Zechariah in Smiths Bible Dictionary
1. The eleventh in order of the twelve minor prophets. He is
called in his prophecy the son of Berechiah and the grandson
of Iddo, whereas in the book of Ezra, Ezr 5:1; 6:14 he is
said to have been the son of Iddo. It is natural to suppose
as the prophet himself mentions his father's name, whereas
the book of Ezra mentions only Iddo, that Berechiah had died
early, and that there was now no intervening link between
the grandfather and the grandson. Zechariah, like Jeremiah
and Ezekiel before him, was priest as well as prophet. He
seems to have entered upon his office while yet young, Zec
2:4 and must have been born in Babylon whence he returned
with the first caravan of exiles under Zerubbabel and
Jeshua. It was in the eighth month, in the second year of
Darius, that he first publicly discharged his office. In
this he acted in concert with Haggai. Both prophets had the
same great object before them; both directed all their
energies to the building of the second temple. To their
influence we find the rebuilding of the temple in a great
measure ascribed. If the later Jewish accounts may be
trusted, Zechariah, as well as Haggai, was a member of the
Great Synagogue. The genuine writings of Zechariah help us
but little in our estimate of his character. Some faint
traces, however, we may observe in them, of his education in
Babylon. He leans avowedly on the authority of the older
prophets, and copies their expressions. Jeremiah especially
seems to have been his favorite; and hence the Jewish saying
that "the spirit of Jeremiah dwelt in Zechariah." But in
what may be called the peculiarities of his prophecy, he
approaches more nearly to Ezekiel and Daniel. Like them he
delights in visions; like them he uses symbols and
allegories rather than the bold figures and metaphors which
lend so much force and beauty to the writings of the earlier
prophets. Generally speaking, Zechariah's style is pure, and
remarkably free from Chaldaisms...
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