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Zechariah · The Prophet

Zechariah · Chapter 5זְכַרְיָה

Two visions of judgment: the flying scroll and the woman in the basket

Sin cannot remain in God's presence. Zechariah receives two striking visions that depict the removal of wickedness from the restored community. The flying scroll pronounces curse upon thieves and oath-breakers, while the woman in the basket represents iniquity being transported to Babylon. Together these visions assure the post-exilic community that God will purge sin from their midst and establish them in holiness.

Zechariah 5:1-4

Vision of the Flying Scroll

1Then I lifted up my eyes again and saw, and behold, there was a flying scroll. 2And he said to me, "What do you see?" And I said, "I see a flying scroll; its length is twenty cubits and its width ten cubits." 3Then he said to me, "This is the curse that is going forth over the face of the whole land; surely everyone who steals will be purged away according to the writing on one side, and everyone who swears falsely will be purged away according to the writing on the other side. 4I will send it forth," declares Yahweh of hosts, "and it will enter the house of the thief and the house of the one who swears falsely by My name; and it will spend the night within that house and consume it with its timber and stones."
1וָאָשׁ֨וּב וָאֶשָּׂ֤א עֵינַי֙ וָֽאֶרְאֶ֔ה וְהִנֵּ֖ה מְגִלָּ֥ה עָפָֽה׃ 2וַיֹּ֣אמֶר אֵלַ֔י מָ֥ה אַתָּ֖ה רֹאֶ֑ה וָאֹמַ֗ר אֲנִ֤י רֹאֶה֙ מְגִלָּ֣ה עָפָ֔ה אָרְכָּהּ֙ עֶשְׂרִ֣ים בָּֽאַמָּ֔ה וְרָחְבָּ֖הּ עֶ֥שֶׂר בָּאַמָּֽה׃ 3וַיֹּ֣אמֶר אֵלַ֔י זֹ֚את הָֽאָלָ֔ה הַיּוֹצֵ֖את עַל־פְּנֵ֣י כָל־הָאָ֑רֶץ כִּ֣י כָל־הַגֹּנֵ֗ב מִזֶּה֙ כָּמ֣וֹהָ נִקָּ֔ה וְכָל־הַנִּ֨שְׁבָּ֔ע מִזֶּ֖ה כָּמ֥וֹהָ נִקָּֽה׃ 4הוֹצֵאתִ֗יהָ נְאֻם֙ יְהוָ֣ה צְבָא֔וֹת וּבָ֙אָה֙ אֶל־בֵּ֣ית הַגַּנָּ֔ב וְאֶל־בֵּ֛ית הַנִּשְׁבָּ֥ע בִּשְׁמִ֖י לַשָּׁ֑קֶר וְלָ֙נֶה֙ בְּת֣וֹךְ בֵּית֔וֹ וְכִלַּ֖תּוּ וְאֶת־עֵצָ֥יו וְאֶת־אֲבָנָֽיו׃
1wāʾāšûḇ wāʾeśśāʾ ʿênay wāʾerʾeh wǝhinnēh mǝḡillâ ʿāp̄â. 2wayyōʾmer ʾēlay mâ ʾattâ rōʾeh wāʾōmar ʾănî rōʾeh mǝḡillâ ʿāp̄â ʾorkāh ʿeśrîm bāʾammâ wǝroḥbāh ʿeśer bāʾammâ. 3wayyōʾmer ʾēlay zōʾṯ hāʾālâ hayyôṣēʾṯ ʿal-pǝnê ḵol-hāʾāreṣ kî ḵol-haggōnēḇ mizzeh kāmôhā niqqâ wǝḵol-hannišbāʿ mizzeh kāmôhā niqqâ. 4hôṣēʾṯîhā nǝʾum yhwh ṣǝḇāʾôṯ ûḇāʾâ ʾel-bêṯ haggannāḇ wǝʾel-bêṯ hannišbāʿ bišmî laššāqer wǝlāneh bǝṯôḵ bêṯô wǝḵillattû wǝʾeṯ-ʿēṣāyw wǝʾeṯ-ʾăḇānāyw.
מְגִלָּה mǝḡillâ scroll / roll
From the root גָּלַל (gālal, "to roll"), this term designates a rolled manuscript, the standard form of written documents in the ancient Near East. The dimensions given—twenty by ten cubits (approximately 30 by 15 feet)—are enormous, making this scroll visible from a great distance and emphasizing the public, unavoidable nature of divine judgment. The same word appears in Jeremiah 36 for the scroll containing Yahweh's words that King Jehoiakim burned, and in Ezekiel 2:9–3:3 where the prophet eats a scroll inscribed with lament and woe. Here the flying scroll symbolizes the active, mobile nature of God's covenant curse pursuing covenant-breakers.
אָלָה ʾālâ curse / oath
This noun derives from the root אָלָה (ʾālâ, "to swear" or "to curse"), and it carries the dual sense of both an oath and the curse invoked for breaking that oath. In Deuteronomy 29:19–20, the ʾālâ refers to the covenant curses written in the Torah that will overtake the one who walks in stubbornness of heart. The term appears in contexts of covenant violation throughout the Hebrew Bible, particularly in Deuteronomy 28–30. Zechariah's flying scroll embodies these covenant sanctions now actively seeking out transgressors in the restored community, demonstrating that the rebuilt temple and renewed worship do not nullify God's moral demands.
