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| Chapter XI. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XI.
There was at that time at
Babylon one Nehemiah, a servant of the king, a Jew by birth, and very
much beloved by Artaxerxes on account of the services he had rendered.
He, having inquired of his fellow-countrymen the Jews, what was the
condition of their ancestral city; and having learned that his native
land remained in the same fallen condition as before, is said to have
been disturbed with all his heart, and to have prayed to God with
groans and many tears. He also called to mind the sins of his nation,
and urgently entreated the divine compassion. Accordingly, the king
noticing that he, while waiting at table, seemed more sorrowful than
usual, asked him to explain the reasons of his grief. Then he began to
bewail the misfortunes of his nation, and the ruin of his ancestral
city, which now, for almost two hundred and fifty years, being leveled
with the ground, furnished a proof of the evils which had been endured,
and a gazing-stock to their enemies. He therefore begged the king to
grant him the liberty of going and restoring it. The king yielded to
these dutiful entreaties, and immediately sent him away with a guard of
cavalry, that he might the more safely accomplish his journey, giving
him, at the same time, letters to the rulers requesting them to furnish
him with all that was necessary. When he arrived at Jerusalem, he
distributed the work connected with the city to the people, man by man;
and all vied with each other in carrying out the orders which they
received. And already the work of rebuilding340
340 “jamque ad
medium machinae processerant.” | had
been half accomplished, when the jealousy of the surrounding heathen
burst out, and the neighboring cities conspired to interrupt the works,
and to deter the Jews from building. But Nehemiah, having stationed
guards against those making assaults upon the people, was in no degree
alarmed, and carried out what he had begun. And thus, after the wall
was completed, and the entrances of the gates finished, he measured out
the city for the construction by families of houses within it. He
reckoned, also, that the people were not adequate in numbers to the
size of the city; for there were not more of them than fifty thousand
of both sexes and of all ranks—to such an extent had their
formerly enormous numbers been reduced by frequent wars, and by the
multitude kept in captivity. For, of old, those two tribes, of whom the
remaining people were all that survived, had, when the ten tribes were
separated from them, been able to furnish three hundred and twenty
thousand armed men. But being given up by God, on account of their sin,
to death and captivity, they had sunk down to the miserably small
number which they now presented. This company, however, as I have said,
consisted only of the two tribes: the ten341
341 Our author here
touches upon a most interesting question—the ultimate destiny of
the ten tribes. He seems to imply that none of them returned to
Palestine, but were wholly absorbed among the Gentile nations. That,
however, cannot be correct, for it was still possible, in the time of
Christ, to speak of some as connected with the tribe of Asher, one of
the ten tribes. See Luke ii.
36. |
which had previously been carried away being scattered among the
Parthians, Medes, Indians, and Ethiopians never returned to their
native country, and are to this day held under the sway of barbarous
nations. But the completion of the restored city is related to have
been effected in the thirty-second year of the reign of Artaxerxes.
From that time to the crucifixion of Christ; that is, to the time when
Fufius Geminus and Rubellius were consuls, there elapsed three hundred
and ninety and eight years. But from the restoration of the temple to
its destruction, which was completed by Titus under Vespasian, when
Augustus was consul, there was a period of four hundred and
eighty-three years. That was formerly predicted by Daniel, who
announced that from the restoration of the temple to its overthrow
there would elapse seventy and nine weeks. Now, from the date of the
captivity of the Jews until the time of the restoration of the city,
there were two hundred and sixty years.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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