Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezra 9-10.
I have always been bothered by this passage because, on a surface reading, it seems cold, uncaring, and xenophobic. However, a closer reading indicates that it is more nuanced than it seems at first glance. First, I need to summarize what the passage says happened. Some of the leaders of the returned Exiles came to Ezra and complained about the returned Exiles intermarrying with the pagan peoples who had been living in the land while they were in Exile. Ezra was distressed by this information and publicly prayed about how terrible such intermarriage was. The people gathered and demanded that those who had intermarried put aside their foreign wives and the children they had by those wives. As I said, this seems cold and uncaring. I first realized that it was a little more complicated than it seems at first when I paid attention to the fact that the people responded to the decision that the men should separate themselves from their foreign wives and children by saying that it could not be done in a day or two. That was followed up by the appointment of men to investigate each of the cases. If it was just a matter of, “You married a foreign woman, send her and her children away or be shunned by polite society,” it would not have required any investigation. Then I looked a little closer at Ezra’s prayer. In his prayer he said, “Shall we then break your commands again and intermarry with the peoples who commit such detestable practices?” The key here was that the foreign wives were still practicing the worship of idols, and raising their children to do so. It still feels cold and uncaring, but the fact that it took them three months to resolve all of the issues tells me that it was not the simple, uncaring thing which it reads as. At least part of what was going on here was that some of these men had married their wives in order to enter into business and economic deals with pagans (in his prayer Ezra mentioned God’s prohibition against the Israelites signing treaties of friendship with the pagan peoples). I still struggle with how this passage describes how they handled this. However, I think it is important to realize that they strove to find a way to deal with their disobedience to God’s commands, and they did not use a one size fits all solution.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.