Lesson 308: NEHEMIAH REBUILDS THE WALLS
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- Oct 6
- 1 min read
Neh. 1; 2; 4:1-18; 6:15-16
Full Lesson HERE
INTRODUCTION. When Cyrus, king of the Medo-Persian Empire, conquered
Babylon in 539 B. C., he issued a decree allowing the deported peoples throughout
his empire to return to their homelands. The first group of Jews to return to Palestine
was led by Zerubbabel, a descendant of David. The main purpose of this return,
besides resettling the land, was to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem. Cyrus gave to
these returning exiles 5400 vessels of gold and silver that Nebuchadnezzar had
taken from the temple and put in the house of his gods in Babylon. The new (second)
temple was completed and dedicated to God in 515 B. C. (Ezra 1; 6:15).
A second group of Jews returned to Palestine in 458 B. C. The leader of this second
return was Ezra, a scribe and descendant of Aaron. Ezra had set his heart to seek
the Lord, and his mission was to teach the laws and statutes to the Jews who had
returned to Palestine (Ezra 7:1-10).
In 445 B. C., in the twentieth year of the reign of the Persian king Artaxerxes,
Nehemiah, a Jew and high official in the king's court, learned that conditions back in
Jerusalem were deplorable–the people were in great affliction and the walls of the city
broken down. The king appointed Nehemiah as governor of Judah and gave him
permission to lead a third group of Jews back to Jerusalem with the authority to
rebuild the walls of the city (Neh. 1-2:8; 5:14).

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