נִקָּה niqqâ purged away / cleared out
The Niphal perfect of נָקָה (nāqâ, "to be clean, innocent, free"), this verb often appears in legal contexts concerning guilt and punishment. In Exodus 20:7, Yahweh declares He "will not leave unpunished" (lōʾ yǝnaqqeh) the one who takes His name in vain—the same root used here but in opposite sense. The passive form here indicates that thieves and false swearers will be "cleared out" or "purged away" from the land, an ironic reversal: rather than being cleared of guilt, they are cleared out of the community. This echoes the Deuteronomic principle that evil must be purged from Israel's midst (Deuteronomy 13:5; 17:7).
גַּנָּב gannāḇ thief / one who steals
From the root גָּנַב (gānaḇ, "to steal"), this participle designates one who habitually steals, violating the eighth commandment. The Decalogue prohibition against stealing (Exodus 20:15) protects both property and personhood, as the verb can refer to kidnapping as well as theft of goods. In the post-exilic context, theft represented not merely a crime against a neighbor but a violation of covenant solidarity, undermining the trust necessary for community restoration. The pairing of thief and false swearer in this vision targets two fundamental breaches of covenant law—one against neighbor's property, the other against God's name.
נִשְׁבָּע nišbāʿ one who swears / takes an oath
The Niphal participle of שָׁבַע (šāḇaʿ, "to swear"), this term refers to one who takes an oath, here specifically qualified as swearing "falsely" (laššāqer) by Yahweh's name. The third commandment forbids taking Yahweh's name in vain (Exodus 20:7), and Leviticus 19:12 explicitly prohibits swearing falsely by God's name, which profanes it. In the ancient world, oaths invoked deity as witness and guarantor; false oaths thus constituted perjury against both human community and divine majesty. The post-exilic community, rebuilding around temple and Torah, faced the temptation to use religious language manipulatively while violating its substance—a hypocrisy this vision confronts with devastating directness.
יְהוָה צְבָאוֹת yhwh ṣǝḇāʾôṯ Yahweh of hosts / LORD of armies
This compound divine title combines the personal covenant name Yahweh with ṣǝḇāʾôṯ ("hosts" or "armies"), referring either to Israel's armies, the heavenly host of angels, or the celestial bodies—likely all three in a comprehensive assertion of sovereignty. The title appears frequently in prophetic literature, especially in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi, emphasizing God's power to execute His purposes. In this context, "Yahweh of hosts" underscores that the One sending forth the curse commands all the forces of heaven and earth; no thief or perjurer can escape His reach. The title assures the faithful remnant that their God possesses both the authority and the power to purify His people.
כִלָּה killâ consume / destroy completely
The Piel perfect of כָּלָה (kālâ, "to complete, finish, consume"), this intensive form indicates thorough, total destruction. The verb appears in contexts of divine judgment where God's wrath consumes utterly, leaving nothing remaining (Deuteronomy 28:21; Jeremiah 14:12). The vision's climax depicts the curse-scroll not merely entering the guilty house but spending the night there and consuming it entirely—timber and stones alike, the very structural elements. This comprehensive destruction recalls the ban (ḥērem) placed on Jericho and Achan's possessions, where covenant violation required total eradication. The image warns that sin's contamination is so thorough that even inanimate materials must be destroyed.

