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Zechariah
Chapter Four
Zechariah 4
Chapter Contents
A vision of a candlestick, with two olive trees. (1-7)
Further encouragement. (8-10) An explanation respecting the olive trees.
(11-14)
Commentary on Zechariah 4:1-7
(Read Zechariah 4:1-7)
The prophet's spirit was willing to attend, but the flesh
was weak. We should beg of God that, whenever he speaks to us, he would awaken
us, and we should then stir up ourselves. The church is a golden candlestick,
or lamp-bearer, set up for enlightening this dark world, and holding forth the
light of Divine revelation. Two olive trees were seen, one on each side the
candlestick, from which oil flowed into the bowl without ceasing. God brings to
pass his gracious purposes concerning his church, without any art or labour of
man; sometimes he makes use of his instruments, yet he needs them not. This
represented the abundance of Divine grace, for the enlightening and making holy
the ministers and members of the church, and which cannot be procured or
prevented by any human power. The vision assures us that the good work of
building the temple, should be brought to a happy end. The difficulty is
represented as a great mountain. But all difficulties shall vanish, and all the
objections be got over. Faith will remove mountains, and make them plains.
Christ is our Zerubbabel; mountains of difficulty were in the way of his
undertaking, but nothing is too hard for him. What comes from the grace of God,
may, in faith, be committed to the grace of God, for he will not forsake the
work of his own hands.
Commentary on Zechariah 4:8-10
(Read Zechariah 4:8-10)
The exact fulfilment of Scripture prophecies is a
convincing proof of their Divine original. Though the instruments be weak and
unlikely, yet God often chooses such, to bring about great things by them. Let
not the dawning light be despised; it will shine more and more to the perfect
day. Those who despaired of finishing the work, shall rejoice when they see
Zerubbabel giving directions what to do, and taking care that the work be done.
It is a comfort to us that the same all-wise, almighty Providence, which
governs the earth, is in particular conversant about the church. All that have
the plummet in their hands, must look up to the eyes of the Lord, have constant
regard to Divine Providence, act in dependence on its guidance and submission
to its disposals. Let us fix our faith on Christ, and view Him carrying on his
work according to his own glorious plan, and daily bringing his spiritual
building nearer to completion.
Commentary on Zechariah 4:11-14
(Read Zechariah 4:11-14)
Zechariah desires to know what are the two olive trees.
Zerubbabel and Joshua, this prince and this priest, were endued with the gifts
and graces of God's Spirit. They lived at the same time, and both were
instruments in the work and service of God. Christ's offices of King and Priest
were shadowed forth by them. From the union of these two offices in his person,
both God and man, the fullness of grace is received and imparted. They built
the temple, the church of God. So does Christ spiritually. Christ is not only
the Messiah, the Anointed One himself, but he is the Good Olive to his church;
and from his fulness we receive. And the Holy Spirit is the unction or
anointing which we have received. From Christ the Olive Tree, by the Spirit the
Olive Branch, all the golden oil of grace flows to believers, which keeps their
lamps burning. Let us seek, through the intercession and bounty of the Saviour,
supplies from that fulness which has hitherto sufficed for all his saints,
according to their trials and employments. Let us wait on him in his
ordinances, desiring to be sanctified wholly in body, soul, and spirit.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Zechariah》
Zechariah 4
Verse 2
[2] And said unto me, What seest thou? And I said, I have
looked, and behold a candlestick all of gold, with a bowl upon the top of it,
and his seven lamps thereon, and seven pipes to the seven lamps, which are upon
the top thereof:
With a bowl — Or basin.
His seven lamps — The temple candlestick had just
so many.
And seven pipes — So each of the lamps had a pipe
reaching from it to the bowl.
On the top — These lamps were so set, as to stand
somewhat higher than the body of the candlestick.
Verse 3
[3] And two olive trees by it, one upon the right side of
the bowl, and the other upon the left side thereof.
Two olive-trees by it — All which is an
emblem of the church, made of pure gold; to be a light in the world; to shine
as lamps that continually burn, maintained with pure oil, distilled from the
olive-trees, not pressed out by man, but continually, abundantly, and freely
flowing from God.
Verse 6
[6] Then he answered and spake unto me, saying, This is the
word of the LORD unto Zerubbabel, saying, Not by might, nor by power, but by my
spirit, saith the LORD of hosts.
This word — Is particularly designed to him,
and in an emblem prefigures what a church it is, how precious, how full of light,
how maintained by God himself.
Power — Courage and valour.
Verse 7
[7] Who art thou, O great mountain? before Zerubbabel thou
shalt become a plain: and he shall bring forth the headstone thereof with
shoutings, crying, Grace, grace unto it.
O great mountain — All opposers put
together.
Become a plain — Thou shalt sink into nothing.
The head stone — Shall assist at the laying of the
finishing stone, as he assisted when the foundation stone was laid.
Grace, grace — Wishing all prosperity, and a
long continuance of it, to the temple and those that are to worship God
therein. As the free favour of God began, and finished, may the same ever dwell
in it and replenish it.
Verse 9
[9] The hands of Zerubbabel have laid the foundation of this
house; his hands shall also finish it; and thou shalt know that the LORD of
hosts hath sent me unto you.
Thou — Zerubbabel and all the Jews.
Verse 10
[10] For who hath despised the day of small things? for they
shall rejoice, and shall see the plummet in the hand of Zerubbabel with those
seven; they are the eyes of the LORD, which run to and fro through the whole
earth.
For who hath despised — In the work of God,
the day of small things is not to be despised. God often chuses weak
instruments, to bring about mighty things: and tho' the beginnings be small, he
can make the latter end greatly to increase.
For — Tho' they undervalued the meanness of the second
temple, yet when finished, they shall rejoice in it.
The plummet — The perpendicular with which
Zerubbabel shall try the finished work.
With those seven — In subordination to
the Divine Providence expressed by the seven eyes, which were on that stone.
And those that have the plummet in their hand, must look up to these eyes of
the Lord, must have a constant regard to the Divine Providence, and as in
dependence upon its conduct, and submission to its disposals.
Verse 12
[12] And I answered again, and said unto him, What be these
two olive branches which through the two golden pipes empty the golden oil out
of themselves?
I answered — l went on to discourse.
Unto him — The angel.
What be these — Two principal branches, one in
each tree, fuller of berries, and hanging over the golden pipes.
Through the pipes — These were fastened
to the bowl, on each side one, with a hole through the sides of the bowl, to
let the oil that distilled from those olive-branches run into the bowl.
Out of themselves — An emblem of
supernatural grace; these branches filled from the true olive-tree, ever empty
themselves, and are ever full; so are the gospel-ordinances.
Verse 14
[14] Then said he, These are the two anointed ones, that
stand by the Lord of the whole earth.
The two anointed ones — Christ and the Holy
Spirit. The Son was to be sent by the Father, and so was the Holy Ghost. And
they stand by him, ready to go.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Zechariah》
04 Chapter 4
Introduction
Verses 1-14
Behold a candlestick all of gold
The candelabrum and olive trees
That by the candelabrum was symbolised the Israelitish community,
the people of the theocracy, may be regarded as generally conceded.
But Israel was itself a symbol and type; it was the visible manifestation of
that invisible spiritual community, the Church of the living God, which
embraces the faithful of all ages and places. But the light which the Church
possesses is not from herself; it is light communicated and sustained by
influences from above. Hence in the vision the lamps were supplied with oil,
not by human ministration, but through channels and pipes from the olive trees
which stood beside and were over the candelabrum. Oil is the proper symbol of
the Holy Spirit’s influence. This is the oil by which the Church is sustained, is
made to shine, and is enabled to accomplish the work she has to do in the
world. Apart from the Divine Spirit the Church is dark and cold and feeble; but
through the visitation of the Spirit she is animated and invigorated, becomes
luminous and glorious, and is crowned with success as she labours to erect
God’s temple on earth. They were taught by this vision not to be discouraged,
for it was not by human might or power that the work was to be done, but by the
Spirit of the Lord. Through His grace the light should be sustained in them;
their hands should be strengthened for their work; and ere long they should see
the consummation of that which had been so auspiciously begun. God sustains His
Church by His grace. But this grace comes to men through certain appointed
media. This was symbolised in the vision by the fruit-bearing branches of the
olive trees, and by the conduits and pipes through which the oil was conveyed
to the lamps. The branches represented the sacerdotal and civil authorities in
Israel. (W. L. Alexander, D. D.)
Man as a student of the Divine revelation and a doer of Divine
work
I. As a student of
the Divine revelations. “I have looked, and behold a candle stick all of gold,”
etc. The ideal Church is all this. The candlestick may, I think, fairly
represent the Bible, or God’s special revelation to man: that is golden, that
is luminous, that is supernaturally supplied with the oil of inspiration. In
fact, in the passage the interpreting angel designates this, candlestick, not
as the Church, but as the “word of the Lord unto Zerubbabel.” I make two
remarks concerning this revelation--
1. It has in it sufficient to excite the inquiry of man as a student.
“What are these, my lord?” What wonderful things are in this Bible!
2. It has an Interpreter that can satisfy man as a student. The angel
to whom the prophet directed his inquiry promptly answered. The prophet here
displays two of the leading attributes of a genuine student of the Divine--
II. As a doer of
the Divine will Man has not only to study, but to work; not only to get Divine
ideas, but to work them out. The work of the prophet was to convey a message
from God to Zerubbabel, and the message he conveyed was a message to world. Man
is to be a “Worker together” with God. I offer two remarks concerning man as a
worker out of the Divine will
1. That though his difficulties may appear great, his resources are
infinite. Zerubbabel, in rebuilding the temple, had enormous difficulties.
Those difficulties hovered before him as mountains. But great as they were, he
was assured that he had resources more than equal to the task. “Not by might,
nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts.”
2. That though his efforts may seem feeble, his success will be
inevitable.
(a) It is common to despise small things.
(b) It is foolish to despise small things. All great things were small
in their beginnings.
(c) It is contemptible to despise small things. Truly great souls
never do so.
The golden candlestick
1. The Church of God is composed of the most precious human material
in the world. The man who walks day by day with the “King Eternal, Immortal and
Invisible,” is of far more value to the world, and is regarded by God as of
more worth, than the man of the greatest intellectual attainments.
2. The Church is a light giver, because its power to give light is
sustained from a source outside itself. The life of the Church of God is not
self-sustaining. Gad is the sustaining power by which the Church is kept alive,
and only as she is supplied from Him with the holy off of the Divine Spirit can
she give out that light which is the life of men. The most perfect machinery
without this life-sustaining force is useless to accomplish the Divine purpose
“of making the Church a blessing to the world. This mysterious living principle
is due to a life at the back of all that is apprehended by the senses, a life
which some call “the efficient cause,” but which we think it more reasonable to
call the “living God.”
3. Because of this all-sufficient source of life we are assured that
small beginnings in the kingdom of God will issue in great results. There is no
such thing in nature as instantaneous result. The blade comes before the ear.
The law of the spiritual kingdom is to begin with the small and end with the
great. Connection with the source of life ensures growth unto perfection. (Outlines
by a London Minister.)
The vision of the candlestick
1. The temple here represents the Church to be enlightened by Christ,
she being in herself but dark, and void of light and comfort, till He come and
appear in her, and for her, and make her light.
2. The ministry appointed of Christ for the direction, edification,
and comfort of the Church are here represented by the candlestick, who should
be pure, that they may be precious in His sight as gold, and who ought to shine
by purity and holiness of life, and be instrumental in making the Church a
shining light in a dark world.
3. The bowl upon the top of the candlestick which immediately
receives the oil doth fitly represent Christ as Mediator, the head and
storehouse of the Church, to whom is intrusted all fulness of gifts and graces
for the Church’s behoof.
4. The variety and sufficiency of gifts communicate by Christ, for
the good and salvation of the Church is represented by seven lamps, all tending
one common end of burning and shining.
5. The way of deriving grace from Christ to His servants, by ordained
and sanctified means, especially by His covenant; our dependence, and the bands
of communion betwixt Him and His people, is represented by seven pipes going
betwixt the bowl and the lamps. (George Hutcheson.)
The candlestick
In order to make God’s meaning clearer the prophet was
granted the vision of the candlestick (lampstand), the gist of which was that
the wick, though necessary to the light, played a very inconsiderable part in
its production. It had no illuminating power; it could only smoke, and char,
and smoulder. At the best it could only be a medium between the oil in the
cistern and the fire that burnt on its serried edge. Thus Zerubbabel might be
weak and flexible as a wick, but none of his deficiencies could hinder him
finishing the work to which he had been called, if only his spirit was kindled
with the Divine fire, and fed continually by the gracious influences of the Holy
Spirit. The candlestick was evidently fashioned on the model of that in the
temple, the shape of which is still preserved to us on the Arch of Titus.
According to the R.V., there were seven pipes to each lamp. Nor was this all.
On either side of this massive candlestick stood an olive tree, from the heart
of which, by a golden pipe, the oil was continually being poured into the
reservoir; so that, even though it might be limited in its containing power,
there could be no failure in its ability to meet the incessant demands of the
lamps. So far as the Jews were concerned, the meaning of the vision was
obvious. They were represented in the candlestick, of which the many lamps and
the precious metal of its composition set forth their perfection and preciousness
in the thought of God. Their function was to shed the light of His knowledge on
the world, as it lay under the power of darkness; whilst, to aid them in
fulfilling this mission, Divine supplies would be forthcoming from a celestial
and living source, and brought to them through the golden pipes, of which one
represented Joshua the priest, and the other Zerubbabel the prince. These men,
therefore, were but mediums for Divine communications. Their sufficiency was
not of themselves, but of God. The mission of Israel would be realised, not by
them, but by the Spirit of God through them. They might seem altogether
helpless and inadequate; but a living fountain of oil was prepared to furnish
them with inexhaustible supplies (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Verses 1-14
Behold a candlestick all of gold
The candelabrum and olive trees
That by the candelabrum was symbolised the Israelitish community,
the people of the theocracy, may be regarded as generally conceded.
But Israel was itself a symbol and type; it was the visible manifestation of
that invisible spiritual community, the Church of the living God, which
embraces the faithful of all ages and places. But the light which the Church
possesses is not from herself; it is light communicated and sustained by
influences from above. Hence in the vision the lamps were supplied with oil,
not by human ministration, but through channels and pipes from the olive trees
which stood beside and were over the candelabrum. Oil is the proper symbol of
the Holy Spirit’s influence. This is the oil by which the Church is sustained,
is made to shine, and is enabled to accomplish the work she has to do in the
world. Apart from the Divine Spirit the Church is dark and cold and feeble; but
through the visitation of the Spirit she is animated and invigorated, becomes
luminous and glorious, and is crowned with success as she labours to erect
God’s temple on earth. They were taught by this vision not to be discouraged,
for it was not by human might or power that the work was to be done, but by the
Spirit of the Lord. Through His grace the light should be sustained in them;
their hands should be strengthened for their work; and ere long they should see
the consummation of that which had been so auspiciously begun. God sustains His
Church by His grace. But this grace comes to men through certain appointed
media. This was symbolised in the vision by the fruit-bearing branches of the
olive trees, and by the conduits and pipes through which the oil was conveyed
to the lamps. The branches represented the sacerdotal and civil authorities in
Israel. (W. L. Alexander, D. D.)
Man as a student of the Divine revelation and a doer of Divine
work
I. As a student of
the Divine revelations. “I have looked, and behold a candle stick all of gold,”
etc. The ideal Church is all this. The candlestick may, I think, fairly
represent the Bible, or God’s special revelation to man: that is golden, that
is luminous, that is supernaturally supplied with the oil of inspiration. In
fact, in the passage the interpreting angel designates this, candlestick, not
as the Church, but as the “word of the Lord unto Zerubbabel.” I make two
remarks concerning this revelation--
1. It has in it sufficient to excite the inquiry of man as a student.
“What are these, my lord?” What wonderful things are in this Bible!
2. It has an Interpreter that can satisfy man as a student. The angel
to whom the prophet directed his inquiry promptly answered. The prophet here displays
two of the leading attributes of a genuine student of the Divine--
II. As a doer of
the Divine will Man has not only to study, but to work; not only to get Divine
ideas, but to work them out. The work of the prophet was to convey a message
from God to Zerubbabel, and the message he conveyed was a message to world. Man
is to be a “Worker together” with God. I offer two remarks concerning man as a
worker out of the Divine will
1. That though his difficulties may appear great, his resources are
infinite. Zerubbabel, in rebuilding the temple, had enormous difficulties.
Those difficulties hovered before him as mountains. But great as they were, he
was assured that he had resources more than equal to the task. “Not by might,
nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts.”
2. That though his efforts may seem feeble, his success will be
inevitable.
(a) It is common to despise small things.
(b) It is foolish to despise small things. All great things were small
in their beginnings.
(c) It is contemptible to despise small things. Truly great souls
never do so.
The golden candlestick
1. The Church of God is composed of the most precious human material
in the world. The man who walks day by day with the “King Eternal, Immortal and
Invisible,” is of far more value to the world, and is regarded by God as of
more worth, than the man of the greatest intellectual attainments.
2. The Church is a light giver, because its power to give light is
sustained from a source outside itself. The life of the Church of God is not
self-sustaining. Gad is the sustaining power by which the Church is kept alive,
and only as she is supplied from Him with the holy off of the Divine Spirit can
she give out that light which is the life of men. The most perfect machinery
without this life-sustaining force is useless to accomplish the Divine purpose
“of making the Church a blessing to the world. This mysterious living principle
is due to a life at the back of all that is apprehended by the senses, a life
which some call “the efficient cause,” but which we think it more reasonable to
call the “living God.”
