
Text -- Zechariah 5:1-4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
A volume, or book spread out at large, flying in the air, swiftly.

This roll or book containeth the curse, due to sinners.

Wesley: Zec 5:3 - -- Either the whole land of Judea, or all the world, wherever these sins are found.
Either the whole land of Judea, or all the world, wherever these sins are found.

According to the threats inscribed thereon.

This curse shall come with commission from me.

It shall stick close to them and theirs like Gehazi's leprosy.

Wesley: Zec 5:4 - -- Nothing shall remain, as when both the timber and stones of a house are consumed.
Nothing shall remain, as when both the timber and stones of a house are consumed.
JFB: Zec 5:1 - -- Of papyrus, or dressed skins, used for writing on when paper was not known. It was inscribed with the words of the curse (Deu 27:15-26; Deu. 28:15-68)...
Of papyrus, or dressed skins, used for writing on when paper was not known. It was inscribed with the words of the curse (Deu 27:15-26; Deu. 28:15-68). Being written implied that its contents were beyond all escape or repeal (Eze 2:9). Its "flying" shows that its curses were ready swiftly to visit the transgressors. It was unrolled, or else its dimensions could not have been seen (Zec 5:2). Being open to all, none could say in excuse he knew not the law and the curses of disobedience. As the previous visions intimated God's favor in restoring the Jewish state, so this vision announces judgment, intimating that God, notwithstanding His favor, did not approve of their sins. Being written on both sides, "on this and on that side" (Zec 5:3), VATABLUS connects it with the two tables of the law (Exo 32:15), and implies its comprehensiveness. One side denounced "him that sweareth falsely (Zec 5:4) by God's name," according to the third commandment of the first table, duty to God; the other side denounced theft, according to the eighth commandment, which is in the second table, duty to one's neighbor.

JFB: Zec 5:2 - -- Thirty feet by fifteen, the dimensions of the temple porch (1Ki 6:3), where the law was usually read, showing that it was divinely authoritative in th...

JFB: Zec 5:3 - -- (Mal 4:6). The Gentiles are amenable to the curse of the law, as they have its substance, so far as they have not seared and corrupted conscience, wr...

JFB: Zec 5:3 - -- Both sides of the roll [VATABLUS]. From this place . . . from this place (repeated twice, as "the house" is repeated in Zec 5:4) [MAURER]; so "hence" ...
Both sides of the roll [VATABLUS]. From this place . . . from this place (repeated twice, as "the house" is repeated in Zec 5:4) [MAURER]; so "hence" is used, Gen 37:17 (or, "on this and on that side," that is, on every side) [HENDERSON]. None can escape, sin where he may: for God from one side to the other shall call all without exception to judgment [CALVIN]. God will not spare even "this place," Jerusalem, when it sins [PEMBELLUS]. English Version seems to take VATABLUS' view.

JFB: Zec 5:4 - -- The "theft" immediately meant is similar sacrilege to that complained of in Neh 13:10; Mal 3:8. They robbed God by neglecting to give Him His due in b...
The "theft" immediately meant is similar sacrilege to that complained of in Neh 13:10; Mal 3:8. They robbed God by neglecting to give Him His due in building His house, while they built their own houses, forswearing their obligations to Him; therefore, the "houses" they build shall be "consumed" with God's "curse." Probably literal theft and perjury accompanied their virtual theft and perjury as to the temple of God (Mal 3:5). Stealing and perjury go together; for the covetous and fraudulent perjure themselves by God's name without scruple (see Pro 30:9).

JFB: Zec 5:4 - -- In vain they guard and shut themselves up who incur the curse; it will inevitably enter even when they think themselves most secure.
In vain they guard and shut themselves up who incur the curse; it will inevitably enter even when they think themselves most secure.

