Not by Might

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4

Not by Might nor by Power

By: Stanley M. Horton

“This is the word of the Lord unto Zerubbabel, saying, Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord of
hosts” (Zechariah 4:6). Was this word a new departure? Did God mean He was now changing His method of working
with men? Not at all. God’s Spirit was active in creation (Genesis 1:2) and has continued to be active at every stage of
God’s plan.

Where God used armies, the victory was still the Lord’s (Exodus 17:9–15). Even Samson’s exploits were accomplished,
not by superior muscle power, but by the moving of the Spirit of the Lord (Judges 13:25; 14:6; 15:14). Zechariah’s vi-
sion only draws attention to a fundamental principle that applies to all who are fellow laborers with the Lord.

The vision that brings this word is the fifth in a series of eight given to encourage those who were rebuilding the temple
after its destruction by the Babylonians. All eight are symbolic and all revolve around the work of the Messiah. God
wanted the people to see their work for Him was not a matter of isolated, local events. What they were doing was part
of the great plan of God for the redemption of the world, a plan that would find its consummation in the work of the
Redeemer, our Lord Jesus Christ. A brief survey of these visions will help us see the fifth vision in its proper context.

The first vision is of a company of horsemen among myrtle trees in a deep valley (perhaps suggesting the lowliness and
the security of God’s people). They are led by One on a red horse, One who is more than either man or angel, One who
is Christ revealed as the Protector and Restorer of His people.

The second vision pictures four horns or world powers (probably the same ones represented by the image of Daniel 2
and the beasts of Daniel 7: Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome),1 and four smiths representing the world powers
which in turn bring God’s judgment on these.

The third vision presents a surveyor (Christ) with a measuring line, indicating that through Christ will come the fulfill-
ment of God’s promises of enlargement, peace, and glory for Jerusalem.

The fourth vision pictures Joshua (Jeshua, Hebrew for Jesus), the current high priest (Ezra 2:2; 3:2), clothed in filthy
garments representing the sins of the people. Though the adversary accuses him, the filthy garments are taken away, the
sin is forgiven, and clean, beautiful garments are put upon him. This is then declared to picture the work of the Mes-
siah, the “Branch,” that is, the new shoot from the root of David (Isaiah 11:1; 53:1; Jeremiah 23:5).

Significantly, the fifth vision emphasizing the Spirit as the Giver of power (Acts 1:8) follows immediately on this pic-
ture of the forgiveness of sin. The remaining visions indicate that sinners must be destroyed, that sin must be removed,
but that the agencies that will bring this about at the end of the age were, in Zechariah’s day, being held in check.2

That the fifth vision indicates a definite step beyond the fourth is suggested by the fact that the angelic messenger had
to rouse Zechariah to a higher, more acute stage of spiritual consciousness in order to receive the vision, and also by the
fact Zechariah finds the vision hard to understand.3 (Note, Zechariah was not actually asleep.) Many modern commen-
tators seem to have just as much difficulty as Zechariah did, and there is much disagreement about the interpretation of
details.4
The vision itself is difficult to picture. Zechariah sees a solid gold candlestick or lampstand. (Tallow or wax candles
were not used in Old Testament times.) The lampstand held seven lamps. We read that from the reservoir bowl at the
top there were “seven pipes to the seven lamps.” Actually, the Hebrew reads “seven seven pipes to the lamps.” This
has been interpreted as one pipe to each lamp, seven in all;5 two pipes to each lamp, 14 in all; or seven pipes to each
lamp, 49 in all. The phrase “seven seven” according to Hebrew usage is best taken distributively, and most com-
mentators who take it this way see in the seven pipes to each of the seven lamps a symbol of fulness of supply.6 The
Bible does not say how the lamps are arranged, however. The lamps were probably not in a line as they were in the
lampstand in Herod’s Temple. More likely, they were in a circle under the bowl “on arms of equal length branching at
regular intervals from the central shaft.”7 Thus, the lamps would give light in all directions.

The beauty of the golden lampstand is marred, however, by the concept of seven pipes to each lamp. The word “pipe”
(Hebrew, mutsakah) actually means a place for pouring, a lip, or a spout. Archaeological discoveries show that Old
Testament lamps were simple. They were just small, shallow, shell-shaped bowls with a lip pinched into one side
where the wick was placed.

I would suggest that the Hebrew phrase “seven seven” means the large reservoir bowl at the top had seven lips. From
these a continuous supply of oil poured into the lamps that were so arranged that one lamp was underneath each of
these lips. Then, the distributive sense would also apply to the lamps so each lamp had seven lips for wicks, giving 49
lights in all. Thus, it would picture not only fullness of supply but a fullness of light spreading to all the world. This
ties directly with Acts 1:8 and Matthew 24:14. The light of the gospel must continue to spread by the power of the
Spirit toward the uttermost part of the world until the end of the age.

