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Text -- Zechariah 2:4 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
2:4 and said to him, “Hurry, speak to this young man as follows: ‘Jerusalem will no longer be enclosed by walls because of the multitude of people and animals there.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Jerusalem the capital city of Israel,a town; the capital of Israel near the southern border of Benjamin


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Zechariah | ZECHARIAH, BOOK OF | VILLAGE | TOWN | Jerusalem | JOSHUA (3) | Israel | Angel | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Zec 2:4 - -- Christ to that angel who came to meet him.

Christ to that angel who came to meet him.

Wesley: Zec 2:4 - -- Hasten and tell Zechariah.

Hasten and tell Zechariah.

Wesley: Zec 2:4 - -- The suburbs of it shall be as towns unwalled, for extent and for safety.

The suburbs of it shall be as towns unwalled, for extent and for safety.

JFB: Zec 2:4 - -- So Zechariah is called as being still a youth when prophetically inspired [GROTIUS]. Or, he is so called in respect to his ministry or service (compar...

So Zechariah is called as being still a youth when prophetically inspired [GROTIUS]. Or, he is so called in respect to his ministry or service (compare Num 11:27; Jos 1:1) [VATABLUS]. Naturally the "angel that talked with" Zechariah is desired to "speak to" him the further communications to be made from the Divine Being.

JFB: Zec 2:4 - -- So many shall be its inhabitants that all could not be contained within the walls, but shall spread out in the open country around (Est 9:19); and so ...

So many shall be its inhabitants that all could not be contained within the walls, but shall spread out in the open country around (Est 9:19); and so secure shall they be as not to need to shelter themselves and their cattle behind walls. So hereafter Judea is to be "the land of unwalled villages" (Eze 38:11). Spiritually, now the Church has extended herself beyond the walls (Eph 2:14-15) of Mosaic ordinances and has spread from cities to country villages, whose inhabitants gave their Latin name (pagani) to pagans, as being the last in parting with heathenism.

Clarke: Zec 2:4 - -- Run, speak to this young man - Nehemiah must have been a young man when he was sakee , or cup-bearer, to Artaxerxes

Run, speak to this young man - Nehemiah must have been a young man when he was sakee , or cup-bearer, to Artaxerxes

Clarke: Zec 2:4 - -- As towns without walls - It shall be so numerously inhabited as not to be contained within its ancient limits. Josephus, speaking of this time, says...

As towns without walls - It shall be so numerously inhabited as not to be contained within its ancient limits. Josephus, speaking of this time, says, Wars 5:4:2, "The city, overflowing with inhabitants, by degrees extended itself beyond its walls."

TSK: Zec 2:4 - -- young : Jer 1:6; Dan 1:17; 1Ti 4:12 Jerusalem : We learn from Josephus, that Jerusalem actually overflowed with inhabitants, and gradually extended it...

young : Jer 1:6; Dan 1:17; 1Ti 4:12

Jerusalem : We learn from Josephus, that Jerusalem actually overflowed with inhabitants, and gradually extended itself beyond its walls, and that Herod Agrippa fortified the new part, called Bezetha. Zec 1:17, Zec 8:4, Zec 8:5, Zec 12:6, Zec 14:10,Zec 14:11; Isa 33:20, Isa 44:26; Jer 30:18, Jer 30:19, Jer 31:24, Jer 31:27; Jer 31:38-40, Jer 33:10-13; Eze 36:10,Eze 36:11; Mic 7:11

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Zec 2:4 - -- And said unto him, Run, speak unto this young man - The prophet himself, who was to report to his people what he heard. Jeremiah says, "I am a ...

And said unto him, Run, speak unto this young man - The prophet himself, who was to report to his people what he heard. Jeremiah says, "I am a youth"Jer 1:6; and, "the young man,""the young prophet,"carried the prophetic message from Elisha to Jehu. "Youth,’ "common as our English term in regard to man, is inapplicable and unapplied to angels, who have not our human variations of age, but exist, as they were created.

