{"notes_id":"eng_tyndale","book":"hag","verses":{"1":{"1":"This introductory statement (<em>superscription</em>) identifies the author, the audience, the date, and the occasion prompting the prophecy. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">the second year:</span> King Darius I (Hystaspes) ruled Persia 521–486 <span class=\"fbn-era\">BC</span>, early in the Persian Empire (539–331 <span class=\"fbn-era\">BC</span>). The messages of Haggai are among the most precisely dated prophecies in the Old Testament. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Prophet</span> (Hebrew <span class=\"fbn-hebrew\">nabi’</span>) designates <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Haggai</span> as a representative of God who speaks with the authority of God, who sent him. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Zerubbabel</span> led one group of Hebrews back to Palestine after the Babylonian exile and was the Persian-appointed governor of Judah at the time of Haggai’s ministry (see <span data-ref=\"ezr,2,1,2,2\">Ezra 2:1-2</span>; <span data-ref=\"ezr,3,2\">3:2</span>; <span data-ref=\"neh,7,7\">Neh 7:7</span>). • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Jeshua</span> was the high priest at that time. Under his supervision, the altar was rebuilt and the second Temple was dedicated (<span data-ref=\"ezr,3,2\">Ezra 3:2</span>; <span data-ref=\"ezr,5,2\">5:2</span>; <span data-ref=\"ezr,6,15\">6:15</span>).","2":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt fbn-yhwh\">Lord</span><span class=\"fbn-excerpt\"> of Heaven’s Armies:</span> Haggai’s and Zechariah’s favorite expression for God emphasizes the invincible power behind God’s word. The Lord can call on infinite numbers of heavenly troops to carry out his will at a moment’s notice (<span data-ref=\"2ki,6,17\">2 Kgs 6:17</span>; <span data-ref=\"mat,26,53\">Matt 26:53</span>). This thought was intended to encourage the Judeans, who felt helpless and insignificant. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">The time has not yet come:</span> Poor crop yields from drought and pestilence had so weakened Judah’s economy (<span data-ref=\"hag,1,6\">Hag 1:6</span>, <span data-ref=\"hag,1,9,1,11\">9-11</span>) that the people thought they could not afford to rebuild the Temple. Haggai convinced them they could not afford to leave the Temple in ruins, for God would not bless and prosper them if they did not rebuild the Lord’s house (<span data-ref=\"hag,1,4\">1:4</span>, <span data-ref=\"hag,1,7,1,8\">7-8</span>).","4":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Why are you?</span> Rhetorical questions in prophetic literature call for agreement rather than a reply (see <span data-ref=\"hag,2,3\">2:3</span>). The purpose of this question is to remove the listeners’ opportunity to offer excuses in response to the message. • The <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">luxurious</span> (or <em>covered, paneled</em>) <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">houses</span> of the people contrasted with God’s Temple, which was <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">in ruins</span> (or <em>desolate</em>) and thus unusable.","5":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Look at what’s happening to you</span> (literally <em>Set your heart on these matters</em>): For the Hebrews, the <em>heart</em> is the place where thinking, feeling, and willing all occur. So this command (also <span data-ref=\"hag,1,7\">1:7</span>; <span data-ref=\"hag,2,15\">2:15</span>, <span data-ref=\"hag,2,18\">18</span>) calls upon the people to think carefully and draw the proper conclusions about the connection between what’s happening to them (drought and poverty, <span data-ref=\"hag,1,6\">1:6</span>) and their failure to restore proper worship of the Lord (<span data-ref=\"hag,1,8,1,9\">1:8-9</span>).","6":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">eat . . . drink . . . put on clothes:</span> Each of these conveys continuous action (i.e., you keep filling your plates . . . you keep drinking and drinking . . . you put on layer after layer of clothes), heightening the sense of futility. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">pockets filled with holes</span> (literally <em>a pierced bag</em>): The image depicts the loss of wages. Many families faced poverty despite their steady labors.","8":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Now go up into the hills:</span> The stands of trees around Jerusalem were insufficient to meet the demands of the Temple project. Such supplies would have been imported from Lebanon and Syria to the north. • The challenge to <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">rebuild my house</span> underscores the importance of worship in the life of the community and the need for a proper sanctuary so worship of the Lord might take place according to the law. The land would experience blessing and prosperity when the Lord’s Temple—his dwelling place—was rebuilt (<span data-ref=\"hag,2,4\">2:4</span>).","9":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">I blew it away:</span> The Lord destroyed the harvest because the people’s priorities were wrong—they thought only of themselves rather than of God. