Bible Commentary

Ezra 2:64

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezra 2:64

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The whole congregation together was forty and two thousand three hundred and threescore. Ezra's numbers, as given in detail (verses 3-60), produce when added together a total of only 29,818; Nehemiah's items () give a total of 31,089; those of the apocryphal Esdras a total of 33,950.

The three authorities agree, however, in their summation, all alike declaring that the actual number of those who returned with Zerubbabel was 42,360. Esdras adds that children under twelve years of age are not included.

If this were so, the entire number must have exceeded 50,000—an enormous body of persons to transport a distance of above a thousand miles, according to Western experience, but one which will not surprise those acquainted with the East.

In the East caravans of from ten to twenty thousand souls often traverse huge distances without serious mishap, and migrations frequently take place on a much grander scale. In the year 1771, 50,000 families of Torgouths, reckoned to number 300,000 souls, arrived on the frontiers of China, after a journey of 10,000 leagues through a most difficult country, and were given lands in the Chinese empire.

They were followed in the next year by 180,000 Eleuths and others, who had accomplished a similar distance. Jenghis Khan is said to have forced 100,000 artisans and craftsmen to emigrate in a body from Khiva into Mongolia.

The transplantation of entire nations was an established practice among the Assyrians, Babylonians, and Persians.

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commentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Ezra 2:1-70Men forsaking the worldly life. We regard the people returning from Babylon as typical of men going out of the worldly life into the life and work of the kingdom of God. Observe— I. THAT MEN FORSAKE THE WORLDLY LIFE FRO…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Ezra 2:1-67Spiritual significances. What signifies to us, it may be asked, the exact number of the children of Parosh and Shephatiah (Ezra 2:3, Ezra 2:4)? What does it signify to us that the heads of the returning families bore su…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Ezra 2:1-67EXPOSITION THE NUMBER OF THOSE WHO RETURNED FROM CAPTIVITY WITH ZERUBBABEL, AND THE NAMES OF THE CHIEFS (Ezra 2:1-64). It has been argued that the whole of this chapter is out of place here, and has been transferred hit…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Ezra 2:1-67The muster-roll. The last chapter gave us a catalogue of the sacred vessels returned. In that portion of the present chapter which concludes with the above verses we have a similar catalogue of the sacred people returne…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryMatthew Henry on Ezra 2:64-70Let 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 added unto them. Their offerings were nothing, compared with the offeri…Matthew HenrycommentaryMatthew Henry on Ezra 2:64-70Here 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 that there were above 12,000 that come out into any of those accounts,…Matthew Henry