3. Because of this all-sufficient source of life we are assured that
small beginnings in the kingdom of God will issue in great results. There is no
such thing in nature as instantaneous result. The blade comes before the ear.
The law of the spiritual kingdom is to begin with the small and end with the
great. Connection with the source of life ensures growth unto perfection. (Outlines
by a London Minister.)
The vision of the candlestick
1. The temple here represents the Church to be enlightened by Christ,
she being in herself but dark, and void of light and comfort, till He come and
appear in her, and for her, and make her light.
2. The ministry appointed of Christ for the direction, edification,
and comfort of the Church are here represented by the candlestick, who should
be pure, that they may be precious in His sight as gold, and who ought to shine
by purity and holiness of life, and be instrumental in making the Church a
shining light in a dark world.
3. The bowl upon the top of the candlestick which immediately
receives the oil doth fitly represent Christ as Mediator, the head and
storehouse of the Church, to whom is intrusted all fulness of gifts and graces
for the Church’s behoof.
4. The variety and sufficiency of gifts communicate by Christ, for
the good and salvation of the Church is represented by seven lamps, all tending
one common end of burning and shining.
5. The way of deriving grace from Christ to His servants, by ordained
and sanctified means, especially by His covenant; our dependence, and the bands
of communion betwixt Him and His people, is represented by seven pipes going
betwixt the bowl and the lamps. (George Hutcheson.)
The candlestick
In order to make God’s meaning clearer the prophet was
granted the vision of the candlestick (lampstand), the gist of which was that
the wick, though necessary to the light, played a very inconsiderable part in
its production. It had no illuminating power; it could only smoke, and char, and
smoulder. At the best it could only be a medium between the oil in the cistern
and the fire that burnt on its serried edge. Thus Zerubbabel might be weak and
flexible as a wick, but none of his deficiencies could hinder him finishing the
work to which he had been called, if only his spirit was kindled with the
Divine fire, and fed continually by the gracious influences of the Holy Spirit.
The candlestick was evidently fashioned on the model of that in the temple, the
shape of which is still preserved to us on the Arch of Titus. According to the
R.V., there were seven pipes to each lamp. Nor was this all. On either side of
this massive candlestick stood an olive tree, from the heart of which, by a
golden pipe, the oil was continually being poured into the reservoir; so that,
even though it might be limited in its containing power, there could be no
failure in its ability to meet the incessant demands of the lamps. So far as
the Jews were concerned, the meaning of the vision was obvious. They were
represented in the candlestick, of which the many lamps and the precious metal
of its composition set forth their perfection and preciousness in the thought
of God. Their function was to shed the light of His knowledge on the world, as
it lay under the power of darkness; whilst, to aid them in fulfilling this
mission, Divine supplies would be forthcoming from a celestial and living
source, and brought to them through the golden pipes, of which one represented
Joshua the priest, and the other Zerubbabel the prince. These men, therefore,
were but mediums for Divine communications. Their sufficiency was not of
themselves, but of God. The mission of Israel would be realised, not by them,
but by the Spirit of God through them. They might seem altogether helpless and
inadequate; but a living fountain of oil was prepared to furnish them with
inexhaustible supplies (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Verse 6
Not by might, nor by power
The Word of the Lord to Zerubbabel
Dwell upon the very remarkable interpretation of the vision given
by God Himself in the words of the text.
I. The false
grounds of confidence which are to be rejected. Summed up in the words “might
and power,” including all earthly means and human instrumentality. We must
beware of substituting temporal means and mortal instruments for the work of
the Spirit, or the glory of God. Nothing short of the almighty power of God can
open the blind eyes or awaken the dead affections of the natural man to see and
embrace the Gospel. If we may not trust to the strength of reason, or the force
of truth, neither may we to the powers of oratory. The gifts of oratory or
eloquence are lovely and excellent, but trusted in, or gloried in, they become
snares and stumbling blocks, drawing away the heart and affections from Christ,
and converting our acts of worship into an idolatrous service. Every Christian,
too, has a sphere of influence with which to serve and honour God, and to help
and strengthen others. But this must not be rested in. Religion must be a
personal concern, a deed of contract, a life of communion between the soul and
God. And there are those who imagine that they love the truth because they love
some of those who profess it. The power of affection on the minds of such
persons is almost unbounded. But a religion based on such grounds is not to be
trusted. When the Spirit of God is not the Author of the work it cannot stand
trial, even in this world; it can never issue in the salvation of the soul.
II. The only source
of spiritual prosperity. The work and efficiency of the Spirit of God. In three
things this work is distinguished.
1. In transforming the character.
2. In overcoming the world.
3. In glorifying the grace of God. (J. M. Wilde, B. A.)
Force--spiritual and material
We have need to study the Christian dynamics. Good arrangements,
good instructions, good intentions, are all well; but what can they avail
without a sufficient, continuous force? Let us take a lesson from the angel who
spoke to the prophet. Zechariah’s object was to instruct the Jews on their
return from captivity, and to cheer them on in the work of rebuilding the
temple. They were not to be appalled by obstacles ever so formidable, for the
work was of God, and God was able to remove mountains of difficulty out of the
way. No adversary would be able to injure them. It is easy to pass from this to
New Testament teaching. The foundation of the Church has been laid; it grows up
slowly but surely, a Holy Temple in the Lord. The work proceeds slowly because
it is arduous in its own nature, obstructed by many adversaries. Zerubbabel’s
temple was finished in about twenty years; but a building which is spiritual
needs much more time than one which is constructed of wood and stone. The affections
and dispositions of men cannot be shaped as material things may be; and just
because the Church is a structure so noble, a habitation of God in the Spirit,
its progress is difficult, and in comparison with the works of man it is slow.
It has also been hindered by the mistakes and dissensions of the builders; but
in the end the same Prince who laid its foundations will certainly finish it.
He will say, “It is finished,” and in His completed Church He will fill the
whole earth with His glory. We speak of the propagation of the Gospel and the
construction of the Church: the one movement is diffusive, the other formative;
both agree in one, and both are of the Lord. The propagation of the Gospel is
not only for, but also by, Christ. He publishes the testimony through all the
earth, and saves sinners. The construction of the Church is also by Christ from
first to last, and the builders, from Paul and Apollos downwards, are nothing
without Him. And oh! with what patience and with what wisdom does He preside
over His vast and complex work. Christ is always building His people together,
healing, reconciling, moulding, blending, compacting them together as living
stones that form the One Temple of the One Holy Ghost. We have said that there
is much opposition to this work. So it has always been, and especially at
critical emergencies, mountains have threatened to fall upon and to destroy the
work of God. Moses went down to Egypt to redeem Israel; then was the power of
Pharaoh as a great mountain against him. And as the people escaped the mountain
seemed to come nearer, the Egyptian army pursued and threatened to destroy
them. Hezekiah revived religion in Judah; then came the power of Assyria, and
as a great mountain impended over Jerusalem. The heathen army invested the
city, and Hezekiah had no power of resistance, and he spread the matter before
the Lord, and in one night the angel of death removed the mountain and laid the
Assyrian host still and dead. The Messiah came, not to condemn but to save the
world; then the kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers took counsel
together against the Lord and His anointed. Herod, Caiaphas, Pilate, Pharisees,
Sadducees, priests, elders, and populace all joined in one desperate
resistance. The acts of the Apostles were all performed, in spite of mountains
of obstruction, by the power from on high that rested upon them. So they
carried the Gospel to Europe, and planted it in Macedonia and Greece and Italy,
and long afterwards missionaries of apostolic spirit bore it onward through the
dense forests of Helvetia, Gaul, and Germany, and penetrated to the distant
shores of Britain. The rage of the heathen threatened to devour them, but the
Lord stood with them, and before His face the mountains melted away. We have great
mountains against us still; huge masses of heathenism which resist our
missions. The scepticism which becomes every day more pronounced. There is
something else to do than wring our hands and pour out lamentations on the ear.
Let us have the faith that removes mountains, and, oppose and deride us who
may, let us be of good courage and build. In order to this, mark well what the
energy is which surmounts or removes obstacles. Not might, nor power of mortal
man. It would have been as vain for the Jews of Zerubbabel to cope with the
power of Darius, or for the Apostles and early Christians to grapple with the
power of the Roman emperor, or for a few labourers to attack a mountain in the
Alps with their spades and try to reduce it to a plain. And equally impossible
it is for us to remove, the more intellectual or spiritual obstructions in the
way of the Gospel by merely human persuasion and argument. The removal of such
mountains as we encounter is a thing possible only with God. It was not before
Moses, Hezekiah, Peter or Paul, Columba or Boniface, Zwingle or Luther, that
mountains became plain, but before Jesus Christ. Zechariah had a vision of the
continuous supply of the Spirit as of holy oil flowing through golden pipes
from two olive trees or branches. By this we understand the kingly and priestly
institutions which were represented at the time by Zerubbabel the prince and
Joshua the high priest. In Jesus Christ, our exalted Saviour, the kingship and
priesthood are united. He is the Priest upon a throne, and from the Father
through Jesus Christ proceeds to the Church a constant supply of the Spirit.
This is the present truth for us; if we believe it, why do we give way to
languor or discouragement? If we have strength, learning, money, let us
consecrate it to the Lord. But, knowing that these cannot prevail, let us lift
our eyes to the Lord Himself, and cast our care upon Him. Let me encourage all
Christian teachers and preachers to persevere in this confidence, undaunted and
unwearied. The holy Temple on the rock will be finished, and the headstone
brought forth with shoutings. Indeed, no man can understand all the symmetry of
our Lord’s plan till it is completed; but then, it will be seen how He has
overruled all the persecutions, martyrdoms, and controversies for higher ends,
and has made even the rending of the outward frame of the Church of God a means
of preserving and purifying its inward life. What bursts of admiration when all
is finished! What shouts of praise, grace, grace! No shout of human names or
party distinctions will be attempted in that bright day. All is due to the
grace of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, to whom be glory in
the Church. (D. Fraser, D. D.)
The Spirit of the Lord
The message which this vision was intended to convey was an
assurance of God’s presence and readiness to help, and of utter dependence on
Him. The prophet was greatly puzzled by this vision. The interpretation was
given in such form as would be likely to make it most effective for the
enterprise in hand.
1. Rulers and people must under stand at the outset that as God’s
chosen they were utterly dependent on Him. It is true for every man in every
age. Not with a strong right arm can we make our spiritual livelihood; not with
a mighty intellect can we plan and execute the purposes of a holy life. The
Spirit of the living God must quicken, energise, inspire.
2. The vision was interpreted to mean that difficulties should not
block the way. All hindrance shall disappear. God shall touch it with His
almighty hand. Nothing is too hard for Him.
3. The vision gave assurance of the ultimate completion of the
temple. The work had languished for years. But as to the final issue there was
no shadow of doubt. A day of great things was coming, if the present did seem
to be a day of small things. Remember that we live in the dispensation of the
Spirit. The Church is the organism through which the Spirit is working towards
the restitution of all things. The Church is the one great power in history.
Its influence is inexplicable on any except supernatural grounds. At every
point of Christian faith and life we are dependent on its influence. Our life
begins with the operation of the Spirit in the new birth. Our sanctification is
through the Spirit. A symmetrical character comes in no other way. Our success
in Christian service is conditioned in the same way. (D. J. Burrell, D. D.)
The need of God’s Spirit
This scene has a natural application to the Divine working among
men, and suggests the need of God’s Spirit. The human spirit should be the
temple of God. Its foundations are laid in the capacities of the soul made in
His image. Sin opposes the work, worldliness hinders it. How shall it be
completed? “Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of
hosts.”
I. We need God’s
Spirit, because through the Spirit the Deity reveals Himself most clearly. Our
first necessity is to know God.
1. Some of the Divine attributes are revealed in nature. Wisdom,
power, glory everywhere, but not the King eternal, immortal, invisible.
Scripture declares that since the foundation of the world His invisible
attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made. Mark
the reservation,--His attributes, not Himself. He is ever hidden within
impenetrable isolation. Nature leaves us crying, “Show us the Father.”
2. God was revealed in Christ. Because men could never by searching
find out the Almighty, the Word which was with God, and was God, became flesh
and dwelt amongst us, revealing Him even to our senses. The incarnation shows
that, while the Deity is an Infinite Spirit pervading immensity, He is yet a
person. He has feeling, and thought, and will, as we have. Taking to Himself a
body like ours, He manifests every quality which makes earthly friends real.
Very God was with men in human body and human soul.
3. God is revealed by His Spirit. When Jesus ascended, the
dispensation of the Spirit began, a closer and fuller Divine manifestation. The
incarnation was not an immediate revelation of God. By the Holy Ghost God enters
directly into our spirits; we know Him, commune with Him, without any earthly
faculty called in to interpret. Neither did the incarnation complete the
revelation. The fullest manifestation of God to man began at Pentecost. The
office of the Spirit is not to supersede the revelation through Christ, but to
disclose its meaning and apply its power. Nature shows God above us; Christ is
God with us; the Holy Spirit is God in us.
II. We need God’s
Spirit, because through the Spirit the most powerful Divine influence is
exercised upon men. God does not merely reveal Himself to the soul, He also
acts upon it.
1. The influence of the Spirit was needed to write the Scriptures.
Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. He put before their
intellect deep things which it was quickened to apprehend. Their affections
were exalted to delight in the infinite grace unveiled to them. Their
conscience was purified to behold and adore the Divine holiness. What they saw
and felt they were moved to declare to the world. It is this supernatural
influence upon the writers which has given the Bible its authority and power.
By this influence the Scriptures are understood. Only He who illuminated the
writer can enlighten the reader. Spiritual things are spiritually discerned.
Critical acumen without spiritual insight cannot understand the book.
2. The influence of the Spirit is needed in regeneration and
sanctification. The plainest truths of the character of God will not of
themselves renew the soul. The intellect discerns them, the heart feels, the
conscience trembles, the will may struggle to obey, but all this does not give
life. There must be added a Divine, a creative touch, which shall send a new
energy into every faculty, thrilling through the will itself, and quickening
all to the sacred activities of a regenerated soul. This creative act separates
the new life in its feeblest beginnings, at a worldwide distance from the most
admirable exhibitions of the old life. Wonderful and awful is the entrance of
God into the human soul. Under the Old Testament dispensation the Spirit was
sent to exceptional individuals for exceptional purposes; it is the mission of
the Comforter to abide permanently in every believer, bringing him into
personal union with God, and making him like God. The fruit of the Spirit is
not dreams and visions, signs and wonders, but love, joy, peace, long
suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance,”--healthy
everyday virtues that make kind husbands, patient mothers, dutiful children,
upright citizens, and pure officials.
3. The influence of the Spirit is needed in Christian work. The
Almighty uses human agents. Heathen abroad and unbelievers at home are to be
saved through the efforts of Christians. The most powerful Divine influence is
given them to accomplish this. We do not always realise that the Almighty is
working more efficiently in His present manifestation through the Spirit than
He has ever wrought in any other method. He who gives grace to receive the
truth also gives grace to speak it. The understanding mind, the earnest heart,
the wise tongue, these are the gift of the Spirit. All the Christian power
comes from this help. Through our study, our pleading, our prayer must breathe
that holy presence which is the power of God unto salvation. This lesson has a
special promise to feeble Churches and discouraged Christians. It shows that
all human opposition is of no account in the sight of God. He gives power to
the weak, and grace to the faulty to do His work. (Monday Club Sermons.)
The might of the Spirit
What is the secret of the immense and amazing, victory of
Christianity? It lies in the out-poured Spirit of Pentecost. It was that which
made the might of weakness irresistible; it was that which gave to the feeble
seedling its imperishable vitality. Nor is it only that Christianity is still
preached; it is still no dead doctrine, but a living force to those who truly
receive it. Is there nothing for men who are filled with the Spirit of God to
do now? Look at the universal worldliness around us; look at the passionate
Mammon worship; at the reckless competition; at the desecration of Sundays in
the mere voluptuous wantonness of pleasure. O God, give us saints; O God, pour
out the Spirit of Thy might! (Dean Farrar.)
The world-conquering Spirit
The work of the early Churches, and that of the Churches of this
age, agree in principle and purpose. The difficulties and forms of opposition
are substantially the same. They are more moral than intellectual.
1. The prevalent worldly spirit.
2. The careless spirit manifest in another direction. There is an
intellectual indifference to Christianity. But the majority of those who are
indifferent to Christianity do not lay claim to any such difficulties. They are
simply and utterly careless.
3. The sceptical spirit that lifts its voice around us. Then wherein
lies our power? Is it in intellectual subtleties of reasoning? No intellectual
power can touch the root of man’s alienation from God. It lies in supernatural
power: a power which, springing from the Divine heart, lays hold of our hearts
and permeates them with His own energy, infusing our intellectual powers with
His own strength. With increased supernatural power--the power of the
Spirit--we shall yet come against the world spirit, the careless spirit, the
sceptical spirit, and cast them down, and the sea of everlasting love shall
roll on until “the knowledge of the Lord shall cover the earth as the waters
cover the sea.” (R. F. Bracey.)
The spiritual work of the Church
1. It is with the spiritual nature of man the Church has to do.
2. In man’s spiritual nature she has to effect the most radical
changes--the greatest transformations. Conversion must be wrought. There must
be a change in the spirit’s condition, the spirit’s relations, and the spirit’s
aspirations.
The accomplishment of this work requites a special power, a
spiritual power.
