31 night"...TODAY I DECLARE THAT I WILL RESTORE TO YOU DOUBLE."
"...TODAY
I DECLARE THAT I WILL RESTORE TO YOU DOUBLE."
ONE
OF GOD'S important instructions in the Old Testament is in Zechariah
9:9. "Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion; shout, O daughter of
Jerusalem: behold, thy King cometh unto thee: He is just, and having
salvation; lowly, and riding upon an ass, and upon a colt the foal of
an ass." Jesus himself was guided by this; it instructed Him on
how He should present himself to the people of Israel on a special
occasion. (Matt. 21:1-11, Mark 11:1-10, Luke 19:28-40, John 12:12-16)
And the gospels clearly teach that Jesus is the One through whom all
must worship God acceptably who would seek salvation. The remainder
of that chapter is considered now with its preview of the first
advent of Jesus and the momentous days which saw its primary
fulfillment.
'Zion' and 'Jerusalem'
Verse
nine identifies two groups of people living in Israel at the time of
Jesus. The "daughter of Zion" refers to those closest to
the LORD in thought, hope, and worship, thus said to be "of
Zion," the highest point of the city. They were the Israelites
indeed of that time, those who had a personal faith which pleased
God. (Heb. 11:6) Their faith would have been the kind of faith that
Abraham had. They served God in thought, worship, and endeavor
according to the instructions of the law, even as did the prophets.
These are mentioned in Mal. 3:16 as those who "spake often one
to another" about God's word and work. These served God
acceptably. Though they too were condemned by God's perfect law,
their service to God was not yoked or limited to slavish service
under it.
The
"daughter of Jerusalem" refers to others of Israel living
in and around that city. They were aware that God had promised a
Messiah deliverer, and were ready to acclaim anyone who would lead
them to a better life and deliverance from their long bondage to
Rome. The prophecy was significant to both elements. To "the
daughter of Zion" it was announcement that the new arrangement
they had long awaited was about to begin. Their king was there, and
while quite unexpected events were about to unfold, He would soon be
raised as a king into His heavenly kingdom. This would open a new
dimension to their relationship with God. Every one of those of faith
would become "sons of God" as their kingdom hopes became
reconstituted into the spiritual reality for which their previous
calling had prepared them. (Acts 1:6) Gladness, rejoicing in hope,
and heart appreciation for God's special favor enlarge as new
believers meditate on that which can come to every believer through
the death and resurrection of Christ Jesus our Lord.
But
the information in verse nine was more like a command to "the
daughter of Jerusalem." A multitude must be stirred by the
occasion, so as to draw attention of both admirers and despisers to
the important event. The arrival of "the King of the Jews"
(Matt. 27:37) must be announced, and if the people had not shouted
out the very stones would have, Jesus told the Pharisees that asked
Him to quiet the tumult. (Luke 19:39,40) The event was an important
occasion in God's eternal purpose. And the power of the King in His
kingdom would eventually extend peace to every one who would believe,
in every city, in every land.
Representation of Peace
The
specific assurance in verse ten is peace: "And I will cut off
the chariot from Ephraim, and the horse from Jerusalem, and the
battle bow shall be cut off: and He shall speak peace unto the
heathen [Gentiles]: and His dominion shall be from sea even to sea,
and from the river even to the ends of the earth." (Zech. 9:10)
The people who first received the prophecy clearly understood the
promise of peace expressed by the symbols used in the first portion
of that verse. They knew their history of conflict and war, and how
the two kingdoms of Israel and Judah--represented respectively by
Ephraim and Jerusalem-- had formerly used chariots and bows and
arrows in battle against the other.
This
prophecy does not promise that all war everywhere would cease. In
God's due time all war will cease in the earth. (Psa. 46:9, 1 Cor.
15:24-26) We know it; we praise Him for that promise; and we praise
Him that we now believe it. But to assure eternal peace in the hearts
of all men was not the primary meaning of the prophecy. Its context
refers to the first advent of Jesus and to one of the initial
blessings for believers in His death and resurrection. It speaks of
the true brotherhood of the 'sons of peace.' (Luke 10:5,6) And the
peace would be not only for Israelitish believers: "He shall
speak peace unto the heathen [Gentiles]." The fulfillment of
that segment of the prophecy began with Cornelius, and has continued
ever since.