JFB: Zec 5:4 - -- Not leaving a vestige of it. So the "stones" and "timber" of the house of a leper (type of the sinner) were to be utterly removed (Lev 14:15; compare ...
Not leaving a vestige of it. So the "stones" and "timber" of the house of a leper (type of the sinner) were to be utterly removed (Lev 14:15; compare 1Ki 18:38).
The "ephah" is the Hebrew dry measure containing about thirty-seven quarts. Alluding to the previous vision as to theft and perjury: the ephah which, by falsification of the measure, they made the instrument of defrauding, shall be made the instrument of their punishment [GROTIUS]. Compare "this is their resemblance" (Zec 5:6), that is, this is a representation of what the Jews have done, and what they shall suffer. Their total dispersion ("the land of Shinar" being the emblem of the various Gentile lands of their present dispersion) is herein fortetold, when the measure (to which the ephah alludes) of their sins should be full. The former vision denounces judgment on individuals; this one, on the whole state: but enigmatically, not to discourage their present building [PEMBELLUS]. Rather, the vision is consolatory after the preceding one [CALVIN]. Idolatry and its kindred sins, covetousness and fraud (denounced in the vision of the roll), shall be removed far out of the Holy Land to their own congenial soil, never to return (so Zec 3:9; Isa 27:9; Isa 52:1; Isa 60:21; Jer 50:20; Zep 3:13). For more than two thousand years, ever since the Babylonian exile, the Jews have been free from idolatry; but the full accomplishment of the prophecy is yet future, when all sin shall be purged from Israel on their return to Palestine, and conversion to Christ.
Clarke: Zec 5:1 - -- Behold a flying roll - This was twenty cubits long, and ten cubits broad; the prophet saw it expanded, and flying. Itself was the catalogue of the c...
Behold a flying roll - This was twenty cubits long, and ten cubits broad; the prophet saw it expanded, and flying. Itself was the catalogue of the crimes of the people, and the punishment threatened by the Lord. Some think the crimes were those of the Jews; others, those of the Chaldeans. The roll is mentioned in allusion to those large rolls on which the Jews write the Pentateuch. One now lying before me is one hundred and fifty-three feet long, by twenty-one inches wide, written on fine brown Basle goat-skin; some time since brought from Jerusalem, supposed to be four hundred years old.

Clarke: Zec 5:3 - -- Every one that stealeth - and every one that sweareth - It seems that the roll was written both on the front and back: stealing and swearing are sup...
Every one that stealeth - and every one that sweareth - It seems that the roll was written both on the front and back: stealing and swearing are supposed to be two general heads of crimes; the former, comprising sins against men; the latter, sins against God. It is supposed that the roll contained the sins and punishments of the Chaldeans.

Clarke: Zec 5:4 - -- Into the house of him - Babylon, the house or city of Nebuchadnezzar, who was a public plunderer, and a most glaring idolater.
Into the house of him - Babylon, the house or city of Nebuchadnezzar, who was a public plunderer, and a most glaring idolater.
Calvin: Zec 5:1 - -- The angel shows in this chapter, that whatever evils the Jews had suffered, proceeded from the righteous judgment Of God; and then he adds a consolat...
The angel shows in this chapter, that whatever evils the Jews had suffered, proceeded from the righteous judgment Of God; and then he adds a consolation — that the Lord would at length alleviate or put an end to their evils, when he had removed afar off their iniquity. Interpreters have touched neither heaven nor earth in their explanation of this prophecy, for they have not regarded the design of the Holy Spirit. Some think that by the volume are to be understood false and perverted glosses, by which the purity of doctrine had been vitiated; but this view can by no means be received. There is no doubt but that God intended to show to Zechariah, that the Jews were justly punished, because the whole land was full of thefts and perjuries. As then religion had been despised, as well as equity and justice, he shows that it was no wonder that a curse had prevailed through the whole land, the Jews leaving by their impiety and other sins extremely provoked the wrath of God. This is the import of the first part. And, then, as this vision was terrible, there is added some alleviation by representing iniquity in a measure, and the mouth of the measure closed, and afterwards carried to the land of Shinar, that is, into Chaldea, that it might not remain in Judea. Thus in the former part the Prophet’s design was to humble the Jews, and to encourage them to repent, so that they might own God to have been justly angry; and then he gives them reason to entertain hope, and fully to expect an end to their evils, for the Lord would remove to a distance and transfer their iniquity to Chaldea, so that Judea might be pure and free from every wickedness, both from thefts and acts of injustice, by which it had been previously polluted. But every sentence must be in order explained, that the meaning of the Prophet may be more clearly seen.
He says, that he had returned; 54 and by this word this vision is separated front the preceding visions, and those also of which we have hitherto spoken, were not at the same time exhibited to the Prophet, but he saw them at different times. We may hence learn that some time intervened before the Lord presented to him the vision narrated in this chapter. He adds, that he raised up his eyes and looked; and this is said that we may know that what he narrates was shown to him by the prophetic Spirit. Zechariah very often raised up his eyes though God did not immediately appear to him; but it behaved God’s servants, whenever they girded themselves for the purpose of teaching, to withdraw themselves as it were from the society of men, and to rise up above the world. The raising up of the eyes then, mentioned by Zechariah, signified something special, as though he had said, that he was prepared, for the Lord had inwardly roused him. The Prophets also, no doubt, were in this manner by degrees prepared, when the Lord made himself known to them. There was then the raising up of the eyes as a preparation to receive the celestial oracle.

