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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Zechariah 14:6

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Zechariah 14:6

And it shall come to pass in that day, [that] the light shall not be clear, [nor] dark:

6. the light shall not be clear, nor dark ] Rather, there shall not be light, the bright ones shall be contracted; as in R. V. margin, i.e. the heavenly bodies shall be darkened. It shall be a day of deep gloom. Comp. “The sun and the moon shall be darkened, and the stars shall withdraw their shining,” Joe 3:15, and Mat 24:29; Rev 6:12-13.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

The light shall not be clear nor dark – Or, more probably, according to the original reading , In that day there will be no light; the bright ones will contract themselves, as it is said, The stars shall withdraw their shining.

This is evermore the description of the Day of Judgment, that, in the presence of God who is Light, all earthly light shall grow pale. So Joel had said, The sun and moon shall be darkened, and the stars shall withdraw their shining Joe 3:15. And Isaiah, The moon shall be confounded and the sun ashamed, when the Lord of hosts shall reign in Mount Zion and in Jersalem and before His ancients gloriously Isa 24:23; and, Behold the day of the Lord cometh, The stars of heaven and the constellations thereof shall not give their light: the sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the moon shall not cause her light to shine Isa 13:9-10. All know well our Lords words Mat 24:29. John, like Zechariah, unites the failure of the heavenly light with a great earthquake, and the sun became as sackcloth of hair: and the moon become as blood; and the stars of heaven fell upon the earth Rev 6:12-13.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Zec 14:6

It shall come to pass in that day, that the light shall not be clear nor dark

The day of the Lord

This phrase denotes not one time, but many.

Any signal manifestation of the Divine government of the world, or any such event as made mens hearts quake within them for fear, is described as the day of the Lord. Though all nature is, in truth, an exponent of the judgment, as well as the beneficence of God, there are times and places in which His right hand, as it were, is more manifestly bared. There are times when the fervent spirit is tempted to wish for one of the days of the Lord. Yet there are many reasons why, even in the worst times, we should not wish to hasten that day which will in appointed course come surely and will not tarry. Instead of encouraging in ourselves impatience for some great day of the Lord, let us rather engrave upon our minds a conviction that such coming will be at last inevitable. We may estimate the character of such general judgments as are here alluded to, by reading the description of those of old. What, then, is the sort of temper or sentiment with which the idea of any great national visitations should be blended in our minds? As citizens we should be aware sometimes truth and righteousness getteth the upper hand, and sometimes the contrary party, that foment error and unrighteousness. It is a doubtful day in a twofold regard–because light and darkness are either intermixed or alternate. Or else because our estate in respect of either is not durable and fixed, but liable to great uncertainties. There is an intermixture of providences at the same time, and the Church is in several respects both happy and miserable at once. Here things go well and there ill. It is a rare case when there is a perfect harmony between our private condition and public happiness. Successively there is a vicissitude and interchange of conditions. Good and evil succeed each other by turns. Human affairs, under God, depend much on the peoples hearts, and how uncertain are they! Inquire the reason of this, why the day of our conflict is such a mixed, doubtful day. Consider–

1. The equity of it. It is such a day as is very suitable to our condition in the world. We are in a middle place, between heaven and hell, and therefore partake somewhat of both. We have mixed principles–flesh and spirit. As long as sin remaineth in us we cannot be perfectly happy. The flesh needeth to be weakened by divers afflictions. As our principles are mixed, so are all our operations. There is a mixture of good and evil in all our services.

2. Consider the wisdom and justice of God in it. He hath many wise ends to be accomplished by these mixed providences. That a people worn out with long misery may be more pliable to Gods purpose. By such mixed providences God will weaken and waste stubborn nature. To work us from earthly things to things heavenly. To put a cloud and veil on His proceedings. To prevent the excesses of either condition, God tempereth and qualifieth the one with the other. To make way for the exercise of our faith. Faith is neither made void by too great a light, nor extinguished by too great a darkness. To win the heart by the various methods of judgments an mercies, and to gain upon us by both means at first. God doth it to bring His people to a Christian union and accord. When religious interest is divided, God keeps the balance equal, and success is sometimes cast on this side, sometimes on that. To prevent contempt and insolency towards those that are fallen under Gods displeasure. It is also a ground of patience. Heavy afflictions lack not their comforts to make them tolerable. He measureth out good and evil with a great deal of wisdom and tenderness. To show that our comforts and crosses are in His hand; and He doth variously dispense weal or woe as our condition doth require.

Application. What use should we make of all this?

1. Be sure you do not make an ill use of it. This is done when we are not thankful for our mercies, because they are not full and perfect. It is an abuse if we are discouraged in Gods service because of this uncertainty. When you have any respite, or breathing time, then is the time and season to put your hand to the work. If there be uncertainties, remember that never a great work is brought to pass without troubles. And change cometh not until our condition proveth a snare for us.

