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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Two months after Haggai began to encourage the Jews to build the temple.
JFB: Zec 1:2 - -- God fulfilled His threats against your fathers; beware, then, lest by disregarding His voice by me, as they did in the case of former prophets, ye suf...
God fulfilled His threats against your fathers; beware, then, lest by disregarding His voice by me, as they did in the case of former prophets, ye suffer like them. The special object Zechariah aims at is that they should awake from their selfish negligence to obey God's command to rebuild His temple (Hag 1:4-8).

JFB: Zec 1:2 - -- Hebrew, "displeased with a displeasure," that is, vehemently, with no common displeasure, exhibited in the destruction of the Jews' city and in their ...
Hebrew, "displeased with a displeasure," that is, vehemently, with no common displeasure, exhibited in the destruction of the Jews' city and in their captivity.
Clarke: Zec 1:1 - -- In the eighth month, in the second year of Darius - This was Darius Hystaspes; and from this date we find that Zechariah began to prophecy just two ...
In the eighth month, in the second year of Darius - This was Darius Hystaspes; and from this date we find that Zechariah began to prophecy just two months after Haggai

Clarke: Zec 1:1 - -- Son of Iddo - There are a number of various readings on this name, ידו Iddo , and עדוא Iddo , both in MSS. and in editions; but they are on...
Son of Iddo - There are a number of various readings on this name,

Clarke: Zec 1:2 - -- The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers - For their ingratitude idolatry, iniquity, and general rebellion.
The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers - For their ingratitude idolatry, iniquity, and general rebellion.
Calvin: Zec 1:1 - -- We here learn what we have already stated, — that Haggai and Zechariah were by God joined together, that they might confirm each other’s doctrine...
We here learn what we have already stated, — that Haggai and Zechariah were by God joined together, that they might confirm each other’s doctrine, for they had to do with a refractory people: besides, the people had to endure hard and arduous trials, so that they needed more than a common testimony to confirm them. Haggai commenced the work of his office in the sixth month; Zechariah shortly followed him, in the eighth month of the same year. It has already been shown who was the Darius mentioned here; though some interpreters dissent, we may yet learn from certain and indubitable proofs, that he was the son of Hystaspes. We shall again speak of this Darius, when a better occasion will offer itself: I wished only in passing to say thus much.
The word of Jehovah came to Zechariah. We have already said that the word of God comes in two ways to men. God addresses all from the least to the greatest; but in the first place he sends his word especially to his Prophets, to whom he commits the office of teaching. The word of God thus comes to private individuals, and it comes also to teachers, who sustain a public character, and become God’s interpreters or messengers. It was thus that God’s word came to Zechariah, not that he might keep to himself what God had said, but that he might be a faithful dispenser of his truth.
With regard to Zechariah, they are mistaken who regard him as the son of Jehoiadah, they are mistaken by Christ in Mat 23:35. Zechariah is indeed said there to have been killed between the temple and the altar, and he is called the son of Barachiah: 9 but the counting of years will easily prove their mistake, who would have him to be the same Zechariah. The former, who is called in sacred history the son of Jehoiadah the priest, was slain under Joash. Let us now see how many kings succeeded him, and also how many years he reigned. That Zechariah must have been almost two hundred years old at the Babylonian exile, if he was alive, had be been a boy when he was stoned. Now this Zechariah, of whom we now speak, performed the office of a Prophet after the return of the people from exile. He must then have been not only more than a hundred and fifty years of age, but must have exceeded two hundred years when he died. The idea respecting the renascence of men, being a reverie of the Jews, is not worthy of a record, much less of a refutation. He is however called the son of Barachiah; but the probable conjecture is that Jehoiadah the priest had two names, and it does not appear that he was a prophet. However this may be, the Zechariah who was stoned in the temple by the order of the king, was the son of the high priest, and died more than a hundred years before the Babylonian exile. For we have said that this Darius was not the Mede who reigned with Cyrus, but the son of Hystaspes, who reigned a long time after, that is, after Cambyses and the Magi. Their want of knowledge is easily proved, who think that these Prophets were sent by God before the completion of the time mentioned by Jeremiah. As then the seventy years had elapsed, this Prophet was no doubt born after the time when the city was destroyed, the temple pulled-down, and the people led captive into Babylon. I come now to the doctrine itself.

