Bible Commentary

Zechariah 9:5

The Pulpit Commentary on Zechariah 9:5

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

Ashkelon shall see it. The ruin of so mighty a city as Tyre naturally filled neighbouring people with dismay. The prophet directs his attention to Philistia, and threatens its chief cities. The cities are enumerated in the same order as in .

Gath is omitted, as in and :. It seems never to have recovered its destruction by Uzziah (). (For Ashkelon, Gaza, and Ekron, see note on .) Her expectation shall be ashamed.

The hope of aid from Tyre shall not be fulfilled. After the fall of Tyre, Alexander continued his march southwards towards Egypt, subduing the cities on his way. The siege of Gaze delayed him some months; and when it was taken, it shared the treatment of Tyre.

Its governor, one Batis, a eunuch, was tied alive to the conqueror's chariot, and dragged round the walls, in cruel imitation of the fate of Hector. The king shall perish from Gaza. No particular king is meant; but the prediction says that henceforward no king should reign in Gaze.

In contrast with the Eastern policy of allowing conquered nations to retain their own rulers as tributary sovereigns, Alexander always deposed or slew reigning monarchs, and consolidated his empire by replacing them with governors of his own.

The various chastisements are meted out by the prophet among the various cities, though they equally apply to all.

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