Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Ezra 1; 3-7 & Nehemiah 2; 4-6; 8 -- Part 1 : Dr. Jared W. Ludlow
Episode Date: July 16, 2022Do we ever simultaneously rejoice and weep? Dr. Jared Ludlow explores the Jewish people returning to Jerusalem to rebuild the temple and rejoicing to have what they had lost, as well as feeling sorrow...ful for the years of exile and the loss of the glory of Solomon’s temple.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing & SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study. I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way. We love to learn, we love to laugh,
we want to learn and laugh with you. As together, we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith, I am your host, I am here with my co-hosts, who I say is doing
a great work and cannot come down.
John, that is you.
You are doing a great work, and I don't know what the second half means, but you cannot
come down.
No, that's when they call dad, will you come down and do the dishes?
I'm doing a great work. I can't come down.
I really live doing a great work up here.
I'm a good publication.
I cannot come down.
Well, John, that phrase comes from the book of Nehemiah.
Nehemiah, say that a bunch of times in a row.
And we have a wonderful friend of ours and a brilliant
scholar to join us on our podcast this week. Tell our audience who is with us.
Yes, we have Dr. Jared Ludlow with us. He has been teaching in ancient scripture since
2006. Previous to that, he spent six years teaching religion and history at BYU Hawaii.
Sounds like a wonderful assignment.
I served as chair of the history department and Hawaii.
He received a bachelor's degree from BYU in Near Eastern
studies, a master's from UC Berkeley in Biblical Hebrew,
a PhD in Near Eastern religions from UC Berkeley
and graduate theological union.
His primary research interests are in ancient Judaism and early Christianity.
His dissertation was published as a book, Abraham meets death, narrative humor in the testament of Abraham.
By Sheffield Academic Press, we got to hear about that. He's also produced a world history textbook,
revealing world history to 1500, and a book related to the apocrypha,
exploring the apocrypha from a Latter-day Saint perspective.
He has regularly presented papers at the Society of Biblical Literature meetings, has participated
in Sparry and similar symposia at BYU.
He enjoys teaching Bible courses, Book of Mormon, World Religions, and World History.
He served a mission to a Compenus, and also lived in Germany and Israel, teaching twice at the BYU Jerusalem
Center. He likes sports hiking, snorkeling, and traveling. He's married to Margaret Nelson.
They have five children, Jared Jr., Joshua, Joseph, Marissa, and Malia. I have a great feeling
of love and appreciation for the Lududdlo family and just want to
thank you and your whole family for the influence you've had on my life. So welcome Dr. Luddlo.
Well thank you. Yeah, it's some tough footsteps to follow in but I'm hoping I'm not ruining it.
And thank you for having me and I appreciate all that you do. Hank and John, to help strengthen the faith of others, youth,
young adults, adults, and really look forward to having this conversation.
I think everyone, the faculty at BYU and elsewhere would say that Jared Ledlow is the pure example,
the epitome of humility.
Jared, the lesson this week is in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah. And
if I correct here, we just jumped a long ways into the future. Is that right? We did do
a little bit of a jump there. And I think probably most significantly, we're at the end
of the Old Testament chronological period, you know, in the 400s BC, that's where Ezra and Nehmaia is placed.
If you're going to say, hey, I'm reading the Bible chronologically, you wouldn't put Ezra and Nehmaia
right here in almost the middle, would you? Yeah, and that's certainly not how the Jews place it.
On their Bible, they do the law first, the first five books of Moses, and then they have all the prophets,
okay, and then they have what they call the writings, and so the writings, the last part of their
Hebrew Bible is Ezra Niyamaya, and Malachi is kind of back there, Haggai is Echoriah, all of these
are pushed right at the end, and of course, that's where our malachai sits.
And those are the last verses we tend to read before we flip a page, jump 400 years and start the
New Testament. But what we're going to do here and come follow me, we're following the order of
what most Protestant and other Christian Bibles have. And they consider this kind of a historical book,
continuation of first and second kings, first and second chronicles, Ezra and Niamaya.
And so it's included among these historical books, and then we'll come back and hit a lot of the
prophets and where they fit. So we'll have like an aim us up in the northern kingdom before the tribes
are taken away, or we'll have Isaiah with King Hezekiah,
or Jeremiah with around the time of Josiah and others. And so later on, we'll kind of fill
in the gaps with these prophets. Let's make sure our listeners understand this, John. So we're
doing history right now. We've been doing history. We Joshua judges first and second Samuel, which we found out was first and second kings. And then there was first kings, which is known as third kings and second kings, which is known as fourth kings.
Oh, let me tell you, it gets even more confusing with Ezra and the Amaya. You look at different Bibles and you have up to fifth Ezra, depending on which domination you go to.
And some just have one book of Ezra that includes Ezra and Ni' Maya.
Others break it down into first, second, third, fourth, and even a fifth.
It's just kind of open to how you want to break it down and where you're going to
put the breaks between them. And I think it makes sense to have Ezra and Ni' Maya in this case,
because we do focus a lot on Nihemiah in the second part,
but if you look at the end of Ezra, it really doesn't end as a book. It's just a continuation on it and Nehemiah.
