Zechariah 7
Zechariah records that in the fourth year of King Darius, a delegation from Bethel comes to ask the priests and prophets whether they should continue observing the fast commemorating the temple's destruction—a question about proper covenant practice after exile. The Lord directs Zechariah to respond that for seventy years the people fasted and mourned while their ancestors refused to hear the voice of the Lord and turn from their evil ways, suggesting that ritual observance divorced from genuine repentance and covenant transformation is spiritually bankrupt. The Lord declares through the prophet that when the people hear His word and turn from their wickedness, then their fasting will become celebration, and their mourning will become joy—establishing that authentic religious practice flows from transformed hearts and obedient living. Zechariah announces that this restoration requires the people to render true judgments and show mercy and compassion to one another, refusing to oppress widows, orphans, foreigners, and the poor, and desisting from plotting evil against one another. The chapter emphasizes that the Lord desires ethical transformation and justice within the covenant community far more than ritual observance, echoing the prophetic tradition from Isaiah through Malachi. In redemptive history, Zechariah's teaching connects post-exilic restoration to the ethical demands of covenant life and suggests that true worship integrates proper behavior, merciful compassion, and obedient response to the Lord's word.
Zechariah 7:1
In the fourth year of King Darius, on the fourth day of the ninth month (Kislev), the word of the Lord comes to Zechariah, establishing the historical and chronological setting for a new phase of prophecy wherein questions about ritual practice will be addressed through divine instruction about justice and mercy. The specific date two years after the initial visions establishes that time has passed in the restoration process; presumably the temple reconstruction is progressing and questions about cultic practice have arisen. The formula the word of the Lord came shifts from the visionary mode to direct prophetic speech, indicating a change in the form of revelation. The ninth month (Kislev) was a significant month in the Jewish calendar, and the fourth day may have had particular significance. This verse marks the beginning of the didactic final section of the prophecy, wherein the visions give way to teaching about the meaning of restoration and the community's proper response.
Zechariah 7:2
Bethel had sent Sharezer and Regem-melech and their men to entreat the favor of the Lord, asking the priests and prophets whether they should continue the practice of fasting in the fifth month\u2014establishing that the returning community is inquiring about the proper performance of ritual practices, specifically the fast commemorating the burning of the temple. The sending of an official delegation from Bethel (a significant religious center) to ask this question indicates the seriousness and communal significance of the inquiry. The practice of fasting in the fifth month commemorated the Babylonian destruction of the temple; now that the temple is being rebuilt, the community questions whether this sorrowful fast should continue. The question assumes that cultic practices are matters requiring divine guidance: the community seeks God's will through His prophets regarding how to mark their memory and maintain their religious identity. This inquiry initiates the final section of the prophecy, wherein God will address not merely the restoration's logistics but its spiritual meaning and the heart-attitudes required for genuine covenant renewal.