Jerusalem shall be inhabited as towns without walls - Or as villages (see the notes at Hab 3:14), namely, an unconfined, uncramped population, spreading itself freely, without restraint of walls, and (it follows) without need of them. Clearly then it is no earthly city. To be inhabited as villages would be weakness, not strength; a peril, not a blessing. The earthly Jerusalem, so long as she remained unwalled, was in continual fear and weakness. God put it into the heart of His servant to desire to restore her; her wall was built, and then she prospered. He Himself had promised to Daniel, that "Her street shall be rebuilt, and her wall, even in strait of times"Dan 9:25. Nehemiah mourned 73 years after this, 443 b.c., when it was told him, "The remnant that are left of the captivity there in the province are in great affliction and reproach: the wall of Jerusalem also is broken down, and the gates thereof are burned with fire"Neh 1:3. He said to Artaxerxes, "Why should not my countenance be sad, when the city, the place of my fathers’ sepulehres, lieth waste, and the gates thereof are consumed with fire?"Neh 2:3. When permitted by Artaxerxes to return, he addressed the rulers of the Jews, "Ye see the distress that we are in, how Jerusalem lieth waste, and the gates thereof are burned with fire; come, and let us build up the wall of Jerusalem, that we be no more a reproach; and they said, let us rise and build. So they strengthened their hands for this good work"Neh 2:17-18. When "the wall was finished and our enemies heard, and the pagan about us saw it, they were much cast down in their own eyes; for they perceived that this work was wrought of our God"Neh 6:15-16.

This prophecy then looks on directly to the time of Christ. Wonderfully does it picture the gradual expansion of the kingdom of Christ, without bound or limit, whose protection and glory God is, and the character of its defenses. It should "dwell as villages,"peacefully and gently expanding itself to the right and the left, through its own inherent power of multiplying itself, as a city, to which no bounds were assigned, but which was to fill the earth. Cyril: "For us God has raised a church, that truly holy and far-famed city, which Christ fortifies, consuming opponents by invisible powers, and filling it with His own glory, and as it were, standing in the midst of those who dwell in it. For He promised; "Lo, I am with you always even unto the end of the world."This holy city Isaiah mentioned: "thine eyes shall see Jerusalem, a quiet habitation; a tabernacle that shall not be taken down; not one of the stakes thereof shall ever be removed, neither shall any of the cords thereof be broken"Isa 33:20; and to her he saith, "enlarge the place of thy, tent, and let them stretch forth the curtains of thine habitation; spare not; lengthen thy cords and strengthen thy stakes. For thou shalt break forth on the right hand and on the left"Isa 54:2-3. For the church of Christ is widened and extended boundlessly, ever receiving countless souls who worship Him."Rup.: "What king or emperor could make walls so ample as to include the whole world? Yet, without this, it could not encircle that Jerusalem, the church which is diffused through the whole world. This Jerusalem, the pilgrim part of the heavenly Jerusalem, is, in this present world, inhabited without walls, not being contained in vile place or one nation. But in that world, where it is daily being removed hence, much more can there not, nor ought to be, nor is, any wall around, save the Lord, who is also the glory in the midst of it."

Poole: Zec 2:4 - -- And said unto him or, And he said or, as the French, Lequel lui dit, Which said unto him : so it is plain that the Angel which now was going forth...

And said unto him or,

And he said or, as the French, Lequel lui dit, Which said unto him : so it is plain that the Angel which now was going forth spake to that angel which came to meet him, or gave him orders what to do.

Run since you came so seasonably, hasten with all diligence, and from me tell that young man, Zechariah.

Jerusalem which hath so long lain in rubbish, which I once delighted in, which now seems desolate and hopeless,

shall be inhabited filled with inhabitants,

as towns without walls the suburbs of it shall be as towns unwalled for greatness of extent, and for safety and freedom from enemies and danger: their own multitudes of men shall be some safeguard to them; and they shall have my presence, a better safeguard.

Cattle brought thither for sacred uses, for sacrifices.

