Zechariah 14:9 | |
9. And the Lord shall be king over all the earth: in that day shall there be one Lord, and his name one. | 9.Et erit Iehova in regem super totam terram; die illo erit Iehova unus, et nomen ejus unum. |
Here the prophet shows more clearly, and without using a figurative language, what might otherwise be more obscure: he says, that
"Thee have they not despised, but me,
that I should not reign over them." (1 Samuel 8:7.)
And yet Samuel was only a governor for a time over the people; but when the people through a foolish zeal wished a king to be given then, God complains that he was despised in not being allowed to reign over them alone. This was more fully completed, when the ten tribes separated themselves from the lawful kingdom which God himself had established and had commanded to be inviolable. From that time then God was not their king. This is one thing.
Afterwards we know that the kings of Israel joined themselves with the kings of Syria to overthrow the kingdom of Judah, and that the Jews also sent for aid to the Assyrians, and afterwards had recourse to the Egyptians. At length the kingdom of Israel was cut off; then the kingdom of Judah, and the city was destroyed and the temple burnt, so that the worship of God for a time ceased. They afterwards returned; but we know they were ever oppressed by hard and cruel tyranny: when they perceived that they were unprotected, because they had refused to take shelter under the wings of God. Though he had so often told them that they would be safe and secure under his protection, they yet refused that favor. Therefore the Jews then found to their great loss that God was not their king.
Hence when Zechariah now speaks of the restoration of the Church, he rightly says, that
We now understand the Prophet's meaning as to this part; but he shows immediately after that this cannot be hoped for, except the Jews really attended to true religion and worshipped God aright and cast away their superstitions. Hence he joins together these two things, -- that the condition of the people would be a happy one, because God would undertake the care of them and perform the office of a king, -- and then, that God would be their king, in order that he might be rightly and sincerely worshipped by them:
He expresses this still clearer by saying, that
We now then understand what the Prophet means: he says first, that things would be in a happy state in Judea, when God would be regarded as one, that is, when the whole land had been cleansed from its defilements, and when true religion again prevailed: but as this purity would not easily obtain footing in the world, and as men easily decline from it, he adds, that the name of God would be one, in order that the Jews might understand that God cannot be rightly worshipped except he be alone worshipped; and that it cannot be one, unless there be one faith, prescribed and certain, and not alternating between diverse opinions, like that of the heathens, whose religion is no other than to follow what they themselves imagine or what they have derived from their ancestors.
Now this is a remarkable passage: God distinguishes himself from all idols and his worship from all superstitions; and the more attentively we ought to consider what the Prophet teaches us, because our inclinations, as I have said, to vanity, is so great, and this is what experience itself sufficiently shows, and we also see how easily superstition, like a whirlwind, carries us away, and not only one superstition, but innumerable kinds of superstition. The more then it behaves us to notice this truth, so that the one name of God may prevail among us, and that no one may allow himself the liberty of imagining anything he pleases; but that we may know what God ought to be worshipped by us. And Christ also condemns for this reason all the forms of worship which prevailed in the world, by saying to the woman of Samaria,
"Ye know not what ye worship, we Jews alone," he says,
"know this." (John 4:22.)
We hence see that this one thing is sufficient to condemn all superstitions, that is, when men follow their own fancies, and observe not a fixed and unchangeable rule, which cannot deceive. It follows --
1 It is added, "over all the earth," according to our version and Newcome and Henderson; but it ought to be, "over the whole land," as it appears evident from the verses which follow; and our version and Newcome render the same phrase, "all the land" in the next verse, while Henderson, more consistent with himself, but not with the meaning of the passage, retains the words, "all the earth."--Ed.
2 Henderson seems to have unnecessarily introduced another version,
In that day Jehovah alone shall be,
And his name alone.
The obvious meaning is, that there would be but "one Jehovah" acknowledged, to the exclusion of all pretended deities, and that his "name" would be one to the exclusion of every other name. It is an announcement suitable to the previous state of things, when many gods were acknowledged, and many names given to them, under which they were worshipped. Much more emphatical and expressive is the usual rendering,--
In that day there shall be one Jehovah, and his name one.
[Estai ku>riov eiJv kai< to< o]noma aujtou e[n].--Septuagint.
"One name" is mentioned, because the heathens pretended to worship the true God under various names.--Ed.