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												Verses 1-3Zechariah 7:1-3. The word of the 
												Lord came unto Zechariah, &c. — 
												In this and the next chapter is 
												contained a third and distinct 
												revelation made to Zechariah, 
												about two years after the 
												former; of which the occasion 
												and matter are as follows: A 
												considerable progress having, by 
												this time, been made in the 
												rebuilding of the temple, and 
												affairs going on pretty 
												smoothly, the hopes of the 
												Jewish nation began to revive, 
												and a deputation was sent to 
												inquire of the priests and 
												prophets, whether it was God’s 
												will that they should still 
												observe the fast, which had been 
												instituted on account of the 
												destruction of the city and 
												temple by the Chaldeans. To this 
												inquiry, the prophet is directed 
												in these chapters how to answer; 
												and his answer is given not all 
												at once, but, as it seems, by 
												piece-meal, and at several 
												times. For here are four 
												distinct discourses that have 
												reference to this case. In the 
												fourth day of the ninth month, 
												even in Chisleu — This month 
												corresponded with the latter 
												part of our November and the 
												beginning of December. When they 
												had sent — The Hebrew verb here 
												used is in the singular number, 
												he had sent, or one had sent: 
												but our translators very 
												properly interpret it plurally, 
												by the figure termed an enallage 
												of the number, which is often 
												used in the Hebrew; and the 
												Vulgate renders it in the same 
												sense. This is understood by 
												some to be spoken of the Jews 
												who still remained in Chaldea; 
												but it seems more probable that 
												those are meant who dwelt in the 
												towns or villages at some 
												distance from Jerusalem. These 
												sent unto the house of God — 
												That, is unto the temple, where 
												the building was still carried 
												on with success; Sherezer and 
												Regem-melech — Men of note among 
												them; and their men — Servants, 
												or persons of less rank, who 
												accompanied them; to pray before 
												the Lord — To offer up prayers 
												for themselves and their 
												friends. The temple was the only 
												place where they could offer 
												sacrifices and oblations, to 
												which solemn prayers were always 
												wont to be joined. And to speak 
												unto the priests and prophets — 
												It was the office of the priests 
												to resolve any doubts that might 
												arise respecting the worship of 
												God, or any part of his law, 
												whether moral or ceremonial, and 
												the people were commanded to 
												consult them, and to act 
												according to their 
												determination. And since the 
												Prophets Haggai and Zechariah 
												were at this time residing in 
												Jerusalem, it was proper to 
												inquire of them, who might 
												probably give them an immediate 
												answer to their inquiry from God 
												himself. Should I weep in the 
												fifth month — The fast in the 
												fifth month was kept because in 
												that month, answering to our 
												month of July, the city and 
												temple were burned by the 
												Chaldeans, 2 Kings 25:8; in 
												memory of which grievous 
												judgment, the people instituted 
												a solemn fast, which, it 
												appears, they had observed from 
												that time until the times here 
												spoken of; refraining from all 
												worldly business and pleasure, 
												and employing themselves in the 
												religious exercise of prayer and 
												humiliation: see Zechariah 
												12:12-14. The question they now 
												proposed, was, whether it were 
												proper for them still to 
												continue this fast, when the 
												ecclesiastical and civil state 
												was in a great measure restored, 
												and the judgment for which they 
												mourned was removed.
