Haggai in Easton's Bible Dictionary
festive, one of the twelve so-called minor prophets. He was
the
first of the three (Zechariah, his contemporary, and
Malachi,
who was about one hundred years later, being the
other two)
whose ministry belonged to the period of Jewish
history which
began after the return from captivity in Babylon.
Scarcely
anything is known of his personal history. He may
have been one
of the captives taken to Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar.
He began his
ministry about sixteen years after the Return. The
work of
rebuilding the temple had been put a stop to through
the
intrigues of the Samaritans. After having been
suspended for
fifteen years, the work was resumed through the
efforts of
Haggai and Zechariah (Ezra 6:14), who by their
exhortations
roused the people from their lethargy, and induced
them to take
advantage of the favourable opportunity that had
arisen in a
change in the policy of the Persian government. (See
DARIUS
characterized:, "There is a ponderous and simple
dignity in the
emphatic reiteration addressed alike to every class
of the
community, prince, priest, and people, 'Be strong,
be strong, be
strong' (2:4). 'Cleave, stick fast, to the work you
have to do;'
or again, 'Consider your ways, consider, consider,
consider'
(1:5, 7;2:15, 18). It is the Hebrew phrase for the
endeavour,
characteristic of the gifted seers of all times, to
compel their
hearers to turn the inside of their hearts outwards
to their own
view, to take the mask from off their consciences,
to 'see life
steadily, and to see it wholly.'", Stanley's Jewish
Church. (See
SIGNET -T0003426.)
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