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">says the</span> <span class=\"fbn-excerpt fbn-yhwh\">Lord</span><span class=\"fbn-excerpt\"> of Heaven’s Armies:</span> The “God-as-speaker formula,” which often closes a prophecy (<span data-ref=\"hag,1,13\">1:13</span>; <span data-ref=\"hag,2,8\">2:8</span>, <span data-ref=\"hag,2,17\">17</span>, <span data-ref=\"hag,2,23\">23</span>), verified Haggai’s message as the sure word of God.","11":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">I have called for a drought:</span> The people failed to recognize their plight as a divine judgment on their misplaced priorities, so Haggai interpreted the situation in light of the curses attached to the covenant (<span data-ref=\"deu,28,15,28,68\">Deut 28:15-68</span>, especially vv <span data-ref=\"deu,28,22,28,24\">22-24</span>, <span data-ref=\"deu,28,38,28,40\">38-40</span>). • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Drought</span> (Hebrew <span class=\"fbn-hebrew\">khoreb</span>) is a wordplay on “ruins” (<span data-ref=\"hag,1,4\">Hag 1:4</span>, <span data-ref=\"hag,1,9\">9</span>; Hebrew <span class=\"fbn-hebrew\">khareb</span>)—Judah’s experiences corresponded with the condition in which they had left the Lord’s Temple.","12":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">The whole remnant</span> means the people who returned from Babylon. All of them were united in the rebuilding project. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">the people feared the</span> <span class=\"fbn-excerpt fbn-yhwh\">Lord</span><span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">:</span> They responded with reverence and worship, and they reordered their priorities by placing spiritual values above their material prosperity.","13":"Haggai’s unusual title as <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">the</span> <span class=\"fbn-excerpt fbn-yhwh\">Lord</span><span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">’s messenger</span> (the same Hebrew phrase is often translated <em>angel of the</em> <em class=\"fbn-yhwh\">Lord</em>) ascribes distinctive authority to Haggai as the Lord’s agent. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">I am with you:</span> This affirmed God’s covenant with the people of Judea, his personal presence, and his support in the building project (<span data-ref=\"hag,2,4,2,5\">2:4-5</span>; see <span data-ref=\"gen,26,3\">Gen 26:3</span>; <span data-ref=\"exo,3,12\">Exod 3:12</span>; <span data-ref=\"isa,41,10\">Isa 41:10</span>; <span data-ref=\"isa,43,5\">43:5</span>; <span data-ref=\"jer,30,11\">Jer 30:11</span>).","14":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">The</span> <span class=\"fbn-excerpt fbn-yhwh\">Lord</span><span class=\"fbn-excerpt\"> sparked the enthusiasm</span> (literally <em>stirred the spirit</em>) of the people to accomplish his purposes (see <span data-ref=\"ezr,1,1\">Ezra 1:1</span>; <span data-ref=\"isa,13,17\">Isa 13:17</span>; <span data-ref=\"isa,41,25\">41:25</span>; <span data-ref=\"jer,51,1\">Jer 51:1</span>, <span data-ref=\"jer,51,11\">11</span>). True worship of God prompts sacrificial service by God’s people."},"2":{"1":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">on October 17 of that same year:</span> This was the last day of the Festival of Tabernacles, the celebration of the summer harvest (see <span data-ref=\"lev,23,34,23,43\">Lev 23:34-43</span>). Hundreds of years earlier, Solomon’s Temple had been dedicated during this festival (<span data-ref=\"1ki,8,2\">1 Kgs 8:2</span>). Haggai’s message was timed to offer the people hope and encouragement in their present distress and discouragement.","3":"The <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">former splendor</span> belonged to Solomon’s Temple (<span data-ref=\"1ki,6,38\">1 Kgs 6:38</span>), which some of the older people of Judah had seen in their youth before going into exile in Babylon. They wept when they saw the new foundation laid (<span data-ref=\"ezr,3,12,3,13\">Ezra 3:12-13</span>), because it seemed <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">like nothing at all</span> by comparison.","4":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">But now . . . Be strong:</span> This marks a shift from rebuke and challenge to encouragement and affirmation (cp. <span data-ref=\"jos,1,6,1,7\">Josh 1:6-7</span>).","5":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">My Spirit remains among you:</span> See <span data-ref=\"exo,29,46\">Exod 29:46</span>; <span data-ref=\"isa,63,11\">Isa 63:11</span>; <span data-ref=\"ezk,36,26,36,27\">Ezek 36:26-27</span>. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">just as I promised</span> (literally <em>the word I cut with you</em>): The phrase “cut a covenant” is the Hebrew idiom for making a covenant (see <span data-ref=\"gen,15,18\">Gen 15:18</span>; <span data-ref=\"exo,34,27\">Exod 34:27</span>). Haggai’s phrase, “cut a word,” is unique in the Old Testament, using language that purposefully creates a connection between his prophecy and God’s covenant relationship with his people. By making this connection, Haggai underscored the continuity of God’s actions in rescuing his people, first from Egypt and then from Babylon (see <span data-ref=\"ezk,20,33,20,38\">Ezek 20:33-38</span>).","7":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Treasures . . . will be brought</span> to the Temple by all the nations as tribute and homage to the God of Israel.","9":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">future glory:</span> Haggai might have in mind the Messiah’s coming to his Temple (see <span data-ref=\"mal,3,1\">Mal 3:1</span>). Jesus was presented in the Lord’s Temple as an infant (<span data-ref=\"luk,2,22\">Luke 2:22</span>), and he taught there as an adult (<span data-ref=\"luk,19,45,19,47\">Luke 19:45-47</span>). Jesus, the human Word of God, is greater than the Temple (<span data-ref=\"mat,12,6\">Matt 12:6</span>; see <span data-ref=\"jhn,2,13,2,22\">John 2:13-22</span>). Although it was recognized by only a few, Jesus’ presence in the Temple far outshone the glory in the Tabernacle at the time of Moses and in Solomon’s Temple (cp. <span data-ref=\"luk,2,29,2,32\">Luke 2:29-32</span>). • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">in this place I will bring peace:</span> The priestly benediction (<span data-ref=\"num,6,24,6,26\">Num 6:24-26</span>) was pronounced as part of the Temple liturgy. In the last days, God would make a covenant of peace with Israel (<span data-ref=\"ezk,34,25\">Ezek 34:25</span>; <span data-ref=\"ezk,37,26\">37:26</span>). The good result of rebuilding the Temple was a guarantee on that future <em>peace</em>.","11":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Ask the priests:</span> The priests’ job was to teach and interpret <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">the law</span> (<span data-ref=\"deu,33,10\">Deut 33:10</span>; <span data-ref=\"mal,2,7,2,9\">Mal 2:7-9</span>), so the message about ceremonial purity was directed to them.","12":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">will it also become holy?</span> This question refers to <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">meat from a holy sacrifice</span> and the way in which ceremonial purity and impurity could be transferred (see “Clean, Unclean, and Holy” Theme Note). Carrying the holy sacrifice—the meat set aside and prepared for the offering—rendered one’s robe holy (cp. <span data-ref=\"lev,6,18\">Lev 6:18</span>). This holiness, however, could not be transmitted to a third object.","13":"Ceremonial uncleanness is transmitted much more easily than ceremonial purity. Anyone touching a corpse became defiled and thus unclean. Anything touched by a <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">ceremonially unclean</span> person was also rendered impure (see <span data-ref=\"num,19,11,19,13\">Num 19:11-13</span>, <span data-ref=\"num,19,22\">22</span>). Haggai applies this in <span data-ref=\"hag,2,14\">Hag 2:14</span>.","14":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">That is how it is with this people:</span> Simply returning from exile to the land God promised Israel did not make the people of Judah holy. They were still unclean, since they were not obeying the instructions of God’s covenant with them. Their work and even their worship were contaminated by impurity; the ruins of the Lord’s Temple had symbolized the people’s disobedience. The rebuilding of the Temple was a tangible sign of changed hearts and renewed obedience to God’s covenant.","15":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Look at what was happening</span> (see study note on 1:5): Divine blessing, whether spiritual or material, is contingent upon the obedience of God’s people (<span data-ref=\"deu,30,6,30,10\">Deut 30:6-10</span>). Haggai called the people to persist in the self-examination that leads to repentance and in the fear of the Lord that his first message initiated (see <span data-ref=\"hag,1,7\">Hag 1:7</span>, <span data-ref=\"hag,1,12\">12</span>).","17":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Return</span> often signifies repentance. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">you refused:</span> The Hebrew people were stubborn and rebellious from the time of Moses (<span data-ref=\"deu,31,27\">Deut 31:27</span>) to the time of Jesus (<span data-ref=\"mat,17,17\">Matt 17:17</span>). • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">blight and mildew:</span> What happened was the result of disobedience to God’s covenant (see <span data-ref=\"deu,28,22\">Deut 28:22</span>).","18":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Think about this eighteenth day of December, the day:</span> Or <em>On this eighteenth day of December, think about the day;</em> literally <em>Think about this day onward, this twenty-fourth day of the ninth month.