Calvin: Zec 5:2 - -- He afterwards adds, that he was asked by the angel what he saw. He might indeed have said, that a roll flying in the air appeared to him, but he did...
He afterwards adds, that he was asked by the angel what he saw. He might indeed have said, that a roll flying in the air appeared to him, but he did not as yet understand what it meant; hence the angel performed the office of an interpreter. But he says, that the roll was twenty cubits long, and ten broad. The Rabbis think that the figure of the court of the temple is here represented, for the length of the court was twenty cubits and its breadth was ten; and hence they suppose, that the roll had come forth from the temple, that there might be fuller reason to believe that God had sent forth the roll. And this allusion, though not sufficiently grounded, is yet more probable than the allegory of the puerile Jerome, who thinks that this ought to be applied to Christ, because he began to preach the gospel in his thirtieth year. Thus he meant to apply this number to the age of Christ, when he commenced his office as a teacher. But this is extreme trifling. I do not feel anxious to know why the length or the breadth is mentioned; for it seems not to be much connected with the main subject. But if it be proper to follow a probable conjecture, what I have already referred to is more admissible — that the length and breadth of the roll are stated, that the Jews might fully understand that nothing was set before them but what God himself sanctioned, as they clearly perceived a figure of the court of the temple.

Calvin: Zec 5:3 - -- The angel then says, that it was the curse which went forth 55 over the face of the whole land. We must remember what I have just said, that God...
The angel then says, that it was the curse which went forth 55 over the face of the whole land. We must remember what I have just said, that God’s judgment is here set forth before the Jews, that they might know how justly both their fathers and themselves have been with so much severity chastised by God, inasmuch as they had procured for themselves such punishments by their sins. From the saying of the angel, that the roll went through the whole land, we learn, that not only a few were guilty, or that some corner of the land only had been polluted, but that the wrath of God raged everywhere, as no part of the land was pure or free from wickedness. As then Judea was full of pollutions, it was no wonder that the Lord poured forth his wrath and overwhelmed, as it were with a deluge, the whole land.
It afterwards follows, for every thief, or every one that steals, shall on this as on that side, be punished, or receive his own reward; and every one who swears, shall on this as on that side be punished. As to the words, interpreters differ with regard to the particles,
Now the Prophet says, that all perjurers, as well as thieves, shall be punished; and there is nothing strange in this, for God, who has forbidden to steal, has also forbidden to forswear. He is therefore the punisher of all transgressions. Those who think that this roll was disapproved, as though it contained false and degenerate doctrine, bring this reason to prove its injustice, that the thief is as grievously punished as the perjurer: but this is extremely frivolous. For, as I have said already, God shows here that he will be the defender of his law in whatever respect men may have transgressed it. We must therefore remember that saying of James,
“he who forbids to commit adultery, forbids also to steal: whosoever then offends in one thing is a transgressor of the whole law:” (Jas 2:11)
for we ought not simply to regard what God either commands or forbids, but we ought ever to fix our eyes on his majesty, as there is nothing so minute in the law which all ought not reverently to receive; for the laws themselves are not only to be regarded, but especially the lawgiver. As then the majesty of God is dishonored, when any one steals, and when any one transgresses in the least point, he clearly shows that the word of God is not much regarded by him. It is hence right that thieves and perjurers should be alike punished: yet the Scripture while it thus speaks, does not teach that sins are equal in enormity, as the Stoics in former times foolishly and falsely taught. But the equality of punishment is not what is here referred to; the angel means only, that neither thieves nor perjurers shall go unpunished, as they have transgressed the law of God.
We must also observe, that the mode of speaking adopted here is that of stating a part for the whole; for under the word theft is comprehended whatever is opposed to the duties of love; so that it is to be referred to the second table at the law. And the Prophet calls all those perjurers who profane the worship of God; and so perjury includes whatever is contrary to the first table of the law, and tends to pollute the service due to God. The meaning is, — that God, as I have said, will be the punisher of all kinds of wickedness, for he has not in vain given his law. Much deceived then are those who flatter themselves, as though by evasions they can elude the judgment of God, for both thieves and perjurers shall be brought before God’s tribunal, so that no one can escape, that is, no wickedness shall remain unpunished; for not in vain has he once declared by his own mouth, that cursed are all who fulfill not whatever has been written. (Deu 27:26.)
And the same thing the Prophet more clearly expresses in the following verse, where God himself declares what he would do, that he would cause the curse to go forth over the whole land; as though he had said, “I will really show, that I have not given the law that it may be despised; for what the law teaches shall be so efficacious, that every one who violates it shall find that he has to do, not with a mortal man, nor with sounds of words, but with the heavenly judge; I will bring forth the curse over the whole land. ”
I have said, that the Prophet was instructed in the import of this vision, that all the Jews might know that it was nothing strange that they had been so severely chastised, inasmuch as they had polluted the whole land by their sins, so that no part of the law was observed by them; for on the one hand they had corrupted the worship of God and departed from true religion; and on the other, they distressed one another by many wrongs, and oppressed them by frauds. As then no equity prevailed among the people, nor any true religion, God shows that he would punish them all, as none were guiltless.

