Kommentar zu Zechariah 4:18
Rashi on Zechariah
with its oil - bowl on top of it as in (Josh. 15:19): “The upper springs”. This is an expression for a spring, [hence] a sort of large round bowl.
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Rashi on Zechariah
and its seven lamps A type of vessel into which oil and wicks are inserted.
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Rashi on Zechariah
seven tubes each Seven small tubes come to every lamp, for the oil flows from the bowl through those tubes into each lamp.
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Rashi on Zechariah
And [there were] two olive trees near it Beside it were two trees upon which olives were growing.
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Rashi on Zechariah
one on the right of the bowl, one on the its left, etc. Here [the prophet] does not explain about the two golden vats mentioned below in the chapter, which are the sorts of bowls or vats of the oil press. [These vats] stand beside the olive trees. The olives beat themselves into the vats and are heated there as [if] in a vat or pit where olives are generally packed. There they are pressed in the oil press, and the oil falls into the vats, and from the vats into the bowl, and from the bowl into the tubes, and from the tubes into the lamps. The tubes and the lamps number forty-nine, an allusion to the light, for in the future the light of the sun will be sevenfold the light of the seven days forty-nine times the light of a day of Creation.
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Rashi on Zechariah
“What are these, my Lord?” What is this, that the olive trees are picked by themselves, and the oil comes into the lamps by itself?
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Rashi on Zechariah
“This is the word of the Lord to Zerubbabel” This is a sign for you to promise Zerubbabel that just as the olives and this oil are finished by themselves in all respects, so will you not build My house with your [own] power or with your [own] strength.
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Rashi on Zechariah
but by My spirit I will place My spirit upon Darius, and he will command you to build and to pay all the building expenses from his [treasury]; and [he will] help you with wheat, wine, oil, and wood, as is explained in Ezra (6, 7): They required no aid from any man.
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Rashi on Zechariah
Who are you, O great mountain? You, the princes of the other side of the river Tattenai, the governor of the other side of the river; Shethar Bozenai, and their companions (Ezra 6:6), who have stopped the work until now - from now on you shall be before Zerubbabel as a plain; you have no more ruling power or superiority over him.
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Rashi on Zechariah
He will bring out the stone of the main architect The main architect will take the plummet in his hand to be the main architect at the head of the builders, and they will build everything according to his words [everything] that he will order concerning a beautiful and glorious building.
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Rashi on Zechariah
with shouts of grace, grace to it To that stone, for everyone will say, “How beautiful is this building that was made with this plummet.” [The expression] “shouts of grace” is as (Job 39:7) “the shouts of a driver,” and (Isa. 66:6) “a sound of stirring” both of which are expressions of making a voice heard.
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Rashi on Zechariah
Zerubbabel’s hands founded this house from beginning to end, in the days of Cyrus I.
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Rashi on Zechariah
and his hands shall complete it now. The word תְּבַצַעְנָה is an expression of completion, as in (Isa. 10: 12) “when the Lord completes all His work.”
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Rashi on Zechariah
For, whoever despised the day when the Temple was founded which was small in their eyes, as is stated in Ezra (3:12): “But many of priests, etc., who had seen, etc., upon its foundation, wept aloud when they beheld this temple;” and in Haggai (2:3): “Is it not as nothing in your eyes?” - will rejoice now when they see the plummet suspended from the plumb line in the hand of the architect, the head of the builders, with which he directs a line to the corner, and this will be in the hand of Zerubbabel.
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Rashi on Zechariah
these, sevenfold Seven times the first foundation in the days of Cyrus. So did Jonathan render: Seven rows of stones like these.
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Rashi on Zechariah
the eyes of the Lord are roving to and fro And it appeals to Him to do so; and He saw this Zerubbabel suited for the matter.
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Rashi on Zechariah
What are these two olive trees? What do they symbolize, and what do the two olive branches (troches in Old French) symbolize? [They are] a cluster of olives on a branch, as if a type of ear of grain.
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Rashi on Zechariah
beside the two golden vats i.e., beside the two golden vats, as in (II Sam. 14:30): “See, Joab’s field is near mine.”
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Rashi on Zechariah
that empty out the gold[en oil] from themselves This oil that is clear and good to illuminate like gold, as in (Job 37:22): “From the north comes gold.”
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Rashi on Zechariah
two anointed ones The horns of the priesthood and the kingdom who are anointed with the anointing oil.
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Rashi on Zechariah
who stand before the Lord of all the earth to supplicate Him to return their greatness.
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Rashi on Zechariah
the two anointed ones The good inclination and the evil inclination, which is converted to good in the merit of the Torah.
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