1. It cannot be done by the might and power of the sword. Or--
2. By the power of law. “You cannot make men moral by acts of
parliament.” Or
3. By the might and power of reason. Your premises may be admitted,
your arguments conclusive, and your pulpits distinguished for logical force,
but men may remain as stones, and our churches as deserts. Or--
4. By the might and power of sympathy. Sympathy can touch the heart
as no other human force van. But sympathy fails to convert and renew. The
essential power is in the Spirit of the Lord of hosts only.
1. This Spirit is greater than the forces in opposition.
2. This Spirit infuses a new life. He creates.
3. This Spirit effects the change in perfect harmony with man’s
freedom. The Church is in the greatest power when she is most filled with the
Holy Spirit. Filled with the Spirit, she can be confident of success, although
her members be few and the opposing forces strong. The Church’s truest friends
are those who are the most spiritual, and who most earnestly seek the Spirit’s
power in her. (Rombeth.)
The Spirit of the Lord
This message of God is addressed to Zerubbabel, as the
former was addressed to Joshua. In this fact the difference in the nature of
the vision is to be accounted for. Joshua represented the nation spiritually,
and the nation had sinned. So the message to him is a message of mercy, and
forgiveness, and promise. Zerubbabel was the civil ruler, and represented the
nation’s might and resources and means of defence. So he is bidden not to rely
upon these, as he was prone to do, but to rely upon God. Two thoughts are
prominent.
I. The completed
temple was symbolised. Zechariah saw a golden candlestick. What did it mean?
The candlestick which in old time had been made by Moses and set up in the
tabernacle, and which afterwards was removed to the temple at Jerusalem, had
been removed out of its place because of the infidelities and sins of the
people. There was no tabernacle now where God dwelt, no temple with its
mercy-seat and golden candlestick. But there it stood in its perfect and
incomparable beauty before the eyes of the prophet as the symbol of a restored
temple, with its lamp and altars of sacrifice and incense and songs of joyful
worship. It was a picture of what was to be, a prediction of a future which in
God’s gracious purpose was near at hand.
II. The complete
restoration of national life. Israel was meant to be the light of the world, as
the Christian Church is in a more perfect manner. When the chosen nation fell
into sin, and had to be punished by the desolation of temple, city, and land,
the world was darkened, and the lamp which God had lighted before the nations
was put out. Restored worship and a revived nation meant a rekindling of this
lamp. To illustrate these ideas and apply them to daily dangers and duties. (Matthew 5:14-16; Mark 4:21-22; Luke 12:35; Philippians 2:15; Revelation 1:20; Revelation 2:5.)
III. The means of
restoration was declared. “Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith
the Lord of hosts.”
The true source of power
We recognise the lesson which this vision furnishes, namely, that
God is in His Church and in the world, and that His government in both is
enforced and supported by the adoption of his own agencies. And furthermore, we
learn that there is order and unanimity in the employ of such agencies. In the
symbol there is unity, order, cooperation, and maintenance. Vegetable life is
maintained through a system of organisation. The whole system of human life is
carried on by the same principle. The great truth laid down in our subject is
that of cooperation. The golden pipes of the candlestick cooperate with the off
in giving light to the lamps. It is not the mere outward forms and institutions
by which only the Church is to preserve her God-like character, and to diffuse
her good and saving influence upon the world, but by the Divine Spirit acting
through these, uniting them to Himself in one grand scheme of cooperation. The
means are required, but they must be made subservient to the Divine will, and
cooperate, in their dependency and trust, with the omnipotence and guidance of
the Almighty. Consider, then, the true source--
I. Of power.
“Power belongeth unto God.” To Him we ascribe all might. This is the one and
only source of our power, personally or nationally. We have our
instrumentalities, we have our Church and national appliances for building up
and enlarging all that is right and beneficial; but we wait for the fire from
heaven to kindle it.
II. Of courage.
Courage lies not in dexterity, but in the heart, in the mind. It is shown by a
cool obedience, by a steadiness of manly purpose. Courage that is true is the
power of mind over matter. But in order to trace out its source we must look
above mind to that Divine Spirit who acts upon the mind.
III. Of conquest.
The noblest battle is against sin, and the noblest conquest is that of self.
Hence as the foes of God, of ourselves, and of truth accumulate upon our life
path, may we meet them with a power, a courage, and a conquest embodied in the
words,--“Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of
hosts.” (W. D. Horwood.)
The agency of the Holy Spirit
The primary allusion of these words requires no explanation. The
typical import is not less apparent than the primary reference. That by the law
of types is not mere, not accidental resemblance, but similarity designed, as
well as complete and unquestionable. Man was created to be the temple of God.
That temple is now in ruins. The grand end of Christianity is to restore that
temple, to clear away the rubbish that conceals its glory. From the
contemplation of existing ruin, glance at the ideal of future restoration,--its
amplitudes, its completeness, its perpetuity. How can the vision be realised?
If, looking at the disproportion of the agency, there comes over the heart the
painful impression of inadequacy, and the corresponding, the contingent apathy
of despair, then listen to the spirit: stirring voice of the text, Not by
might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts.” We are not to
conclude that weakness is at all necessarily connected with this influence of
the Spirit. The laws that determine the nature and regulate the action of this
power of the mind. It must be cognate in kind to that on which it acts. Again,
mind is responsible; and to be so must be free. Anything therefore that moves
it must not interfere with its liberty of choice or its freedom of judgment.
Again, mind is infinitely, constitutionally diversified. Its idiosyncrasies are
endless, and, under the influence of a spiritual power, we have reason to
expect full tolerance of such varieties, and that no attempt will be made to
reduce all into dull uniformity. We are not to interpret the text as teaching
that the Spirit is to act independently of, and unconnected with, human agency.
The power of coercion, our Gospel leaves to error or secularised systems. The
philosophy of the Cross, nevertheless, continually associates Divine power and
human agency. In its moral canons and apparatus, the energy of God does not
supersede the activity of man; nor is the activity of man efficient without the
energy of God. These remarks lead to the proposition of the text, that no
human, no created instrumentality, which acts independently and alone, is
adequate to the restoration of the fallen temple; but that the Spirit of the
Lord of hosts provides the sole efficient energy for the conversion of the
world. I recognise the adaptation of truth, scriptural truth, to the nature and
necessities of man. That adaptation is universal. Biblical truth is entirely
accommodated to our condition and character. Let truth be admitted to the heart
and it must conquer. Undoubtedly it must. But a prior question exists, how is
it to obtain admission there? The avenues are blocked up by sin.
1. Now it is fair to reason for the truth of a principle from the
necessary inconsistencies of its opposite, to urge anomalies irreconcilable,
except on the supposition of the accuracy of the assertion before us. Consider
then these anomalies. It will be generally granted that in similar
circumstances uniformity of cause will be accompanied with uniformity of
result. If, accordingly, in the evangelical plan no power beyond the human is
at work, similar external energy will issue in similar results. Yet such is not
our experience. If dependent on human power, the Gospel will be most successful
when preached by the most eloquent men. The skill of an advocate often
compensates for the hollowness of the cause. But if the measure of real
ministerial success be the conversion of souls to God, the most logical and
eloquent preachers of the Gospel are not the most successful. Again, the Bible
contains a system of pure ethics. We might expect the most cordial reception of
this system from the purest moralists when and where it is ever propounded. All
history attests the reverse.
2. Another train of illustration unfolds itself in analogy. The
emblems of conversion are not more numerous and varied than they are one in,
indirectly but really, tracing all the results of the Gospel to the power of
the Spirit of God. What we want is a ministry thrilled into life by God’s
Spirit, and thrilling men into vigorous, healthy, sustained life, by the same
Spirit, superinduced by faith and prayer.
3. Coincident with this conclusion is the experience of the Church,
not only in its more ordinary and routine movements, but in its epochs that
stand out in bold relief. Consider then the history of the modern revived
Church. Consider the relative success of the preaching of our Lord and of His
apostles. Conclude by appeal to scriptural assertion. The Spirit then is the
power with which the Church is to be armed. (Thomas Archer, D. D.)
Independence of Christianity
God’s first and greatest object is His own glory. This is true in
the general of the great acts of God, this is equally true in the minutiae of
them. God is jealous of His own honour; He will not suffer even His Church to
be delivered in such a way as to honour men more than God; He will take to
Himself the throne without a rival.
I. Not by might.
“Might” properly signifies, the power of a number of men combined together.
“Power” signifies the prowess of a single individual. Treat might as meaning
might collectedly.
1. Collected might in human armies. The Church can neither be
preserved, nor can its interests be promoted by human armies. The progress of
the arms of a Christian nation is not the progress of Christianity.
2. Might may signify great corporations or denominations of men.
There never ought to have been any denominations at all. They may do some good,
but they do a world of mischief. Whenever a denomination begins to get too
great, God will cut away its horns, and take away its glory, till the world
shall say, “It is not by might nor by power.”
II. Nor by power,
that is, individual strength. The greatest works that have been done have been
done by the ones. Take any church, there are multitudes in it, but it is some
two or three that do the work. Individual effort is, after all, the grand
thing. Learning is useful, so is eloquence; but God does not work by these His
great works.
III. By the Spirit
of God. What a magnificent change would come over the face of Christendom if
God were on a sudden to pour out His Spirit as He did on the day of Pentecost.
The grand thing the Church wants at this time is God’s Holy Spirit. Whatever
faults there may be in our organisation, they can never materially impede the
progress of Christianity, when once the Spirit of the Lord is in our midst. Be
in earnest in praying for this. All we want is the Spirit of God. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
A work beyond human ability
I. As implying
some important propositions.
1. That many things which it is our duty to attempt evidently lie
beyond human powers.
2. We have reason to expect that God will grant the necessary aid
while we use the means which are in our power.
3. God communicates spiritual aid in a manner concealed from human
observation.
4. These invisible operations of the Holy Spirit do not supersede
human agency, nor alter, in general, the connection between cause and effect.
5. God uses men and means in such a way as to leave no doubt to whom
the accomplishment is owing.
II. As suggesting
some useful admonitions.
1. The words convey instruction. They throw great light on events
which have occurred, for which historians have not been able to assign an
adequate reason.
2. A lesson of reproof. Some lay great stress on human means and do
not look for the influences of the Spirit.
3. A lesson of encouragement. We are too apt to despise “the day of
small things.” God acts by degrees. The kingdom of God is as a mustard seed,
but that can grow into a great tree. (C. Jerram, M. A.)
The triumph of the Divine kingdom
So much is in the hands of providence that, in general, we can
only conjecture what may be the result. In proportion as events are dependent
on the will of God, they are uncertain to us.
I. The Most High
has clearly promised in His Word, that the kingdom of Christ shall ultimately
prevail over the earth. The religious history of the world presents a threefold
aspect.
1. We may regard man in the state into which he was plunged by the
first transgression; obnoxious to the wrath of the Most High., and distant from
Him. Men divide into two classes:--those who forget God altogether, and the
Jews to whom were committed the oracles of God.
2. To the head of the Jewish people it was promised, “In Thee shall
all the nations of the earth be blessed.”
3. These promises formed part of the joy set before the Redeemer, by
which He was stimulated in His work of self-denial.
II. God has
enjoined it as a duty on His Church to endeavour to promote this end. The
inspired writers derived this notion from two sources.
1. Express commands.
2. The principle on which those commands went. The appointment of a
Christian ministry implies this duty.
III. The Most High
has communicated to the Church adequate means for accomplishing this end. We do
not now need the aid of miracles. Our power lies in the presence and impulse of
the Spirit of truth.
IV. We may
anticipate the period when the kingdom shall be fully established. Some hopeful
signs are--
1. An increasing respect for the Word of God.
2. A more general appeal to the great converting principle of the
Word of God.
3. A universal endeavour to pay the debt of obligation to the diffusion
of the Word of God.
4. Much success has already attended the labours of
Christians, and this shows how God smiles on the rising energies of His Church.
5. The hopeful state of the Church as the administrator of truth in
the present day. If the Spirit of the Christian religion live in our minds, we
shall want no exhortation to advance a cause like this. (W. Wilson, A. M.)
The necessity of the Holy Spirit’s aid
The sentiment here recorded refers to the building of the second
temple. When the prophet contemplated the difficulties that lay in the way of
the accomplishment of this great design, the magnitude of the work, the
obstacles to be overcome, and the insignificance of man’s best energies, he was
ready to despair. But the assurance came to him that the work should certainly
be accomplished, but not by man’s might, only in the power of the Spirit of
God.
I. A negative
proposition. “Not by might,” can any design be brought to a successful issue.
Illustrate by recalling some of the great occurrences which have taken place in
the history of the world, and which declare this incontrovertible truth.
History of Tyre, Babylon, Assyrian attack on Israel, degradation of Rome, story
of Spanish Armada, French Revolution, etc.
II. An affirmative
proposition. Illustrate some instances of the success which attends spiritual
exertions sustained amid prayers, and blessed by the presence of the Spirit of
God. Noah, the only righteous man in the world at that period of prevailing
sin. Success of Joshua when Moses’ hands were held up. Success of the Apostles.
Reformation of Luther. Triumphs of missionaries. This principle of dependence
on the Spirit applies to our reading the Word of God, and to the mode of a
sinner’s acceptance before God. (John Cumming, D. D.)
The work o] the Holy Spirit
The primary application of these words was to the Jews who were
engaged upon the great work of rebuilding their temple. Because they could not
depend upon themselves, the Lord, in these words addressed to Zerubbabel,
opened a better resource. It was not “by might nor by power” that they were to
succeed, but by His Spirit. Now the Spirit, whereby God helped the Jews in
their necessity, was the very same Spirit which, from the commencement, has
been concerned in all that regards the well-being of man, and the government of
this lower world. He “moved upon the face of the waters.” Upon the world thus
created through the eternal Spirit, the work of redemption was to be carried
out and accomplished. We do not marvel that the Lord Jesus, on entering upon
the great work of His ministry, received a visible communication of that same
Spirit; and through that same Spirit He offered Himself a sacrifice unto God.
The Holy Spirit does not now descend for miraculous operations in the Church.
But the promise of the Holy Spirit is a perpetual promise. And it is necessary
for the whole Christian community.
I. The influence
of the Spirit in bringing about the acceptance of the Gospel. The Apostles and
first missionaries had to encounter difficulties of every shape and character.
Where did they get the wisdom which their adversaries were not able to gainsay
or confute? How were they enabled to speak those gracious words which never
failed? It was through the Spirit of God. We do not confine these marvellous interpositions
of the Spirit to apostolical times. The Spirit has always accompanied the Word
with power.
II. The influence
of the Holy Spirit in carrying forward the work of sanctifying and likeness
unto God. After our conversion we must count upon many a long and weary day of
trial and temptation, and spiritual conflict, and heart distress. If we would
take a deeper insight into the things of God, we must ask the Holy Spirit to
take of the things of Jesus and show them unto us. Our enemies may be overcome,
because greater is He who is with us than all who can be against us. It is
promised that we shall be “strengthened with might by the Spirit in the inner
man.” And the consolation of a Christian man’s heart comes direct from the
influence of the Holy Spirit. And what is true concerning the individual is
true concerning the great Christian body. When the Church is despised and
persecuted and everywhere spoken against, God puts forth His interposing arm,
delivers His people, and comforts them, confirming the truth of His ancient
word, “Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts.”
(E. Robins, M. A.)
The might and power of God’s Spirit demonstrated
Our subject is, the Spirit’s influence on the human mind.
I. The necessity
of Spiritual influence. Considering the varied moral effects of the fall, we
may ask, can any less powerful agent than the Spirit of God reorganise our
faculties, and adduce harmony, loveliness, and order, out of the confusion that
prevails within us? No one can savingly know the truth and be really holy, but
as taught of God and sanctified by the Holy Spirit.
II. The nature of
Spiritual influence. We are not called upon to explain the mode or manner of
the Spirit’s operation on the human mind. The fact is sufficient for our
purpose. The value of the agency will correspond with the nature of the agent.
Agreeable to His high and essential excellence will be the Holy Spirit’s work.
The Spirit’s work should not be thought of as miraculous, Influence only of an
ordinary and necessary kind do we contend for, and that only in an ordinary
way, and the use of ordinary means. It is--
1. Quickening in its nature, “The Spirit that quickeneth.”
2. It is enlightening.
3. It is renewing.
4. It is sanctifying.
5. It is consoling.
6. It is assuring.
III. The evidence of
Spiritual influence. The tree is known by its fruits, so also is the Holy
Ghost. His fruits are “love, joy, peace,” etc. An immediate effect of
supernatural agency will be, a deep and humbling conviction of sin. Another will
be,--a ceaseless restlessness till mercy and forgiveness be obtained. A third
will be,--a supreme valuation of Jesus Christ. A fourth will be,--a prevailing
desire to be holy. (W. Mudge.)
A law of Divine operations among men
A rule upon which the eternal God acts in the affairs of
His people. The law is this,--that not human energy nor resources but the
Spirit produces good; that not man but God gives success. Recall some
illustrations of this law.
1. In the circumstances in which it was given. The builders of the
second temple were disheartened and hindered. Their power was gone; they were
taught to look to the Divine power which would work through them.
2. In the operations of the third Person in the Trinity upon the
Church. Its progress has always been due, not to human might and power, but to
the Holy Ghost.
3. The effect of the truth upon the heart of man is not of man, it is
of God.
