2. the Lord of hosts—Jehovah,
Lord of the powers of heaven and earth, and therefore requiring
implicit obedience.
This people—"This"
sluggish and selfish "people." He does not say, My
people, since they had neglected the service of God.
The time—the proper
time for building the temple. Two out of the seventy predicted years
of captivity (dating from the destruction of the temple, 558 B.C.,
2 Kings 25:9) were yet unexpired;
this they make their plea for delay [HENDERSON].
The seventy years of captivity were completed long ago in the first
year of Cyrus, 536 B.C.
(Jeremiah 29:10); dating from 606
B.C., Jehoiakim's
captivity (2 Chronicles 36:6). The
seventy years to the completion of the temple (2 Chronicles 36:6) were completed this very year, the second of Darius
[VATABLUS]. Ingenious in
excuses, they pretended that the interruption in the work caused by
their enemies proved it was not yet the proper time; whereas
their real motive was selfish dislike of the trouble, expense, and
danger from enemies. "God," say they, "hath interposed
many difficulties to punish our rash haste" [CALVIN].
Smerdis' interdict was no longer in force, now that Darius the
rightful king was on the throne; therefore they had no real excuse
for not beginning at once to build. AUBERLEN
denies that by "Artaxerxes" in 2 Chronicles 36:6 is meant Smerdis. Whether Smerdis or Artaxerxes Longimanus
be meant, the interdict referred only to the rebuilding of the city,
which the Persian kings feared might, if rebuilt, cause them trouble
to subdue; not to the rebuilding of the temple. But the Jews
were easily turned aside from the work. Spiritually, like the Jews,
men do not say they will never be religious, but, It is not time yet.
So the great work of life is left undone.