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Text -- Zechariah 2:6 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Ye sleepy Jews.
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Wesley: Zec 2:6 - -- As I executed my threats in scattering you, so I will perform my promise, and gather you.
As I executed my threats in scattering you, so I will perform my promise, and gather you.
JFB: Zec 2:6 - -- That is, from Babylon: a type of the various Gentile lands, from which the Jews are to be recalled hereafter; hence "the four winds of heaven" are spe...
That is, from Babylon: a type of the various Gentile lands, from which the Jews are to be recalled hereafter; hence "the four winds of heaven" are specified, implying that they are to return from all quarters (Deu 28:64; Jer 16:15; Eze 17:21). The reason why they should flee from Babylon is: (1) because of the blessings promised to God's people in their own land; (2) because of the evils about to fall on their foe (Zec 2:7-9). Babylon was soon to fall before Darius, and its inhabitants to endure fearful calamities (Isa 48:20; Jer 50:8; Jer 51:6, Jer 51:45). Many of the Jews in Zechariah's time had not yet returned to Judea. Their tardiness was owing to (1) unbelief; (2) their land had long lain waste, and was surrounded with bitter foes; (3) they regarded suspiciously the liberty of return given by Cyrus and Darius, as if these monarchs designed suddenly to crush them; (4) their long stay in Babylon had obliterated the remembrance of their own land; (5) the wealth and security there contrasted with Judea, where their temple and city were in ruins. All this betrayed foul ingratitude and disregard of God's extraordinary favor, which is infinitely to be preferred to all the wealth of the world [CALVIN and PEMBELLUS].
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JFB: Zec 2:6 - -- The reasoning is: I who scattered you from your land to all quarters, can also gather you again to it.
The reasoning is: I who scattered you from your land to all quarters, can also gather you again to it.
Clarke -> Zec 2:6
Calvin -> Zec 2:6
Calvin: Zec 2:6 - -- That the design of the Prophet may be more clear, we must especially bear in mind the history of the case. When it was allowed the Jews, by the edict...
That the design of the Prophet may be more clear, we must especially bear in mind the history of the case. When it was allowed the Jews, by the edict of Cyrus and of Darius, to return to their own land, that kindness was suspected by many, as though the two kings had a wish suddenly to oppress them when they had pained their object in their return. Some who dwelt comfortably among the Chaldeans and in other places, preferred to enjoy their rest rather than to return with so much trouble to their own country, where there were no houses prepared, and where there were only dreary desolations. As then the greater part of the people thus slighted the singular favor of God, of which the Prophets had so often spoken, it was necessary that this sloth, connected as it was with great impiety, should be reproved. For if any religion had touched their hearts, they must have preferred Jerusalem to the whole world, and the service of God to all earthly advantages and pleasures. Hence the self-indulgence in which the Jews had become torpid, deserved a sharp and severe reproof. This is the reason why the Prophet treats them here with so much sharpness, for otherwise they could not have been roused.
Ho! Ho! he says, as though he had said, “What means this delay? for when God has opened the door for you, ye still take your rest, as though Judea were not your inheritance, as though there were no difference between you and the profane heathens.” We now understand the object of the Prophet.
The particle
But the reason which is added seems far-fetched, or even unsuitable — For to the four winds of heaven have I scattered you; for this could not have served to rouse the Jews to leave Babylon, and to return to the holy land promised to them by God. Yet it was very efficacious towards producing an impression on their minds; for the Lord shows, in these words, that it was in his power to restore them in safety, inasmuch as they had not been scattered here and there, except through his just vengeance. Had their enemies prevailed against them, or had they without reason been expelled from their country, a doubt might have crept in whether the promise could be relied on; but when it appeared evident that their exile was a punishment inflicted by God, they might safely conclude that he would become the author of their restoration; for he who had inflicted the wound was able to heal it.
