Like Jewels in a Crown
August 11, 2007Like Jewels in a Crown
Zechariah Chapters 9-14
Your King Comes to You
The final four chapters of the book of Zechariah do not have the same textual style or cohesiveness as the first eight. While the first section of the book gives us careful chronological detail, this latter section not only has no chronological markers, it would not appear to progress with any specific chronology.
One theory of authorship for books of prophecy holds that, generally speaking, each book was created by disciples of the prophet These disciples would have collected the sayings of the prophet and arrange and edit them to some degree With books like Zechariah, the idea is that the major works of the prophet were collected first and then, over time, other teachings were added. These later teachings may have been original, or passed down from other prophets.
Do to the eclectic nature of the text, a study of these chapters must become a bit if a hodge-podge. To provide some continuity, we will focus on the passages that, by the witness of the New Testament, are prophetic of the coming of Christ.
In Chapter 9 we find the promise that your Lord is coming to us “riding on a donkey” (9:9). This reference is of course prophetic of the “triumphal entry” of Christ as recorded, for example, in Matthew 21:1-5. Though, as we have said, these chapters do not form a single, cohesive unit, this theme of the coming Lord does echo through them.
This coming Lord will use Judah as his bow and Ephraim as his arrow (9:13). But since the Lord is coming gently and humbly, we cannot interpret this as license to take upon ourselves the righteous anger of the Lord (Psalm 7:9-15). Instead, we must be willing tools of God, who of themselves have no value, but in the hand of the Lord are like shining jewels (9:16-17).
Thirty Pieces of Silver
In Chapter 10, the dominate theme is the Lord’s continued care for his people. Though they have been dispersed, the Lord will bring them back again (10:8-10). We are familiar with the metaphor of the shepherd, which is used famously by David (Psalm 23). But here the Lord himself uses the metaphor not only to describe the culpability of those who should have been shepherds, but to show how much he cares for his flock (10:1-3; Ezekiel 34:7-12). This must certainly be the foundation upon which Jesus laid his claim to be the Good Shepherd, the one who lays down his life for the sheep (John 10:11-15).
The metaphor of the shepherd becomes dominant in Chapter 11, where it would appear that the prophet acted out some pantomime on behalf of the Lord. The meaning of this show is not entirely apparent. Nor, in this context, is the meaning of its reference to “thirty pieces of silver.” (11:12-13) Originally, this was the price paid for the redemption of a slave (Exodus 21:32) but it became the terrible price of the redeemer himself (Matthew 27:3-10).
The succession of New Testament archetypes continues in Chapter 12, where the Lord promises a spirit of grace and supplication that will allow us to look with compassion on the one whom we have pierced (12:10). When our Lord was pierced, perhaps only the Beloved Disciple looked on with compassion (John 19:31-37). His sacrifice is our only gain. Would that the Lord would grant us the grace to look beyond our own gain and see his great loss.
The Lord Is our God
In Chapter 13 we have the promise that a fountain will be opened to cleanse us from sin (13:1). In the New Testament, this is revealed to be a fountain filled with the blood of Christ (Matthew 26:26-28). When we are cleansed, we will be happy to say that the Lord is our God (13:9), and the Lord will proclaim that we are his people (1:2-3).
The book of Zechariah ends with a curious image: cooking pots in the house of the Lord that are like the sacred bowls in front of the alter (14:20-21). This is a day when every vessel will be redeemed, and even the lowly cooking pots will become holy in their service to God.
When that day comes, the LORD will save his people, as a shepherd saves his flock from danger. They will shine in his land like the jewels of a crown. (Zechariah 9:16 GNB)