
Text -- Zechariah 7:10 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Zec 7:10
Neither think ill of, or with ill to, nor plot evil against one another.
JFB -> Zec 7:10
JFB: Zec 7:10 - -- That is, devise evil. The Septuagint takes it, Harbor not the desire of revenge (Lev 19:18). "Devise evil against one another" is simpler (Psa 36:4; M...
Clarke -> Zec 7:10
Clarke: Zec 7:10 - -- Evil against his brother in your heart - Do not indulge an unfavourable opinion of another: do not envy him; do not harbour an unbrotherly feeling t...
Evil against his brother in your heart - Do not indulge an unfavourable opinion of another: do not envy him; do not harbour an unbrotherly feeling towards him.
Calvin -> Zec 7:10
Calvin: Zec 7:10 - -- He mentions here some other duties, but for the same purpose of showing, that the fear of God is not proved by ceremonies, but by acting justly towar...
He mentions here some other duties, but for the same purpose of showing, that the fear of God is not proved by ceremonies, but by acting justly towards our brethren, and not by abstaining only from doing wrong, but by being ready to help the miserable. As widows, and orphans, and strangers are exposed as it were to plunder, Moses often in the law recommends them to favor, and shows that God cares for them, and will be their defender, when by one injured. So also the Prophet speaks here expressly of widows, and orphans, and strangers, that the Jews might understand, not only that they were to take heed, lest any one, being wronged, should complain, or lest any one should retaliate an injury, but that they were to observe integrity before God; for the ungodly are often terrified by fear, and refrain from doing mischief, because they know that there will be an avenger. Hence it comes that the rich and the opulent are safe from all injuries, because they are surrounded and fortified by strong defences; but the widows and the orphans are not thus able to repel wrongs. This is the reason why the Prophet prefers here to mention widows, and orphans, and strangers, rather than to speak indiscriminately of all the people. For the import of the whole is, as I have reminded you, that the fear of God is not really proved, except when a person cleaves to what is just and right, and is not restrained by fear or shame, but discharges his duty as it were in the presence of God and of his angels, so that he shows favor to the poor and miserable, who are without any to help them. But as I have elsewhere explained this subject more at large, it is enough now briefly to touch on it. 73 Let us proceed —
TSK -> Zec 7:10
TSK: Zec 7:10 - -- oppress : Exo 22:21-24, Exo 23:9; Deu 24:14-18, Deu 27:19; Psa 72:4; Pro 22:22, Pro 22:23, Pro 23:10; Pro 23:11; Isa 1:16, Isa 1:17, Isa 1:23; Jer 5:2...
oppress : Exo 22:21-24, Exo 23:9; Deu 24:14-18, Deu 27:19; Psa 72:4; Pro 22:22, Pro 22:23, Pro 23:10; Pro 23:11; Isa 1:16, Isa 1:17, Isa 1:23; Jer 5:28, Jer 22:15-17; Eze 22:7, Eze 22:12, Eze 22:29; Amo 4:1, Amo 5:11, Amo 5:12; Mic 2:1-3, Mic 3:1-4; Zep 3:1-3; Mal 3:5; Mat 23:14; 1Co 6:10; Jam 5:4
imagine : Psa 21:11, Psa 36:4, Psa 140:2; Pro 3:29, Pro 6:18; Jer 11:19, Jer 11:20, Jer 18:18; Mic 2:1; Mar 7:21-23; Jam 1:14, Jam 1:15; 1Jo 3:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Zec 7:10
Barnes: Zec 7:10 - -- And oppress not - He had commanded positive acts of love; he now forbids every sort of unlove. "He that oppresseth the poor,"Solomon had said, ...
