month, that is, 
												in the beginning of September. 
												In the second year of Darius — 
												That is, Darius the son of 
												Hystaspes, as Dr. Blayney and 
												many other learned men have 
												proved to a demonstration. Came 
												the word of the Lord to 
												Zechariah — Here we see the 
												prophet did not run before he 
												was sent, or undertake a work to 
												which he was not called: as 
												also, that what he communicated 
												to the people, was first 
												communicated to him by the Lord. 
												Saying, The Lord, &c. — Blayney 
												here supplies, Speak unto all 
												the people of the land, saying, 
												&c. He supposes that some words, 
												expressive of that or a similar 
												sense, have been omitted by the 
												carelessness of some 
												transcriber. The Lord hath been 
												sore displeased with your 
												fathers — He was so long and so 
												much provoked, that his 
												displeasure at last broke out 
												into that flame which consumed 
												your city and temple, and even 
												desolated your country, nay, and 
												punished the inhabitants 
												thereof, and their children, 
												with the captivity of seventy 
												years; yet now he declares 
												himself willing to be reconciled 
												to you upon your repentance.
 
 Verses 3-6
 Zechariah 1:3-6. Therefore say — 
												Rather, but say thou unto them, 
												Thus saith the Lord, Turn ye 
												unto me — The word turn, as it 
												related to the people, signified 
												that they should change their 
												corrupt manners and turn to God 
												in newness of life; and by God’s 
												turning to them, was meant, that 
												he would take them again into 
												his favour, and perform for them 
												acts of manifest kindness, 
												instead of displeasure. Be ye 
												not as your fathers — Do not 
												persist in impenitence as your 
												fathers did. Instead of being 
												hardened in your evil courses by 
												the example of your fathers’ 
												sin, rather be deterred from 
												those courses by the example of 
												your fathers’ punishment. Your 
												fathers, where are they — Where 
												are your disobedient fathers? 
												Were they not consumed with 
												famine and the sword, as God 
												threatened them? And the 
												prophets, do they live for ever 
												— Though the prophets, and those 
												to whom they delivered their 
												message, are dead, yet the 
												commandments delivered by their 
												ministry still continue in full 
												force; which appears by the 
												judgments that came upon your 
												fathers, for not hearkening to 
												them; as they themselves could 
												not but acknowledge. And the 
												same punishments will overtake 
												you, if you continue 
												disobedient. But my words — The 
												dreadful menaces which I 
												delivered; and my statutes — The 
												decreed judgments which I 
												resolved to execute on them: did 
												they not take hold on your 
												fathers? — Overtake them as a 
												pursuing enemy overtakes and 
												seizes on the object of his 
												hostility? In other words, Did 
												not the evils which I had 
												denounced by the prophets come 
												upon your fathers? And they 
												returned, &c. — They were forced 
												to acknowledge with sorrow, that 
												all those calamities which I had 
												threatened against them, and 
												forewarned them of, if they did 
												not obey my voice, were actually 
												come upon them.
 