Calvin: Zec 1:2 - -- Angry was Jehovah with anger against your fathers 10 The Prophet here refers to the severity of the punishment with which the Jews had been visited, i...
Angry was Jehovah with anger against your fathers 10 The Prophet here refers to the severity of the punishment with which the Jews had been visited, in order that posterity might know that God, who so rigidly punishes the despisers of his word and instruction, ought not to be provoked. For by saying that God was angry with anger, he means, that God was in no common measure offended with the Jews, and that the very grievousness of their punishment was a clear evidence how displeased God was with them. But the object of the Prophet was to rouse the Jews, that they might begin seriously to fear God on seeing how dreadful is his wrath. The Apostle states it as a general truth, that it is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God, (Heb 10:30 :) so also the Scripture speaks everywhere. But Zechariah mentions here to his own people a signal evidence of God’s wrath, which ought to justly to have smitten all of them with terror. He does not then speak here of a thing unknown, but reminds them seriously to consider how terrible is God’s vengeance; as a proof of this, their fathers had been deprived of their perpetual inheritance, they had suffered many degradations, and had also been harassed and oppressed by tyrants; in short, they had been nearly sunk in the lowest depths. Since then God has so severely dealt with their fathers, the Prophet bids them to know that God ought to be feared, lest they should grow wanton or indulge themselves in their usual manner, but that they might from the heart repent, and not designedly provoke God’s wrath, of which their fathers had so severe an experience.
Defender: Zec 1:1 - -- Zechariah began his written prophetic ministry just two months after Haggai, although Haggai was much older, and continued writing less than four mont...

Defender: Zec 1:1 - -- Zechariah, meaning "Jehovah remembers", was the most prolific writer among the minor prophets. He is mentioned along with Haggai in Ezr 5:1 and Ezr 6:...
Zechariah, meaning "Jehovah remembers", was the most prolific writer among the minor prophets. He is mentioned along with Haggai in Ezr 5:1 and Ezr 6:14. He is also mentioned by Nehemiah as coming to Jerusalem with Zerubbabel (Neh 12:16; Neh 11:4), except that Nehemiah calls him the son of Iddo instead of the grandson, as does Ezra. Evidently, Berechiah died early, leaving Zechariah to be raised and trained by Iddo. Both Iddo and Zechariah were priests as well as prophets (Neh 12:1, Neh 12:16)."
TSK: Zec 1:1 - -- the eighth : Zec 1:7, Zec 7:1; Ezr 4:24, Ezr 6:15; Hag 1:1, Hag 1:15, Hag 2:1, Hag 2:10,Hag 2:20
Zechariah : Ezr 5:1; Mat 23:35; Luk 11:51
Iddo : Neh ...

TSK: Zec 1:2 - -- Lord : 2Ki 22:16, 2Ki 22:17, 2Ki 22:19, 2Ki 23:26; 2Ch 36:13-20; Ezr 9:6, Ezr 9:7, Ezr 9:13; Neh 9:26, Neh 9:27; Psa 60:1, Psa 79:5, Psa 79:6; Jer 44:...
Lord : 2Ki 22:16, 2Ki 22:17, 2Ki 22:19, 2Ki 23:26; 2Ch 36:13-20; Ezr 9:6, Ezr 9:7, Ezr 9:13; Neh 9:26, Neh 9:27; Psa 60:1, Psa 79:5, Psa 79:6; Jer 44:6; Lam 1:12-15, Lam 2:3-5, Lam 3:42-45, Lam 5:7; Eze 22:31; Dan 9:11, Dan 9:12; Zep 2:1-3; Mat 23:30-32; Act 7:52
sore displeased : Heb. with displeasure