Calvin: Zec 5:4 - -- He afterwards adds, It shall come into the house of the thief, and into the house of him who swears in my name falsely; and there will it reside, an...
He afterwards adds, It shall come into the house of the thief, and into the house of him who swears in my name falsely; and there will it reside, and it shall consume the hoarse, both the wood and the stones. Here the Prophet further stimulates the Jews to repentance, by showing that the curse would so fly as to enter into all their houses; as though he had said, “In vain shall they, who deserve punishment, fortify or shut up themselves; for this curse, which I send forth, shall come to each individual, and with him it shall remain.” We know that hypocrites so flatter themselves, as though they could escape for the moment while God is angry and displeased; but the Prophet shows here that vain is such a hope, for the curse would overtake all the ungodly, and wholly overthrow them; yea, it would consume their houses, both the wood and the stones. In short, he intimates, that punishment ends not until men are reconciled to God. And by these words he reminds us how terrible it is to fall into the hands of God, for he will punish the ungodly and the wicked until he reduces them to nothing. We now then comprehend the design of the Prophet and the meaning of the words. It now follows —
Defender: Zec 5:2 - -- This strange vision revealed a great scroll with judgments written on both sides, flying throughout the earth to indicate the whole earth is under "th...
This strange vision revealed a great scroll with judgments written on both sides, flying throughout the earth to indicate the whole earth is under "the curse of the law" (Gal 3:13)."

Defender: Zec 5:3 - -- Those who rejected God's grace, as shown in the previous visions, continuing in their sins, unrepentant and unforgiven, would be "cut off." The two si...
Those who rejected God's grace, as shown in the previous visions, continuing in their sins, unrepentant and unforgiven, would be "cut off." The two sins mentioned in Zec 5:4, taking God's name in falsifying the truth and stealing, involve the central commandment in each of the two tables of the law, in effect stand for breaking any of God's commands."
TSK: Zec 5:1 - -- roll : Zec 5:2; Isa 8:1; Jer 36:1-6, Jer 36:20-24, Jer 36:27-32; Eze 2:9, Eze 2:10; Rev 5:1-14; Rev 10:2, Rev 10:8-11
roll : Zec 5:2; Isa 8:1; Jer 36:1-6, Jer 36:20-24, Jer 36:27-32; Eze 2:9, Eze 2:10; Rev 5:1-14; Rev 10:2, Rev 10:8-11

TSK: Zec 5:2 - -- What : Zec 4:2; Jer 1:11-14; Amo 7:8
flying : Zep 1:14; 2Pe 2:3
the length : Gen 6:11-13; Rev 18:5

TSK: Zec 5:3 - -- the curse : Deu 11:28, Deu 11:29, Deu 27:15-26, 28:15-68, Deu 29:19-28; Psa 109:17-20; Pro 3:33; Isa 24:6, Isa 43:28; Jer 26:6; Dan 9:11; Mal 3:9, Mal...
the curse : Deu 11:28, Deu 11:29, Deu 27:15-26, 28:15-68, Deu 29:19-28; Psa 109:17-20; Pro 3:33; Isa 24:6, Isa 43:28; Jer 26:6; Dan 9:11; Mal 3:9, Mal 4:6; Mat 25:41; Gal 3:10-13; Heb 6:6-8; Rev 21:8, Rev 22:15
the face : Luk 21:35
every one : etc. or, every one of this people that stealeth, holdeth himself guiltless, as it doth. stealeth. Exo 20:15; Pro 29:24, Pro 30:9; Jer 7:9; Hos 4:2; Mal 3:8-10; 1Co 6:7-9; Eph 4:28; Jam 5:4
sweareth : Zec 5:4, Zec 8:17; Lev 19:12; Isa 48:1; Jer 5:2, Jer 23:10; Eze 17:13-16; Mal 3:5; Mat 5:33-37, Mat 23:16-22; 1Ti 1:9; Jam 5:12

TSK: Zec 5:4 - -- and it shall remain : Lev 14:34-45; Deu 7:26; Job 18:15, Job 20:26; Pro 3:33; Hab 2:9-11; Jam 5:2, Jam 5:3
and it shall remain : Lev 14:34-45; Deu 7:26; Job 18:15, Job 20:26; Pro 3:33; Hab 2:9-11; Jam 5:2, Jam 5:3