The
primary purpose of the prophecy was to show that the resurrected
Jesus would speak peace unto both Jews and Gentiles. There was to be
no limit to the boundaries of the dominion of that spiritual kingdom,
the blessings from which opened at Pentecost. They would go "to
as many as the Lord our God shall call" (Acts 2:39), and people
of every land would receive that calling.--Rev. 5:9
"Blood of Thy Covenant"
Verse
eleven prophesies of the atoning sacrifice of Jesus to be completed
in Jerusalem. "The blood of thy covenant" points to the
great offering of Jesus. Blood represents sacrificed life, life shed,
life poured out. "By the blood of thy covenant I have sent forth
thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water." This promised
that Christ's shed blood was to enable release of prisoners. However,
the time of sending forth the prisoners would not be the exact day of
the events prophesied in verse 9, nor the day of His death. Indeed,
all prisoners would not be released on the same literal day. The
release started on the day of Pentecost, and it has been continuing
during the entire season of the upward calling. Each prisoner is
individually released, so to speak, when they willingly yield their
own will and begin their devotion to the will of God. And of course
the release of prisoners during God's rule from the "great white
throne" (Rev. 20:11) will not end until "all that are in
their graves" shall have come forth.--John 5:28,29
The
"pit wherein is no water" no doubt represents the condition
of mankind in general under condemnation. This reference to a pit
directs our minds to the fact that mankind in sin and death, and
alienated from God, is without the spiritual water of life. Similar
language is used in Isaiah 51:13,14, where it is written of some who
"hasteneth that he may be loosed, and that he should not die in
the pit." The pit there mentioned was apparently without
"bread." This, too, speaks of those in poverty under sin
and death, needing deliverance. When those who earnestly seek
salvation recognize its source, they move toward it, up and out of
the pit, and into deliverance through Christ.
Jesus
described the zealous response of some who came to an early
appreciation of the promises of Him who is invisible. "And from
the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of the heavens is
forcibly treated, and forceful men seize it"-- Marshall
Interlinear; "...the kingdom of heaven is being invaded, and
invaders are seizing upon it"--Rotherham. (Matt. 11:12) The
parallel passage is Luke 16:16: "The law and the prophets were
until John: since that time the kingdom of God is preached, and every
man presseth into it." The Greek word translated 'presseth' is
identical to the Greek word translated 'is forcibly treated' in Matt.
11:12.
"Prisones of Hope"
In
view of the opportunity for deliverance through Christ's "blood,"
prophesied of in verse eleven, God's instruction in verse twelve is
most assuring. "Turn you to the strong hold, ye prisoners of
hope..." It was particularly fitting that fallen men be
addressed as "prisoners of hope." Long ago God promised to
Abraham that all mankind would be blessed. "And by your
descendants shall all the nations of the earth bless themselves."
(Gen. 22:18, Revised Standard Version--same Hebrew for 'bless
themselves' as in Jer. 4:2) The ones specially identified in Zech.
9:9 were to be offered a special blessing--to be of those descendants
of Abraham through whom all the nations of the earth would be
blessed. It was in regard to this offer that Jesus came into
Jerusalem as king--king of the Jews. "He came unto His own, and
His own received Him not. But as many as received Him, to them gave
He power [authority] to become the sons of God, even to them that
believe on His name."--John 1:11,12
The
second half of the important promise of Zech. 9:12 as worded in the
RSV is now considered: "Return to your stronghold, O prisoners
of hope; today I declare that I will restore to you double." It
is at once noticed that this is a promise of blessing--indeed, of a
'double' blessing. In fact, the entire passage, verses 9-17, contains
a series of comforting promises. There is in the context no
intimation whatsoever of any sins or transgressions for which God
would "render" some kind of double punishment.
'Restore Double' Verified
Only
in the King James Version and the ASR among 21 versions of the Bible
is the Hebrew shuwb, Strong #7725, translated 'render' in Zech. 9:12.
