
Salvation Through The One Who Is Pierced (Zechariah 11–12)
Overall Themes
- Israel’s Failed Shepherds Bring Ruin
Corrupt leaders exploit the flock, leading to judgment and division. - God’s True Shepherd Is Rejected
The symbolic shepherd is despised, undervalued, and dismissed—foreshadowing a deeper rejection. - God Hands the People Over to a Worthless Shepherd
When the true shepherd is rejected, a destructive leader rises in his place. - God Defends Jerusalem Against the Nations
The Lord Himself becomes a shield, turning weakness into strength. - God Brings Deep National Repentance
Israel mourns over “the one they pierced,” leading to a Spirit‑given turning of the heart.
Zechariah 11 — The Flock Doomed to Slaughter
1. Judgment on the Land and Its Leaders (11:1–3)
- Lebanon’s cedars, Bashan’s oaks, and the Jordan thickets fall—symbols of national collapse.
- Shepherds (leaders) wail because their “glory” is ruined.
- Point: The land’s devastation reflects the failure of its leaders.
2. Zechariah as the Good Shepherd (11:4–6)
- God commands Zechariah to shepherd a flock “doomed to slaughter.”
- The people are exploited:
- Buyers slaughter them without guilt.
- Sellers profit and claim God’s blessing.
- Shepherds show no pity.
- God withdraws His compassion and hands the people over to internal conflict.
- Point: The flock suffers because its leaders are corrupt, and God’s patience has run out.
3. The Two Staffs: Favor and Union (11:7–11)
- Zechariah shepherds the flock with two staffs:
- Favor — symbolizing God’s covenant protection.
- Union — symbolizing national unity.
- He removes “three shepherds” in one month—representing failed leadership.
- The flock detests him; he grows impatient with them.
- Zechariah breaks Favor, annulling God’s covenant protection.
- Point: Rejecting God’s shepherd leads to the loss of God’s favor.
4. The Thirty Pieces of Silver (11:12–13)
- Zechariah asks for his wages; they pay him thirty pieces of silver—the price of a slave.
- God calls it “the lordly price at which I was priced.”
- Zechariah throws it “to the potter” in the house of the Lord.
- Point: The shepherd is insultingly undervalued—foreshadowing the rejection of the Messiah.
5. The Breaking of Union (11:14)
- Zechariah breaks the second staff, Union, symbolizing the fracture between Judah and Israel.
- Point: Rejection of God’s shepherd leads to national division.
6. The Rise of the Worthless Shepherd (11:15–17)
- God commands Zechariah to act out the role of a foolish shepherd.
- This shepherd:
- Does not care for the lost
- Does not seek the young
- Does not heal the injured
- Devours the flock
- God pronounces woe on this worthless shepherd.
- Point: When the true shepherd is rejected, God gives the people over to destructive leadership.
Zechariah 12 — The LORD Will Give Salvation
1. God’s Sovereign Power Declared (12:1)
- The Lord who created the heavens, the earth, and the human spirit speaks.
- Point: The God who formed all things is fully able to save His people.
2. Jerusalem as a Cup and a Stone (12:2–3)
- Jerusalem becomes:
- A cup of staggering to surrounding nations.
- A heavy stone that injures all who try to lift it.
- All nations gather against Jerusalem.
- Point: God makes Jerusalem the center of global conflict—and global deliverance.
3. God Confounds the Nations and Strengthens Judah (12:4–6)
- God strikes enemy horses with panic and blindness.
- Judah recognizes that Jerusalem’s strength comes from the Lord.
- Judah becomes like a blazing torch consuming surrounding enemies.
- Point: God turns weakness into overwhelming strength.
4. God Saves and Protects His People (12:7–9)
- God saves the “tents of Judah” first—honoring the humble.
- The weakest in Jerusalem becomes “like David.”
- The house of David becomes “like God,” empowered by the angel of the Lord.
- God seeks to destroy all nations that attack Jerusalem.
- Point: God Himself fights for His people.
5. National Repentance: Mourning Over the Pierced One (12:10–14)
- God pours out:
- A spirit of grace
- A spirit of pleas for mercy
- The people look upon “me, on him whom they have pierced.”
- They mourn deeply, like grieving an only child.
- Every family mourns separately—personal, heartfelt repentance.
- Point: Salvation comes through a profound, Spirit‑given recognition of the One they pierced.
Unified Teaching Message
Zechariah 11–12 reveals the tragedy of rejecting God’s true shepherd and the devastation that follows—but also the astonishing grace of God, who fights for His people, pours out a spirit of repentance, and brings salvation through the One who is pierced.
