Text -- Nehemiah 2:3 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Neh 2:3
Wesley: Neh 2:3 - -- _All the grievances of the church, but especially its desolations, ought to be matter of grief to all good people, to all that have a concern for God'...
_All the grievances of the church, but especially its desolations, ought to be matter of grief to all good people, to all that have a concern for God's honour, and are of a public spirit.
JFB -> Neh 2:2-5
JFB: Neh 2:2-5 - -- It was deemed highly unbecoming to appear in the royal presence with any weeds or signs of sorrow (Est 4:2); and hence it was no wonder that the king ...
It was deemed highly unbecoming to appear in the royal presence with any weeds or signs of sorrow (Est 4:2); and hence it was no wonder that the king was struck with the dejected air of his cupbearer, while that attendant, on his part, felt his agitation increased by his deep anxiety about the issue of the conversation so abruptly begun. But the piety and intense earnestness of the man immediately restored [Nehemiah] to calm self-possession and enabled him to communicate, first, the cause of his sadness (Neh 2:3), and next, the patriotic wish of his heart to be the honored instrument of reviving the ancient glory of the city of his fathers.
Clarke -> Neh 2:3
Clarke: Neh 2:3 - -- Let the king live for ever - Far from wishing ill to my master, I wish him on the contrary to live and prosper for ever. Aelian, Hist. Var. lib. i. ...
Let the king live for ever - Far from wishing ill to my master, I wish him on the contrary to live and prosper for ever. Aelian, Hist. Var. lib. i. c. 32, uses the same form of speech in reference to Artaxerxes Mnemon, one of the Persian kings,
TSK -> Neh 2:3
TSK: Neh 2:3 - -- Let the king : Far from wishing ill to my master, I wish him to live forever. 1Ki 1:31; Dan 2:4, Dan 3:9, Dan 5:10, Dan 6:6, Dan 6:21
the city : Neh ...
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Neh 2:3
Barnes: Neh 2:3 - -- The city ... of my fathers’ sepulchres - We may conclude from this that Nehemiah was of the tribe of Judah, as Eusebius and Jerome say th...
The city ... of my fathers’ sepulchres - We may conclude from this that Nehemiah was of the tribe of Judah, as Eusebius and Jerome say that he was.
Poole -> Neh 2:3
Poole: Neh 2:3 - -- Let the king live forever: my sadness comes not from any discontent with my own condition, or any disaffection to the king, for whom my hearty prayer...
Let the king live forever: my sadness comes not from any discontent with my own condition, or any disaffection to the king, for whom my hearty prayers are that he may live forever; but from another cause.
The place of my fathers’ sepulchres which by all nations are esteemed sacred, and inviolable, and honourable. He saith not a word of the temple, or of religion, for he wisely considered that he spake before a heathen king and court, who cared for none of those things.
Haydock -> Neh 2:3
Haydock: Neh 2:3 - -- Live; an usual salutation, Daniel iii. 9., and v. 10. So Ælian (var. i. 32.) says, "O king Artaxerxes, mayst thou reign for ever." ---
Father, ve...
Live; an usual salutation, Daniel iii. 9., and v. 10. So Ælian (var. i. 32.) says, "O king Artaxerxes, mayst thou reign for ever." ---
Father, ver. 5. He knew that the Persians shewed great regard to the dead, (Calmet; Tirinus) whose bodies they sometimes cover with wax, and keep in their house, (Cic.[Cicero?] Tusc. i.; Alex. Genial iii. 2.) or inter. (Herodotus i. 140.)
Gill -> Neh 2:3
Gill: Neh 2:3 - -- And I said unto the king, let the king live for ever,.... Which some think he said to take off the king's suspicion of his having a design upon his li...
And I said unto the king, let the king live for ever,.... Which some think he said to take off the king's suspicion of his having a design upon his life, though it seems to be a common salutation of the kings in those times, see Dan 6:6,
why should not my countenance be sad, when the city, the place of my fathers' sepulchres, lieth waste, and the gates thereof are consumed with fire? a man's native place, and where his ancestors lie interred, being always reckoned near and dear, the king and his nobles could not object to his being concerned for the desolations thereof.