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Zec 5:1 - -- Hitherto all had been bright, full of the largeness of the gifts of God; of God’ s favor to His people ; the removal of their enemies ; the res...
Hitherto all had been bright, full of the largeness of the gifts of God; of God’ s favor to His people ; the removal of their enemies ; the restoration and expansion and security of God’ s people and Church under His protection ; the acceptance of the present typical priesthood and the promise of Him, through whom there should be entire forgiveness : the abiding illumining of the Church by the Spirit of God . Yet there is a reverse side to all this, God’ s judgments on those who reject all His mercies. Augustine, de Civ. Del. 17:3. Ribera: "Prophecies partly appertain to those in whose times the sacred writers prophesied, partly to the mysteries of Christ. And therefore it is the custom of the prophets, at one time to chastise vices and set forth punishments, at another to predict the mysteries of Christ and the Church."
And I turned and - Or, "Again I lifted up my eyes"Gen 26:18; 2Ki 1:11, 2Ki 1:13; Jer 18:14, having again sunk down in meditation on what he had seen, "and behold a roll flying;"as, to Ezekiel was shown "a hand with a roll of a book therein, and he spread it before me."Ezekiel’ s roll also was "written within and without, and there was written, therein lamentation and mourning and woe"Eze 2:9-10. It was a wide unfolded roll, as is involved in its flying; but its "flight signified the very swift coming of punishment; its flying from heaven that the sentence came from the judgment-seat above"(Ribera).

Barnes: Zec 5:2 - -- And he - (the interpreting angel) said unto me It cannot be without meaning, that the dimensions of the roll should be those of the tabernacle ...
And he - (the interpreting angel) said unto me It cannot be without meaning, that the dimensions of the roll should be those of the tabernacle , as the last vision was that of the candlestick, after the likeness of the candlestick therein. The explanations of this correspondence do not exclude each other. It may be that "judgment shall begin at the house of God"1Pe 4:17; that the punishment on sin is proportioned to the nearness of God and the knowledge of Him; that the presence of God, which was for life, might also be to death, as Paul says; "God maketh manifest the savor of this knowledge by us in every place; for we are unto God a sweet savor of Christ in them that are saved and in them that perish; to the one we are the savor of death unto death, and to the other the savor of life unto life"2Co 2:14-16; and Simeon said, "This child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel"Luk 2:34.

Barnes: Zec 5:3 - -- Over the face of the whole earth - primarily land, since the perjured persons, upon whom the curse was to fall Zec 5:4, were those who swore fa...
Over the face of the whole earth - primarily land, since the perjured persons, upon whom the curse was to fall Zec 5:4, were those who swore falsely by the name of God: and this was in Judah only. The reference to the two tables of the law also confines it primarily to those who were under the law. Yet, since the moral law abides under the Gospel, ultimately these visions related to the Christian Church, which was to be spread over the whole earth. The roll apparently was shown, as written on both sides; the commandments of the first table, in which perjury is forbidden, on the one side; those relating to the love of our neighbor, in which stealing is forbidden, on the other. Theodoret: "He calleth curse that vengeance, which goeth through the whole world, and is brought upon the workers of iniquity. But hereby both prophets and people were taught, that the God of all is the judge of all people, and will exact meet punishment of all, bringing utter destruction not on those only who live ungodly toward Himself, but on those also who are unjust to their neighbors. For let no one think that this threat was only against thieves and false-swearers; for He gave sentence against all iniquity. For since all the law and the prophets hang on this word, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and thy neighbor as thyself,"He comprised every sort of sin under false swearing and theft. The violation of oaths is the head of all ungodliness. One who so doeth is devoid of the love of God. But theft indicates injustice to one’ s neighbor; for no one who loves his neighbor will endure to be unjust to him. These heads then comprehend all the other laws."
Shall be cut off - Literally, "cleansed away", as something defiled and defiling, which has to be cleared away as offensive: as God says, "I will take away the remnant of the house of Jeroboam, as a man taketh away dung, until it be all gone"(1Ki 14:10, add 1Ki 21:21), and so often in Deuteronomy, "thou shalt put the evil away from the midst of thee"(Deu 13:5 (6 Heb.); Deu 17:7; Deu 19:19; Deu 21:21; Deu 22:21, Deu 22:24; Deu 24:7), or "of Israel"Deu 17:12; Deu 23:22, and in Ezekiel, "I will disperse thee in the countries and will consume thy filthiness out of thee"Eze 22:15. Set it empty upon the coals thereof, that the brass of it may be hot and may burn, and the filthiness of it may be molten, that the scum of it may be consumed"Eze 24:11.

