Nehemiah 7:73b--8:18 · Ezra Reads the Law
Light from the Word
Nehemiah 7:73b--8:18
Sermon
by Harry N. Huxhold
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In the Sundays of the Epiphany we are reminded in our worship how God continually reveals God’s Person. That, of course, is done most clearly in the Person of our Lord Jesus Christ, who came to be one of us. Today the emphasis of the Lessons is on how God is revealed in the Word. In the Holy Gospel, Jesus himself points out how he is revealed in the word, or the word is revealed in him, but the people do not seem to understand. That is always a problem in communication. The words can be ever so clear, but do people get the message? Jeff Shesol deals with this problem in his book Mutual Contempt, a study of the tensions between President Lyndon Johnson and the Attorney General Robert Kennedy. The problems began with Kennedy’s questioning the advisability of bringing Johnson along as a vice-presidential candidate with his brother Jack as presidential candidate. The jockeying for position and efforts to find common ground led Robert Kennedy to believe that Johnson was an inveterate liar. Johnson and his followers, on the other hand, thought of Johnson as a mediator and an excellent negotiator.

Robert continued to grow in his antagonism toward Johnson for many reasons. When Johnson did serve as Vice President, President Kennedy did ask him to chair a committee dealing with civil rights. At the time Mr. Johnson’s committee had no legislation to back them up, but did rely on companies which held government contracts to follow guidelines for the hiring of African-Americans. Both Robert and Jack Kennedy showed impatience that not more was being done. The Vice President kept pointing to the fact that no law was in place for them to enforce a policy for hiring. The problem was always whether people believed the word or not. The problem continues to this day. Since then there has been considerable legislation to protect civil rights. Yet the problem is whether the legislation is enforced or not. It is one thing to communicate the intent of the word of the law, but the problem is whether people understand, observe, or obey or not. That is what today’s Lessons are about. The First Lesson from the book of Nehemiah relates what Ezra and Nehemiah did about bringing the matter of the word of God to the attention of the people.

The Context

The Lesson is taken from the book of Nehemiah. The books of Ezra and Nehemiah are accounts of the return of Jewish exiles to Jerusalem from Babylonia. Originally the books were known as 1 and 2 Ezra, based on the memoirs and the records of both Ezra and Nehemiah. There has been some effort to prove that Ezra was the author of both books. However, it is more likely that neither Ezra nor Nehemiah were the author of either book. There is no evidence that Ezra and Nehemiah ever met in their roles as leading the returned exiles to rebuild the holy city of Jerusalem. Nehemiah is a layman and a eunuch who had served as cupbearer in the court of Artaxerxes at Susa. Ezra is a scribe who develops a strong leadership role for his people. Each of the men were involved in leading groups of their people from Babylon to Jerusalem.

The return of the exiles occurred in stages over a long period of time lasting some one hundred years. The first return of exiles was in 538 B.C. under Cyrus. There was an attempt to rebuild the Temple, but it was not completed because of opposition. The Temple was rebuilt with encouragement from the prophets Haggai and Zechariah at the time of the second return of exiles about the year 520 B.C. In the next generation it was Ezra who led some of the exiles back to the holy city. Then, probably a whole generation later, Nehemiah led exiles back to their homeland. The task for the leaders who brought back the people was not only to inspire them to return but then also to give them encouragement to get the people to organize themselves, rebuild the city, and establish themselves as the people of God once more. What we have before us today in the First Lesson is an account of how Ezra organized the people to share with them the word of God for the formation of their lives together.

