Day #254
Scripture Reading: Zechariah 1 - 7 …
Like many of the prophecies of the Old Testament,
Zechariah's visions contain predictions that would take place in the near
future, mixed with those that have not yet taken place, that will be fulfilled
in the events surrounding the return of Jesus Christ, the "King" of
whom Zechariah and other prophets speak. God exists beyond time and enters into
time to reveal Himself to mankind.
And who IS this God? Zechariah declares that
He is "the LORD Almighty” and speaks of things that even he did not
fully understand at that time. The words of Chapter 3, verse 8 are
important as we listen to God speak to and through Zechariah: "Listen,
O high priest Joshua and your associates seated before you, who are men
symbolic of things to come …" What God was doing in the
lives of those who had returned from exile in Babylon was symbolic of what He
would do in the future when He promised to bring His people back to the land He
had promised to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. We live in that time today!
In his visions, God gives Zechariah a glimpse into
the spiritual realm, where His horsemen (angels) go about all the earth and
bring back reports to the One who sent them. Zechariah was sent to
encourage the exiles who had returned to Jerusalem and arrives on the scene
shortly after Haggai. The angel said, "This is what the LORD
Almighty says: 'I am very jealous for Jerusalem and Zion, but I am very
angry with the nations that feel secure'" (1:14-15). God
sees what is going on in the world, and He says, "I will return to
Jerusalem with mercy, and there my house will be rebuilt … and the LORD will
again comfort Zion and choose Jerusalem" (1:16-17).
Some interpret this to refer only to the next few
decades that followed, but there is more here that points to the very end of
the age. In Chapter 2, Jerusalem is measured and God says, "whoever
touches you touches the apple of His eye" (2:8). "Shout
and be glad, O Daughter of Zion. For I am coming, and I will live among
you" (2:10). "The LORD will inherit Judah as His portion
in the holy land and will again choose Jerusalem" (2:12). This
undoubtedly had a measure of fulfillment as God brought the people back to
Jerusalem and Judah and they were in the process of rebuilding the temple (the
sign of God's presence among them). But there will also be a future time
when all the nations of the earth will see God's glory through these people.
The beauty of Chapter 3 is in the picture of
forgiveness and cleansing that is given to Joshua the high priest. Satan
stands there to accuse him and the LORD said to Satan, "The LORD rebuke
you, Satan! The LORD, who has chosen Jerusalem, rebuke you!" (3:2).
Joshua stands there dressed in filthy
clothes, but the angel is told to take off his filthy clothes and then he says
to Joshua, "See, I have taken away your sin, and I will put rich
garments on you!" (3:4). Many people fail to grasp that God
not only removes our sins from us, but also clothes us with the perfect
righteousness of Jesus!! The writer of Hebrews declares, "by one
sacrifice He has made perfect forever those who are being made holy" (Hebrews
10:14). And Paul writes in II Corinthians 5:21: "God made
Him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in Him we might become the
righteousness of God!"
God says, "I will remove the sin of this
land in a single day" (3:9). This points us to Jesus' suffering
and death on the cross, and also to another event and another time described
later in Chapter 13, verse 1. We'll talk more about that when we get
there. Meanwhile, God continues to give Zechariah visions of things to
come. There are the "two olive trees" in Chapter 4
… "These are the two who are anointed to serve the Lord of all the
earth" (4:14). Could these be the "two witnesses" of
Revelation 11?
Then there is the "flying scroll" and
the "woman in a basket" of Chapter 5. Again
symbolic of the near future and the distant future, God reveals that His
covenant remains in tact with His people and that His curse remains on those
who swear falsely and who take His name in vain. The vision of Chapter 6,
with the four chariots and four horses, represents "the four spirits of
heaven, going out from standing in the presence of the Lord of the whole
world," as they go out on behalf of the Lord to accomplish His
purposes. As God said to Zerubbabel in Chapter 4, verse 6: "This
is the word of the LORD to Zerubbabel: 'Not by might nor by power, but by
my Spirit,' says the LORD Almighty!" How we need to remember
that truth today. Like those in
Revelation 12:11, we will overcome "by the blood of the Lamb and the
word of our testimony!"
Joshua received a crown (6:11), but God points
Zechariah and the people of Israel to "the Branch," who
will "build the temple of the LORD" (6:12). This "Branch" "will
be clothed with majesty and will sit and rule on His throne. And He will
be a priest on His throne" (6:13). God had already spoken of the "Branch" in
Chapter 3, verse 8, where He said, "I am going to bring My servant, the
Branch." Who is this One whom God is going to bring, who will be
both King and Priest?
The "Branch" is none other than
JESUS, the descendent of David (from the stump of Jesse). He is King and
He is Priest and He will reign over all the earth. In Chapter 7, God
questions the fasts of the people and calls them to soften their hearts and
listen to God's Word. Then they will experience His blessing.
Our sin has been atoned for and we are now "dressed" in
the righteousness of Christ and have access to God's presence. Jesus is
building the spiritual temple of God, His Church, and we who believe are "living
stones!" Praise God for these "symbols of things to
come" which, today, are becoming a reality right in front of our
eyes. Truly, our God reigns in majesty!
"O LORD God Almighty, to You I come through
Jesus, my King, my High Priest. While the pattern of sin and rebellion is
all around me, You have revealed that history is unfolding towards the reign of
Jesus Christ over all things and by Your grace, I am part of His kingdom right
now! Use me, Father, to point others to the future You have promised.
Help me to understand the symbols of truth that point to what yet lies
ahead, and to place my hope not in how things "might" turn out, but
in how You say they WILL turn out ... for Your glory and my good. In
Jesus' name, Amen"
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