The sixth vision opens with Zechariah's characteristic formula of renewed attention: "Then I lifted up my eyes again and saw" (wāʾāšûḇ wāʾeśśāʾ ʿênay wāʾerʾeh). The verb šûḇ ("return, again") signals a fresh prophetic experience, while the sequence of waw-consecutive verbs creates narrative momentum—the prophet turns, lifts, sees, and beholds in rapid succession. The particle hinnēh ("behold") marks the visionary object as startling and significant. The scroll is not merely present but "flying" (ʿāp̄â, feminine participle of ʿûp̄, "to fly"), an active, pursuing agent rather than a passive document. The dialogue structure (verses 2–4) follows the pattern established in earlier visions: the interpreting angel asks what Zechariah sees, the prophet describes the vision, and the angel provides interpretation.

The scroll's dimensions—twenty by ten cubits—are precisely those of the tabernacle's Holy Place (Exodus 26:15–25) and half those of Solomon's temple porch (1 Kings 6:3), creating deliberate architectural resonance. This is no ordinary scroll but one scaled to temple proportions, suggesting that the law written on it originates from the sanctuary and carries divine authority. The curse (hāʾālâ) is personified as "going forth" (hayyôṣēʾṯ, feminine participle) "over the face of the whole land" (ʿal-pǝnê ḵol-hāʾāreṣ), echoing Genesis 1:2 where God's Spirit moved over the face of the waters. What once brought creation now brings de-creation for covenant-breakers, a reversal of blessing into curse.

The structure of verse 3 employs precise parallelism: "everyone who steals... will be purged away" balanced by "everyone who swears falsely... will be purged away." The phrase kāmôhā ("according to it" or "like it") appears twice, indicating that the punishment corresponds exactly to what is written on each side of the scroll—one side addresses theft (eighth commandment), the other false oaths (third commandment). These two sins represent violations of the Decalogue's two tables: duties toward neighbor and duties toward God. The rhetorical effect is comprehensive: no category of covenant-breaker escapes. Verse 4 shifts to first-person divine speech ("I will send it forth," hôṣēʾṯîhā) with the prophetic formula nǝʾum yhwh ṣǝḇāʾôṯ, emphasizing that this is not merely Zechariah's vision but Yahweh's direct action. The curse-scroll becomes an agent with volition—it "will enter" (ûḇāʾâ) and "will spend the night" (wǝlāneh), the latter verb suggesting patient, thorough work rather than hasty destruction. The final verb wǝḵillattû ("and it will consume it") lacks an explicit subject, allowing the curse itself to be understood as the consuming agent, an impersonal force of divine justice that reduces the guilty house to nothing.

God's word is never inert—it flies, pursues, enters, and accomplishes its purpose, whether in blessing or in curse. The community that gathers around temple and Torah must reckon with both the comfort and the terror of an active, holy God whose standards cannot be manipulated or evaded.

Deuteronomy 27:15–26; Deuteronomy 28:15–68; Exodus 20:7, 15

The flying scroll embodies the covenant curses enumerated in Deuteronomy 27–28, where Moses sets before Israel the blessings for obedience and curses for disobedience. Deuteronomy 27:15–26 lists twelve specific curses, each concluding with the people's "Amen," a communal acceptance of covenant sanctions. Deuteronomy 28:15–68 expands these into a comprehensive catalog of judgments that will "pursue" and "overtake" the disobedient (28:15, 45). Zechariah's vision literalizes this pursuit: the curse is no longer a potential consequence but an active agent flying over the land, seeking out violators. The specific sins highlighted—theft and false oaths—correspond to the eighth and third commandments (Exodus 20:7, 15), representing the two tables of the law: vertical relationship with God and horizontal relationship with neighbor.

