Zechariah Ch 8 – Study

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  7. Zechariah Ch 8 – Study

For those who may wish to ‘study’ this chapter, the following simple resources are provided for you. Each passage has a four-Part approach to help you take in and think further about what you have read.

A. Find Out
  1. What did the Lord say He felt about Israel? v.1,2
  2. What was He intending to do? v.3a
  3. What names will change? v.3b
  4. What will change in Jerusalem? v.4,5
  5. How will there be different perceptions about this? v.6
  6. What will He do? v.7
  7. For what purpose? v.8
B. Think:
  1. How is the Lord painting a different picture about the future?
  2. What suggests that the people might doubt this?
  3. How does He reinforce it?
C. Comment:

As a continuation, this chapter continues to give reassurances to those who had come asking whether they needed to continue fasting for Jerusalem. In the previous chapter the Lord focused on His desire for a morally and spiritually transformed land, but now He simply brings further reassurance to them to declaring very openly His intentions for the future of the Land.

His starting point is to declare His jealousy for Jerusalem (Zion), His great concern for her (v.1,2). The prophecies of Ezekiel had shown again and again the glory of the Lord departing from the temple in Jerusalem but now He declares He will return to it (v.3a) so it will be called the city of Faith (v.3b), and the central mountain will be known as a holy place (v.3c) so there will be an amazing transformation of the city (v.4,5).

Whereas it had been a place of dead bodies (see Lam 2:21) and then silence after its destruction (see Lam 1:1, 5:18), soon it will again become a place where old people sit around (v.4) and the streets will be filled with children playing again (v.5).

Now although they may struggle to believe this (v.6a) it is no hard thing for the Lord to achieve (v.6b). How will He do it? He will reach into the countries where His people had been sent into exile (v.7) and bring them back to this land (v.8). In these ways He brings reassurance to those people who wondered if the future of Jerusalem was assured.

D. Application:
  1. God works on long-term strategies.
  2. Never get locked into the present but seek to see the big picture.
A. Find Out
  1. What is the Lord’s purpose in what He now says? v.9a
  2. How is it simply a confirmation? v.9b
  3. How had life been back then? v.10
  4. So what does He say now? v.11
  5. How will life change? v.12
  6. What transformation was taking place? v.13
  7. How is that reiterated? v.14,15
B. Think:
  1. How would you sum up what this passage is about?
  2. How does the Lord do that with reference to the past?
  3. How do you think all this should encourage the present people?
C. Comment:

So the Lord continues in this chapter to bring encouragement to the people back in Jerusalem who had intended to rebuild the Temple ten years ago. From the big overall sweeps of His intention to bless the city, seen in the first eight verses, His goal now is to reiterate what Haggai and Zechariah himself had said those years back, that the temple WILL be rebuilt (v.9).

He now reminds them of the changes that have already taken place since they first arrived back (v.10), how life had been difficult in those early days of return, but He is not dealing with the returning remnant as He had done with the disobedient inhabitants of the Land before the exile. (v.11).

Now, by comparison, they will know His ongoing blessing on them so they will be fruitful in every way with their crops (v.12) and whereas they were once seen as under a curse,  now they will be seen as under His blessing (v.13), so this should encourage them in their rebuilding work and in all their endeavors in resettling the Land.

He reiterates, before the fall of Jerusalem, He had determined to bring destruction because of the people’s disobedience (v.14); now He purposes blessing on then, to do good to them, so they no longer need to feel afraid for their future (implied) (v.15)

In all of this the Lord is seeking to reassure the people that, indeed, they no longer need to fast for Jerusalem for her day of blessing has come.

D. Application:
  1. After disciplinary correction, always comes restoration.
  2. The Lord may discipline us but it will always be followed by blessing.
A. Find Out
  1. What does the Lord challenge them to do? v.16,17
  2. What does he say about their days of fasting? v.18,19
  3. How will things change in Jerusalem? v.20
  4. What further things will happen? v.21
  5. And even more how will that be seen? v.22,23
B. Think:
  1. How does this link up with the previous chapter?
  2. How is this part an extension of the earlier part of the chapter?
  3. How is it supposed to encourage the returned remnant?  
C. Comment:

There is, with these closing verses of this chapter, a drawing together of the previous chapter and the earlier part of this one. The two chapters pivot on the coming of men asking if they should stop their fasting for Jerusalem (7:2,3). Bethel (7:2) was known to be a spiritual ‘hot spot’ in the land and clearly some of the returned remnant had settled there and had continued their practice of fasting four times in the year (7:3,5, 8:19), each fast commemorating one of the catastrophic parts of the downfall of the city, Jerusalem,

Now they had returned – and perhaps caused by the delays that had occurred in rebuilding the temple (remember, restarting in Sept 520BC but not being completed until March 516BC – see Ezra 3:8, 6:15) they wondered how secure the rebuilding was and should they keep on praying and fasting on those four months. Verse 1-8 had been a general proclamation, and 9-15 had explained the change, now this possibly expounds on the future.

In line with what the Lord had said about expelling unrighteousness in Chapter 5, He simply reminds them that He expects them to live righteous lives (v.16-17); speaking truth, maintaining justice, plotting no evil against one another, or speaking untruths.

Then comes the culmination in verses 18 & 19 – the fasts you have spoken of are now turned into times of joy, of feasting and festivals.

The transformation that will take place (? In the end days?) will have worldwide effect: people from all over the world will come (v.20), all coming to seek the Lord (v.21), again from all over the world (v.22) pleading from help from the people of God (v.23).

D. Application:
  1. When God blesses and transforms His people, the world WILL see.
  2. May this be true of Israel & the Church. (? Revelation 11)