We now then see what the Prophet had in view: he intimates that the Jews had hitherto suffered punishment from God, because they obeyed not his word, but provoked by their obstinacy his extreme vengeance; they ought then now to entertain hope, because God was pacified towards them and ready to forgive them. As then their exile was from God, the Prophet intimates that their return would not be difficult when God became reconciled to them, because the Jews had to do only with the heavenly Judge himself. In short, the Prophet designs to show that the Jews acted foolishly by continuing in exile, when liberty was given them to return; and therefore he exhorts them to hasten in time, lest the season of God’s favor should pass away, and thus the door be again closed against them. That they might not hesitate whether this was possible, he shows that it was in God’s power, for he had driven them from their country; it would not therefore be difficult for him to open a way for their return whenever he pleased. 30 He now adds —
Defender -> Zec 2:6
Defender: Zec 2:6 - -- Babylon was east of Jerusalem, but the Assyro/Babylonian/Persian empire - including Syria - had always invaded Judah from the north, and the influence...
Babylon was east of Jerusalem, but the Assyro/Babylonian/Persian empire - including Syria - had always invaded Judah from the north, and the influence of the entire complex of empires was essentially north of Israel. Although the returned exiles had already departed from Babylon, they needed to completely abandon the beliefs and practices of Babylon and the other pagan nations."
TSK -> Zec 2:6
TSK: Zec 2:6 - -- ho : Rth 4:1; Isa 55:1
and flee : Zec 2:7; Gen 19:17; Isa 48:20, Isa 52:11, Isa 52:12; Jer 1:14, Jer 3:18, Jer 31:8, Jer 50:8, Jer 51:6; Jer 51:45, Je...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Zec 2:6
Barnes: Zec 2:6 - -- Ho! ho! and flee - Such being the safety and glory in store for God’ s people in Jerusalem, He who had so provided it, the Angel of the Lo...
Ho! ho! and flee - Such being the safety and glory in store for God’ s people in Jerusalem, He who had so provided it, the Angel of the Lord, bids His people everywhere to come to it, saving themselves also from the peril which was to come on Babylon. So Isaiah bade them, "Go ye forth of Babylon; flee ye from the Chaldaeans with a voice of singing; declare ye, tell this, utter it to the end of the earth; say ye, The Lord hath redeemed His servant Jacob"Isa 48:20. "Depart ye, depart ye, go ye out from thence; touch no unclean thing: go ye out of the midst of her; be ye clean, that bear the vessels of the Lord"Isa 52:11; and Jeremiah, "Flee ye out of the midst of Babylon, and deliver every man his soul; be not cut off in her iniquity, for this is the time of the Lord’ s vengeance. He will render unto her a recompense"(Jer 51:6, add. Jer 50:8). "My people, go ye out of the midst of her, and deliver ye, every man his soul from the fierce anger of the Lord"Jer 51:45.
The words, "flee, deliver thyself,"imply an imminent peril on Babylon, such as came upon her, two years after this prophecy, in the fourth year of Darius. But the earnestness of the command, its repetition by three prophets, the context in isaiah and Jeremiah, imply something more than temporal peril, the peril of the infection of the manners of Babylon, which may have detained there many who did not return. Whence in the New Testament, the words are cited, as to the great evil city of the world; "Wherefore come out from among them and be ye separate, and touch not the unclean thing, and I will receive you"2Co 6:17; and under the name of Babylon; "I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of her, My people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues"Rev 18:4.
For I have spread you abroad as the four winds of heaven - The north country, although its capital and center was Babylon, was the whole Babylonian empire, called "the North"Jer 1:13-14; Jer 3:18; Jer 4:6; Jer 6:1, Jer 6:22; Jer 23:8 because its invasions always came upon Israel from the north. But the book of Esther shows that, sixty years after this, the Jews were dispersed over the 127 provinces of the Persian empire, from India (the Punjab) to Ethiopia Est 1:1; Est 3:8, Est 3:12-14; Est 8:5, Est 8:9, whether they were purposely placed by the policy of the conquerors in detatched groups, as the ten tribes were in the "cities of the Medes"2Ki 17:6, or whether, when more trusted, they migrated of their own accord. God, in calling them to return, reminds them of the greatness of their dispersion. He had dispersed them abroad as the four winds of heaven . He, the Same, recalled them.
