Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezra 6-8.
The first thing I wanted to write about is the way in which the style of writing changes in today’s passage. Up until this point, and for the beginning of this passage, the writer appears to be an anonymous third party. However, in chapter 8 the tone changes to that of Ezra writing in the first person. I would love to know what led to these two approaches being combined into one document. I mean it seems pretty clear to me that Ezra wrote an account of his travel to Jerusalem and his actions once there and that someone decided to add some background information, but why did they do so? It is not particularly important, but I am curious.
Having written the above, I want to focus on what is written in verse 21 of chapter 6:
So the Israelites who had returned from the exile ate it, together with all who had separated themselves from the unclean practices of their Gentile neighbors in order to seek the Lord, the God of Israel.
It is very easy to miss the significance of this verse. Repeatedly throughout Ezra and Nehemiah we see passages which talk about the Returned Exiles separating themselves from those living around them. The passages about that separation read as being very draconic and absolute. However, we also have passages like this one which help us put those passages about separation into context. The Returned Exiles had rejected the assistance of their neighbors in building the temple because those neighbors followed unclean practices and had no intention of giving them up. Later, when they demanded that none of their number marry any of the women from the neighboring peoples it was once again about women who continued in the unclean practices of those neighboring peoples, not about women who chose to fully embrace the worship of God. Here that is made clear, they ate this first Passover after rebuilding the temple with “all who had separated themselves from the unclean practices of their Gentile neighbors.” Let us also embrace all who separate themselves from the unclean practices of those around us in order to serve the Lord.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.