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												Verse 1Zechariah 11:1. Open thy doors, 
												O Lebanon — The prophet, having 
												signified in the foregoing 
												prophecy that the Jewish nation 
												should recover its prosperity, 
												flourish for some time, and 
												become considerable; and having 
												announced to Zion the coming of 
												Messiah her king, and 
												congratulated her on the 
												peaceable nature and great 
												extent of his kingdom, with the 
												blessed effects which his rule 
												should produce, proceeds now to 
												foretel the ruin which should 
												come on the body of the Jewish 
												nation for rejecting him, with 
												the destruction of their temple 
												and capital city. To this only 
												can the first three verses of 
												this chapter relate; for no 
												calamities happened to that 
												people, from the time of 
												Zechariah till that event, of 
												which the expressions here used 
												can with propriety be 
												understood. Lebanon itself 
												cannot be here addressed, which 
												had no doors or gates: but it is 
												figuratively put, either for the 
												temple, built of the cedars of 
												Lebanon, as it is Ezekiel 17:3; 
												and Habakkuk 2:17; or for the 
												city of Jerusalem, whose lofty 
												buildings resembled the stately 
												ranks of trees in a forest: but 
												the former is more probably 
												intended. And, if the Jewish 
												writers may be credited, such 
												was the application made of this 
												prophecy by the Rabbi Johanan, 
												when the doors of the temple 
												opened of their own accord, a 
												little before the temple was 
												burned, a circumstance attested 
												by Josephus, Bell. Jud. lib. 6. 
												cap. 5: “Then R. Johanan, a 
												disciple of R. Hillel, directing 
												his speech to the temple, said, 
												‘I know thy destruction is at 
												hand, according to the prophecy 
												of Zechariah:’ Open thy doors, O 
												Lebanon, &c.” That the fire — 
												Either, figuratively, the wrath 
												of God and the rage of the 
												enemy, or, literally, fire 
												kindled by the enemy; may devour 
												thy cedars — Thy palaces and 
												other fabrics built with cedars.
 
 Verse 2-3
 Zechariah 11:2-3. Howl, fir-tree 
												— By the several sorts of trees 
												here mentioned, seem to be meant 
												the several orders and degrees 
												of men, who should be sharers in 
												the common destruction: see 
												Isaiah 2:13; Isaiah 10:33-34; 
												and the notes. The fir-tree 
												seems to denote the lower 
												people, who are bid to howl 
												because even their superiors, 
												signified by the cedar, could 
												not withstand the storm. Howl, O 
												ye oaks of Bashan — O ye rich, 
												great, and powerful people of 
												the land; Bashan was famous for 
												its stately oaks. For the forest 
												of the vintage — Or rather, a 
												forest, the fenced one, is come 
												down — “As the inhabitants are 
												represented under the image of 
												the trees, the city is aptly 
												denoted by a forest; to which is 
												added by way of distinction הבצר, 
												the fenced one, the article 
												הbeing emphatic, and marking the 
												extraordinary strength of its 
												fortifications, or fence, which, 
												however, proves insufficient for 
												its security.” There is a voice 
												of the howling of the shepherds 
												— That is, of the princes and 
												rulers of the people. For their 
												glory is spoiled — Their 
												magnificent houses are 
												destroyed. A voice of the 
												roaring of young lions — Those 
												who are in the foregoing 
												sentence called shepherds, are 
												here called young lions, because 
												they were devourers of the 
												people by their extortions and 
												oppressions. The pride of Jordan 
												is spoiled — By the pride of 
												Jordan, those woods and thickets 
												are primarily intended that rose 
												proudly above the banks of that 
												river, and greatly decorated the 
												scene. But as those were the 
												receptacles of lions, they are 
												here, in a secondary and 
												metaphorical sense, put for the 
												residences of those princes and 
												grandees, who are denominated 
												lions in the preceding clause 
												for the reason now mentioned.
