This
is gonna be short.
The
Book of Nehemiah is a quick ten-chapter book about, you guessed it,
Nehemiah. Like Ezra, it kind of does this weird back-and-forth
between third person and first person. Most of it is first person,
though, and the third person bits are kind of slipped in subtly here
and there almost as if by accident.
Nehemiah
is cupbearer to king Ataxerxes. Presumably the second Ataxerxes, not
the first, since this book appears to take place around the same time
Ezra was in Judah. At least, Ezra gets mentioned as being present at
some of the ceremonies at the end of the book.
Anyway,
Nehemiah hears about how the Jews who returned to Judah are all
despairing because the walls of Jerusalem are broken down. So
Nehemiah asks the king for leave to go to Jerusalem and rebuild the
walls. The king gives him permission, and letters to the governors to
provide materials.
Nehemiah
returns and inspects the walls, doing it in secret because the local
officials are apparently pissed that he's there to try and help the
Jews. Long story short, he gets the wall built, and has the Jewish
people in the surrounding areas agree to send one tenth of their
population to live in and to guard the city. Even though there's all
kinds of rumors that their neighbors intend violence, nothing ever
comes of it.
In
the end, we get the rededication of the new temple and walls, a new
agreement signed by the chief men to follow the Mosaic laws, and a
repeat of the bit from Ezra where they forced the Jewish men who's
married foreign wives to abandon those women.
A
lot of the book is taken up with long lists of names, some of which
are redundant with the same lists from Ezra. Many of the events are
also redundant with the events of Ezra. But the thing that strikes me
most that is similar about the books? Both are the only books of the
Bible I've read so far that purport to be first person retelling of
events, and neither one of them contains a single supernatural event.
Or even something that could be reasonably interpreted as contact
with God in any form. Both authors are very quick to credit human
actions and emotions to God, but neither one describes anything even
vaguely like a manifestation of that being
Just
found that interesting.
Anyway,
like I said, short. The next book is Esther, another short book, and
hopefully I'll get through that one pretty soon.
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