
Text -- Zechariah 10:6 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The remnant of the kingdom of Israel, the residue of the ten tribes.

To settle them in their own land, and in their own cities.
JFB: Zec 10:6 - -- That is, the ten tribes. The distinct mention of both Judah and Israel shows that there is yet a more complete restoration than that from Babylon, whe...
That is, the ten tribes. The distinct mention of both Judah and Israel shows that there is yet a more complete restoration than that from Babylon, when Judah alone and a few Israelites from the other tribes returned. The Maccabean deliverance is here connected with it, just as the painter groups on the same canvas objects in the foreground and hills far distant; or as the comparatively near planet and the remote fixed star are seen together in the same firmament. Prophecy ever hastens to the glorious final consummation under Messiah.

JFB: Zec 10:6 - -- Namely, securely in their own land. The Hebrew verb is compounded of two, "I will bring again," and "I will place them" (Jer 32:37) MAURER, from a dif...
Namely, securely in their own land. The Hebrew verb is compounded of two, "I will bring again," and "I will place them" (Jer 32:37) MAURER, from a different form, translates, "I will make them to dwell."
Clarke -> Zec 10:6
Clarke: Zec 10:6 - -- I will strengthen the house of Judah - I doubt whether the sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth verses are not to be understood of the future ingatheri...
Calvin -> Zec 10:6
Calvin: Zec 10:6 - -- Zechariah pursues the same subject, — that the work of redemption, the beginning of which the Jews saw, would not be incomplete, for the Lord would...
Zechariah pursues the same subject, — that the work of redemption, the beginning of which the Jews saw, would not be incomplete, for the Lord would at length fulfill what he had begun. The Jews themselves could not acquiesce in those beginnings, which were not a hundredth part of what God had promised; it was hence necessary for them to raise up their minds above, that they might hope for much more than what was evident before their eyes.
And this truth is very useful to us, for we are wont to confine God’s promises to a short duration of time, and when we thus include him within narrow limits, we prevent him as it were to do what we stand in need of. Let then the example of the return of the people of Israel ever come to our minds, for the Lord had promised by his Prophets that they would become very eminent, and in every way rich and happy; but when this did not take place after their return to their country, many of the Jews thought that they had been deceived, as they had expected God to fulfill his word immediately, but they ought to have suspended their hope and expectation until Christ came to the world. On this then the Prophet now insists — that the Jews were to rest patiently, until the ripened time came, when the Lord would prove that he is not only in part but a complete redeemer of his people.
Now he says, I will strengthen the house of Judah, and the house of Joseph will I save. The kingdom of Israel, we know, had by degrees wholly fallen; for at first four tribes were driven into exile, and afterwards the whole people perished, so that all thought that the name of the ten tribes had become extinct. The Lord afterwards visited the kingdom with dreadful ruin. But it must be observed, that while the two kingdoms existed, they entertained grievous enmities towards each other; for the defection which happened under Jeroboam, ever made the Jews violently to hate their brethren, the Israelites, as they indeed deserved; for they had in a manner rejected God by rejecting the son of David, and became in a manner alienated from the body of the Church. Now then Zechariah promises something uncommon, when he says that the two peoples shall be united, so as to be again one, as before the defection: for the house of Joseph means the same as the house of Ephraim; and we know that by taking a part for the whole, the house of Ephraim is taken for the whole kingdom of Israel. We now then understand the Prophet’s meaning — that the state of the people would be happier than it had been since the ten tribes separated from the kingdom of Judah, or from the house of David; for God would gather for himself a Church from all the children of Abraham. 120
He then adds, I will bring them back and cause them to dwell. The verb here,
He then adds, Because I have pitied them. Some read this in the future tense, but I retain the past, for the Lord assigns here a reason for their future gathering, even because he would deal mercifully with his people. He recalls then the attention of the Jews to the fountains of his mercy, as if he had said, “Though they have deserved perpetual ruin, He will yet hear their greenings, because he will be propitious to them.” As their calamity was an hindrance, which prevented the Jews from expecting any such thing, he adds, They shall be as though I had not cast them away. By which words he reminds them that the punishment which had been inflicted on the people, would be only for a time. He then bids them to take courage, though they were like the lost or the dead, for he would put an end to their miseries. And when God says that he had cast away his people, it ought to be taken according to the perceptions of men, as we have observed elsewhere; for adoption was unchangeable, but external appearance could have led to no other conclusion, but that the people had been rejected by God. The meaning of the Prophet is, however, clearly this — that though God had dealt severely with that people, and inflicted on them the heaviest punishment on account of their perfidy, yet his vengeance would not be for ever, for he would give place to mercy.
