Verse 1
Ezra 1:1. Now in the first year
of Cyrus, king of Persia — This
is that famous Cyrus who, one
hundred and forty years before
the temple was destroyed, and
two hundred years before he was
born, was mentioned by name in
the prophecies of Isaiah, as
raised up, and appointed by God,
for the restoration of his
people, Isaiah 44:28; Isaiah
45:1; Isaiah 45:4. This
remarkable prediction, it is
probable, Daniel showed to
Cyrus, and that it induced him
to give forth the following
edict. So Prideaux thinks, with
many other learned men. Cyrus,
it appears, at his first coming
to Babylon, found Daniel there,
an old minister of state, famed
for his great wisdom over all
the East; and hence he not only
himself employed him as such,
but, upon settling the
government, made him first
superintendent, or prime
minister of state, over all the
provinces of the empire. In this
station of life Daniel must have
been a person of great authority
at court, and highly in the
esteem of his prince; and, as
there could be no doubt but he
would use his good offices in
behalf of the enlargement of the
Jews, so it is not likely he
should use them in vain,
especially if he showed Cyrus
the prophecies just mentioned,
which, it is evident from the
decree itself, that Cyrus had
seen. It must be observed that,
strictly speaking, this decree
was not given forth in the first
year of Cyrus’s reign; for then
the Jews were not his subjects;
but in the first year after his
conquest of Babylon, where the
Jews then lived in captivity.
That the word of the Lord by the
mouth of Jeremiah might be
fulfilled — Who foretold that
after seventy years the king of
Babylon and the Chaldeans should
be destroyed, and the people of
Judah restored to their own
land. This prophecy was first
delivered in the fourth year of
Jehoiakim, the son of Josiah,
which was the first year of
Nebuchadnezzar; and the same
year Nebuchadnezzar invaded
Judea, besieged and took
Jerusalem, made Jehoiakim his
subject and tributary,
transported the finest children
of the royal family and of the
nobility to Babylon, to be bred
up there for eunuchs and slaves
in his palace, and also carried
away the vessels of the house of
the Lord and put them in the
temple of his god at Babylon.
Seventy years from this time
will bring us down to the first
year of Cyrus, (2 Chronicles
36:22; Ezra 1:3,) when he made
his proclamation for the
restoration of the Jews, and for
the building of the temple at
Jerusalem. This computation of
the seventy years captivity
appears to many to be the truest
and most agreeable to Scripture.
But, if we fix the commencement
of these seventy years at the
time when Jerusalem was burned
and destroyed, their conclusion
will fall about the time when
Darius issued his decree for
rebuilding the temple, after the
work had been suspended and
stopped. Or, if we fix their
commencement at the time when
Nebuzaradan carried away the
last remainder of the people,
and completed the desolation of
the land, their conclusion will
fall about the time when the
temple was finished and
dedicated, and the first
passover was solemnized in it.
“So that,” as Dean Prideaux
says, “taking it which way we
will, and at what stage we
please, the prophecy of Jeremiah
will be fully and exactly
accomplished concerning this
matter.” It may be said to have
been accomplished, indeed, at
three different times, and in
three different manners, and
therefore, possibly, all might
have been intended, though the
first, without doubt, was the
principal subject of the
prophecy.
The Lord stirred up the spirit
of Cyrus, king of Persia — God,
who had long before designed him
for this work, now suggested
these thoughts and intentions to
him, and excited him to begin to
prosecute them, (for it was not
all accomplished in the first
year of Cyrus,) which he did,
not only by causing his will and
pleasure to be proclaimed, but
to be put in writing, that none
might mistake his meaning.
Verse 2
Ezra 1:2. The Lord God of heaven
— It is observable, says Mr.
Locke, that God, in the former
books, is called the Lord of
hosts, but in the last of
Chronicles, in this, in
Nehemiah, and Daniel, that is,
in the books written after the
captivity, he is styled the God
of heaven, and not Lord of
hosts, though the sense of both
expressions is the same.
Probably those who showed or
interpreted to Cyrus the
prophecy of Isaiah concerning
himself, acquainted him that the
God, whose prophet Isaiah was,
was worshipped by the Jews, not
as the God of their particular
country merely, but as the
Creator and Lord of heaven and
earth. And Cyrus, though it is
likely he did not entirely
forsake the religion of his
country, yet might acknowledge
and revere Jehovah, the God of
the Hebrews, as the true and
great God. For, though the Jews
were strictly commanded to
worship one God, and not to
admit another into fellowship
with him, yet many in the
heathen nations, while they
worshipped idols, acknowledged a
true and supreme God, and often
worshipped the gods of other
countries in common with their
own. Hath given me all the
kingdoms of the earth — All in
those parts of the world; all
those large dominions which the
Assyrians and Babylonians had
possessed: the eastern kings
were wont, as they are still, to
speak magnificently of their
dominions. The gift of these
Cyrus ascribes to the great God,
through the above-mentioned
prophecy of Isaiah concerning
him, which must have carried a
great evidence with it,
especially to him who was so
highly encouraged by it; or
through some special
illumination which God had
vouchsafed to him, as he had to
Nebuchadnezzar and Darius, and
some other heathen princes. And
he hath charged me to build him
a house at Jerusalem — So he
might conclude from the prophecy
just referred to, (Isaiah
45:13,) where God says of Cyrus,
He shall build my city, of which
the temple was a principal part,
and more plainly from Isaiah
44:28, He shall say to
Jerusalem, Thou shalt be built;
and to the temple, Thy
foundation shall be laid.