4. The advancement of Divine life in the soul is in accordance with
the same rule. It becomes then the duty of believers to depend on the Holy
Spirit at all times for success. Reliance on the Holy Spirit for producing
spiritual effects is the rule for Christians. To lose sight of this rule brings
a blight upon efforts however earnest. This reliance will act in a twofold way;
it will hinder any resting or boasting in lawful human resources; and it will
give encouragement where there is little human resource. Faith in the power of
the Holy Ghost will inspirit men, will shed new light upon their humble path,
will put new vigour into their exertions, and will make them bold for God
according to their measure, their capacity, and their means. And a pressing
necessity arises for continual prayer that the Spirit may be given. While you
seek more of the Spirit for yourself, pray earnestly that the gift may be
bestowed on others. (Forster G. Simpson, B. A.)
The Word of the Lord to Zerubbabel
The vision seen by the prophet Zechariah in this chapter is
evidently descriptive of the spiritual character and strength of the Church of
God, shining with a communicated light, and sustained by a communicated
strength perpetually supplied. We dwell on the interpretation of it. We are
told--
1. The false grounds of confidence which are to be rejected. “Might
and power” include all earthly means and human instrumentality. The powers of
reasoning, the exhibition of truth, or the force of argument, are not to be
despised or neglected. It is the trusting to them, the resting in them, or the
boasting of them, that is to be, and must be, utterly rejected if we would look
for the favour and blessing of Almighty God. If we may not trust to the
strength of mason, or the force of truth, neither may we to the powers of
oratory. The gifts of oratory or eloquence are lovely and excellent, but
trusted in, or gloried in, they become snares and stumbling blocks, drawing
away the heart and affections from Christ, and converting our acts of worship
into an idolatrous service. Every Christian has his own peculiar sphere of
influence with which to serve and honour God. But all brought under such
influence must beware lest they rest in it and go no farther. Religion must be
a personal concert. Then there are those who imagine that they love the truth,
because they love those who profess it. A religion based on such grounds is not
to be trusted. When the Spirit of God is not the author of the work, it cannot
stand trial, even in this world.
2. The only source of spiritual prosperity. There are three
particulars in which the work of the Spirit may be distinguished. In transforming
the character. In overcoming the world. In glorifying the grace of God.
3. The certainty of these effects of the Spirit’s work issuing in the
glory of the grace of God. That which God only can effect, to God only can be
attributed. To bring man back again to His own likeness is God’s own work, for
the manifestation of His almighty power, the revelation of His infinite love,
and the perfection of His eternal praise; when, the holy temple completed, the
top stone shall be brought forth with shoutings of, “Grace, grace unto it.” (J.
M. Wilde, B. A.)
Opposition to the Gospel in every age
The opposition made to the building of the temple in that age may
be considered as emblematical of the opposition made to the Gospel of Jesus
Christ in the hearts of men and in the world. By the “Spirit of the Lord” we
may understand Divine power generally, or the Holy Ghost. The proposition to
illustrate is, that the existence and prevalence of religion in the heart and
in the world are not owing to human power but wholly to the Holy Ghost. If it
were the result of human power, then--
1. Men of great learning and talents would be the first to embrace
the Gospel. Their talents and learning seem to qualify them in a peculiar
manner for investigating the evidences of the truth of religion. We reasonably
expect that they will be the first to receive with meekness, humility, and
gratitude, every doctrine which the Bible reveals. How different the actual
facts are! The majority of men of talents and learning have either rejected the
Bible or treated it with scorn. And the comparatively ignorant and unlearned
have become “wise unto salvation.” How shall we account for this difference?
Never, without taking into account the work of the Holy Ghost.
2. If religion in the heart were by might and by power, then those
who are decent and moral would be the first to embrace the Gospel. To all the
duties of the second table they pay strictest attention. To such it might be
supposed that the Gospel would be exceedingly acceptable. Then there are
persons who seem utterly careless and dead; to all appearance they are the
children of perdition. And yet, contrary to all expectation, we see the decent
formalist passing smoothly to perdition; while the wicked and profane are often
“plucked as brands from the burning.”
3. If religion were by might and power, then those who hear the
ablest preachers would always be the best Christians. But facts do not
correspond with expectations. Some of the ablest preachers have laboured with
little success; while others, greatly their inferiors, have been “wise in
winning souls.” As the existence and prevalence of religion in the heart is
wholly the work of the Spirit of God; so the existence and prevalence of
religion in the world must be the fruit of the same agency. The arguments which
illustrate the one also illustrate the other. The progress of religion in the
world is just the progress of religion in a multitude of hearts. Look at the
state of the world when the Apostles of Christ were first sent forth to preach
“the Gospel of the blessed God.” The men who were sent to preach were few in
number, without learning, without wealth, without influence, without eloquence.
What rendered their work so successful? Only the power of the “Spirit of the
Lord.” In process of time superstition almost extinguished the light of the
Gospel. Corruption spread so rapidly, and diffused itself so widely, that in a
little time nothing remained of Christianity but the name. Would the
reformation have been such a power and blessing to the world without the
presence of the Spirit of the Lord? The success of modern missions is not due
to instrumentality, but to the power of the Spirit in the instrumentality. Then
let us pray for the outpouring of the Spirit of the Lord upon ourselves and upon
our missionaries. This is a matter of unspeakable importance. And let us feel a
deeper interest in the salvation of our own souls and the souls of others. Let
us be more generally, more fervently, more perseveringly, employed in prayer
for the Spirit of the Lord. (W. S. Smart.)
God’s work in man
In the work of God in the heart, and for the work of God in our
lives, we require the operation of God’s Holy Spirit. Man is continually
seeking and claiming for Himself independence. But they are happy, and they
alone are happy, who can commit all their ways unto the Lord their God whether
we are converted or unconverted, we must be inhabited by some spirit.
I. The necessity
for a spiritual agency. This arises--
1. From man’s wants on earth. He needs life. By nature he is dead,
“dead in trespasses and sins.” How is spiritual life to be obtained? It must be
the effect of God’s sovereign mercy, by the operation of His Holy Spirit. But
man wants light as well as life. He is dark by nature. By the fall his understanding
became darkened, and he requires to have that understanding renewed, before he
can in any wise comprehend the plain and simple truth which concerns his
everlasting peace. Men continue walking in that same darkness in which they
were originally created. None but the Holy Spirit of God enlightens man. But if
man wants light and life, so also does he require love, because by nature he is
at enmity with God. “The carnal mind is enmity against God.” Again, man
requires health, for he is spiritually sick. This also comes by the Spirit. Man
requires confidence in God, for by nature he distrusts God.
2. We require the Holy Spirit for our admission into heaven.
II. The results
which follow from this spiritual agency. There is security for us amid all the
trials and temptations of this life. The subject suggests to us the greatest
encouragement in the midst of our many difficulties. The road to everlasting
life is beset with difficulties. Who shall be able to overcome these “many
adversaries”? None but they who have the Spirit of God working with them.
Address those who are disheartened in the endeavour to live the Christian life.
Do not attempt to serve God with a half-hearted service; the failure will be as
complete in itself as it will be miserable and wretched to you. Be decided, if
you are really seeking to be God’s children. Are any of you trying to hinder
the work of God in others? Remember, there is One above who sees all the
malice, perceives all the enmity, and considers that any opposition offered to
His children is offered to Himself. (H. M. Villiers, M. A.)
God’s modes of working
When Zerubbabel was ready to bend before the interruption of his
work, his heart was greatly encouraged to persevere in the arduous undertaking
by the assurance that through God’s special interposition and grace the work
should be carried forward to a happy and honourable termination, till at last
he should bring forth “the headstone thereof with shouting, Grace, grace unto
it.” The expression “Not by might,” etc., intimates that God will carry on and
complete His work, as He had begun their deliverance from Babylon, not by
external force, but by the internal influence of His Spirit upon the minds of
men.
I. Observations
for illustrating the text.
1. It is usual for God to bring most important and stupendous results
out of causes apparently trivial and unimportant.
2. The words of text imply God’s accomplishment--of the most gracious
designs by the weakest and most insignificant instruments.
3. That it is our duty to attempt many things which evidently lie
beyond human power.
4. God will grant the necessary aid while we employ the means that
are in our power.
II. Practical
inferences from the subject.
1. That ministers should preach the Gospel with an humble and
confidential dependence on the cooperation of the Spirit to crown their labours
with success.
2. This subject administers reproof to those who pervert it into an
argument for carnal sloth and security.
3. Learn not to despise the day of small things. As in the natural,
so in the moral world, the progress of God’s power is often hid from our view;
but still, is it making no advancement? The Spirit of God is again moving on
the face of the deep, preparatory to a new creation. (James Hay, D. D.)
The only power that can set the world right
An infidel, who was also a well-known socialist marked down by the
police, entered a meeting of the Salvation Army in Switzer land to make
satirical remarks for a Constantinople paper, but during the meeting he was
moved by the power of God, and at the close, with tears running down his
cheeks, he said, “Ah, I believed in dynamite to set the world right, but now I
see there’s another power, and the only one.”
The Spirit of the Lord
It was the mission of Zechariah to stimulate the courage of God’s
people, to kindle again the enthusiasm for the temple and the theocracy with
which they had set out from Babylon. Opposition from their foes, the enormity
of the task of restoring the temple, and the necessity of providing homes for
themselves, had broken their courage, and diverted them from contemplation of
their great spiritual destiny. They must be brought again to the deep
theocratic feeling cherished among their fathers of old. The Lord’s message to
Israel through Zechariah was communicated to the prophet in a series of eight
visions. It was a hard lesson for these returned exiles, this lesson of
implicit trust in God. The nation was just awaking out of a long night, in
which God seemed to have abandoned them. They were little practised in seeing
the invisible. Like Elisha’s servant, they needed to have their eyes opened to
perceive the mountains of Jerusalem “full of horses and chariots of fire” round
about the Lord’s chosen. The tendency of our times is away from all special
reliance on the Spirit of God. Relatively, we have too great faith in secondary
causes. To build a temple, you need only a competent architect, a good
contractor, and a good force of masons. If opposition is threatened, simply
provide yourself with a sufficient police force. Such is men’s creed now. We
glorify organisation. We deify law. We apotheosise the practical. We are
witnessing a revival of the heretical belief in salvation by works. If it was
necessary for James to say, “Faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being
alone,” it is necessary for us to say, Work, if it hath not faith, is dead,
being alone. We give up our inspiration for institutions. We lose the Spirit of
God in elaborately designed methods for His operation. The intellectual, the
practical, the spiritual; this is the order of importance according to the
judgment of many contemporaries. Few things, therefore, could be of more
importance to the religious life of today than this message of Zechariah to the
returned exiles. However truly and clearly seers and prophets may still
apprehend God, the life of thousands goes on nowadays in practical atheism. And
the infection has spread to the churches. Witness the almost frantic efforts of
some among them to keep themselves alive. Having insensibly withdrawn from the
sources of vital piety their only recourse is the process of artificial
respiration. We need schooling in the science of spiritual dynamics and
economics. That this thought may assume greater definiteness, let me specify
some of the lessons which the vision of Zechariah has for us. I mention, out of
many, three--
I. The proper
relation of God’s Spirit to the Church is a vital one. Philosophically
considered, the main conceptions of God which have been current in the
religious progress of the race are two: God as transcendent above the world,
and God as immanent in the world. The one erects a throne for the Ruler of the
universe somewhere above the sky, and worships Him from afar. It reached its
extreme form among the Deists of the last century, who denied all interference
on the part of God in the affairs of the world. It was the dominant, though not
the only conception of God among the Jews before the coming of Christ, which
helps to account for the formality and barrenness of their religion. Nothing so
robs religion of its transforming and sustaining power as the drawing of its
sanctions from some distant sphere, and the deferring of its rewards to some
future age. The other conception--that God is immanent in the world--finds its
best exposition in the literature of Pantheism, and has had expression and
adherents ever since the time of the Vedic hymns. It reaches its extreme form
in the view, still current, which denies to God personality, and identifies Him
with the forces which upbear and impel the world. Both these conceptions are
found--though not in their extreme forms--in the Bible. The New Testament
doctrine of the Holy Spirit may be regarded as the evangelical counterpart of
the philosophical doctrine of immanence. The New Testament teaching here is
summarised for us in the fulfilment, in Acts 2:17, of the prophecy of Joel. God
would no longer be confined above the sky, or by the walls of a single
building, or by the lines which separate the nations. He would come out into
the open, so to speak, and be seen everywhere. He would make every place sacred
by His presence. The universe, and no longer a booth of skins or a house of
cedar, would be His dwelling place This dispensation of the Spirit began on the
day of Pentecost. In it the Gospel assumes its universal character and
function. But the New Testament does not say that the Holy Spirit abides in the
world and world forces in such a sense as to become one with them. In the
ministry of the Holy Spirit God is still a person different from us and from
His world, but He is no longer remote. With Paul we are thrilled with the awe
of a great, tender reverence when we reflect that “He is not far away from any
one of us; for in Him we live and move and have our being.” I know of no more
blighting heresy than the practical denial among us of this New Testament and
Old Testament teaching concerning the presence of God’s Spirit in His world, in
His Church, as a vital blessed and mighty equipment for life’s battles and
duties.
II. God’s Spirit is
the Church’s only proper equipment for service. The presence of God’s Spirit
for defence and for aggression was the burden of Zechariah’s message to
Zerubbabel. God is our defence. It is said that William Penn was the only
colonist in America who left his settlement wholly unprotected by fence or
arms, and that his was the only one which was unassailed by the Indian tribes.
The first Christians depended in a peculiar manner upon the Holy Spirit for
protection and leadership, and with the result that they were delivered from
the hands of persecutors. History affords no more striking enforcement of
Zechariah’s message: “Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the
Lord of hosts.”
III. God’s Spirit,
appropriated by prayer, is now intended to operate through all believers. In
the time of Zechariah, God’s Spirit wrought His will by means of special
representatives. The olive trees supplied the oil to the candelabrum. Only, the
anointed ones were in full measure supplied with the Spirit. But when Joel’s
prophecy was fulfilled the Lord poured out His Spirit upon all flesh. It was a
new epoch in the spiritual progress of mankind. God wills now to operate
directly, without mediation, upon the hearts and minds of all believers. What
matters it, however, if while we are within reach of strength we elect to
continue in all our old weakness? The nearness of God does not ensure that we
shall, in spite of ourselves, personally feel the thrill and joy of His
strength. Prayer is a condition to this. Through prayer the very air about us
may be charged with God, so as to bear us up like eagles in electric clouds.
Closer than our breath is God with His Almighty Spirit and grace. Before
Franklin’s experiment for harnessing the lightning the air was as full of
electricity as it is today, but men did not know how to appropriate it. A
battery may be charged with electric fire, but you must make your connections
to get the power. We need to gear our personal lives and our church work on the
Power which moves the world. Then shall we see a revolution in spiritual
commerce and economics which will speedily bring in the completed kingdom that
was the hope of Zechariah and the inspiration of His message to Zerubbabel. We
make this connection by prayer. Pray in faith, and there shall quiver along
every fibre of your being a thrill of the life, light, and might of God. (E.
M. Poteat.)
Verses 7-9
Who art thou, O great mountain
The temple of God built amidst difficulties
I.
THE
SEEMING DIFFICULTIES IN OUR LORD’S WAY. Solomon raised his goodly structure in
quiet. Joshua and Zerubbabel had difficulty after difficulty to overcome. Turn
to the Lord Jesus. What difficulties were there in His way when He first
undertook to build God’s temple in heaven! He had--
1. To introduce sinners into heaven; to bring those near to God, who
were among the farthest from Him.
2. He had to prepare sinners for heaven. The Lord the Redeemer has to
work to the very last against the bias of nature, and the power of nature’s
lusts. Consider how many of such men He has to work on and change before His
task can be completed. He has to bring “many sons unto glory.” Remember where this
work is to be done. In a world where there is everything to obstruct, and
really nothing to aid it. It is to be accomplished too against all the powers
of darkness. It cannot be done in an hour, or a day, or a year.
II. The ease and
completeness with which the Redeemer o`vercomes the difficulties before Him.
This is more strongly expressed in the abrupt language of the original, than in
our translation “Who art thou?” There is no surprise or ignorance implied in
this question. There is something like derision and contempt in it. The
question expresses at once His own dignity, and the insignificance in His sight
of the obstacles opposed to Him; His own almighty power and their utter
impotence. Here lies one of the hardest lessons we have to learn in practical
Christianity--to see the difficulties of salvation, and not be discouraged by
them; to see the hills before us and around us, and yet to feel sure that the
Lord will carry us over them.
III. The means
whereby the Lord Jesus carries on His great work. Christianity has been
established in the world without the world’s aid, by means which have seemed
most unlikely to establish it. Its very existence in the world at this moment
is one of the greatest moral wonders the world ever saw. The Lord Jesus fits us
for heaven by means of His Spirit. “Not by might, nor by power, but by My
Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts.” Observe then here how jealous God is for the
honour of the Holy Ghost. In looking to the Lord Jesus as our sanctifier, we
must not overlook the Holy Spirit. He sanctifies us by this Spirit.
IV. The effect
which will be produced by the completion of Christ’s work. God’s present
dealings with our world will not go on forever. There is a day coming when all
His purposes of mercy towards it will be accomplished. The completion as spoken
of under the figure of bringing forth and putting on the top or headstone of a
building. This, in Eastern countries, was generally done with much ceremony,
and in the presence of many beholders. With such a prospect before us, well may
we ask with this prophet, “Who hath despised the day of small things?” As for
the Church of Christ, let us learn to be ashamed of our fears concerning it. (C.
