Ezra (Hastings' Dictionary)
- The famous leader connected with Israel's Return. Our sources of information concerning him are Ezr 7-10, Neh 8-10, and the apocryphal books. Some \\Titers have preferred the apocr. 1 Esdras to the canonical Ezra, but on quite insufficient grounds.f The apocr. books are useful in showing the views held about Ezra at a later time, but we must in the main rely upon the canonical books. E. is called the priest, the priest-scribe, and in 2 Es the prophet. He was of a priestly family, but, as his work was chiefly that of the scribe, that designation gradually supersedes the others. E. represents in a way the transition from the prophet to the scribe, but his prophetic functions are not conspicuous except in the apocr. literature.J The Exile had been a period of considerable literary activity. One of the greatest prophets heralded the deliverance of Cjtus (Deutero-Isaiah) ; Ezekiel had produced his book in Babylonia, draw- ing up an elaborate scheme for the new state, which he declared would arise upon the ruins of the old ; and many noble psalms come from this time. But the period was characterized not so much by the creation of a new literature as by the study of what already existed. E. the ' ready scribe in the law of Moses ' was not a mere copyist, nor the author of the law, but a diligent student of the law. E. longed to go to Jems, and put the law into effect there, to establish a real hagiocracy, 'the law' being the supreme authority in civil and religious affairs alike. Artaxerxes was not so tolerant of foreign religions as Cyrus had been, nevertheless E. won his goodwill, and secured a royal edict, clothing him with ample authority to carry out his purpose. This edict has been pre- served in Aramaic (Ezr 7'-') ; and while many regard this as a Jewish version, it is in the main tmstworthy.§ All .Jews who felt so inclined were free to depart from Babylon ; E. was authorized to carry the olierings for the temple made by the king and by the Jews ; to purchase sacrificial animals, and to use the rest of the money as he and his brethren saw fit ; to draw upon the royal treasury in the province of Sj'ria for further necessary supplies ; to exempt the temple officers and servants from the Persian tax ; to ai>i)oint officers to execute the law of God, teaching such as were unacquainted with it ; and to enforce the law of God and of the Persian king by penalty even to fines, imprison- ment, banishment, or death. In the year B.C. 458 E. gathered a caravan of some 1800 males, including 38 Levites who had been persuaded to join the company. E. had said so much to the king about God's ample protection to His servants that he was ashamed to ask for the • On the Apocr. see Bensly, Fourth Book of Ezra, p. 86. t Kiicnen, lielig. of Israel, ii. ; see discussion in Academy, 1895-90. : On Ezra the scribe see OTJC p. 42 f. ; PRE iv SSt. $ See under art. EzRA-NKBKHiAn, Books or. EZEA EZRA AND NEHEMIAH 821 nsnal escort. After fasting and pra3Tng for a safe journey, the company set out, and in four months reached the holy city. E. did not find a community ready and eager for the new government which he was authorized to establish. Many of the people were prosperous (Hag 1), but there was not that spirit of simple devotion to the God of Israel which the zealous E. regarded as essential. E. was informed that many Jews, including even priests and princes, had taken foreign wives. He knew the story of Solomon's decline (1 K U) ; he perceived the danger now of a relapse into idolatry ; above all, he feared the con- sequences of further disobedience of the law of God (Dt 7'). Shecaniah, as the representative of the people who liad been much moved by tlie prayer which E. poured forth in their presence (9"'), proposed that the people should put away the foreign wives and their children. E. accepted, the proposition, and exacted an oath on the spot that the offenders would comply with this agreement. A decree was issued by tlie princes and elders that all the people should assemble at Jerus. within three days, under penalty of confiscation of goods and I excommunication. Hut the