That word appears many hundreds of times in the Hebrew Old Testament,
and in those appearances it is represented in the KJV about fifty
different ways. Five translations read "restore double";
two read 'return' double; two, 'recompense'; two, 'compensate,' of
which Jerusalem Bible is an example--"In compensation for your
days of banishment I will give you back double." Four versions
use other words which promise a blessing. Not included in the ones
numbered above are the following four clear indications of the
meaning of the Hebrew text of Zech. 9:12: "restore double your
former prosperity to you"-- Amplified Version; "recompense
two-fold (good) unto thee"--Leeser; "grant you two-fold
reparation"--NEB; "repay you twice over with blessing for
all you have suffered"--Good News. Now please read the verse in
versions you have.
This
meaning of the prophecy may bring dismay to Bible students who have
thought it read differently. Fear of a new thought and the sinews of
prejudice and conviction strain to reject that which one may not yet
have individually studied to the same conclusion. Some seem to think
there is little more to learn, nothing deeper to see. It is easier to
reject a faithful teaching than to turn away from a long- accepted
opinion that misses the mark of interpretation in harmony with the
context. But God is love, and perfect love for God and His word, and
an appreciation for the revealment of truth through His holy spirit,
casteth out fear.--1 John 4:18
A
certain theology holds that Zech. 9:12 was written to mark a turning
point in God's dealing with Israel; that the day Jesus died marked
the end of a period of favor, and the beginning of a like period of
disfavor. But the prophecy of Zechariah does not suggest such a
teaching. The prophet wrote just a few years after a faithful remnant
had returned to the land of their fathers following the seventy years
of captivity. That was a very proper juncture for God to intimate the
nature of blessings which would be offered to them as a nation about
five and one-half centuries later. The time when those privileges
were offered was during and shortly after the earthly ministry of
Jesus.
The 'Double' for The Remnant
God
dealt with His people Israel through a covenant into which each one
entered at birth. (Deut. 5:3, 29:10-15) In such an arrangement, the
faithful reverent with whom God was pleased received experiences
similar to those which were visited upon the unchaste, idolatrous and
disobedient majority. It was very fitting, then, that the Lord should
speak of a double, a blessing, a recompense to compensate the faith
remnant for the difficulties which they endured on account of the
trespass of others. That is why God promised, "I will restore to
you double." It was a blessing to compensate the faith remnant.
The Hebrew word here translated 'double' is mishneh, Strong #4932,
"properly a repetition, i.e., a duplicate (copy of a document),
or a double (in amount); by implication a second (in order, rank,
age, quality or location)." In none of its 35 uses in the Old
Testament is mishneh used with reference to time.
These
blessings of faith in Christ Jesus for which Israel was kept under
the law are the abundant blessings reserved for the spiritual
firstborn. Belief and faith in the heart are essential for membership
in "the church of the firstborn, which are enrolled in heaven"
(Heb. 12:23), whether or not one be a firstborn by natural birth. The
law of the firstborn is recorded in Deut. 21:17. "He shall
acknowledge the son of the hated for the firstborn, by giving him a
double portion of all that he hath: for he is the beginning of his
strength; the right of the firstborn is his." This was foreshown
in the experiences of Jacob and Esau. Jacob acquired the legal
birthright and the consequent firstborn's double blessing through
faith and the respect in his heart for the promises of God.--Gen.
25:31-34, 27:27-29,36
"Even
today do I declare" refers to the very day that Jesus completed
the pouring out of "the blood of thy covenant." (Zech.
9:11,12) That was an appropriate point for Jehovah to declare it, and
this prophecy records that declaration. Even as God's oath to Abraham
was sworn immediately following the offering of Isaac, so here God's
declaration in the prophecy is identified with the completion of the
personal sacrifice of our Master. The important promise Jesus made to
the thief during their crucifixions was similarly timed. It was in
the hours of His dying that Jesus assured, "Amen, I say unto
thee today, thou shalt be with Me in paradise." (Luke 24:43) But
God did not define the very day He will restore double unto them,
because as before mentioned, the deeper fulfillment of that promise
follows each person's individual heart consecration.
