Chapter 2:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 2 Chronicles Nehemiah
Ezra 2
Complete Concise
That many returned out of Babylon upon Cyrus's proclamation we
were told in the foregoing chapter; we have here a catalogue of the several
families that returned (v. 1). I. The leaders (v. 2). II. The people (v. 3-35).
III. The priests, Levites, and retainers to the temple (v. 35-63). IV. The sum
total, with an account of their retinue (v. 64-67). V. Their offerings to the
service of the temple (v. 68-70).
Verses 1-35
We may observe here, 1. That an account was kept in writing of
the families that came up out of captivity, and the numbers of each family. This
was done for their honour, as part of their recompence for their faith and
courage, their confidence in God and their affection to their own land, and to
stir up others to follow their good example. Those that honour God he will thus
honour. The names of all those Israelites indeed that accept the offer of
deliverance by Christ shall be found, to their honour, in a more sacred record
than this, even in
the Lamb's book of life. The account that was kept
of the families that came up from the captivity was intended also for the
benefit of posterity, that they might know from whom they descended and to whom
they were allied. 2. That they are called
children of the province.
Judah, which had been an illustrious kingdom, to which other kingdoms had been
made provinces, subject to it and dependent on it, was now itself made a
province, to receive laws and commissions from the king of Persia and to be
accountable to him. See how sin diminishes and debases a nation, which
righteousness would exalt. But by thus being made servants (as the patriarchs by
being sojourners in a country which was theirs by promise) they were reminded of
the
better country, that is, the heavenly (Heb. 11:16), a
kingdom
which cannot be moved, or changed into a province. 3. That they are said to
come
every one to his city, that is, the city appointed them, in which
appointment an eye, no doubt, was had to their former settlement by Joshua; and
to that, as near as might be, they returned: for it does not appear that any
others, at least any that were able to oppose them, had possessed them in their
absence. 4. That the leaders are first mentioned, v. 2. Zerubbabel and Jeshua
were their Moses and Aaron, the former their chief prince, the latter their
chief priest. Nehemiah and Mordecai are mentioned here; some think not the same
with the famous men we afterwards meet with of those names: probably they were
the same, but afterwards returned to court for the service of their country. 5.
Some of these several families are named from the persons that were their
ancestors, others from the places in which they had formerly resided; as with us
many surnames are the proper names of persons, others of places. 6. Some little
difference there is between the numbers of some of the families here and in Neh.
7, where this catalogue is repeated, which might arise from this, that some who
had given in their names at first to come afterwards drew backsaid,
I go,
Sir, but went not, which would lessen the number of the families they
belonged to; others that declined, at first,
afterwards repented and went,
and so increased the number. 7. Here are two families that are called
the
children of Elam (one v. 7, another v. 31), and, which is strange, the
number of both is the same, 1254. 8. The children of Adonikam, which signifies
a
high lord, were 666, just the
number of the beast (Rev. 13:18), which
is there said to be
the number of a man, which, Mr. Hugh Broughton
thinks, has reference to this man. 9. The children of Bethlehem (v. 21) were but
123, though it was David's city; for Bethlehem was
little among the
thousands of Judah, yet there must the Messiah arise, Mic. 5:2. 10. Anathoth
had been a famous place in the tribe of Benjamin and yet here it numbered but
128 (v. 23), which is to be imputed to the divine curse which the men of
Anathoth brought upon themselves by persecuting Jeremiah, who was of their city.
Jer. 11:21, 23,
There shall be no remnant of them, for I will bring evil upon
the men of Anathoth. And see Isa. 10:30,
O poor Anathoth! Nothing
brings ruin on a people sooner than persecution.
Verses 36-63
Here is an account, I. Of the priests that returned, and they
were a considerable number, about a tenth part of the whole company: for the
whole were above 42,000 (v. 64), and four families of priests made up above 4200
(v. 36-39); thus was the tenth God's parta blessed decimation. Three of
the fathers of the priests here named were heads of courses, 1 Chr. 24:7, 8, 14.
The fourth was Pashur, v. 38. If these were of the posterity of that Pashur that
abused Jeremiah (Jer. 20:1), it is strange that so bad a man should have so good
a seed, and so numerous.
II. Of the Levites. I cannot but wonder at the small number of
them, for, taking in both the singers and the porters (v. 40-42), they did not
make 350. Time was when the Levites were more forward to their duty than the
priests (2 Chr. 29:34), but they were not so now. If one place, one family, has
the reputation for pious zeal now, another may have it another time.
The wind
blows where it listeth, and shifts its points.
III. Of the Nethinim, who, it is supposed, were the Gibeonites,
given
(so their name signifies) by Joshua first (Jos. 9:27), and again by David (Ezra
8:20), when Saul had expelled them, to be employed by the Levites in the work of
God's house as hewers of wood and drawers of water; and, with them, of the
children of Solomon's servants, whom he gave for the like use (whether they
were Jews or Gentiles does not appear) and who were here taken notice of among
the retainers of the temple and numbered with the Nethinim, v. 55, 58. Note, It
is an honour to belong to God's house, though in the meanest office there.
IV. Of some that were looked upon as Israelites by birth, and
others as priests, and yet could not make out a clear title to the honour. 1.
There were some that could not prove themselves Israelites (v. 59, 60), a
considerable number, who presumed they were of the seed of Jacob, but could not
produce their pedigrees, and yet would go up to Jerusalem, having an affection
to the house and people of God. These shamed those who were true-born
Israelites, and yet were not called Israelites indeed,
who came out of the
waters of Judah (Isa. 48:1), but had lost the relish of those waters. 2.
