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Zechariah Series - Session #4: Grace to Walk in Leadership
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Session 4 Grace to Walk in Leadership (Zech. 3:1-10)
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Zechariah’s fourth and fifth visions (Zech. 3-4) go together
in a special way in the eight visions. They show that God will cleanse
and anoint His people so that they may walk in the fullness of God’s
promised destiny and blessings as set forth in the first three visions
(Zech. 1-2).
1. In the first three visions, the Lord promises to manifest His
zeal and mercy by returning
to personally live in Jerusalem, to fill the temple with His glory,
to take full possession of
the land of Israel, and to draw all nations to worship and obey
the LORD (1:16; 2:10-12).
2. The question arises, how can a sinful and weak people like Israel
walk in such promises? The Lord answers in the next two visions (Zech. 3-4) by
revealing the abundance of His grace. He Himself solves the problem of how a holy
God can dwell among a sinful people. His kingdom is not based on our merits but
on His grace in us.
B. These two visions focus on the two main leaders in Israel, Joshua,
the high priest (Zech. 3) and Zerubbabel, the governor (Zech. 4).
The spiritual condition and experience of the leaders in the kingdom
impact and reflect the spiritual condition and experience of the
people they lead.
Zechariah saw the two main leaders of the temple in Jerusalem (Zech.
3-4). This vision presents Israel’s leadership and national
calling as priests to all the nations (Ex. 19:6; Isa. 61:6). These
two visions encourage the two leaders who are primarily responsible
for rebuilding the temple.
C. The Lord addresses the two main obstacles that hinder His people
from enjoying their destiny.
The first obstacle is our sin; therefore He provides spiritual
cleansing and renewal (Zech. 3).
The next obstacle is our lack of resources; therefore He gives
supernatural provision (Zech. 4).
In other words, we need His grace for continued spiritual renewal
and supernatural provision.
D. In Zechariah 3, He cleanses their heart and leads them to wholehearted
obedience
(Zech. 3:3-7).
In Zechariah 4, He helps their work and values it even when it
is small and difficult (4:6-10).
In other words, He desires wholeheartedness and diligence from His
sinful and weak leaders.
E. The message of Zechariah 3-4 is the revelation of God’s
grace to His sinful and weak leaders.
The message is that God forgives and cleanses our hearts, even
from our greatest sins (Zech. 3).
The message is that God provides for and uses our work, even in
our smallest tasks (Zech. 4).
F. The first obstacle to overcome is the lie that we fail too much
to be used by God (3:1-5).
The next obstacle to overcome is the lie that we lack too much
to complete God’s will (Zech. 4:6-9).
G. The Lord’s people are to be confident in His love that
frees us from all condemnation (Zech. 3).
The Lord’s people are to be confident that He values our
small and difficult labors (Zech. 4).
II. FOURTH VISION: THE CLEANSING OF JOSHUA THE HIGH PRIEST (Zech.
3:1-5)
A. Summary: In this heavenly scene (3:1-2), Zechariah saw Joshua
the high priest standing before the Angel of the Lord (the preincarnate
Christ). Satan presented a case against Joshua accusing him of not
being qualified for leadership. The problem was that Joshua was
in fact guilty (3:4).
Joshua was fully cleansed and then called to walk in wholehearted
obedience to the Lord (3:7).
He and his leadership team were to be a prophetic sign of the Messiah
and of His grace (3:8-9).
The whole nation of Israel will eventually partake of the Messiah’s
extravagant grace (3:10).
B. The vision has four parts: the heavenly scene (3:1-2), a symbolic
act (3:3-5), an exhortation to wholeheartedness (3:6-7), and a revelation
of the coming Messiah and His salvation (3:8-10).
C. Joshua was functioning here in his high priestly capacity as
the official representative of Israel.
The high priest represented the nation before God on the Day of
Atonement (Lev. 16:1-10). As the sin of Joshua was removed, so the
sin of Israel and the land will be removed
(Zech. 13:1-2).
D. What God did for Joshua, He will do for Israel as a nation and
for each believer in Jesus.
III. THE HEAVENLY SCENE (3:1-2)
A. Satan accused Joshua to the Lord of not being qualified for
his leadership role in Israel (3:4a).
1 Then he showed me Joshua the high priest standing
before the Angel of the LORD, and Satan standing at his right hand
to oppose (accuse) him. (Zech.
3:1)
1. Joshua: He was Israel’s high priest (6:11).
Thus, he was the primary spiritual leader in the nation and represented Israel in her calling to be a priestly
nation. He had returned from Babylon to Jerusalem with the other exiles about 20 years earlier.