2. The right use we should make of it. By way of caution, take heed of human confidences, and presuming too much on temporal success by means and instruments. For direction–Walk by a sure rule. Get a sure guide. Encourage yourself by the sure promise that you have to build upon. A man wrapped up in the peace of God, and the quiet of a good conscience, and hopes of eternal life, is fortified against all encounters, storms, and difficulties whatsoever. (T. Manton.)

Light and solace

These verses present a suggestive description of human history as a whole, and of each godly life in that history.


I.
The mixed character of our earthly existence, The light shall not be clear, nor dark; It shall be one day, not day, nor night. That is, the lot even of a good man is chequered. Every height has its hollow. And each blessing has its accompanying affiiction. But no Christian is ever in absolute darkness. If the rough wind be blowing, God will take care that it be not from the east. Observe–

1. Through the trials of the past God has disciplined us into fitness for present duties. Present trials are the prophecies of future efficiency.

2. Trials are frequently connected with our sins. Evil deeds are evil seeds which produce a harvest of bitterness.

3. Trials lead us to long for heaven, and wean us from the world.


II.
The christians support under this mixed experience–It shall be one day which shall be known, etc. This means–

1. Our condition as a whole–not one separate part, but the whole day of light and dark–is known unto the Lord.

2. Our lot is ordered for us by Jehovah, just according as the grand total demands it.


III.
The happy termination of this mixed state of things–And it shall come to pass, that at evening time it shall be light. All doubts and clouds shall have been driven away by the Sun of Righteousness. Relief shall come when it is least expected. Light is the synonym for joy, for purity, for knowledge. In heaven all the elements of darkness shall be absent. It shall be light. (Homilist.)

Mingled experiences


I.
The language of the text is descriptive of the present mingled state of affairs, both in the Church and in the world. Darkness is the effect of our low situation. There is nothing really dark with God–nothing imperfect in the Gospel. The Gospel is to our perception not so distinct as to be perfectly clear; but it is not so dark as to be useless and unintelligible. There are clouds and obscurities resting on the subject arising from our weakness and imperfection of understanding. Illustrate–

(1) By the partial distribution of the Gospel among the nations of the earth.

(2) The language is also descriptive of the imperfect attainments of real Christians. In the matter of personal experience it is but twilight. You have faith, but not the full assurance of faith. You have hope, but how few of you hope ever blooming! You have obedience, but it is partial, irregular, imperfect. You have joy, but it is meddled with.

(3) The text finds its illustration in the inscrutable dispensations of the providence of God. How vast, how profound a subject!


II.
The superintending care of Divine providence during this chequered and mysterious state of things. This intimates–

1. Gods superintendence of all things.

2. Gods foreknowledge of all things.

3. The harmony of Divine providence.

4. The beneficial tendency of the providence of God.

5. The language is a ground of unlimited resignation and contentment; and

6. A motive for unlimited confidence.


III.
The wonders and glories of that auspicious day in which this singular state of affairs shall terminate. This promise contains a reserve of consolation for the feeble Christian against the hour of dissolution. And a reserve of consolation for the feeble Christian in seasons of perplexity and difficulty. The promise contains also an assurance of the final glory, the millennial reign of the Son of God. (Joseph Beaumont, D. D.)

Dark and bright periods in human life

The word rendered clear is in the margin precious, and is in the plural. The word here rendered dark is in the margin thickness.


I.
A period of unmitigated distress. This period of unmitigated calamity primarily refers, we have no doubt, to those long centuries of oppression, cruelty, mockery, and scorn, to which the Jewish people have been subjected ever since the destruction of Jerusalem. In the predictions of Joel (Joe 2:31; Joe 3:15) referring to the destruction of the Holy City and breaking up of the Jewish commonwealth, the period is referred to as a period when the sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood. Three remarks are suggested concerning this dark day.

1. Such a day is the hard destiny of some men. Their life is a day of darkness. It is so with some nations. The history of some nations and tribes is little less than a history of crushing oppression, bloody revolutions and untold cruelties and sufferings.

2. Such a day is deserved by most men. All men are sinners and deserve this blackness and darkness forever. The very tendency of sin, in fact, is to quench every light in the firmament of the soul.


II.
Here is a period of uninterrupted joy.

1. Such a day as this is destined to dawn on every good man. Heaven is a scene of light. No clouds of ignorance or suffering obstruct the rays, nor will the sun ever go down. The Lord God is the light thereof.

2. Such a day as this is destined to dawn on the world in the future. (Homilist.)

Light and shade in the Christian life


I.
The mixed character of our earthly life. The light shall not be clear nor dark. The lot even of the good man is chequered. No Christian is ever in absolute and unrelieved darkness. It may be a long twilight with him, but it is never night. Why does God permit so much of darkness in our lot? Set forth some of the reasons why we have so much of difficulty and affliction to contend with.