There were others that could not prove themselves priests, and yet were supposed
to be of the seed of Aaron. What is not preserved in black and white will, in
all likelihood, be forgotten in a little time. Now we are here told, (1.) How
they lost their evidence. One of their ancestors married a daughter of Barzillai,
that great man whom we read of in David's time; he gloried in an alliance to
that honourable family, and, preferring that before the dignity of his
priesthood, would have his children called after Barzillai's family, and their
pedigree preserved in the registers of that house, not of the house of Aaron,
and so they lost it. In Babylon there was nothing to be got by the priesthood,
and therefore they cared not for being akin to it. Those who think their
ministry, or their relation to ministers, a diminution or disparagement to them,
forget who it was that said,
I magnify my office. (2.) What they lost
with it. It could not be taken for granted that they were priests when they
could not produce their proofs, but they were,
as polluted, put from the
priesthood. Now that the priests had recovered their rights, and had the
altar to live upon again, they would gladly be looked upon as priests. But they
had sold their birthright for the honour of being gentlemen, and therefore were
justly degraded, and forbidden to
eat of the most holy things. Note,
Christ will be ashamed of those that are ashamed of him and his service. It was
the tirshatha, or governor, that put them under this sequestration, which some
understand of Zerubbabel the present governor, others of Nehemiah (who is so
called, Neh. 8:9, 10:1, and who gave this order when he came some years after);
but the prohibition was not absolute, it was only a suspension, till there
should be a high priest
with Urim and Thummin, by whom they might know
God's mind in this matter. This, it seems, was expected and desired, but it
does not appear that ever they were blessed with it under the second temple.
They had the canon of the Old Testament complete, which was better than Urim;
and, by the want of that oracle, they were taught to expect the Messiah the
great Oracle, which the Urim and Thummim was but a type of. Nor does it appear
that the second temple had the ark in it, either the old one or a new one. Those
shadows by degrees vanished, as the substance approached; and God, by the
prophet, intimates to his people that they should sustain no damage by the want
of the ark, Jer. 3:16, 17.
In those days, when
they shall call
Jerusalem the throne of the Lord, and
all the nations shall be gathered
to it, they shall
say no more, The ark of the covenant of the Lord, neither
shall it come to mind, for they shall do very well without it.
Verses 64-70
Here is, I. The sum total of the company that returned out of
Babylon. The particular sums before mentioned amount not quite to 30,000 (29,
818), so that there were above 12,000 that come out into any of those accounts,
who, it is probable, were of the rest of the tribes of Israel, besides Judah and
Benjamin, that could not tell of what particular family or city they were, but
that they were Israelites, and of what tribe. Now, 1. This was more than double
the number that were carried captive into Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar, so that, as
in Egypt, the time of their affliction was the time of their increase. 2. These
were but few to begin a nation with, and yet, by virtue of the old promise made
to their fathers, they multiplied so as before their last destruction by the
Romans, about 500 years after, to be a very numerous people. When God says,
"Increase and multiply,"
a little one shall become a thousand.
II. Their retinue. They were themselves little better than
servants, and therefore no wonder that their servants were comparatively but few
(v. 65) and their beasts of burden about as many, v. 66, 67. It was not with
them now as in days past. But notice is taken of 200
singing-men and women
whom they had among them, who, we will suppose, were intended (as those 2 Chr.
35:25) to excite
their mourning, for it was foretold that they should,
upon this occasion,
go weeping (Jer. 50:4), with ditties of lamentation.
III. Their oblations. It is said (v. 68, 69), 1. That they
came
to the house of the Lord at Jerusalem; and yet that house, that holy and
beautiful house, was now in ruins, a heap of rubbish. But, like their father
Abraham, when the altar was gone they came with devotion to
the place of the
altar (Gen. 13:4); and it is the character of the genuine sons of Zion that
they favour even
the dust thereof, Ps. 102:14. 2. That they offered
freely towards the
setting of it up in its place. That, it seems, was the
first house they talked of setting up; and though they came off a journey, and
were beginning the world (two chargeable things), yet they offered, and offered
freely, towards the building of the temple. Let none complain of the necessary
expenses of their religion, but believe that when they come to balance the
account they will find that it clears the cost. Their offering was nothing in
comparison with the offerings of the princes in David's time; then they
offered by talents (1 Chr. 29:7), now by drams, yet these drams, being after
their ability, were as acceptable to God as those talents, like the widow's
two mites. The 61,000 drams of gold amount, by Cumberland's calculation, to so
many pounds of our money and so many groats. Every maneh, or pound of silver, he
reckons to be sixty shekels (that is, thirty ounces), which we may reckon 7
l.
10
s. of our money, so that this 5000 pounds of silver will be above
37,000
l. of our money. It seems, God had blessed them with an increase of
their wealth, as well as of their numbers, in Babylon; and, as God had prospered
them, they gave cheerfully to the service of his house. 3. That they
dwelt in
their cities, v. 70. Though their cities were out of repair, yet, because
they were their cities, such as God had assigned them, they were content to
dwell in them, and were thankful for liberty and property, though they had
little of pomp, plenty, or power. Their poverty was a bad cause, but their unity
and unanimity were a good effect of it. Here was room enough for them all and
all their substance, so that there was no strife among them, but perfect
harmony, a blessed presage of their settlement, as their discords in the latter
times of that state were of their ruin.
Chapter 2:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 2 Chronicles Nehemiah
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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