And then what we're going to do is we're going to stop everything right for a minute and we're going to do
Esther,
and we're going to do Esther, Job, Psalms, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes, which aren't historical books, per se, that not telling us a history. What did you say? The writings. They're called the writings.
How would you define writings? Let's try to place this. We've done history up to this point.
We're going to continue to do history today, but then we're going to get into writings.
I think writings is kind of a catch-all topic that they used.
You have proverbs, Psalms, these wisdom sayings is how a lot of them are classified wisdom literature.
Job probably jumps back in time a much earlier period and it's got its own kind of teaching story
of kind of separate, right? Yeah? Can somebody be good in the face of all this evil and bad coming upon them,
tackling the issue of the Odyssey, the justice of God, and those kinds of things?
And so these writings, I think, tend to be tackling certain topics, if you will,
and exploring God's wisdom. So, Jared, would it be possible then,
because the next part after Psalms and Proverbs is going to be what you call the prophets,
and would it be possible to take Joshua through Namaia and then place each book of the prophets
in that history somewhere? Yeah, definitely.
You could put Isaiah with King Hezekiah's reign on Jeremiah later on.
And they classify some as the great prophets or major prophets and minor
prophets. And that's more just not by how wonderful they were or not.
But just the size of the book. And so Isaiah and Jeremiah
Ezekiel, these are all major prophets because we have lots of chapters from them, whereas
the minor prophets, sometimes were included all on one scroll, the 12 prophets at the end,
because they were short enough that you could just include them all on one roll. This is excellent, because I think our listeners
love to just understand the setup,
and where we're coming at this.
So we're still in the history, not in the writings yet,
not in the prophets, we're still in the history,
Joshua through Nahamaya, you could say,
is the history books.
I was just sitting here thinking how we get
kind of used to the Book of Mormon.
And the Book of Mormon does have a flashback or two, and then the Jaredites kind of at the
end chronologically could be at the first.
But it's a little easier.
My son's trying to go through the Old Testament and he's doing kings and chronicles.
And I'm kind of like, yeah, there's some repetition.
So it's nice to kind of have somebody categorize it a little bit.
So we kind of know what we're looking at.
Yeah.
So Jared, the last we left, the Northern Kingdom was under,
look like things were about to fall down,
where they were coming down,
and the Southern Kingdom, just a century or so later,
things look like they were gonna come down to,
fill us in.
What has happened since we left off in Second Kings?
You know, the Kingdom of Israel really becomes a story of empires. They just get conquered
one empire by the next, by the next. And so you mentioned the Northern Kingdom taken
away by the Assyrians, and a lot of the Ten Tribes were taken away. They become lost to
history, so we call them the lost 10 tribes.
The southern kingdom barely survived, and that's under King Hezekiah.
And then, like you mentioned about a century later, the Babylonians come because they've
now conquered the Assyrians.
And so then they basically inherit and take over the same territory that the Assyrians had,
but they want to expand.
And so they want to take over the
Southern Kingdom and Jerusalem is the prized jewel of that Southern Kingdom. And so they want to
conquer it. And they eventually are successful. And I think it's important to connect here with
the Book of Mormon because this is the time period of Lehi and Nephi. And this is why they have to
leave Jerusalem is because the Babylonians are coming and
are going to conquer and they receive these prophecies that if they don't leave they could be taken
into captivity or worse killed as a part of that. One of the worst parts of this Babylonian invasion
ends up being the destruction of the temple. Solomon's temple is magnificent building, particularly by ancient standards, is destroyed around 586, 587 BC.
A bunch of the inhabitants of the land are taken away to Babylon, so they're put into exile,
and this begins the period of the Babylonian exile. Jeremiah, the prophet, prophesied that this would happen,
and he said it would be about 70 years before they could come back. And depending, I guess, on when, because Babylon comes several times to attack Jerusalem,
they actually come back maybe a little bit sooner, unless you count it from one of the earlier attacks of Babylon.
The Persians then conquer the Babylonians, and the Persians decide that they're going to have
maybe a little bit more tolerant policy
towards their conquered peoples.
They're going to allow them to go back to their homelands if they had been exiled under
Babylon or Syria before.
They're going to allow them to rebuild their religious temples.
King Cyrus has a decree and we even have the cylinder, the clay,
canna form cylinder that this decree is written on.
It's in the British Museum,
and so you can go and read it.
We sometimes mistakenly think it's just for the Jews.
It's not, it's for all the peoples of their land.
And so the Jews, of course, say, well, we're part of this,
so we'll take that to mean that we can
return to Jerusalem, and we are going to rebuild our temple. That's what a lot of the
beginning of the book of Ezra talks about is the return of some of these exiles from
Babylon to Jerusalem so that they can rebuild their temple, rebuild their community, rebuild
Jerusalem. And in a nutshell nutshell that's kind of what
Ezra Nehemiah is all about is those rebuilding efforts.
But and here's another point we sometimes miss, not all the Jews wanted to go back.
Some were perfectly comfortable in Babylon.
It was, they had a lot of water there.
It was plentiful as far as agriculture and some other things.