The Task

What we have is the record of how the people met together for the reading of the word from God. We are not sure how the books of Ezra were originally organized chronologically, so even though this text is found in what appears to be the memoirs of Nehemiah, the story’s central character is Ezra. We read that it was in the beginning of the month of Tishri when this took place, for them possibly the beginning of a new year, an ideal time to begin anew. That would be late September or early October on our calendar. It was the people who organized themselves and requested that Ezra come and read “the book of the law of Moses, which the Lord had given to Israel.” We cannot be sure of how much of the “book of the law of Moses” was meant. We know that it was not in book form as we see things printed out, but the book was a scroll that had to be unrolled in order to make the point. How much scroll had to be read is debatable. The term “law” in the Hebrew Scriptures normally is generic for the whole of God’s revelations. Or it could be that only Deuteronomy was read. It has also been suggested that portions of the Scriptures were read with interpretations or additions that fit the situation in which the Jerusalem population found itself.

As it was, the people of Jerusalem found themselves at a crucial moment in their history. It must have been at least 800 years since their forefathers, released from bondage in Egypt, had received the covenant from God through the Mediator Moses at Mount Sinai. For forty years their ancestors were providently cared for in the wilderness and moved into the Promised Land of Canaan. They occupied, conquered, and settled that land and eventually created a glorious monarchy that thrived under the administration of an outstanding king by the name of David. Tragically the kingdom involved itself in civil war that divided the kingdom into the Northern Kingdom of Israel and the Southern Kingdom of Judah. In time the infidelity and idolatries in the Northern Kingdom led to its downfall in 722 B.C. The Assyrians ravaged the nation and carried the ten tribes of the North into captivity and scattered them to the four corners of the earth never to return. Judah, the Southern Kingdom, suffered defeat and exile to Babylonia in 586 B.C. Now in this slow recovery of the population through four different returning groups, the people of Jerusalem had to regroup and decide about their future.

The Word

The people gathered in the city square early in the morning to hear the priest Ezra read the word to them. They remained until noon, which means that the reading took about six hours. The situation was reminiscent of when Moses read the Law to the people before they entered into the Promised Land. That we know as Deuteronomy, which means the Second Giving of the Law. Ezra’s reading was a repetition once more of giving of the Law as a way for God to make a claim on this people. The Hebrew understanding of a reading of the Law as the word of God was that one should relate to it as though it were being read for the first time. That is to say, the reading of the word would have the same effect or power as though God were revealing it in its initial or pristine form. This was not second hand stuff. The word Ezra was reading to the people was as lively, active, and effective as the word Moses had read to the people eight hundred years before and as King Josiah had the law read to the people in his efforts to instill spiritual reforms in his day.

It is important for us to have the same kind of understanding of the use of the word in our day. Ezra knew that the assemblage of the people of Jerusalem around the word of God was essential if they were to define themselves as the people of God once more. The people could attempt all kinds of social reforms and struggle with the actual rebuilding of their city in vain if they did not acknowledge their history and tradition as the people of God. That, too, would be in vain if they did not live under the same covenant, the same promises, and the same rule of God which had shaped the history of their forbears. Here was the moment in which they could experience God’s presence in and among them. They would be confronted in the same manner as we hear in the Holy Gospel that the people of Nazareth were confronted by Jesus. When Jesus read the word of God to them from the Prophet Isaiah, Jesus said to them, “Today the Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” For the people in the synagogue in Nazareth this was a dramatic modeling of what is always going on in the word. God is always present in the word to confront us.

The Reaction

The reaction of the people is that there was mourning and weeping. Before we ask ourselves what this public lamenting meant, we should take note of the fact that this assemblage was constituted of both men and women. What is noteworthy of that is not that the scene was the more emotional because of the presence of women. The Hebrew Scriptures do not reserve emotional reactions to women. Weeping is as much a male trait as it is a female trait. What is important to recognize is that normally it was not required of the women to take part in the religious ceremonies. That was a must only for the men. Here both the people and Ezra apparently want to make a new start at things and involve everyone. The intention was that these people did not want to let happen to them what had taken place in the lives of their ancestors to bring on them the shame and pain of the exile. No doubt their weeping and their mourning at the reading of the word was to recognize that the exile could have been avoided if only the people had trusted the word of the Lord who had covenanted with them.