The dimensions of the scroll (twenty by ten cubits) deliberately echo the Holy Place of the tabernacle, where the law was kept in the ark within the Most Holy Place. This architectural resonance signals that the curse originates from the sanctuary itself—the very place of God's presence and the locus of covenant relationship. The post-exilic community, having returned from Babylonian exile and rebuilt the temple, might have assumed that restoration guaranteed blessing. Zechariah's vision shatters this presumption: the rebuilt temple does not nullify God's moral demands but intensifies them. The law that dwelt in the sanctuary now flies forth to execute judgment, demonstrating that proximity to God's presence without covenant faithfulness brings not security but danger. The scroll's consumption of house, timber, and stones recalls the total destruction of Achan's possessions after his theft of devoted things (Joshua 7:24–25), establishing continuity between wilderness-era covenant sanctions and post-exilic accountability.

Zechariah 5:5-11

Vision of the Woman in the Basket

5Then the angel who was speaking with me went out and said to me, "Lift up now your eyes and see what this is going forth." 6And I said, "What is it?" And he said, "This is the ephah going forth." Again he said, "This is their appearance in all the land. 7And behold, a lead cover was lifted up; and this is a woman sitting inside the ephah." 8Then he said, "This is Wickedness!" And he threw her down into the middle of the ephah and threw the lead weight on its opening. 9Then I lifted up my eyes and saw, and behold, two women were going forth with the wind in their wings; and they had wings like the wings of a stork, and they lifted up the ephah between the earth and the heavens. 10And I said to the angel who was speaking with me, "Where are they taking the ephah?" 11Then he said to me, "To build a house for her in the land of Shinar; and when it is prepared, she will be set there on her own pedestal."
5וַיֵּצֵ֕א הַמַּלְאָ֖ךְ הַדֹּבֵ֣ר בִּ֑י וַיֹּ֣אמֶר אֵלַ֔י שָׂ֣א נָ֤א עֵינֶ֙יךָ֙ וּרְאֵ֔ה מָ֖ה הַיּוֹצֵ֥את הַזֹּֽאת׃ 6וָאֹמַ֖ר מַה־הִ֑יא וַיֹּ֗אמֶר זֹ֤את הָֽאֵיפָה֙ הַיּוֹצֵ֔את וַיֹּ֕אמֶר זֹ֥את עֵינָ֖ם בְּכָל־הָאָֽרֶץ׃ 7וְהִנֵּ֛ה כִּכַּ֥ר עֹפֶ֖רֶת נִשֵּׂ֑את וְזֹאת֙ אִשָּׁ֣ה אַחַ֔ת יוֹשֶׁ֖בֶת בְּת֥וֹךְ הָאֵיפָֽה׃ 8וַיֹּ֙אמֶר֙ זֹ֣את הָרִשְׁעָ֔ה וַיַּשְׁלֵ֥ךְ אֹתָ֖הּ אֶל־תּ֣וֹךְ הָאֵיפָ֑ה וַיַּשְׁלֵ֛ךְ אֶת־אֶ֥בֶן הָעֹפֶ֖רֶת אֶל־פִּֽיהָ׃ 9וָאֶשָּׂ֨א עֵינַ֜י וָאֵ֗רֶא וְהִנֵּה֩ שְׁתַּ֨יִם נָשִׁ֤ים יֽוֹצְאוֹת֙ וְר֣וּחַ בְּכַנְפֵיהֶ֔ם וְלָהֵ֥נָּה כְנָפַ֖יִם כְּכַנְפֵ֣י הַחֲסִידָ֑ה וַתִּשֶּׂ֙אנָה֙ אֶת־הָ֣אֵיפָ֔ה בֵּ֥ין הָאָ֖רֶץ וּבֵ֥ין הַשָּׁמָֽיִם׃ 10וָאֹמַ֕ר אֶל־הַמַּלְאָ֖ךְ הַדֹּבֵ֣ר בִּ֑י אָ֛נָה הֵ֥מָּה מֽוֹלִכ֖וֹת אֶת־הָאֵיפָֽה׃ 11וַיֹּ֣אמֶר אֵלַ֔י לִבְנֽוֹת־לָ֥הּ בַ֖יִת בְּאֶ֣רֶץ שִׁנְעָ֑ר וְהוּכַ֛ן וְהֻנִּ֥יחָה שָּׁ֖ם עַל־מְכֻנָתָֽהּ׃
5wayyēṣēʾ hammalʾāk haddōbēr bî wayyōʾmer ʾēlay śāʾ nāʾ ʿênêkā ûrʾēh māh hayyôṣēʾt hazzōʾt. 6wāʾōmar mah-hîʾ wayyōʾmer zōʾt hāʾêpâ hayyôṣēʾt wayyōʾmer zōʾt ʿênām bᵉkol-hāʾāreṣ. 7wᵉhinnēh kikkar ʿōperet niśśēʾt wᵉzōʾt ʾiššâ ʾaḥat yôšebet bᵉtôk hāʾêpâ. 8wayyōʾmer zōʾt hārišʿâ wayyašlēk ʾōtāh ʾel-tôk hāʾêpâ wayyašlēk ʾet-ʾeben hāʿōperet ʾel-pîhā. 9wāʾeśśāʾ ʿênay wāʾērēʾ wᵉhinnēh šᵉttayim nāšîm yôṣᵉʾôt wᵉrûaḥ bᵉkanpêhem wᵉlāhēnnâ kᵉnāpayim kᵉkanpê haḥᵃsîdâ wattiśśeʾnâ ʾet-hāʾêpâ bên hāʾāreṣ ûbên haššāmāyim. 10wāʾōmar ʾel-hammalʾāk haddōbēr bî ʾānâ hēmmâ môlîkôt ʾet-hāʾêpâ. 11wayyōʾmer ʾēlay libnôt-lāh bayit bᵉʾereṣ šinʿār wᵉhûkan wᵉhunniḥâ šām ʿal-mᵉkunātāh.
