Zec 9:1-17. NINTH TO FOURTEENTH CHAPTERS ARE PROPHETICAL.
Written long after the previous portions of the book, whence arise the various features which have been made grounds for attacking their authenticity, notwithstanding the testimony of the Septuagint and of the compilers of the Jewish canon in their favor. See Introduction.
ALEXANDER'S CONQUESTS IN SYRIA (Zec 9:1-8). GOD'S PEOPLE SAFE BECAUSE HER KING COMETH LOWLY, BUT A SAVIOUR (Zec 9:9-10). THE MACCABEAN DELIVERANCE A TYPE THEREOF (Zec 9:11-17).
1. in . . . Hadrach--rather, concerning or
against Hadrach (compare
Isa 21:13).
"Burden" means a prophecy BURDENED with
wrath against the guilty. MAURER, not so well,
explains it, What is taken up and uttered, the utterance, a solemn
declaration.
Hadrach--a part of Syria, near Damascus. As the name is not mentioned
in ancient histories, it probably was the less-used name of a region
having two names ("Hadrach" and "Bikathaven,"
Am 1:5,
Margin); hence it passed into oblivion. An ancient
RABBI JOSE
is, however, stated to have expressly mentioned it. An Arab, Jos.
Abassi, in 1768 also declared to
MICHAELIS
that there was then a town of that name, and that it was capital of the
region Hadrach. The name means "enclosed" in Syrian, that is, the west
interior part of Syria, enclosed by hills, the Cœlo-Syria of
STRABO
[MAURER].
JEROME
considers Hadrach to be the metropolis of Cœlo-Syria, as Damascus
was of the region about that city.
HENGSTENBERG
regards Hadrach as a symbolical name of Persia, which Zechariah avoids
designating by its proper name so as not to offend the government under
which he lived. But the context seems to refer to the Syrian region.
GESENIUS
thinks that the name is that of a Syrian king, which might more easily
pass into oblivion than that of a region. Compare the similar "land of
Sihon,"
Ne 9:22.
Damascus . . . rest thereof--that is, the place on
which the "burden" of the Lord's wrath shall rest. It shall permanently
settle on it until Syria is utterly prostrate. Fulfilled under
Alexander the Great, who overcame Syria
[CURTIUS, Books 3 and 4].
eyes of man, as of all . . . Israel . . . toward the Lord--The eyes of
men in general, and of all Israel in particular, through consternation
at the victorious progress of Alexander, shall be directed to Jehovah.
The Jews, when threatened by him because of Jaddua the high priest's
refusal to swear fealty to him, prayed earnestly to the Lord, and so
were delivered
(2Ch 20:12;
Ps 23:2).
Typical of the effect of God's judgments hereafter on all men, and
especially on the Jews in turning them to Him. MAURER, PEMBELLUS and others, less
probably translate, "The eyes of the Lord are upon man, as they are
upon all Israel," namely, to punish the ungodly and to protect His
people. He, who has chastised His people, will not fail to punish men
for their sins severely. The "all," I think, implies that whereas men's
attention generally (whence "man" is the expression) was directed to
Jehovah's judgments, all Israel especially looks to Him.
JFB.
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