Satan Accuses, but God Justifies (Zechariah 3–4).

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Satan Accuses, but God Justifies (Zechariah 3–4).

Zechariah 3 — Vision Four: The Cleansed Priesthood

The Courtroom Scene

  • Joshua the high priest stands before the angel of the LORD.
  • Satan stands at Joshua’s right hand—the traditional place of the prosecuting attorney—to accuse, condemn, and disqualify.
  • The accusation is not baseless: Joshua’s garments are filthy, representing real guilt and impurity.

God’s Response to the Accuser

  • The LORD Himself rebukes Satan, not because Joshua is innocent, but because Joshua is chosen.
  • God calls Joshua a “brand plucked from the fire”—a rescued sinner, not a discarded one.
  • The decisive point: Satan’s accusations cannot overturn God’s election, mercy, or purpose.

The Act of Justification

  • God commands Joshua’s filthy garments to be removed.
  • Joshua is clothed in rich, clean garments—a picture of God’s gracious justification, not human self‑repair.
  • A clean turban (the symbol of priestly holiness) is placed on his head.
  • God declares: “I have freely forgiven your iniquity.”
  • The priest is restored not by argument, effort, or defense—but by divine grace.

Covenant Calling and Messianic Hope

  • Joshua is charged to walk faithfully in his renewed calling.
  • He and his fellow priests are signs pointing to “My Servant, the Branch”—the coming Messiah.
  • God promises to remove the land’s iniquity “in a single day,” anticipating the once‑for‑all work of Christ.
  • The result is peace, fellowship, and security—life “under the vine and fig tree.”

Zechariah 4 — Vision Five: The Menorah and the Olive Trees

The Lampstand and the Olive Trees

  • A golden menorah continually supplied with oil symbolizes God’s unceasing provision.
  • The message to Zerubbabel:
    “Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit.”
  • Just as Joshua’s cleansing was God’s work, the rebuilding of the temple will be God’s work.

Encouragement to Zerubbabel

  • The “great mountain” of obstacles will become a level plain.
  • Zerubbabel will finish what he started because God is the One empowering him.
  • God’s seven eyes—His perfect, watchful presence—delight in the work.

The Two Anointed Ones

  • The olive trees represent God’s Spirit‑empowered leaders (commonly Joshua and Zerubbabel).
  • Together they foreshadow the unified, Spirit‑anointed ministry of the coming Messiah.

Overall Themes (with Emphasis on God’s Justifying Grace)

1. Satan Accuses, but God Justifies

  • Satan highlights guilt; God removes it.
  • Satan points to the filth; God clothes His people in righteousness.
  • Satan argues for disqualification; God declares acceptance.
  • The believer’s hope rests not in self‑defense but in God’s sovereign mercy.

2. God’s Grace Precedes and Empowers Service

  • Joshua is cleansed before he is commissioned.
  • Zerubbabel builds by the Spirit, not by human strength.

3. God’s Chosen Servant, the Branch, Is the Center of Restoration

  • The Messiah brings decisive, once‑for‑all forgiveness.
  • He unites priestly cleansing and kingly authority.

4. God Delights in Small Beginnings

  • God rejoices over faithful obedience, even when the work seems insignificant.

5. God Is Building a Future of Peace

  • Cleansing leads to fellowship, security, and flourishing.
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About Jefferson Vann

Jefferson Vann is pastor of Piney Grove Advent Christian Church in Delco, North Carolina.
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