The book of Ezra is traditionally associated with Ezra the priest-scribe, though the opening chapter narrates events before Ezra personally appears in the book.
The Lord Stirs Cyrus to Restore His House
When the Lord's appointed time arrives, He fulfills His word by moving rulers, awakening His people, and restoring worship for His glory.
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When the Lord's appointed time arrives, He fulfills His word by moving rulers, awakening His people, and restoring worship for His glory.
Ezra 1 argues that restoration after judgment is not accidental, political, or self-generated. It is the direct outworking of God's sovereign faithfulness to His word. The Lord rules over empires, awakens human hearts, and restores worship according to covenant promise.
The restored postexilic community of Judah and later covenant readers who needed to understand the return from exile as the work of the Lord, not merely the policy of Persia.
The chapter opens in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, after Babylon has fallen and Judah's exile under Babylonian domination is being reversed under Persian imperial rule.
When the Lord's appointed time arrives, He fulfills His word by moving rulers, awakening His people, and restoring worship for His glory.
The book of Ezra is traditionally associated with Ezra the priest-scribe, though the opening chapter narrates events before Ezra personally appears in the book.
The restored postexilic community of Judah and later covenant readers who needed to understand the return from exile as the work of the Lord, not merely the policy of Persia.
The chapter opens in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, after Babylon has fallen and Judah's exile under Babylonian domination is being reversed under Persian imperial rule.
- The people of Judah are scattered, displaced, and living under foreign imperial authority. They possess promises from God, but the visible center of their worship, the temple in Jerusalem, lies ruined.
Persian imperial policy often allowed displaced peoples to return, restore local sanctuaries, and pray for the wellbeing of the empire. Ezra 1 presents that policy under the higher rule of the Lord, who moves kings and peoples to accomplish His word.
Ezra 1 marks the beginning of Judah's return from exile and the restoration of temple worship, showing that the covenant God has not abandoned His people after judgment but is acting to preserve worship, promise, and messianic hope.
The Lord fulfills His prophetic word by stirring a pagan king, awakening His people, and restoring the temple vessels for renewed worship in Jerusalem.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Ezra 1 displays gospel-shaped patterns without yet revealing the full gospel: God acts first, fulfills His word, shows mercy after judgment, awakens His people, and restores the possibility of worship. The chapter prepares for the greater restoration accomplished through Christ, whose cross and resurrection secure forgiveness, gather God's people, and bring them into living access to God.
The Lord fulfills His word and stirs Cyrus.
Cyrus authorizes the rebuilding of the temple in Jerusalem.
The remnant responds to God's stirring and receives provision.
The sacred articles are counted and sent back to Jerusalem.
- 1: The chapter begins with the Lord's faithfulness to His prophetic word through Jeremiah.
- 2-4: Cyrus grants permission for the people to go to Jerusalem and rebuild the temple.
- 5-6: Those whose spirits God moves prepare to return, and others strengthen them with gifts.
- 7-11: The vessels taken from the temple by Nebuchadnezzar are returned under Sheshbazzar's care.
Theological Argument
Ezra 1 argues that restoration after judgment is not accidental, political, or self-generated. It is the direct outworking of God's sovereign faithfulness to His word. The Lord rules over empires, awakens human hearts, and restores worship according to covenant promise.
From fulfilled prophecy, to royal decree, to stirred returnees, to restored temple vessels.
- 1.The exile's reversal begins with the Lord's faithfulness to his word.
- 2.The Lord governs pagan kings without ceasing to be Israel's covenant God.
- 3.True covenant return requires inward stirring, not merely external permission.
- 4.The restoration of worship requires both willing obedience and concrete provision.
Theological Focus
- Divine sovereignty over rulers and nations
- Faithfulness of God to prophetic promise
- Restoration after covenant judgment
- Providence working through imperial policy
- Renewal of temple-centered worship
- The stirring of the human spirit by God
- The remnant's obedient return
- God fulfills His word
- God rules the nations
- God restores worship
- God awakens obedience
- Judgment does not cancel covenant mercy
- Providence
- Divine Faithfulness
- Restoration
- Worship
- Human Responsibility Under Divine Sovereignty
- Remnant Theology
Theological Themes
The return begins because the word spoken through Jeremiah has reached its appointed fulfillment.
Persia is powerful, but the Lord is the true sovereign directing history.
The return is not merely geographical. It is temple-focused and worship-centered.
The returnees respond because the Lord moves their spirits.
The exile was real judgment, but Ezra 1 shows that judgment did not exhaust God's purposes for His people.
Covenant Significance
Ezra 1 stands at the hinge between covenant judgment and covenant restoration. The Lord had sent Judah into exile because of covenant rebellion, but He now preserves a remnant, restores access to the land, and prepares for renewed temple worship. This is mercy after discipline, not the denial of discipline.
- The promised return begins - The Lord acts in keeping with the prophetic hope of return after exile.
- The land remains covenantally significant - The people are called to go up to Jerusalem, showing that restoration is tied to the place God chose for His name.
- The temple remains central - The decree focuses specifically on rebuilding the house of the Lord, not merely resettling the population.
- The remnant is preserved - Judah and Benjamin, priests and Levites, are named as those who respond to God's stirring.
- Jeremiah 25:11-12 - Jeremiah announces the seventy-year judgment on Babylonian captivity.
- Jeremiah 29:10-14 - Jeremiah promises that after the appointed period the Lord will bring His people back.
- 2 Chronicles 36:22-23 - The ending of Chronicles parallels the opening decree of Ezra and frames the return as the continuation of Israel's story.
- Isaiah 44:28 · 45:1 - Isaiah names Cyrus as the Lord's instrument for restoration.
Canonical Connections
Ezra 1 explicitly presents the return as the fulfillment of the Lord's word through Jeremiah.
The end of 2 Chronicles and the beginning of Ezra share the Cyrus decree, linking the end of the monarchy narrative to the hope of return.
Isaiah had already presented Cyrus as the Lord's chosen instrument for Jerusalem and the temple's restoration.
The neighbors' gifts echo the exodus pattern in which Israel leaves captivity with material provision, though Ezra's return is from exile rather than Egypt.
The vessels taken under Babylonian judgment are returned, reversing the shame of temple plunder and preparing for worship renewal.
Cross References
Ezra 1 displays gospel-shaped patterns without yet revealing the full gospel: God acts first, fulfills His word, shows mercy after judgment, awakens His people, and restores the possibility of worship. The chapter prepares for the greater restoration accomplished through Christ, whose cross and resurrection secure forgiveness, gather God's people, and bring them into living access to God.
- Grace after judgment - The return from exile is mercy to a judged people, showing that divine discipline does not exhaust divine compassion.
- God acts before the people act - The Lord stirs Cyrus and the returnees before the rebuilding begins.
- Restoration aims at worship - The chapter moves toward the house of the Lord, anticipating the gospel's restoration of sinners to God-centered worship.
- The greater return comes in Christ - The physical return from Babylon anticipates the deeper redemption by which Christ brings sinners home to God.
