Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Zechariah 1:2
The LORD hath been sore displeased with your fathers.
2. sore displeased ] Lit. displeased with displeasure. The addition of the noun serves to give emphasis to the verb. Comp. Luk 22:15. What a commentary on this “sore displeasure” was the scene on which the prophet and his hearers gazed, in its contrast with the past: the House, which had once been “exceeding magnifical, of fame and of glory throughout all countries” (1Ch 22:5), now slowly rising above its foundations, the poor and feeble representative of its former self: the city, which had once been “beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth,” now such as Nehemiah some seventy-five years after saw it, on that memorable night when he “on his mule or ass, accompanied by a few followers on foot, descended into the ravine of Hinnom, and threaded his way in and out amongst the gigantic masses of ruin and rubbish ; the gate, outside of which lay the piles of the sweepings and offscourings of the streets; the masses of fallen masonry, extending as it would seem all along the western and northern side; the blackened gaps left where the gates had been destroyed by fire; till at last by the royal reservoir the accumulations became so impassable, that the animal on which he rode refused to proceed” (Stanley, Jewish Church, Vol. III. p. 125, Neh 2:12-15): the people, once “many as the sand which is by the sea in multitude, eating and drinking and making merry” (1Ki 4:20), now scattered among the heathen, represented on their native soil only by the poor and subject “remnant,” to whom the prophet addressed himself!
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
2. The company of horsemen and their Leader;
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
2 6. The call to Repentance. Zechariah’s first message is one of warning, by the example of their fathers and the earlier prophets. On their fathers, as they well knew, the displeasure of Almighty God had fallen heavily (Zec 1:2). Now, for the first time in this new era of their history, God is sending to them, as He did to their fathers of old, His servants the prophets, himself and Haggai, with a call to repentance and a promise of reconciliation, Zec 1:3. Let them not be like their fathers, who turned a deaf ear to the remonstrances of the prophets and refused to amend, Zec 1:4; lest, being like them in their sin, they should be like them in their punishment also, and should have with them to confess, in the bitter experience of their accomplishment, that God’s unheeded threatenings would surely take effect, Zec 1:5-6.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Wroth was the Lord against your fathers with wrath – o, that is, a wrath which was indeed such, whose greatness he does not further express, but leaves to their memories to supply. Cyril: Seest thou how he scares them, and, setting before the young what befell those before them, drives them to amend, threatening them with the like or more grievous ills, unless they would wisely reject their fathers ways, esteeming the pleasing of God worthy of all thought and care. He speaks of great wrath. For it indicates no slight displeasure that He allowed the Babylonians to waste all Judah and Samaria, burn the holy places and destroy Jerusalem, remove the elect Israel to a piteous slavery in a foreign land, severed from sacrifices, entering the holy court no more nor offering the thank-offering, or tithes, or first-fruits of the law, but precluded by necessity and, fear even from the duty of celebrating his prescribed and dearest festivals. The like we might address to the Jewish people, if we would apply it to the mystery of Christ. For after they had killed the prophets and had crucified the Lord of glory Himself, they were captured and destroyed; their famed temple was levelled, and Hoseas words were fulfilled in them; The children of Israel shall abide many days without a king and without a prince, without a sacrifice and without an image, without an ephod and without teraphim .
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Zec 1:2
The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers
A call to repentance
The prophet being to carry comfortable tidings to this people, begins with the doctrine of repentance, inviting them not to obstruct their own mercy by impenitency; and to make way for this doctrine, he points out to them the greatness of Gods displeasure against their fathers for their sin, as might be seen in the horrible calamities that did come upon them, which might teach their children not to expect exemption if they followed their way.
Doctrine–
1. A people are prepared and fitted for favourable manifestations of God by repentance, and mercies are sweetest and most comfortable unto penitents, therefore the Lord permits this doctrine to the following visions, as the only way to fit people for them, and make them truly comfortable to them.
2. No privilege bestowed on any people will exempt them from sharp corrections when they sin; for albeit the Jews were the only people of God at that time, yet the Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers, which is also a warning to them.
