History of The Book of Ezra
The Hebrew traditions treated the books of Ezra and Nehemiah
is one book, although they were probably separated in the
Bible. The book of Ezra bears the name of an individual who
was a descendent of the priest Hilkiah who had helped
initiate reforms in the time of Josiah (2 Kings 22:8). Ezra
returned from the Babylonian captivity in 457 BC which was
80 years after the first group of Jews had returned to
Israel under the leadership of Zerubbabel (13 years before
Nehemiah). Ezra was both a priest and a scribe and he had a
single purpose, to purify the worship of the Lord among the
Hebrews based on the law of Moses. The Jews have regarded
Ezra as the second greatest hero in the history of Israel,
after Moses. The most important observation about the book
of Ezra is to see how God fulfills his Word, and the
prophets spoke continually about the restoration of the
people of Israel to the land of their inheritance, after
the captivity. God did miracles in the hearts of foreign
monarchs like Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, and Cyrus, Darius,
and Xerxes. He fulfilled his purposes through great leaders
like Joshua, Zerubbabel, Haggai, Zechariah, Ezra, and
Nehemiah to bring about the rebuilding of the wall in
Jerusalem, and the Temple of Solomon, and the
reestablishment of the law of Moses. The book of Ezra along
with Nehemiah provide for us all the history among the Jews
between 536 BC and 430 BC. The accomplishments of Ezra
focuses on the period from 536 two 456 BC, and Nehemiah
begins his mission in 445 BC with a detailed description of
12 years of events.
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