- Do not preach Ezra 1 as moralistic self-rebuilding detached from God's initiating mercy.
- Do not make Cyrus the savior of the story. The Lord is the deliverer behind the decree.
- Do not collapse the return from exile into the final redemption. It is a real restoration, but it points beyond itself.
- Do not treat temple restoration as mere religious nostalgia. It concerns access, worship, holiness, and covenant life before God.
Primary Emphasis
Ezra 1 contributes to the Bible's Christ-centered storyline by showing that God preserves His covenant people, restores the line of promise, and reopens the worship-centered life of Judah after exile. The chapter does not present Christ directly, but it prepares the historical ground in which the messianic hope continues. The greater restoration will not come merely through a Persian decree or rebuilt temple, but through the Messiah who embodies God's presence, secures final forgiveness, and gathers God's people into true worship.
Chapter Contribution
Ezra 1 argues that restoration after judgment is not accidental, political, or self-generated. It is the direct outworking of God's sovereign faithfulness to His word. The Lord rules over empires, awakens human hearts, and restores worship according to covenant promise.
God governs not only kings and decrees but also the inner resolve of His people, stirring them to rise and rebuild.
The return begins because the Lord fulfills what He had spoken through Jeremiah, demonstrating that judgment does not cancel His covenant faithfulness.
God's stirring does not bypass human action; it produces rising, going, giving, counting, guarding, and rebuilding.
The return is carried forward through ordinary means: family heads, priests, Levites, neighbors, treasurers, inventories, and material support.
The return of both people and temple articles shows mercy after exile while preserving the memory that the exile itself was deserved covenant judgment.
The people strengthen the returnees with goods and freewill offerings, showing that faithful participation in God's work includes material support.
The aim of the return is the rebuilding of the house of the Lord in Jerusalem, with temple articles restored for worship-centered obedience.
The Lord directs kings, empires, decrees, resources, and human response to fulfill His word.
God fulfills what He spoke through Jeremiah, showing that His word remains firm across generations.
The chapter introduces postexilic restoration as God's merciful work after covenant judgment.
The return is ordered toward rebuilding the house of the Lord and restoring temple worship.
God stirs, yet people must go, give, carry, rebuild, and obey.
The returnees represent a preserved people through whom God continues His covenant purposes.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Ezra 1 displays gospel-shaped patterns without yet revealing the full gospel: God acts first, fulfills His word, shows mercy after judgment, awakens His people, and restores the possibility of worship. The chapter prepares for the greater restoration accomplished through Christ, whose cross and resurrection secure forgiveness, gather God's people, and bring them into living access to God.
Sense word, matter, spoken promise
Definition A spoken word, matter, or declared message, here referring to the Lord's prophetic word through Jeremiah.
References Ezra 1:1
Lexicon word, matter, spoken promise
Why it matters Ezra 1 is governed by the reliability of God's spoken word. The return begins because the Lord's word reaches fulfillment.
Sense to complete, finish, bring to an end
Definition To bring something to its appointed completion.
References Ezra 1:1
Lexicon to complete, finish, bring to an end
Why it matters The exile's appointed period is not random. The Lord brings His spoken word to completion.
Form in passage Hiphil · Perfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to awaken, rouse, stir
Definition To awaken or arouse someone to action.
References Ezra 1:1, 5
Lexicon to awaken, rouse, stir
Why it matters The same Lord who fulfills prophecy also awakens Cyrus and the returnees to act according to His purpose.
Sense spirit, breath, inner disposition
Definition The inner life, disposition, or animating impulse of a person.
References Ezra 1:1, 5
Lexicon spirit, breath, inner disposition
Why it matters The return is not only externally authorized. God moves the inner disposition of His people toward obedience.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense house, household, temple
Definition A house or dwelling; in this context, the temple, the house of the Lord in Jerusalem.
References Ezra 1:2-5
Lexicon house, household, temple
Why it matters The chapter's goal is not mere relocation but the rebuilding of the Lord's house and the renewal of worship.
Cross-language bridge 4 links · View in lexicon
Sense to go up, ascend
Definition To ascend or go up, often used for movement toward Jerusalem.
References Ezra 1:3, 5
Lexicon to go up, ascend
Why it matters The return to Jerusalem is described as an ascent, geographically and theologically, toward the place of worship.
Sense vessel, article, utensil, implement
Definition An object, implement, vessel, or article used for a particular purpose.
References Ezra 1:7-11
Lexicon vessel, article, utensil, implement
Why it matters The temple vessels embody the concrete restoration of what Babylon had taken and what the Lord now returns for worship.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
To form confidence that the Lord rules history and fulfills His word even through events that appear political, delayed, or unlikely.
To move God's people from passive longing for restoration into obedient participation in worship-centered renewal.
Hopeful, responsive, worship-centered faithfulness under the sovereign hand of God.
- Remember specific promises of God when present circumstances feel stalled.
- Pray for the Lord to stir His people toward obedience, not merely improve external conditions.
- Participate materially and personally in the work of restoring worship and discipleship.
- Refuse to make human rulers, policies, or resources the main explanation for God's work.
- Measure renewal by restored worship and covenant faithfulness, not merely by visible activity.
- The chapter gently but clearly warns against reading providence as human achievement. Cyrus acts, neighbors give, and returnees go, but the Lord is the primary actor. It also warns against reducing restoration to location, politics, or religious nostalgia while missing the central aim: the renewed worship of the Lord.
- Ezra 1 is mainly about Persian religious tolerance. - Persian policy is part of the historical background, but the narrator's theological emphasis is that the Lord stirred Cyrus to fulfill His word.
- The return from exile means the covenant problem is fully solved. - The return is a real act of mercy, but Ezra-Nehemiah will show that the deeper problem of sin and covenant faithfulness remains.
- Cyrus is presented as a converted Israelite worshiper. - The decree acknowledges the God of heaven, but the chapter does not require the conclusion that Cyrus possessed saving covenant faith.
- The temple vessels are a minor logistical detail. - Their restoration signals the reversal of temple plundering and the preparation for renewed worship.
- Only those who returned were faithful, while all who remained were disobedient. - The text emphasizes those whom God stirred to return and those who gave support. It does not give enough data to judge every non-returning Jew simplistically.
- Where am I tempted to interpret God's delays as God's absence?
- Do I recognize the Lord's sovereignty even when He works through unlikely people or institutions?
- When God stirs obedience in me, do I rise and act, or do I merely approve the idea of obedience?
- How am I strengthening the worship and mission of God's people with what the Lord has entrusted to me?
- Do I desire restoration because I want comfort, or because I long for renewed worship and faithfulness before God?
- Encourage weary believers with the faithfulness of God's word - Ezra 1 is strong medicine for those who feel forgotten. The Lord remembers His word even after long seasons of judgment, waiting, and displacement.
- Teach providence with precision - The chapter helps believers see that God can work through rulers and systems without making those rulers or systems ultimate.