Barnes: Zec 5:4 - -- I will bring it forth - Out of the treasure-house, as it were; as he says, "He bringeth forth the wind out of His treasures"Jer 10:13; Jer 51:1...
I will bring it forth - Out of the treasure-house, as it were; as he says, "He bringeth forth the wind out of His treasures"Jer 10:13; Jer 51:16; and, "Is not this laid up in store with Me, sealed up among My treasures?"To Me belongeth "vengeance and recompense"Deu 32:34-35. And it shall remain, literally, "lodge for the night,"until it has accomplished that for which it was sent, its utter destruction. Lap.: "So we have seen and see at this day powerful families, which attained to splendor by rapine or ill-gotten goods, destroyed by the just judgment of God, that those who see it are amazed, how such wealth perceptibly yet insensibly disappeared."Chrys. on the statues 15. n. 13. p. 259. Oxford Translation: "Why doth it overthrow the stones and the wood of the swearer’ s house? In order that the ruin may be a correction to all. For since the earth must hide the swearer, when dead, his house, overturned and become a heap, will by the very sight be an admonition to all who pass by and see it, not to venture on the like, lest they suffer the like, and it will be a lasting witness against the sin of the departed."
Paganism was impressed with the doom of him who consulted the oracle, whether he should foreswear himself for gain. "Swear,"was the answer, "since death awaits too the man, who keeps the oath; yet Oath hath a son, nameless, handless, footless; but swift he pursueth, until he grasp together and destroy the whole race and house.""In the third generation, there was nought descended from him,"who had consulted about this perjury, "nor hearthstone reputed to be his. It had been uprooted and effaced."A pagan orator relates, as well known, that "the perjurer escapes not the vengeance of the gods, and if not himself, yet the sons and whole race of the foresworn fall into great misfortunes."God left not Himself without witness.
Lap.: "The prophet speaks of the curse inflicted on the thieves and false swearers of his own day; but a fortiori he includes that which came upon them for slaying Christ. For this was the greatest of all, which utterly overthrew and consumed Jerusalem, the temple and polity, so that that ancient and glorious Jerusalem exists no longer, as Christ threatened. "They shall lay thee even with the ground, and they shall not leave in thee one stone upon another"Luk 19:44. This resteth upon them these"1800 "years."
Poole: Zec 5:1 - -- Then or And , Heb. i.e. after I had seen those comfortable visions, and been instructed in the true meaning of them.
I turned changed his posture...
Then or And , Heb. i.e. after I had seen those comfortable visions, and been instructed in the true meaning of them.
I turned changed his posture, though the occasion of it be not mentioned, nor the posture into which he put himself.
Lifted up mine eyes looked up into the air where the vision appeared.
Looked very diligently, and discerned clearly.
A flying roll a volume, or book, which in those days were not written as now our books are printed and bound, but were written, as deeds are now, on large or long parchments, and rolled up upon a neat round stick, or else rolled upon themselves; such the roll here seen: much as our large geographical maps are rolled upon rollers, sad lodged in a convenient cavity, so were their books of old. But probably here now the roll was spread out at large, flying in the air swiftly, perhaps with some noise, that might make the prophet look about him.

Poole: Zec 5:2 - -- And he the angel, Zec 4:1,5 .
What seest thou, O Zechariah?
The length thereof is twenty cubits that is, ten yards long; by this it appears the r...
And he the angel, Zec 4:1,5 .
What seest thou, O Zechariah?
The length thereof is twenty cubits that is, ten yards long; by this it appears the roll was spread out, for had it been rolled up he could not have seen the length, though he did the breadth, five yards.

Poole: Zec 5:3 - -- Then said he the angel, which instructed the prophet.
This is the curse this roll or book containeth the curse, the menaced punishment due to sinne...
Then said he the angel, which instructed the prophet.
This is the curse this roll or book containeth the curse, the menaced punishment due to sinners, of which too many were still among the Jews.
That goeth forth that goeth speedily, for it flieth.
Over the face of the whole earth either the whole land of Judea, or over all the world; wherever these sins are found, this curse will come upon the sinners, unless they repent.
Every one that stealeth: theft is here first mentioned, a sin that had abounded among them, and front which they were not free then; they robbed one another, and they robbed God, they were sacrilegious.
Shall be cut off shall be punished with an extermination of his house, as well as with cutting off his life.
According to it according to the just threats of the law.
Every one that sweareth profanely, or falsely, the perjured person,
shall be cut off too