1. Through the trials of the past God has disciplined us into fitness for the duties of the present. We did not see this at first, but we have discovered it now. Resistance is needed for the development of physical vigour, and difficulty is as much required for the formation of strength in moral character.

2. Our trials are frequently connected with our sins. Illustrate from the history of Jacob.

3. The shades of darkness in our earthly lots lead us to long for heaven. If everything here were as we should wish to have it, we should not desire to go elsewhere; but God has provided some better thing for us in the world beyond, and He takes care that we shall not get wedded entirely to the concerns of earth.


II.
The Christians solace and support. Suggested by the words, It shall be one day which shall be known to the Lord.

1. Our condition is known to the Lord. The world is governed by a Person, and He under whose eye all things come to pass, is our Father.

2. Our lot is ordered by Jehovah. Our lives are not by chance. There is an order in them, and a plan running through them. Then things that seem to be working against us must really be working for us.


III.
The happy termination of this mixed state of things to the Christian. Relief shall come, and that at the time when it is least expected. If the day has been lowering, we look for a deeper darkness than ordinary when evening comes: but here, when men usually anticipate that it will be evening, it will be morning. You have seen this illustrated very often in separate passages of your lives. These separate chapters are only miniatures of life as a whole, for, at its evening time there comes to the Christian the dawning light of heaven. (W. M. Taylor, D. D.)

Mingled light and darkness

The first clause of the text is religious. It does not refer to the light of the natural heavens. It refers to all there is in the religion of man, and in the things which affect him in the experience of it. His condition is to be one of a mixed character, not wholly good, and not wholly evil–not all light, not all dark. This mixture may be seen in several particulars.

1. In the matter of a believers holiness. Therein there is some light, but it is not clear nor dark. The believer has some true conformity to God, but it is not a perfect conformity. He often wonders at himself,–at the inconsistencies and contradictions that he finds in his own experience. In his poor soul faith struggles to get the better of unbelief–the love of the world comes up to combat the love of God. His heart is inconsistent, his soul unsteady, his way devious, and he cannot be ignorant that his holiness is only of an imperfect character. Whenever God spares a regenerated sinner upon the earth after the time of his regeneration, such a regenerated sinner will have this chequered experience.

2. This mixture may be seen in the believers knowledge. There is a mixture of clearness and obscurity in the knowledge of Gods people which nothing could describe more perfectly than Zechariah has here described it. They have knowledge, but, in all parts of it, it is limited. Behold a disciplined believer. He is in the furnace. He knows who put him there. He knows that the process will stop when the purpose of it is accomplished. But there are other things he does not know. He attempts to know them, but he cannot find them out. He asks, For what particular sin am I thus afflicted? He knows not why God has Sent that particular affliction on him. Behold a believer examining his own heart. He knows something about it. He very well knows its deceitfulness. But it is a wonder to him how his deceitfulness will work. When shall he ever be sure of a heart that has so often wandered? We ought to remember that the imperfection of our knowledge results from our creature littleness and the imperfection of our present state; and that so far as we have any necessity of knowing in order to be saved, our knowledge may be as clear and definite as our capacities will allow.

3. The comforts of Gods people have in them a wonderful mingling of light and gloom. It is not all clear day with them, It is not all night: The alternation of comfort and depression which Christians experience, constitutes a chapter of facts which shows the mingled character of their life, whether we can have knowledge of the reasons for it or not.

4. The condition of life. We fail in few things as Christians more than we fail of fitly noticing the changes we pass through as God is leading us on. However this may be, there are strange minglings of light and darkness in our condition. So fluctuating and uncertain is the condition of life here, that no mortal can be found whose biography has any considerable resemblance to his anticipations; his life has not carried out the plans of his youth. We are knocked about in the world. Our condition is shifting, fluctuating, varying. There is scarcely a believer among us who is not compelled, amid this mingling of light and darkness, to recognise the immediate hand of his God. Amid all this mixture of good and evil, we cannot understand why it is so. How needful is faith! After Zechariah has mentioned the mingled clearness and obscurity of our state, he immediately points us to One who can understand it. It shall be one day which shall be known to the Lord, not day nor night. Of itself it is of a mixed character. To us it is mixed. We cannot understand it. God can. We can turn over the chequered scene into His hands. It is to Him all one day. He sees no darkness in it. It is all alike light–all one. He has one intent in all the dispensations that affect us. When it is said, At evening time it shall be light, we are not to understand that the evening or night shall be turned into day. The rain led character of the believers experience shall pass. Light shall come at the end. This may find illustration in all the features of the believers experience. (T. S. Spencer, D. D.)

The mixed experience of the Church

The Church has had a mixed experience, not all dark, not all bright; now defeat and now success; now joy, now grief; mingled light and shade, but at evening time light has always come. So with each Christian, the Church in miniature. Tears and smiles, sighs and songs mingle. Why this discipline?

1. We need it to correct mistakes of nature.

2. Our deliverance from sin and the development of Christian virtues are processes which involve this mingled experience.