- Call people to awakened obedience - The Lord's stirring should not be treated as a passing emotion. When God moves His people toward obedience, they must rise.
- Frame giving as participation in restoration - The neighbors' gifts show that material provision can be an act of strengthening the work of God.
- Keep worship, not mere recovery, at the center - The goal is not simply going back home. The goal is the restored worship of the Lord.
God's promises may seem buried beneath years of loss, but His word is not bound by exile, empire, or delay.
Spiritual leadership must teach the people to recognize God's hand without turning providence into triumphalism.
Renewal begins with God's word, God's stirring, and worship-centered obedience, not merely strategy.
Participation in God's work may involve sending, giving, supplying, and supporting those called to go.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The Lord fulfills His prophetic word by stirring a pagan king, awakening His people, and restoring the temple vessels for renewed worship in Jerusalem.
Ezra 1 stands at the hinge between covenant judgment and covenant restoration. The Lord had sent Judah into exile because of covenant rebellion, but He now preserves a remnant, restores access to the land, and prepares for renewed temple worship. This is mercy after discipline, not the denial of discipline.
Ezra 1 displays gospel-shaped patterns without yet revealing the full gospel: God acts first, fulfills His word, shows mercy after judgment, awakens His people, and restores the possibility of worship. The chapter prepares for the greater restoration accomplished through Christ, whose cross and resurrection secure forgiveness, gather God's people, and bring them into living access to God.
Hopeful, responsive, worship-centered faithfulness under the sovereign hand of God.
Focus Points
- Divine sovereignty over rulers and nations
- Faithfulness of God to prophetic promise
- Restoration after covenant judgment
- Providence working through imperial policy
- Renewal of temple-centered worship
- The stirring of the human spirit by God
- The remnant's obedient return
- God fulfills His word
- God rules the nations
- God restores worship
- God awakens obedience
- Judgment does not cancel covenant mercy
- Providence
- Divine Faithfulness
- Restoration
- Worship
- Human Responsibility Under Divine Sovereignty
- Remnant Theology
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Ezra 1:1-4
Ezr 1:6 All their surrounders assisted them with gifts. The surrounders are the people of the places where Jews were making preparations for returning; chiefly, therefore, their heathen neighbours (Ezr 1:4), but also those Jews who remained in Babylon. חזּקוּ בידיהם is not identical in meaning with יד חזּק, to strengthen, e. g. , Jer 23:14; Neh 2:18; but with החזיק בּיד, the Piel here standing instead of the elsewhere usual Hiphil: to grasp by the hand, i.
e. , to assist; comp. Lev 25:34. על לבד, separated to, besides; elsewhere joined with מן, Exo 12:37, etc. התנדּב connected with כּל without אשׁר, as the verbum fin . in Ezr 1:5, 1Ch 29:3, and elsewhere. האלהים לבית must, according to Ezr 1:4, be supplied mentally; comp. Ezr 2:68; Ezr 3:5; 1Ch 29:9, 1Ch 29:17.
Ezr 1:7 King Cyrus, moreover, caused those sacred vessels of the temple which had been carried away by Nebuchadnezzar to be brought forth, and delivered them by the hand of his treasurer to Sheshbazzar, the prince of Judah, for the use of the house of God which was about to be built. הוציא, to fetch out from the royal treasury. The “vessels of the house of Jahve” are the gold and silver vessels of the temple which Nebuchadnezzar, at the first taking of Jerusalem in the reign of Jehoiakim, carried away to Babylon, and lodged in the treasure-house of his god (2Ch 36:7 and Dan 1:2).
For those which he took at its second conquest were broken up (2Ki 24:13); and the other gold and silver goods which, as well as the large brazen implements, were taken at the third conquest, and the destruction of the temple (2Ki 25:14. ; Jer 52:18.) , would hardly have been preserved by the Chaldeans, but rather made use of as valuable booty.
Ezr 1:8 Cyrus delivered these vessels יד על, into the hand of the treasurer, to whose care they were entrusted; i. e. , placed them under his inspection, that they might be faithfully restored. ממרדת is Mithridates. נּזבּר, answering to the Zend gazabara , means treasurer (see comm. on Dan. p. 514, note 4). This officer counted them out to the prince of Judah Sheshbazzar, undoubtedly the Chaldee name of Zerubbabel.
For, according to Ezr 5:14, Ezr 5:16, שׁשׁבּצּר was the governor (פּחה) placed by Cyrus over the new community in Judah and Jerusalem, and who, according to Ezr 1:11 of the present chapter, returned to Jerusalem at the head of those who departed from Babylon; while we are informed (Ezr 2:2; Ezr 3:1, Ezr 3:8, and Ezr 4:3; Ezr 5:2) that Zerubbabel was not only at the head of the returning Jews, but also presided as secular ruler over the settlement of the community in Judah and Jerusalem. The identity of Sheshbazzar with Zerubbabel, which has been objected to by Schrader and Nöldeke, is placed beyond a doubt by a comparison of Ezr 5:16 with Ezr 3:8, etc.
, Ezr 5:2 : for in Ezr 5:16 Sheshbazzar is named as he who laid the foundation of the new temple in Jerusalem; and this, according to Ezr 5:2 and Ezr 3:8, was done by Zerubbabel. The view, too, that Zerubbabel, besides this his Hebrew name, had, as the official of the Persian king, also a Chaldee name, is in complete analogy with the case of Daniel and his three companions, who, on being taken into the service of the Babylonian king, received Chaldee names (Dan 1:7).
Zerubbabel, moreover, seems, even before his appointment of פּחה to the Jewish community in Judah, to have held some office in either the Babylonian or Persian Court or State; for Cyrus would hardly have entrusted this office to any private individual among the Jews. The meaning of the word שׁשׁבּצּר is not yet ascertained: in the lxx it is written Σασαβασάρ, Σαβαχασάρ, and Σαναβάσσαρος; 1 Esdras has Σαμανασσάρ, or, according to better MSS, Σαναβασσάρ; and Josephus, l.
c. , Ἀβασσάρ.
Ezr 1:9-10 The enumeration of the vessels: 1. אגרטלים of gold 30, and of silver 1000. The word occurs only here, and is translated in the Septuagint ψυκτῆρες; in 1 Esdr. 2:11, σπονδεῖα. The Talmudic explanation of Aben Ezra, “vessels for collecting the blood of the sacrificed lambs,” is derived from אגר, to collect, and טלה, a lamb, but is certainly untenable.
עגרטל is probably connected with Arab. qarṭallah , the rabbinical קרטיל, the Syriac karṭālā' , the Greek κάρταλλος or κάρταλος, a basket (according to Suidas), κάρταλος having no etymology in Greek; but can hardly be derived, as by Meier, hebr. Wurzelwörterbuch , p. 683, from the Syriac ‛rṭl , nudavit , to make bare, the Arabic ‛arṭala , to make empty, to hollow, with the sense of hollow basins.