Haydock: Zec 2:4 - -- Walls. This must be understood of the spiritual Jerusalem, the Church of Christ. (Challoner) --- According to St. Augustine (in Psalm lxxi.) when ...

Walls. This must be understood of the spiritual Jerusalem, the Church of Christ. (Challoner) ---

According to St. Augustine (in Psalm lxxi.) when the literal sense cannot be verified, we must have recourse to the thing prefigured; and thus what is here written, must be explained of the Church rather than of Jerusalem. (Worthington) ---

A little before the fall of the latter, it was become so populous that the houses which had been built without the walls were enclosed. (Josephus, Jewish Wars vi. 6.) ---

this multitude was a sort of pledge or figure of the crowds which should embrace the gospel.

Gill: Zec 2:4 - -- And said unto him,.... That is, the other angel said to the angel that had been talking with the prophet, Run, speak to this young man: meaning Zec...

And said unto him,.... That is, the other angel said to the angel that had been talking with the prophet,

Run, speak to this young man: meaning Zechariah, who was either young in years, as Samuel and Jeremiah were when they prophesied; or he was a servant of a prophet older than he, and therefore so called, as Joshua, Moses's minister, was, Num 11:28 as Kimchi observes:

saying, Jerusalem shall be inhabited as towns without walls; this shows that this is not to be understood of Jerusalem in a literal sense, for that was not inhabited as a town without a wall; its wall was built in Nehemiah's time, and remained until the city was destroyed by Vespasian; yea, it had a treble wall, as Josephus says b; but of the church of Christ in Gospel times; and denotes both the safety and security of it; see Eze 38:11 and the populousness of it; and especially as it will be in the latter day, when both Jews and Gentiles are called, and brought into it; which sense is confirmed by what follows:

for the multitude of men and cattle therein; the Jews being meant by "men"; see Eze 34:31 and the Gentiles by "cattle", to which they used to be compared by the former: this will be fulfilled when the nation of the Jews will be born at once, and all Israel will be saved, and the fulness of the Gentiles shall be brought in; for the number of the spiritual Israel, the sons of the living God, both Jews and Gentiles, shall be as the sand of the sea, which cannot be measured, Hos 1:10 and when there will be such a large increase of converts; and such flockings to Zion, to the spiritual Jerusalem, the church of God, that the place will be too small for them, Isa 49:19 whereas, when Jerusalem in a literal sense was rebuilt, after the Babylonian captivity, there was a want of persons to inhabit it, and lots were cast for one out of ten to dwell in it; and they were glad of others that offered themselves willingly to be inhabitants of it, Neh 11:1 for there was but a small number that returned from Babylon to repeople the city of Jerusalem, and the whole country of Judea; no more came from thence but forty two thousand, three hundred, and threescore, besides men and maid servants, which amounted to seven or eight thousand more, Ezr 2:64 Neh 7:66 which were but a few to fill such a country, and so many cities and towns that were in it, besides Jerusalem; and yet Josephus c affirms, that the number of those of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, that came up from thence, and were above twelve years of age, were four millions, six hundred, and twenty eight thousand; in which he is followed by Zonaras d, and it is admitted and approved of by Sanctius on the place; which is not only contrary to the accounts of Ezra and Nehemiah, but is incredible; that such a number that went into captivity, which was not very large, should, under all the distresses and oppressions they laboured, in seventy years time so multiply, and that two tribes only, as to be almost eight times more than all the twelve tribes were at their coming out of Egypt; a number large enough to have overrun the Babylonian monarchy; and too many to be supported in so small a country as the land of Canaan: wherefore, upon the whole, it must be best to interpret this of spiritual and mystical Jerusalem, and of the populousness of the church of Christ in the latter day.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Zec 2:4 Heb “Jerusalem will dwell as open regions (פְּרָזוֹת, pÿrazot)”; cf. NAB “...

Geneva Bible: Zec 2:4 And said to him, Run, speak to this ( b ) young man, saying, ( c ) Jerusalem shall be inhabited [as] towns without walls for the multitude of men and ...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Zec 2:1-13 - --1 God, in the care of Jerusalem, sends to measure it.6 The redemption of Zion.10 The promise of God's presence.

