Ezra in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(help), called ESDRAS in the Apocrypha, the famous scribe
and priest. He was a learned and pious priest residing at
Babylon in the time of Artaxerxes Longimanus. The origin of
his influence with the king does not appear, but in the
seventh year of his reign he obtained leave to go to
Jerusalem, and to take with him a company of Israelites.
(B.C. 457.) The journey from Babylon to Jerusalem took just
four months; and the company brought with them a large
freewill offering of gold and silver, and silver vessels. It
appears that Ezra's great design was to effect a religious
reformation among the Israel Jews. His first step was to
enforce separation upon all who had married foreign wives.
Ezr 10:1 ... This was effected in little more than
six months after his arrival at Jerusalem. With the detailed
account of this important transaction Ezra's autobiography
ends abruptly, and we hear nothing more of him till,
thirteen years afterwards, in the twentieth of Artaxerxes,
we find him again at Jerusalem with Nehemiah. It seems
probable that after effecting the above reformations he
returned to the king of Persia. The functions he executed
under Nehemiah's government were purely of a priestly and
ecclesiastical character. The date of his death is
uncertain. There was a Jewish tradition that he was buried
in Persia. The principal works ascribed to him by the Jews
are--
1. The instruction of the great synagogue;
2. The settling the canon of Scripture, and
restoring, correcting and editing the whole sacred volume;
3. The introduction of the Chaldee character instead
of the old Hebrew or Samaritan;
4. The authorship of the books of Chronicles, Ezra,
Nehemiah, and, some add, Esther; and, many of the Jews say,
also of the books of Ezekiel, Daniel, and the twelve
prophets;
5. The establishment of synagogues.
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