And oppress not - He had commanded positive acts of love; he now forbids every sort of unlove. "He that oppresseth the poor,"Solomon had said, "reproacheth his Maker. The widow, the orphan, the stranger, the afflicted"Pro 24:31, are, throughout the law, the special objects of God’ s care. This was the condition which God made by Jeremiah; "If ye thoroughly amend your ways and your doings, if ye thoroughly execute judgment between a man and his neighbor; if ye oppress not the stranger the fatherless and the widow, and shed not innocent blood in this place, neither walk after other gods to your hurt, then will I cause you to dwell in this, place"Jer 7:5-7. It was on the breach of the covenant to set their brethren free in the year of release, that God said; "I proclaim a liberty for you to the sword, to the pestilence and to the famine, and I will make you to be removed into all the kingdoms of the earth"Jer 34:17.
And let none of you imagine - that is, "devise, as, by Micah, God retorted the evil upon them. They "devised evil on their beds; therefore, behold, against this family do I devise an evil, from which ye shall not remove your necks"Mic 2:1, Mic 2:3.
Poole -> Zec 7:10
Poole: Zec 7:10 - -- Oppress not do not first misreport their persons, their actions, and their cases, and on that pretence do them wrong, and oppress them: it is double ...
Oppress not do not first misreport their persons, their actions, and their cases, and on that pretence do them wrong, and oppress them: it is double oppression, to oppress by false information, and then condemn; the first is an oppression of righteousness, the next is oppression of the righteous.
The widow i.e.: a catalogue of helpless ones, who are under the peculiar tutelage of God, Exo 22:21,22 De 10:18,14:29 24:17,19 Isa 1:17,23 , &c.
Let none of you imagine evil against his brother in your heart neither think ill of, nor wish ill to, nor plot evil against, one another.
Haydock -> Zec 7:10
Haydock: Zec 7:10 - -- Devise. Septuagint, "wickedly remember in your hearts each one the evil of his brother." (Haydock)
Devise. Septuagint, "wickedly remember in your hearts each one the evil of his brother." (Haydock)
Gill -> Zec 7:10
Gill: Zec 7:10 - -- And oppress not the widow, nor the fatherless, the stranger, nor the poor,.... Such as have no husband to provide for them, nor father and mother to c...
And oppress not the widow, nor the fatherless, the stranger, nor the poor,.... Such as have no husband to provide for them, nor father and mother to care for them, and are in a strange land, where they have no friends or acquaintance, and are poor, and can not help themselves. Laws of this kind were frequently inculcated among the Jews; see Deu 24:14,
and let none of you imagine evil against his brother in your heart; thoughts of evil are sinful, and forbidden by the law of God, as well as actions, which agrees with our Lord's sense of the law, Mat 5:22, see Lev 19:17.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Zec 7:1-14
TSK Synopsis: Zec 7:1-14 - --1 The captives enquire concerning the set fasts.4 Zechariah reproves the hypocrisy of their fasting.8 Sin the cause of their captivity.
MHCC -> Zec 7:8-14
MHCC: Zec 7:8-14 - --God's judgements upon Israel of old for their sins, were written to warn Christians. The duties required are, not keeping fasts and offering sacrifice...
Matthew Henry -> Zec 7:8-14
Matthew Henry: Zec 7:8-14 - -- What was said Zec 7:7, that they should have heard the words of the former prophets, is here enlarged upon, for warning to these hypocritical enqu...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Zec 7:8-12
Keil-Delitzsch: Zec 7:8-12 - --
The second word of the Lord recals to the recollection of the people the disobedience of the fathers, and its consequences, viz., the judgment of ex...
Constable -> Zec 7:1--8:23; Zec 7:8-14
Constable: Zec 7:1--8:23 - --IV. Messages concerning hypocritical fasting chs. 7--8
A question posed by representative Israelites provided th...

Constable: Zec 7:8-14 - --C. The command to repent 7:8-14
Having referred to the words of the former prophets (v. 7), Zechariah now summarized them as an exhortation to his own...
Guzik -> Zec 7:1-14
Guzik: Zec 7:1-14 - --Zechariah 7 - Obedience Is Better than Ritual
A. Confronting the sin of religious hypocrisy.
1. (1-3) A question about fasting.
Now in the fourth ...