The
peace and blessing of the 'double' are enjoyed by each one who
participates in the kingdom of heaven and its "upward call of
God in Christ Jesus." (Phil. 3:14 RSV) The first to enjoy the
'double' were the faithful Jewish remnant, "as many as received
him." (John 1:12) The same Hebrew word for double as used in
Zech. 9:12, mishneh, is used twice in Isaiah 61:7, and the context
indicates that the blessing promised is again a very real though an
intangible one--it is a spiritual blessing. "Instead of your
[former] shame ye shall have double; and instead of dishonor they
shall rejoice in their portion: therefore in their land they shall
possess double; everlasting joy shall be unto them."--ASV
"Blessed Are They that Mourn"
The
instruction, comfort and promise in Isaiah 61 is particularly
directed to faithful Jews--Israelites indeed. The quotation from it
by Jesus at the beginning of His ministry (Luke 4:18,19) indicates
how it gave direction to His teaching. Those whom Isaiah referred to
as "trees of righteousness" are said to "build the old
wastes." But things then would be new, different; the builders
would be "them that mourn in Zion" (Isa. 61:3,4); and the
building would be constructed of spiritual qualities through the
spiritual energies of spiritual sacrificers. (1 Pet. 2:5) In view of
this, the valid promise which Jesus made was linked to the prophecy:
"Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be
comforted."--Matt. 5:4
Inasmuch
as only the faith remnant of fleshly Israel could "be named the
Priests of the LORD" and "Ministers of our God" (Isa.
61:6), it would be necessary for them to "eat the riches
('wealth'--RSV) of the nations." This 'wealth' refers to the
faith remnant from among the Gentiles, who would be appropriated, as
it were, by Israel's remnant in order that those Gentiles might
become joint members. The glory of the truth revealed to Gentiles
requires their personal belief in the divine promises originally made
to Abraham and his seed. For this Israel would 'boast,' would rejoice
in being fitted with others-- Gentiles--who would participate in the
special privileges.--Isaiah 61:2-6
Israel
was and always is Israel. The name always refers only to the
faithful, only to the true. None others fulfill the meaning of the
word, "to rule with God." Paul's identification in Romans
9:6 is a truth: "However, it is not as though God's Word had
failed--coming to nothing. For it is not everybody who is a
descendant of Jacob (Israel) who belongs to [the true] Israel."
(Amplified Bible) Any natural Israelite who lacked the faith of
Abraham was not of Israel, even though after the flesh they were
called Israel. The rest were only nominal, and in their harvest the
nominal were denominated "chaff," worthless for use in
God's purpose.
Spiritual Concealed in the Natural
The
first advent of Jesus was a time of great privilege for Israel. They
had always hoped for God's chiefest blessing, and until then all they
understood was the natural, for the spiritual promises were concealed
in the natural. God had predetermined that the spiritual blessings be
offered to them first. For that reason Jesus instructed that the
gospel be preached in the cities of Israel. If by rejecting the
message of peace, they gave evidence that they were but chaff, His
disciples were to judge that city as unworthy of their message:
"shake off the dust from off thy feet," and go to
others.--Matt. 10:5,6,12- 14,23, Luke 10:6-11
Isaiah
61:4 suggests that the prophecy was received after God had visited
'wastes' and 'desolations' upon Jerusalem. Many scholars believe that
a prophet subsequent to the "son of Amoz" (Isa. 1:1) wrote
the later chapters of Isaiah. This conclusion is further supported by
1), reference to the loss of Solomon's temple--"Our holy and our
beautiful house, where our fathers praised thee, is burned up with
fire: and all our pleasant things are laid waste" (Isa. 64:11);
and 2), by the search for spiritual materials--"But this is the
man to whom I will look, he that is humble and contrite in spirit,
and trembles at My word"--with which to build another temple:
"what is the house which you would build for me, and what is the
place of my rest?" (Isa. 66:1,2 RSV) The captivity brought
'shame' and 'dishonor' upon all the people, but this was felt most
deeply by those who had faith in God. The promise in Isaiah 61:7 was
especially to comfort the real Israel. The 'double' was to be for
them, and they would receive it "in their land." Such words
of promise would encourage a captive people to return at the earliest
opportunity from the national punishment in Babylon.