 
 Verse 4-5
 Zechariah 11:4-5. Feed the flock 
												of the slaughter — That is, the 
												people, who are so denominated, 
												because they were devoted to 
												ruin by the following 
												mischievous counsels of their 
												false teachers, and the 
												oppressions of their rulers. 
												This command seems to be 
												addressed to Zechariah; but an 
												insuperable objection lies 
												against its being understood as 
												given to him in his own person, 
												because he did not live in such 
												times as are here described; for 
												Zerubbabel the governor, and 
												Joshua the high-priest, it 
												appears, were men of 
												extraordinary piety and virtue; 
												and no doubt the rest of the 
												princes or rulers of the people 
												at this time were good men. We 
												can, therefore, understand it in 
												no other manner, as addressed to 
												Zechariah, than as he typified 
												Christ; and so God commanded him 
												to do that which he had 
												appointed Christ to do, namely, 
												to gather and feed the lost 
												sheep of Israel, which their 
												shepherds scattered and 
												destroyed. Whose possessors slay 
												them — Whose governors and 
												teachers are the cause of their 
												destruction. Those are not 
												improperly said to do a thing 
												who are the cause of its being 
												done. And hold themselves not 
												guilty — Are not aware of the 
												great guilt of their conduct; 
												or, act as if they thought they 
												might lawfully make merchandise 
												of men’s bodies or souls, for 
												their own lucre or advantage. 
												See 2 Peter 2:3. And they that 
												sell them — Who betray their 
												persons, or liberty, or 
												property, for profit; or sell 
												them for slaves to foreigners; 
												or, by their exactions and 
												oppressions, reduce them to such 
												poverty that they are obliged to 
												sell themselves; say, Blessed be 
												the Lord, for I am rich — That 
												is, they hypocritically and 
												impiously pretend to return God 
												thanks for having put it in 
												their power to acquire riches by 
												such ungodly practices! And 
												their own shepherds — That is, 
												their chief priests, princes, 
												and rulers, as above; pity them 
												not — Destroy them without 
												remorse. In Christ’s time, which 
												seems to be here referred to, 
												“the chief priests and the 
												elders, who were the possessors 
												of the flock, by their 
												traditions, the commandments of 
												men, and their impositions on 
												the consciences of the people, 
												were become perfect tyrants, 
												devouring their houses, 
												engrossing their wealth, and 
												fleecing the flock instead of 
												feeding it. The Sadducees, who 
												were Deists, corrupted their 
												judgments; the Pharisees, who 
												were bigots for superstitious 
												observances, corrupted their 
												morals by making void the 
												commandments of God, Matthew 
												15:6. Thus they slew the sheep 
												of the flock; thus they sold 
												them. They cared not what became 
												of them, so they could but gain 
												their own ends, and serve their 
												own interests.” — Henry.
 
 Verse 6
 Zechariah 11:6. I will no more 
												pity the inhabitants of the land 
												— I will no more spare them than 
												their shepherds do. The 
												inhabitants of the land are to 
												be distinguished from the poor 
												of the flock in the next verse. 
												By the former are meant those 
												who in their respective stations 
												were as wicked as the rulers, 
												chief priests, and others, 
												termed their shepherds, 
												Zechariah 11:5; by the latter, 
												those who were oppressed and 
												were piously disposed. But I 
												will deliver the men every one 
												into his neighbour’s hand — 
												“This verse assigns the reason 
												for calling the people, the 
												flock of slaughter. Nor can 
												words more aptly describe the 
												calamities which befell the Jews 
												in the war which ended in the 
												taking of Jerusalem by the 
												Romans; when the people, having 
												first, by their intestine 
												broils, destroyed one another, 
												as is set forth at large by 
												Josephus, at length fell into 
												the hand of him whom they had 
												owned for their sovereign, (‘we 
												have no king but Cesar,’ John 
												19:15,) and who completely 
												desolated the land for their 
												rebellion against him.” — 
												Blayney.