2. Satan: Satan stood next to Joshua to accuse
him, or to present a case against him, before the Lord. The Hebrew
word satan means “the accuser.”
3. Accuse: The phrase “to oppose”
is translated “to accuse”. Satan continually accuses God’s people (Rev. 12:10). Satan can only accuse;
he cannot condemn.
10The accuser of our brethren, who accused them before God day and
night. (Rev. 12:10)
4. Angel of the Lord: Most conservative commentators
believe that the Angel of the Lord is the preincarnate Christ, the
second person of the Trinity. Zechariah had seen Him earlier that night in the first vision (1:11-12). The Angel is called “the
Lord” (3:2).
5. Standing before: This is an official term used
for priestly ministry. The Lord called various ones to “stand before” Him to minister to Him,
such as the tribe of Levi (Deut. 10:8-9), the high priest (Judg. 20:28), Elijah (1 Kgs. 17:1), and
Elisha (2 Kgs. 3:14), etc.
B. The Lord did not receive Satan’s accusation against Joshua,
but rebuked Satan twice (3:2). The Lord said two things: He rebuked
Satan and described Joshua as a brand plucked from the fire.
2 And the LORD said to Satan, “The LORD rebuke
you, Satan! The LORD who has chosen Jerusalem rebuke you! Is this
not a brand plucked from the fire?” (Zech.
3:2)
1. Rebuke you: The Lord rebuked Satan, not because
the accusations against Joshua were false, but because of God’s
gracious love for and sovereign choice of Joshua and Israel.
The Lord will not tolerate Satan’s accusation against us.
Neither should we. We must make this same declaration of truth over our heart day by day.
2. Jesus’ intercession for us is far stronger than Satan’s
accusations against us (Rom. 8:34).
33Who shall bring a charge against God’s elect?
It is God who justifies. 34Who is he who condemns? It is Christ who died, and furthermore is risen, who
is even at the right hand of God, who
also makes intercession for us...38I am persuaded that neither death
nor life, nor angels nor principalities…39shall be able to
separate us from the love of God which is in Christ. (Rom. 8:33-39)
3. Jesus stands as our advocate with the Father, for He became
the propitiation for our sins.
1 If anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father,
Jesus Christ the righteous.
2 And He Himself is the propitiation for our sins… (1
Jn. 2:1-2)
C. At the same time as Satan was accusing Joshua in the spirit
realm, Tattenai, the Persian governor of Samaria, was accusing Joshua
(Ezra 5:3), saying that he had no right to build the temple (Ezra
5:1-17). Tattenai governed the region beyond the River, west of
the Euphrates to the Sea.
1 Then the prophet Haggai and Zechariah…prophesied
to the Jews…2 So Zerubbabel…and Jeshua…rose up and began to build
the house of God…3 At the same time Tattenai the governor of the region beyond the
River…spoke thus to them: “Who has commanded you to
build this temple?”…7They sent a letter to him [King
Darius]…8 Let it be known to the king that…the
temple of the great God, which is being built with heavy stones,
and timber is being laid in the walls…17Let the king send
us his pleasure concerning this matter. (Ezra
5:1-17)
D. And just as the Lord rebuked Satan for accusing Joshua in the
spirit realm, so the Persian King Darius rebuked Tattenai for troubling
Joshua, and then commanded him to give financial provision to Zerubbabel
to build the temple (Ezra 6:6-12).
6 Now therefore, Tattenai…7 Let the work of this
house of God alone…8 Let the cost be paid at the king’s expense from taxes on the
region beyond the River; this is to be given immediately to these
men, so that they are not hindered…12I Darius issue a decree;
let it be done diligently. (Ezra 6:6-12)
E. The Lord who chose Jerusalem: The God who chose
weak and sinful Jerusalem is the God of grace who chooses those
who do not deserve salvation and cannot save themselves. The Lord
Himself answered the accusation as the God who chooses to redeem
sinful and helpless people.
F. Brand plucked from the fire: The Lord describes
Joshua (and Israel) to Satan as a brand plucked from the fire (3:2b).
Israel had just been delivered from the fire of the Babylonian captivity.
She was like a burning stick that God had pulled out of a fire to
save her from total destruction. God will not allow Israel to be
totally destroyed in the fires of His judgment. Israel has almost
been destroyed several times in history, such as in 70 AD. It will
happen again in the Tribulation (13:8; Jer. 30:7; Rev. 12:13-17),
but God will intervene in mercy. Having snatched Joshua, or Israel,
as a brand from the fire, He has no intention of allowing them to
be totally destroyed.
