CLAIM: The Lord will bring unprecedented population growth and economic prosperity to Jerusalem in the Millennium. He will come in His manifest presence to dwell in Jerusalem. The Lord will deal severely with the nations that have oppressed Israel. A partial fulfillment of this passage may have been seen in the limited prosperity Israel experienced in the days of Herod the Great, and again since 1948. However, the prosperity and population expansion enjoyed in these periods is much more limited than what is envisioned here. Furthermore, the population in Israel has always had to deal with the fear of her enemies.
Again, this seems to follow on the previous chapter, that this is marked as an eschatalogical passage because one wants it to be an eschatalogical passage. The historical, second-temple rebuilding period is in view here. Obviously, other passages talk about restoring the fortunes of Israel, and, while that may be foreshadowed here as a template of what is to come, there is no textual cues here to indicate that this must be fulfilled again, or in a greater measure.