3. Though the Lord do not chastise any of His chosen and regenerate people in pure wrath or beyond the bounds of moderation, yet His fatherly displeasure may be very hot and sad in its effects, and His displeasure against a visible Church, which hath abused mercy, very grievous, and therefore ought to be seriously laid to heart; therefore He calls them to consider how the Lord hath been sore displeased, or had displeasure on displeasure.
4. Albeit examples of Gods anger, especially when they are near, ought to be effectual documents to others, exciting to tremble and repent, yet such is the stupidity of men, that notwithstanding any such warnings, they will be ready to adventure on the same sins, which God hath so remarkably punished; therefore they need stirring up to see and make use of Gods anger against their fathers, the effects whereof were very visible to them. (George Hutcheson.)
The prophets exordium
Its object is to show the unchanging permanence of Gods Word, by contrasting it with the transitory nature of their fathers and the prophets, and it may thus be set forth more fully. Let the fate of your fathers be a warning to you that you avoid the disobedience to the word of Jehovah, which brought upon them evils so desolating. For where are they new? Once they ruled and worshipped here as you do. But where are they now? Some lie in slaughtered heaps, when the banner of Judah was trampled in the dust, and her bravest sons cut down like grass before the mowers scythe, by the fierce cohorts of the Assyrian. Some lie buried in the ruins of the holy city, which they sought to defend from the spoiler. Some are sleeping by the flashing waters of the Euphrates, after weeping out a weary life beneath the willows that bend in the land of the stranger. Whilst some, in the feebleness of tottering age, have returned to lay their bones in the soil that is hallowed by the memories and hopes of Israel. And why has this been their mournful history? Because they refused to listen to the warnings of the prophets. Hence even the prophets themselves were taken away. They warned, and wept, and prayed, but met only with stoning, reviling, and hate. They toiled on to stay the coming judgments, but when their efforts were disregarded by the people, God in mercy took them away from the evil to come. Then the last barrier was removed, and the torrent of wrath came dire and pitiless in its rush of fury and swept them away in its flood. Now as your fathers and the prophets alike have passed away according to My word; as neither the wickedness of the one, nor the piety of the other, could arrest My threatened judgments, beware lest a like evil come upon you, that your prophets, being disregarded, be also withdrawn, and the judgments you are daring come upon you for your disobedience. This appropriate introduction was probably followed with exhortations to build the temple, and restore the worship of God, that are not recorded, as their interest was local and temporary. Inferences–
1. Whilst God is love, and whilst the preachers of the Gospel must preach this glorious truth, they must not conceal the fact that God is a consuming fire, and angry with the wicked every day. It is a sign of sickly piety when men are willing to hear nothing of the wrath of God against sin (Zec 1:1-2).
2. If men expect God to return to them in prosperity, they must return to Him in penitence. The flower averted from the sun must turn toward it, to catch, its genial smile (Zec 1:3).
3. What we have to do for God in life should be done quickly, for life is rapidly passing; to evil and good alike come the swift shadows of the sunset (Zec 1:5).
4. What a man sows, he shall also reap, and the seedlings of life on earth shall be harvested in heaven or in hell (Zec 1:6). (T. V. Moore, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 2. The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers.] For their ingratitude idolatry, iniquity, and general rebellion.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
The Lord, the holy, the mighty One, your God, the just Governor of the world, hath been sore displeased; so long provoked, that his displeasure at last enkindled within his breast, and broke out into that flame which hath consumed your land, city, and temple.
With your fathers; all that were progenitors, forefathers to the returned captives, from their entrance into Canaan, but especially since the apostacy in Jeroboams time; for many hundred years your predecessors have provoked God by their notorious sins, even to the days of their captivity.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
2. God fulfilled His threatsagainst your fathers; beware, then, lest by disregarding His voice byme, as they did in the case of former prophets, ye suffer likethem. The special object Zechariah aims at is that they should awakefrom their selfish negligence to obey God’s command to rebuild Histemple (Hag 1:4-8).