"In Their Land"
But
probably more is to be understood from the words "in their land"
than instruction to but one generation. Jews from other lands were
enlightened on the day of Pentecost, and said, "we do hear...in
our tongues the wonderful works of God." (Acts 2:5-11) The
message of the gospel with its spiritual blessings was subsequently
taken to Jews who lived beyond Judah, Samaria and Galilee. (Acts
11:19, 13:4-46) Consider "their land" as a symbol of
spiritual opportunity, blessing and privilege in which their hopes
would be newly defined and spiritually enlarged. For these spiritual
privileges they had been "shut up unto the faith [in Christ
Jesus] which should afterward be revealed."--Gal. 3:23
God's
blessings to natural Israel were literal, but the eternal blessings
which the symbols represent are spiritual. The natural blessing which
Solomon invoked upon Israelites "so long as they live in the
land which thou gavest unto our fathers" (I Kings 8:38-43) and
"all the days that they live in the land" (2 Chron.
6:28-33), come in their spiritual form to any man who worships God in
spirit and in truth, whether Jew or Gentile.
Some
of the faithful fleshly Israelites of our Lord's and the apostle's
time did possess their double portion--"everlasting joy shall be
unto them"--when actually living "in their land," but
many received their double portion while living in distant lands. And
the remnant of other nations also receive a firstborn's double
blessing of joy: "...your heart shall rejoice and your joy no
man taketh from you...that your joy may be full." (John
16:20-24) This has been possible because the remnant of Israel under
the direction of Jesus and the apostles took the message of salvation
abroad to the Gentiles. They in turn also actively minister
reconciliation and the upward call.--2 Cor. 5:18-21, Phil. 3:14
"The Seed which the LORD Hath Blessed"
It
is acknowledged that Abraham's seed according to faith, of whatever
natural family believers come, "are the seed which the LORD hath
blessed." Foreseeing this, God caused Isaiah to write that just
"as the earth bringeth forth her bud, and as the garden causeth
the things that are sown in it to spring forth; so the Lord GOD will
cause righteousness and praise to spring forth before all the
nations." (Isa. 61:8-11, Gal. 3:9) The service of zealous
believers today is evidence that the primary fulfillment of this
prophecy has been proceeding.
"Prisoners
of hope" turn "to the strong hold" by exercising faith
in Christ Jesus our Lord. It is He that has the authority to bestow
deliverance. He grants it to those who seek it by devotion and
service. The only way ever intended whereby one becomes a member of
Abraham's seed that blesses others is through faith. And Paul reminds
all believers of "the words of the Lord Jesus, how He said, 'It
is more blessed to give than to receive.'" (Acts 20:35) "Sons
of God" enjoy a blessing which supersedes that experienced by
members of the previous 'house of servants.' (Heb. 3:5) Sonship
opened as a result of the dispensation of faith in Jesus after His
death and resurrection. "But the scripture shut up all...under
sin, that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to them
that believe."--Gal. 3:22 American Standard Revised
Bow, Arrow, Trumpet, Lightning
The
use of trumpet, arrow, and lightning as symbols by Zechariah in the
context of its time fulfillment is noteworthy. The meaning of those
symbols is consistent throughout Scripture. Noted foregoing has been
'the double blessing' of peace and deliverance promised in Zech.
9:10-12. The symbolic language in verses 13-15 represents the warfare
against unrighteousness led by Christ Jesus, Him that sat on the
white horse, having "a bow; and a crown was given unto Him: and
He went forth conquering, and to conquer." (Rev. 6:2) First He
used Israel's remnant, from both Judah and Ephraim, serving together.
The
symbols used to portray this joint service are a bow and an arrow.