1. The NIV translates this as: “Is not this man a burning
stick snatched from the fire?" The imagery here suggests a narrow escape from a dangerous situation.
Fire is a figurative expression for punishment.
2. Amos uses this same phrase to describe Israel being snatched
as a half-burned stick in a time of divine discipline. Amos recounts
Israel’s rescue from a situation comparable to the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah, when fire fell from heaven
to destroy them.
11I overthrew some of you, as God overthrew Sodom and
Gomorrah, and you were like a firebrand plucked from the burning;
yet you have not returned to Me…
(Amos 4:11)
3. The message is that the Lord has always supernaturally intervened
in mercy to save Israel from total destruction. Therefore Israel can be sure that He has
sovereignly chosen her and will intervene with mercy in the future and that she will survive
any fire she suffers.
4. The Lord emphasizes the fact of Israel being rescued and the
timing of her rescue. Israel deserved the fire and was almost consumed, but God stepped in at
the last minute and rescued them in His extravagant mercy. The Lord speaks this to Satan
as an argument against his accusations of Joshua. The Lord is zealous for Zion.
This is a statement about how the Lord sees Jerusalem. Though Israel deserved to be in the
fire of Babylon, the Lord did not give up on her and He intervened in great mercy. He
even let her experience “close to the fullness” of what she deserved before
He intervened and saved her.
5. Today, God is raising up leaders, who, like Joshua, are like
brands plucked from the fire.
If they received what they deserved, they would have no chance of
being used in leadership. The Lord delights in mercy and deals gently with His
people (Mic. 7:18; Ps. 18:35). If Jesus, in His mercy, had not rescued us as He rescued
Joshua, then we would be utterly consumed by our sin and trials. When God calls people
to serve Him, He
knows that they are weak, sinful, and needy, that they are are not
yet whole. He delights in gathering “brands plucked from the fire” with defiled
garments, giving them new clothing at their new birth, and continually reapplying the grace
of cleansing day by day.
G. The message is that Israel’s destiny in God’s promises
rests on His sovereign choice of Israel, which depends on God’s
character and faithfulness. Paul made this point, “Has God
cast away His people? Certainly not!” (Rom. 11:1). As we consider
Jerusalem’s history of rebellion against God and His refusal
to end the relationship, it gives us confidence in the Lord and
His ways.
IV. RECEIVING GOD’S GRACE: THE SYMBOLIC ACT (3:3-5)
A. Joshua’s dirty garments were removed and new ones were
given to him (3:3-5). The Lord told the angels to take away his
dirty garments, and then He spoke directly to Joshua, “See,
I have removed your sin and will clothe you with rich robes”
(3:4). The symbolic action of replacing Joshua’s dirty garments
with clean ones speaks of God’s grace and Jesus’ work
on the cross.
3 Joshua was clothed with filthy garments, and was
standing before the Angel. 4 Then He answered and spoke to those who stood before Him, saying,
“Take away the filthy garments from him.” And to him
He said, “See, I have removed your iniquity…and I will
clothe you with rich robes.” 5 …I said, “Let them
put a clean turban on his head.” So they put a clean turban
on his head, and they put the clothes on him. And the Angel of the
LORD stood by. (Zech. 3:3-5)
1. Filthy garments: Joshua was guilty, as shown
by his filthy clothes. He also represents Israel. We, too, are guilty as charged. We have no hope of acquitting
ourselves.
2. Take away the filthy garments: The Lord commanded
the angels to remove Joshua’s dirty clothes (3:4c). The Lord explained to Joshua that removing
his filthy clothes symbolized removing his sin. Our sinful deeds are compared to filthy
rags (Isa. 64:6).
3. Rich robes: The rich robes are symbolic of
being clothed with God’s righteousness and with priestly robes (Ex. 28:8-9; Lev. 8:7-9; Isa. 61:10; 2 Cor.
5:17, 21). The truths of the gospel of grace are set forth in this passage. In the parable of
the prodigal son, Jesus says
that the father put the best robes on his son (Lk. 15:22)
21He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that
we might become the righteousness of God. (2 Cor. 5:21)
10For He has clothed me with the garments of salvation,
He has covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom
decks himself with ornaments. (Isa. 61:10)
4. See: The Lord exhorted Joshua to “see”
that He had removed his sin and clothed him with rich robes (3:4). We must “see” these truths in
our own lives and understand how they apply to Israel.
5. Intercession: Zechariah asked the Lord to put
a turban on Joshua’s head (3:5). His intercessory declaration was accepted. Perhaps the Lord purposely
left out the turban to allow Zechariah to participate in the process through intercession.
