
Text -- Nehemiah 8:10 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Feast before the Lord.

Wesley: Neh 8:10 - -- Being the feast of trumpets, and the beginning of this joyful month, wherein so many days of thanksgiving were to be observed.
Being the feast of trumpets, and the beginning of this joyful month, wherein so many days of thanksgiving were to be observed.

Wesley: Neh 8:10 - -- Rejoicing in God in serving him with chearfulness, and thankfulness, which is your duty always, but now especially, will give you that strength both o...
Rejoicing in God in serving him with chearfulness, and thankfulness, which is your duty always, but now especially, will give you that strength both of mind and body, which you greatly need, both to perform all the duties required of you, and to oppose all the designs of your enemies.
JFB -> Neh 8:9-10
JFB: Neh 8:9-10 - -- A deep sense of their national sins, impressively brought to their remembrance by the reading of the law and its denunciations, affected the hearts of...
A deep sense of their national sins, impressively brought to their remembrance by the reading of the law and its denunciations, affected the hearts of the people with penitential sorrow. But notwithstanding the painful remembrances of their national sins which the reading of the law awakened, the people were exhorted to cherish the feelings of joy and thankfulness associated with a sacred festival (see on Lev 23:24). By sending portions of it to their poorer brethren (Deu 16:11, Deu 16:14; Est 9:19), they would also enable them to participate in the public rejoicings.
Clarke: Neh 8:10 - -- Eat the fat, and drink the sweet - Eat and drink the best that you have; and while ye are feeding yourselves in the fear of the Lord, remember those...
Eat the fat, and drink the sweet - Eat and drink the best that you have; and while ye are feeding yourselves in the fear of the Lord, remember those who cannot feast; and send portions to them, that the joy and the thanksgiving may be general. Let the poor have reason to rejoice as well as you

Clarke: Neh 8:10 - -- For the joy of the Lord is your strength - This is no gluttonous and drunken festival that enervates the body, and enfeebles the mind: from your rel...
For the joy of the Lord is your strength - This is no gluttonous and drunken festival that enervates the body, and enfeebles the mind: from your religious feast your bodies will acquire strength and your minds power and fervor, so that you shall be able to Do His will, and to do it cheerfully. Religious joy, properly tempered with continual dependence on the help of God, meekness of mind, and self-diffidence, is a powerful means of strengthening the soul. In such a state every duty is practicable, and every duty delightful. In such a frame of mind no man an ever fell, and in such a state of mind the general health of the body is much improved; a cheerful heart is not only a continual feast, but also a continual medicine.
TSK -> Neh 8:10
TSK: Neh 8:10 - -- Go your way : Ecc 2:24, Ecc 3:13, Ecc 5:18, Ecc 9:7; 1Ti 6:17, 1Ti 6:18
eat : Son 5:1
send : Deu 26:11-13; Est 9:19, Est 9:22; Job 31:16-18; Ecc 11:2;...
Go your way : Ecc 2:24, Ecc 3:13, Ecc 5:18, Ecc 9:7; 1Ti 6:17, 1Ti 6:18
eat : Son 5:1
send : Deu 26:11-13; Est 9:19, Est 9:22; Job 31:16-18; Ecc 11:2; Luk 11:41; Rev 11:10
the joy : Psa 28:7, Psa 28:8, Psa 149:2; Pro 17:22; Isa 6:7, Isa 6:8, Isa 12:1-3, Isa 35:1-4, Isa 61:10; Joe 2:23; 2Co 8:2, 2Co 12:8, 2Co 12:9; Phi 3:4