Bradley, M. A.)
Salvation secure
Treat the text as designed to encourage the believer in the
assurance of his final salvation, in strong confidence of continuing and
upholding power, to be vouchsafed to him.
I. The honor of
God is concerned in a persuasion of our final safety.
1. In all spiritual temples the command to build, and the means to
build, and the laying the foundation for the building, originate solely with
God Himself. How unlikely then that God should forsake the work of His own
hands. God is the author of that spiritual temple which is to be raised from
the ruins of our degraded humanity. Man is as powerless to work a change in his
own spiritual affections as he is to fix a new sun in the heavens, or to divert
the course of the trackless deep.
2. The honour of God is concerned in the accomplishment of this work,
by the multiplied succours which He has provided for carrying it on. We
discover a constant regard to a law of progression. Whether God be ripening a
blade of grass, or forming a world from the shapeless void, there is to be a
beginning, a continuance, and an end. The building up of the soul into a holy
temple in the Lord is no exception to this law. God will take His own time, and
work in His own way.
II. The building of
this temple will redound to the glory of Christ. Zerubbabel is a type of
Christ.
1. There is a promise on the part of Christ to His people, that He
will work in them all needful grace to keep them faithful unto the end.
2. Christ is concerned in our final victory, because the believer’s
triumphs form an integral part of His own. Conclusion--
The building of the spiritual temple
Zerubbabel is a type of a far greater builder than himself, and
the temple of Zerubbabel is a shadow of a far nobler temple. Zerubbabel is a
type of Him “whom God hath exalted from among the people,” to build His
spiritual temple; and the temple of Zerubbabel is a type of that Church, which
is “built on the foundation of the Apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself
being the chief cornerstone”; of which every true Christian is a lively, that
is, a living stone; and in which all are builded together, for a habitation of
God through the Spirit. Each converted Christian is a temple of God by the
Spirit, and like the temple of Zerubbabel, is honoured by the indwelling God as
His abode. Christians are spoken of in Scripture as living stones of one great
spiritual temple (as well as each being a separate temple). The manner in which
the separate stones of Solomon’s temple were prepared was striking and
remarkable. While that temple was in building, no sound of axe or hammer was
heard. Of the glorious temple to the Lord--a temple built of ransomed and
purified souls, of deathless and sinless bodies--our Lord Jesus Christ is the
chief builder. And He “will not fail nor be discouraged,” until He has erected
His spiritual building on God’s eternal hill of Zion. But He uses instruments.
He has His fellow labourers. He directs their work. The whole plan is in His
mind. To His ministers he gives “diversities of operations” by the same Spirit.
It is the conviction that our great Master is with His servants, even unto the
end of the world, that supports and cheers them under difficulties that would
otherwise overwhelm them. (W. Weldon Champneys, M. A.)
His hands shall also
finish it--
The founder and finisher of the temple
Zerubbabel is very little more than a grotesque name to most Bible
readers. He was a prince of the blood royal of Israel, and the civil leader of
the first detachment of returning exiles. The words of the text are, in their
plain original meaning, the prophetic assurance that the man, grown an old man
by this time, who had been honoured to take the first spadeful of soft out of
the earth, should be the man “to bring forth the headstone with shoutings of
grace, grace unto it!” I take them to be a Messianic prophecy. This Zerubbabel
was a prophetic person. What was true about him primarily is thereby shown to
have a bearing upon the greater Son of David who was to come thereafter, and
who was to build the Temple of the Lord.
I. There is here,
a large truth as to Christ, the true temple builder. “I am Alpha and Omega,”
etc. All the letters are from Him, and He underlies everything. That is true
about Creation, in the broadest and in the most absolute sense. “He is the
beginning, and in Him all things consist.” He is the Beginner and the Finisher
of the work of redemption, which is His only, from its inception to its
accomplishment. Jesus makes a new beginning; He presents a perfectly fresh
thing in the history of human nature. Just as His coming was the introduction
into the heart of humanity of a new type, the second Adam, the Lord from
heaven, so the work that He does is all His own. He does it all Himself. The
text declares that all through the ages His hand is at work. “Shall also finish
it”--then he is labouring at it now. We have to think of a Christ who is
working on and on, steadily and persistently. A work begun, continued, and
ended by the same immortal hand is the work on which the redemption of the
world depends.
II. We have here
the assurance of the triumph of the Gospel. There were many who were ready to
throw cold water on the works of Zerubbabel. The text is the cure for all
hopeless calculations by us Christian people, and by other than Christian
people. When we begin to count up resources, and to measure these against the work
to be done, there is little wonder that good men and bad men sometimes concur
in thinking that the Gospel of Jesus Christ has very little chance of
conquering the world. That is perfectly true, unless you take Him into the
calculation, and then the probabilities are altogether different. He renews and
purifies the corrupted Church, and He lives forever. When Brennus conquered
Rome, and the gold for the city’s ransom was being weighed, he clashed his
sword into the scale to outweigh the gold. Christ’s sword is in the scale, and
it weighs more than the antagonism of the world and the active hostility of
hell.
III. Here is
encouragement for despondent and timid Christians. Jesus Christ is not going to
leave you halfway across the bog. That is not His manner of guiding us. He
began and He will finish. If the seed of the kingdom is in our hearts, He will
watch over it, and He will bless the springing thereof. Be of good cheer, only
keep near the Master, and let Him do what He desires to do for us all.
IV. Here is a
striking contrast to the fate which attends all human workers. Few of us are
happy enough to begin and finish any task, beyond the small ones of our daily
life. Authors die with half finished books. No man starts an entirely fresh
line of action; he inherits much from the past. No man completes a great work
that he undertakes. Coming generations, if it is one of the great historical
works of the world, work out its consequences for good or evil. We have to be
contented to do our little bit of work that will fit in along with that of a
great many others. How many hands does it take to make a pin? We have to be
content to be parts of a mighty whole. Multiplication of joy comes from
division of labour. So let us do our little bit of work, and remember that
whilst we do it, He is doing it in us for whom we are doing it, and let us
rejoice to know that at the last we shall share in the “joy of our Lord,” when
He sees of the travail of His soul, and is satisfied. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Reasons against pessimism
Those Hebrew prophets were thorough optimists. No matter how great
the desolation which was around them, no matter how deep the degradation into
which the people had fallen, no matter how dark the prospect, they told of a
glory to follow. Their words are charged with hope. They summoned languid,
desponding souls to courageous action. They never hung their harp upon the
willows. In the presence of error, evil, idolatry there is no quailing, no
craven cry of fear, but a tone of almost contemptuous defiance. Can the force
of contempt go further? “Moab is my washpot,”--I will wash my hands in Moab.
“Over Edom I will fling my old shoe.” It is so here. This young Zechariah is
perhaps the most hopeful of all the prophets. He calls upon the daughter of
Zion to sing and rejoice. The holy city, which has been despoiled, shall become
so vast that no angel can measure it, and God shall be a wall of fire round
about it, and the glory in the midst of it. In this chapter he seeks to
encourage Zerubbabel in the great work of rebuilding the temple. A mighty
mountain of hindrance bars his way. But by this most suggestive vision the
prophet assures him that he shall be aided in his work by the mysterious energy
of God. Perhaps there never was an age when the servants of Christ were more
exposed to dejection, or when it was more incumbent upon them to maintain an
undaunted and confident spirit. Pessimism is in the air. It fills our
literature with a wailing cry. As Goethe said: “Men write as if they were all
ill, and the whole world a lazaretto.” There is a deep undertone of sadness in
the life of our times. The culture of the age is mournful. One may well ask, Is
this “metric England”? The number of suicides in this country during the past
thirty years has risen from 65 per million to 79. In London it is 85, in Paris
422. Now, pessimism is the legitimate outcome of unbelief. If man is a bubble,
soon to be pricked by death, how can he be glad? Men are congratulating the
world that faith is dying; but they will find, if it dies, that some other
things, which they would fain keep, have disappeared too. But if pessimism is
proper to unbelief, it ought to have no place in the minds of Christian men.
What are the reasons against pessimism? What reasons have we for declaring that
it will be laid low?
I. First of all,
it is alien to human nature. The fundamental principle of pessimism is that
evil is an essential element of human nature. It is original and permanent. The
world is corrupt in its nature. The teaching of the Word of God is that sin is
an intrusion. We are often told that the Scripture view of man is too dark. It
is the only bright view of the subject. That which regards sin as natural is
horrible, and forbids hope. Sin is neither the “essence of the creature nor the
act of the Creator.” So terrible is it when it culminates, that it would be
fearful to regard it as the mere outcome of the natural working of the human
heart. What a vivid picture is that which our Lord gives of the state of man!
The human heart is a house, and living in it, ordering it, is “a strong man
armed.” Yes, sin is a mighty tyrant, but it is only a lodger. It occupies the
city of Mansoul, but it has crept in and it can be cast out. Is not this
evident from a survey of the effects of evil? It is manifestly foreign to human
nature, for it runs right athwart the interests, and cuts deep into the powers
of that nature, sapping its strength, and draining its very life blood. It is a
wrong inflicted upon the soul, not the intended outcome and expression of the
soul. It is a great hurt, a violation of law, a break in the harmony of life, a
discord in its music, a derangement of its order. The effects of sin are
eloquent of its nature. It spoils, rends, tears, maims perverts It is off “the
course of nature.” Human nature has fallen among thieves, which have robbed,
wounded it and left it half dead. Sin is not the essence of man; it is an alien
thing, it is a foreign power. Men feel it has to be accounted for, that it is
not according to the constitution of things. A belief in a fall runs through
the religions of the world. Archdeacon Wilson has well said: “The problem about
evil which has attracted the mind of man has always been enunciated as the
origin of evil. Did any one ever write an essay or vex his mind over the origin
of good? It is in the constitution of our minds to ask for a reason for
anything that is rare, exceptional, or anomalous. Why does an eclipse of the
sun take place? What is the cause of thunderstorms? But we do not often ask why
the sun gives light. Can it be that evil is so rare a phenomenon? No; the
pessimist will not admit, and the optimist will not assert, that evil is so
rare an interference that we are driven to account for it because of its
rarity. It is not because it is rare, but because we instinctively feel it is
an intruder, however common it may be. We ask for the cause of sickness, common
as it is. Health is the normal state; disease the abnormal. Sin is an
interference, a fall.”
II. Another reason
against pessimism, and a ground for hope, is to be found in the wiles and
deceptions that evil must practise before it can succeed. It pretends to be
what it is not. It palms itself off as something else. Sin only keeps its place
by deception. It is “transformed into an angel of light.” It wears the garb of
goodness, and declines to be unclothed. Nor does it wholly possess the human
soul. The noblest, most authoritative power of the soul may be cowed and
silenced, but it never consents heartily to the sway of evil. Conscience is
often like a discrowned king, whose commands are slighted, but it does not run
with the multitude of the passions to do evil. It stands solitary, apart,
issuing, however vainly, its protests. Hence sin and fear go together. The
mountain shakes and trembles, as Sinai at the voice of God. “Conscience doth
make cowards of us all.” Nor are the forces of evil so compact, so massive, so
welded together as they seem. It is well to follow the counsel which the angel
gave to the fearful Gideon--“But if thou fear to go down, go thou with Phurah
thy servant down to the host, and thou shalt hear what they say, and afterwards
shall thine hands be strengthened to go down to the host. An undefined fear
pervades the ranks of evil. There are vague presages of approaching disaster.
III. But let us
hasten on to consider the chief reason against pessimism, the highest ground
for cherishing the spirit of the text. The vision recorded in this chapter is
most beautiful and suggestive. The prophet sees a golden candelabrum, like that
which had been in the old temple, but much grander. It has a bowl on the top of
it, and beneath are seven lamps and seven pipes to the lamps, and on each side
of the bowl stands an olive tree. The prophet is taught that his help is in
God. As the lamp was supplied, not by human agency, but direct from the living
trees, so he is to learn that evil will” be overthrown and righteousness
exalted, “not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of
hosts.” The advent of Jesus Christ into this world was the coming of one
stronger than the strong man armed. It was the introduction of a new spiritual
energy, a life-giving, restoring force. His whole work, and the consequent
descent of His Spirit, show that God is on the side of man, and that the evils
which have enslaved, defiled, degraded him shall be overcome. Truth, purity,
love are on the throne of the universe. “The Lord reigneth, let the earth be
glad.” And further, we are reminded that as we seek to overcome the mountains
of evil which are in this world, we can only be qualified for our work as we
receive the power of the Holy Ghost. To trust in our own strength, to place our
dependence in men or means, to rely on ecclesiastical organisations and
auxiliaries, will entail inevitable weakness and defeat. I read the other day
of an Italian miser, who died near San Remo worth £120,000, who for years went
without stockings because he grudged paying for the washing of them. Some
Christian workers are guilty of a similar penuriousness with regard to the
spiritual treasures, the “unsearchable riches,” which are at their disposal.
Let us not be straitened in ourselves, for we are not straitened in God. Let us
be of good cheer, and cultivate a bold, buoyant optimism. And let us be clear
as to what is implied in the hope of the overthrow of evil and the
establishment of righteousness. It is not implied that the millennium will be
here in a fortnight, or that the progress of goodness is steady and uniform.
Dalliance with the world may enfeeble the churches, and they may be shorn of
their strength. Everything depends on the extent to which the Spirit of Christ
prevails among men. The great mountain of evil is a crumbling mountain. Some of
us have quailed before that mountain. Sin seems so fixed and strong. The
characteristic evils of our nature seem so inveterate. (J. Lewis.)
Verse 10
Who hath despised the day of small things?
Great results from small beginnings
This has ever been a watchword among Christians; small
beginnings are not to be despised. Apply--
I. To the
institutions of religion. Four reasons why we should not despise the day of
small things.
1. Because often the mightiest effects are produced from them, as in
the world of nature; in the world of literature; in the world of politics. So
in grace. What is it and what will it he? Yet what was its origin?
2. Because God’s vower can make the feeblest mighty for the
accomplishment of His work.
3. We never know what God intends to do by our understanding.
Prescience is not ours. Not having it, we cannot see what God will do.
4. In matters of religion, what is comparatively little is
abstractedly great. Then if you want to do much for God, do not generalise so
much. Do not be discouraged by seeing how many are unsaved, look at the one
saved.
II. To personal and
private religion. Religion is often small in its commencement--sometimes rapid,
sudden conviction, but ordinarily more slow. This day of small things may be
despised by scorn; by opposition; by neglect. First impressions are sacred;
treat them as such. The day of small things is not despised by those who best
know its value; the Father of Mercies; the Son; Angels; or Satan. It is the
pledge of greater days that are coming. Apply to ministers; parents; Sabbath
school teachers; the lately awakened. (J. Summefield, A. M.)
Small beginnings
Despondency paralyses exertion, but hope stimulates and supports
it. Despondency is never so likely to be felt as at the commencement of an
undertaking, when there are few to support it and many to oppose it; when the
beginning is so small as to excite the apprehensions of its friends and the
derision of its enemies. The Jews who returned from the Babylonish captivity
felt this when they applied themselves to the rebuilding of the temple. “Small
beginnings are not to be despised,” Consider this sentiment--
I. In application
to public institutions. The age in which we live is happily and honourably
distinguished by a spirit of religious zeal So many are the associations
throughout our country, for humane and pious purposes of every form, that
charity, where it has but a solitary offering, is almost bewildered in its
choice. Those only who have known by experience what it is to originate a new
institution, especially if it be out of the ordinary routine of Christian
effort, can form an adequate idea of the labour, patience, and heroism which
are requisite to carry it to maturity, amidst the doubts of the sceptical, the
mistakes of the ignorant, the misrepresentations of the slanderous, and the
cold and selfish calculations of the lukewarm. But still, small beginnings are
not to be despised.
1. The most wonderful effects have resulted from causes apparently
very small. Illustrate from the natural, intellectual, and political world, and
in the world of grace. Trace the cause of Protestantism to its commencement.
Contemplate the progress of Methodism. Or note the beginnings of great
missionary societies, or the Bible Society.
2. We should not despise the day of small things, because the power
of God can still render the feeblest instruments productive of the greatest
results. The feeblest preacher may be the honoured instrument of conversion,
when the most eloquent has preached in vain.
3. However discouraging appearances may be, we never know what God
really intends us to do, or to do by us. We can never look to the result of our
actions in their influence upon others. No man who devotes himself to the cause
of religious benevolence can say what use God intends to make of him, but it is
often far greater than he is aware. Illustrate by Robert Raikes, or Wesley.
4. In religion, what may seem little by comparison, is, when viewed
positively and absolutely, immensely great. We may offend against the
injunction of the text by inattention. We do not advocate an indiscriminate
precipitate zeal. Or by scorn. If the object of a scheme be good, if the means
appear adapted to the end, let it not be contemned because it is at present in
the infancy of its age, and of its strength. All that is sublime in
Christianity was once confined to a little circle of poor men and women.
Neglect is another way of sinning against the letter and spirit of the text.
Especially let those who are the principal agents in schemes of benevolence beware
of despising the day of small things. Let them not too soon sink into a state
of depression. If they have fears, they should conceal them, and exhibit only
their hopes.
II. Apply the
sentiment of the text to personal religion.
