the Third Week after Easter
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Sagradas Escrituras
Esdras 6:22
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- CondensedParallel Translations
Y con gozo celebraron por siete días la fiesta de los panes sin levadura, porque el Señor los había llenado de regocijo, y había vuelto hacia ellos el corazón del rey de Asiria para animarlos en la obra de la casa de Dios, el Dios de Israel.
Y celebraron la solemnidad de los panes �zimos siete d�as con regocijo, por cuanto Jehov� los hab�a alegrado, y convertido el coraz�n del rey de Asiria � ellos, para esforzar sus manos en la obra de la casa de Dios, del Dios de Israel.
Y durante siete d�as con regocijo celebraron la fiesta de los panes sin levadura, porque Jehov� los hab�a alegrado, y hab�a vuelto el coraz�n del rey de Asiria hacia ellos, para esforzar sus manos en la obra de la casa de Dios, del Dios de Israel.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
the feast: Exodus 12:15-20, Exodus 13:6, Exodus 13:7, 2 Chronicles 30:21, 2 Chronicles 35:17, Matthew 26:17, 1 Corinthians 5:7, 1 Corinthians 5:8
turned: Ezra 7:27, Proverbs 16:7, Proverbs 21:1, John 19:11
the king: Darius, as reigning over the country of Assyria, is here called "the king of Assyria." Ezra 6:6-12, Ezra 1:1, 2 Kings 23:29, 2 Chronicles 33:11, Zechariah 10:10, Zechariah 10:11
Reciprocal: Judges 7:11 - thine hands 2 Chronicles 29:36 - Hezekiah rejoiced Ezra 6:16 - with joy Ezra 7:6 - according to Ezra 9:1 - have not separated Nehemiah 2:8 - the king Nehemiah 2:18 - So they strengthened Job 4:3 - and thou hast Jeremiah 30:19 - out Jeremiah 31:13 - for Jeremiah 33:11 - the voice of them Ezekiel 23:23 - the Assyrians
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And kept the feast of unleavened bread seven days with joy,.... Which immediately followed upon the passover, Exodus 12:18,
for the Lord had made them joyful; the building of the temple being finished, and the service of it restored to its original purity;
and turned the heart of the king of Assyria unto them, to strengthen their hands in the work of the house of God, the God of Israel; by giving them leave to go on in building the temple, and by encouraging and assisting them in it till they had finished it; this was Darius Artaxerxes, who, though called king of Persia, was also king of Assyria, being possessed of the Assyrian monarchy, as his predecessors were upon the taking of Babylon, and the same is therefore called also the king of Babylon, Nehemiah 13:6. God, the God of Israel, who has the hearts of all men in his hands, and so the hearts of kings, and can turn them at his pleasure, inclined his heart to do them good, which was matter of joy unto them, see Ezra 7:27.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
The king of Assyria - i. e., Darius. Assyria had so long been the great monarchy of western Asia that the sacred writers continue the title to those who had inherited the old Assyrian power, as first to the Babylonians 2 Kings 23:29, and secondly to the Persians. With similar inexactness we find Herodotus calling Cyrus “king of the Medes.”
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Ezra 6:22. Turned the heart of the king of Assyria — I am of Calmet's mind, that king of Assyria is here put for king of Persia. Cyrus and his successors possessed all the rights and estates of the ancient kings of Assyria, and therefore the same monarch may be styled king of Assyria as well as king of Persia.
DARIUS had a very high character, as a wise, just, and merciful prince. To strengthen his title to the crown, he married two of the daughters of Cyrus, and, no doubt, to show his affection to this family, he the more cheerfully confirmed the edict which Cyrus had made in favour of the Jews.