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14 chapters · 78 min read
520s–400s BC
The returned exiles in
To encourage the rebuilding of the and point forward to God's ultimate plan — the coming of the and the establishment of God's kingdom
is the longest of the minor prophets and the most quoted in the New Testament after Isaiah and Psalms. The first half features eight vivid night visions — horsemen, lampstands, a flying scroll — all assuring the exiles that God is at work. The second half contains stunning messianic prophecies: a king riding a donkey, thirty pieces of silver, a pierced one whom the nation will mourn. The details are eerily specific.
God's heavenly horsemen report that every nation is out here vibing while Jerusalem is still in ruins — and that's exactly what sets Him off.
Zechariah 1 — The Night Vision That Started It All
'I will remove the iniquity of this land in a single day' — one of the hardest Messianic drops in the OT, and if you know what day that turned out to be, it hits different.
Zechariah 3 — The Courtroom Scene That Changed Everything
Wickedness got personified, stuffed in a basket, sealed with a lead lid, and deported back to Babylon — sin didn't just get forgiven, it got evicted.
Zechariah 5 — The Flying Scroll and the Woman in the Basket
God caught the whole nation in 4K — seventy years of fasting and it was never actually about Him, just religious performance on autopilot.
Zechariah 7 — Stop Faking Your Fasts
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500 years before Palm Sunday, God describes a King rolling up on a donkey not a war horse — because real power needs no display. Lowkey the hardest flex in Scripture.
Zechariah 9 — The King Who Pulls Up on a Donkey