1. Religion is often small in its commencement. This is not always
the case. Sometimes a transformation of character takes place, as complete as
it is rapid. But the usual process of this great change is much more slow. The
kingdom of heaven is like a grain of mustard seed. There are many ways in which
the small beginning of personal religion may be despised. It may be ridiculed
as the fanaticism of a weak mind, or the enthusiasm of a heated imagination, or
the whim of a capricious taste. Ridicule is not unfrequently coupled with direct
opposition, Men who find laughter avails nothing are very likely to exchange it
for wrath. Neglect, however, is that which comes more immediately within the
spirit of this part of the subject. The first appearances of religion in the
soul do not always receive from others the prompt, affectionate, and skilful
attention which they demand and deserve. First impressions, unless carefully
watched, like the young buds of fruit trees in the spring, will soon fall off
from the mind and come to nothing.
2. Reasons why the day of small things ought not to be despised. It
is not despised by those who best know its importance. It is not neglected or
contemned by the Eternal Father Angels do not despise it. The beginnings of
religion lead on to great and glorious attainments. Our subject has its special
admonition to ministers, and to parents, and to Sunday-school teachers, and to
Christians generally. (John Angel James.)
The day of small things
I. Something about
God. These words show us that humility is, if I may say so, a portion of the
Divine character. He does not despise “the day of small things.” It is
impossible to find lowliness in the Divine nature in its essence, because there
is nothing upon which to base it. The life of God is a necessary life. There is
room for this virtue in the Divine actions, though not in the Divine essence.
Note the absence of ostentation in all God’s works of nature or of grace. Note
the condescension of Divine providence. Not only in its prime, m its
perfection, in its maturity, in its grand completeness, does God take delight
in the soul, but in the nascent form of undeveloped life, the very foundation
of the spiritual structure. He does not despise first beginnings; it is even
true that in the “day of small things” God especially acts.
II. Something about
small things. We despise little things, and think them beneath us. Our thoughts
and measurements are so different from God’s thoughts and measurements. And
this results from pride, which makes us think so many things beneath us, not
worthy of care and of finish. It arises also from a certain ignorance of the
value of little things. The text implies that they are important.
1. Because our life is made u of little things.
2. In their effect upon our spiritual life, because they require so
much effort.
III. Something about
ourselves.
1. It teaches us hope. God does not despise, because He sees in His
eternal mind the results.
2. We learn patience from it.
3. It must fill us with emulation. This will make us persevere and
long to make progress. (W. H. Hutchings, M. A.)
The regard of God for small beginnings, physical and spiritual
It was but a small and feeble remnant that returned from the
captivity in Babylon to rebuild Jerusalem and the temple. Their spirits broken
by slavery, their cohesion imperfect, their resources limited, their well
wishers few; the adversaries arrogant and numerous, the difficulties manifold
and dispiriting. It was as if a fraction of a swarm of bees were striving to
rebuild their hive under the ceaseless attacks of a cloud of malignant wasps or
hornets. Their souls were exceedingly filled with contempt by the scorn of
Sanballat, who cried aloud, “What do these feeble Jews? Will they revive the
stones of the temple out of the heaps of burned rubbish? If a fox shall go up
even he shall break down their stone wall.” Now this contempt of Sanballat well
represents the scorn with which the great world regards all religious
beginnings both in individual lives and in society. The notion which prevails
so wisely as to the hopes of Christians might be expressed thus: “These
aspirations of yours after union with the Infinite and Everlasting Cause, after
an indestructible life in God, are too absurd. Lift up your eyes to the
heavens, and consider their magnificence, look upon the illimitable vastness of
that celestial machinery, the number of those worlds on worlds, which shine
through the eternal darkness; and then look down on yourselves, and at mankind,
a cloud of ephemeral insects passing away. Who can believe that such ‘minims of
nature’ have any permanent relation with the universe, much less with its
Maker? Face the inevitable, and do not shrink from the nothingness which is
your doom.” The one all-sufficing answer to these degrading counsels is to be
found in the words of the prophet of the restoration. “Who hath despised the
clay of small things?” The law of the Divine action is evolution from small
beginnings, the development of all organic growths from germs, and the gradual
transformation of lower into higher forms of being. Suppose the seeds of all
the flora of the world in all its latitudes could be offered to our view in one
panoramic vision. Who could suppose, apart from experience, that out of such a
collection of black or grey or yellow dots, or tiny cones, or coloured berries,
could spring the cloud-piercing forests of the tropics, or of the American
Andes, and all the radiant glories of the flowers, shrubs, and trees of the
temperate zones? Who could believe that such a marvellous universe of lovely
form and lovelier colour lay hid under the appearance of such insignificant
beginnings? Extend the thought to the world of birds, to the development of
their airy figures and varied plumages, and places of abode, and modes of
living, all springing from invisible vital germs concealed in eggs throughout
all their uncountable millions of millions; and finally enlarge the conception
by taking in the whole animal world similarly developed. Who after such a
review could rationally despise the day of small things? It is a world
unceasingly renewed from invisible points of life--points of life developed
under a Divine pervading power into the universe of wonders that we see around
us. The visible and material is a type of the unseen. “First the seed, then the
ear, then the full corn in the ear. So is the kingdom of God.” And this leads
us directly to the Divine lessons inculcated by the prophet in the name of the
living God: “Who hath despised the day of small things?”--the lessons learned
from God Himself and His own loving procedure
1. The old Latin proverb teaches us that “great reverence is due to
the young.” Oftentimes there is very little of this shown to them. Many of the
most unpleasant qualities of children are frequently the direct result of the
infamous treatment which they receive from their elders. Try to be a sun to
your planets, not raining down on them only the cold light of instruction and
reproof, but the warmer rays of a beneficent friendship. Wise words cannot take
the place of loving deeds. Flowers must have sunshine. Souls must have
tenderness. If you “despise the day of small things” here, you despise the
foundations of the future structures of the temple of the Lord.
2. In the same manner respect the beginnings of early religion. Many
adult Christians appear to have no faith in the reality and value of early
piety. Let us never despise the day of small things, but understanding our
Lord’s regard for elementary faith and love, never be detected in breaking, as
unworthy of reliance, the bruised reed of childhood, or quenching the tiny
spark on its smoking flax.
3. In the same manner we have to learn, if ourselves established
Christians, to understand and sympathise with the imperfect development of
character in the earlier stages of adhesion to the Son of God. It would be
delightful if all Christians were suddenly struck into perfection, as a disc of
gold is struck with some heroic image on one side, and with St. George’s
victory over the dragon on the other. But it is not so. The plant of
righteousness is a growth. The temple slowly rises. The formation of the Divine
likeness is both a creative and an imitative process. Children are childish in
both worlds. But who hath despised the immature stages of development? It is as
if you enter a sculptor’s studio. You see here an almost shapeless lump of
clay; there a mass beginning to put on the human form; there a bust beginning
to speak with the lines of nobleness or beauty; there a piece of marble
undergoing the first rougher process of assimilation; there an artist at work
with hammer and chisel, striking frequent blows with passionate ardour, as said
Michael Angelo, as if he would “set free the imprisoned angel”; there the
master hand at work on his final touches, which are to breathe soul into the
stone, and beauty and life into the dead material, and to impress on it,
perhaps, a likeness which shall transmit to future ages the countenance which
overawed or delighted contemporary generations. Even so in the Church you see
souls in all stages of progress under the Supreme Artist’s touch. Learn, then,
to tolerate the defects of incipient development. We know not what we shall be,
and we see not what others will be. Simon, the passionate fisherman of
Bethsaida, became the steadfast and devoted Rock, or Petra, on which Christ has
built His Church. The Son of thunder became the Apostle of love. The ferocious
and murderous Saul became the gentle and all-embracing father of the Gentile
Churches. God only knows what He will bring out of any thing. Man can bring
light out of the blackest coal, and the colours of the rainbow in the aniline
dyes are extracted from gas tar. And so God can convert carbon into the
diamond, and souls swarming with many devils, into the “sons and daughters of
the Lord Almighty.” How hopeful as well as tolerant should such a retrospect
make us in relation to the unfinished individualities around us. We must see
the “end of the Lord” before we judge of tits work. There is but one Eye that
sees the end from the beginning, and that is the eye of the Eternal. That which
is last to our thought is first to Him. The evolutionary prospect is ever
before Him, and in looking at each creature He sees what that creature shall
become in all the stages of its future eternity. We know not what we shall be;
but we know that to despise small things now is to contradict the processes of
Divine thought, and to flout the methods of Divine procedure. Each soul is the
subject of a work which will never end, under the hand of the Omnipotent
Designer. And that which will satisfy us, when we awake in His likeness, and
will satisfy Him when He rests with delight, and sees His work to be “very
good,” in the endless Sabbath, will also satiate the desires of His
under-workmen. Oh, what will be the heaven of such a man as St. Paul! It is
this vision, in its different degrees of glory, which the Omniscient Mind sees
beforehand for all God’s servants in the eternal future; and it is because He
sees it, that He warns us never to “despise the day of small things”; because
each soul is what God sees it to be, not only now, but in its future
development. (Edward White.)
God’s blessing on the day of small things
1. God’s great mind, so infinitely above our level, does not perceive
all the distinctions we are wont to make between what we denominate great and
small. To a person greatly elevated, all below--people and buildings--appears
equally small, even so Jehovah is too high to perceive the various grades of
greatness and littleness into which we are accustomed to divide the affairs of
life.
2. It has ever been God’s plan to work from apparently small
beginnings; had He chosen He could have commanded great things at once into
existence, but He has said, “A little one shall become a thousand,” etc. (Isaiah 60:22). The great Saviour came
into the world as a weak babe: His great kingdom commenced with twelve men,
most of whom were unlearned. Mark the insignificant beginnings of modern
missions, of Sunday Schools, or of our Christian Endeavour Movement! Truly,
“God chose the foolish things of the world that He might put to shame them that
are wise; and God chose the weak things of the world that He might put to shame
the things that are strong,” etc. (1 Corinthians 1:27).
3. These who despise the day of small things will never accomplish
great works. It is dangerous and disastrous to make light of the small
beginnings of evil, sin, or bad habits. The modern scientific theory of germs
may be used as an apt illustration, showing how the neglect of even
infinitesimal atoms is the cause of so much fatal disease.
4. The tenderness of God comes out in His regard for the small and
weak. “A bruised reed He will not break, and smoking flax shall He not quench,
till He send forth judgment unto victory” (Matthew 12:20). Our Lord often referred
to the small beginnings of His kingdom, comparing them to “seeds,” “a grain of
mustard seed,” “a little leaven” (Matthew 11:1-30.). The day of small
things is the day of precious things, but we are not to be satisfied until it
becomes the day of great things.
5. Small things marked the beginning of the work in the hand of
Zerubbabel, so small was the foundation in the eyes of those who had seen the
glory of the former temple, that “they wept with a loud voice” (Ezra 3:12) at the comparison; but God
assured them that, in the latter end, its glory should be greater, inasmuch as
the Messiah Himself would stand within its walls, and His Gospel be proclaimed
therein (Acts 5:42).
6. There is great comfort here, for all depressed builders of the
spiritual temple. The work progresses so slowly, that we are often discouraged.
But let the work of grace be ever so small in Its beginnings, the plummet is in
good hands. The great Master Builder will surely accomplish that which He
begins. Jesus Christ lathe finisher as well as the author of our faith (Hebrews 12:2).
7. “God’s blessing on it” is the secret of all success. Work, great
or small, without this is utter failure. “Not by might, nor by power, but by My
Spirit, saith the Lord” (Zechariah 4:6). (E. J. B.)
Folly of despising small things
Value of little things may be seen in--
I. God’s
providential dealings with His Church. Give illustrations from both Old
Testament and New, from the Reformation, and from modem missionary societies.
II. In the
development of the inner life.
1. In the training of children.
2. In the formation of habits; both good and bad. Conclusion--
The day of small things
No doubt many of the Jews had looked with a sort of contempt on
the apparently insignificant beginning which had been made towards restoring
the religion of their fathers, and had discouraged one another by insinuating
that what commenced with so much feebleness was never likely to reach a
successful termination. They might have known better. Just because there seemed
to be but little proportion between the agency and the end, they decided at
once that success was hardly to be looked for, and that it was useless to
persevere in an endeavour so palpably hopeless. These Jews have been imitated
by men of every age. Much of the evil that exists in the world may be traced to
the despising “the day of small things.”
I. The reasons
which lie against such despising. God is wont to work through instruments or
means, which in human calculation are disproportioned to the ends which He
designs to accomplish. He does not always take what appears to us a mighty
agency, when a mighty result is to be achieved. There is in us all a tendency
to ascribe to second causes what ought to be ascribed directly to the First. It
is by the day of small things that God ordinarily interposes those great
revolutions and deliverances which alter the whole state, whether of nations or
of individuals. God ordinarily commences with what appears inconsiderable.
II. Certain cases
in which the “day of small things” is despised, with the consequences that are
thence likely to ensue. We are likely to make light of small things. Take the
case of the slave of bad habits. Few plunge immediately into evil. Most men
begin by deviating from the right in some one small particular. And it is thin
small beginning which it is perilous to despise. Observe the ordinary course
followed by God in His spiritual operations on unconverted men. They are not
for the most part to be distinguished from the operations of their own minds.
There is a small beginning of influence which it is perilous to despise. (Henry
Melvill, B. D.)
Small things
1. What are we to understand by the “day of small things”? It is the
course of God that the beginning shall be small to lead to great effects. We
see this in creation, in providence, and in grace. In many a young and tender
heart there has been just a thought, then a misgiving, then a desire, then a
prayer. And that was just the day of small things: it was the first dawning of
a bright day. When God begins the work, He carries it on in His own way,
therefore perseverance is the great mark of effectual calling. Think of those
who, though not young in years, are the weak in faith. They are always wavering
between hopes and fears. Wherever we look we may see a “day of small things.”
II. Who hath
despised it? God does not. Jesus will not despise them. Take care lest you
should be found despising it. Apply to ministers, parents, teachers. The
gradual work in souls is little discernible, but, when duly reflected on, it is
as clearly to be traced out as any other. (J. H. Evans.)
The significance of apparent trifles
I. Illustrations
from nature.
1. The seed.
2. The mountain rivulet.
3. The spark.
4. The child.
II. Illustrations
from providence.
1. Scriptural, as Joseph, Moses, David, Esther.
2. General, as Cromwell, Napoleon.
III. Illustrations
from the history of the Church.
1. Introduction of the Gospel.
2. Reformation.
3. The religious denominations.
4. Benevolent and religious institutions. (G. Brooks.)
The day of small things
It is a “day of small things” with you as regards your--
I. Conviction of
sin. How easy it is to know ourselves to be sinners, how hard to feel ourselves
to be such. We distress ourselves because it seems to us as if we could not
repent. But beware of imagining that a certain number of tears, a certain
standard of repentance is to qualify you for the blessings of Christ’s
salvation. Try yourself thus, “How do I feel with regard to sin? Have I any
desire to be rid of it in its power, as well as in its consequences? Do I feel
any real degree of hatred towards it? Do I desire to hate it?” If you can
answer in the affirmative, this is a sure proof that God’s Spirit has not
forsaken you. The Spirit’s office is to convince of sin.
II. Faith. Your cry
is, “Lord, I believe, help Thou mine unbelief.” You have no doubts as to the
power of Christ’s work; but you can scarcely believe there is salvation for
you. Many are in darkness and disquietude through lack of faith. It may be a
“day of small things” as regards your faith in God’s providence.
III. Christian
graces and the practical influence of religion on the life. This again is a
source of deep humiliation and much disquietude to you. Be not discouraged. The
work of grace is gradual; you cannot sow the seed and have blossom and fruit in
a day.
IV. Spiritual peace
and joy. It cannot be presumption to claim what God bestows, what Christ has
purchased.
V. Religious
knowledge. You find many difficulties in the Bible. As yet you seem to
understand only “first principles of the doctrine of Christ.” How then are you
to go on to perfection? The Spirit, to teach and enlighten, as well as to
sanctify and comfort you, is covenanted to you. You shall grow in knowledge as
in grace. (John C. Miller.)
The day of small things not to be despised
In this message God reproved those who had regarded the new temple
with contempt, and those also who thought that they were unable to finish it.
He informed them that the work was His, that it was to be effected not by human
might nor power, but by His Spirit. Zerubbabel should finish it, and those who
had despised the feeble commencement of the work should witness its completion.
I. In all God’s
works there is usually a “day of small things.” There is a season in which His
work makes but a very small and unpromising appearance. Illustrate from the
beginnings of the Christian Church, and from the work of grace in the hearts of
individuals.
II. Many persons
despise “the day of small things.” God’s enemies did so in Zechariah’s time.
The friends of God do. They think too little of it; they undervalue it, and
they are by no means sufficiently thankful for it, and therefore may be said,
comparatively speaking, to despise it. Illustrate, times of religious revival
generally begin with persons of no social standing, and so revivals are often
despised. Even Christians too lightly esteem the work of God in their own
hearts.
III. Reasons why it
ought not to be despised.
1. Such conduct tends to prevent its becoming a day of great things.
2. Because the inhabitants of heaven, whose judgment is according to
truth, do not despise it.
3. Because our Saviour does not despise it. “The smoking flax He will
not quench.”
4. Our Heavenly Father does not despise it.
5. Because it is the commencement of a day of great things. Apply--
Weak grace encouraged
It is not easy to determine what is small. Things, at first
apparently trivial and uninteresting, often become very great and momentous. It
is so in nature, in science, in political affairs, in moral concerns. What
inference should we derive hence? A philosopher will not despise the day of
small things; a statesman will not; a moralist will not--and should a
Christian? Apply the question entirely to the subject of religion.