Verse 3
Ezra 1:3. Who is there among you
of all his people? — Not of the
tribe of Judah only, but of
Israel also, who were under his
government, the Assyrians and
Medes, among whom they were
scattered, being his subjects.
Accordingly Josephus says, that
Zerubbabel sent the edict of
Cyrus into Media to the rest of
the tribes. His God be with him
— Let his God help him, as I
also shall; and let him go up to
Jerusalem — Thus he not only
makes a proclamation to them of
liberty to go to their own
country, but desires them to go,
and prays God to be with them,
and prosper them in building his
house, saying, He is the God,
and thereby evidently
acknowledging him to be the
true, if not also the only God.
Verse 4
Ezra 1:4. Whosoever remaineth in
any place where be sojourneth,
&c. — This seems to relate to
such as were desirous to go up
with their brethren, but were
forced to stay behind for want
of necessaries to support them
in so long a journey. To such he
would have a supply of all
things needful to be given by
the inhabitants of the places
where they lived, who could
afford it, besides sending by
them an offering toward the
rebuilding of the temple.
Verse 5
Ezra 1:5. Then rose up the chief
of the fathers, &c. — Eminent
and experienced men, from whom
it might justly be expected,
that, as they were above their
brethren in dignity, so they
should go before them in duty.
Of Judah and Benjamin — And with
them some of the other tribes,
as appears from 1 Chronicles
9:3; but these only are named,
because they were most
considerable for number and
quality. And the priests and
Levites — Who, as became them,
were among the first that set
their faces toward Zion. If any
good work is to be done, let
ministers take the lead in it.
With all whose spirit God had
raised, to go up — Whom he had
inspired with reverence and love
for himself as the God of
Israel, and a deep concern for
the restoration of his worship
at Jerusalem, and with that
resolution and fortitude which
were requisite to enable them to
break through the difficulties
and discouragements which were
in their way. These were
undoubtedly great and many; such
as their present penury; the
length, and hazards, and
expenses of the journey; their
being dispersed in several and
distant places, which prevented
the conjunction of their
counsels and actions; the
multitude of their enemies; the
actual possession of their
country by others; the ruinous
state of Jerusalem, and the
other cities and towns of Judea;
and the great backwardness of
many of their own brethren to go
with them. Add to this, the
temptation was strong to some of
them to stay in Babylon, being
conveniently and comfortably
settled there, and having
contracted an acquaintance with
their neighbours, such as was
agreeable and pleasing to them.
By these and such like
considerations, many were
induced to remain where they
were, or at least not to go with
the first that went. But there
were some that broke through
these difficulties, and they
were those whose spirits God had
raised up: whom by his Spirit he
had inspired with a generous
desire of liberty, and a
gracious affection to their own
land, the land God had given
them, and a desire for the free
and public exercise of their
religion. Had God left them to
themselves, and to the counsels
of flesh and blood, they would
have stayed in Babylon: but, as
he had raised up the spirit of
Cyrus to proclaim this liberty,
so he raised up their spirits to
take the benefit of it, and set
their faces toward Zion, as
strangers asking the way
thither, Jeremiah 50:5. For,
being a new generation, they
went out, like their father
Abraham, from this land of the
Chaldees, not knowing whither
they went.
Verse 6
Ezra 1:6. All that were about
them strengthened their hands —
Some of them, probably, because
they had embraced, or at least
favoured, the Jewish religion,
concerning which they had been
instructed by the Israelites,
who had now for a long time
dwelt among them; and others,
that they might hereby gratify
the king, and procure his
favour, perceiving him to be
friendly to the Jews, and
forward and hearty in the work
of helping them. Thus God, when
he pleases, can incline the
hearts of strangers to be kind
to his people; yea, make those
strengthen their hands, who
formerly weakened them.
Verse 8
Ezra 1:8. And numbered them —
Caused them to be delivered to
the Jews by number; unto
Sheshbazzar, the prince of Judah
— The captain and governor of
these returning Jews, Ezra 2:2.
The sceptre, therefore, was not
yet departed from Judah. This
person’s name was originally
Zerubbabel, but it was common
for the great men of Judah, at
the time of the captivity, to
have two names, one of their own
country, which was domestic, and
another of the Chaldeans, which
was used at court. “Zerubbabel
was born at Babylon, and his
name, which signifies an exile,
or stranger in Babylon, implies
the misery of the people of
Israel at that time; but
Sheshbazzar, which is a compound
of two words, signifying fine
linen and gold, seems to be a
name of better omen, and to
denote their future and more
flourishing condition. So Bishop
Patrick. Dr. Trapp, however,
says that Sheshbazzar signifies
joy in tribulation. Some are of
opinion, that among the sacred
things which Cyrus ordered to be
restored, the ark of the
covenant was one; but it nowhere
appears that this ark was
carried from Jerusalem to
Babylon. They tell us, indeed,
that in the second temple
sacrifices were offered as in
the first, and all solemn days
observed, especially the great
day of expiation, when the law
ordained that the blood should
be sprinkled before the
mercy-seat, and the mercy-seat,
say they, was part of the ark;
but besides that the ark,
without the Shechinah, (which
was then certainly withdrawn,)
would have been of no great
significance, the Jews
universally acknowledge that the
ark was one of the five things
which were wanting in the second
temple.” — Dodd. |