Sunday, March 22, 2015

SBF Notes - The Liberator

ZECHARIAH 9:9-12
Review
3 weeks ago: Zephaniah – Prophesied in the Southern kingdom (Judah) when Josiah reigned. Judgment (The Day of the Lord) was coming universally and locally.
2 weeks ago: Zephaniah – A remnant remains that will be delivered from the judgment (Judah from Babylon, us from sin). Jesus, our warrior, saves us from judgment.
Last week: Obadiah – Babylon conquers Judah and Jerusalem. The Edomites (related to Judah through Esau and Jacob) helped Babylon so they would be judged.
Context
Set in context of whole Bible with “Kingdom of God”. King Cyrus of Persia, as prophesied 200 years before (Isa. 44:28, 45:1), conquered the Babylonians, so the Jewish nation returned, with his permission and began rebuilding the temple. We met Cyrus in Ezra. Zechariah wrote to rouse people from their indifference in building the temple. They weren’t just building for the present but for a future Messiah. After the exile God is renewing his commitment to restore Judah as his people. They will suffer more distress but in the end God will judge the oppressors and Judah will produce the Messiah.
Intro
When was the last time someone encourage you? Did it motivate you?
Verse 9
Why are they rejoicing? A king is coming! They were in exile and had no king for some time. It wasn’t just any king but one with character. They had many with bad character.
What character traits will he have? He will be righteous, victorious and humble.
How righteous? He was without sin (2 Cor. 5:21, Heb. 4:15).
How victorious? He destroyed the works of the devil (1 John 3:8).
How humble? He humbled himself by dying on the cross (Phil. 2:8). Why a donkey? It emphasized humility because he didn’t enter on a powerful warhorse.
Do we see this king coming in the New Testament? Matt. 21:5, John 12:15, Luke 19:28, Mark 11:4. So Zechariah’s prophecy fulfilled 500 years later.
Verses 10
What will this king do? He will bring peace. The triumphal entry on the donkey was a prophecy of his first coming. This is a prophecy of his second coming.
How far will this peace extend? From sea to sea which means not just Israel but all the nations. Euphrates was northern border of Israel but symbolic.
Verse 11
Why are the prisoners released?  Because of the covenant God had made. Applies to Israel then and us now (Mark 14:24, Matt. 26:28).
Verse 12
What is Zechariah’s encouragement? Have hope! They were still under Persian rule but they were still free. Freedom is not a location but a position. They could live in freedom even in the midst of Persian rule. We are still prisoners of this world and under the curse of sin but, in Christ, free from the power of sin. Jesus is the King who sets the prisoners free.
He is encouraging them to continue work on the temple. The temple was God’s visible presence in the midst of his people. There is therefore a distinction between those who have God and those who don’t, i.e. no temple = no God. The temple pointed to the ultimate temple – Jesus (John 1:14). He became the place where God was dwelling in our midst. He is gone so we are now “pieces” of that temple (1 Cor. 3:16). We are the place where God dwells through the Spirit. When people get saved and join the church the temple is being built (1 Peter 2:4-5). We have the privilege of participating in a construction project of the King in expanding the temple.
Apply (What now?)
What are you doing on the job site? Are you watching everyone else build or are you a builder?
Are you encouraging others by participating and encouraging each other as you work?
Our words are a powerful tool (Prov. 18:21, Prov. 12:25).
How can we encourage one another? Commend each other (wisdom, helpfulness, kindness, compassion, etc.), don’t talk down to each other (Phil. 2:3), show confidence in each other (loan them something), notice character qualities, serve people, ask advice, etc.
Pray

Thank you for setting us free. Give us strength and desire to continue the building project you have for us. Show us how we can encourage one another.