אֵיפָה ʾêpâ ephah / basket
A standard Hebrew dry measure, approximately 22 liters or three-fifths of a bushel, derived from Egyptian origins. In this vision the ephah functions symbolically as a container for wickedness, its commercial associations evoking economic injustice and false weights condemned throughout the prophets. The choice of a measuring vessel underscores the theme of divine measurement and judgment that runs through Zechariah's night visions. The ephah's capacity to hold a woman personifying wickedness suggests the comprehensive scope of iniquity being removed from the land.
רִשְׁעָה rišʿâ wickedness / evil
The feminine noun for wickedness, from the root רשׁע meaning to be wicked or guilty. Here personified as a woman, the term encompasses moral evil, covenant unfaithfulness, and social injustice. The personification is not a statement about gender but a grammatical device matching the feminine noun; wickedness itself is being embodied and exiled. This same root appears in the vision of the flying scroll (5:3-4) where it describes covenant-breakers, creating thematic unity across the dual visions of chapter 5.
עֹפֶרֶת ʿōperet lead
A heavy metal used here both as a lid (kikkar ʿōperet, "disk of lead") and as a weight to seal the ephah. Lead's density makes it ideal for containment and suppression, symbolizing the complete restraint of wickedness. The dual use—both covering and sealing—emphasizes the thoroughness with which evil is being imprisoned. In ancient Near Eastern contexts, lead was associated with permanence and immovability, reinforcing the finality of this judgment.
חֲסִידָה ḥᵃsîdâ stork
A large migratory bird, possibly the white stork, known for its powerful wings and long-distance flight. The term derives from חֶסֶד (ḥesed, "steadfast love"), possibly because storks were observed caring for their young, though this etymology is debated. In Levitical law the stork is unclean (Lev 11:19), which may add symbolic weight to these creatures carrying wickedness away. The stork's migratory nature makes it an apt symbol for transporting evil far from the land, while its unclean status reinforces the polluted nature of the cargo.
שִׁנְעָר šinʿār Shinar / Babylonia
The ancient name for Babylonia, first appearing in Genesis 10:10 as the location of Nimrod's kingdom and in Genesis 11:2 as the site of the Tower of Babel. The term evokes humanity's primordial rebellion and the origin of idolatry and imperial pride. By sending wickedness to Shinar, the vision reverses the exile: instead of God's people being carried to Babylon, Babylon becomes the repository for covenant unfaithfulness. The geographical symbolism is deliberate—wickedness returns to its archetypal home, the place of confusion and divine judgment.
מְכֻנָה mᵉkunâ pedestal / base
From the root כון meaning to establish, set up, or make firm. The term denotes a fixed base or platform, suggesting permanence and cultic installation. The irony is sharp: wickedness, which should have no place in the land of promise, will be given a permanent shrine in Babylon. The language echoes temple terminology, implying that evil will be enshrined and worshiped in its proper location—far from Yahweh's dwelling. This pedestal contrasts with the foundation stone of Zerubbabel's temple (4:7), highlighting the opposition between true worship and idolatrous wickedness.

