Verse 1
Ezra 3:1. When the seventh month
was come — We may suppose they
left Babylon in the spring, and
were four months on their
journey; for so long Ezra and
his company were in coming, Ezra
7:9. The seventh month therefore
commenced soon after their
arrival in Judea, when, as many
of the feasts of the Lord were
then to be solemnized, the
people gathered themselves
together — By agreement among
themselves, rather than by the
command of authority; to
Jerusalem — Though they were
newly come to their cities, and
had their hands full of business
there, to provide necessaries
for themselves and their
families, which might have
excused them from attending on
God’s worship in public, till
the hurry was a little over, as
many with us foolishly put off
their coming to the communion
till they are settled in the
world; yet, such was their zeal
for religion, now they were
newly come from under correction
for their irreligion, that they
left all their business in the
country to attend God’s altar;
and in this pious zeal they were
all of a mind, they came as one
man.
Verse 2
Ezra 3:2. Then stood up Jeshua
the son of Jozadak — He was the
high- priest, called Joshua,
Haggai 1:1. And Zerubbabel the
son of Shealtiel — That is, his
grandson; for, properly
speaking, he was the son of
Pedaiah. And builded the altar
of the God of Israel — Which was
of more present necessity than
the temple, both to make
atonement to God for all their
sins, and to obtain God’s
assistance for the building of
the temple, and to strengthen
their own hearts and hands in
that great work.
Verse 3
Ezra 3:3. They set the altar
upon his bases — That is, in the
place where it anciently stood;
for fear was upon them, because
of the people of those countries
— And therefore they made the
more haste, lest they should be
hindered. Apprehension of
dangers should quicken us in our
duty. Have we many enemies? We
have the more need to have God
for our friend, and to keep up
our correspondence with him.
Some translate the clause,
Although fear was upon them;
that is, although they were in
great fear of their evil
neighbours, yet,
notwithstanding, they would not
desist from restoring the
worship of God.
Verse 4
Ezra 3:4. They kept also the
feast of tabernacles — This
seems to be mentioned for all
the solemnities of the month,
whereof this was the most
eminent; otherwise it is not
probable that they would neglect
the day of atonement, which was
so solemnly enjoined, (Leviticus
23:27-29,) and was so exceeding
suitable to their present
condition.
Verse 5
Ezra 3:5. And afterward offered
the continual burnt-offering —
The morning and evening
sacrifice. The law required
much, but they offered more; for
though they had little wealth,
they had much zeal. Happy they
that bring with them out of the
furnace of affliction such a
holy heat as this!
Verse 6
Ezra 3:6. To offer
burnt-offerings — And the other
sacrifices which were to be
offered with them upon that
first day of the seventh month,
which was the feast of trumpets.
Burnt-offerings are often put
for all sacrifices, and the
meaning of these two verses is,
that the holy rites of
sacrificing were restored, and
continued ever after, in their
several seasons, on the new
moons, and other festival
solemnities.
Verse 7
Ezra 3:7. Meat, and drink, and
oil, unto them of Zidon and Tyre
— The inhabitants of those towns
wanted provisions more than
money, as appears by the history
of Solomon’s building, 1 Kings
5:10. To bring cedar- trees from
Lebanon — Tyre and Zidon now, as
of old, furnished them with
workmen, and Lebanon with
timber, orders for both which
they had from Cyrus. What God
calls us to we may depend upon
his providence to furnish us
with.
Verse 8
Ezra 3:8. In the second month
began Zerubbabel, &c. — The
building of the temple was begun
as soon as ever the season of
the year would permit, and as
soon as they had ended the
solemnities of the passover.
They took little more than half
a year for preparing the ground
and materials; so much were
their hearts upon the work. And
Jeshua, and their brethren the
priests and Levites, &c. — Then
the work of God is likely to go
on well when magistrates,
ministers, and people are
zealously affected toward it,
and agree in their places to
promote it. It was God that gave
them one heart for this service,
and it promised a happy issue.
Verse 9
Ezra 3:9. Then stood Jeshua with
his sons — This person was not
the high- priest, so called, but
a Levite, of whom see Ezra 2:40.
To set forward the workmen — To
encourage them to a cheerful and
vigorous prosecution of the
work.
Verse 10
Ezra 3:10. To praise the Lord —
The priests, with the trumpets
appointed by Moses, and the
Levites, with cymbals appointed
by David, made up a concert of
praise at the laying of the
foundation of the temple, to
assist the singing of that
everlasting hymn which will
never be out of date, and for
which our tongues should never
be out of tune, the burden of
Psalms 136. Whatever our
condition is, let it be owned
that God is good; and whatever
fails, that his mercy fails not.
Verse 11-12
Ezra 3:11-12. And they sang
together by course — That is,
answered one another
alternately. And all the people
shouted with a great shout — The
people were very differently
affected upon this occasion.
Those that had only known the
misery of having no temple at
all, praised the Lord with
shouts of joy when they saw the
foundation of this laid, for to
them this was as life from the
dead. But many that had seen the
first house — Which divers of
them had, because it had not
been destroyed quite sixty years
ago, and who remembered the
glory of that temple, wept with
a loud voice — “Not only because
this temple was likely to prove
far inferior to that of Solomon,
as to its outward structure, but
because it was to want those
extraordinary marks of the
divine favour wherewith the
other temple was honoured. Both
the temples, without all doubt,
were of the same dimensions; but
here was the sad difference
which drew tears from the eyes
of the elders, that in all
appearance there were no hopes
that the poor beginnings of the
latter temple would ever be
raised to the grandeur and
magnificence of the former,
since the one had been built by
the wisest and richest king, and
constantly adorned by some one
or other of his posterity; the
other now begun by a small
company of exiles just returned
from their captivity: the one in
a time of profound peace and the
greatest opulence; the other in
a time of common calamity and
distress: the one finished with
the most costly stones and
timber, wrought with exquisite
art, and overlaid with vast
quantities of gold; the other to
be raised out of no better
materials than what could be dug
from the ruinous foundation of
the old one. But the occasion of
their grief was not only this,
that the materials and ornaments
of the second temple were even
as nothing in comparison with
the first, (Haggai 2:3,) but
that the ark of the covenant,
and the mercy- seat which was
upon it, the holy fire upon the
altar, the Urim and Thummim, the
spirit of prophecy, the
Shechinah or divine presence,
the five great things for which
the former temple was so
renowned, were lost and gone,
and never to be recovered to
this other. This was a just
matter of lamentation to those
who had seen these singular
tokens of the divine favour in
the former temple, and a
discouragement of their
proceeding with the building of
the present; and therefore the
Prophet Haggai was sent to
inform them that all these wants
and defects should be abundantly
repaired by the coming of the
Messiah, the true Shechinah of
the Divine Majesty, in the time
of the second temple: (Ezra
2:7-9 :) I will shake all
nations, and the desire of all
nations shall come; and I will
fill this house with glory: the
glory of this latter house shall
be greater than of the former,
saith the Lord of hosts.” —
Dodd.
Verse 13
Ezra 3:13. So that the people
could not discern, &c. — The
mixture of sorrow and joy here
is a representation of this
world. In heaven all are singing
and none sighing; in hell all
are wailing and none rejoicing:
but here on earth we can scarce
discern the shouts of joy from
the noise of the weeping; let us
learn to rejoice with them that
rejoice, and weep with them that
weep. Meantime, let us ourselves
rejoice as though we rejoiced
not, and weep as though we wept
not. |