
Text -- Ezra 1:8-11 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Ezr 1:8
Wesley: Ezr 1:8 - -- Zerubbabel; the Chaldeans called him Sheshbazzar, that is, Joy in tribulation, but among his own people he was called Zerubbabel, a stranger in Babylo...
Zerubbabel; the Chaldeans called him Sheshbazzar, that is, Joy in tribulation, but among his own people he was called Zerubbabel, a stranger in Babylon. So he looked upon himself, tho' (Josephus says) he was captain of the life - guard.
JFB: Ezr 1:8 - -- That is, Zerubbabel, son of Salathiel (compare Ezr 3:8; Ezr 5:16). He was born in Babylon, and called by his family Zerubbabel, that is, stranger or e...
That is, Zerubbabel, son of Salathiel (compare Ezr 3:8; Ezr 5:16). He was born in Babylon, and called by his family Zerubbabel, that is, stranger or exile in Babylon. Shesh-bazzar, signifying "fire-worshipper," was the name given him at court, as other names were given to Daniel and his friends. He was recognized among the exiles as hereditary prince of Judah.

JFB: Ezr 1:11 - -- The vessels here specified amount only to the number of 2499. Hence it is probable that the larger vases only are mentioned, while the inventory of th...
The vessels here specified amount only to the number of 2499. Hence it is probable that the larger vases only are mentioned, while the inventory of the whole, including great and small, came to the gross sum stated in the text.

JFB: Ezr 1:11 - -- All the Jewish exiles did not embrace the privilege which the Persian king granted them. The great proportion, born in Babylon, preferred continuing i...
All the Jewish exiles did not embrace the privilege which the Persian king granted them. The great proportion, born in Babylon, preferred continuing in their comfortable homes to undertaking a distant, expensive, and hazardous journey to a desolate land. Nor did the returning exiles all go at once. The first band went with Zerubbabel, others afterwards with Ezra, and a large number with Nehemiah at a still later period.
Clarke: Ezr 1:8 - -- Sheshbazzar, the prince of Judah - This was probably the Chaldean name of him who was originally called Zerubbabel: the former signifies joy in affl...
Sheshbazzar, the prince of Judah - This was probably the Chaldean name of him who was originally called Zerubbabel: the former signifies joy in affliction; the latter, a stranger in Babylon. The latter may be designed to refer to his captive state; the former, to the prospect of release. Some think this was quite a different person, a Persian or Chaldean, sent by Cyrus to superintend whatever officers or men Cyrus might have sent to assist the Jews on their return; and to procure them help in the Chaldean provinces, through which they might be obliged to travel.

Clarke: Ezr 1:11 - -- All the vessels - were five thousand and four hundred - This place is without doubt corrupted; here it is said the sum of all the vessels, of every ...
All the vessels - were five thousand and four hundred - This place is without doubt corrupted; here it is said the sum of all the vessels, of every quality and kind, was five thousand four hundred; but the enumeration of the articles, as given in Ezr 1:9, Ezr 1:10, gives the sum of two thousand four hundred and ninety-nine only. But we can correct this account from 1 Esdras 2:13, 14
I shall set both accounts down, that they may be compared together
Ezr 1:9, Ezr 1:11 | 1 Esdras 2:13, 14 | ||
Golden chargers | 30 | Golden cups | 1000 |
Silver chargers | 1000 | Silver cups | 1000 |
Knives | 29 | Silver censers | 29 |
Golden basons | 30 | Golden vials | 30 |
Silver basons, second sort | 410 | Silver vials | 2410 |
Other vessels | 1000 | Other vessels | 1000 |
Said to be 5400 - only 2499 | Total | 5469 | |
Difference of the first account from itself: 2901 | Difference of the second account from the first: 69 |
According, therefore, to the sum total in Ezra, the sum total in Esdras is only 69 different. See the next chapter, Ezra 2 (note)
It may be said that the vessels did actually amount to 5400, and that the chief of them only were intended to be specified; and these happen to amount to 2499; but that it was not the design of Ezra to insert the whole; and that the ninth verse should be considered as stating, And of the chief of them, that is, the gold and silver articles, this is the number. But the expression in Ezr 1:10, other vessels, sets this conjecture aside: the place is most manifestly corrupted.
Defender: Ezr 1:8 - -- It is commonly believed that Sheshbazzar is the Chaldean name for Zerubbabel, since both are called "governor" of the returning exiles (Ezr 5:14; Ezr ...

