a7:1-5
b1 Kgs 2:35
c1 Chr 6:3-15
d7:1
e7:7-8
f2 Kgs 25:18-21
g7:6
h7:9
i8:31
j7:6
l8:22
n7:10
o7:11-26
p7:14
q7:15-20
r7:21-24
s7:25-26
t7:14
uEsth 1:14
v7:10
w7:11-26
x7:15
y1 Kgs 8:27
zPs 24:1
aa7:16
ad8:25-27
ae7:21-22
afExod 27:20
ag29:2
ahLev 2:4
aj14:10
akNum 28:7
al7:23
am5:11-12
ao7:19
ap7:24
aq7:25-26

‏ Ezra 7

Summary for Ezra 7:1-5: 7:1-5  a Ezra highlights his standing by listing his own genealogy through Zadok, priest under Solomon (1 Kgs 2:35  b), all the way back to Aaron the high priest, Moses’ brother. This list is clearly abbreviated: It has only sixteen generations from Aaron to eighty years after the Exile, while 1 Chr 6:3-15  c has twenty-three generations from Aaron to the Exile. 7:1  d Many years later: Ezra arrived in Jerusalem in 458 BC (7:7-8  e), about fifty-seven years after the dedication of the second Temple. Ezra has been recording events that occurred before his time, but now he begins to record his own history.

• son: In biblical genealogies, the Hebrew word translated son often means descendant.

• Seraiah was high priest under Zedekiah; he was executed by Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BC (2 Kgs 25:18-21  f).
7:6  g Ezra came from Babylon, where there was still a substantial and prosperous Jewish community.

• The Hebrew term translated scribe is sometimes translated as “secretary.” It describes an educated and reliable individual who transcribed and interpreted official documents. Accordingly, many scholars think that Ezra functioned like a “Secretary of State for Jewish Affairs” in the Persian government. Here, however, the emphasis is on his scribal role of studying and teaching from the five Books of Moses.
7:9  h Ezra and his entourage had arranged to leave Babylon on April 8 but did not actually leave until April 19, 458 BC (8:31  i). In those intervening eleven days, he organized the group and assembled it at the Ahava Canal, searched for more Levites, and proclaimed a fast.

• To make the 800-mile journey in four months, Ezra’s party would have walked an average of about ten miles per day, five days per week. Ezra knew that his success was attributable only to the gracious hand of his God (see also 7:6  j, 28  k; 8:22  l, 31  m).
7:10  n Ezra had three life goals: (1) to study God’s word, (2) to obey what God said, and (3) to teach ... the people of Israel. He allowed God’s word to transform his character and behavior so that he could influence the lives of others.
Summary for Ezra 7:11-26: 7:11-26  o In this letter, King Artaxerxes granted Ezra the power and responsibility to evaluate the situation in Jerusalem (7:14  p), present freewill offerings to God (7:15-20  q), obtain supplies and finances from local authorities (7:21-24  r), and institute judicial reforms (7:25-26  s).
7:14  t I and my council of seven: The Greek historian Xenophon knew of this council (Xenophon, Anabasis 1.6.4-5), and Esth 1:14  u lists the names of the seven princes of Xerxes, Artaxerxes’ father.

• your God’s law: The word translated law in this verse is the Aramaic word dath rather than the Hebrew torah (7:10  v), suggesting that a Persian wrote this letter (7:11-26  w).
7:15  x who lives in Jerusalem: God’s Temple was located there. Artaxerxes probably thought that he was helping rebuild the house of Jerusalem’s local deity (cp. 1 Kgs 8:27  y; Ps 24:1  z).
7:16  aa Like Cyrus (1:4  ab, 6  ac), Artaxerxes allowed Jews in Babylon to send freewill offerings to Jerusalem. A sizeable sum was collected from the king and his council as well as from Jewish contributors (8:25-27  ad).
Summary for Ezra 7:21-22: 7:21-22  ae The items listed were typically used as offerings in worship (cp. Exod 27:20  af; 29:2  ag; Lev 2:4  ah, 13  ai; 14:10  aj; Num 28:7  ak).
7:23  al the God of heaven: This is the title by which the Jews had referred to the Lord (5:11-12  am) and that Cyrus had used (1:2  an). The Persian king probably believed, like others in the ancient Near East, that each country’s god or gods controlled their territory. Artaxerxes did not want to risk bringing God’s anger against the realm of the king and undermine the peace of his empire by failing to provide for the God of Jerusalem (7:19  ao) the worship that he required.
7:24  ap The tax exemptions given to Temple personnel in Jerusalem were similar to the conciliatory gestures made to those in other nations.
Summary for Ezra 7:25-26: 7:25-26  aq Ezra was to teach God’s laws and govern the area occupied by the Jews in accordance with God’s laws and the law of the king—i.e., Persian civil law.
Copyright information for TNotes