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<h3> CHAPTER 5. How Xerxes The Son Of Darius Was Well Disposed To The Jews; As Also Concerning Esdras And Nehemiah. </h3>
<p>1. Upon the death of Darius, Xerxes his son took the kingdom, who, as he
inherited his father's kingdom, so did he inherit his piety towards God,
and honor of him; for he did all things suitably to his father relating to
Divine worship, and he was exceeding friendly to the Jews. Now about this
time a son of Jeshua, whose name was Joacim, was the high priest.
Moreover, there was now in Babylon a righteous man, and one that enjoyed a
great reputation among the multitude. He was the principal priest of the
people, and his name was Esdras. He was very skillful in the laws of
Moses, and was well acquainted with king Xerxes. He had determined to go
up to Jerusalem, and to take with him some of those Jews that were in
Babylon; and he desired that the king would give him an epistle to the
governors of Syria, by which they might know who he was. Accordingly, the
king wrote the following epistle to those governors: "Xerxes, king of
kings, to Esdras the priest, and reader of the Divine law, greeting. I
think it agreeable to that love which I bear to mankind, to permit those
of the Jewish nation that are so disposed, as well as those of the priests
and Levites that are in our kingdom, to go together to Jerusalem.
Accordingly, I have given command for that purpose; and let every one that
hath a mind go, according as it hath seemed good to me, and to my seven
counselors, and this in order to their review of the affairs of Judea, to
see whether they be agreeable to the law of God. Let them also take with
them those presents which I and my friends have vowed, with all that
silver and gold that is found in the country of the Babylonians, as
dedicated to God, and let all this be carried to Jerusalem to God for
sacrifices. Let it also be lawful for thee and thy brethren to make as
many vessels of silver and gold as thou pleasest. Thou shalt also dedicate
those holy vessels which have been given thee, and as many more as thou
hast a mind to make, and shall take the expenses out of the king's
treasury. I have, moreover, written to the treasurers of Syria and
Phoenicia, that they take care of those affairs that Esdras the priest,
and reader of the laws of God, is sent about. And that God may not be at
all angry with me, or with my children, I grant all that is necessary for
sacrifices to God, according to the law, as far as a hundred cori of
wheat. And I enjoin you not to lay any treacherous imposition, or any
tributes, upon their priests or Levites, or sacred singers, or porters, or
sacred servants, or scribes of the temple. And do thou, O Esdras, appoint
judges according to the wisdom [given thee] of God, and those such as
understand the law, that they may judge in all Syria and Phoenicia; and do
thou instruct those also which are ignorant of it, that if any one of thy
countrymen transgress the law of God, or that of the king, he may be
punished, as not transgressing it out of ignorance, but as one that knows
it indeed, but boldly despises and contemns it; and such may be punished
by death, or by paying fines. Farewell."</p>
<p>2. When Esdras had received this epistle, he was very joyful, and began to
worship God, and confessed that he had been the cause of the king's great
favor to him, and that for the same reason he gave all the thanks to God.
So he read the epistle at Babylon to those Jews that were there; but he
kept the epistle itself, and sent a copy of it to all those of his own
nation that were in Media. And when these Jews had understood what piety
the king had towards God, and what kindness he had for Esdras, they were
all greatly pleased; nay, many of them took their effects with them, and
came to Babylon, as very desirous of going down to Jerusalem; but then the
entire body of the people of Israel remained in that country; wherefore
there are but two tribes in Asia and Europe subject to the Iomans, while
the ten tribes are beyond Euphrates till now, and are an immense
multitude, and not to be estimated by numbers. Now there came a great
number of priests, and Levites, and porters, and sacred singers, and
sacred servants to Esdras. So he gathered those that were in the captivity
together beyond Euphrates, and staid there three days, and ordained a fast
for them, that they might make their prayers to God for their
preservation, that they might suffer no misfortunes by the way, either
from their enemies, or from any other ill accident; for Esdras had said
beforehand that he had told the king how God would preserve them, and so
he had not thought fit to request that he would send horsemen to conduct
them. So when they had finished their prayers, they removed from Euphrates
on the twelfth day of the first month of the seventh year of the reign of
Xerxes, and they came to Jerusalem on the fifth month of the same year.