 Verse 7-8
 Zechariah 1:7-8. Upon the four 
												and twentieth day of the 
												eleventh month — That is, about 
												three months after he had 
												received the former vision; 
												which is the month Sebat — This 
												was the Chaldee or Syriac name 
												of the eleventh month, not the 
												Hebrew name. This month 
												corresponded with the latter end 
												of January and the beginning of 
												February. Came the word of the 
												Lord unto Zechariah — This 
												second revelation contains eight 
												distinct visions, following each 
												other in the same night. “The 
												first vision is of an angel in a 
												human form, sitting on 
												horseback, in a low valley among 
												myrtle-trees, attended by others 
												upon horses, of different 
												colours. The prophet asks the 
												meaning, and is informed that 
												they were the ministers of 
												Providence, sent to examine into 
												the state of the whole earth, 
												which they report to be quiet 
												and tranquil. The angel hereupon 
												intercedes for Judah and 
												Jerusalem, which he represents 
												to have suffered under the 
												divine indignation seventy 
												years. He receives a consolatory 
												answer. The prophet is directed 
												to proclaim, that God’s wrath 
												against Judah was at an end; 
												that he would cause the temple 
												and Jerusalem to be rebuilt; and 
												would fill the country with 
												good, as a token and consequence 
												of his renewed favour, Zechariah 
												1:7-17.” — Blayney. Saying, I 
												saw, &c. — That is, the word 
												came to the prophet, who said, I 
												saw, &c., or, thus recited the 
												divine vision which had been 
												sent him. What now follows 
												(which extends to the end of the 
												sixth chapter) was uttered when 
												the people had made a great 
												progress in the work of the 
												temple, and were now to be 
												excited to the new labour of 
												fortifying Jerusalem. And behold 
												a man — The prophet terms him 
												so, according to his appearance; 
												till, perceiving by his answer, 
												Zechariah 1:10, that he had a 
												divine commission, he afterward 
												gives him the respectable title 
												of the angel, or messenger of 
												Jehovah; riding upon a red horse 
												— A horse of a red or bloody 
												colour was an emblem of the 
												slaughters of war, as appears 
												from Revelation 6:4. But the 
												myrtle being a tree of pleasure, 
												and an emblem of peace, 
												therefore the red horse 
												appearing among the myrtle- 
												trees, signified that the 
												slaughters of war were, or soon 
												would be, repressed or 
												restrained by a profound peace, 
												namely, in the Persian empire, 
												for that is here referred to: 
												and accordingly there was a 
												profound peace in it in the 
												fourth, fifth, and sixth years 
												of Darius. It is doubtful what 
												angel or other being was 
												represented by the figure of a 
												man on this red horse. Some 
												suppose Michael, whom the 
												Prophet Daniel seems to mention 
												as the guardian angel of the 
												Jews, or the angel presiding, 
												under God, over the affairs of 
												their nation, and taking care of 
												them. Others suppose the λογος, 
												or Son of God, is meant; which 
												opinion seems probable. The 
												reason of his appearing in a 
												bottom, or low place, amidst 
												myrtles planted by the waters, 
												is thought to have been to mark 
												out the affliction, humiliation, 
												and sorrow to which Judea was 
												reduced. The myrtle flourishes 
												best in shady and watery places. 
												Littora myrtetis lætissima, says 
												Virgil. See Calmet. Behind him 
												were red horses — With riders on 
												them, as appears from Zechariah 
												1:10, “who were angels, 
												Zechariah 1:11. They had horses 
												to show their power of celerity; 
												and horses of different colours, 
												to intimate the difference of 
												their ministries.” — Newcome. 
												Or, as others explain it, to 
												signify the various events of 
												the wars waged by Darius, which 
												were sometimes fortunate, at 
												other times unsuccessful.
 
 Verses 9-11
 Zechariah 1:9-11. Then said I, O 
												my Lord, what are these — What 
												is the meaning of these 
												appearances, or visions? And the 
												angel that talked with me said — 
												“This was another heavenly 
												minister, sent, probably, to 
												present the visions to the 
												prophet’s imagination, as well 
												as to explain them. Angelus 
												comes et interpres, “an 
												accompanying angel and 
												interpreter.” And under his 
												direction the prophet receives 
												satisfactory information from 
												the month of the first angel and 
												his attendants.” — Blayney. I 
												will show thee what these be — 
												“I will cause that it shall be 
												explained to thee by the angel 
												who stands first among the 
												myrtles. This may have been done 
												by a sign given to that angel, 
												or by words omitted in the 
												relation.” — Newcome. And the 
												man that stood among the 
												myrtle-trees — This was an angel 
												of an order superior to him 
												mentioned in the preceding 
												verse, who either prevents that 
												angel, and takes upon him to 
												return an answer to the 
												prophet’s question, or else 
												sends his answer to Zechariah by 
												that angel, as Christ sent his 
												revelation to St. John by an 
												angel, Revelation 1:1. These are 
												they whom the Lord hath sent — 
												They are the messengers or 
												ministering spirits of Jehovah. 
												And they — The rest of the 
												angels, implied at the end of 
												Zechariah 1:8, and who came 
												after the first; answered, We 
												have walked to and fro through 
												the earth — We have been 
												diligent to execute that office 
												which was allotted to us. And 
												behold all the earth sitteth 
												still, &c. — This must be 
												understood here, and in many 
												other places, in a restricted 
												sense, for all the nations with 
												whom the Jews had a connection. 
												It means here chiefly the 
												Persian empire, which enjoyed 
												peace at that time. But the 
												state of the Jews was unsettled: 
												see Zechariah 1:16 : which 
												circumstance gives occasion to 
												the following intercession.
 