Poole: Zec 5:4 - -- I will bring it forth so exemplarily will I execute this judgment, that it shall appear I do it, my hand, saith God, shall be seen in it.
It shall e...
I will bring it forth so exemplarily will I execute this judgment, that it shall appear I do it, my hand, saith God, shall be seen in it.
It shall enter none shall be able to keep it out, this curse shall come with commission from me,
into the house of the thief where he laid up that he got by theft, and thought to rejoice in it; or by house understand all his estate and goods, with his family and posterity. The thief ; the robbers of God and of their neighbours, and every other notorious transgressor of the precepts of the second table.
And into the house of him that sweareth falsely by my name: this doth explain that of the third verse, and it is plain that the perjured person is here threatened, every one that dares call God to witness to a falsehood, and imprecate themselves if they speak not truth.
It shall remain this curse shall be a long curse, it shall stick close to them and theirs, like Gehazi’ s leprosy.
In the midst of his house as in the heart and centre of their house, like a sword in the midst of the bowels, or like a disease that seizeth the heart.
Shall consume it though it do not destroy suddenly, it shall destroy surely.
With the timber thereof, and the stones thereof the strength of it, nothing shall remain, as when both timber and stones of a house are consumed and wasted. Such execution shall be done on those, whose name and place shall be blotted out.
Haydock: Zec 5:1 - -- Eyes of the soul. (Menochius) ---
Volume. That is, a parchment, according to the form of the ancient books, which, from begin rolled up, were cal...
Eyes of the soul. (Menochius) ---
Volume. That is, a parchment, according to the form of the ancient books, which, from begin rolled up, were called volumes. (Challoner) ---
Such are still used in the synagogues. They were usually written only on one side. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint have read e at the end of megilla, and render "a scythe," (Haydock) indicating chastisement. Aquila and Theodoret have Diphtherea, and Symmachus Kephalis. (St. Jerome) ---
The latter denotes the roller (Haydock) to which the parchment was sewed. (Menochius) ---
The former signifies a book written on vellum, particularly that in which the poets say Jupiter marks the sins and punishments of mankind. The prophet saw a volume of this nature. (Calmet) ---
The sins of the people, and the punishment designed for them, were described. It appeared flying, to shew that the decree came from heaven. (St. Chrysostom; Il. xxvii. ad pop.) (Worthington)

Haydock: Zec 5:2 - -- Cubits, alluding to Judea, which was twice as long as it was broad. (Menochius) ---
Many explain this vision and that of the woman, (ver. 7) of the...
Cubits, alluding to Judea, which was twice as long as it was broad. (Menochius) ---
Many explain this vision and that of the woman, (ver. 7) of the Jews, (Calmet) after St. Jerome. (Haydock) ---
But is seems rather to denote the Chaldeans, whose sentence had been long pronounced, and who were punished by the Persians, and by the Greeks, as by two women. If we understand the Jews, their iniquity was chastised by the Assyrians and Chaldeans. (Calmet)

Haydock: Zec 5:3 - -- In like. Protestants, "shall cut off as on that side standing to it." (Haydock)
In like. Protestants, "shall cut off as on that side standing to it." (Haydock)

Haydock: Zec 5:4 - -- Thief. Nabuchodonosor is often so styled. (St. Jerome iv. 7.) This title comprises all the injuries done to man, as he that sweareth falsely ref...
Thief. Nabuchodonosor is often so styled. (St. Jerome iv. 7.) This title comprises all the injuries done to man, as he that sweareth falsely refers to those where God's honour is concerned (Calmet) more immediately. (Haydock)
Gill: Zec 5:1 - -- Then I turned, and lift up mine eyes, and looked,.... The prophet turned himself from looking upon the candlestick and olive branches, having had a fu...
Then I turned, and lift up mine eyes, and looked,.... The prophet turned himself from looking upon the candlestick and olive branches, having had a full and clear understanding of them, and looked another way, and saw another vision:
and behold a flying roll, a volume or book flying in the air; it being usual for books, which were written on parchment, to be rolled up in the form of a cylinder; whence they were called rolls or volumes.

Gill: Zec 5:2 - -- And he said unto me,.... That is, the angel:
What seest thou? and I answered, I see a flying roll, the length whereof is twenty cubits, and the br...
And he said unto me,.... That is, the angel:
What seest thou? and I answered, I see a flying roll, the length whereof is twenty cubits, and the breadth thereof ten cubits; so that it was a very large one, a volume of a very uncommon size, especially it may so seem to us; but in other nations they have very long rolls or volumes, even longer than this: the Russians write their acts, protests, and other court matters, on long rolls of paper, some twenty ells, some thirty, and some sixty, and more x: and this being the length and breadth of the porch before the temple, 1Ki 6:3 hence the Jewish writers conclude that this flying roll came from thence: it may design either the roll or book in which the sins of men are written; which is very large, and will quickly be brought into judgment, when it will be opened, and men will be judged according to it; which shows the notice God takes of the sins of men; the exact knowledge he has of them; his strict remembrance of them; and the certain account men must give of them another day: or, the book of God's judgments upon sinners, such as was Ezekiel's roll, Eze 2:9 which are many and great; are rolled up, and not at present to be searched into; but are flying, coming on, and will be speedily executed: or rather the book of the law, called a roll or volume, Psa 40:7 and which will be a swift witness against the breakers of it, as more fully appears from the explanation of it in the next verse Zec 5:3. It is a mere fancy and conceit of some that the Talmud is meant by this roll, the body of the Jewish traditions, which make void the commands of God, take away the blessing, and leave a curse in the land, as they did in the land of Judea.