3. Our hold on God by faith and prayer is made more steady. But it shall be one day known to the Lord. A precious compensation is this assurance that God knows. God is working out a definite plan. The golden thread of His purpose runs through all that to us seems mixed and contradictory. He weaves the warp and woof. Nothing is confused. It shall be light. (J. Jackson Wray.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 6. The light shall not be clear, nor dark] Metaphorically, there will be a mixture of justice and mercy in all this; or a bright light and darkness. Mercy shall triumph over judgment. There shall be darkness-distress, c. but there shall be more light-joy and prosperity-than darkness.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

In that day; whilst God is fighting with the enemies of his church, the nations that fought against Jerusalem.

The light; good estate, peace, and welfare.

Shall not be clear; unmixed good, all light, it will not be so well with the church.

Nor dark; not so sad as all darkness, there shall be a temper of both, some peace with some trouble; some prosperity with some adversity; some mercy in midst of judgment to allay the bitterness of judgment, and some judgment with our mercies to allay their sweetness.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

6. light . . . not . . . clear . . .darkJEROME,Chaldee, Syriac, and Septuagint translate, “Thereshall not be light, but cold and ice”; that is, a day full ofhorror (Am 5:18). But theHebrew for “clear” does not mean “cold,”but “precious,” “splendid” (compare Job31:26). CALVINtranslates, “The light shall not be clear, but dark”(literally, “condensation,” that is, thick mist); like adark day in which you can hardly distinguish between day and night.English Version accords with Zec14:7: “There shall not be altogether light nor altogetherdarkness,” but an intermediate condition in which sorrows shallbe mingled with joys.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

And it shall come to pass in that day,…. Which shall precede the coming of Christ, both his spiritual and personal reign; for what follows will not agree with either state:

[that] the light shall not be clear [nor] dark; before the latter day glory it will be a darkish dispensation; not “clear”, as in the first times of the Gospel, when the sun of righteousness appeared, and the shadows of the ceremonial law were removed, and the Gospel shone out in the ministry of Christ and his apostles; nor as at the reformation from Popery, when the morning star was given, Re 2:28 nor as it will be in the spiritual reign of Christ, when Zion’s light will be come, and her watchmen will see eye to eye; when the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and the light of the sun seven fold as the light of seven days; and much less as will be in the kingdom state, when there will be no need of the sun or moon; or in the ultimate glory, when we shall see no more darkly through a glass, but face to face: and yet it will not be “dark”, as it was with the Jews under the legal dispensation; and much less as with the Gentiles before the coming of Christ; or as in the dark times of Popery; it will be a sort of a twilight, both with respect to the light of doctrine, and of spiritual joy, comfort, and experience; which is much our case now. Some read the words, “there shall be no light, but cold and frost” k; it will be a time of great coldness and lukewarmness, with regard to divine and spiritual things; iniquity will abound, and the love of many wax cold,

Mt 24:12.