</em> Some believe that the phrase “this day” refers to the date of the initial clearing of rubble from the Temple site and the procuring of building materials (September 21, 520 <span class=\"fbn-era\">BC</span>; see <span data-ref=\"hag,1,14,1,15\">1:14-15</span>).","19":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">I am giving you a promise now while the seed is still in the barn:</span> The promise of a bountiful crop calls attention to God’s faithfulness to his covenant people. The Temple was not yet complete, but God was promising to extend its blessings at once. • <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">But from this day onward I will bless you:</span> God was gracious in responding immediately to his people’s efforts toward spiritual renewal and obedience (see <span data-ref=\"psa,111,4,111,5\">Ps 111:4-5</span>).","21":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Zerubbabel, the governor</span><em>,</em> was a descendant of David through Jehoiachin (<span data-ref=\"1ch,3,19\">1 Chr 3:19</span>). Haggai’s affirmation thus overturns the curse on Jehoiachin (<span data-ref=\"jer,22,24,22,30\">Jer 22:24-30</span>). However, Zerubbabel abruptly disappears from the biblical record. He was possibly deposed as Judean governor or even executed by King Darius, who was attempting to control his newly acquired empire. The expectations here ascribed to Zerubbabel, and his status as a descendant of David, might have made him a political threat to Darius.","22":"<span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">I will overturn their chariots and riders:</span> The prophet’s language would remind Israel of their deliverance from the Egyptian army (see <span data-ref=\"exo,15,1,15,21\">Exod 15:1-21</span>). The ambiguity of the threat of God’s judgment makes it unclear whether Haggai is referring to events in the distant future or to something more immediate involving the Persian Empire (e.g., the Greek-Persian wars during the reigns of Darius I and Xerxes or the later Peloponnesian War).","23":"The <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">signet ring</span> was a symbol of kingship. An engraved stone set in a gold or silver finger ring was used to seal or endorse official documents. The image here emphasizes the divine authority invested in <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">Zerubbabel</span> and assures the people of God’s continuing involvement in the political process (despite the failures of the Hebrew monarchs). The designation of Zerubbabel as the <em>signet</em> of the Lord no doubt rekindled expectations for the Messiah, since Zerubbabel was a descendant of King David. Yet the declaration ultimately points beyond Zerubbabel (see study note on 2:21) to one of his descendants (see <span data-ref=\"mat,1,12\">Matt 1:12</span>; <span data-ref=\"luk,1,32,1,33\">Luke 1:32-33</span>; <span data-ref=\"luk,3,27\">3:27</span>)."}},"ranges":[{"start_chapter":1,"start_verse":1,"end_chapter":1,"end_verse":15,"contents":"The first <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">message</span> calls the people of Jerusalem to focus on restoring proper worship of God."},{"start_chapter":2,"start_verse":1,"end_chapter":2,"end_verse":9,"contents":"Haggai’s second message assures the community that God has not forgotten his promises, made by earlier prophets, to bless and restore them (e.g., <span data-ref=\"isa,35,1,35,10\">Isa 35</span>; <span data-ref=\"isa,40,1,40,11\">40:1-11</span>; <span data-ref=\"isa,52,1,52,12\">52:1-12</span>; <span data-ref=\"jer,32,36,32,44\">Jer 32:36-44</span>; <span data-ref=\"jer,33,6,33,26\">33:6-26</span>)."},{"start_chapter":2,"start_verse":6,"end_chapter":2,"end_verse":7,"contents":"God <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">will again shake the heavens and the earth</span> at the coming day of judgment (see <span data-ref=\"isa,2,19,2,21\">Isa 2:19-21</span>; <span data-ref=\"isa,30,28\">30:28</span>). The previous shaking was the judgment on Egypt at the time of the Exodus (<span data-ref=\"hag,2,21,2,22\">Hag 2:21-22</span>; <span data-ref=\"exo,14,31\">Exod 14:31</span>). The New Testament relates <span class=\"fbn-excerpt\">in just a little while</span> to the return of Jesus Christ (<span data-ref=\"heb,12,26,12,27\">Heb 12:26-27</span>). Haggai probably saw God’s ultimate judgment foreshadowed in events to take place after his time (e.g., the fall of Persia to Greece, the fall of Greece to Rome; see <span data-ref=\"dan,2,39,2,45\">Dan 2:39-45</span>)."},{"start_chapter":2,"start_verse":10,"end_chapter":2,"end_verse":19,"contents":"The theme of the third message is the law’s instructions about ritual purity. These instructions were still operative. God expects his people to be holy, even as he is holy (<span data-ref=\"lev,11,44,11,45\">Lev 11:44-45</span>)."},{"start_chapter":2,"start_verse":20,"end_chapter":2,"end_verse":23,"contents":"Haggai’s final message is perhaps the most important; it reestablishes the prominence of David’s descendant in Israel’s religious and political life. The dynasty of David was key to restoring the Hebrew people after the Babylonian exile (see <span data-ref=\"jer,23,5\">Jer 23:5</span>; <span data-ref=\"ezk,37,24\">Ezek 37:24</span>). God had cursed David’s descendant, King Jehoiachin, at the time of the Exile (<span data-ref=\"jer,22,24,22,30\">Jer 22:24-30</span>), but Haggai’s last message overturns that curse and reinstates the covenant with David (see <span data-ref=\"2sa,7,4,7,17\">2 Sam 7:4-17</span>) as the means by which God will carry out his promises to bless and restore Israel."}]}