David Bahn – Reflections

Light from the Word and through the lens

49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 116: Jesus in Zechariah’s Prophecy


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I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are John 19; Exodus 12; Numbers 9; Zechariah 12.

Zechariah 12:10-11

Lake Dillon Overlook | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

The New Testament writers frequently draw from Zechariah when pointing to Jesus as the promised Messiah. Passages such as Zechariah 9:9 (fulfilled in Jesus’ triumphal entry, Matt. 21:5; John 12:15), Zechariah 11:12–13 (thirty pieces of silver, Matt. 27:9–10), Zechariah 12:10 (pierced one, John 19:37), and Zechariah 13:7 (striking the shepherd, Matt. 26:31; Mark 14:27) all find their fulfillment in Christ. In fact, one estimate counts over fifty echoes of Zechariah throughout the New Testament, with Revelation drawing on it most extensively.

I had forgotten just how much of Zechariah points to Jesus until I reread chapter 12 and was arrested by the phrase, “they shall look on me, on him whom they have pierced.” God himself is speaking. He declares that He will be pierced!

The chapter begins with God’s promise to defend His people against their enemies. Yet victory would come at a terrible cost: the piercing of the Son of God, nailed to the cross. And what is the result? Deep mourning and repentance among God’s people as the Spirit works contrition and faith in hearts pierced by the awareness of sin and awakened to the wonder of God’s mercy.

God’s people in Zechariah’s day were much like us. Their spiritual renewal was fragile, their faith easily stalled. They needed God’s intervention. They needed the Spirit to draw them to repentance and trust. So do we. And God gives it — not by our grasping, but by His gift.

That is what God has done for all people in Jesus, the One pierced for our transgressions and crushed for our iniquities. In Him, sorrow is met with comfort, guilt is covered by grace, and death itself is overcome. When we look upon the One who was pierced, we see not only the cost of our sin but also the depth of God’s love.


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