2. מחלפים 29. This word also occurs only here. The Sept. has παρηλλαγμένα (interpreting etymologically after חלף), 1 Esdr. θυΐ́σκαι, the Vulg. cultri , sacrificial knives, according to the rabbinical interpretation, which is based upon חלף, in the sense of to pierce, to cut through (Jdg 5:26; Job 20:24). This meaning is, however, certainly incorrect, being based linguistically upon a mere conjecture, and not even offering an appropriate sense, since we do not expect to find knives between vessels and dishes.
Ewald ( Gesch . iv. p. 88), from the analogy of מחלפות (Jdg 16:13, Jdg 16:19), plaits, supposes vessels ornamented with plaited or net work; and Bertheau, vessels bored after the manner of a grating for censing, closed fire-pans with holes and slits. All is, however, uncertain. 3. כּפורים, goblets (goblets with covers; comp. 1Ch 15:18) of gold, 30; and of silver, 410.
The word משׁנים is obscure; connected with כּסף כּפורי כּס it can only mean goblets of a second order (comp. 1Ch 15:18). Such an addition appears, however, superfluous; the notion of a second order or class being already involved in their being of silver, when compared with the golden goblets. Hence Bertheau supposes משׁנים to be a numeral corrupted by a false reading; and the more so, because the sum-total given in Ezr 1:11 seems to require a larger number than 410.
These reasons, however, are not insuperable. The notion of a second order of vessels need not lie in their being composed of a less valuable metal, but may also be used to define the sort of implement; and the difference between the separate numbers and the sum-total is not perfectly reconciled by altering משׁנים into אלפים, 2000. 4. 1000 other vessels or implements.
Ezr 1:9-10 The enumeration of the vessels: 1. אגרטלים of gold 30, and of silver 1000. The word occurs only here, and is translated in the Septuagint ψυκτῆρες; in 1 Esdr. 2:11, σπονδεῖα. The Talmudic explanation of Aben Ezra, “vessels for collecting the blood of the sacrificed lambs,” is derived from אגר, to collect, and טלה, a lamb, but is certainly untenable.
עגרטל is probably connected with Arab. qarṭallah , the rabbinical קרטיל, the Syriac karṭālā' , the Greek κάρταλλος or κάρταλος, a basket (according to Suidas), κάρταλος having no etymology in Greek; but can hardly be derived, as by Meier, hebr. Wurzelwörterbuch , p. 683, from the Syriac ‛rṭl , nudavit , to make bare, the Arabic ‛arṭala , to make empty, to hollow, with the sense of hollow basins.
2. מחלפים 29. This word also occurs only here. The Sept. has παρηλλαγμένα (interpreting etymologically after חלף), 1 Esdr. θυΐ́σκαι, the Vulg. cultri , sacrificial knives, according to the rabbinical interpretation, which is based upon חלף, in the sense of to pierce, to cut through (Jdg 5:26; Job 20:24). This meaning is, however, certainly incorrect, being based linguistically upon a mere conjecture, and not even offering an appropriate sense, since we do not expect to find knives between vessels and dishes.
Ewald ( Gesch . iv. p. 88), from the analogy of מחלפות (Jdg 16:13, Jdg 16:19), plaits, supposes vessels ornamented with plaited or net work; and Bertheau, vessels bored after the manner of a grating for censing, closed fire-pans with holes and slits. All is, however, uncertain. 3. כּפורים, goblets (goblets with covers; comp. 1Ch 15:18) of gold, 30; and of silver, 410.
The word משׁנים is obscure; connected with כּסף כּפורי כּס it can only mean goblets of a second order (comp. 1Ch 15:18). Such an addition appears, however, superfluous; the notion of a second order or class being already involved in their being of silver, when compared with the golden goblets. Hence Bertheau supposes משׁנים to be a numeral corrupted by a false reading; and the more so, because the sum-total given in Ezr 1:11 seems to require a larger number than 410.
These reasons, however, are not insuperable. The notion of a second order of vessels need not lie in their being composed of a less valuable metal, but may also be used to define the sort of implement; and the difference between the separate numbers and the sum-total is not perfectly reconciled by altering משׁנים into אלפים, 2000. 4. 1000 other vessels or implements.
Ezr 1:11 “All the vessels of gold and of silver were five thousand and four hundred. ” But only 30 + 1000 אנרטלים, 29 מחלפים, 30 + 410 covered goblets, and 1000 other vessels are enumerated, making together 2499. The same numbers are found in the lxx. Ancient interpreters reconciled the difference by the supposition that in the separate statements only the larger and more valuable vessels are specified, while in the sum-total the greater and lesser are reckoned together.
This reconciliation of the discrepancy is, however, evidently arbitrary, and cannot be justified by a reference to 2Ch 36:18, where the taking away of the greater and lesser vessels of the temple at the destruction of Jerusalem is spoken of. In Ezr 1:11 it is indisputably intended to give the sum-total according to the enumeration of the separate numbers. The difference between the two statements has certainly arisen from errors in the numbers, for the correction of which the means are indeed wanting.
The error may be supposed to exist in the sum-total, where, instead of 5400, perhaps 2500 should be read, which sum may have been named in round numbers instead of 2499. הגּולה העלות עם, at the bringing up of the carried away, i. e. , when they were brought up from Babylon to Jerusalem. The infinitive Niphal העלות, with a passive signification, occurs also Jer 37:11.
List of Those Who Returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel and Joshua - Ezra 2 The title (Ezr 2:1 and Ezr 2:2) announces that the list which follows it (vv. 3-67) contains the number of the men of the people of Israel who returned to Jerusalem and Judah from the captivity in Babylon, under the conduct of Zerubbabel, Joshua, and other leaders. It is composed of separate lists: of the families of the people, vv.
3-35; of the priests and Levites,Ezr 2:36-42; of the Nethinims and servants of Solomon, vv. 43-58; of families who could not prove their Israelite descent, and of certain priests whose genealogy could not be found, Ezr 2:59-63; and it closes with the sum-total of the persons, and of their beasts of burden, Ezr 2:64-67. This is followed by an enumeration of the gifts which they brought with them for the temple (Ezr 2:68 and Ezr 2:69), and by a final statement with regard to the entire list (Ezr 2:70).
Nehemiah also, when he desired to give a list of the members of the community at Jerusalem, met with the same document, and incorporated it in the book which bears his name (Neh 7:6-73). It is also contained in 1 Esdr. 5:7-45. The three texts, however, exhibit in the names, and still more so in the numbers, such variations as involuntarily arise in transcribing long lists of names and figures.
The sum-total of 42,630 men and 7337 servants and maids is alike in all three texts; but the addition of the separate numbers in the Hebrew text of Ezra gives only 29,818, those in Nehemiah 31,089, and those in the Greek Esdras 30,143 men. In our elucidation of the list, we shall chiefly have respect to the differences between the texts of Ezra and Nehemiah, and only notice the variations in 1 Esdras so far as they may appear to conduce to a better understanding of the matter of our text.