k , , Sept.; “non erit lux, sed frigus et gelu”, V. L; so Syr. Ar.; “congelatio”, Tigurine version; so Ben Melech; “non erit lux; frigora potius et congelatio; [vel] non erit lux; frigoribus congelascent, scilicet peccatores”, Hiller. de Arcano Kethib & Keri, p. 370.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Complete salvation. – Zec 14:6. “And it will come to pass on that day, there will not be light, the glorious ones will melt away. Zec 14:7. And it will be an only day, which will be known to Jehovah, not day nor night: and it will come to pass, at evening time it will be light.” The coming of the Lord will produce a change on the earth. The light of the earth will disappear. The way in which is to be understood is indicated more precisely by . These words have been interpreted, however, from time immemorial in very different ways. The difference of gender in the combination of the feminine with the masculine verb , and the rarity with which the two words are met with, have both contributed to produce the keri , in which has either been taken as a substantive formation from , or the reading with Vav cop. has been adopted in the sense of cold, and (contraction, rigidity) taken to signify ice. The whole clause has then been either regarded as an antithesis to the preceding one, “It will not be light, but (sc., there will be) cold and ice” (thus Targ., Pesh., Symm., Itala, Luther, and many others); or taken in this sense, “There will not be light, and cold, and ice, i.e., no alternation of light, cold, and ice will occur” (Ewald, Umbr., Bunsen). But there is intolerable harshness in both these views: in the first, on account of the insertion of without a negation for the purpose of obtaining an antithesis; in the second, because the combination of light, cold, and ice is illogical and unparalleled in the Scriptures, and cannot be justified even by an appeal to Gen 8:22, since light is no more equivalent to day and night than cold and ice are to frost and heat, or summer and winter. We must therefore follow Hengstenberg, Hofmann, Koehler, and Kliefoth, who prefer the chethib , and read it , the imperf. kal of . signifies to congeal, or curdle, and is applied in Exo 15:8 to the heaping up of the waters as it were in solid masses. , the costly or splendid things are the stars, according to Job 31:26, where the moon is spoken of as , walking in splendour. The words therefore describe the passing away or vanishing of the brightness of the shining stars, answering to the prophetic announcement, that on the day of judgment, sun, moon, and stars will lose their brightness or be turned into darkness (Joe 3:15; Isa 13:10; Eze 32:7-8, Mat 24:29; Rev 6:12). In Zec 14:7 this day is still more clearly described: first, as solitary in its kind; and secondly, as a marvellous day, on which the light dawns at evening time. The four clauses of this verse contain only two thoughts; each so expressed in two clauses that the second explains the first. , unus dies , is not equivalent to tempus non longum (Cocceius, Hengst.), nor to “only one day, not two or more” (Koehler), but solitary in its kind, unparalleled by any other, because no second of the kind ever occurs (for the use of ‘echad in this sense, compare Zec 14:9, Eze 7:5, Son 6:9). It is necessary to take the words in this manner on account of the following clause, “it will be known to the Lord;” i.e., not “it will be singled out by Jehovah in the series of days as the appropriate one” (Hitzig and Koehler), nor “it stands under the supervision and guidance of the Lord, so that it does not come unexpectedly, or interfere with His plans” (Hengstenberg), for neither of these is expressed in ; but simply, it is known to the Lord according to its true nature, and therefore is distinguished above all other days. The following definition, “not day and not night,” does not mean that “it will form a turbid mixture of day and night, in which there will prevail a mongrel condition of mysterious, horrifying twilight and gloom” (Koehler); but it will resemble neither day nor night, because the lights of heaven, which regulate day and night, lose their brightness, and at evening time there comes not darkness, but light. The order of nature is reversed: the day resembles the night, and the evening brings light. At the time when, according to the natural course of events, the dark night should set in, a bright light will dawn. The words do not actually affirm that the alternation of day and night will cease (Jerome, Neumann, Kliefoth); but this may be inferred from a comparison of Rev 21:23 and Rev 21:25.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

The Prophet confirms what we have already observed that the Church would be subject to many troubles and commotions, so that the faithful should not enjoy the common light, but be more miserable than men in general. And he has ever the same object in view, to prepare the faithful to exercise patience, and to remind them that they are not to promise themselves such enjoyments in the holy land, as though they were to be free from the trials of the cross. Lest then they should deceive themselves with vain hopes, he sets before them many evils and many calamities, that they might confidently wait for the aid, of which he had spoken, while immersed in thick darkness, and hardly able to distinguish between day and night. But the rest shall be considered tomorrow.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

IN THAT DAY (11) . . . Zec. 14:6-7

RV . . . And it shall come to pass in that day, that there shall not be light; the bright ones shall withdraw themselves: but it shall be one day which is known unto Jehovah; not day, and not night; but it shall come to pass, that at evening time there shall be light.

LXX . . . And it shall come to pass in that day that there shall be no light, and there shall be for one day cold and frost, and that day shall be known to the Lord, and it shall not be day nor night: but towards evening it shall be light.

COMMENTS

The description is typical of many in which the day of Jehovah is pictured in the prophets. Isaiah said Then the moon shall be con* founded, and the sun ashamed, when the Lord of hosts shall reign in mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, and before his ancients gloriously, (Isa. 24:23) and Behold, the day of the Lord cometh, cruel both with wrath and fierce anger, to lay the land desolate: and he shall destroy the sinners thereof out of it. For the stars of heaven and the constellations thereof shall not give their light: the sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the moon shall not cause her light to shine. (Isa. 13:9-10) Joel stated The sun and the moon shall be darkened, and the stars shall withdraw their shining. (Joe. 3:15) Jesus own description was Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken: And then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and glory. And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other. (Mat. 24:29-31)

On Pentecost Peter saw at least the beginning of this prediction being fulfilled in the coming of the Holy Spirit. Nothing that happened on Pentecost, however, answers to the last two verses of Joels prediction, as quoted by Peter (cf. Act. 2:17-20). Perhaps here is a clue to the events described by Zechariah. The coming of the Holy Spirit marked the beginning of the day of Jehovah (Act. 2:17-18). The happenings pictured by Isaiah, Joel, Jesus, and John marked its end. (Act. 2:19-20)

Chapter XLIIQuestions

In the Second Day

1.

Chapter fourteen deals almost exclusively with _________________.

2.

Eschatology may be defined simply as _________________.

3.

Do scholars generally agree on the meaning of this chapter?

4.

Discuss the two extreme views of pre and post millenialists in regard to Zechariah fourteen.

5.

One can never be _________________ and be dogmatic about eschatology, especially when it is written in apocalyptic form.

6.

In the study of eschatology we are deprived of a very useful tool in the interpretation of prophecy in general. What is that tool?

7.

Review the meaning of a day of Jehovah in chapter forty-one.

8.