He adds another reason, For I Jehovah am their God. He means by this sentence that adoption would not be void, though he had for a time rejected the Jews: for by calling himself their God, he reminds them of his covenant, as though he had said, that he had not in vain made a covenant with Abraham, and promised that his seed would be blessed. Since then God had pledged his faith to Abraham, he says here that he would be the God of his people; not that they deserved anything, but because he had gratuitously chosen both Abraham and his seed.
He in the last place says, And I will hear them 122 He seems here to exhort them to prayer, that, relying on this promise, they might ask of God what had been promised. Though this verb is often taken in a sense not strictly correct, for God is said to hear those who do not flee to him; but what I have stated is more suitable to this place — that the people are stimulated to prayer, as God freely invites us to himself for this end, that is, that our prayers may harmonise with his promises. This is the meaning. It now follows —
TSK -> Zec 10:6
TSK: Zec 10:6 - -- I will strengthen : Zec 10:12; Psa 89:21; Isa 41:10; Eze 37:16; Oba 1:18; Mic 4:6, Mic 4:13, Mic 5:8, Mic 7:16; Zep 3:19, Zep 3:20
I will save : Zec 8...
I will strengthen : Zec 10:12; Psa 89:21; Isa 41:10; Eze 37:16; Oba 1:18; Mic 4:6, Mic 4:13, Mic 5:8, Mic 7:16; Zep 3:19, Zep 3:20
I will save : Zec 8:7; Jer 3:18, Jer 23:6, Jer 31:1, Jer 31:31; Eze 39:25; Hos 1:11; Rom 11:25, Rom 11:26
for I have : Isa 14:1; Jer 31:20; Hos 1:7, Hos 2:23; Mic 7:18-20
as : Zec 8:11; Isa 49:17-21; Jer 30:18; Eze 36:11
for I am : Zec 13:9; Isa 41:17-20; Jer 33:2, Jer 33:3; Eze 36:37

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Zec 10:6
Barnes: Zec 10:6 - -- I will bring them again to place them - Zechariah seems to have condensed into one word two of Jeremiah, "I will bring them again"unto this pla...
I will bring them again to place them - Zechariah seems to have condensed into one word two of Jeremiah, "I will bring them again"unto this place, and "I will cause them to dwell"safely Jer 32:37. Kimchi. It is not a confusion of forms, but the blending of two words into one. So also Ibn Ezra): "The two ideas are here both implied, he will cause them to return to their land, and will cause them to dwell there in peace and security."
For I will have mercy upon them - Dionysius: "For the goodness and lovingkindness of God, not any merits of our’ s, is the first and principal cause of our whole salvation and grace. Therefore the Psalmist says, ‘ neither did their own arm save them; but Thy right hand and Thine arm, and the light of Thy countenance, because Thou hadst a favor unto them’ Psa 44:3."
And they shall be, as though I had not cast them off - (Etymologically, "loathed,""cast off as a thing abhorrent".) God is ever "the God of the present."He does not half-forgive. "Their sins and their iniquities I will remember no more"Heb 8:12. God casts off the sinner, as being what he is, a thing abhorrent, as penitence confesses of itself that it is "a dead dog, a loathsome worm, a putrid corpse."God will not clothe with a righteousness, which He does not impart. He restores to the penitent all his lost graces, as though he had never forfeited them, and cumulates them with the fresh grace whereby He converts him (see vol. i. on Joe 2:25, pp. 192, 193). It is an entire re-creation. "They shall be, as though I had not cast them off.""I will settle you as in your old estates, and will do good, more than at your beginnings, and ye shall know that I am the Lord"Eze 36:11.
For I am the Lord their God, and will hear them - As He says by Malchi, "I am the Lord; I change not"Mal 3:6. His unchangeableness belongs to His Being; "I Am; therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed;"and by Hosea, "The Lord of hosts, The Lord is His memorial, therefore turn thou to thy God"(Hos 12:5-6, (6, 7 Heb.) See vol. i. pp. 119, 120). Because God was "their God,"and as surely as He was "their God,"He would hear them. His Being was the pledge of His hearing. "I, the Lord, will hear them; I, the God of Israel, will not forsake them"Isa 41:17.
