Zechariah 5:7 - Albert Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Bible Comments

And behold there was lifted up a talent of lead - the heaviest Hebrew weight, elsewhere of gold or silver; the golden talent weighing, 1,300,000 grains; the silver, 660,000; here, being lead, it is obviously an undefined mass, though circular , corresponding to the Ephah. The Ephah too was the largest Hebrew measure, whose compass cannot now, with certainty, be ascertained . Both probably were, in the vision, ideal. Theodoret: “Holy Scripture calleth the punishment of sin, lead, as being by nature heavy. This the divine David teacheth us, “mine iniquities are gone over my head: as an heavy burden, they are too heavy for me” Psalms 38:4. The divine Zechariah seeth sin under the image of a woman; for most evils are engendered by luxury. But he seeth the punishment, like most heavy lead, lying upon the mouth of iniquity, according to a Psalm, “all iniquity shall stop her mouth” Psalms 107:42. Ambr. in Psalms 35. n. 9. Opp. i. 769: “Iniquity, as with a talent of lead, weighs down the conscience.”

This is a woman - Literally, “one woman,” all sin being concentrated and personified in one, as he goes on to speak of her as the, personified, wickedness. The sitting may represent her abiding tranquil condition in her sins, according to the climax in Psalms 1:1-6, “and hath not sat in the seat of the scornful” Psalms 1:1; and, “thou sittest and speakest against thy brother” Psalms 50:20; (Lap.), “not standing as by the way, but sitting, as if of set purpose, of custom and habit.” “Whoso hath peace in sins is not far from lying down in them, so that, oppressed by a spirit of slumber, he neither sees light, nor feels any blow, but is kept down by the leaden talent of his obduracy.”

Zechariah 5:7

7 And, behold, there was lifted up a talentb of lead: and this is a woman that sitteth in the midst of the ephah.