assembly found the task too great to be accomplished in an open-air meeting during a severe winter storm, and the matter was referred to a divorce court, with E. at its head. After three months' labour, and not without opposition apparently (Ezr 10" RV),t the work of the court was linislied, and many innocent women and children were cast out, as Uagar and Ishmael had been. The account of E.'s formal institution of the law is found in Neh 8-10. Neh. had come to Jems. in B.C. 444. His first work was the rebuilding of the walls. According to tlie compiler of Ezr-Neh (see further on the BooK-S OF EzR AND Nf.h), it was after this event that E. read the law to the people assembled at Jerus., and obtained their pledge to observe it. It is singular that E., who had brought the law to Jerus. for the purpose of making it the code of the community, should not have pro- mulgated it sooner. It may be that Stade is right in supposing that E. had arou.sed the hostility of the people by the compulsory divorce, and that the times were not ripe before (Gesch. ii. 173f. ); or it may be that the c^jonology is not exact, as the compilation was mado long after tlie events de- scribed, and the description of the reading of the law interrupts Nehemiah's narrative (cf. 7 , 11'-'). J On the second day's reading the peojile licard the directions for observing the feast of booths. Stejis were taken at once to celebrate this feast, and the reading of the law was continued on each day of its observance. Two dsys later a great fast wa8 held, the people separttting themselves from strangers, and confessing their sin. E. gave utterance to a remarkable prayer, § praising God for His great goodness to Israel, deploring the apostasy and disobedience of the jieople, and triicmg the past misfortunes of the nation, as well as their present condition of vassalai;e, to their great sins. II The relation of E. and Nen. is one of the perplex- ing problems of this period. Neh. in his memoirs mentions E. but once (12"). H In the E. portions of Neh, Nehcmiah is mentioned but once (8').* • RMMilnfr, iftw Ewald (Uitt. ». 142 n. 4), SS S^3:i, Kit IO". t 8«fi Uertheau-UyMel, A'zr., Neh.^ Kit., io Kurxf(. Ex. Hand, buch,' in toe I On thl« readlnfr of the law aee Trumbull's Yaii Ltcturt on Vu Sunday School, is.'is. p. 7. I Fotlowtnt; LXX, which nr«flxei the wordj) 'and Ezra said' to QA. On this ptwaaj^e seo LzaA-NlllKUuu, Uookh op. I E. estAblished the caoonicity of the Pent, by tboae readings ; unOTJCp. 171. 1 The Eira of Neh 141- >»■ •• li another peraon. •• Th« beet (Ir. Teralone lack the title Tirnhatha (8») ; 1 E» hot the title, but lAoks the name (tH^) ; Laf^arde's e<l. agrees with Heb. The Neh. of 10 Is the aame as that of Ezr 2^. There is scant justification for Ewald's statement that ' the chronicler unites these two men very closely in his representations' !,I/ht. r. 161). I?, and Nchemiah were f^anted hifrh authority in the Judaean colony, and tliat in th«> liame sphere. Yet Nehemiah entirely ignores E. Their purposes were ditt'erent, it is true, one desiring to promote especi- ally the religious welfare of tlie colony, the other the political ; but among the .lews these spheres overlapped or rather interlaced at all points. It is probable that E.'s chief work in Jerus. was accom- plislied before Nehemiah's arrival. t E. m-ade a lasting impression upon the Jewish people. The development of the later .Jewish life followed the lines laid dovra by him. This is due, not so much to liis keen foresight in forecasting the future, as to the fact that his influence shaped Jewish life and thought in a way from which it never wholly departed. He gave the law an authority wliich it had never had before in Jewish history. This zeal was contagious, and accounts for tliat enthusiasm for the letter of the law which characterizes later ages. LiTEiiATURR.— Besides works referred to above, see PRE'-' art. 'Esra und Nehemia'; OTJC^ p. 168; Wellhausen, Hist, of Isr. and Jui. 130 ff. ; see also literature at end of foil. art. 2. The eponym of a priestly family which re- turned with Zei-ubbabel, Neh 12' ', ^sAzariah of Neh Itf". L. W. BATTEN.