Now Esdras presented the sacred money to the treasurers, who were of the
family of the priests, of silver six hundred and fifty talents, vessels of
silver one hundred talents, vessels of gold twenty talents, vessels of
brass, that was more precious than gold, <SPAN href="#link11note-8"
name="link11noteref-8" id="link11noteref-8"><small>8</small></SPAN> twelve
talents by weight; for these Presents had been made by the king and his
counselors, and by all the Israelites that staid at Babylon. So when
Esdras had delivered these things to the priests, he gave to God, as the
appointed sacrifices of whole burnt-offerings, twelve bulls on account of
the common preservation of the people, ninety rams, seventy-two lambs, and
twelve kids of the goats, for the remission of sins. He also delivered the
king's epistle to the king's officers, and to the governors of Celesyria
and Phoenicia; and as they were under a necessity of doing what was
enjoined by him, they honored our nation, and were assistant to them in
all their necessities.</p>
<p>3. Now these things were truly done under the conduct of Esdras; and he
succeeded in them, because God esteemed him worthy of the success of his
conduct, on account of his goodness and righteousness. But some time
afterward there came some persons to him, and brought an accusation
against certain of the multitude, and of the priests and Levites, who had
transgressed their settlement, and dissolved the laws of their country, by
marrying strange wives, and had brought the family of the priests into
confusion. These persons desired him to support the laws, lest God should
take up a general anger against them all, and reduce them to a calamitous
condition again. Hereupon he rent his garment immediately, out of grief,
and pulled off the hair of his head and beard, and cast himself upon the
ground, because this crime had reached the principal men among the people;
and considering that if he should enjoin them to cast out their wives, and
the children they had by them, he should not be hearkener to, he continued
lying upon the ground. However, all the better sort came running to him,
who also themselves wept, and partook of the grief he was under for what
had been done. So Esdras rose up from the ground, and stretched out his
hands towards heaven, and said that he was ashamed to look towards it,
because of the sins which the people had committed, while they had cast
out of their memories what their fathers had undergone on account of their
wickedness; and he besought God, who had saved a seed and a remnant out of
the calamity and captivity they had been in, and had restored them again
to Jerusalem, and to their own land, and had obliged the kings of Persia
to have compassion on them, that he would also forgive them their sins
they had now committed, which, though they deserved death, yet, was it
agreeable to the mercy of God, to remit even to these the punishment due
to them.</p>
<p>4. After Esdras had said this, he left off praying; and when all those
that came to him with their wives and children were under lamentation, one
whose name was Jechonias, a principal man in Jerusalem, came to him, and
said that they had sinned in marrying strange wives; and he persuaded him
to adjure them all to cast those wives out, and the children born of them,
and that those should be punished who would not obey the law. So Esdras
hearkened to this advice, and made the heads of the priests, and of the
Levites, and of the Israelites, swear that they would put away those wives
and children, according to the advice of Jechonias. And when he had
received their oaths, he went in haste out of the temple into the chamber
of Johanan, the son of Eliasib, and as he had hitherto tasted nothing at
all for grief, so he abode there that day. And when proclamation was made,
that all those of the captivity should gather themselves together to
Jerusalem, and those that did not meet there in two or three days should
be banished from the multitude, and that their substance should b
appropriated to the uses of the temple, according to the sentence of the
elders, those that were of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin came together
in three days, viz. on the twentieth day of the ninth month, which,
according to the Hebrews, is called Tebeth, and according to the
Macedonians, Apelleius. Now as they were sitting in the upper room of the
temple, where the elders also were present, but were uneasy because of the
cold, Esdras stood up and accused them, and told them that they had sinned
in marrying wives that were not of their own nation; but that now they
would do a thing both pleasing to God, and advantageous to themselves, if
they would put those wives away. Accordingly, they all cried out that they
would do so. That, however, the multitude was great, and that the season
of the year was winter, and that this work would require more than one or
two days. "Let their rulers, therefore, [said they,] and those that have
married strange wives, come hither at a proper time, while the elders of
every place, that are in common to estimate the number of those that have
thus married, are to be there also." Accordingly, this was resolved on by
them, and they began the inquiry after those that had married strange
wives on the first day of the tenth month, and continued the inquiry to
the first day of the next month, and found a great many of the posterity
of Jeshua the high priest, and of the priests and Levites, and Israelites,
who had a greater regard to the observation of the law than to their
natural affection, <SPAN href="#link11note-9" name="link11noteref-9" id="link11noteref-9"><small>9</small></SPAN> and immediately cast out their
wives, and the children which were born of them. And in order to appease
God, they offered sacrifices, and slew rams, as oblations to him; but it
does not seem to me to be necessary to set down the names of these men. So
when Esdras had reformed this sin about the marriages of the forementioned
persons, he reduced that practice to purity, so that it continued in that
state for the time to come.</p>
<p>5. Now when they kept the feast of tabernacles in the seventh month <SPAN href="#link11note-10" name="link11noteref-10" id="link11noteref-10"><small>10</small></SPAN>
and almost all the people were come together to it, they went up to the
open part of the temple, to the gate which looked eastward, and desired of
Esdras that the laws of Moses might be read to them. Accordingly, he stood
in the midst of the multitude and read them; and this he did from morning
to noon. Now, by hearing the laws read to them, they were instructed to be
righteous men for the present and for the future; but as for their past
offenses, they were displeased at themselves, and proceeded to shed tears
on their account, as considering with themselves that if they had kept the
law, they had endured none of these miseries which they had experienced.