The gardens.
Yeah, the gardens of Babylon.
So that's why, for example, Nehemiah is going to come back later, because he just stayed there in the Persian Empire.
And by the way, the Persians are a little bit further east than the Babylonians.
Today, if you think of modern Iraq, that's kind of the area of Babylon, southern Iraq.
Persia was more of a modern Iran. So they've come from the east and they've now conquered
the Babylonians, and so they inherit again all of their empire, and they push even down into Egypt.
Cambyses, the successor to Cyrus, pushes down and conquer Zejip for a while. Their empire gets even bigger.
And they're going to last for a couple of hundred years until Alexander the Great comes on the
scene. And then of course, he takes over and it becomes Greek empires.
Then the Romans are going to come.
So it's just one empire after another.
This reminds me of something that I appreciated from the manuals said that Jewish people had been held captive in Babylonia for about 70 years.
They had lost Jerusalem and the temple, and many had forgotten their commitment to God's law, but God had not forgotten them.
I'm glad you commented on this. They were taking captive, but we might assume,
and they just practiced their religion there,
but it sounds like when we read Nehemiah and stuff,
they're, oh, hey, wait, we're supposed to do this.
It's like they had lost a lot of what they were supposed
to be about.
Is that a fair way to put it?
Yeah, I think you had some continuation of worship,
but suddenly they're without a temple.
And when two thirds of your law revolves around the temple,
suddenly you're like, what am I supposed to do?
We kind of experienced this lately
as Latter-day Saints with COVID,
when all of a sudden the temple shut,
and we're like, wait, what am I supposed to do?
This is where I drew a lot of spiritual strength
was by going to the temple regularly,
and what about all these family names that I'm accumulating?
What do I do about this?
And how do I worship without the temple?
And that's the kind of the crisis that they faced was what do I do?
Now some continue to certainly practice and worship.
And maybe this is the beginning of where we get the synagogues and more
focus on scripture study, because those in Babylon, that's what they had and that's what
they could develop. If you fast forward, the Jews have the Talmud, which is a collection
of their laws and interpretations of the laws and so forth. And we have a Babylonian Talmud
and a Palestinian or Jerusalem Talmud that developed later on. And we have a Babylonian Talmud and a Palestinian or a Jerusalem Talmud
that developed later on. Now we're talking about 400, 500 AD because there's still such
a community in Babylon of Jews that studied scripture that tried to practice the laws
as much as they could without the temple, but they didn't have the temple there. And as
far as we know, they never tried to build a temple
in the Babylonian area.
But they had Jews there all the way up until the 1900s.
Wow.
It really was when the state of Israel was formed,
when suddenly Jews didn't feel so comfortable
in some Arab country because of the backlash
against the formation of the state of Israel in 1948.
When I was in grad school, you mentioned,
you know, I went to UC Berkeley,
and one summer to earn some money,
I just did odd jobs,
and I got hired by an Iraqi Jewish family
just to do yard work and things around their house.
And they had fled from Iraq because of the tension
that they now felt in this Arab country.
Their ancestors went back to Iraq
all the way back to the exile.
Yeah, as far as you can tell,
they were there for centuries and centuries
from that time period.
This brings up another question that my students
sometimes ask that I love to get your perspective on
and that is that they often ask,
well, what do the Jews do today without the temple?
Or do they still do sacrifices?
And so, sounds like the Babylonians had to come up with a, we don't have the temple type of worship.
And what do the Orthodox Jews do today regarding the temple?
They've kind of faced the same thing because the Jerusalem temple that we know from the time of Jesus
and the New Testament,
herod's temples, we often call it, that gets destroyed in 70 AD by the Romans.
And since then, there hasn't been a temple
functioning like it was before then.
Now, sometimes you'll see synagogues called temples,
temple and manual, but that's just a name
that they use for synagogue.
It doesn't mean that it's a temple like in Jerusalem. Throughout time,
have been certain Jewish groups that may continue to do sacrifices on the side or whatever,
the Samaritans that we'll talk a little bit more about today, they continue to do sacrifices on
Mount Gerasim, and so every Passover they have a major sacrifice of lambs and all getting ready for Passover on top of the mount
So sacrifice is kind of continued often on in different groups
But a vast majority of Jews today
It's all about synagogue worship. It's all about prayer
Scripture study those kinds of things and frankly if you ask particularly
Western Jews are they excited to rebuild the temple a scripture study, those kinds of things. And frankly, if you ask, particularly, western Jews,
are they excited to rebuild the temple? A lot of them would say, why? Are we going to go back to animal sacrifice? That's ancient stuff. It's past. And others will say, well, when the Messiah comes,
maybe something will happen with the temple. And then there's others that are very actively,
particularly those in Jerusalem actively trying to rebuild the temple. And then there's others that are very actively, particularly those in Jerusalem actively trying
to rebuild the temple.
And of course, that can cause some political issues today.
And the same spot where the old one was.
Yeah.
Yeah, we'll just get rid of the dome of the rock.
And currently occupied.
I like how you said that.
It's currently occupied.
If you both helped me with this, we came back in with Joshua.