Gill: Zec 5:3 - -- Then said he unto me, This is the curse,.... So the law of Moses is called, because it has curses written in it, Deu 27:15 which curse is not causele...
Then said he unto me, This is the curse,.... So the law of Moses is called, because it has curses written in it, Deu 27:15 which curse is not causeless, but is according to law and justice; it is from the Lord, and is no other than the wrath of the Almighty; and, wherever it lights, it will remain and continue for ever. Vitringa, on Isa 24:6 says, this is the curse which Isaiah there prophesies of, which had its accomplishment in the times of Antiochus; but there the prophet is speaking, not of the land of Judea, but of the antichristian states.
That goeth forth over the face of the whole earth: over the whole land of Judea, and the inhabitants of it, for their breach of the law, contempt of the Gospel, and the rejection of the Messiah; and which had its accomplishment when wrath came upon them to the uttermost, in the destruction of their nation, city, and temple; and is the curse God threatened to smite their land with, Mal 4:6 and this curse also reaches to the whole world, and the inhabitants of it, who lie in wickedness; and to all sorts of sinners, particularly those next mentioned:
for everyone that stealeth shall be cut off as on this side, according to it; as it is written and declared on one side of the roll:
and everyone that sweareth shall be cut off as on that side according to it; as is written and declared on the other side of the roll; which two sins of theft and false swearing, the one being against the second, and the other the first table of the law, show that the curse of the law reaches to all sorts of sins and sinners; to all who do not keep it in every respect: and, indeed, to all but those who are redeemed from it by the blood of Christ; and that it is proportioned according to a man's sins: and those two are particularly mentioned, because they are sins which prevailed among the Jews at the time Christ was on earth. Theft did, both in a literal and figurative sense, Mat 23:14 and so did vain swearing, Mat 5:33.

Gill: Zec 5:4 - -- I will bring it forth, saith the Lord of hosts,.... The roll was come forth, and was flying abroad; but the curse and wrath of God, signified by it, i...
I will bring it forth, saith the Lord of hosts,.... The roll was come forth, and was flying abroad; but the curse and wrath of God, signified by it, is what God would bring forth out of his treasures, according to his purposes and declarations, and execute upon sinners; which shows the certainty of it, and that there is no escaping it:
and it shall enter into the house of the thief, and into the house of him that sweareth falsely by my name; and it shall remain in the midst of his house, and shall consume it with the timber thereof, and the stones thereof; when wrath is gone forth from the Lord, there is no stopping it; and where it takes place it will remain, there is no getting rid of it; it makes an utter desolation of goods and estates, and entirely destroys both body and soul in hell: there seems to be an allusion to the plague of the leprosy, Lev 14:45. So the son of Sirach says,
"a man that swears much shall be full of iniquity, and the plague shall not depart from his house:''
and again,
"if a man swears in vain, he shall not be innocent or justified, for his house shall be full of calamities y.''
So the oracle in Herodotus z, which Grotius has observed, makes an utter destruction of a man's house and family, to be the punishment of the sin of perjury. Moreover, by the house of the thief and swearer may be meant the temple, as in the times of Christ, which was become a den of thieves and perjurers, and for their sins, became desolate, Mat 21:13.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Zec 5:2 Heb “twenty cubits…ten cubits” (so NAB, NRSV). These dimensions (“thirty feet long and fifteen feet wide”) can hardly be...

NET Notes: Zec 5:3 Stealing and swearing falsely (mentioned later in this verse) are sins against mankind and God respectively and are thus violations of the two major p...
Geneva Bible: Zec 5:2 And he said to me, What seest thou? And I answered, I see a flying ( a ) scroll; its length [is] twenty cubits, and its breadth ten cubits.
( a ) Bec...

Geneva Bible: Zec 5:3 Then said he to me, This [is] the curse that goeth forth over the face of the whole earth: for every one that ( b ) stealeth shall be cut off [as] on ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Zec 5:1-11
TSK Synopsis: Zec 5:1-11 - --1 By the flying roll is shewn the curse of thieves and swearers;5 and by a woman pressed in an ephah the final judgment of wickedness.
MHCC -> Zec 5:1-4
MHCC: Zec 5:1-4 - --The Scriptures of the Old and New Testament are rolls, in which God has written the great things of his law and gospel; they are flying rolls. God's w...
Matthew Henry -> Zec 5:1-4
Matthew Henry: Zec 5:1-4 - -- We do not find that the prophet now needed to be awakened, as he did Zec 4:1. Being awakened then, he kept wakeful after; nay, now he needs not be s...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Zec 5:1-4
Keil-Delitzsch: Zec 5:1-4 - --
Zec 5:1. "And I lifted up my eyes again, and saw, and behold a flying roll. Zec 5:2. And he said to me, What seest thou? And I said, I see a flyin...
Constable -> Zec 1:7--6:9; Zec 5:1-4
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...