But when Esdras saw them in that disposition, he bade them go home, and
not weep, for that it was a festival, and that they ought not to weep
thereon, for that it was not lawful so to do. <SPAN href="#link11note-11"
name="link11noteref-11" id="link11noteref-11"><small>11</small></SPAN> He
exhorted them rather to proceed immediately to feasting, and to do what
was suitable to a feast, and what was agreeable to a day of joy; but to
let their repentance and sorrow for their former sins be a security and a
guard to them, that they fell no more into the like offenses. So upon
Esdras's exhortation they began to feast; and when they had so done for
eight days, in their tabernacles, they departed to their own homes,
singing hymns to God, and returning thanks to Esdras for his reformation
of what corruptions had been introduced into their settlement. So it came
to pass, that after he had obtained this reputation among the people, he
died an old man, and was buried in a magnificent manner at Jerusalem.
About the same time it happened also that Joacim, the high priest, died;
and his son Eliasib succeeded in the high priesthood. 6. Now there was one
of those Jews that had been carried captive who was cup-bearer to king
Xerxes; his name was Nehemiah. As this man was walking before Susa, the
metropolis of the Persians, he heard some strangers that were entering the
city, after a long journey, speaking to one another in the Hebrew tongue;
so he went to them, and asked them whence they came. And when their answer
was, that they came from Judea, he began to inquire of them again in what
state the multitude was, and in what condition Jerusalem was; and when
they replied that they were in a bad state <SPAN href="#link11note-12"
name="link11noteref-12" id="link11noteref-12"><small>12</small></SPAN> for
that their walls were thrown down to the ground, and that the neighboring
nations did a great deal of mischief to the Jews, while in the day time
they overran the country, and pillaged it, and in the night did them
mischief, insomuch that not a few were led away captive out of the
country, and out of Jerusalem itself, and that the roads were in the day
time found full of dead men. Hereupon Nehemiah shed tears, out of
commiseration of the calamities of his countrymen; and, looking up to
heaven, he said, "How long, O Lord, wilt thou overlook our nation, while
it suffers so great miseries, and while we are made the prey and spoil of
all men?" And while he staid at the gate, and lamented thus, one told him
that the king was going to sit down to supper; so he made haste, and went
as he was, without wishing himself, to minister to the king in his office
of cup-bearer. But as the king was very pleasant after supper, and more
cheerful than usual, he cast his eyes on Nehemiah, and seeing him look
sad, he asked him why he was sad. Whereupon he prayed to God to give him
favor, and afford him the power of persuading by his words, and said, "How
can I, O king, appear otherwise than thus, and not be in trouble, while I
hear that the walls of Jerusalem, the city where are the sepulchers of my
fathers, are thrown down to the ground, and that its gates are consumed by
fire? But do thou grant me the favor to go and build its wall, and to
finish the building of the temple." Accordingly, the king gave him a
signal that he freely granted him what he asked; and told him that he
should carry an epistle to the governors, that they might pay him due
honor, and afford him whatsoever assistance he wanted, and as he pleased.