Defender: Ezr 1:8 - -- The term "prince" does not have to imply royalty, but only "principal." However, Zerubbabel was actually a grandson of King Jehoiachin (1Ch 3:17-19)."
The term "prince" does not have to imply royalty, but only "principal." However, Zerubbabel was actually a grandson of King Jehoiachin (1Ch 3:17-19)."
TSK: Ezr 1:8 - -- Sheshbazzar : Ezr 1:11, Ezr 5:14, Ezr 5:16; Hag 1:1, Hag 1:14, Hag 2:2-4; Zec 4:6-10

TSK: Ezr 1:9 - -- chargers of gold : Num 7:13, 19-89; 1Ki 7:50; 2Ch 4:8, 2Ch 4:11, 2Ch 4:21, 2Ch 4:22, 2Ch 24:14; Mat 14:8
nine : Mat 10:29-31

TSK: Ezr 1:11 - -- the vessels : Rom 9:23; 2Ti 2:19-21
five thousand : Instead of 5,400, the enumeration of the articles in 2Ti 2:9, 2Ti 2:10, only amounts to 2,499; but...
the vessels : Rom 9:23; 2Ti 2:19-21
five thousand : Instead of 5,400, the enumeration of the articles in 2Ti 2:9, 2Ti 2:10, only amounts to 2,499; but in the account, Esdras 2Ti 2:13, 2Ti 2:14, the amount is 5,469, as will be evident from the following statements:
Temple Vessels | |||
In Ezra | In Esdras | ||
Gold chargers | 30 | Gold cups | 1,000 |
Silver chargers | 1,000 | Silver cups | 1,000 |
Knives | 29 | Silver censers | 29 |
Gold basons | 30 | Gold vials | 30 |
Silver basons | 410 | Silver vials | 2,410 |
Other vessels | 1,000 | Other vessels | 1,000 |
Said to be | 5,400 | Total | 5,469 |
But only | 2,499 | ||
Deficiency | 2,901 | Surplus | 69 |

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Ezr 1:8 - -- Mithredath - Or, "Mithridates."The occurrence of this name, which means "given by Mithra"or "dedicated to Mithra,"is an indication that the sun...
Mithredath - Or, "Mithridates."The occurrence of this name, which means "given by Mithra"or "dedicated to Mithra,"is an indication that the sun-worship of the Persians was at least as old as the time of Cyrus.
Sheshbazzar - i. e., Zerubbabel. On his royal descent, see 1Ch 3:19 note.

Barnes: Ezr 1:9 - -- Chargers - The word in the original thus translated occurs only in this passage. Its meaning is doubtful. Some derive it from a Hebrew root, "t...
Chargers - The word in the original thus translated occurs only in this passage. Its meaning is doubtful. Some derive it from a Hebrew root, "to hollow out,"and translate "cup"or "vessel."
Knives - This is another doubtful word, only used here. The etymology points to some employment of basket-work.

Barnes: Ezr 1:11 - -- The sum of the numbers as they stand in the present Hebrew text is 2,499, instead of 5,400. In the Apocryphal Book of Esdras the sum given is 5,469,...
The sum of the numbers as they stand in the present Hebrew text is 2,499, instead of 5,400. In the Apocryphal Book of Esdras the sum given is 5,469, and with this sum the items in that place exactly agree (1 Esdras 2:13, 14). Most commentators propose to correct Ezra by the passage of Esdras; but the items of Esdras are improbable. Probably the sum total in the present passage has suffered corruption.
Poole: Ezr 1:8 - -- Numbered them i.e. he caused them to be delivered to the Jews by number.
Unto Sheshbazzar i.e. Zorobabel, as appears by comparing Ezr 3:8 , with Ez...
Numbered them i.e. he caused them to be delivered to the Jews by number.
Unto Sheshbazzar i.e. Zorobabel, as appears by comparing Ezr 3:8 , with Ezr 5:16 , to whom the Persians, or rather the Chaldeans, had given this name of Sheshbazzar, as they gave other names to Daniel and his companions, Dan 1:7 .
The prince of Judah and the captain and governor of these returning Jews, Ezr 2:2 . So the sceptre is not yet departed from Judah.

Poole: Ezr 1:9 - -- Large knives used in the killing of the sacrifices, which are here mentioned, because the hafts of them were made of or covered with gold or silver....
Large knives used in the killing of the sacrifices, which are here mentioned, because the hafts of them were made of or covered with gold or silver.