Judah is the bent bow; Ephraim, the arrow. But not all Israel were to
be used, only "thy sons, O Zion"--only the Israelites
indeed, the ones of faith. He makes Zion's sons "as the sword of
a mighty man," not 'against' but 'over,' as in "I will
brandish your sons, O Zion, over your sons, O Greece." (RSV) We
incline to the view that God did not intend those words to intimate
future Jewish efforts under the Maccabees to deliver themselves from
the dominion of Greece, as Jerome says the Jews understood. In view
of the events clearly foreshown by verses 9-12, it is reasonable to
think that this connected verse, 13, holds reference to an activity
involving the gospel. 'Over' suggests the priority of Zion to God's
blessing, as well also the superiority of Israel's relationship as
natural branches in the olive tree. Peter's words may relate to those
elements. He affirmed to the Jews that God should send "the
Christ having been foreappointed for you, Jesus..." The apostle
concluded with the words, "Unto you first God, having raised up
His servant Jesus, sent Him to bless you, in turning away every one
of you from his iniquities."--Acts 3:20,26
Verse
fourteen promises that "the Lord GOD shall blow the trumpet."
A trumpet usually announces something. Here the prophet seems to be
using a trumpet blow to mark the start of the gospel invitation. In
Isaiah 27:3 the trumpet blast represents a spiritual call for
response by believers. In Isaiah 58:1, a trumpet illustrates the
prominence to be given a specific instruction. In Amos 2:2 and 3:6 a
trumpet is used in connection with judgment and destruction. The
trumpet blown 'in Zion' announces impending judgment from the LORD,
and calls people to repentance. (Joel 2:1,15) It is marvelous that
the Lord would "be seen over them" working his providence
and blessing.--Zech. 9:14
Zech.
9:15: "Jehovah of hosts will shelter above them, and they will
eat and tread down sling-stones, and will drink, make a noise, as if
wine, and become full, like the sacrificial bowls, like the corners
of the altar." (Keil-Delitzsch) The prophet's language, which
describes victory over enemies, whose flesh and blood is eaten and
drunk, is similar to that in Num. 23:24. The time of fulfillment of
the context, Zech. 9:9-12, suggests the intended primary significance
of verse 15. It may point to the victory which God's power through
his holy spirit gave to the early followers of Christ Jesus in their
fight against the error, prejudice, and persecution of Judaism.
Peace Portrayed
The
message in Isaiah 11 has details and meaning similar to that in
Zechariah 9. Verses 1-5 refer to Jesus. The symbols in verses 6-9
portray the peace which is to all those who willingly become subjects
of their invisible King. Christ Jesus our glorified Lord, the "root
of Jesse," the seed of David, has become the ensign, the
conspicuous signal for truth, and the Gentiles also seek and attain
His glorious rest. The comprehensive preview given in verse 10 is
explained in succeeding verses. Verse 13 foretells that envy, vexing,
and adversary attitudes between the two-tribe kingdom of Judah and
the ten-tribe kingdom of Israel, again represented by Ephraim, shall
be cut off.
Remnants
of Gentile nations are gathered by the Gospel message sent forth by
the spiritual elect, who "set up," that is, proclaim the
"ensign" throughout the earth. The adjacent Philistines
mentioned in verse 14 may represent Gentiles, at one time enemies
because of Israel's priority regarding the gospel (Rom. 11:28), but
who would be reconciled to God through the witness of Israel's
remnant. This would lead to the repentance of a remnant of Edom,
Moab, and Ammon, representing other Gentiles, who would come with
obedience to also partake of spiritual blessings. The spread of the
gospel was actually in that manner: first into adjacent Samaria, and
later to other Gentiles.--Acts 1:8, 8:5-14, 10:1-11:1
The
promise of Zech. 9:16,17 must have comforted the remnant to
anticipate "that day" when the LORD their God would save
them "as the flock of His people." Jesus brought that
blessing, identified Himself as their shepherd, and they as His
flock. (Luke 12:32, John 10:11-16) How encouraging to the ones who
feared the LORD and who thought upon His name must have been the
words: "...for like the jewels of a crown they shall shine on
his land. Yea, how good and how fair it shall be!" (RSV) His
people become as crown jewels only through His goodness and love,
through the sustenance and joy which comes to all who are God's dear
Israel, encouraged by His provisions of truth and hope!

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