In the day of Jehovah described in Zechariah fourteen the ______________ of Jerusalem is to be divided in her midst.

9.

Half the population of Jerusalem is to be _________________.

10.

Why does the Roman occupation of Jerusalem not fit the description here?

11.

List the events of Zechariah

a.

In that day (10)

b.

In that day (11)

c.

In that day (12)

d.

In that day (13)

e.

In that day (14)

f.

In that day (15)

g.

In that day (16)

12.

Describe the present setting of the Mount of Olives.

13.

The division of the Mount of Olives would provide an easy ___________________.

14.

The events here are compared to an historic earthquake in the days of ___________________.

15.

The description of the Lord in company with all the saints always refers to ___________________.

16.

What other prophets described the day of the Lord in terms similar to those used here by Zechariah?

17.

Peter saw at least the beginning of the fulfillment of a similar prediction by Joel in ___________________.

18.

God has always been king over the whole earth. In the end He will be ___________________.

19.

Locate Geba and Rimmon.

20.

What other topographical alterations accompany the splitting of the Mount of Olives?

21.

Who will be safe during these cataclysmic events?

22.

Describe the plague which is to come upon those arrayed against Jerusalem.

23.

What is the result of this plague?

24.

What Jewish feast is to be celebrated by all the nations? What is its significance?

25.

What is to be the consequence if any nation fails to keep the feast?

26.

Why is Egypt here singled out for special punishment should she fail to keep the feast?

27.

Finally the inscription _______________ is to be seen on everything in Jerusalem.

28.

Explain the significance of this inscription appearing on such diverse items as altar utensils and cook pots in the home.

29.

Who were the Canaanites?


Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series

(6) That the light shall not be clear, nor dark.Better, there shall not be light; the glorious ones (i.e., the heavenly bodies) shall fail (literally, become coagulated).

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

Zec 14:6. And it shall come to pass, &c. How this will be fulfilled we cannot know till the time of its completion shall arrive; for a fact certainly, not a simile, is here again delivered. We know that in the Scripture, light denotes joy and prosperity, and darkness adversity. See Houbigant.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

And it shall come to pass in that day, that the light shall not be clear nor dark: 7 But it shall be one day, which shall be known to the Lord, not day, nor night: but it shall come to pass, that at evening-time it shall be light.

By these verses, it should seem is intended to shew, that this great day of the Lord will be ushered in, with a season remarkable neither for brightness nor darkness. The divine manifestations to the Church, and to individuals, will not be so clear as the Church might wish; neither so dark as to induce fear that Christ’s spirit had left the earth. Such as it is, in the experience of God’s people, a mingled state of grace and corruption. But, as it is well known to the Lord, he will brighten up the dark shades, and when the season is at the worst, and most unpromising, the Lord will turn our darkness into light. Observe, Reader! the thing itself is miraculous, and therefore it must be the Lord’s own work. And this is the character of grace, from beginning to end.

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Zec 14:6 And it shall come to pass in that day, [that] the light shall not be clear, [nor] dark:

Ver. 6. And it shall come to pass in that day ] That is, saith Diodati, after the destruction of antichrist, shall the Son of God come in, who shall bring the Church into its glory; where without any vicissitude or variation of day and night, of calamity and prosperity, of knowledge and ignorance, it shall enjoy eternal light by the sight of God, Isa 60:19-20 Rev 21:23 ; Rev 22:5 . Thus he. Between this fall of antichrist and the consummation of all some place the full and final restoration of the Jews, and make this a description of that glorious Church they shall then erect. There shall be no darkness, but perpetual light. It shall not be, saith our prophet here, sometimes clear, sometimes misty, (variable and uncertain weather, now fair, now foul), but one day, not of day and night; for in the evening, when night is wont to come, it shall be light; as if he should say, it shall be always day and no night, , a nightless day, a morning without clouds, a clear shining after rain, as David in another case, 2Sa 22:4 , and as with the Hyperboreans, the whole half year is said to be but one continuous day; so that they sow and reap in a day.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Zec 14:6-7

6In that day there will be no light; the luminaries will dwindle. 7For it will be a unique day which is known to the LORD, neither day nor night, but it will come about that at evening time there will be light.

Zec 14:6

NASBIn that day there will be no light; the luminaries will dwindle

NKJVthere will be no light, the lights will diminish

NRSVon that day there shall not be either cold or frost

TEVwhen the time comes, there will no longer be cold or frost

NJBthat Day, there will be no light, but only cold and frost

The Septuagint and the Vulgate interpret the last phrase as no cold and ice (cf. New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology and Exegesis, vol. 3, pp. 952, 995). However, the eschatological context may refer to the dwindling light (BDB 21) of the heavenly bodies (cf. Isa 13:10; Isa 24:23; Isa 60:19; Jer 4:23; Eze 32:7-8; Joe 2:31; Joe 3:15; Mat 24:29; Act 2:19).