The reaction of tears and mourning must have been a mixed reaction of the people. On the one hand, there must have been a great deal of guilt that was followed by a genuine sense of repentance for the previous indifference to the word of God. On the other hand, there had to be great deal of joy when the people also learned that God was a gracious and forgiving God who had not only not given up on them but who still wanted them as God’s own. All of that had to be tempered by a grim determination of the people not to repeat the sordid history of the unbelief, the indifference to the word, and the outright idolatry. The people did affirm what they heard of the word of God. They responded with the spontaneous but liturgical amens, which meant that they were in agreement with what they heard. They lifted their hands as a sign of agreement with what they heard from on high. What was most important, “Then they bowed their heads and worshiped the Lord with their faces to the ground.” These acts of worship would indicate more than contrition, but also adoration of God that was prompted by their humility and faith before him.

The Feast

Ezra himself must have been moved by the reaction of the people. He was touched by the fact that they were prompted to tears and that they did respond in an affirmative manner. In turn, Ezra announced to the people, “This day is holy to the Lord your God; do not mourn or weep.” By this Ezra indicated to the people that their affirmation of what had been read to them was the kind of response God was looking for. God accepted their confession as making the covenant between God and people secure and effective for them. They did not have to mourn or weep but rather they could get about the business of making the covenant alive and real in their lives. In other words, Ezra was pleased that he could see good results to the effort that had been made to have the people understand the kind of mutual claim that God and people had on one another. Interpreters cite this occasion as the beginning of Judaism. This was the start of recognizing that the unique role the people of the former Southern Kingdom would have to play in the family of nations was to behave and define themselves as the people of God, the chosen ones.

Ezra also added that the people could celebrate what had transpired between them and God. He urged them, “Go your way, eat the fat, and drink sweet wine, and send portions to those for whom nothing is prepared, for this day is holy to your Lord; and do not be grieved, for the joy of the Lord is your strength.” The people could celebrate the goodness of the Lord. Typically a feast is the occasion in which we not only taste of the good things before us, but also we discover a deepening of our sense of community. We all know those times when we have felt spent in giving strict attention to a learning experience of a lecture, seminar or special meeting. Then the meal afterwards becomes more than an occasion for relaxation and refreshment. The meal becomes a communion, the meeting of hearts, minds, and spirit, as people share together in the fraternity of a meal.

A Call For Faith

It is very important for us to catch the flavor of what Ezra was doing for the people on this important occasion. There are many interpreters who fault Ezra for the creation of Judaism as a provincial, exclusive, and legalistic version of the Hebrew faith. They point to his ruling that the Jews should not marry outside the faith as typical of this narrow view of the faith. That would be unfair to the larger task which Ezra performed, which was to get the people to return to the faith as well as to interpret and to practice the faith. Our story mentions over and over again that all this was done with interpretation and that the Levites were given the assignment of helping the people to understand all that was involved. Ezra saw his task as beginning back on square one to get people to appreciate the special place they had in the heart and the mind of God.

We in America should have a sympathetic understanding of what Ezra was trying to do. We have all kinds of people stressing the fact that we as a people need to recapture what it means to be American. Educators, politicians, pastors, professionals, talk show hosts and hostesses, and business men regularly talk about recapturing values and of redeveloping the cultural awareness that made our nation great. That often means going back into our history to examine what a makes frontier nation great. As Christians we should always be about that task. As Ezra called the people back to the covenant, we need to rehearse the gospel of salvation over and over again in our worship, be given to the study of God’s word so that we can apply it, and be regularly in communion with one another at the Lord’s feast. Our Lord Jesus Christ not only made that necessary for us by his own exemplary life but also he is the fulfillment of the covenant Ezra shared with the people. Jesus died and rose again, so that the covenant is for real for us by the manner in which he comes to us, which is through the word and sacraments. He is even more. He not only fulfills the word, but he is the interpretation of it. He is the one who gives light through the word.

CSS Publishing Company, The Presence in the Promise, by Harry N. Huxhold