Poole -> Zec 2:6
Poole: Zec 2:6 - -- Ho, ho: since Jerusalem shall be safe, rich, and glorious by the presence and blessings of her God, the prophet calls to the sleepy Jews, as men that...
Ho, ho: since Jerusalem shall be safe, rich, and glorious by the presence and blessings of her God, the prophet calls to the sleepy Jews, as men that need be awakened.
Come forth set upon your journey for your own country and city, come out from your captive prisons.
And flee make all the haste you possibly can, and flee as men do who are pursued with danger, as men that are earnestly bent to get out of harm’ s way, as the manslayer to the city of refuge. The Hebrew hath only and flee , but our translators have by that guessed at what might fill up the expression, and read, come forth , &c.
From the land of the north Babylon, which lay north to Canaan.
For I have spread you abroad as the four winds of the heaven: as I executed my threats in scattering you, so I will perform my promise, and gather you from all quarters of the world; arise, come away, therefore.
Haydock -> Zec 2:6
Haydock: Zec 2:6 - -- North. Many Jews had not yet returned, Esther, &c. ---
Winds, Ezechiel v. 2, 12. (Calmet) ---
Gentiles, and ye children of Sion, flee from Babyl...
North. Many Jews had not yet returned, Esther, &c. ---
Winds, Ezechiel v. 2, 12. (Calmet) ---
Gentiles, and ye children of Sion, flee from Babylon and from sin into the true Church. (Worthington)
Gill -> Zec 2:6
Gill: Zec 2:6 - -- Ho, ho,.... This word expresses a call and proclamation; and is doubled, as Kimchi observes, to confirm it; and so the Targum paraphrases it,
"proc...
Ho, ho,.... This word expresses a call and proclamation; and is doubled, as Kimchi observes, to confirm it; and so the Targum paraphrases it,
"proclaim to the dispersed:''
come forth, and flee from the land of the north, saith the Lord; that is, from Babylon, which lay north of Judea; see Jer 1:13 Jer 3:12 where many of the Jews continued, and did not return with the rest when they came up out of the captivity; and are therefore called to come forth from thence in haste; and figuratively designs, either the people of God that are among the men of the world, and are called to separate from them, and have no fellowship with there; or such as will be in mystical Babylon, a little before its destruction; and will be called out of it, lest they partake of her plagues; see Rev 18:4,
for I have spread you abroad as the four winds of the heaven, saith the Lord; meaning either the dispersion of the Jews in Babylon, and other countries; or of the people of God, being scattered up and down in the jurisdiction of Rome Papal; or the sense is, that it was his will and purpose, when they were come out of Babylon, that they should be spread in the several parts of the world, to support the cause of Christ, and strengthen his interest.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Zec 2:6 Or “of the sky.” The same Hebrew term, שָׁמַיִם (shamayim), may be translated “heave...
Geneva Bible -> Zec 2:6
Geneva Bible: Zec 2:6 Ho, ho, [come ( f ) forth], and flee from the land of the north, saith the LORD: for I have spread you abroad as the four ( g ) winds of the heaven, s...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Zec 2:1-13
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.
MHCC -> Zec 2:6-9
MHCC: Zec 2:6-9 - --If God will build Jerusalem for the people and their comfort, they must inhabit it for him and his glory. The promises and privileges with which God's...
Matthew Henry -> Zec 2:6-9
Matthew Henry: Zec 2:6-9 - -- One would have thought that Cyrus's proclamation, which gave liberty to the captive Jews to return to their own land, would suffice to bring them al...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Zec 2:6-9
Keil-Delitzsch: Zec 2:6-9 - --
The prophecy commences thus in Zec 2:6-9 : Zec 2:6. "Ho, ho, flee out of the land of the north, is the saying of Jehovah; for I spread you out as t...
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...
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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...
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Constable: Zec 2:6-13 - --2. The oracle about enemy destruction and Israelite blessing 2:6-13
This message brings out the ...
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