And then Samuel came along and we chose a king and
we went three kings in a row and they didn't seem to go very well. Saul, David, and
Solomon, and then we divided, right, then we divided into two kingdoms, the
north and the south, eventually the northern kingdom, Israel and the north, Judah
and the south, ten tribes in the north, two tribes in the south. Yeah, Israel and the North. Judah in the South. Ten tribes in the North. Two tribes in the South.
The Northern Kingdom was destroyed by a Syria, 721 years before Jesus.
Then the Southern Kingdom barely hangs on.
We just did that last week under King Hezekiah, but then they eventually fall in 586 to Babylon,
who had taken Assyria as Jarrah just told us.
I can see why Leimon and Lemuel didn't think Jerusalem could be destroyed because
Hezekiah and Isaiah preserved them.
Yeah, God is on our side.
Why would He allow His city, His people, His temple to be taken over?
It's one of my favorite lines in the whole Old Testament, the army of the Assyrians
and behold when they arose in the morning, behold, they were all dead corpses.
Yeah, Sinah Harib, he's like, we can't fight this, let's go home.
And also, you mentioned that some Jews are taken captive in 586 just after Lehigh is preaching,
and that's where we get the stories of Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. Is that right?
They're in Babylon.
Yeah.
And so they could have had a young men's group in Jerusalem with Nephi and Daniel and
others.
They're all about the same age.
Yeah.
So now Israel, you would say, is in exile.
The Northern Kingdom is no more.
The Southern Kingdom is no more.
And Babylon, from what I've read, Jared, is a pretty brutal, how would you occupy her?
Yeah, I think the Assyrians were worse,
but Babylon still is pretty harsh,
especially compared to the Persians that are gonna come.
Now, the Persians, of course,
are gonna maintain an empire,
so they're still gonna have soldiers and expect taxes
and things like that.
It's not just Kumbaya and we're all hugging.
Right.
Compared to Assyrian Babylon before,
it's a different administration, you could say.
Okay.
So Babylon rules for about 70 years.
And then here comes King Cyrus and the Persian saying,
go home, go rebuild.
And did Cyrus see himself as a liberator?
I think you could say that. And I think certainly that's how the Jews viewed him.
In fact, he's viewed very favorably in the book of Isaiah, so we could maybe read a couple of verses.
He's kind of called a shepherd. He's called an anointed one. Somebody who could come and deliver them. And so in Isaiah 44, 28, it says,
that,
that,
sayeth of Cyrus, he is my shepherd, and shall perform all my pleasure, even saying to Jerusalem,
now shall be built, and to the temple thy foundation shall be laid. And so Isaiah and the Jews certainly had a very positive view.
And God used as he does throughout history non-covenant people to accomplish his purposes.
Sometimes unknowingly by themselves, sometimes it's in justice, sometimes it's in mercy.
And certainly I think in this case we see more of the mercy side of bringing
them back and allowing them to rebuild. And so Cyrus is viewed I think very favorably by the Jews.
What year would that be for Cyrus saying I'm here you can go home? That's around 525.
That's around 525. And so I think it was 538 that the Persians
take over the Babylonians just about a decade later,
he issues this decree.
And it's kind of exciting to see it
in the British Museum, frankly.
I mean, I had read about it so much
and then all of a sudden here I'm in this room
and I kind of walked by it at first
and I thought, oh, it's another Acadian,
their Kineiform Clay Tablet. And then I kind of circled back and I was like, wait, no, this is the Cyrus
cylinder. This is the one that we always talk about. That's cool. That's kind of cool
that we have it preserved. Let's keep going with our story. So, because I think we're
almost too, Ezra. So when we say Cyrus allows the Jews to return, we're not talking the
kingdom of Israel is back. We're talking a small portion
of those who are exiled returned to just Jerusalem. Jared, did they return to the whole land?
They're primarily just returning to Jerusalem and it's environs. You know, it's the area around
Jerusalem because that had been the capital city and they wanted to strengthen it. And in fact, later on, I think it's in
Nehemiah that they even have to like cast lots to get people to move out of Jerusalem to start settling
more of the areas around because they just want to expand the territory a little bit. But people
are feeling like I'm I feel safer inside the city. I'm safer with more people around me.
On our own later day-day Saint History,
we may be see that that sometimes everybody
wants to be in the city and sometimes it's hard to expand
or some want to expand when Joseph says,
no, you need to stay in the city for protection.
I think one important point is we mentioned that
there's the exiles from the North Kingdom,
there's exiles from the Southern Kingdom, there's exiles from the southern kingdom,
but that doesn't mean everybody.
It mostly means the upper class, the elite,
the ones that they are worried about,
revolting, leading the leadership,
the organ, yeah, they can organize
some kind of rebellion and so forth.
So they want them closer in a different part of the empire
that they're not comfortable with.
They don't have the same connections to the land and they don't have the same knowledge about where's the defensive
places and so forth. And so they can keep tabs on them better. But that means they leave a lot of
people behind, mostly lower class, mostly so that they can continue working the land because you want to tax the land.
And if nobody knows what grows where and where the water sources are and how to, where's the best place to hurt, you know, your animals, these kinds of things, then you don't have much revenue.