This topic also has an entry in the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Both articles offer independent scholarly perspectives.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia on Ezra
Ezra ez'-ra (Aramaic or Chaldee, `ezra', "help"; a hypocoristicon, or shortened form of Azariah, "Yahweh has helped." The Hebrew spells the name `ezrah, as in 1Ch 4:17, or uses the Aramaic spelling of the name, as in Ezr 7:1. The Greek form is Esdras): (1) A priest who returned with Zerubbabel from Babylon (Ne 12:1). In Ne 10:2, Azariah, the full form of the name, is found. (2) A descendant of Judah and father of Jethro and other sons (1Ch 4:17). (3) The distinguished priest who is the hero of the Book of Ezra and co-worker with Nehemiah. ⇒See a list of verses on EZRA in the Bible. 1. Family: The genealogy of Ezra is given in Ezr 7:1-6, where it appears that he was the son of Seraiah, the son of Azariah, the son of Hilkiah, the son of Shallum, the son of Ahitub, the son of Amariah, the son of Azariah, the son of Meraioth, the son of Zerahiah, the son of Uzzi, the son of Bukki, the son of Abishua, the son of Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron, the high priest. Since Seraiah, according to the Book of Kings, was killed by Nebuchadrezzar at Riblah (2Ki 25:18-21), and since he…
Smith's Bible Dictionary on Ezra
(help), called Esdras in the Apocrypha, the famous scribe and priest. He was a learned and pious priest residing at Babylon in the time of Artaxerxes Longimanus. The origin of his influence with the king does not appear, but in the seventh year of his reign he obtained leave to go to Jerusalem, and to take with him a company of Israelites. (B.C. 457.) The journey from Babylon to Jerusalem took just four months; and the company brought with them a large freewill offering of gold and silver, and silver vessels. It appears that Ezra’s great design was to effect a religious reformation among the Palestine Jews. His first step was to enforce separation upon all who had married foreign wives. (Ezra 10:1) ... This was effected in little more than six months after his arrival at Jerusalem. With the detailed account of this important transaction Ezra’s autobiography ends abruptly, and we hear nothing more of him till, thirteen years afterwards, in the twentieth of Artaxerxes, we find him again at Jerusalem with Nehemiah. It seems probable that after effecting the above reformations he returne…
Fausset's Bible Dictionary on Ezra
("the helper," as Nehemiah means "the comforter".) 1. A "ready scribe in the law of Moses" (Ezr 7:6; Ezr 7:11-12); "a scribe of the words of the commandments of the Lord and of His statutes to Israel"; "a scribe of the law of the God of heaven"; "priest"; a worthy descendant of Hilkiah the priest under Josiah, who "found the book of the law in the house of the Lord" (2Ch 34:14-15); son or descendant of Seraiah (not the high priest. Seraiah, Ezr 7:1). See Ezra 7-10; also Nehemiah 8; Neh 12:26. Resided in Babylon under Artaxerxes Longimanus. His qualification for his work was "he had prepared his heart to seek the law of the Lord, and to do it, and to teach in Israel statutes and judgments." By the king's leave, in the seventh year of his reign, he took to Jerusalem 1,754 persons, including Israelites, priests, Levites, singers, porters, and Nethinim (Ezr 7:7; Ezra 8). The journey occupied four months. They brought free will offerings, gold, silver, and vessels, from the king and his counselors, as well as from the Jews abroad. Artaxerxes empowered him also to draw upon the royal treas…
References
- Orr, J. (ed.) (1915) The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Chicago: Howard-Severance Company. [Public Domain]
- Easton, M.G. (1893) Easton's Bible Dictionary. 3rd edn. Thomas Nelson. [Public Domain]
- Nave, O.J. (1897) Nave's Topical Bible. Topical Bible Publishing Co.. [Public Domain]
- Hastings, J. (ed.) (1909) A Dictionary of the Bible. Edinburgh: T&T Clark. [Public Domain]
- Smith, W. (ed.) (1884) Smith's Bible Dictionary. London: John Murray. [Public Domain]
- Fausset, A.R. (1878) Fausset's Bible Dictionary. [Public Domain]A Critical and Expository Bible Cyclopaedia
