Zechariah: The Incredible Ways Of God (VIII)

SHARPENING YOUR FOCUS (7:1-14)

Neal Pollard

The eight visions in the first six chapters are followed by didactic (teaching) discourses in chapters seven and eight. Some might say that between the visions (ch. 1-6) and the Messianic prophecy (ch. 9-14), these chapters form the heart of the message of Zechariah to the people. Chapter seven focuses on the people’s responsibility to God, while chapter eight focuses on God’s response to His repenting people. 

Again, Zechariah is like an Old Testament Luke, giving precise names, dates, and places, helping us with knowledge like precisely when these oracles were written. Historians can take his citation of “the fourth year of King Darius…on the fourth day of the ninth month, which is Chislev” and determine that this was December, 518 B.C. This is two years after Zechariah received the visions (1:1) and over two years before the dedication of the second temple (widely believed to be March, 516 B.C.; see Ezra 6:15-16 to align this date). 

The backdrop to the discourses is the delegation of two representatives from Bethel (their names are Chaldean and mean “protect the king” and “friend of the king”) and additional men, asking the priests and the prophets at the nearly completed temple if they still needed to fast (2-3). They are seeking God’s favor (2), and the priests new the law and the prophets received revelation (Smith, 563). It is logical to seek their guidance. Are they weary of fasting? Are they ready to be done with it? Perhaps this is a fast that had been set each year throughout the time of Babylonian Captivity, but it was not the fast set by the Law of Moses on the Day of Atonement (Lev. 23:27; the 10th day of the 7th month). The oracles are in response to this question.

Lesson One (4-7). The brief lesson is built on three rhetorical questions:

  • Did you actually fast for Me (5)?
  • Do you eat and drink for yourselves (6)?
  • Didn’t the former prophets speak about these things before captivity (7)?

Basically, God says He is less concerned about afflicting the body with fasting than He is about real inward change (5). Legalistic fasting repulsed God. The people had neglected to consider God in their daily lives when they feasted (6), and the warnings of the prophets before the exile still applied (7). Zechariah’s teaching through rhetorical questions foreshadows the extensive way his successor, Malachi, would speak to the people after the temple was rededicated. 

Lesson Two (8-14). The second oracle expands on the last statement of the first oracle. That is, Zechariah drills down on what the former prophets had told their forefathers. What had the Lord said in the past (9a)? What had their ancestors neglected, drawing the consequences of exile? 

They failed to actively do the good required by the Law (9). They didn’t practice justice, kindness, and compassion with each other. This is reminiscent of the oft-quoted Micah 6:8.

They did what was called evil in the Law (10). They oppressed widows, orphans, the poor, and strangers, and they did evil against each other. 

They hardened their hearts and refused to listen to God’s Word (11-12). God was calling to them and they refused to listen.

The result of these sins was that it drew God’s wrath (12). When they called, He wouldn’t listen to them either (13). He sent them into captivity (14). Thus, this oracle reviews how the people had gotten into their dire predicament in the first place. This chapter is the sobering, sad story of how they had fallen and why their temple and cities were destroyed. What He says next is the bridge to the bright hope with which Zechariah ends this great book, focusing on the Messianic age to come. 

Unknown's avatar

Author: preacherpollard

preacher,Cumberland Trace church of Christ, Bowling Green, Kentucky

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.