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Zec 1:1 - -- In the eighth month - o . The date joins on Zechariah’ s prophecy to those of Haggai. Two months before, "in the sixth month"Hag 1:1, had ...
In the eighth month - o . The date joins on Zechariah’ s prophecy to those of Haggai. Two months before, "in the sixth month"Hag 1:1, had Haggai, conjointly with Zechariah Ezr 5:1-2, exhorted Zerubbabel and the people to resume the intermitted building of the temple. These had used such diligence, notwithstanding the partial discouragement of the Persian Government, that God gave them "in the seventh month"Ezr 5:3-5, the magnificent promise of the later glory of the temple through the coming of Christ Hag 2:1-9. Still, as Haggai too warned them, the conversion was not complete. So Zechariah in the eighth, as Haggai in the ninth Hag 2:10-14 month, urges upon them the necessity of thorough and inward repentance, as the condition of partaking of those promises.
Osorius: "Thrice in the course of one saying, he mentions the most holy name of God; partly to instruct in the knowledge of Three Persons in one Nature, partly to confirm their minds more strongly in the hope of the salvation to come."

Barnes: Zec 1:2 - -- Wroth was the Lord against your fathers with wrath - o , that is, a wrath which was indeed such, whose greatness he does not further express, b...
Wroth was the Lord against your fathers with wrath - o , that is, a wrath which was indeed such, whose greatness he does not further express, but leaves to their memories to supply. Cyril: "Seest thou how he scares them, and, setting before the young what befell those before them, drives them to amend, threatening them with the like or more grievous ills, unless they would wisely reject their fathers’ ways, esteeming the pleasing of God worthy of all thought and care. He speaks of great wrath. For it indicates no slight displeasure that He allowed the Babylonians to waste all Judah and Samaria, burn the holy places and destroy Jerusalem, remove the elect Israel to a piteous slavery in a foreign land, severed from sacrifices, entering the holy court no more nor offering the thank-offering, or tithes, or first-fruits of the law, but precluded by necessity and, fear even from the duty of celebrating his prescribed and dearest festivals. The like we might address to the Jewish people, if we would apply it to the mystery of Christ. For after they had "killed the prophets"and had "crucified the Lord of glory"Himself, they were captured and destroyed; their famed temple was levelled, and Hosea’ s words were fulfilled in them; "The children of Israel shall abide many days without a king and without a prince, without a sacrifice and without an image, without an ephod and without teraphim".
Poole: Zec 1:1 - -- In the eighth month called both Marchesvan and Bul by the Hebrews, and answers to part of our October and November. Two months after Haggai began to...
In the eighth month called both Marchesvan and Bul by the Hebrews, and answers to part of our October and November. Two months after Haggai began to encourage the Jews to build the temple.
Darius son of Hystaspes, and the third Persian monarch: see Hag 1:1 ; and again Zec 1:15 , at large.
Came the word of the Lord: here is his warrant and Divine call, the Lord communicated to him what he was to communicate to, others.
Zechariah: his name bespeaks him a remembrancer of God, or it may speak God remembering him, and the rest of this people.
The son the Jew called the descendants in right line sons, though they were grandsons, or great-grandsons; and in this sense some say Zechariah is the son of Baruch, and the son of Iddo. This Zechariah is not he that is mentioned 2Ch 24:20 , this is too early by many years; nor is this Zechariah the father of John Baptist, this is as much too late; but most likely it is that Zechariah whom the Jews slew between the temple and the altar, Mat 23:35 .
Berechiah: this name is expressly mentioned Mt 23 , and his time exactly suits the time pointed at by the evangelist.
Iddo: one of this name you have 2Ch 9:29 , but this is too old to be this in the text, for there will be found (as Wolphius in Ezram notes) four hundred and fifty years’ distance between Iddo the seer and this Iddo mentioned in the text.
The prophet whether Zechariah or Iddo I determine not.
ZECHARIAH