Poole: Ezr 1:10 - -- Basons of a second sort the first or chief were of gold, and these of silver are called the second, or next to them of worth and use.
Other vessels ...
Basons of a second sort the first or chief were of gold, and these of silver are called the second, or next to them of worth and use.
Other vessels a thousand: he speaks of vessels of a middle size; for great and small were five thousand four hundred, as it follows here. Or, as some render it,
other vessels by
thousands: they were not distinctly numbered according to their various forms and uses, but were promiscuously put together by thousands.
Haydock: Ezr 1:8 - -- Gazabar means, "the treasurer." (Hebrew; Syriac; Calmet; Protestants; 3 Esdras ii. 19.) (Haydock) ---
Son is not in Hebrew, &c., (Menochius) and ...
Gazabar means, "the treasurer." (Hebrew; Syriac; Calmet; Protestants; 3 Esdras ii. 19.) (Haydock) ---
Son is not in Hebrew, &c., (Menochius) and must be omitted. (Tirinus) ---
Sassabasar. This was another name for Zorobabel, (Challoner) given by the Chaldeans, as they changed the name of Daniel into Baltassar. (Eusebius, Præp. Evan. xi. 3.) (Tirinus) ---
But others think that this was the Persian "governor (Junius) of Judea," (3 Esdras) as one reside at Jerusalem, till the days of Nehemias, 2 Esdras v. 14. It does not appear that Zorobabel was invested with this dignity, before the reign of Darius Hystaspes, Aggeus ii. 24. (Calmet)

Knives. Septuagint, &c., "changes" of garments. (Calmet)

Haydock: Ezr 1:10 - -- Sort. Septuagint and Syriac, "double;" yet of less value. (Calmet) ---
As no first sort had been mentioned, and some Latin manuscripts read 2410, ...
Sort. Septuagint and Syriac, "double;" yet of less value. (Calmet) ---
As no first sort had been mentioned, and some Latin manuscripts read 2410, agreeably to 3 Esdras ii. 12., and the truth, (Hallet) it may be inferred that "thousands were expressed anciently by single letters, with a dot....over them." Afterwards, when numbers were expressed by words at length, the b being thus reduced to signify "two," was, of course, written shnim; but this word making nonsense with the following, has been changed into mishnim, a word not very agreeable to the sense here, and which leaves the sum total, now specified in the Hebrew text, very deficient for want of the 2000, thus omitted. (Kennicott, Dis. ii.) ---
Josephus has, "30 golden cups, 2400 of silver." (Haydock)

Haydock: Ezr 1:11 - -- Hundred. Only 2499 are specified. 3 Esdras reads, 5469. Josephus ([Antiquities?] xi. 1.) differs from all, reading 5210; which shews that the copi...
Hundred. Only 2499 are specified. 3 Esdras reads, 5469. Josephus ([Antiquities?] xi. 1.) differs from all, reading 5210; which shews that the copies have varied, and that the Hebrew is incorrect. (Calmet) ---
The use of number letters might cause this confusion. (Haydock) (Capel. iii. 20, 13.)
Gill: Ezr 1:8 - -- Even these did Cyrus king of Persia bring forth by the hand of Mithredath the treasurer,.... Or Mithridates, a name common with the Persians, from the...
Even these did Cyrus king of Persia bring forth by the hand of Mithredath the treasurer,.... Or Mithridates, a name common with the Persians, from their god Mithras, the sun they worshipped:
and numbered them unto Sheshbazzar prince of Judah; delivered them by tale to him; who, according to the Jewish rabbins, as Jarchi says, was Daniel, who was so called, because he stood in six tribulations; but it does not appear that Daniel went up to Jerusalem with the captivity, as this man did, but remained at Babylon; rather, with Aben Ezra, it is best by him to understand Zerubbabel, who did go up, and was the prince of Judah; and Cyrus, in his letter q to the governors of Syria, expressly says, that he delivered the vessels to Zerubbabel, the prince of the Jews. He had two names, Sheshbazzar, which signifies he rejoiced in tribulation, and Zerubbabel, which signifies either the seed of Babylon, being born there, or dispersed, or a stranger there, as others.

