
Text -- Ezra 2:69-70 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Ezr 2:69 - -- Sixty one thousand drams of gold amount to something more than so many pounds of our money. So bishop Cumberland, who likewise supposes five thousand ...
Sixty one thousand drams of gold amount to something more than so many pounds of our money. So bishop Cumberland, who likewise supposes five thousand pounds of silver, to be about thirty seven thousand pounds sterling.

Wesley: Ezr 2:70 - -- And they dwelt in peace, in perfect harmony, a blessed presage of their settlement, as their discord in the latter times of that state, was of their r...
And they dwelt in peace, in perfect harmony, a blessed presage of their settlement, as their discord in the latter times of that state, was of their ruin.
Rather, "darics," a Persian coin (see on 1Ch 29:7).

JFB: Ezr 2:69 - -- (compare Neh 7:70). This--in the circumstances--was a very appropriate gift. In general, it may be remarked that presents of garments, or of any other...
(compare Neh 7:70). This--in the circumstances--was a very appropriate gift. In general, it may be remarked that presents of garments, or of any other usable commodities, however singular it may seem to us, is in harmony with the established notions and customs of the East.
Clarke: Ezr 2:69 - -- Threescore and one thousand drams of gold - דרכמונים darkemonim , drakmons or darics; a Persian coin, always of gold, and worth about 1£. ...
Threescore and one thousand drams of gold -

Clarke: Ezr 2:69 - -- Five thousand pounds of silver - מנים manim , manehs or minas. As a weight, the maneh was 100 shekels; as a coin, 60 shekels in value, or about...
Five thousand pounds of silver -
Thus we find that God, in the midst of judgment, remembered mercy, and gave them favor in the land of their captivity.

Clarke: Ezr 2:70 - -- Dwelt in their cities - They all went to those cities which belonged originally to their respective families.
Dwelt in their cities - They all went to those cities which belonged originally to their respective families.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
The numbers here and in Nehemiah (see the marginal reference) vary.

Barnes: Ezr 2:70 - -- All Israel - That the Israelites of the ten tribes returned to Palestine with Zerubbabel is apparent: (1) from 1Ch 9:3; (2) from the enumeratio...
Poole -> Ezr 2:69
Poole: Ezr 2:69 - -- A dram of gold is supposed to be of the weight of the fourth part of a shekel, and of the value of a French crown.
A dram of gold is supposed to be of the weight of the fourth part of a shekel, and of the value of a French crown.
Haydock: Ezr 2:69 - -- Solids. Hebrew darcemonim. (Haydock) ---
"Darics," worth as much as a golden sicle. (Pelletier) (Calmet) (1 Paralipomenon xxix. 7.) ---
Poun...
Solids. Hebrew darcemonim. (Haydock) ---
"Darics," worth as much as a golden sicle. (Pelletier) (Calmet) (1 Paralipomenon xxix. 7.) ---
Pounds, (mnas) or 60 sicles. (Menochius) ---
3 Esdras has "mnas" in both places.
Gill: Ezr 2:69 - -- They gave after their ability unto the treasure of the world threescore and one thousand drachms of gold,.... These "darcemons or darics" were a Persi...
They gave after their ability unto the treasure of the world threescore and one thousand drachms of gold,.... These "darcemons or darics" were a Persian coin; one of which, according to Brerewood k, was of the value of fifteen shillings of our money, and so this quantity of them amounted to 45,750 pounds; but according to Bishop Cumberland l they were of the value of twenty shillings and four pence of our money, and so came to upwards of 61,000 pounds; these everyone, according to his ability, put into the common stock or treasury for the work of building the temple; the Vulgate Latin m reads 40,000:
and five thousand pounds of silver; and an Hebrew "mina", or pound, being of our money seven pounds, ten shillings, according to Brerewood n, amounted to 31,250 pounds: but others o, reckoning a drachm of gold at ten shillings, and a mina or pound of silver at nine pounds, make the whole to amount only to 75,500 pounds of our money:
and one hundred priests' garments; which, as they were laid up among treasures, so were necessary for the service of the temple.

Gill: Ezr 2:70 - -- So the priests and the Levites, and some of the people, and the singers, and the Nethinims, dwelt in their cities,.... Which were assigned to them out...
So the priests and the Levites, and some of the people, and the singers, and the Nethinims, dwelt in their cities,.... Which were assigned to them out of the several tribes, and in which they or their forefathers had dwelt before the captivity:
and all Israel in their cities; as those of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, so of the other ten, as many as returned and joined those who were left in the land.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Ezr 2:1-70
TSK Synopsis: Ezr 2:1-70 - --1 The number that return of the people;36 of the priests;40 of the Levites;43 of the Nethinims;55 of Solomon's servants;61 of the priests who could no...
MHCC -> Ezr 2:64-70
MHCC: Ezr 2:64-70 - --Let none complain of the needful expenses of their religion. Seek first the kingdom of God, his favour and his glory, then will all other things be ad...
Matthew Henry -> Ezr 2:64-70
Matthew Henry: Ezr 2:64-70 - -- Here is, I. The sum total of the company that returned out of Babylon. The particular sums before mentioned amount not quite to 30,000 (29,818), so ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Ezr 2:68-70
Keil-Delitzsch: Ezr 2:68-70 - --
Contributions towards the rebuilding of the temple, and concludingremarks. Comp. Neh 7:70-73. - Some of the heads of houses, when theycame to the h...
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 2:1-70 - --2. The exiles who returned ch. 2
This chapter contains a record of the people who responded to C...
