
Text -- Ezra 4:2 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Ezr 4:2 - -- This they spake not sincerely, but that by this conjunction with them, they might pry into their counsels, and thereby find some matter of accusation ...
This they spake not sincerely, but that by this conjunction with them, they might pry into their counsels, and thereby find some matter of accusation against them.

Wesley: Ezr 4:2 - -- Son of Sennacherib, and after him king of Assyria, who brought or sent these persons hither, either, in the day's of Salmanasar, who reigned in Assyri...
Son of Sennacherib, and after him king of Assyria, who brought or sent these persons hither, either, in the day's of Salmanasar, who reigned in Assyria but eight years before Esarhaddon; and so Esarhaddon might be one of his commanders, and the man by whom that colony was sent. Or, in the reign of Esarhaddon, who sent this second colony to strengthen the first.
JFB -> Ezr 4:2
JFB: Ezr 4:2 - -- A very interesting explanation of this passage has been recently obtained from the Assyrian sculptures. On a large cylinder, deposited in the British ...
A very interesting explanation of this passage has been recently obtained from the Assyrian sculptures. On a large cylinder, deposited in the British Museum, there is inscribed a long and perfect copy of the annals of Esar-haddon, in which the details are given of a large deportation of Israelites from Palestine, and a consequent settlement of Babylonian colonists in their place. It is a striking confirmation of the statement made in this passage. Those Assyrian settlers intermarried with the remnant of Israelite women, and their descendants, a mongrel race, went under the name of Samaritans. Though originally idolaters, they were instructed in the knowledge of God, so that they could say, "We seek your God"; but they served Him in a superstitious way of their own (see on 2Ki 17:26-34, 2Ki 17:41).
Clarke -> Ezr 4:2
Clarke: Ezr 4:2 - -- Let us build with you - We acknowledge the same God, are solicitous for his glory, and will gladly assist you in this work. But that they came with ...
Let us build with you - We acknowledge the same God, are solicitous for his glory, and will gladly assist you in this work. But that they came with no friendly intention, the context proves.
TSK -> Ezr 4:2
TSK: Ezr 4:2 - -- Zerubbabel : Ezr 1:5, Ezr 2:2, Ezr 3:2, Ezr 3:12
Let us : Pro 26:23-26; 2Co 11:13-15; Gal 2:4; 2Ti 3:8; 2Pe 2:1, 2Pe 2:2
we do : 2Ki 17:24, 2Ki 17:27-...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Ezr 4:2
Barnes: Ezr 4:2 - -- Compare 2Ki 17:24-28 notes. Since the days - Esar-haddon reigned from 681-668 B.C. Thus, the Samaritans speak of what had taken place at least...
Compare 2Ki 17:24-28 notes.
Since the days - Esar-haddon reigned from 681-668 B.C. Thus, the Samaritans speak of what had taken place at least 130 years previously. There appear to have been at least three colonizations of Samaria by the Assyrian kings. The first is mentioned in 2Ki 17:24. Later in his reign Sargon added to these first settlers an Arabian element. Some 30 or 40 years afterward, Esarhaddon, his grandson, largely augmented the population by colonists drawn especially from the southeast parts of the Empire Ezr 4:10. Thus, the later Samaritans were an exceedingly mixed race.
Poole -> Ezr 4:2
Poole: Ezr 4:2 - -- Let us build with you: this they spake not sincerely, as appears from their disposition and designs discovered in the following history; but that by ...
Let us build with you: this they spake not sincerely, as appears from their disposition and designs discovered in the following history; but that by this conjunction with them they might pry into their counsels, and thereby get an opportunity to find some matter or pretences of accusation against them.
We seek your God, as ye do for so they did, though in a mongrel way: see 2Ki 17:26 , &c.
Esar-haddon king of Assur son of Sennacherib, and after him king of Assyria, 2Ki 19:37 ; who brought or sent these persons hither, either,
1. In the days of Salmaneser, who lived and reigned in Assyria but eight years before Esar-haddon’ s reign; and so Esar-haddon might be one of his most eminent commanders, and the man by whom that colony was sent. Or,
2. In the reign of Esar-haddon, who sent this second colony to supply and strengthen the first.
