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1. The symbolic act 3:1-5 
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3:1 Zechariah's guiding angel next showed the prophet, in his vision, Joshua (lit. Yahweh saves), Israel's current high priest (6:11; Ezra 5:2; Neh. 7:7; Hag. 1:1), standing before the angel of the Lord (1:11-12). "The accuser"(lit. "the Satan,"Heb. hasatan) was standing at Joshua's right hand prepared to accuse him before the angel of the Lord (cf. Job 1:6-12; 2:1-7; Rev. 12:10).65Standing at the right hand was the traditional place were an accuser stood in Jewish life (cf. 1 Chron. 21:1; Ps. 109:6).

". . . sin exposes the sinner to satanic attack not only in the case of unbelievers (Matt. 12:43-45), but believers as well (I Cor. 5:5; I John 5:16)."66

Evidently the scene that Zechariah saw took place in the temple.

"The first three visions brought the prophet from a valley outside the city to a vantage-point from which the dimensions of the original Jerusalem could be seen. In the fourth and fifth visions he is in the Temple courts, where the high priest officiated and had access to God's presence."67

"Joshua is standing in a tribunal, where he is being accused of unfitness for the priestly ministry."68

3:2 The Lord then spoke to the accuser citing His own authority as Yahweh who had chosen Jerusalem. This is one indication that Joshua represented Israel since God linked Joshua with Jerusalem. Joshua was secure from Satan's accusations because of the Lord's sovereign choice of Jerusalem (cf. 12:2; Rom. 8:33). The Lord may be distinct from the angel of the Lord, but they seem to be synonymous.69The Lord rebuked Satan twice, the repetition adding force to the initial rebuke (cf. Jude 9).

The Lord then referred to Joshua as a burning stick plucked from the fire (cf. Amos 4:11). If Joshua represents Israel, then the fire must refer to the Babylonian captivity from which Israel had come almost destroyed, and the stick refers to the surviving remnant. Israel had experienced another brush with extinction at the Exodus (Deut. 4:20; 7:7-8; Jer. 11:4), and she will do so again in the Tribulation (13:8-9; Jer. 30:7; Rev. 12:13-17).

3:3 Joshua stood before the angel of the Lord dressed in excrement bespattered garments (cf. Isa. 4:4). He was ministering to the Lord in this extremely filthy and ceremonially unclean condition. This represented the unclean state in which Israel stood in Zechariah's day as she ministered before Him as a kingdom of priests in the world.

3:4 The Lord then instructed others who were standing before Him, probably angelic servants, to remove Joshua's filthy garments (cf. Exod. 28:8-9, 41; Lev. 8:7-9; Num. 20:28). The Lord explained that these garments symbolized the high priest's (Israel's) iniquities, which He had forgiven. He promised to remove his representative's filthy robes and replace them with festal, stately robes, the apparel of royalty and wealth, symbolic of God's righteousness (cf. Isa. 3:22). Thus God would restore Israel to her original calling as a priestly nation (cf. Exod. 19:16; Isa. 61:6).

"Theologically, however, there also seems to be a picture here of the negative aspect of what God does when he saves a person. Negatively, he takes away sin. Positively, he adds or imputes to the sinner saved by grace his own divine righteousness (cf. v. 5)."70

3:5 Zechariah chimed in suggesting that the angelic dressers also put a clean turban on Joshua's head, which they did along with his other garments. A plaque on the front of the high priest's turban read "Holy to the Lord"(Exod. 28:36; 39:30). This is what Israel will be in the future, a holy nation of holy priests. The Lord observed all that was happening, sovereignly approving and directing all the changes in Joshua's condition.

"What is unique here is the command of a mere man to bring about a purpose of God."71



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