Clearly, the oil is a type of the Holy Spirit and the lamps are a type of those through whom the Spirit gives light to the
world.8 There is, however, little agreement among commentators concerning what the lampstand represents. Some
modern interpreters arbitrarily cut out the passage between verses 6a and 10b and make the seven lamps the seven
eyes of God.9 This would make the lampstand represent God or Christ and the lamps symbols of the Spirit. But this
hardly fits the context,10 though Calvin took the lamps to represent the “graces or the various gifts of His Spirit,” and
the number seven to indicate perfection.11

Some Jewish commentators and most modern dispensationalists take the lampstand to be Israel or Israel restored dur-
ing the millennium, since the Book of Revelation uses seven separate lampstands to represent the seven churches, and
through them the Church as a who1e.12

Most, however, agree with Keil in taking the burning lamps as “a symbol of the church or the nation of God which
causes the light of its spirit or of its knowledge of God to shine before God and stream out into the night of a world
estranged from God,” recognizing that the New Testament often refers to disciples or the Church as lights (Matthew
5:14; Luke 12:35; Revelation 1:20).13 Or, better, as Leupold puts it: “Every attentive reader can make his own ap-
plication of this vision. The ‘lampstand’ was the church of God as she gives light through the seven lamps, that is —
seven being the number of divine operation — by the power that God supplies. This power is the Spirit. A lamp fulfills
its function when it shines in the power of the fuel or oil that it has. The church fulfills her function, not by man’s
striving, but by letting the Spirit make her a light to the world. At this point we are confronted by an issue of faith:
will we believe that an adequate supply of the oil of the Spirit will be provided by God? This so manifestly leads to
the motto: ‘Not by might, nor by power.’ ”14

But this is not all the picture. On each side of the lampstand is an olive tree with a golden pipe through which oil emp-
ties. The word “pipes” (Hebrew, tsanteroth) in verse 12 is quite different from that in verse 2. Here, the meaning is a
conduit. Yet, the Hebrew may be taken to mean that the oil in the bowl is supplied by the olive trees or that the oil in
the bowl actually supplies the trees (called anointed ones, sons of oil, in verse 14) with their oil.15

In the latter case it may be taken as teaching that light is maintained by God, not by the prince, Zerubbabel, or his civil
administration, and not by the priest, Joshua, or his religious establishment.

In the former case, it must also be recognized that the “sons of oil” means more than Zerubbabel and Joshua, more
than the church and state, and picture rather the princely and priestly ministry which God’s Spirit ordains, a ministry
that finds its fullness only in Christ.16
I
n either case, we can see Christ as the real source, the Giver of the Holy Spirit, “the ocean-basin of God’s infinite
resources.”17

It pays to turn away from dependence on the world. Its might and power are not enough to accomplish the work of
God. (Might and power are synonyms that include all the strength, worth, wealth, ability, valor, efficiency, and suf-
ficiency of man.)18 It is not strange, then, that the New Testament gives such frequent emphasis to the necessity of our
dependence on the power of the Spirit.

Jesus set an example as He performed miracles by the power of the Spirit (Matthew 12:28). His final words to His
disciples promised power “after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you” (Acts 1:8) . The entire Book of Acts demon-
strates what this means. The apostles further show that the Church is edified or built up through the gifts of the Spirit.
One of the final invitations of the Bible is “the Spirit and the bride say, Come” (Revelation 22:17). Truly, from cover
to cover, the Word of God teaches that it is “by my Spirit, saith the Lord.”

Endnote

1. Merrill F. Unger, Zechariah (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1965), 37. Others prefer Assyria, Egypt, Babylon,
and Medo-Persia.

2. G.N.M. Collins, “Zechariah,” The New Bible Commentary, ed. F. Davidson (Grand Rapids: Wm. E. Eerdmans
Publishing Co., 1953), 752,753.

3. Thomas V. Moore, A Commentary of Zechariah (London: Banner of Truth Trust, 1961 reprint from 1856), 72. Un-
ger, op. cit., 70.

4. H.C. Leupold, Exposition of Zechariah (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1965), 81.

5. John Calvin, Commentaries on the Twelve Minor Prophets, trans. John Owen (Grand Rapids: Wm. E. Eerdmans
Publishing Co., 1950), Vol. V, 105. George Adam Smith, The Book of the Twelve Prophets (New York: Harper &
Bros., 1928), 290.

6. T.T. Perowne, “Haggai and Zechariah,” Cambridge Bible (Cambridge: University Press, 1893), 86. David Baron,
The Vision and Prophecies of Zechariah (London: Morgan & Scott, 1918), 130. Carl Friedrich Keil, The Twelve
Minor Prophets, trans. James Martin (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1954 reprint), 263. Unger, op.
cit., 73. Moore, op. cit., 72.

7. Hinckley G. Mitchell, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on Haggai and Zechariah (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark,
1912), 162.

8. E.B. Pusey, The Minor Prophets (London: James Nisbet and Co. Ltd., 1907), 101.

9. Mitchell, op. cit., 163. H.L. Ellison, Men Spoke from God, 2d ed. (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Co., 1958), 129.

10. Leupold, op. cit., 85. Keil, op. cit., 265. Charles L. Feinberg, God Remembers (Wheaton, Illinois: Van Kampen
Press, 1950), 72.

11. Calvin, op. cit., 108.

12. Unger, op. cit., 73,80. Feinberg, op. cit., 69,71. Baron, op. cit., 132,135.

13. Keil, op. cit., 266,275. Moore, op. cit., 71. Theo. Laetsch, The Minor Prophets (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing
House, 1956), 428.

14. Leupold, op. cit., 88.

15. Ellison, op. cit., 129.

16. Keil, op. cit., 277. Ellison, op. cit., 129. Baron, op. cit., 135. Smith, op. cit., 290.

17. F.B. Meyer, The Prophet of Hope (London: Morgan and Scott, n.d.), 44.

18. Leupold, op. cit., 87.

© Stanley M. Horton
Reprinted from Enrichment journal, used with permission.

You might also like