Have you ever wished you could rewind the final hours of Jesus’ life and watch them unfold from a different angle—almost like “behind-the-scenes” before the Gospels record it? Choosing Barabbas over Jesus is one of the most shocking moments in Scripture, and because we’ve heard it so many times, it can start to feel familiar.
Most of us know the storyline. Judas betrays Jesus for thirty pieces of silver. The money ends up connected to a potter. Pilate tries to release Jesus. And the crowd stuns everyone by demanding Barabbas instead.
But what if God had already given His people a prophetic preview of those very moments—not merely with a few scattered predictions, but through a living drama acted out in history?
That’s what we find in Zechariah 11. Zechariah doesn’t only speak prophecy—he performs it. He steps into one role, then shifts and plays another. And in doing so, he portrays two shepherds: a true shepherd who is rejected, and a foolish shepherd who is embraced.
In other words, Zechariah gives us the meaning beneath the event—while Luke shows us the event itself. Together, they expose the tragedy of choosing the wrong shepherd… and they also magnify the grace of the gospel.
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Table of contentsKey ScripturesZechariah 11 and the True Shepherd RejectedThirty pieces of silver: what God’s people thought their Shepherd was worthThrown into the temple: blood money returnedThe potter and the field: where rejected vessels end upJudas and the field: a horrifying picture of judgmentAn encouraging truth: the Potter remakes broken vesselsThe staff is broken: rejection brings judgmentThe foolish shepherd: the one the people wantLuke 23: Choosing the wrong shepherd in real timeBarabbas: the kind of man you don’t set freeThe shocking cry: “Release to us Barabbas!”The hypocrisy: accuse Jesus of rebellion, then choose a rebel“We have no king but Caesar”Why crucifixion?The gospel in one scene: we are BarabbasA warning: don’t enjoy the benefits while rejecting the SaviorWhat will you do with Jesus?Application questions (personal or group use)
Key Scriptures
Zechariah 11:12–17
Matthew 27:3–10
Acts 1:18–19
Luke 23:18–25
Jeremiah 18:1–6
Romans 9:20–21
Deuteronomy 21:23
Galatians 3:13
Zechariah 11 and the True Shepherd Rejected
Zechariah 11 is startling because it reads like a summary of the final hours of Jesus’ life—centuries before they occurred.
Thirty pieces of silver: what God’s people thought their Shepherd was worth
In the acted drama, Zechariah plays the part of the shepherd and asks for wages, because shepherds deserve to be paid:
Zechariah records, “Give me my wages… So they weighed out for my wages thirty pieces of silver.”
That amount matters. Exodus tells us that thirty pieces of silver were the price paid for a slave killed by an ox—hardly a “generous” amount. In the drama, the payment is not a reward; it’s an insult. It’s the people’s way of saying, “This is what you’re worth to us.”
And that is exactly what Judas’ betrayal price communicates: not only treachery, but contempt.
Thrown into the temple: blood money returned
Zechariah continues with another detail that feels almost too precise:
The Lord tells Zechariah to throw the money into “the house of the LORD.”
That is exactly what Judas later does. Overwhelmed with guilt, he returns the silver and throws it into the temple before going away and taking his own life.
God is showing us that the betrayal was wicked—but it was not random. Even the “where” of the silver ends up under the sovereignty of God.
The potter and the field: where rejected vessels end up
Zechariah adds, “Throw it to the potter.”
In Jesus’ day, Judas never met a potter. But the chief priests—refusing to put “blood money” into the treasury—use it to buy a potter’s field, turning it into a burial place.
A potter’s field was associated with what was rejected—broken clay, discarded vessels, things that didn’t turn out as intended. The irony is staggering: the price paid for rejecting the Shepherd buys the very place where the rejected are collected.
Judas and the field: a horrifying picture of judgment
The New Testament describes Judas’ death in graphic terms: after hanging himself, he falls, and his body bursts open.
It’s a dreadful image—yet it fits the theme of rejection and ruin. Judas is like a vessel marred beyond repair, thrown into the field of broken things.
But that darkness sets the stage for something unexpectedly hopeful.
An encouraging truth: the Potter remakes broken vessels
Jeremiah 18 gives us a beautiful picture: God is the Potter, and we are the clay. When a vessel is marred, the potter doesn’t have to discard the clay—he can remake it.
Paul carries that truth forward when he says the Potter has authority to shape vessels for honorable purposes.
This is why the potter’s field detail is so striking: in a sense, Jesus purchas