 
 Verse 7
 Zechariah 11:7. And — Or rather, 
												but, I will feed the flock of 
												slaughter, even you — Or, 
												especially you, O poor of the 
												flock — Zechariah here, 
												representing Christ the true 
												shepherd, says, he will enter 
												upon his office, and undertake 
												the care of the flock appointed 
												for the slaughter; even you, O 
												poor of the flock — This clause 
												is explicatory of the former, 
												and by the repetition of it we 
												are shown, that God, in his 
												charge to the prophet, as a type 
												of Christ, and to Christ the 
												antitype, distinguishes clearly 
												between different sorts of 
												people among the Jews; between 
												those that were poor, despised, 
												weak, and humble, and those that 
												were tyrannical, proud, and 
												cruel, and made a prey of their 
												inferiors: these were left out 
												of the pastoral charge; the 
												others were to be taken care of. 
												And I took unto me two staves — 
												These were the proper 
												accoutrements of a shepherd, and 
												these the prophet assumed as a 
												badge of his office, and gave 
												them significant names, which 
												are partly explained, Zechariah 
												11:10-14. “The shepherds of old 
												time,” says Lowth, “had two 
												rods, or staves, one turned 
												round at the top, that it might 
												not hurt the sheep: this was for 
												counting them, and separating 
												the sound from the diseased, 
												Leviticus 27:32; the other had 
												an iron hook at the end of it, 
												to pull in and hold the straying 
												sheep. The psalmist mentions 
												both these, Psalms 23:4, Thy rod 
												and thy staff comfort me.” The 
												one I called Beauty — Or, 
												pleasantness, or, delight, as 
												the word נועםmay be rendered, 
												signifying, says Lowth, his 
												favour, gentleness, or kindness 
												toward his people; which was 
												remarkably verified in Christ, 
												whose gracious words, and 
												beneficial works, were 
												conspicuous through the whole 
												course of his life. The other I 
												called Bands — Which the same 
												author interprets of the bond of 
												the new covenant, whereby he 
												intended to unite both the 
												kingdoms of Israel and Judah 
												under himself, as their head and 
												king, Ezekiel 37:22; and then 
												afterward to unite the Jews and 
												the Gentiles into one church, by 
												breaking down the partition wall 
												that was between them. Newcome 
												considers the former, Beauty, as 
												intended to “denote how 
												beautiful and pleasant the land 
												would have been, if its 
												inhabitants had kept their 
												covenant with God.” The other, 
												Bands, “ as signifying the union 
												which ought to have subsisted 
												between Judah and Israel.” Mr. 
												Scott explains “the former word 
												of the honour, privilege, and 
												ornament which the Jews 
												possessed, according to their 
												national covenant, in the 
												oracles, instituted worship, and 
												temple of God; and especially by 
												the ministry of Christ and his 
												apostles, who preached the 
												gospel to them first.” The 
												other, he thinks, means, “the 
												connection of the nation under 
												one government, and the harmony 
												that had, in some measure, 
												hitherto united them, as the 
												flock of God.” Many other 
												interpretations are given of 
												these two names, but as they all 
												are, and must be, in a great 
												measure, founded on conjecture, 
												the reader is not here troubled 
												with them.
 
 Verse 8
 Zechariah 11:8. Three shepherds 
												also I cut off in one month — 
												The prophet may be said to do 
												what God did; either in the 
												punishment of certain false 
												prophets, or of certain wicked 
												governors. Some think, that by 
												these three shepherds were 
												figuratively signified the chief 
												priests, scribes, and elders of 
												the Jews. Christ exposed these 
												as blind guides, and thereby 
												lessened their authority among 
												the people, which contributed 
												very much to the spreading of 
												the gospel. Blayney, who thinks 
												the common translation 
												encumbered with insuperable 
												difficulties, renders the 
												clause, and I set aside the 
												authority of the shepherds in 
												one month. His reasons for this 
												interpretation have certainly 
												considerable weight, but cannot 
												with propriety be introduced 
												here. One argument, however, in 
												favour of it, to which he 
												appeals, may be noticed. It 
												evidently suits that application 
												of the prophecy which most 
												commentators adopt. “Let us now 
												see,” says he, “what happened to 
												him, of whom Zechariah is 
												evidently set forth as the type. 
