Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezra 9-10.
This Book of Ezra always troubles me because it seems to suggest that the Israelites should reject anyone not of their ancestry. Today’s passage discusses the reaction of the more devout among the returned exiles to those who had intermarried with the people around them. One could easily read it as condemning those who welcomed outsiders who wished to join the people of God. However, there are several reasons to realize that is not the message. The first reason is a couple of verses I maybe should have written about yesterday, Ezra 6:21. There, when the exiles celebrated the Passover it says, “So the Israelites who had returned from the exile ate it, together with all who had separated themselves from the unclean practices of their Gentile neighbors in order to seek the Lord, the God of Israel.” When they ate the Passover, they welcomed those who separated themselves from the practices of their Gentile neighbors. Another other reason is contained in Ezra’s prayer about the situation. When Ezra prays confessing this sin, and seeking God’s guidance on what to do about it, he says that they were intermarrying with people who commit detestable practices. The implication being that the people of God were taking wives who had not given up the practices which were incompatible with serving God, and were giving their daughters in marriage to men who were following those practices. The final reason to think that the problem with intermarrying was the idolatrous practices of those with whom they were marrying, rather than with them not being descendants of Israel, comes in the way they chose to implement the solution. Rather than lay out a blanket law that all of those who had married foreign wives must divorce them and send them away, they decided that those accused of having foreign wives would come before the elders on a case by case basis, and those who had intermarried would be required to send divorce their foreign wives and send them away. This reads to me that they were dealing with this on a case by case basis because some of those women whose families were not Jewish had separated themselves from the unclean practices in order to seek the Lord. Those who had done this were no longer considered foreign.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.