Random Verse from Zechariah
211 verses across 14 chapters.
Then he answered and spake unto me, saying, This is the word of the Lord unto Zerubbabel, saying, Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, saith the Lord of hosts.
Zechariah 4:6KJV
Drawing from 211 verses
Zechariah is the longest of the twelve Minor Prophets, fourteen chapters of visions, promises, and glimpses of a coming King. It was written to encourage Jewish exiles who had returned to Jerusalem and were struggling to rebuild the temple.
The book is traditionally attributed to the prophet Zechariah, who began prophesying in 520 BC alongside Haggai. The first half records a series of striking night visions; the second half looks far ahead.
The New Testament quotes Zechariah often. His picture of a humble king riding into Jerusalem on a donkey, in Zechariah 9:9, is fulfilled on Palm Sunday, and several other passages surface in the accounts of Jesus' final week.
The themes are encouragement for small beginnings, God's fierce protection of his people, and hope that reaches past the present mess. Zechariah 4:6 is the famous reminder that God's work moves forward by his Spirit rather than by human muscle, and Zechariah 4:10 warns against writing off small starts.
People enjoy drawing a random verse from this book because it mixes comfort with wonder. One pull might give you a tender line about how precious God's people are to him, like Zechariah 2:8. Another might hand you a strange, vivid image that makes you want to read the whole chapter.
If you are working on something that feels small, slow, or fragile, Zechariah is a good book to let speak. Try a few pulls with the picker above.
Frequently asked questions
- How is Zechariah connected to the New Testament?
- Zechariah is one of the most quoted prophets in the New Testament. Zechariah 9:9 is fulfilled when Jesus enters Jerusalem on a donkey, and other passages from the book echo through the accounts of his final week.
- What does Zechariah 4:6 mean?
- It was spoken to Zerubbabel, the governor leading the temple rebuild, and it teaches that God's work succeeds through his Spirit rather than through human strength or resources. People still lean on it when facing tasks bigger than their abilities.