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Smith's Bible Dictionary.pdf - Online Christian Library

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<strong>Smith's</strong> <strong>Bible</strong> <strong>Dictionary</strong><br />

•Son of Hachaliah, and apparently of the tribe of Judah. All that we know certainly concerning him<br />

is contained in the book which bears his name. We first find him at Shushan, the winter residence<br />

of the kings of Persia, in high office as the cupbearer of King Artaxerxes Longimanus. In the<br />

twentieth year of the king’s reign, i.e. B.C. 445, certain Jews arrived from Judea, and gave<br />

Nehemiah a deplorable account of the state of Jerusalem. He immediately conceived the idea of<br />

going to Jerusalem to endeavor to better their state, and obtained the king’s consent to his mission.<br />

Having received his appointment as governor of Judea, he started upon his journey, being under<br />

promise to return to Persia within a given time. Nehemiah’s great work was rebuilding, for the<br />

first time since their destruction by Nebuzar-adan, the walls of Jerusalem, and restoring that city<br />

to its former state and dignity as a fortified town. To this great object therefore Nehemiah directed<br />

his whole energies without an hour’s unnecessary delay. In a wonderfully short time the walls<br />

seemed to emerge from the heaps of burnt rubbish, end to encircle the city as in the days of old.<br />

It soon became apparent how wisely Nehemiah had acted in hastening on the work. On his very<br />

first arrival, as governor, Sanballat and Tobiah had given unequivocal proof of their mortification<br />

at his appointment; but when the restoration was seen to be rapidly progressing, their indignation<br />

knew no bounds. They made a great conspiracy to fall upon the builders with an armed force and<br />

put a stop to the undertaking. The project was defeated by the vigilance and prudence of Nehemiah.<br />

Various stratagems were then resorted to get Nehemiah away from Jerusalem and if possible to<br />

take his life; but that which most nearly succeeded was the attempt to bring him into suspicion<br />

with the king of Persia, as if he intended to set himself up as an independent king as soon as the<br />

walls were completed. The artful letter of Sanballat so-far wrought upon Artaxerxes that he issued<br />

a decree stopping the work till further orders. If is probable that at the same time he recalled<br />

Nehemiah, or perhaps his leave of absence had previously expired. But after a delay, perhaps of<br />

several years he was permitted to return to Jerusalem land to crown his work by repairing the<br />

temple and dedicating the walls. During his government Nehemiah firmly repressed the exactions<br />

of the nobles and the usury of the rich, and rescued the poor Jews from spoliation and slavery. He<br />

refused to receive his lawful allowance as governor from the people, in consideration of their<br />

poverty, during the whole twelve years that he was in office but kept at his own charge a table for<br />

150 Jews, at which any who returned from captivity were welcome. He made most careful provision<br />

for the maintenance of the ministering priests and Levites and for the due and constant celebration<br />

of divine worship. He insisted upon the sanctity of the precincts of the temple being preserved<br />

inviolable, and peremptorily ejected the powerful Tobiah from one of the chambers which Eliashib<br />

had assigned to him. With no less firmness and impartiality he expelled from all sacred functions<br />

those of the high priest’s family who had contracted heathen marriages, and rebuked and punished<br />

those of the common people who had likewise intermarried with foreigners; and lastly, he provided<br />

for keeping holy the Sabbath day, which was shamefully profaned by many both Jews and foreign<br />

merchants, and by his resolute conduct succeeded in repressing the lawless traffic on the day of<br />

rest. Beyond the thirty-second year of Artaxerxes, to which Nehemiah’s own narrative leads us,<br />

we have no account of him whatever.<br />

•One of the leaders of the first expedition from Babylon to Jerusalem under Zerabbabel. (Ezra 2:2;<br />

Nehemiah 7:7)<br />

•Son of Azbuk and ruler of the half part of Beth-zur, who helped to repair the wall of Jerusalem.<br />

(Nehemiah 3:18)<br />

Nehemiah, The Book Of<br />

488<br />

William Smith

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