Gill: Ezr 1:9 - -- And this is the number of them,.... Of the vessels delivered, as follows:
thirty chargers of gold, a thousand chargers of silver; these, according ...
And this is the number of them,.... Of the vessels delivered, as follows:
thirty chargers of gold, a thousand chargers of silver; these, according to Ben Melech, were vessels in which water was put to wash hands in; but rather they were, as Aben Ezra observes from the Jerusalem Talmud r, vessels in which they gathered the blood of lambs and bullocks slain for sacrifices:
nine and twenty knives; which, because the handles of them were of gold or silver, were valuable, and might be very large knives, and what the priests used in slaying and cutting up the sacrifices.

Gill: Ezr 1:10 - -- Thirty basins of gold,.... Cups or dishes with covers, as the word seems to signify; but, according to Jarchi and Aben Ezra, they were vessels in whic...
Thirty basins of gold,.... Cups or dishes with covers, as the word seems to signify; but, according to Jarchi and Aben Ezra, they were vessels in which the blood of sacrifices was received, and out of which it was sprinkled on the altar:
silver basins of a second sort four hundred and ten; perhaps lesser than the other, however not so valuable, being of silver; in the Apocrypha:"And this was the number of them; A thousand golden cups, and a thousand of silver, censers of silver twenty nine, vials of gold thirty, and of silver two thousand four hundred and ten, and a thousand other vessels.'' (1 Esdras 2:13)the number is 2410; and in the letter of Cyrus, before referred to, it is 2400:
and other vessels a thousand; which are not particularly mentioned; Junius and Tremellius render the words:
other vessels by thousands, there being near 3000 that are not described.

Gill: Ezr 1:11 - -- All the vessels of gold, and of silver, were five thousand and four hundred,.... Those that are mentioned make no more than 2499, which Aben Ezra thin...
All the vessels of gold, and of silver, were five thousand and four hundred,.... Those that are mentioned make no more than 2499, which Aben Ezra thinks were the larger vessels; but this general sum takes in great and small, as in 2Ch 36:18 in the letter of Cyrus, before mentioned, these vessels are more particularly described, and their several numbers given, which together amount to the exact number in the text, 5400; the apocryphal Ezra makes them 5469:
all these did Sheshbazzar bring up with them of the captivity, that were brought up from Babylon unto Jerusalem: of whom there is a large and particular account in the following chapter.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes


NET Notes: Ezr 1:10 The meaning of the Hebrew term מִשְׁנִים (mishnim) is uncertain. The noun מִש&...

NET Notes: Ezr 1:11 The total number as given in the MT does not match the numbers given for the various items in v. 9. It is not clear whether the difference is due to e...
Geneva Bible: Ezr 1:8 Even those did Cyrus king of Persia bring forth by the hand of Mithredath the treasurer, and numbered them unto ( h ) Sheshbazzar, the prince of Judah...

Geneva Bible: Ezr 1:9 And this [is] the number of them: thirty chargers of gold, a thousand chargers of silver, nine and twenty ( i ) knives,
( i ) Which served to kill th...

Geneva Bible: Ezr 1:11 All the vessels of gold and of silver [were] five thousand and four hundred. All [these] did Sheshbazzar bring up ( k ) with [them of] the captivity t...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Ezr 1:1-11
TSK Synopsis: Ezr 1:1-11 - --1 The proclamation of Cyrus for the building of the temple.5 The people provide for their return.7 Cyrus restores the vessels of the temple to Sheshba...
Maclaren -> Ezr 1:1-11
Maclaren: Ezr 1:1-11 - --The Eve Of The Restoration
Now in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, that the word of the Lord by the mouth of Jeremiah might be fulfilled, the ...
MHCC -> Ezr 1:5-11
MHCC: Ezr 1:5-11 - --The same God that raised up the spirit of Cyrus to proclaim liberty to the Jews, raised up their spirits to take the benefit. The temptation was to so...
Matthew Henry -> Ezr 1:5-11
Matthew Henry: Ezr 1:5-11 - -- We are here told, I. How Cyrus's proclamation succeeded with others. 1. He having given leave to the Jews to go up to Jerusalem, many of them went u...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Ezr 1:7-10; Ezr 1:11
Keil-Delitzsch: Ezr 1:7-10 - --
King Cyrus, moreover, caused those sacred vessels of the temple whichhad been carried away by Nebuchadnezzar to be brought forth, anddelivered them ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ezr 1:11 - --
"All the vessels of gold and of silver were five thousand and fourhundred."But only 30 + 1000 אנרטלים , 29 מחלפים , 30 + 410 coveredg...
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 1:1-11 - --1. The edict of Cyrus and its consequences ch. 1
God had warned his people Israel that disobedie...