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 exhortations, and to reveal more fully than he doth all the future revolutions and events; to the final desolation of Jerusalem and the second temple by the Romans, and the rejection of the Jews for their sins against all the mercies of their God, and for their rejecting and murdering of the Messiah; who, rejected of the Jews, taketh in the Gentiles, and establisheth his church amongst them; which is revealed unto Zechariah, and communicated to the Jews by him; with a declaration of the future ruin of the Persian kingdom by the Grecians, and also of the wars of the Seleucidae and Lagidae, and their overthrow by the Romans; during the series of which times, the Jews shall be grown numerous, wealthy, and powerful, and, so long as they keep their covenant with God, shall do wonderful things, and be eminently owned of God, and be either wonderfully secured amidst these troubles, or more wonderfully victorious over those that trouble them. And indeed what Zechariah foretold, or promised to them, was in its time made good amongst them; his predictions were punctually fulfilled; if the promises were not, it was because the Jews by their sins cut themselves off from the promises, which may be observed in those intervals of times between Zechariah’ s prophesying and the coming of the Messiah. Now the first interval was above two hundred years, to the death of Alexander the Great; during which time the Jews enjoyed the common peace with the subjects of the Persian empire, and the particular favour of Alexander the conqueror during his life. These years were years of growth to the Jews. The next interval, through the wars of Alexander’ s divided captains, and between the Seleucidaes and the Lagidae, was an interval of some great trouble, and yet of greater preservation to the Jews. The next interval is that of the Maccabees, during which those victories were gotten which do almost exceed our belief. But whilst thus times were changed, the Jews continued much the same, unthankful to God, cold in religion, and added to their sins daily; till at last God delivered them into the hands of the Romans, whose general, Pompey the Great, deposed Hyrcanus from the throne, and restored the high priesthood to him. From henceforth the Jews’ sins and miseries grow together, till that was accomplished, Zec 14:2 , the city Jerusalem taken, the houses rifled, &c. Thus by various intermixture of providences, God did try the Jews, whether they would, as became his people, repent of former sins, amend their future doings, believe his promises, and obey his precepts, that he might bless them; so should all the good foretold by this prophet have crowned them. But if they failed (as they did) in those points of duty, then all the evil threatened should (as it did) overtake them, and, as Zechariah foretold, continue on them, as it doth to this day. This prophecy then contains the revolutions of the Jews, and the empires of Persia and Greece, and the Romans; in whose times the Jews, by killing the Lord of life, filled up their measure, and by whose hands God punished them, destroying their polity, razing their city, burning their temple, and captivating the people, which lasteth to this day. The better to represent all these at once to your view, take this following scheme.
Zechariah Doth
1. Exhort to present repentance and reformation, chaps. 1, 2, 7, 8
2. Promise
A. Present blessings, chap, 1, 2, 8:9-15
B. Future Mercy, and that
1. Under Persian government, Zec 8:3-7
2. Alexander and the Grecians, Zec 9:9
3. In the Maccabees’ times
3. Encourage
A. Joshua, Zec. iii
B. Zerubbabel, chap iv
4. Threaten
A. The enemies of the Jews, chap i.21; ii:9, ix:1-8, 12:1-4,9
B. The sinful and impenitent Jews, chap iv; xi:1; xiv:1,2
5. Foretell
A. The Jews’ rejecting him, Zec. xi:10-12, &c
B. Gods’
1. Avenging the sin on the Jews, chap 14:1,2
2. Calling the Gentiles, Zec. viii:20-23; xii:10, iii:8,9; vi:12,13
3. Continued protection of the church of Christ among the Gentiles,
chap 14:3, to end
All which, either in dark, yet significant, types or emblems or else in plain and easily intelligible words, is represented to us by this prophet.
ZECHARIAH CHAPTER 1
Zechariah exhorteth to repentance, Zec 1:1-6 . His vision of the horses and their angelic riders, Zec 1:7-11 . At the prayer of the angel comfortable promises are made to Jerusalem, Zec 1:12-17 . The vision of the four horns, and the four carpenters, Zec 1:18-21 .
In the eighth month called both Marchesvan and Bul by the Hebrews, and answers to part of our October and November. Two months after Haggai began to encourage the Jews to build the temple.
Darius son of Hystaspes, and the third Persian monarch: see Hag 1:1 ; and again Zec 1:15 , at large.
Came the word of the Lord: here is his warrant and Divine call, the Lord communicated to him what he was to communicate to, others.
Zechariah: his name bespeaks him a remembrancer of God, or it may speak God remembering him, and the rest of this people.
The son the Jew called the descendants in right line sons, though they were grandsons, or great-grandsons; and in this sense some say Zechariah is the son of Baruch, and the son of Iddo. This Zechariah is not he that is mentioned 2Ch 24:20 , this is too early by many years; nor is this Zechariah the father of John Baptist, this is as much too late; but most likely it is that Zechariah whom the Jews slew between the temple and the altar, Mat 23:35 .
Berechiah: this name is expressly mentioned Mt 23 , and his time exactly suits the time pointed at by the evangelist.
Iddo: one of this name you have 2Ch 9:29 , but this is too old to be this in the text, for there will be found (as Wolphius in Ezram notes) four hundred and fifty years’ distance between Iddo the seer and this Iddo mentioned in the text.
The prophet whether Zechariah or Iddo I determine not.