Maclaren: Zec 2:4-5 - --The City Without Walls Jerusalem shall be inhabited as towns without walls. 5. For I, saith the Lord, will be unto her a wall of fire round about, an...

MHCC: Zec 2:1-5 - --The Son of David, even the Man Christ Jesus, whom the prophet sees with a measuring line in his hand, is the Master-Builder of his church. God notices...

Matthew Henry: Zec 2:1-5 - -- This prophet was ordered, in God's name, to assure the people (Zec 1:16) that a line should be stretched forth upon Jerusalem. Now here we have th...

Keil-Delitzsch: Zec 2:1-5 - -- Whilst the second vision sets forth the destruction of the powers that were hostile to Israel, the third (Zec 2:1-5) with the prophetic explanation ...

Constable: Zec 1:7--6:9 - --II. The eight night visions and four messages 1:7--6:8 Zechariah received eight apocalyptic visions in one night...

Constable: Zec 2:1-13 - --C. The surveyor ch. 2 In the first vision (1:7-17) God promised comfort to Israel. In the second (1:18-2...

Constable: Zec 2:1-5 - --1. The vision itself 2:1-5 2:1-2 In the next scene of his vision, Zechariah saw a man (i.e., an angel who looked like a man) with a measuring line in ...

Guzik: Zec 2:1-13 - --Zechariah 2 - A City Without Walls A. Call to Return to the Promised Land. 1. (1-5) The man with the measuring line and the protection promised. T...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Zechariah (Book Introduction) THE name Zechariah means one whom Jehovah remembers: a common name, four others of the same name occurring in the Old Testament. Like Jeremiah and Eze...

JFB: Zechariah (Outline) INTRODUCTORY EXHORTATION TO REPENTANCE. THE VISION. The man among the myrtles: Comforting explanation by the angel, an encouragement to the Jews to b...

TSK: Zechariah 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Zec 2:1, God, in the care of Jerusalem, sends to measure it; Zec 2:6, The redemption of Zion; Zec 2:10, The promise of God’s presence.

Poole: Zechariah (Book Introduction) THE ARGUMENT Zechariah is the second prophet who cometh from God to the returned captives, and his errand to them was both to second Haggai’ s...

Poole: Zechariah 2 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 2 The vision of an angel sent to measure Jerusalem, and its flourishing state under God’ s protection foretold, Zec 2:1-5 . The people...

MHCC: Zechariah (Book Introduction) This prophecy is suitable to all, as the scope is to reprove for sin, and threaten God's judgments against the impenitent, and to encourage those that...

MHCC: Zechariah 2 (Chapter Introduction) (Zec 2:1-5) The prosperity of Jerusalem. (Zec 2:6-9) The Jews called to return to their own land. (Zec 2:10-13) A promise of God's presence.

Matthew Henry: Zechariah (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Prophecy of Zechariah This prophet was colleague with the prophet Haggai, and a worker together wit...

Matthew Henry: Zechariah 2 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have, I. Another vision which the prophet saw, not for his own entertainment, but for his satisfaction and the edification of t...

Constable: Zechariah (Book Introduction) Introduction Title and Writer The title of this book comes from its traditional writer...

Constable: Zechariah (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-6 II. The eight night visions and four messages 1:7-6:8 ...

Constable: Zechariah Zechariah Bibliography Alexander, Ralph H. "Hermeneutics of Old Testament Apocalyptic Literature." Th.D. disser...

Haydock: Zechariah (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF ZACHARIAS. INTRODUCTION. Zacharias began to prophesy in the same year as Aggeus, and upon the same occasion. His prophecy i...

Gill: Zechariah (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ZECHARIAH This book is in the Hebrew copies called "the Book of Zechariah"; in the Vulgate Latin version, "the Prophecy of Zecharia...

Gill: Zechariah 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ZECHARIAH 2 This chapter contains a prophecy of the church under the Gospel dispensation; of the largeness and numbers of it; and o...

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