When a crime was committed in ancient Israel---a theft, for example---there would be a public call for witnesses to come forward, with an oath calling upon God to deal appropriately with the perpetrator and anyone who knew what had happened but refused to testify.
This kind of public call and oath is first mentioned in the Bible in Leviticus 5:1. Another reference to it is in Proverbs 29:24: "The partner of a thief hates his own life; he hears the curse, but discloses nothing."
When there was a lack of evidence in a case, it might have ended up being resolved by an oath. For example, Exodus 22:10-11 describes a case where one person leaves some possession with another person for safekeeping, and the possession is subsequently lost. If there is no evidence of what happened and the person who was supposed to be guarding the possession swears that he doesn't know what happened, the owner has to accept his word.
Underlying all of this is the conviction that God sees everything and is the ultimate Judge. In some cases where a person failed to testify, his conscience would eventually move him to step forward belatedly, as in Leviticus 5:1. Or if a person had defrauded another and initially lied about it, he might later confess the truth and make things right (Lv 6:1-7). God might give such a person some incentive to do the right thing by allowing the person to suffer for his wrongdoing. That's what Leviticus 5:1 means when it speaks of the reluctant witness "bearing his iniquity."
One striking affirmation of God's justice appears in Zechariah's vision of a flying scroll. (Remembering the old Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons, I am tempted to refer to the scroll in the vision as Rocket J. Scroll.) This huge scroll measures about 30 feet by 15 feet. It has writing on both sides, like the tablets of the Decalogue. The commandment against stealing is on one side, and the commandment against bearing false witness is on the other. The scroll seems to symbolize the whole Decalogue, or more broadly all of God's Word.
Zechariah 5:3-4 pictures God sending out the scroll, as he sends out his Word in Psalm 147:15; and as in Isaiah 55:11, it accomplishes God's will, carrying out justice in the world. The scroll makes good on the oath that goes out when witnesses are solicited---see verse 3.
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