Poole: Zec 1:2 - -- The Lord the holy, the mighty One, your God, the just Governor of the world, hath been sore displeased; so long provoked, that his displeasure at las...
The Lord the holy, the mighty One, your God, the just Governor of the world, hath been sore displeased; so long provoked, that his displeasure at last enkindled within his breast, and broke out into that flame which hath consumed your land, city, and temple.
With your fathers all that were progenitors, forefathers to the returned captives, from their entrance into Canaan, but especially since the apostacy in Jeroboam’ s time; for many hundred years your predecessors have provoked God by their notorious sins, even to the days of their captivity.
Barachias adopted him, (1 Esdras v. 1.) or rather Addo was his grandfather.

Angry, as he has severely chastised them. (Calmet)
Gill: Zec 1:1 - -- In the eighth month,.... The month Marchesvan, called the month Bul, in 1Ki 6:38 which answers to part of our October, and part of November: this was ...
In the eighth month,.... The month Marchesvan, called the month Bul, in 1Ki 6:38 which answers to part of our October, and part of November: this was but two months from the first prophecy of Haggai, Hag 1:1 and but a few days after his second, Hag 2:1 so near were the prophecies of these two prophets together:
in the second year of Darius: king of Persia; not Darius the Mede, but Darius the son of Hystaspes:
came the word of the Lord unto Zechariah; that is, "the word of prophecy from before the Lord", as the Targum paraphrases it; which came to him, either in a dream, or in a vision, or by an impulse on his mind; who is described by his descent, the son of Barachias; mention is made of this name in Mat 23:35. It signifies "the blessed of the Lord", and is the same with Eulogius or Benedictus:
the son of Iddo the prophet: the word "prophet", as Kimchi observes, belongs to Zechariah; not but that his grandfather Iddo might be a prophet too; and the same writer takes notice, that in the Midrash mention is made of Iddo the prophet; and so there is an Iddo that is called the seer and the prophet in 2Ch 9:29 but whether the same with this is not certain. The name is by some thought to be the same with Firmicus, Statius, Robertus:
saying; as follows:

Gill: Zec 1:2 - -- The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers. Who lived before and at the time of the destruction of the city of Jerusalem, and which was mani...
The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers. Who lived before and at the time of the destruction of the city of Jerusalem, and which was manifest by their captivity; all which were occasioned by their sins, with which they provoked the Lord to sore displeasure against them; and this is mentioned as a caution to their children, that they might not follow their example, and incur the like displeasure.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Zec 1:1 Both Ezra (5:1; 6:14) and Nehemiah (12:16) speak of Zechariah as a son of Iddo only. A probable explanation is that Zechariah’s actual father Be...

Geneva Bible: Zec 1:1 In the eighth month, in the second year of ( a ) Darius, came the word of the LORD unto ( b ) Zechariah, the son of Berechiah, the son of Iddo the pro...

Geneva Bible: Zec 1:2 The LORD hath been ( c ) sore displeased with your fathers.
( c ) He speaks this to make them afraid of God's judgments, so that they should not prov...
