Zechariah
Zechariah calls the post-exilic community to see beyond their present discouragement by unveiling God's hidden sovereignty at work in eight night visions, then pivots to apocalyptic promises of a pierced King and cosmic restoration, establishing that the God who restores His temple now will ultimately restore all things through the Messiah.
Zechariah is the most explicitly messianic book in the Minor Prophets, supplying crucial Old Testament texts that the New Testament applies directly to Jesus's passion, kingship, and return; without it, the church lacks essential Old Testament scaffolding for understanding Christ's piercing, His entry to Jerusalem, and the final judgment. The book also speaks to any community that finds itself in spiritual exile, teaching us to trust God's hidden work when visible evidence of His presence seems absent, making it indispensable for churches facing doubt, decline, or delay in seeing God's promises fulfilled. Zechariah's theology of the Holy Spirit's empowerment and the coming King connects the restoration hope of the exile's end to the full restoration of all things, bridging the testaments in a way no other minor prophet accomplishes.
- Read Zechariah as a prophetic book in two distinct but related parts: chapters 1-8 (night visions and oracles for the restoration community) and chapters 9-14 (apocalyptic oracles about the coming King and final day).
- Follow the night visions (chapters 1-6) as a series of revelations designed to encourage the discouraged post-exilic community: God is sovereignly at work even when it is not visible.
- Read chapters 9-14 with the New Testament open alongside; more of these chapters are quoted in the passion narratives than any other Old Testament book.
- Notice how Zechariah holds together the humble coming of the King (9:9, fulfilled in Palm Sunday) and the pierced one who is mourned (12:10, cited in John 19) , both are essential to his portrait of the Messiah.
- Let the final chapters' intensity not be flattened into a single prediction; they describe a comprehensive cosmic resolution in which God comes to dwell with his purified people.