Then the angel who talked with me 				returned and wakened me, as a man is wakened from his sleep. He 				asked me, “What do you see?”
								I answered, “I see a solid gold lamp 				stand with a bowl at the top and seven lights on it, with seven 				channels to the lights. Also there are two olive trees by it, 				one on the right of the bowl and the other on its left.”
								I asked the angel who talked with me, 				“What are these, my lord?”
								He answered, “Do you not know what 				these are?”
								“No, my lord,” I replied.
								So he said to me, “This is the word of 				the LORD to Zerubbabel: ‘Not by might nor by power, but by my 				Spirit,’ says the LORD Almighty.
								“What are you, O mighty mountain? 				Before Zerubbabel you will become level ground. Then he will 				bring out the capstone to shouts of ‘God bless it! God bless 				it!’ ”
								Then the word of the LORD came to me: 				“The hands of Zerubbabel have laid the foundation of this 				temple; his hands will also complete it. Then you will know that 				the LORD Almighty has sent me to you.
								“Who despises the day of small things? 				Men will rejoice when they see the plumb line in the hand of 				Zerubbabel.
								“(These seven are the eyes of the 				LORD, which range throughout the earth.)” (Zechariah 4:1-10)
								The Hebrew word for plumb line can also mean chosen stone and I 				think both meanings are in view here.  The plumb line in 				Zerubbabel’s hand signifies his supervision of the Temple’s 				construction.  The chosen stone represents the Messiah (1 Peter 2:6) 				and the seven eyes mean He sees everything.  This tells us 				the Lord Himself is the project manager.
								Then I asked the angel, “What are 				these two olive trees on the right and the left of the lamp 				stand?”
								Again I asked him, “What are these two 				olive branches beside the two gold pipes that pour out golden 				oil?”
								He replied, “Do you not know what 				these are?”
								“No, my lord,” I said.
								So he said, “These are the two who are 				anointed to serve the Lord of all the earth.”(Zech 4:11-14)
								 
								What Time Is It?
								It was February 15, 519 BC. Twenty years earlier the Jews had 				come back to Jerusalem after 70 years of captivity in Babylon, 				and following several abortive attempts had given up trying to 				rebuild their Temple.
								To justify quitting, some had speculated that the reason for 				their difficulty was that the time wasn’t right (Haggai 1:2). So God sent them two prophets, Haggai to admonish them 				and Zechariah to encourage them, and it had worked. On the day 				Haggai spoke his 2nd message to them, they had begun work on the 				Temple again.
								But the task seemed so intimidating. The older ones could still 				remember Solomon’s Temple, destroyed in the siege of Jerusalem  				some 90 years earlier after standing in the city for nearly 400 				years. In Solomon’s time the nation was wealthy beyond measure 				and they were at peace with all their neighbors. But now they 				were just a rag-tag group of ex-captives, constantly harassed by 				their enemies. How would they ever hope to replace their 				beautiful Temple, so costly and magnificent?
								 
								And The Answer is …
								During that long February night in 519 BC Zechariah had a series 				of visions, eight in all. The one above was the Lord’s answer to 				their questions about the Temple. Yes they had possessed much 				wealth and had many resources during Solomon’s time, and now 				they had precious little. But this temple would be built just 				the same. “Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit,” said 				the Lord (Zech. 4:6).
								Three years later the Temple was completed, and while it couldn’t 				compare to the splendor and glory of the earlier Temple of 				Solomon, Haggai had promised them that the glory of this Temple 				would exceed that of the first one (Haggai 2:9),  and he was right. It was 				modified and renovated beyond recognition, first during the 				Hasmonean period that followed the Macabbean revolt, and then 				again by King Herod.  Of this Temple the rabbis would say, 				“One who has not seen the Temple from the time of Herod has 				never seen a magnificent building.”  But more than that, it 				was the Temple visited by the Lord during His time on earth.
								 
								Got Oil?
								And with what symbolism did the Lord represent His Spirit in 				Zechariah’s vision? Oil. Oil from the olive trees, sustaining 				the only source of light in the Temple, the seven-branched lamp 				stand called the menorah. It’s from verses like these that oil 				has come to stand for the Holy Spirit when used symbolically.
								Often the Holy Spirit’s work is accomplished through men and 				women set apart for the purpose, also explained in the vision.
								 
								Then I asked the angel, “What are 				these two olive trees on the right and the left of the lamp 				stand?”
								Again I asked him, “What are these two olive 				branches beside the two gold pipes that pour out golden oil?”
								He replied, “Do you not know what 				these are?”
								“No, my lord,” I said.
								So he said, “These are the two who are 				anointed to serve the Lord of all the earth.”(Zech 4:11-14)
								 
								In Israel the High Priest and the Ruler were always anointed with 				oil symbolizing their calling. In Zechariah’s time they were 				Joshua and Zerubbabel.  In the Church today, we anoint with 				oil those we believe the Lord has called to minister to us or 				govern over us. The oil signifies our belief that the Holy 				Spirit has set them apart for this purpose and is working 				through them.  When we anoint the sick with oil, as 				instructed in James 5:14, we’re symbolizing the miraculous power of 				the Holy Spirit to perform a healing miracle in them.  And the prayer offered in faith will make the sick person 				well (James 5:15).  				Oil, the symbol of the Holy Spirit.
								 