 
 Verses 4-6
 Zechariah 7:4-6. Then came the 
												word of the Lord unto me — When 
												these men had proposed their 
												case, and were expecting the 
												priests’ answer, God 
												commissioned his prophet to give 
												them the answer contained in the 
												subsequent part of this and in 
												the following chapter; saying, 
												Speak unto all the people of the 
												land — Let all the people in 
												general, and not only those who 
												have proposed the question, know 
												what I am now about to say to 
												thee, in answer to it. When ye 
												fasted and mourned in the fifth 
												and seventh month — “The Jews 
												not only observed those fasts 
												which were instituted by God 
												himself, but likewise added 
												others, in commemoration of 
												great calamities. The exiled 
												Jews instituted four of these 
												fasts; one in the fourth month, 
												(June 17,) in commemoration of 
												the breach of the wall, 
												mentioned Jeremiah 52:7; one in 
												the fifth month, (July 4,) in 
												commemoration of the burning of 
												the temple, Jeremiah 52:12; one 
												in the seventh month, (September 
												3,) for the murdering of 
												Gedaliah, Jeremiah 41:2; and one 
												in the tenth month, (December 
												4,) in commemoration of the 
												beginning of the siege, 2 Kings 
												25:1. These fasts were observed, 
												not only in their captivity, but 
												likewise in Judea, between the 
												reigns of Cyrus and Darius the 
												son of Hystaspes; the Jews 
												therefore, as we have remarked, 
												particularly inquired concerning 
												the observation of the fast on 
												account of the burning of the 
												temple, because that temple was 
												now rebuilding; for they might 
												doubt whether it was not 
												improper to retain it any 
												longer, as the reason had ceased 
												which gave rise to it; or, 
												whether the commemoration of 
												past calamities was not of great 
												utility to the morals of 
												mankind.” See Grotius, and 
												Calmet’s Dictionary on the word 
												FASTS. Did ye fast at all unto 
												me — Blayney renders it, Did ye 
												fast any fastings of mine? Or, 
												Did ye fast my fastings, mine? 
												When ye fasted, were those 
												fastings observed as mine, my 
												ordinances? No: you did not fast 
												with an intention to obey me, or 
												from religious motives, and with 
												sincere purposes of repentance 
												and reformation. You lamented 
												more the losses, inconveniences, 
												and miseries you suffered, than 
												the sinfulness of your conduct 
												which brought these calamities 
												upon you. And when ye did eat, 
												did ye not eat for yourselves? — 
												Did you not seek your own 
												pleasure and convenience, and 
												not my glory? I was as little 
												regarded by you in your fasts as 
												in your feasts.
 
 Verse 7
 Zechariah 7:7. Should ye not 
												hear the words — You needed not 
												to have thus inquired, had you 
												regarded the words spoken by my 
												prophets, who have borne 
												testimony to the real excellence 
												and absolute necessity of 
												obedience to the great and 
												momentous precepts of my law, 
												and who have called for true 
												repentance and sincere love to 
												God and man, with their proper 
												fruits, and have shown how light 
												and insignificant all ceremonies 
												and formal services are in 
												comparison thereof. When 
												Jerusalem was inhabited and in 
												prosperity — He puts them in 
												mind of the reproofs, warnings, 
												and exhortations of Isaiah, 
												Jeremiah, and others of the 
												former prophets, delivered to 
												them when they were in a state 
												of comparative prosperity, in 
												which state they would have been 
												continued, if they had hearkened 
												to these prophets, and been 
												obedient to the Lord’s voice 
												uttered by them. As if he had 
												said, This is what you should 
												have done on your fast-days; it 
												was not enough to weep and 
												separate yourselves on those 
												days in token of your sorrow for 
												the judgments that had come upon 
												you; but you should have 
												searched the Scriptures of the 
												prophets, that you might have 
												seen what was the ground of 
												God’s controversy with your 
												fathers, and might have taken 
												warning by their miseries, not 
												to tread in the steps of their 
												iniquities. You ask, shall you 
												do as you have done in fasting? 