The second Hebrew phrase has two words: (1) precious, rare, splendid, weighty (BDB 429) and (2) thicken, condense, congeal (BDB 891, KB 1117, Qal IMPERFECT). The NASB footnote has glorious ones will congeal.

Zec 14:7 For it will be a unique day which is known to the LORD This possibly refers to Mat 24:36 and reenforces the understanding that this section refers to God the Father. The uniqueness may be that there is no more night (cf. TEV).

at evening time there will be light God’s presence provides continual light (cf. Isa 60:19-20; Rev 21:25; Rev 22:5), as it did before the creation of the sun, stars, and moon (cf. Gen 1:3-5 versus Zec 1:14-19).

Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley

clear = light.

dark = dense.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Zec 14:6-7

IN THAT DAY (11) . . . Zec 14:6-7

The description is typical of many in which the day of Jehovah is pictured in the prophets. Isaiah said Then the moon shall be con* founded, and the sun ashamed, when the Lord of hosts shall reign in mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, and before his ancients gloriously, (Isa 24:23) and Behold, the day of the Lord cometh, cruel both with wrath and fierce anger, to lay the land desolate: and he shall destroy the sinners thereof out of it. For the stars of heaven and the constellations thereof shall not give their light: the sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the moon shall not cause her light to shine. (Isa 13:9-10) Joel stated The sun and the moon shall be darkened, and the stars shall withdraw their shining. (Joe 3:15) Jesus own description was Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken: And then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and glory. And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other. (Mat 24:29-31)

Zerr: Zec 14:6-7. On the basis of reasoning from the simple to the complex, or from the known to the unknown, I will conclude this paragraph is an indefinite prediction of the general diffusion of Gospel light that was to be shed from Jerusalem at the beginning of the kingdom of Christ. We may be certain that is the chief subject of the chapter as a whole, and hence these peculiar expressions should be interpreted in that light. Not clear nor dark means there will not be extremes either way. One day known to the Lord. It will not be done exactly as man might have suggested, but it will he according to the Lords wisdom. Not day nor night has about the same meaning as the phrase not clear nor dark’ above. Evening it shall be light. So consistent will the spiritual day be that when it would normally he expected to dim toward the night it will still continue to be light.

On Pentecost Peter saw at least the beginning of this prediction being fulfilled in the coming of the Holy Spirit. Nothing that happened on Pentecost, however, answers to the last two verses of Joels prediction, as quoted by Peter (cf. Act 2:17-20). Perhaps here is a clue to the events described by Zechariah. The coming of the Holy Spirit marked the beginning of the day of Jehovah (Act 2:17-18). The happenings pictured by Isaiah, Joel, Jesus, and John marked its end. (Act 2:19-20)

Questions

In the Second Day

1. Chapter fourteen deals almost exclusively with _________________.

2. Eschatology may be defined simply as _________________.

3. Do scholars generally agree on the meaning of this chapter?

4. Discuss the two extreme views of pre and post millenialists in regard to Zechariah fourteen.

5. One can never be _________________ and be dogmatic about eschatology, especially when it is written in apocalyptic form.

6. In the study of eschatology we are deprived of a very useful tool in the interpretation of prophecy in general. What is that tool?

7. Review the meaning of a day of Jehovah in chapter forty-one.

8. In the day of Jehovah described in Zechariah fourteen the ______________ of Jerusalem is to be divided in her midst.

9. Half the population of Jerusalem is to be _________________.

10. Why does the Roman occupation of Jerusalem not fit the description here?

11. List the events of Zechariah

a. In that day (10)

b. In that day (11)

c. In that day (12)

d. In that day (13)

e. In that day (14)

f. In that day (15)

g. In that day (16)

12. Describe the present setting of the Mount of Olives.

13. The division of the Mount of Olives would provide an easy ___________________.

14. The events here are compared to an historic earthquake in the days of ___________________.

15. The description of the Lord in company with all the saints always refers to ___________________.

16. What other prophets described the day of the Lord in terms similar to those used here by Zechariah?

17. Peter saw at least the beginning of the fulfillment of a similar prediction by Joel in ___________________.

18. God has always been king over the whole earth. In the end He will be ___________________.

19. Locate Geba and Rimmon.

20. What other topographical alterations accompany the splitting of the Mount of Olives?

21. Who will be safe during these cataclysmic events?

22. Describe the plague which is to come upon those arrayed against Jerusalem.

23. What is the result of this plague?

24. What Jewish feast is to be celebrated by all the nations? What is its significance?

25. What is to be the consequence if any nation fails to keep the feast?

26. Why is Egypt here singled out for special punishment should she fail to keep the feast?

27. Finally the inscription _______________ is to be seen on everything in Jerusalem.

28. Explain the significance of this inscription appearing on such diverse items as altar utensils and cook pots in the home.