Ezr 2:1-2 The title . - “These are the children of the province that went up out of the captivity, of the carrying away (i. e. , of those which had been carried away), whom Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon had carried away unto Babylon, and who returned to Jerusalem and Judah, every one to his city. ” In Neh 7:6 לבבל is omitted, through an error of transcription caused by the preceding בּבל; and וליהוּדה stands instead of ויהוּדה, which does not, however, affect the sense.
המּדינה is the province whose capital was Jerusalem (Neh 11:3), i. e. , the province of Judaea as a district of the Persian empire; so Ezr 5:8; Neh 1:2. The Chethiv נבוכדנצור is similar to the form Nebucadrezor, Jer 49:28, and is nearer to the Babylonian form of this name than the usual biblical forms Nebucadnezzar or Nebucadrezzar . For further remarks on the various forms of this name, see on Dan 1:1.
They returned “each to his city,” i. e. , to the city in which he or his ancestors had dwelt before the captivity. Bertheau, on the contrary, thinks that, “though in the allotment of dwelling-places some respect would certainly be had to the former abode of tribes and families, yet the meaning cannot be that every one returned to the locality where his forefathers had dwelt: first, because it is certain (?)
that all memorial of the connection of tribes and families was frequently obliterated, comp. below, Neh 7:61-64; and then, because a small portion only of the former southern kingdom being assigned to the returned community, the descendants of dwellers in those towns which lay without the boundaries of the new state could not return to the cities of their ancestors.
” True, however, as this may be, the city of each man cannot mean that “which the authorities, in arranging the affairs of the community, assigned to individuals as their domicile, and of which they were reckoned inhabitants in the lists then drawn up for the sake of levying taxes,” etc. (Bertheau). This would by no means be expressed by the words, “ they returned each to his own city.
” We may, on the contrary, correctly say that the words hold good à potiori , i. e. , they are used without regard to exceptions induced by the above-named circumstance. אשׁר־בּאוּ, Ezr 2:2, corresponds with the העלים of Ezr 2:1; hence in Neh 7:7 we find also the participle בּאים. They came with Zerubbabel, etc. , that is, under their conduct and leadership.
Zerubbabel (Ζοροβάβελ, זרבּבל or זרוּבבל, probably abbreviated from בּבל זרוּע, in Babylonia satus seu genitus ) the son of Shealtiel was a descendant of the captive king Jehoiachin (see on 1Ch 3:17), and was probably on account of this descent made leader of the expedition, and royal governor of the new settlement, by Cyrus. Jeshua (ישׁוּע, the subsequently abbreviated form of the name Jehoshua or Joshua, which is used Neh 8:17 also for Joshua the son of Nun, the contemporary of Moses) the son of Josedech (Hagg.
Jos 1:1), and the grandson of Seraiah the high priest, who was put to death by Nebuchadnezzar at Riblah, was the first high priest of the restored community; see on 1Ch 6:15. Besides those of Zerubbabel and Joshua, nine (or in Nehemiah more correctly ten) names, probably of heads of families, but of whom nothing further is known, are placed here. 1. Nehemiah, to be distinguished from the well-known Nehemiah the son of Hachaliah, Neh 1:1; 2.
Seraiah, instead of which we have in Neh 7:7 Azariah; 3. Reeliah, in Nehemiah, Raamiah; 4. Nahamani in Nehemiah, Εὐηνέος in 1 Esdras 5:8, omitted in the text of Ezra; 5. Mordecai, not the Mordecai of the book of Esther (Est 2:5.) ; 6. Bilshan; 7. Mispar, in Nehemiah Mispereth; 8. Bigvai; 9. Rehum, in 1 Esdras Ροΐ́μος; 10. Baanah. These ten, or reckoning Zerubbabel and Joshua, twelve men, are evidently intended, as leaders of the returning nation, to represent the new community as the successor of the twelve tribes of Israel.
This is also unmistakeably shown by the designation, the people of Israel, in the special title, and by the offering of twelve sin-offerings, according to the number of the tribes of Israel, at the dedication of the new temple, Ezr 6:16. The genealogical relation, however, of these twelve representatives to the twelve tribes cannot be ascertained, inasmuch as we are told nothing of the descent of the last ten.
Of these ten names, one meets indeed with that of Seraiah, Neh 10:3; of Bigvai, in the mention of the sons of Bigvai, Ezr 8:14; of Rehum, Neh 3:17; Neh 12:3; and of Baanah, Neh 10:28; but there is nothing to make the identity of these persons probable. Even in case they were all of them descended from members of the former kingdom of Judah, this is no certain proof that they all belonged also to the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, since even in the reign of Rehoboam pious Israelites of the ten tribes emigrated thither, and both at and after the destruction of the kingdom of the ten tribes, many Israelites might have taken refuge and settled in Judah.
The last words, Ezr 2:2, “The number of the men of the people of Israel,” contain the special title of the first division of the following list, with which the titles in Ezr 2:36, Ezr 2:40, Ezr 2:43, and Ezr 2:55 correspond. They are called the people of Israel , not the people of Judah, because those who returned represented the entire covenant people.
Ezr 2:1-2 The title . - “These are the children of the province that went up out of the captivity, of the carrying away (i. e. , of those which had been carried away), whom Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon had carried away unto Babylon, and who returned to Jerusalem and Judah, every one to his city. ” In Neh 7:6 לבבל is omitted, through an error of transcription caused by the preceding בּבל; and וליהוּדה stands instead of ויהוּדה, which does not, however, affect the sense.
המּדינה is the province whose capital was Jerusalem (Neh 11:3), i. e. , the province of Judaea as a district of the Persian empire; so Ezr 5:8; Neh 1:2. The Chethiv נבוכדנצור is similar to the form Nebucadrezor, Jer 49:28, and is nearer to the Babylonian form of this name than the usual biblical forms Nebucadnezzar or Nebucadrezzar . For further remarks on the various forms of this name, see on Dan 1:1.
They returned “each to his city,” i. e. , to the city in which he or his ancestors had dwelt before the captivity. Bertheau, on the contrary, thinks that, “though in the allotment of dwelling-places some respect would certainly be had to the former abode of tribes and families, yet the meaning cannot be that every one returned to the locality where his forefathers had dwelt: first, because it is certain (?)
that all memorial of the connection of tribes and families was frequently obliterated, comp. below, Neh 7:61-64; and then, because a small portion only of the former southern kingdom being assigned to the returned community, the descendants of dwellers in those towns which lay without the boundaries of the new state could not return to the cities of their ancestors.
” True, however, as this may be, the city of each man cannot mean that “which the authorities, in arranging the affairs of the community, assigned to individuals as their domicile, and of which they were reckoned inhabitants in the lists then drawn up for the sake of levying taxes,” etc. (Bertheau). This would by no means be expressed by the words, “ they returned each to his own city.
” We may, on the contrary, correctly say that the words hold good à potiori , i. e. , they are used without regard to exceptions induced by the above-named circumstance. אשׁר־בּאוּ, Ezr 2:2, corresponds with the העלים of Ezr 2:1; hence in Neh 7:7 we find also the participle בּאים. They came with Zerubbabel, etc. , that is, under their conduct and leadership.