So they leave the lower class there.
And what the Assyrians particularly did, and the Babylonians did this a little bit as well, is they brought peoples from other part of their empire into the land.
And so suddenly you have a mixture of peoples left in the land
with outside peoples, non-Israelites coming in,
kind of for the same purpose, they're not going to know this land,
they're not going to have the same knowledge of defense and these kinds of things.
And it's that inner marriage that occurs between the people left in the land and these
outsiders that become a big problem for Ezra, particularly end a little bit in Nehemiah
as well.
This is the beginnings of what later become known as the Samaritans, this inner marriage between people left in the land, people from outside.
So they continue having many of the same worship practices, traditions, trying to follow the law of Moses,
but they're also bringing in some other ideas that's becoming this mixture. And so when some of these Jews come back from
Babylon to rebuild the temple, there's people here in Jerusalem that want to help, that
say, well, this is part of our tradition too. We're Jewish too, right? And they don't want their
help because they feel like they've corrupted
themselves, I guess you could say, you're not real Israelites anymore. That's what
Harry Potter would call a half blood, some Jewish blood, some non-Jewish blood. It's a
major tension. I think historians tend to call them Samarians earlier on and then they
become known as the Samaritans.
As we open the New Testament, we know that these two groups are antagonistic towards each
other.
Why?
Well, just go back a few hundred years and you see this is the beginning of it because they're
not welcome to rebuild the temple.
And so then they finally say, well, okay, we'll build our own temple.
And so they go to Mount Garaz, we'll build our own temple. And so they go to Mount
Gharazim and they build their own temple. And that's where they go to worship. Until that temple
gets destroyed by later Jews who decide, no, that's an illegal temple. So that adds to the
santagonism between them because at the root, they're both following the law of Moses. They both have the Torah, but they start practicing some things differently, or they're just
viewed as not as pure.
That Gerasim temple comes up in Jesus' conversation with the woman at the well.
Exactly.
Because she says, we've worshipped here.
You worshipped Jerusalem.
So which is it?
And Jesus' response as well,
and a little while it's gonna be neither place.
All right, it's gonna be in your heart, really,
that you worship God in spirit and in truth.
And you know.
Jared, and when Cyrus allows this small portion
of Jews to return, he's not saying,
go back and have a kingdom of your own.
There's still Persians, right,
that are gonna pay their taxes. Why is
he allowing them to return then? Just because he's trying to, how to win friends and influence people
and saying, listen, if I give you this, you'll probably not rebel. Yeah, I think that's exactly
it. He thinks, if they're happy where they're at, then they will be less likely to rebel. Yes, he's still going to require
taxes from them. They still will have a governor over them that's going to be from under Persian
control. There will be military garrisons nearby and things like that. But he just thought, if you
oppressed the people too much, then they're going to want to rebel.
So let's ease up a little bit, let them
practice some of the worship that they want to do.
But keep
being loyal to Persia.
For the most part it worked for 200 years.
Much longer, you know, Babylon only lasted
not even 100 years.
They were just too brutal.
And the Syrians as well.
These were kind of very powerful, short-lived flame
that rose up and then burned out pretty quick,
but Persians tended to last until Alexander came
and had series of wars with them
and eventually took them over.
Jared, you feel like we're ready to get into the text here?
Well, let's start with just Ezra I, just because it is kind of the retelling of this
commission to rebuild the temple and the return of temple instruments. I guess that's one thing we
haven't mentioned is that when Babylon conquered the temple, they took a lot of the temple vessels.
So things used for the sacrifices and altarvincents type things, and they took
them off to Babylon, and now they're being allowed to bring them back. For example, in verse
7, it says, also Cyrus the King brought forth the vessels of the house of the Lord, which
Nebuchadnezzar had brought forth out of Jerusalem, and had put them in the house of his gods. Even those did Cyrus King
of Persia bring forth by the hand of Mithredath, the treasurer, and numbered them unto Sheshpasar,
the Prince of Judah. Sheshpasar is this local ruler that's going to be set up in Jerusalem area,
and they're going to bring back these vessels. And one thing that frankly gets a little tedious, I guess you could say about Ezra and Nehemiah,
is we have these lengthy lists of offerings that are brought back, donations made for the temple,
people, these can be kind of tedious, but this is what a historical source is.
It tries to record all of these things that happen.
It will repeat some of the decrees of the Persian rulers.
And we could easily be cynical and say, oh, well,
that's just all made up.
But I think a lot of historians think, actually, no.
This is probably pretty accurate of retelling
some of these decrees.
Granted, it's gone through a translation into Hebrew, and then now into English,
and so it's going to look a little different that way, but the core elements of it would remain.
And so that's kind of what happens in chapter 1 is just finally this coming back
and starting to rebuild the temple.
Ezra 3 talks about they start with the altar. I mean, what they want to do first is
offer sacrifice as again. And I think we see that throughout scripture starting with Adam.
What's one of the first things he does after he's kicked out of the Garden of Eden, build an altar, give thanks and pray.
Lehigh and his family when they get to the promised land, they build an altar.