The expression “I said” in v. 5 indicates that Zechariah was standing in the
heavenly council in this vision.
5 And I said, “Let them put a clean turban on
his head.” So they put a clean turban on his head, and they
put the clothes on him…the Angel of the LORD stood by. (Zech.
3:5)
6. Turban: The turban is a symbol of Israel’s
reinstatement as a priestly nation (Ex. 19:6).
The Lord clothed Joshua in the rich robes of priestly garments to
signify the grace that qualified him to be in leadership in God’s kingdom. The Lord
will forgive, transform and equip Israel to fulfill her original calling to be a priestly nation
(Ex. 19:16; Isa. 61:6).
V. AN EXHORTATION TO WHOLEHEARTEDNESS (3:6-7)
A. The Lord admonished Joshua to walk in wholehearted obedience
(3:6-7). This is the only reasonable response to receiving God’s extravagant grace.
The Lord gave him two exhortations (to godly character and to
diligent service) as the conditions for receiving three promises.
6 Then the Angel of the LORD admonished Joshua, saying,
7 “Thus says the LORD of hosts: ‘If you will walk in
My ways, and if you will keep My command [perform My service], then
you shall also judge My house, and likewise have charge of My courts;
I will give you places to walk among these who stand here.’”
(Zech. 3:6-7)
1. Admonished: The word admonished means to warn
in an earnest way.
2. Walk in My ways: Joshua was to walk with godly
character in his personal life.
3. To keep My command: He was to respond with
diligent service by being faithful to the assignment the Lord had given him. Keeping the command meant fulfilling
the charge that God had given him to keep the temple sanctuary and to perform
the priestly duties related to it.
15The priests…who kept charge of My sanctuary…shall
stand before Me to offer to Me the fat and the blood [animal sacrifices].
(Ezek. 44:15)
4. To “keep My command” is translated as to “keep
the charge” (KJV, RSV) or to “perform
My service” (NAS), referring to his priestly responsibilities.
This is made clear at the end of verse 7 where he was to have “charge of My courts,”
i.e., responsibility in the temple.
5. The exhortation to keep God’s command, or charge, is to
“not quit,” but to be diligent in the ministry assignment that God gave him. Some see their ministry
assignment as a voluntary activity that they can quit when it gets hard, rather
than a military assignment in a war zone that they must fulfill regardless of the opposition
or difficulty they face.
6. He was exhorted “to see” (3:4), “to walk and
keep” (3:7), and “to hear” (3:8).
B. The Lord promised to bless Joshua in three ways for responding
in wholeheartedness (3:7b).
7 Then you shall also judge My house, and likewise
have charge of My courts; I will give you places to walk among these
who stand here. (Zech. 3:7b)
1. You shall judge My house: To judge or have
leadership in God’s house or His kingdom purposes. Faithful
service leads to more opportunities for service.
2. You shall have charge of My courts: To have
leadership in the Lord’s court or temple (or the house of prayer). Jesus promised to make overcomers “a
pillar in His temple”
(Rev. 3:12), which speaks of receiving a position of authority in
the Millennium.
3. Places to walk among these who stand here:
“These who stand here” refers to the angels who stood in God’s presence (3:4). The NAS says, “I
will give him free access to stand among those that are with you now.” This promise includes
experiencing nearness to God, access to the angelic realm and the heavenly council, and
eternal rewards.
4. Jesus promised that some of His servants would experience an
open heaven (Jn. 1:51).
51You shall see heaven open, and the angels of God
ascending and descending.
(Jn. 1:51)
C. The “grace message” in Zechariah 3 emphasizes God’s
extravagant grace that leads us to wholehearted obedience to Jesus
in our personal lifestyle and our ministry assignment. The grace
of God in the gift of righteousness is freely available to all (3:4),
but we differ in the measure of our experience of His grace, according
to how we respond to it (3:7). The Lord gave Joshua the free gift
of righteousness, but left it to him to choose to walk in wholeheartedness.
By choosing to obey, Joshua could affect some of the quality of
his spiritual experience and that of those under his leadership.
God’s grace offers us God’s love and the power to love
Him in return.
VI. THE COMING MESSIAH AND HIS SALVATION (3:8-10)
A. In this vision, Joshua and his leadership team stand as a prophetic
picture to instruct and inspire others (3:8). They are a prophetic
sign of the coming Messiah, and of His grace.