												Our Saviour’s teaching was in a 
												style so far superior to that of 
												the professed guides of the 
												people in his days, that, stung 
												with jealousy, they exclaimed, 
												Perceive ye how ye prevail 
												nothing? Ye have lost all your 
												wonted influence; behold the 
												world is gone after him, John 
												12:19. Even so it may be 
												presumed the purity and 
												disinterestedness of Zechariah’s 
												instructions may have gained so 
												far upon the minds of the people 
												as to deprive the corrupt and 
												selfish teachers of that 
												ascendency which they once 
												possessed.” And my soul loathed 
												them — Or, was straitened toward 
												them, as the Hebrew, תקצר בהם, 
												may be literally translated, 
												that is, I was straitened in my 
												affections to them. I was less 
												tender toward them than toward 
												the poor of the flock, because 
												they showed themselves to be 
												averse from my person and 
												doctrine. So the Vulgate, 
												contracta est anima mea in eis. 
												The LXX., however, read, 
												βαρυνθησεται η ψυχη μου, my soul 
												shall be burdened; and Bishop 
												Newcome, my soul was grieved at 
												them. The word בחלה, rendered 
												abhorred, in the next clause, 
												does not occur elsewhere in the 
												Scriptures, but, according to 
												Bishop Newcome, bears that sense 
												in the Syriac. The LXX. render 
												it, αι ψυκαι αυτων επωρυοντο επ’ 
												εμε, Their souls howled, 
												bellowed, roared, or, raised a 
												horrible outcry against me, an 
												expression strikingly 
												descriptive of the fierce and 
												vehement accusations of the 
												Jewish chief priests, scribes, 
												and elders against Christ, and 
												of the violent, loud, and 
												oft-repeated clamours of the 
												people for his condemnation and 
												crucifixion. Of which see Luke 
												23:5; Luke 23:10; Luke 23:18-24.
 
 Verse 9
 Zechariah 11:9. Then said I, 
												will not feed you — I will no 
												longer exercise a tender 
												paternal care over you; that 
												that dieth, let it die — Or 
												rather, the dying let it die; 
												that which has a deadly disease, 
												let it perish by that disease. 
												Or, that which is ready to die, 
												and will not be cured, but hath 
												rejected the shepherd’s love and 
												skill, let it die. Thus Jesus 
												said, If ye believe not, ye 
												shall die in your sins. For this 
												seems to be spoken of the 
												miseries to which the Jewish 
												people were delivered up for 
												their manifold sins, and in 
												particular for their rejection 
												of Christ, which filled up the 
												measure of their iniquity. And 
												that that is to be cut off — 
												Namely, by the sword of the 
												enemy; let it be cut off; and 
												let the rest eat every one the 
												flesh of another — Either live 
												to be besieged till hunger and 
												famine make the living eat the 
												dead, or cruelly kill their 
												children and others, that they 
												may eat their flesh; a calamity 
												threatened, Deuteronomy 
												28:52-58; or else, by seditious 
												and bloody intestine quarrels, 
												destroy each other; all which 
												happened to them in the siege of 
												Jerusalem by the Romans.
