7. Expounded by Christ as referring to Himself
(Mt 26:31, 32).
Thus it is a resumption of the prophecy of His betrayal
(Zec 11:4, 10, 13, 14),
and the subsequent punishment of the Jews. It explains the mystery why
He, who came to be a blessing, was cut off while bestowing the
blessing. God regards sin in such a fearful light that He spared not
His own co-equal Son in the one Godhead, when that Son bore the
sinner's guilt.
Awake--Compare a similar address to the sword of justice personified
(Jer 46:6, 7).
For "smite" (imperative),
Mt 26:31
has "I will smite." The act of the sword, it is thus implied, is
GOD'S
act. So the prophecy in
Isa 6:9,
"Hear ye," is imperative; the fulfilment as declared by Jesus is future
(Mt 13:14),
"ye shall hear."
sword--the symbol of judicial power, the highest exercise of which
is to take away the life of the condemned
(Ps 17:13;
Ro 13:4).
Not merely a show, or expression, of justice (as Socinians think) is
distinctly implied here, but an actual execution of it on Messiah the
shepherd, the substitute for the sheep, by God as judge. Yet God in
this shows His love as gloriously as His justice. For God calls Messiah
"My shepherd," that is, provided
(Re 13:8)
for sinners by My love to them, and ever the object of My love, though
judicially smitten
(Isa 53:4)
for their sins
(Isa 42:1; 59:16).
man that is my fellow--literally, "the man of my union." The Hebrew for "man" is "a mighty man," one peculiarly man in his noblest ideal.
"My fellow," that is, "my associate." "My equal"
([DE
WETTE]; a
remarkable admission from a Rationalist). "My nearest kinsman"
[HENGSTENBERG],
(Joh 10:30; 14:10, 11;
Php 2:6).
sheep shall be scattered--The scattering of Christ's disciples on His
apprehension was the partial fulfilment
(Mt 26:31),
a pledge of the dispersion of the Jewish nation (once the Lord's
sheep,
Ps 100:3)
consequent on their crucifixion of Him. The Jews, though "scattered,"
are still the Lord's "sheep," awaiting their being "gathered" by Him
(Isa 40:9, 11).
I will turn . . . hand upon . . . little ones--that is, I will
interpose in favor of (compare the phrase in a good sense,
Isa 1:25)
"the little ones," namely, the humble followers of Christ from the
Jewish Church, despised by the world: "the poor of the flock"
(Zec 11:7, 11);
comforted after His crucifixion at the resurrection
(Joh 20:17-20);
saved again by a special interposition from the destruction of
Jerusalem, having retired to Pella when Cestius Gallus so unaccountably
withdrew from Jerusalem. Ever since there has been a Jewish "remnant"
of "the little ones . . . according to the election of
grace." The hand of Jehovah was laid in wrath on the Shepherd that His
hand might be turned in grace upon the little ones.
JFB.
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