								Double Vision
								Frequently the messages of prophets concerned events far in the 				future. In those cases the Lord arranged a double fulfillment of 				the prophecies He gave them. The first one was only a partial 				fulfillment, and took place fairly soon. Its purpose was to 				validate the prophecy so the people would know it truly came 				from the Lord. This protected the credibility of the prophet (Deut. 18:21-22) and verified the accuracy of the long-term 				fulfillment for the generation that would experience it in the 				future.
								A good example is the prophecy of the virgin birth given by 				Isaiah (Isa. 7:14). In giving it, Isaiah used a Hebrew 				word that could mean either virgin or young woman. This was to 				permit a partial fulfillment in his time that would validate the 				prophecy.
								And sure enough, a short time later Isaiah’s wife became pregnant 				and gave birth to a boy the Lord called Immanuel. As he had 				prophesied, before the boy was old enough to speak, the Northern 				Kingdom was overrun by the Assyrians. (Isa. 8:1-10) 				The partial fulfillment had come to pass.
								Six hundred years later, after Isaiah, his family, and the 				Assyrian invasion were ancient history, Jewish scholars 				translating Isaiah’s writings into Greek saw the future 				Messianic fulfillment in the prophecy. They chose a word that 				could only describe a woman who has never experienced sexual 				intercourse, because they believed it spoke of a virgin birth. 				One hundred fifty years after that, the Virgin Mary gave birth 				to Jesus.
								While both fulfillments contained specific outcomes that were 				important in Israel’s history, a young woman giving birth was 				hardly the unique event that Isaiah needed to show the nation 				that God was with them (“Immanuel” in Hebrew). That would take 				nothing less than the only virgin birth in human history, which 				by the way also fulfilled a prophecy given to the serpent in the 				Garden.  The “Seed of the Woman” (a biological 				impossibility) would bring about his downfall.
								 
								Two More Sons Of Oil
								In Zech. 4:11-14 we 				have one of those double fulfillments. First the immediate one; 				Zerubbabel the Governor and Joshua the High Priest would be 				God’s two anointed ones (literally sons of oil), charged with 				completing the Temple construction. In the vision they were the 				two olive trees from whom the oil flowed, signifying the Holy 				Spirit working through them. In the process, Zechariah’s 				appointment as a prophet was confirmed as promised in verse 8 of 				his vision, since Zerubbabel, who started the project, also 				completed it.  “The hands of 				Zerubbabel have laid the foundation of this temple; his hands 				will also complete it. Then you will know that the LORD Almighty 				has sent me to you.”
								But the use of the phrase “Lord of all the Earth” in verse 14 is 				a clue to another later fulfillment. It’s used only four times 				in scripture, twice in Joshua 3 where 				the Lord stopped the flow of the Jordan River so the people 				could cross on dry ground, here inZech. 4, and in Revelation 11:4 the only other place where it’s used 				in conjunction with two men called by God for extraordinary 				service. (Four is often called the number of the earth because 				on the fourth day the creation of earth itself was complete.  				Then it was populated. Day five brought fish and birds, and on 				day 6 animals and man were created.)
								These men are the two witnesses who will be sent to Israel to 				display signs and wonders during the Great Tribulation. 				Performing the miracles of Moses and Elijah and preaching the 				sermons of Peter and Paul, they too will be “sons of oil,” set 				apart for miraculous work, anointed with the Holy Spirit for 				extraordinary service, and supernaturally protected by Him till 				their ministry is complete.  “And I will give power to my two 				witnesses, and they will prophesy for 1,260 days, clothed in 				sackcloth. These are the two olive trees and the two lamp stands that stand 				before the Lord of the earth.”(Rev. 11:4) 				The wording is straight out of Zechariah’s vision.
								 
								Beginning just before the Great Tribulation and lasting for 1260 				days, their ministry bridges the two halves of Daniel’s 70th 				week.   Their purpose is to prepare Israel for the 				coming Messiah in the ultimate fulfillment of another dual 				prophecy.  This one appears through out the Old and New 				Testaments, and is the two comings of the Messiah.
								When their ministry is complete, the Lord will remove His 				supernatural protection and they’ll be killed in the streets of 				Jerusalem.  In the ultimate sign of contempt they’ll be 				denied burial, their bodies left in the street where they fall.  				But in one final unmistakable message, they’ll rise from the 				dead three and a half days later, ascending into heaven in full 				view of an astonished world.  Shortly afterward,  the 				Spirit of grace and supplication will sweep over God’s people 				and their eyes will be opened to the Messiah, the one they have 				pierced (Zech 12:10).  Once again two sons of oil will have 				accomplished their mission.  ‘Not by might 				nor by power, but by my Spirit,’ says the LORD Almighty.08-28-10