												No; you must do that which you 
												have not yet done; you must 
												repent of your sins, and reform 
												your lives; that is it that we 
												now call you to, and it is the 
												same that the former prophets 
												called your fathers to. To 
												affect them the more with a 
												sense of the mischief that sin 
												had done them, and to bring them 
												to true repentance, he reminds 
												them of the former flourishing 
												state of their country; 
												Jerusalem was then inhabited, 
												and in prosperity, but is now 
												desolate and in distress; the 
												cities round about, that are now 
												in ruins, were then inhabited 
												too, and in peace; the country 
												likewise was very populous. But 
												then God by the prophets cried 
												to them, as one in earnest, and 
												was importunate with them to 
												mend their ways, and their 
												doings, or else their prosperity 
												would soon be at an end. Now, 
												says the prophet you should have 
												taken notice of that, and have 
												inferred, that what was required 
												of them for the preventing of 
												the judgments, and which they 
												did not perform, is required of 
												you for the removal of the 
												judgments; and if you do it not, 
												all your fastings and weeping 
												signify nothing. The south was 
												that tract of land called the 
												wilderness of Judea, Matthew 
												3:1; part of which, or near to 
												it, was the hill country, 
												mentioned Joshua 21:11; Luke 
												1:39. The LXX. here render it 
												ορεινη, the hill country. The 
												plain was that open country, 
												called the plains of Jericho, 2 
												Kings 25:5; and the plain of the 
												valley of Jericho, Deuteronomy 
												34:3; and reached as far as the 
												salt sea, or the lake of 
												Asphaltites, called the sea of 
												the plain, Deuteronomy 3:17; 
												compare Jeremiah 17:26.
 
 Verses 9-12
 Zechariah 7:9-12. Thus speaketh 
												the Lord of hosts — Or did 
												speak, that is, to your fathers, 
												and thus he speaks to you now; 
												Execute true judgment — I often 
												put your fathers in mind that 
												judgment and mercy were more 
												acceptable to me than fasting, 
												or any external performances; 
												(see the margin;) and I repeat 
												the same admonition to you of 
												the present age. And let none of 
												you imagine evil against his 
												brother, &c. — Neither think ill 
												of, nor wish ill to, nor plot 
												evil against one another. But 
												they refused to hearken — But 
												your fathers refused to obey the 
												admonitions of the former 
												prophets, and were often 
												reproved by them for their 
												refractory disposition; and 
												pulled away the shoulder — 
												Withdrew their shoulder from the 
												yoke of the law. The metaphor is 
												taken from oxen that refuse to 
												put their necks under the yoke. 
												See the margin. Yea, they made 
												their hearts as an adamant-stone 
												— So that no arguments could 
												make any impression upon them; 
												lest they should hear the law — 
												Of God by Moses, which they were 
												peremptorily required to do, but 
												to do which they as peremptorily 
												refused; and the words — The 
												counsels and commands; which the 
												Lord hath sent in his Spirit by 
												the former prophets — Inspired 
												and commissioned his prophets to 
												declare; therefore — For this 
												great obstinacy; came a great 
												wrath — Which consumed the whole 
												land, and burned against the 
												people that had inhabited it 
												seventy years together in 
												Babylon; from the Lord of hosts 
												— In all which the hand of the 
												Lord was most evidently seen, 
												rendering unto them according to 
												their ways.
 
 Verse 13-14
 Zechariah 7:13-14. Therefore — 
												On this very account; as he 
												cried — As I, by my Spirit in my 
												prophets, called, warned, 
												entreated, and urged them to 
												repent, obey, and live, but they 
												would not; so they cried — In 
												their deep distress, and amidst 
												their overwhelming calamities; 
												and I would not hear — Would not 
												answer, or regard their prayer. 
												But I scattered them — Cast them 
												out of their habitations, and 
												dispersed them through distant 
												countries; with a whirlwind — 
												Suddenly and irresistibly; among 
												all the nations — All the 
												heathen, that hated them and 
												their ways. Thus the land — Once 
												flowing with milk and honey; 
												once full of cities, men, and 
												cattle; was desolate after them 
												— Became waste as a wilderness 
												after they were cast out; that 
												no man passed through — An 
												entire riddance was not only 
												made of its inhabitants, but the 
												very highways were desolate, so 
												that none passed and repassed: 
												and that which was before a 
												pleasant land, became a mere 
												desert.
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