sore displeasedHebrew,“displeased with a displeasure,” that is, vehemently, withno common displeasure, exhibited in the destruction of the Jews’ cityand in their captivity.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers. Who lived before and at the time of the destruction of the city of Jerusalem, and which was manifest by their captivity; all which were occasioned by their sins, with which they provoked the Lord to sore displeasure against them; and this is mentioned as a caution to their children, that they might not follow their example, and incur the like displeasure.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Angry was Jehovah with anger against your fathers (10) The Prophet here refers to the severity of the punishment with which the Jews had been visited, in order that posterity might know that God, who so rigidly punishes the despisers of his word and instruction, ought not to be provoked. For by saying that God was angry with anger, he means, that God was in no common measure offended with the Jews, and that the very grievousness of their punishment was a clear evidence how displeased God was with them. But the object of the Prophet was to rouse the Jews, that they might begin seriously to fear God on seeing how dreadful is his wrath. The Apostle states it as a general truth, that it is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God, (Heb 10:30 🙂 so also the Scripture speaks everywhere. But Zechariah mentions here to his own people a signal evidence of God’s wrath, which ought to justly to have smitten all of them with terror. He does not then speak here of a thing unknown, but reminds them seriously to consider how terrible is God’s vengeance; as a proof of this, their fathers had been deprived of their perpetual inheritance, they had suffered many degradations, and had also been harassed and oppressed by tyrants; in short, they had been nearly sunk in the lowest depths. Since then God has so severely dealt with their fathers, the Prophet bids them to know that God ought to be feared, lest they should grow wanton or indulge themselves in their usual manner, but that they might from the heart repent, and not designedly provoke God’s wrath, of which their fathers had so severe an experience.
(10) The words may be thus rendered, —
Wroth was Jehovah, With your fathers was he wroth.
This is more consistent with the characters of the Hebrew language than the usual rendering.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(2) Your fathers.This verse contains the word of the Lord addressed directly to and through the prophet, who is included among those addressed in the pronoun your fathers. It gives the ground on which the exhortation to repentance is founded.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
2. At the beginning of his message the prophet places the statement that Jehovah was angry with the fathers.
Sore displeased Literally, angry with anger. This should serve as a warning to the present generation.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
“The LORD hath been sore displeased with your fathers. (3) Therefore say thou unto them, Thus saith the LORD of hosts; Turn ye unto me, saith the LORD of hosts, and I will turn unto you, saith the LORD of hosts. (4) Be ye not as your fathers, unto whom the former prophets have cried, saying, Thus saith the LORD of hosts; Turn ye now from your evil ways, and from your evil doings: but they did not hear, nor hearken unto me, saith the LORD. (5) Your fathers, where are they? and the prophets, do they live forever? (6) But my words and my statutes, which I commanded my servants the prophets, did they not take hold of your fathers? and they returned and said, Like as the LORD of hosts thought to do unto us, according to our ways, and according to our doings, so hath he dealt with us.”
The leading points of this first sermon is, to show the people the cause of God’s judgments upon his people, by causing them to go into Babylon. Some of the Prophets, such as Hannaniah, had taught their fathers lies. And when the Lord called upon them to return, led away by the false teachers, and their own corruptions, they would not return. Now, saith the Lord, where are these prophets? They are dead. But my words live forever. See Jer 28 throughout, a solemn Chapter.
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Zec 1:2 The LORD hath been sore displeased with your fathers.
