Chapter 4:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 2 Chronicles Nehemiah
Ezra 4
Complete Concise
The good work of rebuilding the temple was no sooner begun than
it met with opposition from those that bore ill will to it; the Samaritans were
enemies to the Jews and their religion, and they set themselves to obstruct it.
I. They offered to be partners in the building of it, that they might have it in
their power to retard it; but they were refused (v. 1-3). II. They discouraged
them in it, and dissuaded them from it (v. 4, 5). III. They basely
misrepresented the undertaking, and the undertakers, to the king of Persia, by a
memorial they sent him (v. 6-16). IV. They obtained from him an order to stop
the building (v. 17-22), which they immediately put in execution (v. 23, 24).
Verses 1-5
We have here an instance of the old enmity that was put between
the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent. God's temple cannot be
built, but Satan will rage, and the
gates of hell will
fight against
it. The gospel kingdom was, in like manner, to be set up with much
struggling and contention. In this respect the glory of the latter house was
greater than the glory of the former, and it was more a figure of the temple of
Christ's church, in that Solomon built his temple when there was
no
adversary nor evil occurrent, (1 Ki. 5:4); but this second temple was built
notwithstanding great opposition, in the removing and conquering of which, and
the bringing of the work to perfection at last in spite of it, the wisdom,
power, and goodness of God were much glorified, and the church was encouraged to
trust in him.
I. The undertakers are here called the
children of the
captivity (v. 1), which makes them look very little. They had newly come out
of captivity, were born in captivity, had still the marks of their captivity
upon them; though they were not now captives, they were under the control of
those whose captives they had lately been. Israel was God's son, his
first-born; but by their iniquity the people sold and enslaved themselves, and
so became children of the captivity. But, it should seem, the thought of their
being so quickened them to this work, for it was by their neglect of the temple
that they lost their freedom.
II. The opposers of the undertaking are here said to be
the
adversaries of Judah and Benjamin, not the Chaldeans or Persians (they gave
them no disturbance"let them build and welcome"), but the relics of
the ten tribes, and the foreigners that had joined themselves to them, and
patched up that mongrel religion we had an account of, 2 Ki. 17:33.
They
feared the Lord, and served their own gods too. They are called
the
people of the land, v. 4. The worst enemies Judah and Benjamin had were
those that
said they were Jews and were not, Rev. 3:9.
III. The opposition they gave had in it much of the subtlety of
the old serpent. When they heard that the temple was in building they were
immediately aware that it would be a fatal blow to their superstition, and set
themselves to oppose it. They had not power to do it forcibly, but they tried
all the ways they could to do it effectually.
1. They offered their service to build with the Israelites only
that thereby they might get an opportunity to retard the work, while they
pretended to further it. Now, (1.) Their offer was plausible enough, and looked
kind:
"We will build with you, will help you to contrive, and will
contribute towards the expense;
for we seek your God as you do," v.
2. This was false, for, though they sought the same God, they did not seek him
only, nor seek him in the way he appointed, and therefore did not seek him as
they did. Herein they designed, if it were possible, to hinder the building of
it, at least to hinder their comfortable enjoyment of it; as good almost not
have it as not have it to themselves, for the pure worship of the true God and
him only. Thus are the
kisses of an enemy deceitful; his words are
smoother than butter when war is in his heart. But, (2.) The refusal of their
proffered service was very just, v. 3.
The chief of the fathers of Israel
were soon aware that they meant them no kindness, whatever they pretended, but
really designed to do them a mischief, and therefore (though they had need
enough of help if it had been such as they could confide in) told them plainly,
"You
have nothing to do with us, have no part nor lot in this matter, are not
true-born Israelites nor faithful worshippers of God;
you worship you know
not what, Jn. 4:22. You are none of those with whom we dare hold communion,
and therefore we ourselves will build it." They plead not to them the law
of their God, which forbade them to mingle with strangers (though that
especially they had an eye to), but that which they would take more notice of,
the king's commission, which was directed to them only: "The king of
Persia has commanded us to build this house, and we shall distrust and affront
him if we call in foreign aid." Note, In doing good there is need of the
wisdom
of the serpent, as well as the
innocency of the dove, and we have
need, as it follows there, to
beware of men, Mt. 10:16, 17. We should
carefully consider with whom we are associated and on whose hand we lean. While
we trust God with a pious confidence we must trust men with a prudent jealousy
and caution.