 
 Verse 10-11
 Zechariah 11:10-11. And I took 
												my staff, even Beauty — Or, 
												pleasantness, or delight. See 
												note on Zechariah 11:7 : 
												emblematical, as of God’s 
												favour, gentleness, or kindness 
												to his people, and of the honour 
												and privilege which they 
												possessed in his oracles, 
												instituted worship, and temple; 
												so especially of God’s covenant 
												with them, and all the blessings 
												of it. And cut it asunder — To 
												signify that, as they had 
												rejected God and his favour, and 
												refused to comply with the terms 
												of his covenant, so that God had 
												now annulled it, and rendered it 
												utterly void. That I might break 
												my covenant — This, in some 
												measure, illustrates what is 
												meant by the staff Beauty. While 
												it was unbroken, the covenant 
												between God and the Jews was 
												whole and unbroken. And it is to 
												be observed, Christ calls it his 
												covenant, for he was the 
												mediator of it: namely, to bring 
												us to God in repentance, faith, 
												and holy obedience; and to 
												reconcile God to us in mercy and 
												grace. Which I had made with all 
												the people — Hebrew, כל עמים, 
												literally, all people, that is, 
												all the tribes of Israel; and 
												all other people that, by being 
												proselyted to their religion, 
												were incorporated into their 
												nation. The Jewish Church is 
												thus represented as being now 
												stripped of all its glory, its 
												crown profaned and cast to the 
												ground, and all its honour laid 
												in the dust, God being departed 
												from it, and resolved no more to 
												own it for his church. When 
												Christ told the Jews that the 
												kingdom of God should be taken 
												from them, and given to another 
												people, then he broke the staff 
												of Beauty, Matthew 21:43. And it 
												was broken in that day, though 
												Jerusalem and the Jewish people 
												were spared yet forty years 
												longer; and though the great men 
												did not, or would not, 
												understand Christ’s words 
												uttered on that occasion as a 
												divine sentence, but thought to 
												put it by with a cold, God 
												forbid, Luke 20:16. Yet the poor 
												of the flock, that waited upon 
												him — Namely, who knew the 
												Messiah, believed in him, 
												observed his doctrine, miracles, 
												and life, and obeyed him; who 
												understood with what authority 
												he spoke, and could distinguish 
												the voice of their shepherd from 
												that of a stranger; knew that he 
												was the word of the Lord — Saw 
												and acknowledged God in all 
												this, trembled at his word, and 
												were confident that it would not 
												fall to the ground.
 
 Verse 12-13
 Zechariah 11:12-13. And I said 
												unto them — Namely, upon 
												parting. The prophet, still 
												personating Christ, or acting as 
												a type of him, reminds the Jews 
												of his concern for their 
												welfare, the care he had taken 
												of them, and the labour he had 
												bestowed on instructing them; 
												and refers it to them whether 
												his services had not deserved 
												some reward, and, if they had, 
												what that reward ought to be; 
												saying, If ye think good, give 
												me my price — Or rather, my 
												wages or hire of service, as the 
												word שׂכרundoubtedly signifies; 
												and if not, forbear — If you 
												dismiss me without wages I shall 
												be content. So they weighed for 
												my price thirty pieces of silver 
												— That is, as is supposed, 
												thirty shekels, of the value of 
												about 2 Samuel 4 d. each, which 
												was the price of a slave. This 
												showed how little they regarded 
												him, or his labours; that is, 
												how little value the Jews would 
												put on the ministry of Christ; 
												or on his labours and sufferings 
												for their salvation. For, 
												according to St. Matthew 26:15; 
												Matthew 27:9, this symbolical 
												action was fulfilled when the 
												chief priests and elders of the 
												Jews paid that sum to Judas for 
												betraying Christ to them, and 
												putting his life in their power. 
												And the Lord said unto me — Unto 
												the prophet, personating Christ; 
												Cast it unto the potter — Hereby 
												intimating that it was a reward 
												only suitable to a potter’s 
												labour, and a price only 
												adequate for such wares as he 
												sold, which were of the meanest 
												value. A goodly price that I was 
												prized at of them — Thus the 
												prophet ironically remarks on 
												the high estimation in which he 
												and his services were holden: or 
												rather, God here upbraids the 
												shepherds of his people, who 
												prized the great Shepherd no 
												higher. And I cast them to the 
												potter, &c. — Or, cast them into 
												the house of the Lord for the 
												potter: I cast them back into 
												the treasury in the temple, 
												whence afterward they were 
												taken, and laid out in 
												purchasing the potter’s field. 