 Verse 12
 Zechariah 1:12. Then the angel 
												of the Lord said — “Christ the 
												mediator,” as Bishop Hall 
												explains it, “prayed for the 
												salvation of his church, which 
												was now troubled, when all the 
												countries around were at rest.” 
												But, as we find by the next 
												verse that God’s answer to this 
												petition was given to the angel 
												interpreter, or the angel who 
												talked with the prophet, this 
												seems to determine that the 
												petition was made by that angel. 
												How long wilt thou not have 
												mercy on Jerusalem — At this 
												time Jerusalem lay without any 
												walls or defence, and was not 
												wholly rebuilt; and on the 
												cities of Judah — These still 
												lay wholly in ruins; against 
												which thou hast had indignation 
												these threescore and ten years — 
												There are three ways of 
												computing the seventy years of 
												the captivity, taken notice of 
												in Scripture. The first is, 
												beginning from the fourth year 
												of Jehoiakim to the first of 
												Cyrus: this is Jeremiah’s 
												account, Jeremiah 25:1; Jeremiah 
												25:11; which Daniel follows, 
												Daniel 9:2. Another may be 
												computed from the besieging of 
												Jerusalem in the ninth year of 
												Zedekiah, in the tenth month, 
												for which a solemn fast was kept 
												by the Jews: compare 2 Kings 
												25:1, with Zechariah 8:19. This 
												computation ends with the second 
												year of Darius, which is the 
												reckoning Zechariah here 
												follows. Or lastly, if we 
												compute the beginning of the 
												seventy years from the 
												destruction of Jerusalem and the 
												first temple, which came to pass 
												in the eleventh year of the same 
												reign, they will be accomplished 
												in the fourth year of Darius, 
												and this computation agrees with 
												what is said Zechariah 7:1; 
												Zechariah 7:5. The last two ways 
												of reckoning the seventy years 
												may be reduced to one, only by 
												supposing, that the prophet, in 
												this verse, sets down a complete 
												for an incomplete number, and 
												calls that space of time seventy 
												years, which wanted but little 
												of it: a way of speaking of 
												which several instances may be 
												produced.
 
 Verses 13-17
 Zechariah 1:13-17. And the Lord 
												answered the angel — “By a 
												voice, or impulse; and the angel 
												communicated the reply to 
												Zechariah.” — Newcome. So the 
												angel said, Cry thou — Now 
												publish what thou hearest, and 
												assure God’s poor, captive, 
												empoverished church, that he 
												will do her good. Saying, Thus 
												saith the Lord of hosts — The 
												God of armies, and the Father of 
												his people; I am jealous for 
												Jerusalem — I have been jealous 
												against, but now am jealous for 
												Jerusalem; my love is now raised 
												to a very high degree of 
												compassion for my people, and of 
												indignation against her enemies 
												and oppressors. The words may be 
												rendered, I am jealous for 
												Jerusalem with great zeal, for 
												so the word קנאהoften signifies. 
												So that the meaning is, I have a 
												great concern for the welfare of 
												my people, and I will not any 
												longer suffer them to be ill 
												treated. I am very sore 
												displeased with the heathen, &c. 
												— The remnant of the 
												Babylonians, Philistines, 
												Edomites, Samaritans, &c., which 
												had not been made such examples 
												of God’s severity as the Jews 
												were. For I was but a little 
												displeased —
 