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Neh 8:10
Barnes: Neh 8:10 - -- The "sending of portions"to the poor is not distinctly mentioned in any but the later historical Scriptures (compare the margin reference). The prac...
Poole -> Neh 8:10
Poole: Neh 8:10 - -- Eat the fat, and drink the sweet feast before the Lord, as the duty of the day obligeth you to do.
Send portions unto them for whom nothing is prepa...
Eat the fat, and drink the sweet feast before the Lord, as the duty of the day obligeth you to do.
Send portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared for the relief of your poor brethren, who else must mourn whilst you rejoice. See of this duty and practice Deu 16:11,14 Es 9:19 .
This day is holy unto our Lord being the feast of trumpets, Lev 23:24 , and the beginning of this joyful month, wherein so many days of feasting and thanksgiving were to be observed.
The joy of the Lord is your strength i.e. rejoicing in God in the manner prescribed in his word, or serving him with cheerfulness and thankfulness, which is your duty always, but now especially, will give you that strength both of mind and body which you greatly need, both to perform all the duties required of you, and to endure and oppose all the crafty counsels and malicious designs of your enemies against you; whereas this dejection of mind, and excessive grief, if you indulge it, will both offend God, and damp your spirits, and weaken your very bodies, and make you unfit for God’ s service, or for your own necessary occasions, and so an easy prey to your enemies.
Haydock -> Neh 8:10
Haydock: Neh 8:10 - -- Wine. Hebrew and Septuagint, "things." Syriac and Arabic have simply, "drink." ---
Portions. The Greeks styled them, Greek: merides; and the L...
Wine. Hebrew and Septuagint, "things." Syriac and Arabic have simply, "drink." ---
Portions. The Greeks styled them, Greek: merides; and the Latins, sportulæ. The custom prevailed not only among the Jews, (Esther ix. 19.) but also among Christians and pagans. Moses frequently exhorts the people to invite the poor; (Deuteronomy xvi. 14.) and St. Paul blames the rich Corinthians, for giving no part of their feast to them, 1 Corinthians xi. 21. ---
Strength. By this holy joy, we shall be encouraged to perform all our duties. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "Be not downcast, because he (the Lord) is our strength." (Haydock)
Gill -> Neh 8:10
Gill: Neh 8:10 - -- Then he said unto them,.... Nehemiah the Tirshatha or governor:
go your way; to their own houses, and refresh themselves; it being noon, and they h...
Then he said unto them,.... Nehemiah the Tirshatha or governor:
go your way; to their own houses, and refresh themselves; it being noon, and they had stood many hours attentive to the reading and expounding of the law:
eat the fat, and drink the sweet: not a common meal, but a feast, consisting of the richest provisions, the best of food and liquors
and send portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared; for the poor, who had no food at home provided for them; the widow, fatherless, and stranger, who at festivals were to partake of the entertainment, Deu 16:11
for this day is holy unto our Lord: neither be you sorry; confirming what the Levites had said and exhorted to, Neh 8:9
for the joy of the Lord is your strength; to rejoice, as the Lord commanded them on such days as these, was a means both of increasing their bodily strength and their inward strength, and of fitting them the more to perform their duty to God and men with cheerfulness, which sorrow and heaviness made unfit for; and the joy which has the Lord for its object, and comes from him, is the cause of renewing spiritual strength, so as to run and not be weary, walk and not faint, in the ways of God.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Neh 8:1-18
TSK Synopsis: Neh 8:1-18 - --1 The religious manner of reading and hearing the law.9 They comfort the people.13 The forwardness of them to hear and be instructed.16 They keep the ...
MHCC -> Neh 8:9-12
MHCC: Neh 8:9-12 - --It was a good sign that their hearts were tender, when they heard the words of the law. The people were to send portions to those for whom nothing was...
Matthew Henry -> Neh 8:9-12
Matthew Henry: Neh 8:9-12 - -- We may here observe, I. How the people were wounded with the words of the law that were read to them. The law works death, and speaks terror, shows ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Neh 8:9-12
Keil-Delitzsch: Neh 8:9-12 - --
The celebration of the feast of the new moon . - Neh 8:9 Then Nehemiah, theTirshatha (see remarks on Ezr 2:63), and the priest Ezra the scribe, and...
Constable: Neh 7:1--10:39 - --A. The Renewal of the Mosaic Covenant chs. 8-10
"The reading of Scripture (Neh 8) and the act of prayer ...

Constable: Neh 7:73--13:31 - --II. THE RESTORATION OF THE JEWS chs. 8--13
One writer viewed chapters 8-13 (really 7:73-13:37) as the third part...