And so they want to rebuild the altar there so that they can offer thanks for being
back in the land.
This is where it can get confusing.
It seems like they start rebuilding the temple, but it's not going to be done for a while. I think most put it about 515 is when the temple is finally
completed. And so that's a good 10 years. And in fact, here we get a little overlap. We have Haggai,
profit from later in the Old Testament, but from this time period obviously, he comes along and he says,
wait, look at your
Houses and then compare that to the House of the Lord. You're building your houses before you're rebuilding the House of the Lord.
Let's get our priorities straight here and let's get the temple. So Haggai the Prophet and Haggai 1
the temple. So Haggai the Prophet and Haggai I starting of verse three, then came the word of the Lord by Haggai the
Prophet saying, is it time for you, oh ye, to dwell in your
sealed houses, or as the footnote there reads, panelled houses,
nicely adorned houses, I guess is probably how we could
say it. And this house, meaning the temple lie waste.
Now therefore, thus saith the Lord of hosts, consider your ways.
In other words, let's rethink this. Let's rebuild this.
And so it took a little prompting from Haggai and Zachariah, another prophet of this time
period, to kind of light the fire under the Israelites to remember part of why your back
here is to rebuild the temple.
And so even though probably they had started some of the worship going on there, the temple
still needed to be completed.
And so they eventually do that.
And so this is what we refer to often as the second temple. And
it starts a new historical period. And this is the period I love to study. This is my main
area is the second temple period. It's basically from mid 400s, BC to around 70 AD when the
temple is destroyed. So it straddles the end of the Persian, all of the Greek period,
and the beginning of the Roman period in the land here. And when they rebuilt it, it's interesting
because there's different reactions. Some were tremendously excited. Well, I think all were excited.
Yes, we have a temple again. But some that knew the old temple, knew that this new temple wasn't
the same as Solomon's temple. They didn't have the resources that Solomon had. Solomon was wealthy,
he had connections all over the Eastern Mediterranean, bringing in the finest craftsmen and supplies
and things. And this is just an exilic group coming back barely trying to rebuild their houses and city and the temple
That reminds me Jared of Nephi when he says he tried to build the temple
But he said it was not like solomans
It was patterned after solomans, but he knew it wasn't the same was
So the first temple we talk about we call Solomon's Temple from Solomon all the way to the destruction by Babylon
and then trying to rebuild it
We're gonna call that the second temple, but that's not the same as Herod's Temple, right?
Well, it is the same temple
same as yeah ground
but what Herod does when he comes on the scene is he wants to make it magnificent again more like Solomon's temple and
By his time he did have the resources that he could do that. He expands the courtyards. He expands the
Stoa the porches around
He can add to the facade. He can do all of these things to make it a truly magnificent building.
I think his real intention is to show off to the Romans, look at our beautiful temple.
So he makes all of this and we often call it Herod's Temple.
The structure didn't change. It just was like the outside and the area around it.
It just was like the outside and the area around it. So we would say Solomon's Temple, and then we would say the second temple.
So when we say second temple, Herod's Temple, we're not talking about two different things.
You were talking about the same building.
A remodel, if you will.
The remodeled.
You picked up the grounds and uh, yeah. Provo has announced that they're going to
redo our temple. It's going to look a lot different than it did before.
But it's going to be in the same space. That's going to be even more radical than I think what
Herod did to the Jerusalem temple. Yeah, if it looks like Ogane, it's going to look a lot different. Yeah, maybe to think
of how they reacted to this new temple, the second temple. Let's think about the Salt Lake temple.
What if we rather than trying to remodel and refurbish and strengthen the foundational? What if we
just raised it and then just put up a little temple like during
present-hinkley's era when we had the small temples? You know, it still would be a temple,
it still be functioning and we'd be happy to have a temple, but anybody who knew the salt
lake temple would be like, it's not the salt lake temple, it's not the same as it was before.
That's what I think a lot of them were going through
was feeling this lacking of that. It's hard to get excited. If any of our listeners ever hear
first temple period think Solomon down to the Babylon. If you ever hear second temple period,
think of this returning, under Cyrus, all the way down past Jesus to when the temple is destroyed
after Jesus dies. So we have two basic temple periods. We're giving our audience a little
mini-doctorate degree in Jewish history. Jared, I'm rebuilding the temple. It doesn't feel like I'm
rebuilding the big beautiful temple. And then I've got these other Jews who are half Jewish, half, you call
half Gentile, I guess.
Gentile. They want to help as well. So this whole return, this has been stressful.
It is a very stressful period. We in our day could look at how these people of the land
are treated and say, well, that's not very fair, that's not
very tolerant.
And to a certain extent, that's true.
However, there's a whole political layer that's underneath this.
By allowing them to help rebuild the temple, you're allowing them more political power.
Because frankly, they kind of filled in a power vacuum when the Babylonians
destroyed Jerusalem and took all the upper class and the royalty away, they kind of had
their own local rule under of course the imperial rule over them, but they had quite a bit
of power on their own underneath that system. But suddenly you've got this whole
little other group coming back, some of which are related to Davidic lines and so forth.
