Shashai שָׁשַׁי

Male H8343 1 book

Israelite who divorced his foreign wife

Who is Shashai in the Bible?

Shashai was an Israelite who appears in Ezra 10:40 as one of the men who had married a foreign woman and agreed to divorce her during Ezra's religious reforms. After the Babylonian exile, when the Jewish people returned to Jerusalem, Ezra discovered that many Israelites, including priests and Levites, had intermarried with neighboring peoples, which was considered a violation of God's law. In response to Ezra's call for repentance and religious purification, Shashai joined others in divorcing his foreign wife to restore the community's covenant faithfulness. Though the biblical text provides no further details about Shashai's personal circumstances, his name serves as a record of the difficult choices made during this period of Jewish renewal and religious reform.

Biography

Shashai, mentioned in Ezr.10.40, was one of the Israelites who had married a foreign woman during the time of Ezra. Following the Babylonian exile, when the Israelites returned to Jerusalem, Ezra discovered that many of them, including priests and Levites, had intermarried with the neighboring peoples. This was seen as a violation of God's law and a threat to the religious purity of the community. Ezra called for an assembly of the people and urged them to confess their sins and separate themselves from their foreign wives. Shashai was among those who agreed to divorce his foreign wife as part of this religious reform. The text does not provide any further details about Shashai's background or the specific circumstances of his marriage. However, his inclusion in the list of those who divorced their foreign wives highlights the importance of maintaining religious purity and the challenges faced by the Israelites in the post-exilic period.

In Scripture

1 biblical book ; 1 with study content
Ezra 1 verse

Names & Aliases

Form Language Script
Named Hebrew שָׁשַׁי
Encyclopedia Article

Shashai

ISBE 1915 (Public Domain)

shak): Eponym of a Benjamite family (1Ch 8:14,25).

sha'-ul, sha'-ul-its (sha