Holy Lit: The Bible

162 | Ezra's commission (Ezra 7-8)

13 min · 19 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio 162 | Ezra's commission (Ezra 7-8)

Descripción

It’s the fifth century BCE—most likely 458 BC—and the Persian Empire stretches from the borders of India all the way west to the shores of the Aegean Sea. Jerusalem, once the capital of the kingdom of Judah, had been destroyed by the Babylonians about a hundred and twenty years earlier, its people scattered, its Temple reduced to rubble. But things have been changing. Cyrus the Great conquered Babylon decades ago, and under Persian rule a first wave of Jewish exiles was allowed to return home. By the time our story opens, the Temple has actually been rebuilt—completed around 516 BC—but the people, their laws, their spiritual life? That’s another story entirely. Source: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PJSl_-tSdXuD24-a_MmHrBU-K3sKtuxX/view?usp=sharing

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177 episodios

Portada del episodio 166 | Social reforms (Nehemiah 5)

166 | Social reforms (Nehemiah 5)

We're in Jerusalem around 445 to 444 BCE. The walls of the city have been in ruin for over a century and a half — ever since the Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem in 586 BCE. The Second Temple had been rebuilt decades before Nehemiah arrives, and the city was inhabited, but the walls were still rubble and the city was still exposed to attack. Then Nehemiah arrives. He's a Jewish official serving as cupbearer to the Persian king Artaxerxes I — a position of high trust and direct access to the king, but one he shared with other senior officials, not the sole confidant. He gets permission and funding to go back and rebuild the walls. And for the first four chapters of this book, that's what he does — organizing the people, dealing with hostile neighbors, keeping the work going under threat of attack. Source: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1cChSMMrBpNSFbsMRPCNmse_Ne2z6TDV5/view

Ayer15 min
Portada del episodio 162 | Ezra's commission (Ezra 7-8)

162 | Ezra's commission (Ezra 7-8)

It’s the fifth century BCE—most likely 458 BC—and the Persian Empire stretches from the borders of India all the way west to the shores of the Aegean Sea. Jerusalem, once the capital of the kingdom of Judah, had been destroyed by the Babylonians about a hundred and twenty years earlier, its people scattered, its Temple reduced to rubble. But things have been changing. Cyrus the Great conquered Babylon decades ago, and under Persian rule a first wave of Jewish exiles was allowed to return home. By the time our story opens, the Temple has actually been rebuilt—completed around 516 BC—but the people, their laws, their spiritual life? That’s another story entirely. Source: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PJSl_-tSdXuD24-a_MmHrBU-K3sKtuxX/view?usp=sharing

19 de jun de 202613 min