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Ezra, Nehemiah (Anchor Bible Commentaries)

✍ Scribed by J Myers


Publisher
Yale University Press
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Leaves
353
Series
Anchor Bible Commentary; 14
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The books of Ezra and Nehemiah, treated here as one larger work, continue the story of Israel’s experience begun in the biblical books of I and II Chronicles. In the wake of Persia replacing Babylon as the ruling empire in the ancient Near East, the Judahites exiled in Babylon find reason to hope again. Their hope is rooted in the fulfillment of the prophetic promises that they would one day return to their homeland. Not only do the exiles return from Babylon with the support of the Persian ruler, but they renew their commitment to God.

Two remarkable personalities – with strikingly different approaches to the same objective – are the architects of this rebuilding of a people so long without roots. Ezra, β€œthe second Moses,” bases the renewal on the Torah and spiritual reform. Nehemiah, the accomplished politician and diplomat, keeps the renewal alive with his deft administrative hand.

For all its usefulness in painting the historical picture, Ezra-Nehemiah presents an exceedingly complex textual jigsaw puzzle. The heart of the matter lies not in reconciling all the parallel lists, quotes, and different accounts of the same story, but in coming to a better understanding of how and when the Bible came to be written. The factors of spiritual renewal, national reconstruction, and biblical composition make Ezra-Nehemiah a key to biblical interpretation then and now.

✦ Table of Contents


Title Page
Preface
Contents
Principal Abbreviations
Introduction
History
The Jews in the Exilic Period
The Early Returns
Literary and Historical Order
The Present Order of Ezra-Nehemiah
Attempts ot Rearrange the Literary Materials of Ezra-Nehemiah
The Sources
The Use of the Sources
The Achievements of Nehemiah and Ezra
Nehemiah
Ezra
Text and Related Matters
The Hebrew Text
The Versions
Authorship and Date
Selected Bibliography
Ezra
1. Cyrus Releases the Jews (1:1–11)
2. The Return to Jerusalem (2:1–70)
3. Renewal of Religious Institutions (3:1–13)
4. Work on the Temple Suspended Because of Samaritan Opposition (4:1–24)
5. Persian Officials Investiage the Rebuilding of the Temple (5:1–17)
6. Darius I Permits the Completion of the Temple (6:1–22)
7. Ezra and His Mission (7:1–28)
8. Ezra's Departure from Babylon: His Enlistment and Selection of Personnel (8:1–36)
9. Ezra Reprimands the Jerusalem Jews for Their Sins (9:1–15)
10. Repentance of the Jews (10:1–44)
Nehemiah
1. Nehemiah Distressed by News of the Conditions in Jerusalem (1:1–11)
2. Nehemiah Goes to Jerusalem by Permission of Artaxerxes (2:1–10)
3. Nehemiah's Secret Inspection of Jerusalem Angers the Officials (2:11–20)
4. Reconstruction of the City Walls (3:1–32)
5. Samaritan Opposition and Harassment Necessitate Protective Measures (3:33β€”4:17)
6. Economic Problems: Nehemiah's Solution (5:1–13)
7. Nehemiah's Administration (5:14–19)
8: Plots against Nehemiah (6:1–14, 17–19)
9. Completion of the Wall (6:15–16; 7:1–3)
10. Population Records (7:4–72a)
11. The Reading of the law (7:72bβ€”8:12)
12. Celebration of the Feast of Booths (8:13–18)
13. Penance (9:1–37)
14. The Written Pledge of Reform: Signers and Provisions (10:1–40)
15. Distribution of the Jews in and outside Jerusalem (11:1–36)
16. Postexilic Clearical Genealogies (12:1–26)
17. Dedication of the Wall (12:27–43)
18. Temple Provisions, Expulsion of Foreigners (12:44β€”13:3)
19. Nehemiah's Reforms (13:4–31)
Appendixes
I. Comparison of Nehemiah VII and Ezra II (1 Esdras V)
II. Comparison of Lists
A. Priest Lists in Ezra-Nehemiah
B. Lists of Levites
C. Lists of Laymen
D. Builder's List of Neh 3
E. Town Lists of Benjamin
F. Town Lists of Judah
III. Levite Families
Index of Place and Personal Names
Key to the Text


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