1. The work of grace in the soul is frequently small in its
commencement. The Christian is a soldier, and the beginning of his career is
naturally the day of small things. The Christian is a scholar; and when he
enters the school, it is, of course, a “day of small things;” he begins with
the rudiments.
2. Three reasons why the day of small things is not to be despised.
The day of small things
Contempt for small beginnings is one of the most ordinary displays
of the human disposition, in all departments of affairs, but especially in
things connected with sacred interests. Divers of the great powers and
influential systems, good or evil, that have had a mighty effect, have in their
apparently insignificant origin been despised. Individuals appointed to be of
the greatest importance in the world have often experienced contempt in the
beginning of their career. This is true of David, and it is in a sense true of
the Son of Man. The vain world has always been peculiarly disposed to an
unhesitating contempt of the small beginnings of Divine operations, to
attribute meanness to what had a relation to infinite greatness. The Christian
cause itself, in its early stage, was an object of extreme scorn; every
ignominious epithet was connected with the name of a Christian. So fared the
great Reformation. We comment on the tendency in men to indulge contempt for
good things, in the littleness and weakness of their beginnings and early
operations. The case with our world is, that man, having lost his original goodness,
was to be under an economy of discipline, for his correction and practical
restoration; but that the operation for this was not to be sudden, but by
various processes, commencing in an apparent littleness of agency, power, and
scope, so as to appear, in human judgment, incompetent to a great purpose. Why
has the Sovereign Wisdom appointed it so? It is a higher discipline for the
servants of God, as agents in a good cause, as it brings their principle of
obedience under a more plain, unequivocal proof. It tends to keep them under a
direct, pressing conviction that all the power is of God. They will also have a
stronger sense of the value of the good that is so hardly and so slowly
accomplished. Can we expose the error and injustice of this disposition to
despise small beginnings? It comes from not duly apprehending the preciousness
of what is good, in any, even the smallest portion of it. Any essential good,
in the highest sense, is a thing of inexpressible value: especially so in an
evil world, where it is scattered among baser elements. Again, in the
indulgence of this disposition, it is left out of sight, how much, in many
cases, was requisite to be previously done, to bring the small beginning into
existence at all: it did not start into existence of itself. Though small, it
may have been the result of a large combination. Another thing is that we are
apt to set far too high a price on our own efforts and services. Far enough
from small, truly, have been our labours, expenditures, sacrifices, self-denials,
inconveniences, pleadings, perhaps prayers. Our self-importance cannot endure
that so much of our agency, ours, should be consumed for so small a result. A
tenth part of the pains should have done as much. It is not an equivalent; and
it is a hard doom to work on such terms. Again, we overmeasure our brief span
of mortal existence. We want all that is done for the world to be done in our
time. We want to contract the Almighty’s plan to our own limits of time, and to
precipitate the movement, that we may clearly see the end of it. In all this
there is the impiety of not duly recognising the supremacy of God. The grand
essential of religion--faith--is wanting; faith in the unerring wisdom of the
Divine scheme and determinations: faith in the goodness of God. With
such faith let us look on the “day of small things,” and remonstrate against
the tendency to despise it; whether it be in good men, from impatience, and a
very censurable self-importance; or in worldly men, from irreligion. Look into
the natural world, as having an analogy emblematical of a higher order of
things. In nature we see many instances of present actual littleness containing
a powerful principle of enlargement: such as the seed of a plant, the germ of a
flower, the acorn of the oak. In fire there is a mysterious principle of
tremendous power. Does the parent despise the day of small things in his
infant? Turn to the kingdom of God on earth, the promotion of which is the
cause of God. There the small things are to be estimated according to what they
are to become. But what things, as yet comparatively small, come under this
description? We answer all things, judiciously and in good faith, attempted to
promote the best cause, that is, to diminish the awful sum of human depravity
and misery. Efforts to diminish ignorance. The topic includes the progress of
genuine Christianity. Looking abroad, we can but think it a “day of small
things” for Christianity. But what is it, that, on this account, shall be
despised? Is it Christianity itself, or is it God who sent it? We may be
confident that when God makes or causes a beginning of a good work, it is
intended for progress and expansion. Now to remonstrate and warn against
“despising.” To a decidedly irreligious contemner, we might say, “Beware what
you do; for if the thing be of God you are daring Him by your contempt.” There
is also admonition to those who are too apt to fall into something like what
the text describes,--not from hostility to religion and general improvement,
but from want of faith,--from indolence, cowardice, or mere worldly
calculation,--reckoning on things without reckoning on God. To undervalue is in
a certain sense to “despise.” Shall there not be an admonition to examine
whether pride, or sluggishness, or covetousness have not something to do with
it? In some cases, it partly proceeds from the less blamable cause of a gloomy,
apprehensive, disconsolate constitution of mind,--looking on the dark
side,--dismayed by difficulties,--prone to fear the most and hope the least,
dwelling on remembered and recorded failures more than on successes. But there
may be the interference of pride. A man shall have such a notion of himself,
and of a good cause, as to deem it unbefitting his dignity to connect or
concern himself with it. It is not of an order, or in a state, to reflect any
honour on a man of his high sentiments, refined habits, or consideration in
society. With some men a good work or design is of “small” account, when it has
not the quality for rousing the sluggish temperament, nothing to excite gaze
and wonder. Covetousness is one of the most decided practical “despisings.”
Most truly does a man treat the good things as contemptibly small, when he
deems them not worth his money, that is, money which he could afford. We would
rather refer to such as were not positively enemies, whose “despising,” in a
mitigated sense of the word, was from little faith, self-sparing, false
prudence, worldly calculation. They have lived to see that the good cause can
do without them, and that there were more generous, liberal, magnanimous
spirits to be found in the community. Well, at all events, the good cause of
God, of Christ, of human improvement, is certain, is destined to advance and
triumph. It may at last be seen that the whole course of the world, from the
beginning to the end, was “a day of small things,” as compared with the
sequel--only as a brief introduction to an immense and endless economy. (John
Foster.)
Christian appreciation of little things
Zerubbabel was taught of the Lord to hold in due esteem even the
imperfect commencement already made, and to regard with a degree of assurance
and satisfaction the feeble results his hands had already wrought. This is but
one of the uncounted instances, both in Scripture and in nature, of the affectionate
interest with which God regards “little things.” It is not quite easy and
natural for us to think of God as putting all the skill of His thought and
interest of His heart in the small matters of His providence and His
workmanship. In all our attempts to figure and localise Him, we resort
instantly and spontaneously to words that represent immensity of height, and
breadth, and circuit. It is not the drop, but the ocean--not the pebble, but
the mountain that seems to us redolent of Divine suggestion, and freighted with
Divine presence. This tendency prompts us to see God in the flashing of the
lightning, and to hear Him in the pealing of the thunder, but makes us deaf to
Him in the pattering of the rain, the sighing of the wind, and the twittering of
the sparrow. Happy is the man and the prophet that has the ear to detect the
Divineness that lodges in the little quiet voices of God’s works and
providences. It is only when we pass into the New Testament that we get the
best assurances of God’s distributed regard, and of His detailed interest and
affection. It is the genius of the Gospel to try and convince men of God’s
fatherly concern for us. But fatherly concern always particularises and
individualises: and so in the Gospel there is not much about the sky, but a
great deal about the ground: not much about masses of men, but about individual
men. God feeds the bird, paints the lily, clothes the grass. “Even the very
hairs of your head are all numbered.” Christ’s history, from the Baptism to the
Ascension, is mostly made up of little words, little deeds, little prayers,
little sympathies, adding themselves together in unwearied succession. One
reason why we have no more continuous and solid comfort in our Christian life
is, that we are looking and feeling after great joys, and neglecting and
failing to economise the multitude of little blessings that are within reach,
and that, if husbanded and cultivated, would go, in most cases, to compose a
life quite substantially delightful and quite solidly comfortable. It is not
well to pray for great joys. There is something disturbing and unsettling in
them. It is a great deal better to pray that we may have our hearts let into an
appreciation of our everyday joys, and into an appreciation of the goodness of
God in that these everyday joys come to a very quiet but very steady
expression. We want a Christian genius for infusing sublimity into trifles.
Some one has said, “It is better that joy should be spread over all the day, in
the form of strength, than that it should be concentrated into ecstasies, full
of danger, and followed by reactions.” Our lives would be more fruitful if we
let our hearts feel the incessant droppings of heavenly mercy. The constant
dropping of God’s little goodnesses seems designed, not so much for their own
sakes, but, like the constant dropping of the rain, that they may be to us a
kind of heavenly fertility, soaking in at the soul’s pores, and sinking down
around the roots of our manly Christian purposes, nourishing those purposes,
becoming absorbed into them, and so quickening them, building them up, and
pushing them on to fructification. What capacity even the most commonplace
living has for affording us discipline. A good angel really hides in every
provocation and petty exasperation. The little tests that are given to our
temper, our faith, our affection, our consecration, are more efficacious than
the larger and more imposing ones. They take us when we are off our guard.
There is something in great occasions that nerves us to powers of endurance not
properly our own. We ought to show great respect for little opportunities of
service and patent continuance in small well-doings. (Charles H. Parkhurst,
D. D.)
Duty in relation to the little
I. It is seldom
wise to despise “the day of small things.” This is shown by history and
observation. Look at nature. Into the hand of an infant may be put an acorn
which shall be the parent of many forests. The Wye and the Severn may be turned
whithersoever you please at their source, and a child may step over them. At
their outset they are indebted to the very smallest possible rill, and even to
the tears of rushes. Look at men. Rembrandt painted in a smithy; Pascal traced
his Euclid with chalk; Wilkie drew his first rough sketch on the white-washed
wails of his father’s rooms with a burnt stick; and it was with a burnt stick
on his father’s barn door that one of Wales’s most celebrated preachers learned
to write. Luther was but the son of a miner, Carey a shoemaker, and Morrison a
last maker! And who can help going back to the humble company of the Galilean
fisherman who afterwards turned the world upside down. Sydney Smith made sport
of the Baptist Missionary Society, because the first collection on its behalf
was only £13, 2s. 6d.; and to come to a recent Lancashire political movement,
who can forget the Anti-corn law league’s “day of small things” and subsequent
grand success?
II. It is generally
wrong to despise “the day of small things.”
1. There is a heartlessness in it. It is during “the day of small things”
that men need sympathy and help. Johnson in composing his dictionary, and many
others in all fields of labour. “To him that hath shall be given.” At one point
in a man’s history, a kind word, a sympathising look, and a cordial grasp of
the hand will be felt to be of more service than any amount of money at a
subsequent stage in his career.
2. There is a cowardice in it. The cowardice of sneering at honest,
well-meant efforts on a small scale.
3. There is an injustice in it. The injustice of withholding
encouragement and praise from men who so act as to deserve success, whether
they succeed or not. Blessed is the man who still believes that “wisdom is
better than folly, though it fail to bring him bread during the reign of
fools.” The right--the Christian thing should take precedence of all
calculations as to the scale of operations. The right must be weighed in its
own scales--tested by its own standard.
The extreme importance of not “despising the day of small things”
in regard to--
1. The formation of bad and irreligious habits.
2. The formation of religious habits, and the cherishing of religious
impressions and convictions.
3. The present attainments and spiritual stature of professing and
real Christians.
4. The final prevalence of Christianity throughout the world. (Homilist.)
Day of small things--A talk with children
We are all inclined to underestimate the importance of little
things whenever we see them. We should not despise them--
1. Because small things are often too powerful to be despised. Our
enemies are microbes, not lions. The discoveries of science are chiefly in the
direction of showing the terror of small things.
2. Because of the exceeding beauty of small things. Illustrate by the
revelations of the microscope. Their beauty teaches us that God has taken care
to make, not only big things, but even the smallest things exquisitely
beautiful. He is such a perfect worker that He would not do anything
imperfectly. And with us, careful attention to little things will help to form
a noble character for life. If you become negligent and slovenly in school you
will, by and by, be slovenly in life. There is no knowing what little things
may become as time unfolds. You little children, learn of Jesus Christ and His
love, and you may turn out a great reformer, or such an one as Luther, Knox,
Wesley, Spurgeon, or Florence Nightingale. Then never treat small opportunities
with indifference, but consider that every great thing has come from a little
beginning, and that a great life, as a rule, consists of many little things
well done. (David Davies.)
Small things
(to children):--You, my children, are living in the day of small
things, the day of little sorrows and little joys and little sins and little
thoughts and words, but do not despise the day of small things. The greatest
results, both of good and evil, come from small beginnings. There is an old
fable that the trees of the forest once held a meeting, to complain of the
injuries which the woodman’s axe had done them. All the trees determined that none
of them would give any wood to make a handle for their enemy the axe. The axe
went travelling up and down the forest, begging the oak and the elm, the cedar
and the ash, to give him wood enough for a handle, but they all refused. At
last the axe begged for just enough wood, only a little bit, to enable him to
cut down the brambles, which were choking the roots of the trees. Well, they
agreed to this, and gave him a little wood, but no sooner had the axe got a
handle than the cedar and the oak, the ash and the elm, and all the trees were
cut down. So is it with sins and bad habits. They begin with a very small
beginning; the tempter whispers, “Is it not a little one?” and then, if you
yield to them, they cut you down and destroy you. Remember that one single worm
can kill a whole tree. Never think sin is a trifle; it may seem small to you,
but it is none the less dangerous. A scorpion is a very small reptile, but it
can sting a lion to death. There are plenty of ruined men and women, who began
as children by being too idle to get up betimes in the morning, and to do their
work. If you want to get rid of the weeds in your garden, pull them up when
they are young; don’t give them time to grow strong and run to seed. If you
want to grow up to be good men and women, try to get the better of bad habits
whilst you are young. One of the labours of Hercules was to kill the hydra, a
horrible monster with one hundred heads. As fast as one head was cut off two
more grew in its place unless the wound was stopped with fire. We have all got
some kind of a monster like the hydra to fight with. Perhaps your monster is
bad temper, or laziness, or untruthfulness. You must fight against your
monster, and cut off its head. And you must get the wound burnt with fire, that
the heads may not grow again. I mean, that you must pray to God to help you,
and to send the fire of the Holy Spirit to your assistance. Little sins seem
like trifles to us. Well, a grain of sand seems a very little thing too, yet
millions of grains of sand form a desert, and bury the traveller beneath them.
When we do wrong for the sake of pleasing ourselves we think it a small matter,
and look forward to having our own way. But we find in time that what we get
lay our sin crushes us at last. In the early days of Rome the governor of the
citadel, the strongest part of the town, had a daughter called Tarpeia. When
the Sabines, a neighbouring tribe, came to attack Rome, Tarpeia promised to
open the gates to the enemies of her people. As a reward she asked for what the
Sabines carried on their left hands, meaning their golden bracelets. When the
treacherous woman had let them in the king of the Sabines not only threw his
bracelet upon Tarpeia, but also his heavy shield, which was carried on the left
hand. His followers did the same, and Tarpeia was crushed beneath the shields
and bracelets. So it is with sin. “The wages of sin is death.” Again little
words seem trifles, but they are very important. Such words as “I shan’t,” “I
won’t,” “I don’t care,” have made many a parent’s heart sad, and spoilt many a
promising life. (H. Wilmot Buxton, M. A.)
Small, but enough
In Sir Henry M. Stanley’s account of his African experiences he
tells of his first encounter with a pigmy tribe that used poisoned arrows. With
contemptuous smiles the young men drew out the tiny darts, flung, them away,
and continued answering the savages with rifle shots. When the day a fight was
over the wounds, which were mere punctures, were syringed with warm water and
bandaged, but soon the poison began to be felt, and all who were wounded either
died after terrible suffering, or had their constitutions wrecked or were
incapacitated for a long time. So the smallest sin does its work in the heart
and life, sooner or later. Small, but growing:--When the father of William the
Conqueror was departing to the Holy Land he called together the peers of
Normandy, and required them to swear allegiance to his young son, who was a
mere infant. When the barons smiled at the feeble babe the king promptly
replied to their smile: “He may be little now, but he will grow.” And he did
grow. That same baby hand ere long ruled the nation with a rod of iron. The
same may be said of evil in its tiniest form: “It is little, but it will grow.”
Once let the smallest sin gain the upper hand, and it will destroy the whole
life.
No influence is small
The great tendency in many Christians of circumscribed lives is to
believe that their influence is small. Tell them that they have a large
influence over the people among whom they live, and they will at once dispute
it and perhaps blush at the thought of their having any perceptible degree of
influence. And this is true of many Christians of acknowledged piety, ability,
and clean records. And it is because of this feeling that not a few of these
good people do not put forth that effort to reach and help others which they
easily might. They are afflicted with a modesty which underrates the real
measure of their power and possible ministry. Better realise, Christian
brother, that, however weak and narrow your ability may seem to you to be, your
influence is never small, but always large. You cannot make it otherwise if you
would. An eminent preacher says: “Do not fear that your influence be small; no
influence is small: but even if it were, the aggregate of small influences is
far more irresistible than the most vigorous and heroic of isolated efforts.”
Did you ever think of the influence which the odour of a little bed of flowers
has? Everything around that bed is influenced by it; everyone coming near it is
consciously affected by it. Do not excuse yourself from duty of any sort on the
plea of having no influence. (G. H. Wetherbe.)
A little woman and a big war
When Mrs. Stowe, who wrote “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” visited the white
House, President Lincoln bent over her, saying: “And this is the little woman
who made this big war?” The freeing of the serfs in Russia was the result of
thoughts aroused by the reading of the novelist’s story, so the Czar told
Turgenef.