2. When this plot failed they did what they could to divert them
from the work and discourage them in it. They weakened their hands by telling
them it was in vain to attempt it, calling them
foolish builders, who
began what they were not able to finish, and by their insinuations troubled
them, and made them drive heavily in the work. All were not alike zealous in it.
Those that were cool and indifferent were by these artifices drawn off from the
work, which wanted their help, v. 4. And because what they themselves said the
Jews would suspect to be ill meant, and not be influenced by, they, underhand,
hired
counsellors against them, who, pretending to advise them for the best,
should dissuade them from proceeding, and so
frustrate their purpose (v.
5), or dissuade the men of Tyre and Sidon from furnishing them with the timber
they had bargained for (ch. 3:7); or whatever business they had at the Persian
court, to solicit for any particular grants or favours, pursuant to the general
edict for their liberty, there were those that were hired and lay ready to
appear of counsel against them. Wonder not at the restlessness of the church's
enemies in their attempts against the building of God's temple. He whom they
serve, and whose work they are doing, is
unwearied in
walking to and
fro through the earth to do mischief. And let those who discourage a good
work, and weaken the hands of those that are employed in it, see whose pattern
they follow.
Verses 6-16
Cyrus stedfastly adhered to the Jews' interest, and supported
his own grant. It was to no purpose to offer any thing to him in prejudice of
it. What he did was from a good principle, and in the fear of God, and therefore
he adhered to it. But, though his reign in all was thirty years, yet after the
conquest of Babylon, and his decree for the release of the Jews, some think that
he reigned but three years, others seven, and then either died or gave up that
part of his government, in which his successor was Ahasuerus (v. 6), called also
Artaxerxes (v. 7), supposed to be the same that in heathen authors is
called
Cambyses, who had never taken such cognizance of the despised Jews
as to concern himself for them, nor had he that knowledge of the God of Israel
which his predecessor had. To him these Samaritans applied by letter for an
order to stop the building of the temple; and they did it in the beginning of
his reign, being resolved to lose no time when they thought they had a king for
their purpose. See how watchful the church's enemies are to take the first
opportunity of doing it a mischief; let not its friends be less careful to do it
a kindness. Here is,
I. The general purport of the letter which they sent to the
king, to inform him of this matter. It is called (v. 6)
an accusation against
the inhabitants of Judah and Jerusalem. The devil is the
accuser of the
brethren (Rev. 12:10), and he carries on his malicious designs against them,
not only by accusing them himself before God, as he did Job, but by acting as a
lying spirit in the mouths of his instruments, whom he employs to accuse them
before magistrates and kings and to make them odious to the many and obnoxious
to the mighty. Marvel not if the same arts be still used to depreciate serious
godliness.
II. The persons concerned in writing this letter. The contrivers
are named (v. 7) that plotted the thing, the writers (v. 8) that put it into
form, and the subscribers (v. 9) that concurred in it and joined with them in
this representation, this misrepresentation I should call it. Now see here, 1.
How the
rulers take counsel together against the Lord and his temple,
with their companions. The building of the temple would do them no harm, yet
they appear against it with the utmost concern and virulence, perhaps because
the prophets of the God of Israel had foretold the
famishing and
perishing
of all the
gods of the heathen, Zep. 2:11; Jer. 10:11. 2. How the people
concurred with them in imagining this vain thing. They followed the cry, though
ignorant of the merits of the cause. All the several colonies of that plantation
(nine are here mentioned), who had their denomination from the cities or
countries of Assyria, Chaldea, Persia, etc., whence they came, set their hands,
by their representatives, to this letter. Perhaps they were incensed against
these returned Jews because many of the ten tribes were among them, whose
estates they had got into their possession, and of whom they were therefore
jealous, lest they should attempt the recovery of them hereafter.
III. A copy of the letter itself, which Ezra inserts here out of
the records of the kingdom of Persia, into which it had been entered; and it is
well we have it, that we may see whence the like methods, still taken to expose
good people and baffle good designs, are copied.