												This whole transaction, 
												performed by Zechariah in a 
												vision, as Lowth, Doddridge, and 
												many other interpreters suppose, 
												or, as others think, in reality; 
												“was designed to be an exact 
												representation of the several 
												circumstances that should attend 
												the betraying of Christ by 
												Judas, the price the chief 
												priests would put upon him, (to 
												whom, as the governors of the 
												temple, the money was returned,) 
												and the use to which the money 
												would be applied. And this whole 
												prophetic scene was transacted 
												in the single person of 
												Zechariah, just as Ezekiel 
												sustained the type or figure 
												both of the Chaldean army that 
												should besiege Jerusalem, and of 
												the Jews themselves that should 
												be besieged, Ezekiel 4:1-12.” So 
												Lowth, who adds, “This is one of 
												those prophecies whose literal 
												sense is fulfilled in our 
												blessed Saviour, and cannot be 
												applied to any other person but 
												in a very remote or improper 
												sense.” The like instances may 
												be seen Psalms 22:16-18; Psalms 
												69:21; Hosea 11:1. The Jews 
												themselves have expounded this 
												prophecy of the Messiah. “There 
												can be no doubt,” says Blayney, 
												“that this is the passage 
												referred to Matthew 27:9, though 
												under the name of Jeremiah, (put 
												by mistake of some transcriber 
												of St. Matthew’s gospel,) 
												instead of Zechariah. But a 
												question arises, how the 
												transaction related by the 
												evangelist can be said to be a 
												fulfilling of that which was 
												spoken by the prophet, 
												considering the striking 
												difference in some of the 
												circumstances. In the one case, 
												thirty pieces of silver were 
												given as wages for service; in 
												the other, they were paid as the 
												price of a man’s blood: in the 
												one they were thrown with 
												contempt to the potter; in the 
												other, they were cast down in 
												the temple in a fit of remorse, 
												and taken up by others, who 
												employed them in the purchase of 
												the potter’s field. But 
												notwithstanding these 
												differences, considering that 
												all passed under the special 
												direction of Divine Providence, 
												it is impossible not to 
												conclude, from a review of both 
												transactions, that there was a 
												designed allusion of the one to 
												the other, and not a mere 
												accidental resemblance between 
												them. But the quotation, it is 
												said, is not just: for no such 
												words are to be found in the 
												prophet, which the evangelist 
												hath pretended to cite from him. 
												To this it may be answered, that 
												though not the precise words, 
												the substance of them is given, 
												so that the passages are at 
												least equivalent,” as a 
												collation of them in the 
												original will show: see the note 
												on Matthew 27:9.
 
 Verse 14
 Zechariah 11:14. Then — As soon 
												as I saw what little value they 
												put upon me, and my pastoral 
												care over them, and services for 
												them; I cut asunder mine other 
												staff, even Bands — The prophet 
												did this in type, and Christ in 
												reality; that I might break the 
												brotherhood between Judah and 
												Israel — That I might declare, 
												or foreshow, that the friendship 
												and union which had existed 
												between the two tribes and the 
												remnant of the ten tribes, was 
												broken. “From the time that the 
												people returned from Babylon, 
												the Jews and Israelites had 
												formed one society, both of 
												religion and polity, which 
												society continued till the last 
												destruction of Jerusalem, when, 
												the Jewish kingdom being 
												subverted, the bands were 
												broken, and a disunion in 
												religion was made; some of the 
												Jews continuing attached to 
												their ancient law as much as 
												they could without the temple, 
												and others professing the 
												Christian faith.” — Houbigant. 
