Zechariah
The Earthquake and the
Parousia
"And in that day
His feet shall stand on Mount of Olives which faces
Zechariah is typical
of almost all of the Old Covenant prophets in expressing his vision in
hyperbolic language. His vision of the siege of
The dispensational
view of this text is literalism in its crassest form. Pentecost refers to
Zechariah 14 as proof that "a valley that is not in existence today shall
come into being at the time of the Second Advent." Walvoord, commenting
specifically on the judgment of
On the other hand,
many writers see that the prophecy of Zechariah "is figurative, and was
never intended to be taken literally." As King observes, one of the
problems of those who demand a literal view of Zechariah is their failure to
understand that
It is clear from the
context that this coming of the Lord cannot be an "end of time"
scenario. Escape would be possible. This best fits Jesus' description of the
possibility of escape from the impending demise of the Old Aeon, Matthew 24:15
— "when you see the Abomination of Desolation...flee to the mountains."
See also Luke 17:31-37. In addition, there would be worship and service to
Jehovah after this Parousia. There would still be nations that would be both
obedient and disobedient.
Finally, for the
Amillennialist Zechariah 14 simply cannot be referent to any supposed end of
time because it says "his feet shall stand on the
Zechariah 14 predicted
the coming of the Lord in judgment when his feet would stand on the
But the Lord shall never set foot on earth at his Second or Final Coming. (Amillennial view.)
Therefore Zechariah 14 does not predict the Second or Final Coming of the Lord. (As understood by the Amillennialist. This will become increasingly significant as we continue our study of Zechariah.)
Eusebius said
Zechariah's prediction of the coming of the Lord referred to the destruction of
The Shaking of the Earth
The concept of the
shaking of the earth at the coming of the
Joel 2-3
Joel foresaw "the last days" Joel 2:28, consummating in the Day of the Lord, 3:14, when the Lord would shake the heaven and earth, 3:15-16. The last days would be the time when the miraculous gifts of the Holy Spirit would be poured out on "all flesh" as a sign of that impending Great and Terrible Day of the Lord, 2:28-31.
In Acts 2:15f Peter defended himself and the other apostles against the charge of drunkenness by saying "this is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel"; he then quotes Joel 2:28f. Thus Peter was affirming in no uncertain terms that 1.) The last days were in existence. (Please note that he did not say the outpouring of the Spirit initiated the last days. The last days did not begin on Pentecost! The last days were already in existence in the ministry of John the Immerser and Jesus' personal ministry, Hebrews 1:1-2; 1 Peter 1:18-20.)
Second, for Peter the outpouring of the Spirit meant the fulfillment of Joel. This is contrary to the futurist millennial view that "At the institution of the Theocratic kingdom the prophecy of Joel will be fulfilled." To deny Peter's declaration about the fulfillment of Joel is to deny inspiration; it is to exalt preconceived ideas above inspired testimony.
Joel said the outpouring of the Spirit would be a sign of the Great Day of the Lord when the Lord would shake heaven and earth. Peter said the outpouring of the Spirit on Pentecost was the fulfillment of Joel. Therefore Pentecost was a sign of the impending Great and Terrible Day of the Lord. Is it any wonder then that Peter went on to exhort his listeners "Save yourselves from this untoward generation" Acts 2:40? Bales was certainly correct when he said "It has been thought that Peter indicated that some judgment was coming on that very generation. They were to save themselves from sharing it the guilt and doom of that generation."
Joel's prophecy of the
Great and Terrible Day of the Lord and thus the shaking of heaven and earth,
can apply to no other event than the fall of
One can only wonder why this "imperative" need to honor apocalyptic literature in Matthew does not apply in Thessalonians and 2 Peter 3. Per Deaver we must honor the Old Testament apocalyptic source and nature of the language in Matthew but totally ignore or discount the Old Testament source and nature of Thessalonians, 2 Peter 3 and Revelation! This in spite of the fact that 1.) 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 is directly parallel to Matthew 24 — a text that we must honor as non-literal per Deaver, and; 2.) Peter and John, in 2 Peter 3 and Revelation specifically inform us that their prophecies are simply reiterations of Old Testament apocalyptic predictions — even including Joel 2-3.
In Matthew 24:29-31
Jesus quotes from Joel 2-3. Joel's prophecy foretold the shaking of heaven and
earth just as Zechariah 14 foretold the time when the earth would be shaken. In
Matthew 24 Jesus said his prediction, taken from Joel 2-3, would be fulfilled
in the fall of
Joel and Zechariah
If in Matthew 24 Jesus quotes Joel's prophecy of the Great and Terrible Day of the Lord — inclusive of the "earthquake" — and applies it to the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 and if Zechariah 14 speaks of the Day of the Lord, the earthquake, and the fall of Jerusalem how is it possible to delineate between the prophecies? Simply put, it is not possible. Further, the concommitant blessings to come at the Day of the Lord are the same in Zechariah and Joel.
Zechariah said in that
day a fountain for sin would be opened, 14:8. Joel said in the Day of the Lord
a fountain for the cleansing of
In short, Zechariah 14
and Joel 2-3 are directly parallel. They both speak of the identical blessings
to flow out of the Lord's epiphany. Zechariah 14 specifically places its
prophecy within the framework of
Isaiah 2-4
These three chapters comprise one undivided prophecy. This is shown by the connected references to "that day." The setting is "the last days" Isaiah 2:2. The consummation of those last days would be the "day of the Lord of hosts" 2:12, "when He arises to shake the earth mightily" 2:21.
In the last days
Jehovah would establish his house/kingdom and dwell in
We find here the very constituent elements of Zechariah's prophecy. All of the blessings are the same. The setting is the same because Jesus himself gave us the divine commentary on Isaiah 2-4.
In Luke 23:28-31 Jesus
was being led to his crucifixion. As he carried his cross the women who loved
him cried around him. He told them not to mourn for him but for themselves and
"for your children" Luke 23:28. In verse 30 he alludes directly to
Isaiah 19-21 (as well as Hosea 10:8).
Isaiah, like
Zechariah, predicted the time when the Lord would come and shake the earth.
Jesus quotes from Isaiah and applies that prophecy to the fall of
Hebrews 12:25-28
In this text the
writer cites Haggai's prophecy that one day the Lord would "shake not only
the earth but the heaven also." The result of the shaking of heaven and
earth would be the full establishment of "that which cannot be
shaken" the everlasting
Hebrews 12:27-28.
In the prophecy we
find the same constituent elements as found in Isaiah, Joel, and Zechariah. We
find the fulfillment of
Hengstenberg rejected
the A.D. 70 application of Zechariah 14 because of this supposed contrast
destruction and deliverance. To him this contrast suggested that Zechariah was
speaking of two different
J. Massyngberde Ford, p. 264 — Zechariah 14 the city split in two; Revelation 16 the city split into three parts
Don Preston
as of 3-2005