1. They represent themselves as very loyal to the government,
and greatly concerned for the honour and interest of it, and would have it
thought that the king had no such loving faithful subjects in all his dominions
as they were, none so sensible of their obligations to him, v. 14.
Because we
are salted with the salt of the palace (so it is in the
margin),
"we have our salary from the court, and could no more live without it than
flesh could be preserved without salt;" or, as some think, their pay or
pension was sent them in salt; or "Because we had our education in the
palace, and were brought up at the king's table," as we find, Dan. 1:5.
These were those whom he intended to prefer; they did
eat their portion of
the king's meat. "Now, in consideration of this,
it is not meet
for us to see the king's dishonour;" and therefore they urge him to
stop the building of the temple, which would certainly be the king's dishonour
more than any thing else. Note, A secret enmity to Christ and his gospel is
often gilded over with a pretended affection to Caesar and his power. The Jews
hated the Roman government, and yet, to serve a turn, could cry,
We have no
king but Caesar. But (to allude to this), if those that lived upon the crown
thought themselves bound in gratitude thus to support the interest of it, much
more reason have we thus to argue ourselves into a pious concern for God's
honour;
we have our maintenance from the God of heaven and are
salted
with his salt, live upon his bounty and are the care of his providence; and
therefore it is not
meet for us to see his dishonour without resenting it
and doing what we can to prevent it.
2. They represent the Jews as disloyal, and dangerous to the
government, that Jerusalem was
the rebellious and bad city (v. 12),
hurtful
to kings and provinces, v. 15. See how Jerusalem,
the joy of the whole
earth (Ps. 48:2), is here reproached as the scandal of the whole earth. The
enemies of the church could not do the bad things they design against it if they
did not first give it a bad name. Jerusalem had been a loyal city to its
rightful princes, and its present inhabitants were as well affected to the king
and his government as any of his provinces whatsoever. Daniel, who was a Jew,
had lately approved himself so faithful to his prince that his worst enemies
could find no fault in his management, Dan. 6:4. But thus was Elijah most
unjustly charged with troubling Israel, the apostles with
turning the world
upside down, and Christ himself with
perverting the nation and
forbidding
to give tribute to Caesar; and we must not think it strange if the same game
be still played. Now here,
(1.) Their history of what was past was invidious, that
within
this city sedition had been moved of old time, and, for
that cause, it
was destroyed, v. 15. It cannot be denied but that there was some colour
given for this suggestion by the attempts of Jehoiakim and Zedekiah to shake off
the yoke of the king of Babylon, which, if they had kept close to their religion
and the temple they were now rebuilding, they would never have come under. But
it must be considered, [1.] That they were themselves, and their ancestors,
sovereign princes, and their efforts to recover their rights, if there had not
been in them the violation of an oath, for aught I know, would have been
justifiable, and successful too, had they taken the right method and made their
peace with God first. [2.] Though these Jews, and their princes, had been guilty
of rebellion, yet it was unjust therefore to fasten this as an indelible brand
upon this city, as if that must for ever after go under the name of
the
rebellious and bad city. The Jews, in their captivity, had given such
specimens of good behaviour as were sufficient, with any reasonable men, to roll
away that one reproach; for they were instructed (and we have reason to hope
that they observed their instructions) to
seek the peace of the city where
they were
captives and
pray to the Lord for it, Jer. 29:7. It was
therefore very unfair, though not uncommon, thus to impute the iniquity of the
fathers to the children.
(2.) Their information concerning what was now doing was grossly
false in matter of fact. Very careful they were to inform the king that the Jews
had
set up the walls of this city, nay, had
finished them (so it
is in the
margin) and
joined the foundations (v. 12), when this
was far from being the case. They had only begun to build the temple, which
Cyrus commanded them to do, but, as for the walls, there was nothing done nor
designed towards the repair of them, as appears by the condition they were in
many years after (Neh. 1:3), all in ruins.
What shall be given, and what
done,
to these false tongues, nay, which is worse, these false pens?
sharp
arrows, doubtless,
of the mighty, and
coals of juniper, Ps.