29. Who were the Canaanites?

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

a Day of Testing

Zec 13:1-9; Zec 14:1

This Fountain was opened, when the soldier pierced the Saviors side. But it is not enough for God to forgive; He must deal drastically with the waywardness of his people. And so thorough would be the work, that parents would rather their son should die than assume for filthy lucre and without the divine call, the lucrative profession of a prophet. A township would arise against a man suspected of being a prophet, who, in his terror, would pretend that he was a tiller of the ground. And if they discovered marks in his body which indicated that he had been previously branded as a false prophet, he would rather assert that his friends had been the cause of his affliction, than that he had any sympathy with the prophetic office.

Note that remarkable anticipation, Zec 13:7-9. See Mat 26:31. Jesus knew that He was the Fathers fellow. He thought it not robbery to be equal with God. We will come unto Him, and make our abode with Him. But He is also the Man. By the grace of the One Man, we may reign in life, Rom 5:17.

Fuente: F.B. Meyer’s Through the Bible Commentary

that the: “That is, it shall not be clear in some places, and dark in other places of the world.”

not: Psa 97:10, Psa 97:11, Psa 112:4, Pro 4:18, Pro 4:19, Isa 50:10, Isa 60:1-3, Hos 6:3, Luk 1:78, Luk 1:79, Joh 1:5, Joh 12:46, Eph 5:8-14, Col 1:12, 2Pe 1:19, Rev 11:3, Rev 11:15

clear: Heb. precious

dark: Heb. thickness

Reciprocal: Job 11:17 – age Dan 12:4 – many Zec 12:3 – in that Mar 4:31 – is less than

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Zec 14:6-7. On the basis of reasoning from the simple to the complex, or from the known to the unknown, I will conclude this paragraph is an indefinite prediction of the general diffusion of Gospel light that was to be shed from Jerusalem at the beginning of the kingdom of Christ. We may he certain that is the chief subject of the chapter as a whole, and hence these peculiar expressions should be interpreted in that light. Not clear nor dark means there will not be extremes either way. One day known to the Lord. It will not be done exactly as man might have suggested, but it will he according to the Lords wisdom. Not day nor night has about the same meaning as the phrase not clear nor dark’ above. Evening it shall be light. So consistent will the spiritual day be that when it would normally he expected to dim toward the night it will still continue to be light.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Zec 14:6-7. And it shall come to pass in that day Namely, when the Lord shall come forth to fight against the enemies of his church, the nations that fought against Jerusalem, as foretold Zec 14:3; or, in that day when he shall come to convert and restore the Jews, and spread his gospel through all the world; the light Namely, of knowledge, holiness, and happiness in his church; shall not Namely, at first; be clear Like that of the perfect day; nor dark As perfect night, but shall be a kind of twilight, a mixture of light and darkness, of knowledge and ignorance, as to divine things, of holiness and sin, of happiness and misery, or of prosperity and adversity. But it shall be one day One continued day; there shall be no setting of the sun to make it quite night; but God will invariably pursue the end he has in view, and always act in order to it, namely, the full salvation of his spiritual Jerusalem. Which shall be known to the Lord The Lord will always have his eye upon this progressive day, and upon all the events of it. He will continually take notice of them, and order and dispose of all for the best, according to the counsel of his own will. But at evening time

When natural days end, and when, perhaps, the shades of the evening may appear to be coming on, and there may be an apprehension of returning darkness; it shall be light This spiritual day shall be full of light and glory, Isa 48:8; and Isa 60:19-21. Mr. Scott considers these verses as containing a compendious prophecy of the state of the church, from its establishment in the apostles days, to those glorious times which are expected; a prophecy foretelling that, for a long season, the light would neither be clear nor dark: it would be greatly obscured by ignorance, heresy, superstition, and idolatry, yet not wholly extinguished: and the state of the church would be much deformed by sin and calamities; yet some holiness and consolation would be found. This period could neither be called a clear, bright day, cheered and illumined by the shining of a summers sun, nor would it be dark, as if the sun were set or totally eclipsed; but it would contain a great mixture of truth and error, of holiness and sin, of happiness and misery. Yet it would form one day, and never be interrupted by a night of total darkness. It would also be known unto the Lord, as to the degree of its light, and the term of its continuance; and he would watch over, and take care of, his cause and people all the time of it. But his people would hardly know whether to call it day or night, or a compound of both: yet, at length, toward the evening of the world, the Sun of righteousness would break forth and shine with unclouded splendour, dispelling the gloom of ignorance, heresy, idolatry, and superstition, and illuminating the church and the earth with knowledge, righteousness, peace, and consolation.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

In that day the luminaries will dwindle (lit. congeal) and there will be a reduction of light on the earth (cf. Joe 3:15-17; Amo 5:18).

"The meaning is that the loss of light is explained by the congealing of the heavenly bodies, their ’thickening’ as it were to the point that they cannot shine [cf. Exo 15:8; Job 10:10; Zep 1:12]." [Note: Merrill, p. 351.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)