Ver. 2. The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers ] Heb. He hath boiled against your fathers with foaming anger, with height of heat. There are degrees of anger, see Mat 5:22 Deu 29:28 . The Lord rooted them out of their land in anger, and in wrath, and in great indignation. Surgit hic oratio: and the last of those three words is the same here used in the text; noting a higher degree than the two former, even such a fervour and fierceness of God’s wrath as maketh him ready to kill and cut off, see 2Ki 6:6 , and note the affinity of that word with this like as he had much ado to forbear killing of Moses, when he met him in the inn, Exo 4:24 , and as Nebuchadnezzar was not only angry, but very furious, and commanded to destroy all the wise men of Babylon, Dan 2:12 . Now if the wrath of a king be as many messengers of death, Pro 16:14 , what shall we think of the foaming and frothing wrath of God, which burns unto the lowest hell, and sets on fire the foundations of the mountains, Deu 32:22 . After which followeth, in the next verse, “I will heap mischiefs upon them; I will spend mine arrows upon them,” Deu 32:23 . He had done so upon the ancestors of these refractory Jews, who had been saepius puncti et repuncti, minime tamen ad resipiscentiam compuncti, often punished, but could never be reclaimed; so incorrigibly flagitious, so shamelessly, so prodigiously wicked were they, till there was no remedy. This their vile stubbornness made him sore displeased with them; and put thunderbolts into his hands to destroy them; for though fury be not in God, Isa 27:5 , to speak properly, he is free from any such passions as we are subject to, yet if briars and thorns set against him in battle, if a rabble of rebels conspire to cast him out of his throne, saying, “We will not have this man to rule over us,” &c., “I would go through them, I would burn them together,” saith he, in the same breath. Abused mercy turneth into fury. Nothing so cold as lead, and yet nothing so scalding, if molten. Nothing more blunt than iron; and yet nothing so keen, if sharpened. The air is soft and tender; yet out of it are engendered thunder and lightnings. The sea is calm and smooth; but if tossed with tempests, it is rough above measure. The Lord, as he is Father of mercies, so he is God of recompences: and it is a fearful thing to fall into his punishing hands, Heb 10:31 . If his wrath be kindled, yea, but a little, woe be to all those upon whom it lights, Psa 2:12 : how much more when he is sore displeased with a people or person, as here! For “who knoweth the power of thine anger?” saith Moses; “even according to thy fear, so is thy wrath,” Psa 90:11 ; that is, let a man fear thee never so much, he is sure to feel thee much more, if once he fall into thy fingers. And this is here urged by the prophet as a motive to true repentance; since by their fathers’ example they might see there was no way to escape the dint of the Divine displeasure but to submit to God’s justice, and to implore his mercy: men must either turn or burn, “For even our God is a consuming fire,” Heb 12:29 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
sore displeased. Hebrew displeased with a displeasure. Figure of speech Polyptoton. App-6. See note on Gen 26:28.
your fathers. Compare verses: Zec 1:4, Zec 1:6,
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Lord: 2Ki 22:16, 2Ki 22:17, 2Ki 22:19, 2Ki 23:26, 2Ch 36:13-20, Ezr 9:6, Ezr 9:7, Ezr 9:13, Neh 9:26, Neh 9:27, Psa 60:1, Psa 79:5, Psa 79:6, Jer 44:6, Lam 1:12-15, Lam 2:3-5, Lam 3:42-45, Lam 5:7, Eze 22:31, Dan 9:11, Dan 9:12, Zep 2:1-3, Mat 23:30-32, Act 7:52
sore displeased: Heb. with displeasure
Reciprocal: 1Ki 15:12 – all the idols Jer 32:23 – but Eze 20:18 – the statutes Eze 33:4 – whosoever heareth Hag 2:17 – yet Zec 1:15 – General
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Zec 1:2. Fathers is used as referring to the ancestors or other near relatives. The relationship first mentioned is that between the prophet and his older brethren with whom he was then associated.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
1:2 The LORD hath been {c} sore displeased with your fathers
(c) He speaks this to make them afraid of God’s judgments, so that they should not provoke him as their fathers had done, whom he so grievously punished.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The Lord told Zechariah that He had been angry with the Jews’ forefathers. Therefore, the prophet was to preach repentance to his contemporaries as Yahweh’s authoritative and faithful mouthpiece. If they turned back to the Lord, He would return to bless them (cf. Isa 55:6-7; Jer 3:12; Hos 7:10; Joe 2:12-13; Amo 5:4; Amo 5:6; Mal 3:7). This is the clarion call that furnishes the background for this book’s message of hope. [Note: Unger, p. 20.] And this was the reassurance that the restoration community needed after the discipline of the Exile. They were to return to Yahweh, to a personal relationship and allegiance to Him, not just to formal obedience to His law and covenant. Zechariah was to warn the Israelites not to be like their (pre-exilic) forefathers who refused to respond to the preaching of earlier (pre-exilic) prophets who urged them to repent (e.g., Isaiah, Jeremiah, et al.).
"It’s one thing to ask God to bless us but quite another to be the kind of people He can bless!" [Note: Warren W. Wiersbe, "Zechariah," in The Bible Exposition Commentary/Prophets, p. 449.]