8 “Hear, O Joshua, the high priest, you and your
companions who sit before you, for they are a wondrous sign; for
behold, I am bringing forth My Servant the BRANCH. 9 For behold,
the stone that I have laid before Joshua… (Zech. 3:8-9a)
1. Wondrous sign: They were to be a wondrous,
or important, type, or picture, pointing to the Messiah as the “Branch” and the “Stone,”
and of how to function in priestly ministry.
2. You and your companions: Joshua and his leadership
team were priests. Their priestly role was an imperfect type of
Jesus and His priesthood.
3. In their wholeheartedness and faithfulness (3:7) they were to
be a picture that gave others insight into the Messiah, and inspiration to walk in His grace and
to be priests as they were. They were “proof” that the priestly lifestyle
is wonderful, attainable, and doable.
4. These men were used to restore the priesthood and temple; they
were prophetic signs that the fullness of both would come in the
future. Their very existence as faithful priests was a sign of God’s favor on that generation, and that all Israel
would be saved (3:9).
5. Hear: They were to be careful to “hear”
that as a prophetic picture, or model, they would give insight into what God is like and inspire others to imitate
their faith. In other words, they were to “hear” that what they were doing mattered
to God, and that it would affect
their destiny and relationship with God, as well as many others
who would imitate them.
B. Joshua was shown a Branch and a Stone, which both spoke of the
Messiah (3:8b-9). A stone is something that bears weight, and a
branch produces food that we eat. Paul used the combination of building
and plant metaphors to describe life in the kingdom (1 Cor. 3:9;
Eph. 2:19-22; 3:17).
8 “For behold, I am bringing forth My Servant
the BRANCH. 9 For behold, the stone that I have laid before Joshua:
upon the stone are seven eyes. Behold, I will engrave its inscription,”
Says the LORD of hosts, “and I will remove the iniquity of
that land in one day.” (Zech.
3:8-9)
1. Branch: The picture of the Messiah as the Branch
of the Lord expresses various facets of Jesus’ glory (Isa.
4:2; 11:1; Jer. 23:5; 33:15; Zech. 3:8; 6:12). Jesus’ work
grows or branches out as His people are joined to Him as smaller branches
(Jn. 15:4-5).
2. Stone: Zechariah was to behold, or understand,
the stone that was laid before Joshua (3:9). Jesus is the foundation stone of Israel’s salvation
and the stone which she stumbled over (Mt. 21:42). Jesus is the rock on which the Church is built
(Eph. 2:20-22; 1 Pet. 2:9).
The stone, or rock, is a figure of God and the Messiah (Deut. 32:4,
15, 18; 2 Sam. 22:2; Ps. 18:2; 31:3; 62:7; 89:26; 94:22; 95:1; 118:22; Isa. 8:13-15;
17:10; 28:16; Dan. 2:35, 45; Zech. 3:9; 10:4; Mt. 16:18; 21:42; Rom. 9:33; 1 Cor. 10:4b; Eph.
2:20; 1 Pet. 2:6-8).
3. Seven eyes: On the stone were seven eyes symbolizing
Jesus’ omniscience (Rev. 5:6).
Jesus possesses omniscience—all knowledge and wisdom. In Zechariah
4:10, we learn that the seven eyes on this stone are God’s eyes going to
and fro throughout the earth.
4. I will engrave its inscription: God will engrave
on the stone a declaration related to His removing Israel’s sin in one day (3:9c). It is not clear what
the inscription specifically is.
Stones in the ancient world had writings on them; they were memorials
to commemorate significant events or to tell of the greatness of a king, etc. Since
the national salvation of Israel is mentioned in the next phrase, the inscription is probably
related to her salvation.
5. I will remove the iniquity: In one day, the
sin of the land of Israel will be removed.
In one day, Jesus accomplished the redemption of Israel on the cross.
And the day of His return will be the day of Israel’s national salvation (3:9d;
Rom. 11:26). The way Joshua and his team received God’s grace in one day was
both a sign and the assurance that in one day Israel would be saved and qualified for
her priestly role.
C. Fig tree and vine: Israel will function as
a community that enjoys prosperity and security (3:10). To sit under
“his” vine and fig tree indicates that each one will
personally be prosperous. This scene pictures the gladness of each
Israelite as they invite friends to partake of hospitality under
their vine and fig tree in the Millennium. Zechariah develops this
idea (8:4-5).
10In that day…everyone will invite his neighbor
under his vine and under his fig tree. (Zech.
3:10)
4 “Old men and old women shall again sit in the
streets of Jerusalem…5 The streets of the city shall be full
of boys and girls playing in its streets.” (Zech.
8:4-5)
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