Haydock -> Ezr 4:2
Haydock: Ezr 4:2 - -- Asor Haddan sent a priest to instruct these people, but Salmanasar had transported them into the country. (Calmet) ---
They continued for some time...
Asor Haddan sent a priest to instruct these people, but Salmanasar had transported them into the country. (Calmet) ---
They continued for some time worshipping idols alone, and afterwards they consented to pay the like adoration to the Lord, 4 Kings xvii. 24, &c. (Haydock) ---
It is clear, from their petition, that they had as yet no temple. The first was erected by them on Garizim, by leave of Alexander the Great, as a retreat for Manasses, brother of the Jewish high priest, and other who would not be separated from their strange wives. (Josephus, [Antiquities?] xi.) ---
Yet the Samaritan Chronicle, lately published, seems to give a higher antiquity to that temple, and pretends that a miracle declared in favour of the place. (Calmet) ---
The fathers indeed adored there, (John iv. 20., and Genesis xii. 6,) and Josue erected an altar on Hebal, but the Samaritan copy says it was to be on Garizim, Deuteronomy xxvii. 4., and Josue viii. 30. (Haydock)
Gill -> Ezr 4:2
Gill: Ezr 4:2 - -- Then they came to Zerubbabel, and the chief of the fathers,.... These they addressed, as knowing that if they could not prevail with them, they could ...
Then they came to Zerubbabel, and the chief of the fathers,.... These they addressed, as knowing that if they could not prevail with them, they could never succeed in their design; and these were no doubt the principal of the Samaritans that applied:
and said unto them, let us build with you; that is, the temple, they proposed to join with them, and assist them in it; which proposal at first sight might seem very agreeable and welcome, and would have been so had they been sincere, but they were not; they hoped, by getting among them, to have sown discord among them, and disunited them; and so by these or other means to have retarded the building; or if it went forward, that they might have a claim to it as theirs, at least as to set up their own idols in a part of it; the reasons they gave follow:
for we seek your God as ye do; which was false, for they did not worship him alone, but with idols, nor in the same manner as the Jews did:
and we do sacrifice unto him; but even that could not recommend them to the Jews, since they ought not to sacrifice, even to the Lord himself, but at Jerusalem: there is a various reading here; the textual reading is, "we do not sacrifice"; that is, to idols; the marginal reading is, "we sacrifice to him", which we follow; Aben Ezra takes in both, perhaps most rightly; "we do not sacrifice to any other, but to him"; which was also false:
since the days of Esarhaddon, king of Assur, who brought us up hither; to Samaria, from Babylon, and other places; see 2Ki 17:24.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Ezr 4:1-24
TSK Synopsis: Ezr 4:1-24 - --1 The adversaries, being not accepted in the building of the temple with the Jews, endeavour to hinder it.7 Their letter to Artaxerxes.17 The answer a...
Maclaren -> Ezr 4:1-5
Maclaren: Ezr 4:1-5 - --Building In Troublous Times
Now when the adversaries of Judah and Benjamin heard that the children of the captivity builded the temple unto the Lord ...
MHCC -> Ezr 4:1-5
MHCC: Ezr 4:1-5 - --Every attempt to revive true religion will stir up the opposition of Satan, and of those in whom he works. The adversaries were the Samaritans, who ha...
Matthew Henry -> Ezr 4:1-5
Matthew Henry: Ezr 4:1-5 - -- We have here an instance of the old enmity that was put between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent. God's temple cannot be built, but...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Ezr 4:1-2
Keil-Delitzsch: Ezr 4:1-2 - --
The adversaries of the Jews prevent the building of the temple till the reignof Darius (Ezr 4:1, Ezr 4:2). When the adversaries of Judah and Benjami...
Constable: Ezr 1:1--6:22 - --I. THE FIRST RETURN UNDER SHESHBAZZAR chs. 1--6
"This whole section (Ezra 1-6) emphasizes God's sovereignty and ...

Constable: Ezr 3:1--6:22 - --B. The Rebuilding of the Temple chs. 3-6
Construction of the temple began soon after the exiles returned...

Constable: Ezr 4:1-24 - --2. The opposition to construction ch. 4
No project that seeks to honor God and advance His will ...