Now they are the top dogs. And so it's also a clash of political power. And I think part of the
reason they weren't allowed to help rebuild the temple is not for spiritual reasons, although that is how the text points out. But I think for the political reason, no, we
are in charge here. And so these local people try to stop these rebuilding projects by claiming
you don't have permission to do this. We're here. We've been here. They have to
peel back to Persia, and that's where you get some of these chapters where we
have a repetition of the decrees. In fact, you don't see this in the King James
version, but there's several chapters, I think chapter four through six in
Ezra, that is actually written in Aramaic rather than Hebrew in the Hebrew Bible.
There's different parts of the Hebrew Bible where they just have kept the
Aramaic from these decrees because under the Persian Empire, Aramaic became
kind of the dominant lingua franca of the day. And that's why by the time of
Jesus, Aramaic was a common spoken language because they had been dominated
by the Persians for so long.
It maintained some of these Aramaic decrees and letters back and forth.
But the Persians, as they check their archives and check probably Cyrus's cylinder, they
find, no, they are given permission to do this.
And so they do have the Persian backing to allow them
to continue to rebuild. I'm looking at this synopsis for Ezra chapter 4, the Samaritans offer help
then hinder the work. It's a little more complex than we think about this relationship with the
Samaritans going way back to these Old Testament times like we're talking about. I think that helps us when we get to Jesus and the Samaritans and that history they have of that rival temple like you said in Gareth's
theme. Been going on for 400 years. Yeah. Right. If I'm of a lower class family, let's just say I've
lived really long. I've seen a Syria come in. I've seen Babylon come in. Then Madeline, my daughter fell in love with
Truman the Babylonian. Yeah, Truman the Persian. They had children. So now I've got children who are
half Jewish, half non-Jewish. Here comes this rebuilding group. I want to be part of it and they say
absolutely not. You can't be part of it. So do I leave then at that point? Is that when I go to the North and go live in what's called Samaria?
Or am I already there?
I think a lot of the people are wherever they are and a lot of mar and Samaria.
But I think some of the movers and shakers, if you will, of that group had moved into
the Jerusalem area.
And so they still are there kind of antagonizing.
Some of this is groups of neighboring ammonites, for example, that can kind of come in and
and assert some authority now that a lot of the Jews are gone.
And so they are in the mix here as well.
There's the people of the land that I think are more just the people left over that have now intermarried. But then there's also some of these other groups that are coming in
and trying to assert more authority. Goodness, this is messy. It gets really messy.
Sometimes when I've thought about this history, I've thought just everybody
get along. Just everybody rebuild the walls and everybody rebuild the temple.
It's awesome. We all get to go back, but we do complicate things.
It was interesting that you said that they're supposed
to rebuild the temple and yet they build their own homes first.
Because we saw that so often last year, John,
where the Lord said in the doctrine of covenants,
build the temple, and then two years later,
hey, is anybody gonna...
Is anybody gonna get started on this?
Then another time, I was serious about that.
So, Jared, is that kind of feel the same to you
as when we read those church history stories?
Yeah, I think that's exactly it, because it's a sacrifice.
If you're gonna work on the temple,
then that means you're not working on your own things.
And so, being able to have faith enough
to put the Lord's house first,
and then that you'll still be able to do your own, that's a challenge. to have faith enough to put the Lord's house first,
and then that you'll still be able to do your own,
to challenge.
And then attitude is this opposition
that kind of helps delay things.
It's like not getting the right permit,
or something, so you have to go through the permit process
until you finally, the person say, yes,
they can go on, it's a factor as well,
is just the natural opposition that's coming against
them.
That's interesting.
And what an awesome way we could apply this to.
It's a sacrifice to put the house of the Lord first.
That's the same way today, isn't it?
You've got to make time to go to the temple because, like you said, I've got a sacrifice
of what I could be doing in my own life to go do the
Lord's work. Sacrifices will vary as far as how hard that is. That's one of the efforts of the
churches to get temples as close to members as possible. But still some people have to travel
incredible amounts of time and make incredible efforts to attend the temple. And yet sometimes I'm five minutes away from a temple
and I realize, wait, I haven't done my part yet.
For a while, I need to get to the temple.
They didn't have to make appointments though
to build the temple.
We have to make appointments.
Our life is really hard, John.
We have to go online and make an appointment.
Gee, I need some names.
I can print out my own family members, just like that.
But John, I mean, that takes ink and just give me a break here,
John.
Let me know.
My life is hard.
Another way to look at it is interesting to me
is like in Ezra 4, it talks about the Samaritans hired
counselors or the people of the land, hired counselors against them to frustrate their purpose
and going, yeah, whenever we want to build a temple
in the world, everybody just loves it.
Yeah, no one ever hires counselors to stop the work.
There's never a local opposition, right?
Never.
Isn't that right out of the manual?
The Lord's work rarely goes unopposed,
and this was certainly true of the efforts
led by Zeruba Bell.
Jared, tell us who Zeruba Bell is.
So Zeruba Bell is one of these kind of local governor
that is under the Persians.
The name sounds like it's related to all,
but it's actually related to Babylon, and Zera is seed,
so seed of Babylon.
