In the Ancient Near East, rulers were often referred to as shepherds.
This is a familiar image in the Bible, where God is often likened to a shepherd (Ps 23:1; 80:1; Isa 40:11; Jer 31:10; Eze 34) and the Messiah is pictured as a Shepherd (Eze 34:23; 37:24; Micah 5:4). It is fitting, then. that Jacob and his sons were shepherds ( Ge 46); and that David, an ancestor of the Messiah, was a shepherd as well.
Zechariah 10, like Ezekiel 34, laments the poor leadership of Israel's human shepherds and contrasts their unreliability with the faithfulness of God, Israel's true shepherd (verses 2-3).
Another similiarity between Zechariah 10 and Ezekiel 34 is that both of these prophecies speak of the Messiah. In Ezekiel 34:23 the Messiah is a good shepherd from the line of David. In Zechariah 10:4, the Messiah is a descendant of Judah who is "the cornerstone,", "the tent peg," and "the battle bow," metaphors that describe his leadership and strength.
In Zechariah 10:6-12 God promises a future restoration of Israel, with people returning to the Promised Land in a new Exodus.
Zechariah 11 seems to indicate that before a final restoration, Israel would come under divine judgment. Shepherd imagery is again prominent in this chapter, as the prophet Zechariah apparently is asked to act out the part of a shepherd. He takes up two staffs called "favor" and "union." He reports, "and I tended the sheep" (v. 7), presumably meaning that rhe epresents a good shepherd.
Zechariah goes on to say, "In one month I destroyed the three shepherds" (verse 8). Lots of possibilities have been suggested for the identities of these three shepherds. Commentator Kenneth Barker (EBC) mentions several, including
- Eleazar, John, and Simon, leaders of three factions during the disastrous revolt of 66-73 AD;
- Seleucid leaders Antiochus IV, Heliodorus, and Demetrius during the time of the Maccabean revolt;
- Corrupt high priests Jason, Menelaus, and Alcimus of the early second century BC;
- Three classes of leaders---prophets, priests, and kings.
This is one of the Bible's most cryptic prophecies, so we should not be dogmatic about what constitutes its fulfillment. Overall, we see a familiar pattern of judgment followed by restoration, with the message that God, our faithful Shepherd, is in charge.
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