												The design of the prophet’s 
												commission, says Blayney, was to 
												endeavour to bring about a 
												reformation, upon which would 
												depend the continuance of the 
												brotherhood, or political union, 
												between Judah and Israel. The 
												second crook, or staff, was 
												therefore called Bands. But when 
												the commission ended without 
												producing its effect, the 
												breaking of the crook prefigured 
												the dissolution of that 
												brotherhood. What that 
												brotherhood was, is well 
												explained by Mr. Lowth, who 
												says, that “upon the destruction 
												of Jerusalem, which was the bond 
												and cement of all their tribes, 
												being the seat and centre both 
												of their civil power, and of the 
												divine worship, (Psalms 
												132:3-5,) the consequence was 
												the entire dissolution of the 
												nation, and the dispersion and 
												confusion of all their tribes, 
												whose families could no longer 
												be distinguished after the loss 
												of their genealogies.” Calmet 
												thinks that, in this verse, 
												Israel denotes the unbelieving 
												Jews, who rejected Christ, and 
												Judah the faithful ones who 
												believed in him.
 
 Verse 15
 Zechariah 11:15. And the Lord 
												said, Take thee yet [or once 
												more] the instruments of a 
												foolish [or unwise] shepherd — 
												The prophet, having hitherto 
												represented the good shepherd, 
												is now directed to assume the 
												dress and equipage of one of a 
												contrary character. As folly in 
												the Scripture is equivalent to 
												wickedness, by a foolish 
												shepherd here may be meant, not 
												only unskilful, but likewise 
												ill-designing governors, or 
												teachers, who should only intend 
												their own advantage, and have no 
												regard for the good of the 
												flock, or people committed to 
												their charge. The instruments of 
												such a shepherd must be suitable 
												to his own disposition and 
												indiscretion, such as a crook 
												armed with iron, which, whenever 
												it was used, would wound the 
												flock; and a scrip, or bag, 
												which contained nothing useful 
												for the sheep, and the like. The 
												prophet here follows the order 
												of time, that he may foretel the 
												madness and blindness of the 
												shepherds; that is, of the 
												priests, rulers, and teachers of 
												the Jewish nation, till the last 
												destruction of Jerusalem; who 
												not only disregarded religion, 
												and the safety and welfare of 
												the sheep, but even devoured 
												such of them as were worth 
												devouring.
 
 Verse 16
 Zechariah 11:16. For lo, I will 
												raise up a shepherd in the land 
												— A shepherd, in the singular 
												number, denotes a succession of 
												such shepherds as are described 
												in the following words. So a 
												succession of priests is 
												represented under the single 
												person of Levi, Malachi 2:5-6. 
												Since the Jews had rejected the 
												true Shepherd, God threatens to 
												send, or permit to arise, among 
												them, such shepherds to rule or 
												teach them as should be 
												notorious for their negligence 
												and avarice, their cruelty and 
												oppression. This may be 
												understood either of the blind 
												guides of whom Christ speaks, 
												and whose character he describes 
												at large, Matthew 23:13-33; 
												namely, the scribes and 
												Pharisees, the priests and 
												doctors of their law; or of the 
												avaricious, tyrannical, and 
												unmerciful princes, that should 
												rule them with rigour, and make 
												their own land as much a place 
												of bondage to them as ever Egypt 
												or Babylon had been. And when 
												they had rejected him by whom 
												princes decree justice, it was 
												just that they should be given 
												over into the power of those who 
												should decree unrighteous 
												decrees. It is probable, also, 
												that there is a reference here 
												to the false prophets and false 
												Christs, which, as our Lord 
												foretold, Matthew 24:5, should 
												arise. Many such there were, 
												who, by their seditious 
												practices, provoked the Romans, 
												and hastened on the ruin of the 
												Jewish nation: but it is very 
												remarkable that they were never 
												deceived by a counterfeit 
												Messiah till they had refused 
												and rejected the true Messiah. 
												The prophet proceeds to describe 
												the character of these foolish 
												shepherds, in the following 
												words: 1st, They should be 
												negligent; which shall not visit 
												those that be cut off — Or, as 
												the LXX. render it, το 
												εκλιμπανον, that which is 
												missing, or has wandered from 
												the flock; and it may signify 
												that which is ready to perish. 