120:3, 4. If they had not been perfectly lost to all virtue and honour they
would not, and if they had not been very secure of the king's countenance they
durst not, have written that to the king which all their neighbours knew to be a
notorious lie. See Prov. 29:12.
(3.) Their prognostics of the consequences were altogether
groundless and absurd. They were very confident, and would have the king believe
it upon their word, that if this city should be built, not only the Jews would
pay
no toll, tribute, or custom (v. 13), but (since a great lie is as soon
spoken as a little one) that the king would have no portion at all on this side
the river (v. 16), that all the countries on this side Euphrates would instantly
revolt, drawn in to do so by their example; and, if the prince in possession
should connive at this, he would wrong, not only himself, but his successors:
Thou
shalt endamage the revenue of the kings. See how every line in this letter
breathes both the subtlety and malice of the old serpent.
Verses 17-24
Here we have,
I. The orders which the king of Persia gave, in answer to the
information sent him by the Samaritans against the Jews. He suffered himself to
be imposed upon by their fraud and falsehood, took no care to examine the
allegations of their petition concerning that which the Jews were now doing, but
took it for granted that the charge was true, and was very willing to gratify
them with an order of council to stay proceedings. 1. He consulted the records
concerning Jerusalem, and found that it had indeed rebelled against the king of
Babylon, and therefore that it was, as they called it, a
bad city (v.
19), and withal that in times past kings had reigned there, to whom all the
countries on that side the river had been tributaries (v. 20), and that
therefore there was danger that if ever they were able (which they were never
likely to be) they would claim them again. Thus he says as they said, and
pretends to give a reason for so doing. See the hard fate of princes, who must
see and hear with other men's eyes and ears, and give judgment upon things as
they are represented to them, though often represented falsely. God's judgment
is always just because he sees things as they are, and it is according to truth.
2. He appointed these Samaritans to stop the building of the city immediately,
till further orders should be given about it, v. 21, 22. Neither they, in their
letter, nor he, in his order, make any mention of the temple, and the building
of that, because both they and he knew that they had not only a permission, but
a command, from Cyrus to rebuild that, which even these Samaritans had not the
confidence to move for the repeal of. They spoke only of the
city:
"Let not
that be built," that is, as a city with walls and
gates; "whatever you do, prevent
that, lest damage grow to the hurt of
the kings:" he would not that the crown should lose by his wearing it.
II. The use which the enemies of the Jews made of these orders,
so fraudulently obtained; upon the receipt of them they went up
in haste to
Jerusalem, v. 23.
Their feet ran to evil, Prov. 1:16. They were
impatient till the builders were served with this prohibition, which they
produced as their warrant to
make them cease by force and power. As they
abused the king in obtaining this order by their mis-informations, so they
abused him in the execution of it; for the order was only to prevent the walling
of the
city, but, having force and power on their side, they construed it
as relating to the
temple, for it was that to which they had an ill will,
and which they only wanted some colour to hinder the building of. There was
indeed a general clause in the order, to
cause these men to cease, which
had reference to their complaint about building the walls; but they applied it
to the building of the temple. See what need we have to pray, not only for
kings, but for all in authority under them, and
the governors sent by them,
because the
quietness and
peaceableness of our lives,
in all
godliness and honesty, depend very much upon the integrity and wisdom of
inferior magistrates, as well as the supreme. The consequence was that
the
work of the house of God ceased for a time, through the power and insolence
of its enemies; and so, through the coldness and indifference of its friends, it
stood still till the second year of Darius Hystaspes, for to me it seems clear
by the thread of this sacred history that it was that Darius, v. 24. Though now
a stop was put to it by the violence of the Samaritans, yet that they might soon
after have gone on by connivance, if they had had a due affection to the work,
appears by this, that before they had that express warrant from the king for
doing it (ch. 6) they were reproved by the prophets for not doing it, ch. 5:1,
compared with Hag. 1:1, etc. If they had taken due care to inform Cambyses of
the truth of this case, perhaps he would have recalled his order; but, for aught
I know, some of the builders were almost as willing it should cease as the
adversaries themselves were. At some periods the church has suffered more by the
coldness of its friends than by the heat of its enemies; but both together
commonly make church-work slow work.
Chapter 4:
| 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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