There is yet another “major” OT passage that prophesied the involvement of the wicked shepherds of Israel in the crucifixion of our Lord. It is a theme woven throughout Zech. 9-14. The NKJV calls Zech. 11:4-17 the “Prophecy of the Shepherds.” Zech. 13:7-9 is called “The Shepherd Savior.”
To get the gist of this prophecy, we need to understand Zech. 11:4: “Thus says the LORD my God, ‘Feed the flock for slaughter.’” The LORD is speaking with Zechariah. The flock is Israel, as we will see. He is told to fatten them up so that they can be butchered and sold. Why would the LORD say this? The rest of the sentence in v5 tells us: “whose owners slaughter them and feel no guilt; those who sell them say, ‘Blessed be the LORD, for I am rich’; and their shepherds do not pity them.” There we have it again! The shepherds of Israel who are out to make themselves rich off the flock that they are supposed to watch after. The reason is that the LORD no longer pities the flock. He is giving them over to their fellow Israelites, their neighbors and their king. So Zechariah did as he was told (v7).
Shepherds typically had two staves: one for outside danger and one for internal strife. Zechariah has these and gives them names: Beauty (meaning “grace”) and Bonds (referring to unity). Not only was the flock under control; he also took control of the unrighteous shepherds of Israel, dismissing three in one month (v8). Some try to find a historical situation that fits this description, but I go with those who refer the three to the prophets, priests and kings, the three classes of shepherds in Israel.
But then he leaves the sheep to themselves, withdrawing “Beauty” (God’s grace that established the covenant with Abraham) and “Bonds” (resulting in the division of the nation into two, Israel and Judah, v14). He does this because, as the poor of the flock understand, “it was the word of the LORD” (v11).
It is important to understand this: Zechariah is doing what we might call “the dirty work” but he is doing what the LORD told him to do. We say this because of what happens next: Zechariah asks for his wages, not asking the LORD who had asked him to prepare them for slaughter, but asking the evil shepherds whose goal was to get rich off the sheep. He asks for his wages, and they give him “thirty pieces of silver” (v12). It is then the LORD who says, “throw it to the potter.” It’s hard not to think of Matt. 27:3-10 where Judas’ betrayal and remorse is seen as he returns the money to the shepherds of Israel.
Now you may wonder if God intended all this to be the foretelling of what would happen in the NT. The answer is found in v13: the LORD calls the thirty pieces of silver “that princely price they set on me.” The price is not just the worth of the betrayer; it is the declared worth of the One being betrayed!
We must stop here but this story is not finished. It get’s quite exciting!