The resolution of a moment
At Toulon, Napoleon, looking out of the batteries, drew back a
step to let some one take his place. The next moment the new-arrived was
killed. That step brought the French Empire, and made possible the bloody role
of its victories and defeats. The rout at Waterloo turned on a shower of rain
hindering Grouchy’s advance. The resolution of a moment with some men has been
the turningpoint of infinite issues to a world. (J. C. Geikie.)
Great results from small beginnings
A little babe is born in a poor miner’s home at Eiselben, Saxony,
November 1483. Few notice his birth, but in 1519 Martin Luther shakes the
foundation of the papal throne, and saves Europe from gross ignorance and
superstition. August 25th, 1759, William Wilberforce was born at Hull who
imagined that this small babe would one day become the saviour of the slaves,
and that on August 15th, 1838, 800,000 African bondsmen would rend the air with
cries of “Freedom’s come”?
Nothing should be despised
Down at Greenock there, on an ordinary working man’s hob, there is
a kettle boiling. Kettles have boiled in Scotland millions of times before.
Listen to the lid. “Rat-a-tat!” Listen! Don’t judge it! The ears of a genius
are suddenly fixed on the sound of the lid that is raised by the bubbling of
the boiling water. What have you there? You have the birth of the giant steam
forces that are abroad on the world today. Don’t be hasty either about men or
method--about workers or work; you never know what it is to grow to, if God be
in it. Over in an American State there is a kite flying as the thundercloud is
coming across the sky, and there is a man holding the string like a silly
schoolboy. “Oh, what an undignified thing,” you say. And he has a key in his
hand. He is tapping away at the bottom there, when suddenly a spark is seen.
What are you going to say about it? A small thing, yet perhaps one of the
mightiest events that ever took place in this world. It is the birth of
electricity--the birth of the electric forces that bind the Antipodes to our
shores. Ah, be careful! When God is in it you do not know what is to come out
of it. But these men, though chosen by God, have got no extra intellect. They
have no extra learning, and would have been passed by even for a Socialistic
propaganda. It was not likely that these men should carry the banner of the
Cross as they did. “Only a little chit of a boy,” the elder said at a Scottish
communion; “only one chit of a boy joined us this communion”; and he thought
the minister was wasting his time, night after night, with that little chit of
a boy. But in that Scottish parish there was never such a communion, never such
a joining of the Church; for that little boy was Robert Moffat, Africa’s
missionary. Never despise anything, for you never know to what it will grow. (John
Robertson.)
The day of small things
This very sweet and evangelical minor prophet bore his burden of
prophecy after the return from the Babylonish Captivity. The second temple,
erected in his time, was of no esteem in the sight of the people, few and poor
as they were, whose fathers had boasted to them of the glory of the first
temple. But the prophet cheers them as his fellow prophet Haggai did, who said,
“The glory of this latter house shall be greater than of the former!” In this
despised temple the people would know that the Lord of hosts had sent His
servant to them. Man is never so apt to err as in coming to hasty conclusion
with regard to God’s dealing with him.
I. Ours is a day
of small things.
1. We live in a small world. Many worlds that surround us in space greatly
exceed ours in size. We stand, as it were, upon an atom of God’s material
creation.
2. Our bodies are small portions of this world. Over these alone we
have immediate control, and that in a very partial degree.
3. Our faculties are few. We have but five senses of the body and
five of the mind. These are at our command in a limited and imperfect manner.
4. Our knowledge of matter is small. Nature is ever sparing in her
revelations.
5. Our knowledge of the Divine Mind is small.
II. This day should
not be despised. Why should it? It is ours. No one despises his own. Despise--
1. Not small opportunities of obtaining religious knowledge. This is
the chief knowledge. Its smallest morsels are more precious than pearl dust.
Religious knowledge is useful for two lives--a guide for both worlds.
2. Not small opportunities of doing good for Christ. We have not all
abundance of wealth to enrich God’s sanctuary. Few have ten talents to occupy
until He comes.
3. Not small sins in their earliest stage. However small, they are
deviations from the right path; the lines containing a small angle, if produced
far, become far asunder. As large rivers spring from small sources, so small
sins soon grow to be large. Sinning is strengthened by habit, and increases in
its onward course.
4. Not small chastisements for sin.
5. Not small religious impressions. You may never get stronger ones
to start with. By being timely cherished they will grow in strength. Why we
should not. Because our present day is but the infancy of our being. Our brief
time will give birth to an eternity; a dwarf will be the parent of a giant. We
shall have to give an account of how we spend it. Why should we differ from
others with regard to the day of small things? God despises not small things;
if He did, He would not have created so many of them. Nor does the Church; it
receives the weakest in the faith, and performs the smallest duties. Nor does
the Evil One, with his malicious craftiness. (J. Bowen Jones, B. A.)
Verses 11-14
What are these two olive trees
The candlestick and the olive trees
In the parable of Zechariah we have the picture of a lamp
supplied not by a limited quantity of oil contained in metal or earthenware
vessels, but by an unlimited Unfailing quantity from a living source.
It was not part of the produce of an olive harvest that kept the candlestick
burning brightly; for that supply would in course of time have been exhausted:
even the whole crop of olives of one year would in course of time have failed.
And what a beautiful symbol of the bountifulness and enduringness of grace this
is! We do not get a limited, carefully measured supply from Christ, but an
unlimited, ever-flowing fulness. He will supply all our need; not according to
our own sense of need, but according to His riches in glory. Christ came not
that we might have a bare life, snatched from the condemnation of the law, but
that we might have more abundant life than man originally possessed in his
unfallen state. It is not pardon and acquittal only that He gives us, but
righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost. Where our sin abounds His
grace doth much more abound. God carefully measures His afflictive
dispensations, and sends trials and sorrows in small doses, as it were; just as
the apothecary measures out in a carefully graduated medicine glass the bitter
or poisonous medicines that are necessary to cure our sicknesses. But God pours
His joys and blessings into our souls in such lavish bountifulness that there
is not room in them to contain them. He wishes not only that His joy may be in
us, but that our joy may be full. The two olive trees that feed the visionary
candlestick, one on each side, may be said to represent the twofold character
of Christ’s personality,--His Divine and human natures. Another idea implied in
the symbol of the text besides this of exhaustless abundance is
spontaneity--freeness. The olive trees pour their oil into the lamps freely as
well as fully. The oil that feeds the candlestick has not to be first gathered
in the berries, extracted in the oil press, manufactured by the art of man,
sold by the merchant, bought and earned by the sweat of the face. Not in this
roundabout, laborious, artificial way, but directly, by a spontaneous, natural
process, do the olive trees contribute of their fulness to the supply of the
lamps; and thus it is that the grace of God is freely given to us. Not by
laborious mechanical arts and efforts, but by a living faith, a simple trust,
do we obtain the supplies of our spiritual need from Christ. We have not to
work for them, but only to freely receive them as they are freely offered to
us. How striking is the contrast between the way in which we get the fruits of
sin and the tree of life! We stretch out our hand to pluck the forbidden fruit.
We take it ourselves, in defiance of God’s command--by force, by deceit, by
trouble, by methods that cost us toil and pain. But God gives to us to eat of
the tree of life. We have not to stretch forth the hand to pluck it; it is
given into our hand, into our mouth. God’s unspeakable gift is freely bestowed.
The olive trees that feed the lamp of your faith and love are planted in no
earthly soil, and are dependent upon no earthly means of culture. They grow
without your toil or care in heavenly light and air. Their harvests are
regulated by the unchanging laws of God’s covenant of grace. Your Father is the
husbandman. Your Saviour has finished the whole work of grace, and you do not
require to add to it. The less you interfere with its working the better. The
Kingdom of Heaven is indeed as if a man should cast seed into the ground, and
should sleep and rise night and day, and the seed should spring and grow up, he
knoweth not how. For the earth bringeth forth fruit of itself--first the blade,
then the ear, and after that the full corn in the ear. He who is the author of
your faith will be the finisher of it; and having begun the good work of grace
in you, He will carry it on and complete it; and therefore the more poor in
spirit you are, the more empty and destitute, the more will the Kingdom of
Heaven be yours, the more room and freedom will it have to work out in you the
good pleasure of God’s goodness as the work of faith. (Hugh Macmillan, D. D.
, LL. D.)
The consecration of the people
The picture that the prophet saw is set before us with
distinctness, and the meaning of the symbol is not obscure. The significance of
the central figure--the candlestick or candelabrum, all of gold,--the prophet
knows perfectly. Concerning that he asks no questions. Is the meaning equally
clear to all of us? The golden lampstand always symbolises the Church. The
Church is represented, not as the light of the world, but as the receptacle or
support of the light. The light is Divine. The candelabrum all of gold was to
the prophet the symbol of the Church of God in its latter-day glory. To him the
Jewish Church and the Jewish nation were not twain, but one. That sharp
discrimination which we make between things sacred and things secular, the
devout Jew did not make at all. Between politics and religion he drew no line.
It must be admitted that this old Hebrew conception is a little nobler and
finer than the theory of life that generally prevails among us. We have come to
make a broad distinction between that part of life which is sacred, and that
part which is secular. The complete divorce between the Church and the State
which exists among us is the result of sectarian divisions. That a practical
unity is one day to be realised I have no doubt. It can never be realised until
the different sects all learn to exalt that which is essential above that which
is secondary. The things that are essential are the values of character,
righteousness, purity, and love; the things that are secondary are rites and
forms and dogmas. When the Church of God shall be one it will be possible to
bring it into the closest relations with the State. The prophet did need to
inquire concerning the two olive trees growing on either side of the candelabrum,
connected with it by golden pipes and pouring a perennial supply of golden oil,
pure and precious, into the golden bowl--what did they symbolise? The oil thus
provided must be taken to represent the Divine inspiration, which is the power
that moves and the life that energises the Kingdom of God in the world. It is
the immanent and perennial grace of “Him whose light is truth, whose warmth is
love.” The two olive trees are the “two anointed ones,” Zerubbabel and
Joshua--the two men in whom the Spirit of the Lord was dwelling; the men who
were working together to rebuild the temple, and fully restore the worship.
They were the living sources of inspiration and help to the restored and
glorified kingdom. We have no kings or priests. All who believe, says Peter,
are a royal priesthood. The grace that was specialised in the old time is
generalised in the new. The right of standing before the Lord, receiving His
messages, and transmitting His truth and love and power, is not restricted to a
few; it belongs to all faithful and loyal souls. (W. Gladden.)
Model religious teachers
This is not another vision, but an explanation of the one recorded
in the preceding verses. Take the “two anointed ones” as types of model
religious teachers.
I. They have a
high order of life in them. They are represented by the olive branches. Few
productions of the vegetable kingdom are of such a high order as those of the
olive. Its fatness was proverbial ( 7:9); it is an evergreen, and most
enduring. In short, it is marked by great beauty, perpetual freshness, and
immense utility. It was one of the sources of wealth in Judea, and its failure
was the cause of famine. The emblems of a true teacher are not dead timber or
some frail vegetable life, but an olive tree. Religious teachers should not
only have life, but life of the highest order. They should be full of animal
spirits, full of creative genius, full of fertile thought, full of Divine
inspiration.
II. They
communicate the most precious elements of knowledge. They “empty the golden oil
out of themselves.” It has been observed by modern travellers that the natives
of olive countries manifest more attachment to olive oil than to any other
article of food, and find nothing adequate to supply its place. Genuine
religious teachers feed the lamp of universal knowledge with the most golden
elements of truth. They not only give the true theory of morals and worship,
but the true theory of moral restoration. What are the true genuine religious
teachers doing? They are pouring into the lamps of the world’s know ledge the
choicest elements of truth.
III. They live near
to the God of all truth. “Then said he, These are the two anointed ones that
stand by the Lord of the whole earth.” They “stand”; a position of dignity,
“stand,” a position of waiting--waiting to receive infallible instructions,
ready to execute the Divine behests. All true religious teachers live
consciously near to God. (Homilist.)
The two olive trees
Consider--
1. That by the two olive trees it is not clear to understand only the
graces of God poured out on His Church. That is indeed signified by oil in such
Scripture as Psalms 45:7. Here the resolution is
concerning the trees that furnished the oil. Nor yet are we to understand them
of a fountain of bounty in God; for there can be no reason given why that
should be compared to two trees, and be said to “stand before the Lord.” But by
them we are to understand Christ anointed in His priestly (which includes His
prophetical) and kingly office, who was chief in this work, and in furnishing
all instruments; who furnishes His Church, and serves His Father in the work of
redemption, and is cared for by Him.
2. That the angel, answering both the prophet’s questions in one,
leads us to understand the one by the others so far as is needful; and
therefore we may conceive that either that of the branches is not touched as
needless, or pointing out only the fit ways of communicating Himself to His
people’s capacity, the pipes not being able to receive the oil of the whole
tree at once, or that branches only now furnishing, imported Christ’s
communicating Himself in a small measure in this typical work of building the
temple in respect of what He had and was to communicate in the building of His
Church under the Gospel; or if we will stretch it further, it may take in
Joshua and Zerubbabel, the one anointed priest, the other a successor of their
anointed kings, who, however, as instruments in the work, they were resembled
by the burning lamps, getting furniture from the bowl, yet in respect of their
office among that people, and their influence upon all instruments of building
the temple, they were types of Christ, and so might be represented by two
little branches, resembling Him, the great olive tree . . . ”standing before
the God of the earth,” as being instrumental to keep in life in the Church when
all power shall be opposite to her. (George Hutcheson.)
The two anointed ones
Who are these? They refer to some standing channel of blessing
from God, and are alluded to again in Revelation 11:3-4, in terms that cannot
be mistaken. Without entering at length into the reasons for this opinion, we
simply affirm that they refer to a duality of gracious manifestation from God,
corresponding to a duality of necessity in the nature of man. There are two
grand evils to be overcome, guilt and pollution, and they demand two standing
sources of blessing, the one to remove the guilt by atonement, the other to
remove the power of sin by giving a higher power of holiness. These two sources
are embodied in two official forms, the only two that were connected with the
theocracy as permanent elements, the sacerdotal and regal orders, This duality
marked all the manifestations of God, for it rested on a deep necessity of
human nature, and it was then embodied in the persons of Joshua and Zerubbabel.
Since, then, they were so essential to the theocracy, the people need not
suppose that God would allow them to perish, but would continue them in
existence until He should come who was a priest after the order of Melchizedek.
Learn--
1. That the Church is the same under both dispensations, for the
promises made to her then are only fulfilling now, showing that then and now
she was the same Church. The candlestick is the same, though the tubes may be
changed; and the Church is the same, though her official channels be totally
altered.
2. God has provided an unfailing source of strength for His people.
Their supply comes not from a dead reservoir of oil, but a living olive tree,
that is ever drawing from the rich earth its generous furnishings, and then
distilling them by seven pipes, a perfect number, to those who are to be
burning and shining lights.
3. The whole work of religion in the heart of the individual, and
throughout the world, is of grace. Christ is at once the cornerstone and the
copestone of the Church; and as He was greeted with “shoutings of grace” when
He came the first time, much more shall He when He comes the second time,
without sin unto salvation.
4. We are prone to judge of God’s work by man’s standard; and because
we see but a narrow stream from the fountain, doubt or deny the river.
5. It is not only unwise, it is wicked, to be disheartened because of
the external feebleness of the Church, compared with the work she has to do and
the enemies she has to encounter. God is her strength, her glory, and her hope,
and to despair of her is to deny God.
6. The doctrine and discipline of the Church, the truth and power
that God has lodged in her organisation and in her ordinances, are still the
standing channels through which the Spirit pours the oil of grace and strength,
and hence should both be kept pure and unclogged. (T. V. Moore, D. D.)
Do not arrest the inflow of spiritual influences
Beware, also, that nothing chokes the golden pipes of obedience to
His kingliness, and trust in His priesthood; else the entrance of the golden
oil will be arrested. They may soon become stopped by neglect, inattention, or
disuse. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Two olive trees
The prophet manifests great concern to understand what is
meant by these two olive trees.
I. The universal
dominion of the Lord Jesus Christ. “The Lord of the whole earth.” Not to be
understood in an abstract, but in a relative sense. The Lord Jesus is the last
Adam, and He came and acquired universal dominion on behalf of His people. He
obtained universal dominion by prevailing with God. This He did by His obedient
life. Whatever perfection--whether of love, or holiness, or wisdom, or
integrity--you may name, the Saviour possessed them all. And “the Lord is well
pleased for His righteousness’ sake.” This righteousness, this obedient life of
the Lord Jesus, hath prevailed with God’s law, hath prevailed with justice.
This is one step towards the Saviour’s universal dominion, God’s unexceptional
approbation of His righteousness, God’s deep and eternal interest in His
righteousness. When the Saviour came to die, was there in the whole universal
Church one sin that He did not conquer? Was there one demand of justice that He
did not meet? See some of the symptoms of this dominion while the Saviour was
in the world. He cast out devils,--there is power over hell. Need I remind you
of sin? Why, He pardoned one and another. Then diseases,--what disease was ever
too hard for Him? Then the sea,--He walks on it. Whatever dominion He
possesses, He will give to you.
II. The
representatives of the Old and New Testament Churches. The two anointed ones.
In the Book of Revelation called the “two witnesses.” These represent the Old
Testament Church and the New Testament Church. In this passage, then, is given
Christ’s entire dominion; the river of the Gospel; the Old and New Testament
Churches sweetly united in the same theme; a clear note of time when these
wonders were to be mediatorially accomplished; and the faithfulness of the Old
and of the New Testament Churches. (James Wells.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》