Zerubbabel (Ζοροβάβελ, זרבּבל or זרוּבבל, probably abbreviated from בּבל זרוּע, in Babylonia satus seu genitus ) the son of Shealtiel was a descendant of the captive king Jehoiachin (see on 1Ch 3:17), and was probably on account of this descent made leader of the expedition, and royal governor of the new settlement, by Cyrus. Jeshua (ישׁוּע, the subsequently abbreviated form of the name Jehoshua or Joshua, which is used Neh 8:17 also for Joshua the son of Nun, the contemporary of Moses) the son of Josedech (Hagg.
Jos 1:1), and the grandson of Seraiah the high priest, who was put to death by Nebuchadnezzar at Riblah, was the first high priest of the restored community; see on 1Ch 6:15. Besides those of Zerubbabel and Joshua, nine (or in Nehemiah more correctly ten) names, probably of heads of families, but of whom nothing further is known, are placed here. 1. Nehemiah, to be distinguished from the well-known Nehemiah the son of Hachaliah, Neh 1:1; 2.
Seraiah, instead of which we have in Neh 7:7 Azariah; 3. Reeliah, in Nehemiah, Raamiah; 4. Nahamani in Nehemiah, Εὐηνέος in 1 Esdras 5:8, omitted in the text of Ezra; 5. Mordecai, not the Mordecai of the book of Esther (Est 2:5.) ; 6. Bilshan; 7. Mispar, in Nehemiah Mispereth; 8. Bigvai; 9. Rehum, in 1 Esdras Ροΐ́μος; 10. Baanah. These ten, or reckoning Zerubbabel and Joshua, twelve men, are evidently intended, as leaders of the returning nation, to represent the new community as the successor of the twelve tribes of Israel.
This is also unmistakeably shown by the designation, the people of Israel, in the special title, and by the offering of twelve sin-offerings, according to the number of the tribes of Israel, at the dedication of the new temple, Ezr 6:16. The genealogical relation, however, of these twelve representatives to the twelve tribes cannot be ascertained, inasmuch as we are told nothing of the descent of the last ten.
Of these ten names, one meets indeed with that of Seraiah, Neh 10:3; of Bigvai, in the mention of the sons of Bigvai, Ezr 8:14; of Rehum, Neh 3:17; Neh 12:3; and of Baanah, Neh 10:28; but there is nothing to make the identity of these persons probable. Even in case they were all of them descended from members of the former kingdom of Judah, this is no certain proof that they all belonged also to the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, since even in the reign of Rehoboam pious Israelites of the ten tribes emigrated thither, and both at and after the destruction of the kingdom of the ten tribes, many Israelites might have taken refuge and settled in Judah.
The last words, Ezr 2:2, “The number of the men of the people of Israel,” contain the special title of the first division of the following list, with which the titles in Ezr 2:36, Ezr 2:40, Ezr 2:43, and Ezr 2:55 correspond. They are called the people of Israel , not the people of Judah, because those who returned represented the entire covenant people.
Ezr 2:3-35 List of the houses and families of the people. Comp. Neh 7:8-38. - To show the variations in names and numbers between the two texts, we here place them side by side, the names in Nehemiah being inserted in parentheses. Ezra II Ezra II Neh. VII 1. The Sons of Parosh 2172 2172 2. The Sons of Shephatiah 372 372 3. The Sons of Arah 775 652 4. The Sons of Pahath Moab, of the sons of Joshua and Joab 2812 2818 5.
The Sons of Elam 1254 1254 6. The Sons of Zattu 945 845 7. The Sons of Zaccai 760 760 8. The Sons of Bani (Binnui) 642 648 9. The Sons of Bebai 623 628 10. The Sons of Azgad 1222 2322 11. The Sons of Adonikam 666 667 12. The Sons of Bigvai 2056 2067 13. The Sons of Adin 454 655 14. The Sons of Ater of Hezekiah 98 98 15. The Sons of Bezai 323 324 16. The Sons of Jorah (Harif) 112 112 17.
The Sons of Hashum 223 328 18. The Sons of Gibbar (Gibeon) 95 95 19. The Sons of Bethlehem 123 123 20. The Men of Netophah 56 56 21. The Men of Anathoth 128 128 22. The Sons of Azmaveth (men of Beth-azmaveth) 42 42 23. The Sons of Kirjath-arim, Chephirah, Beeroth 743 743 24. The Sons of Ramah and Gaba 621 621 25. The Men of Michmas 122 122 26. The Men of Bethel and Ai 223 123 27.
The Sons of Nebo (Acher) 52 52 28. The Sons of Magbish 156 wanting 29. The Sons of other Elam 1254 1254 30. The Sons of Harim 320 320 31. The Sons of Lod, Hadid, Ono 725 721 32. The Sons of Jericho 345 345 33. The Sons of Senaah 3630 3930 Total 24,144 25,406 The differences in the names are unimportant. In Ezr 2:6 the ו copulative inserted between the names ישׁוּע and יואב, both in Nehemiah and 1 Esdras, is wanting; the name בּני (Ezr 2:10) is written בּנּוּי in Nehemiah (Neh 7:15); for יורה (Ezr 2:18), Neh 7:24 has חריף, evidently another name for the same person, Jorah having a similarity of sound with יורה, harvest-rain, and חריף with חרף, harvest; for נּבּר (Ezr 2:20), Neh 7:25 more correctly read גּבעון, the name of the town; and for ערים קרית (Ezr 2:25), Neh 7:29 has the more correct form יערים קרית: the sons of Azmaveth (Ezr 2:24) stands in Nehemiah as the men of Beth-azmaveth; while, on the other hand, for the sons of Nebo (Ezr 2:29), we have in Nehemiah (Neh 7:33) the men of Nebo Acher, where אחר seems to have been inserted inadvertently, Elam Acher so soon following.
The names Bezai, Jorah, and Hashum (Ezr 2:17-19) are transposed in Nehemiah (Neh 7:22-24) thus, Hashum, Bezai, and Harif; as are also Lod, etc. , and Jericho, (Ezr 2:33, Ezr 2:34) into Jericho and Lod, etc. (Nehemiah, vv. 36, 37). Lastly, the sons of Magbish (Ezr 2:30) are omitted in Nehemiah; and the sons of Bethlehem and the men of Netophah (Ezr 2:21 and Ezr 2:22) are in Nehemiah (Neh 7:26) reckoned together, and stated to be 188 instead of 123 + 56 = 179.
A glance at the names undoubtedly shows that those numbered 1-17 are names of races or houses: those from 18-27, and from 31-33, are as certainly names of towns; there, therefore, inhabitants of towns are named. This series is, however, interrupted by Nos. 28-30; Harim being undoubtedly, and Magbish very probably, names not of places, but of persons; while the equality of the number of the other, Elam 1254, with that of Elam (No.