 Namely, with the Jewish nation; 
												and they — Namely, their 
												enemies; helped forward the 
												affliction — They added to, or 
												lengthened out, the time of the 
												affliction, namely, by hindering 
												the accomplishment of Cyrus’s 
												decree in favour of the Jews: 
												see Ezra 4:1-6. Or the meaning 
												is, “Mine anger did not rise so 
												high, as the punishment which 
												the enemies of my people 
												inflicted.” I made the 
												Babylonians instruments of my 
												vengeance; but they exceeded 
												their commission, and acted as 
												they were prompted by their own 
												ambition and cruelty; and I was 
												displeased with them for their 
												extreme cruelty, and with the 
												nations who insulted over my 
												people in their distress. 
												Therefore I am returned to 
												Jerusalem with mercies — I will 
												have compassion on Jerusalem, 
												and cause her to experience the 
												effects of my favour. And a line 
												shall be stretched forth upon 
												Jerusalem — That is, the 
												architect’s measuring-line, for 
												laying out the buildings. And 
												Jerusalem shall be wholly 
												rebuilt, and fortified with 
												walls, &c. This accordingly was 
												fulfilled not many years after, 
												as we read Nehemiah 3:4. My 
												cities through prosperity shall 
												yet be spread abroad — Over the 
												face of Judea: or, the cities of 
												Judea shall be rebuilt, 
												enlarged, and adorned, 
												throughout the land. And the 
												Lord shall yet comfort Zion — By 
												showing his wonted kindness to 
												her after her affliction.
 
 Verses 18-21
 Zechariah 1:18-21. Then, behold, 
												four horns — Horns often signify 
												the power of princes or people, 
												the metaphor being taken from 
												those cattle whose strength lies 
												in their horns. The horns here 
												mentioned denote the powers 
												which had scattered Israel and 
												Judah, or that should scatter 
												them, as a bull, in his fury, 
												tosses into the air whatever 
												opposes him. It is uncertain 
												whether the number four is here 
												used indefinitely, or to denote 
												that specific number; and if the 
												latter, what particular powers 
												are pointed out by it. Calmet 
												supposes the Assyrians, 
												Chaldeans, Persians, and 
												Egyptians. But “the most ancient 
												and prevailing opinion among the 
												Jews themselves, and perhaps the 
												most probable of any, is, that 
												the four great empires, the 
												Assyrian, or Babylonian, the 
												Persian, Grecian, and Roman, are 
												intended; namely, the empires 
												alluded to by the four beasts, 
												Daniel 7. By each of these the 
												Jewish nation hath been in turns 
												oppressed, and all of them have 
												been successively brought down 
												and annihilated; although, from 
												the depression of the last, the 
												Jews have not as yet apparently 
												derived any considerable 
												advantage.” — Blayney. The Lord 
												showed me four carpenters — Or 
												workmen, as Bishop Newcome 
												renders the word, observing, 
												“Vitringa supposes that the 
												horns were iron, and that these 
												were fabri ferrarii malleis 
												dolabris que intructi,” 
												blacksmiths furnished with 
												hammers and axes. Then said I, 
												What come these to do? — He 
												inquires not who or what they 
												were, but what was their 
												business and design. And he 
												spake, (or said,) These are the 
												horns — In order to satisfy the 
												inquiry of the prophet, the 
												angel first points to the four 
												horns, mentioned Zechariah 
												1:18-19, as if he had said, See, 
												there are four horns, which have 
												scattered Judah. The LXX. add, 
												και την ισραηλ κατεαξαν, and 
												have broken Israel. Instead of 
												which addition the Arabic has, 
												and destroyed Jerusalem. So that 
												no man did lift up his head — No 
												one had either strength or 
												courage to make any resistance: 
												so dispirited and dejected were 
												all the people. But these are 
												come to fray them — These are 
												principal commanders, or powers, 
												raised up by God to dismay and 
												deter them. To cast out the 
												horns of the Gentiles — To 
												break, or cast down, the power 
												of these nations; which lifted 
												up their horn over the land of 
												Judah — Who employed their 
												strength, and used all possible 
												efforts, to hinder the Jewish 
												people from flourishing again in 
												Judea. Observe, reader, in what 
												way soever the church is 
												threatened with mischief, and 
												whatever opposition is given to 
												its interests, God can find out 
												ways and means to check the 
												force, or restrain the wrath of 
												its enemies, and make it turn to 
												his praise.
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