ARGUMENT.
AS the book of Ezra gave us a
history of the first restoration
of the Jewish people after the
Babylonish captivity, of their
return to Judea, and the
building of the second temple;
so this of Nehemiah, who came
into Judea about thirteen years
after him, and succeeded him in
the government there, contains a
further account of their
settlement in Jerusalem,
particularly with respect to the
building of the wall of the
city, and the reformation of
several corruptions which had
crept in among them.
That Nehemiah himself, whose
actions are recorded in this
book, was the author of it,
there can be no reasonable
doubt: for he says as much in
the beginning of it, and all
along relates what he did in his
own person in rebuilding the
walls of Jerusalem, and in other
things. But, as has been
intimated in the note on Ezra
2:2, there is great reason to
suppose he was not the same
person with the Nehemiah
mentioned Ezra 2:1, and Nehemiah
7:7 of this book, who returned
with Zerubbabel. For, since from
the first of Cyrus, (when
Zerubbabel returned,) to the
twentieth of Artaxerxes
Longimanus, there are no less
than ninety-two years
intervening, that Nehemiah must
have been a very old man; upon
the lowest computation above a
hundred, and consequently
incapable of being the king’s
cup-bearer, which this Nehemiah
was, of taking a journey from
Shushan to Jerusalem, and of
behaving there with all that
courage and activity which is
recorded of him. We may
conclude, therefore, that this
was a different person, though
of the same name.
In this Nehemiah we have the
shining character of an able
governor and true patriot,
deeply concerned for the good of
his country and the honour of
religion; choosing to leave an
honourable and profitable post
in the greatest court in the
world, and generously spending
the riches he had gained in it
for the public benefit of his
fellow-Israelites, and
encountering also, for the same
end, inexpressible difficulties,
and that with a courage and
spirit very extraordinary and
wonderful, but such as were
absolutely necessary to reform
the manners, and procure the
safety, of such a nation as the
Jews were. It has been
universally observed, that the
Jews never fell into any of
their old idolatries after the
time of the great Babylonish
captivity; one great cause of
which good effect, under God,
without doubt, was the exceeding
great zeal manifested, and care
taken, by Ezra and Nehemiah, to
instruct them in the law of God,
and to give an early and
vigorous check to the dangerous
practice of marrying into
heathen families. Of Nehemiah’s
cares and labours to accomplish
these purposes we have a full
account in these his
commentaries, wherein he records
not only the works of his hands,
but the very workings of his
heart, inserting many devout
reflections and ejaculations,
which are peculiar to his
writings. Twelve years he was
the tirshatha, or governor, of
Judea, under the same Artaxerxes,
as is probable, that gave Ezra
his commission. We have in this
book his concern for Jerusalem,
and commission to go thither,
chap. 1., 2.; his building the
wall of Jerusalem,
notwithstanding much opposition,
chap. 3., 4.; his redressing the
grievances of the people, chap.
5.; his finishing the wall,
chap. 6.; the account he took of
the people, chap 7.; his calling
the people to read the law,
fast, and pray, and renew their
covenant, chap. 8.-10. He
peoples Jerusalem, and settles
the tribe of Levi, chap. 11.,
12. He reforms divers abuses,
chap. 13. After Nehemiah we read
of no more governors appointed
over Judea by the Persian kings:
but their affairs seem to have
been left to the management of
the high-priests, as we find
they were in the following times
of the Maccabees. This is the
last historical book of the Old
Testament that was written, as
Malachi is the last prophetical
book.
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