Poole -> Zec 10:6
Poole: Zec 10:6 - -- I will strengthen the house of Judah: God will give both courage and strength, courage to attempt, and also strength to go through and finish the att...
I will strengthen the house of Judah: God will give both courage and strength, courage to attempt, and also strength to go through and finish the attempt; in this they of the house of Judah were famous in the wars of the Jews against the Seleucidae, in which wars they had wonderful difficulties, and as wonderful courage and success.
I will save the house of Joseph the remnant of the kingdom of Israel, the residue of the ten tribes, called the house of Joseph, for that Ephraim and Manasseh, part of that kingdom, were the sons of Joseph.
I will bring them again both Judah and Joseph, out of Babylonish captivity, to place them; to settle them in their own land, and in their own cities: how far this doth warrant the expectation of a universal gathering of this people I do not undertake to determine.
I have mercy upon them I pity them in what they have already suffered, and my mercy is not clean gone from them; I have yet rich mercy for them, and will show it when they have built city and temple, and restored religion.
They shall be as though I had not cast them off in every respect they shall so multiply, thrive, and prosper, that though they remember it with grief and shame, yet the generations to come shall discern no sad marks of a rejected people.
I am the Lord their God in a perpetual covenant, which I never can nor will break: I am and will be their God; they should, yea shall, be my people, as Zec 8:8 .
And will hear them: they will pray, and I will hear, for they are mine, they will seek me as their God, and I will save them as my people.
Haydock -> Zec 10:6
Haydock: Zec 10:6 - -- Joseph. All the tribes shall embrace the gospel at last. (Worthington) ---
Back, from the caverns to which they had fled.
Joseph. All the tribes shall embrace the gospel at last. (Worthington) ---
Back, from the caverns to which they had fled.
Gill -> Zec 10:6
Gill: Zec 10:6 - -- And I wilt strengthen the house of Judah,.... Both with internal and external strength, so that they shall be able to stand their ground against enemi...
And I wilt strengthen the house of Judah,.... Both with internal and external strength, so that they shall be able to stand their ground against enemies of every sort:
and I will save the house of Joseph: the ten tribes, such of them that shall be found, for all Israel shall be saved, Rom 11:26 not only temporally, but spiritually, with an everlasting salvation:
and I will bring them again to place them; there is but one word in the original text; it is composed of two words, as Kimchi observes, of
for I have mercy upon them; which is the spring and source of all the above benefits promised, or that are after mentioned; even of the covenant and its blessings; the mission of Christ, and salvation by him; regeneration, pardon, and eternal life; hence they that had a "loammi" upon them, and were not the people of God, now will be his people; and those who had not obtained mercy shall obtain it, even those that were concluded in unbelief:
and they shall be as though I had not cast them off; or rejected them from being his people; which was done when the natural branches, the Jews, were broken off, and the Gentiles of the wild olive tree were grafted in; when their civil and church state were dissolved, and their city and temple destroyed:
for I am the Lord their God; covenant interest always remains, and is the source of all the blessings of grace, and will be of the conversion of the Jews, Rom 11:26,
and will hear them; when, the Spirit of grace and supplication being poured upon them, they shall cry unto the Lord, and look to him for salvation. The Targum is,
"and I will receive their prayer.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Zec 10:1-12
TSK Synopsis: Zec 10:1-12 - --1 God is to be sought unto, and not idols.3 As he visited his flock for sin, so he will save and restore them.
MHCC -> Zec 10:6-12
MHCC: Zec 10:6-12 - --Here are precious promises to the people of God, which look to the state of the Jews, and even to the latter days of the church. Preaching the gospel ...
Matthew Henry -> Zec 10:5-12
Matthew Henry: Zec 10:5-12 - -- Here are divers precious promises made to the people of God, which look further than to the state of the Jews in the latter days of their church, an...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Zec 10:5-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Zec 10:5-7 - --
Thus equipped for battle, Judah will annihilate its foes. Zec 10:5. "And they will be like heroes, treading street-mire in the battle: and will fig...
Constable: Zec 9:1--14:21 - --V. Oracles about the Messiah and Israel's future chs. 9--14
This part of Zechariah contains two undated oracles ...

Constable: Zec 9:1--11:17 - --A. The burden concerning the nations: the advent and rejection of Messiah chs. 9-11
In this first oracle...