So he's come from that area,
but now is here in Jerusalem,
and he helps kind of start the community
and get things going here,
because Ezra doesn't show up himself until chapter seven.
And so what the first chapters are,
are just all this background from when the Persians had taken over up until Ezra comes on the scene,
and Ezra is about 458.
So almost 100 years after Persia had conquered the Babylonians,
Ezra finally comes on the scene.
And even among seasoned biblical scholars,
the chronology of Ezra and Nehemiah
is one of the most confusing things in the Bible.
It's listing a lot of kings,
but it doesn't list like if this is the heart of Zerxes I,
the second, there's Deris.
We see in the book of Daniel,
but this is not the same Deris that's mentioned here. And there's going to be a later Darius that Alexander conquers. So
that gets confusing. And then we have a Nehemiah that's mentioned that's not the Nehemiah that's
the books named after. And which came first and when? And if you fill it all confused, you're not
alone. So we just try to keep it pretty basic and say,
you know, the Persians came, they start to rebuild the temple
if it finally gets rebuilt, but then Ezra is going to come,
Nehemiah is going to come, particularly Ezra is going to focus
on the law, on the worship aspect of it.
Okay, now that we have the temple,
let's make sure we're following the law in our daily lives
and what we're doing.
Nehemiah is going to come back
because he's heard that the city still is kind of in ruins as far as the walls of the city and so forth.
He's like, wait, this is Jerusalem, it can't be that way. Nehemiah is a cup bearer to the Persian king.
A cup bearer, as you know, is the one that basically tastes test the food and the wine the drink for the king
So that if anything's poisoned
He's out before the king gets it right he's like a canary in a mine
Yeah, and so it's a dangerous position
But it's also a very trusted position because you could imagine that a cup bear could easily turn against the king
And pass on food that he himself has poisoned. So it has to be somebody that's trusted. So it's quite amazing that a non-persion
is given this very trusted position. But because of his connection to the king, the king one day
notices, wait, Nehemiah, why are you so down? What's up, finally, Nehemiah shares? You know, I've heard from some of my colleagues back in Jerusalem that
came that things are not good there. The walls are still in ruins. And so the King says,
well, why don't you go back and help rebuild them? With, it sounds like the intention that
Nehemiah would return return and he does actually return.
We just aren't sure how long he stays. He will return back to Jerusalem later.
Nehemi's efforts are primarily with the walls of the city. My wife, Margaret,
this is one of her favorite parts of the story and partly I think because of our time in Jerusalem,
because of the opposition Nehemi has to go out at night and inspect the walls of the city and figure out,
okay, where do we need to rebuild and strengthen the walls?
How can we do this?
Kind of does a reconnaissance trip at night
going around the walls and inspecting them and so forth.
And then he begins this rebuilding effort
that included not only how we're going to construct,
but how are we going to defend ourselves from this opposition while we're building.
It's kind of like the Kirtland Temple when they had to build the temple and they had to
have guards to protect them. And so you have a tool in one hand and maybe a weapon in another.
And it kind of describes that in Nehemiah of some of these efforts to rebuild the walls.
Nehemiah's main project was getting the city back to where it was.
But again, the local opposition is trying to tell the Persians, look, if you let them rebuild the walls,
then of course they're going to rebel. They now have a fortified city.
Because of Nehemiah's position, I think he's able to assure the King no.
We're just trying to make the city what it was.
And we're still loyal to you.
It provides a fortified city for you because we're under your empire.
So he finally does get the permission and the resources and everything.
And they're able to finish with a lot of rejoicing once it's finally done.
This is fantastic.
I didn't realize so much
opposition and it wasn't necessarily enemies because it seems to me that
they're not enemies of Persia who are fighting against this rebuilding a
temple. It's the locals. I would say it's internal opposition. We have in the
church some that are outside of the church that may attack or not agree with us and try to
thwart our purposes. But then we have some within the church that also oppose some of the things.
Sometimes those are even harder to deal with. So they're trying to carry out what they feel they
should be doing with the temple and the walls and everything amidst all of this opposition.
Again, because there's a political layer underneath all this, he who can rebuild the walls,
controls the walls, you know, and the city and gates. And that's one of the things NMI does is he
decrees when the gates can be open, when they're going to be closed, and those kinds of things. So it gives power to whoever has that control.
Interesting. This makes the book so much more accessible, like you can understand as you read.
It's a historian wanting to kind of tell us how long after the fact were these books written, do we know?
We don't know. Ezra kind of follows like in the same vein as first and second kings and others where it's just a third person
narrative
redactoring we don't know who's
Exactly recording this. Nehemi is interesting in that it's more of a first person
Account I think it's a little bit more like a first Nephi maybe
Reflecting back on some of the events that had happened earlier and so forth.
So I can't imagine it's going to be that much later than the time period it's
recording, but it's obviously going to go through some editorial process in
the transmission. And it's very pro those who are trying to return and rebuild.
Definitely from that perspective. What would this American history sound like?
We had our own city.
Who are these outsiders that think that they can come in and take over?
Yeah.
All right.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
podcast.