6), seems somewhat strange. To this must be added, that Magbish is wanting both in Nehemiah and 2 Esdras, and the other Elam in 1 Esdras; while, in place of the sons of Harim 320, we have in 1 Esdr. 5:16, in a more appropriate position, υἱοὶ Ἀρομ 32. Hence Bertheau infers that Nos. 28 and 29, sons of Magbish and sons of Elam Acher (vv. 30 and 31), are spurious, and that Harim should be written Ἀρώμ, and inserted higher up.
The reasons for considering these three statements doubtful have certainly some weight; but considering the great untrustworthiness of the statements in the first book of Esdras, and the other differences in the three lists arising, as they evidently do, merely from clerical errors, we could not venture to call them decisive. Of the names of houses or races (Nos.
1-17 and 30), we meet with many in other lists of the time of Ezra and Nehemiah; whence we perceive, (1) that of many houses only a portion returned with Zerubbabel and Joshua, the remaining portion following with Ezra; (2) that heads of houses are entered not by their personal names, but by that of the house. The names, for the most part, descend undoubtedly from the time anterior to the captivity, although we do not meet with them in the historical books of that epoch, because those books give only the genealogies of those more important personages who make a figure in history.
Besides this, the genealogies in Chronicles are very incomplete, enumerating for the most part only the families of the more ancient times. Most, if not all, of these races or houses must be regarded as former inhabitants of Jerusalem. Nor can the circumstance that the names given in the present list are not found in the lists of the inhabitants of Jerusalem (1 Chron 9 and Neh 11) be held as any valid objection; for in those lists only the heads of the great races of Judah and Benjamin are named, and not the houses which those races comprised.
The names of cities, on the other hand (Nos. 18-33), are for the most part found in the older books of the Old Testament: Gibeon in Jos 9:3; Bethlehem in Rth 1:2; Mic 5:1; Netophah, 2Sa 23:28 - see comm. on 1Ch 2:54; Anathoth in Jos 21:18; Jer 1:1; Kirjath-jearim, Chephirah, and Beeroth, as cities of the Gibeonites, in Jos 9:17; Ramah and Geba, which often occur in the histories of Samuel and Saul, also in Jos 18:24-25; Michmash in 1Sa 13:2, 1Sa 13:5; Isa 10:28; Bethel and Ai in Jos 7:2; and Jericho in Jos 5:13, and elsewhere.
All these places were situate in the neighbourhood of Jerusalem, and were probably taken possession of by former inhabitants or their children immediately after the return. Azmaveth or Beth-azmaveth (Neh 7:28) does not occur in the earlier history, nor is it mentioned out of this list, except in Neh 12:29, according to which it must be sought for in the neighbourhood of Geba.
It has not, however, been as yet discovered; for the conjecture of Ritter, Erdk . xvi. p. 519, that it may be el-Hizme, near Anâta, is unfounded. Nor can the position of Nebo be certainly determined, the mountain of that name (Num 32:3) being out of the question. Nob or Nobe (1Sa 21:2) has been thought to be this town. Its situation is suitable; and this view is supported by the fact that in Neh 11:31.
, Nob, and not Nebo, is mentioned, together with many of the places here named; in Ezr 10:43, however, the sons of Nebo are again specified. As far as situation is concerned, Nuba, or Beit-Nuba (Robinson’s Biblical Researches , p. 189), may, as Bertheau thinks, correspond with this town. Magbish was by many older expositors regarded as the name of a place, but is certainly that of a person; and no place of such a name is known.
The localities Lod, Hadid, and Ono (Ezr 2:33) first occur in the later books of the Old Testament. On Lod and Ono, see comm. on 1Ch 8:12. חדיד is certainly Ἀδιδά (1 Macc. 12:28, 13:13), not far from Lydda, where there is still a place called el-Hadithe, Arab. ' l - hdı̂th (Robinson’s Biblical Researches , p. 186). סנאה, Ezr 2:35, is identified by older expositors with Σεννά, ν͂ν Μαγδαλσεννά, which Jerome describes as terminus Judae, in septimo lapide Jerichus contra septentrionalem plagam ( Onom.
ed. Lars. et Parth. p. 332f.) ; in opposition to which, Robinson, in his above-cited work, identifies Magdal-Senna with a place called Mejdel, situate on the summit of a high hill about eighteen miles north of Jericho. The situation, however, of this town does not agree with the distance mentioned by Eusebius and Jerome, and the name Mejdel, i. e. , tower, is not of itself sufficient to identify it with Magdal-Senna.
The situation of the Senaah in question is not as yet determined; it must be sought for, however, at no great distance from Jericho. Of the towns mentioned in the present list, we find that the men of Jericho, Senaah, and Gibeon, as well as the inhabitants of Tekoa, Zanoah, Beth-haccerem, Mizpah, Beth-zur, and Keilah, assisted at the building of the walls of Jerusalem under Nehemiah (Neh 3:2-3, Neh 3:7).
A larger number of towns of Judah and Benjamin is specified in the list in Neh 11:25-35, whence we perceive that in process of time a greater multitude of Jews returned from captivity and settled in the land of their fathers.
Ezr 2:3-35 List of the houses and families of the people. Comp. Neh 7:8-38. - To show the variations in names and numbers between the two texts, we here place them side by side, the names in Nehemiah being inserted in parentheses. Ezra II Ezra II Neh. VII 1. The Sons of Parosh 2172 2172 2. The Sons of Shephatiah 372 372 3. The Sons of Arah 775 652 4. The Sons of Pahath Moab, of the sons of Joshua and Joab 2812 2818 5.
The Sons of Elam 1254 1254 6. The Sons of Zattu 945 845 7. The Sons of Zaccai 760 760 8. The Sons of Bani (Binnui) 642 648 9. The Sons of Bebai 623 628 10. The Sons of Azgad 1222 2322 11. The Sons of Adonikam 666 667 12. The Sons of Bigvai 2056 2067 13. The Sons of Adin 454 655 14. The Sons of Ater of Hezekiah 98 98 15. The Sons of Bezai 323 324 16. The Sons of Jorah (Harif) 112 112 17.
The Sons of Hashum 223 328 18. The Sons of Gibbar (Gibeon) 95 95 19. The Sons of Bethlehem 123 123 20. The Men of Netophah 56 56 21. The Men of Anathoth 128 128 22. The Sons of Azmaveth (men of Beth-azmaveth) 42 42 23. The Sons of Kirjath-arim, Chephirah, Beeroth 743 743 24. The Sons of Ramah and Gaba 621 621 25. The Men of Michmas 122 122 26. The Men of Bethel and Ai 223 123 27.