												Neither shall seek the young one 
												— Which are most apt to perish 
												through weakness; he alludes to 
												the lambs which, on account of 
												their tender age, are not able 
												to follow the flock. Nor heal 
												that which is broken — Which has 
												received some hurt, but shall 
												leave it to die of its wounds. 
												Nor feed that that standeth 
												still — Not able to go forward. 
												Blayney renders the word, made 
												to stand, or set up again after 
												sickness. “Such,” says he,” it 
												is well known, require much care 
												to nourish and support them, in 
												order to their regaining 
												strength; a care which the 
												foolish shepherd will not bestow 
												upon them.” Or, as the LXX. 
												render it, το ολοκληρον ου μη 
												κατευθυνη, nor shall direct that 
												which is whole, mentioned in 
												opposition to those that wander, 
												or are diseased. 2d, These 
												shepherds would be luxurious; he 
												shall eat the flesh of the fat — 
												That is, instead of preserving 
												the best of his flock, in order 
												to increase it, he kills them to 
												indulge his own appetite: or, 
												enriches himself by oppressing, 
												or otherwise taking from those 
												that are persons of property: 
												like that wicked servant that 
												said, My lord delays his coming, 
												he eats and drinks with the 
												drunken, serving his own belly. 
												3d, They are tyrannical and 
												cruel to the flock. And tear 
												their claws [or, as it ought to 
												be rendered, break their hoofs] 
												in pieces — This implies the 
												same as when it is said (Ezekiel 
												34:4) of such shepherds, With 
												force and with cruelty have ye 
												ruled them. The unwise shepherd, 
												instead of being tender and 
												gentle with his flock, is 
												supposed to drag them about with 
												his iron crook, or to over-drive 
												them in rough and stony ground, 
												so as to break their hoofs. Or, 
												he imposes burdens and hardships 
												upon them that they are unable 
												to bear. Upon the whole, a 
												sluggish, negligent, covetous, 
												riotous, oppressive, and cruel 
												government, priesthood, or 
												ministry, is here shadowed out 
												by a foolish shepherd.
 
 Verse 17
 Zechariah 11:17. Wo to the idol 
												shepherd — Or the shepherd of 
												nothing, or of no value, as רעי 
												האלילshould be translated; he 
												who calls himself the shepherd, 
												ruler, or teacher of the people, 
												but is in reality nothing less. 
												So רפאי אליל, Job 13:4, 
												signifies physicians of no 
												value. That leaveth the flock — 
												Who taketh no care of the flock, 
												and minds nothing but making his 
												own profit out of them. Such a 
												shepherd is no better than an 
												idol, that is profitable for 
												nothing, (Isaiah 44:10,) and 
												hath only the outward form and 
												appearance of a shepherd. The 
												sword shall be upon his arm, and 
												upon his right eye — As he has 
												abused his power and his 
												understanding, signified by his 
												arm and his right eye, God shall 
												in his just judgment, deprive 
												him of the use of both those 
												faculties. The sword is put for 
												any instrument of the divine 
												vengeance. As the word חרבhere 
												rendered sword, also means 
												desolation, Blayney renders the 
												clause, Because of his arm is 
												desolation, and because of his 
												right eye: observing, “The 
												purport of the passage is, that 
												since, through the 
												misapplication of his power, and 
												through his negligence in 
												watching over the flock, they 
												are subjected to desolation or 
												the sword; therefore, as of 
												strict justice, he shall be 
												punished with a deprivation at 
												least of those faculties which 
												he so fatally misused.” Some 
												think the right arm and right 
												eye of the people are intended, 
												and observe, that the arm of the 
												Jews was dried up from that time 
												when they were no longer able to 
												bear arms, or to defend 
												themselves; as their right eye 
												has been darkened to the true 
												knowledge of the Scriptures, 
												which they read as with a veil 
												before them.
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