The vision unfolds in three dramatic movements: discovery (vv. 5-6), identification (vv. 7-8), and deportation (vv. 9-11). The angel's imperative "Lift up now your eyes" (śāʾ nāʾ ʿênêkā) initiates the sequence with urgency, the particle nāʾ adding a note of entreaty. The ephah "going forth" (hayyôṣēʾt) uses a feminine participle that will be echoed by the two women "going forth" (yôṣᵉʾôt) in verse 9, creating verbal symmetry around the theme of movement and removal. The cryptic statement "This is their appearance in all the land" (zōʾt ʿênām bᵉkol-hāʾāreṣ) has puzzled interpreters; the word ʿênām likely means "their eye" or "their appearance," suggesting that the ephah represents how wickedness manifests throughout the covenant community.

The central revelation in verses 7-8 employs staccato syntax for dramatic effect. The lifted lead cover reveals "a woman sitting" (ʾiššâ yôšebet), the participle suggesting settled residence—wickedness has made itself at home. The angel's terse declaration "This is Wickedness!" (zōʾt hārišʿâ) identifies the figure with shocking directness, followed immediately by two forceful verbs: "he threw her" (wayyašlēk ʾōtāh) and "he threw the lead weight" (wayyašlēk ʾet-ʾeben). The repetition of the verb šlk ("throw/cast") emphasizes violent suppression. The lead weight is cast "to its opening" (ʾel-pîhā), literally "to its mouth," personifying the ephah as a creature whose mouth must be stopped.

The deportation scene (vv. 9-11) introduces surreal imagery with precise detail. The two women have "wind in their wings" (rûaḥ bᵉkanpêhem), the word rûaḥ carrying associations of both natural wind and supernatural spirit. Their wings are "like the wings of the stork" (kᵉkanpê haḥᵃsîdâ), the simile grounding the fantastic in observable nature while maintaining symbolic freight. They lift the ephah "between the earth and the heavens" (bên hāʾāreṣ ûbên haššāmāyim), suspending wickedness in cosmic transit, neither earthly nor heavenly but in exile. Zechariah's question "Where are they taking the ephah?" (ʾānâ hēmmâ môlîkôt) receives a geographically and theologically loaded answer: "to build for her a house in the land of Shinar" (libnôt-lāh bayit bᵉʾereṣ šinʿār).

The infinitive construct libnôt ("to build") with the prepositional suffix lāh ("for her") indicates purpose and beneficiary—a house custom-built for wickedness. The final clause employs two passive verbs in sequence: "when it is prepared" (wᵉhûkan, Hophal of kwn) and "she will be set there" (wᵉhunniḥâ, Hophal of nwḥ). The passives suggest divine orchestration behind the visible action; God is removing wickedness from his land and establishing it in its proper place. The phrase "on her own pedestal" (ʿal-mᵉkunātāh) uses the same root (kwn) as "prepared," creating wordplay: wickedness will be established (kun) on its establishment (mᵉkunâ) in the land of confusion. The vision thus presents a cosmic housecleaning, with evil not merely suppressed but relocated to its archetypal home.

Wickedness cannot simply be destroyed; it must be exiled to its proper place, far from the dwelling of God. The vision promises that covenant unfaithfulness will not coexist with temple worship—what Babylon represents must return to Babylon, leaving the land purified for Yahweh's presence.

"Yahweh" throughout Zechariah preserves the covenant name rather than the generic "LORD," maintaining the personal and relational force of Israel's God who speaks through night visions. The prophet's consistent use of the divine name underscores that these revelations come from Israel's covenant partner, not an abstract deity.

"Wickedness" (hārišʿâ) is rendered with the definite article in verse 8, capturing the Hebrew's personification of evil as a specific entity to be identified and removed. The LSB's choice to capitalize "Wickedness" reflects the personification without obscuring the underlying Hebrew noun, allowing readers to see both the abstract concept and its embodied representation in the vision.