The Sons of Nebo (Acher) 52 52 28. The Sons of Magbish 156 wanting 29. The Sons of other Elam 1254 1254 30. The Sons of Harim 320 320 31. The Sons of Lod, Hadid, Ono 725 721 32. The Sons of Jericho 345 345 33. The Sons of Senaah 3630 3930 Total 24,144 25,406 The differences in the names are unimportant. In Ezr 2:6 the ו copulative inserted between the names ישׁוּע and יואב, both in Nehemiah and 1 Esdras, is wanting; the name בּני (Ezr 2:10) is written בּנּוּי in Nehemiah (Neh 7:15); for יורה (Ezr 2:18), Neh 7:24 has חריף, evidently another name for the same person, Jorah having a similarity of sound with יורה, harvest-rain, and חריף with חרף, harvest; for נּבּר (Ezr 2:20), Neh 7:25 more correctly read גּבעון, the name of the town; and for ערים קרית (Ezr 2:25), Neh 7:29 has the more correct form יערים קרית: the sons of Azmaveth (Ezr 2:24) stands in Nehemiah as the men of Beth-azmaveth; while, on the other hand, for the sons of Nebo (Ezr 2:29), we have in Nehemiah (Neh 7:33) the men of Nebo Acher, where אחר seems to have been inserted inadvertently, Elam Acher so soon following.
The names Bezai, Jorah, and Hashum (Ezr 2:17-19) are transposed in Nehemiah (Neh 7:22-24) thus, Hashum, Bezai, and Harif; as are also Lod, etc. , and Jericho, (Ezr 2:33, Ezr 2:34) into Jericho and Lod, etc. (Nehemiah, vv. 36, 37). Lastly, the sons of Magbish (Ezr 2:30) are omitted in Nehemiah; and the sons of Bethlehem and the men of Netophah (Ezr 2:21 and Ezr 2:22) are in Nehemiah (Neh 7:26) reckoned together, and stated to be 188 instead of 123 + 56 = 179.
A glance at the names undoubtedly shows that those numbered 1-17 are names of races or houses: those from 18-27, and from 31-33, are as certainly names of towns; there, therefore, inhabitants of towns are named. This series is, however, interrupted by Nos. 28-30; Harim being undoubtedly, and Magbish very probably, names not of places, but of persons; while the equality of the number of the other, Elam 1254, with that of Elam (No.
6), seems somewhat strange. To this must be added, that Magbish is wanting both in Nehemiah and 2 Esdras, and the other Elam in 1 Esdras; while, in place of the sons of Harim 320, we have in 1 Esdr. 5:16, in a more appropriate position, υἱοὶ Ἀρομ 32. Hence Bertheau infers that Nos. 28 and 29, sons of Magbish and sons of Elam Acher (vv. 30 and 31), are spurious, and that Harim should be written Ἀρώμ, and inserted higher up.
The reasons for considering these three statements doubtful have certainly some weight; but considering the great untrustworthiness of the statements in the first book of Esdras, and the other differences in the three lists arising, as they evidently do, merely from clerical errors, we could not venture to call them decisive. Of the names of houses or races (Nos.
1-17 and 30), we meet with many in other lists of the time of Ezra and Nehemiah; whence we perceive, (1) that of many houses only a portion returned with Zerubbabel and Joshua, the remaining portion following with Ezra; (2) that heads of houses are entered not by their personal names, but by that of the house. The names, for the most part, descend undoubtedly from the time anterior to the captivity, although we do not meet with them in the historical books of that epoch, because those books give only the genealogies of those more important personages who make a figure in history.
Besides this, the genealogies in Chronicles are very incomplete, enumerating for the most part only the families of the more ancient times. Most, if not all, of these races or houses must be regarded as former inhabitants of Jerusalem. Nor can the circumstance that the names given in the present list are not found in the lists of the inhabitants of Jerusalem (1 Chron 9 and Neh 11) be held as any valid objection; for in those lists only the heads of the great races of Judah and Benjamin are named, and not the houses which those races comprised.
The names of cities, on the other hand (Nos. 18-33), are for the most part found in the older books of the Old Testament: Gibeon in Jos 9:3; Bethlehem in Rth 1:2; Mic 5:1; Netophah, 2Sa 23:28 - see comm. on 1Ch 2:54; Anathoth in Jos 21:18; Jer 1:1; Kirjath-jearim, Chephirah, and Beeroth, as cities of the Gibeonites, in Jos 9:17; Ramah and Geba, which often occur in the histories of Samuel and Saul, also in Jos 18:24-25; Michmash in 1Sa 13:2, 1Sa 13:5; Isa 10:28; Bethel and Ai in Jos 7:2; and Jericho in Jos 5:13, and elsewhere.
All these places were situate in the neighbourhood of Jerusalem, and were probably taken possession of by former inhabitants or their children immediately after the return. Azmaveth or Beth-azmaveth (Neh 7:28) does not occur in the earlier history, nor is it mentioned out of this list, except in Neh 12:29, according to which it must be sought for in the neighbourhood of Geba.
It has not, however, been as yet discovered; for the conjecture of Ritter, Erdk . xvi. p. 519, that it may be el-Hizme, near Anâta, is unfounded. Nor can the position of Nebo be certainly determined, the mountain of that name (Num 32:3) being out of the question. Nob or Nobe (1Sa 21:2) has been thought to be this town. Its situation is suitable; and this view is supported by the fact that in Neh 11:31.
, Nob, and not Nebo, is mentioned, together with many of the places here named; in Ezr 10:43, however, the sons of Nebo are again specified. As far as situation is concerned, Nuba, or Beit-Nuba (Robinson’s Biblical Researches , p. 189), may, as Bertheau thinks, correspond with this town. Magbish was by many older expositors regarded as the name of a place, but is certainly that of a person; and no place of such a name is known.
The localities Lod, Hadid, and Ono (Ezr 2:33) first occur in the later books of the Old Testament. On Lod and Ono, see comm. on 1Ch 8:12. חדיד is certainly Ἀδιδά (1 Macc. 12:28, 13:13), not far from Lydda, where there is still a place called el-Hadithe, Arab. ' l - hdı̂th (Robinson’s Biblical Researches , p. 186). סנאה, Ezr 2:35, is identified by older expositors with Σεννά, ν͂ν Μαγδαλσεννά, which Jerome describes as terminus Judae, in septimo lapide Jerichus contra septentrionalem plagam ( Onom.
ed. Lars. et Parth. p. 332f.) ; in opposition to which, Robinson, in his above-cited work, identifies Magdal-Senna with a place called Mejdel, situate on the summit of a high hill about eighteen miles north of Jericho. The situation, however, of this town does not agree with the distance mentioned by Eusebius and Jerome, and the name Mejdel, i. e. , tower, is not of itself sufficient to identify it with Magdal-Senna.
The situation of the Senaah in question is not as yet determined; it must be sought for, however, at no great distance from Jericho. Of the towns mentioned in the present list, we find that the men of Jericho, Senaah, and Gibeon, as well as the inhabitants of Tekoa, Zanoah, Beth-haccerem, Mizpah, Beth-zur, and Keilah, assisted at the building of the walls of Jerusalem under Nehemiah (Neh 3:2-3, Neh 3:7).
A larger number of towns of Judah and Benjamin is specified in the list in Neh 11:25-35, whence we perceive that in process of time a greater multitude of Jews returned from captivity and settled in the land of their fathers.