"Leave off thy sorrow then," said the king, "and be cheerful in the
performance of thy office hereafter." So Nehemiah worshipped God, and gave
the king thanks for his promise, and cleared up his sad and cloudy
countenance, by the pleasure he had from the king's promises. Accordingly,
the king called for him the next day, and gave him an epistle to be
carried to Adeus, the governor of Syria, and Phoenicia, and Samaria;
wherein he sent to him to pay due honor to Nehemiah, and to supply him
with what he wanted for his building.</p>
<p>7. Now when he was come to Babylon, and had taken with him many of his
countrymen, who voluntarily followed him, he came to Jerusalem in the
twenty and fifth year of the reign of Xerxes. And when he had shown the
epistles to God <SPAN href="#link11note-13" name="link11noteref-13" id="link11noteref-13"><small>13</small></SPAN> he gave them to Adeus, and to
the other governors. He also called together all the people to Jerusalem,
and stood in the midst of the temple, and made the following speech to
them: "You know, O Jews, that God hath kept our fathers, Abraham, and
Isaac, and Jacob, in mind continually, and for the sake of their
righteousness hath not left off the care of you. Indeed he hath assisted
me in gaining this authority of the king to raise up our wall, and finish
what is wanting of the temple. I desire you, therefore who well know the
ill-will our neighboring nations bear to us, and that when once they are
made sensible that we are in earnest about building, they will come upon
us, and contrive many ways of obstructing our works, that you will, in the
first place, put your trust in God, as in him that will assist us against
their hatred, and to intermit building neither night nor day, but to use
all diligence, and to hasten on the work, now we have this especial
opportunity for it." When he had said this, he gave order that the rulers
should measure the wall, and part the work of it among the people,
according to their villages and cities, as every one's ability should
require. And when he had added this promise, that he himself, with his
servants, would assist them, he dissolved the assembly. So the Jews
prepared for the work: that is the name they are called by from the day
that they came up from Babylon, which is taken from the tribe of Judah,
which came first to these places, and thence both they and the country
gained that appellation.</p>
<p>8. But now when the Ammonites, and Moabites, and Samaritans, and all that
inhabited Celesyria, heard that the building went on apace, they took it
heinously, and proceeded to lay snares for them, and to hinder their
intentions. They also slew many of the Jews, and sought how they might
destroy Nehemiah himself, by hiring some of the foreigners to kill him.
They also put the Jews in fear, and disturbed them, and spread abroad
rumors, as if many nations were ready to make an expedition against them,
by which means they were harassed, and had almost left off the building.
But none of these things could deter Nehemiah from being diligent about
the work; he only set a number of men about him as a guard to his body,
and so unweariedly persevered therein, and was insensible of any trouble,
out of his desire to perfect this work. And thus did he attentively, and
with great forecast, take care of his own safety; not that he feared
death, but of this persuasion, that if he were dead, the walls for his
citizens would never be raised. He also gave orders that the builders
should keep their ranks, and have their armor on while they were building.
Accordingly, the mason had his sword on, as well as he that brought the
materials for building. He also appointed that their shields should lie
very near them; and he placed trumpeters at every five hundred feet, and
charged them, that if their enemies appeared, they should give notice of
it to the people, that they might fight in their armor, and their enemies
might not fall upon them naked. He also went about the compass of the city
by night, being never discouraged, neither about the work itself, nor
about his own diet and sleep, for he made no use of those things for his
pleasure, but out of necessity. And this trouble he underwent for two
years and four months; <SPAN href="#link11note-14" name="link11noteref-14" id="link11noteref-14"><small>14</small></SPAN> for in so long a time was the
wall built, in the twenty-eighth year of the reign of Xerxes, in the ninth
month. Now when the walls were finished, Nehemiah and the multitude
offered sacrifices to God for the building of them, and they continued in
feasting eight days. However, when the nations which dwelt in Syria heard
that the building of the wall was finished, they had indignation at it.
But when Nehemiah saw that the city was thin of people, he exhorted the
priests and the Levites that they would leave the country, and remove
themselves to the city, and there continue; and he built them houses at
his own expenses; and he commanded that part of the people which were
employed in cultivating the land to bring the tithes of their fruits to
Jerusalem, that the priests and Levites having whereof they might live
perpetually, might not leave the Divine worship; who willingly hearkened
to the constitutions of Nehemiah, by which means the city Jerusalem came
to be fuller of people than it was before. So when Nehemiah had done many
other excellent things, and things worthy of commendation, in a glorious
manner, he came to a great age, and then died. He was a man of a good and
righteous disposition, and very ambitious to make his own nation happy;
and he hath left the walls of Jerusalem as an eternal monument for
himself. Now this was done in the days of Xerxes.</p>
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