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Ezra-Nehemiah: Retrograde Revolution

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Ezra-Nehemiah: Retrograde Revolution offers a rich exploration of one of the Bible’s pivotal, yet often overlooked books. It chronicles the return of the Jewish people from Babylonian exile and their efforts to rebuild not only Jerusalem, but also their identity, worship, and covenantal life. With historical depth, this book illuminates the Persian-era context and the challenges of post-exilic restoration, including political instability, social stratification, and religious renewal. 

Culturally, it examines the tension between maintaining distinctiveness and engaging with surrounding influences — struggle still relevant in modern Jewish life. Theologically, it delves into themes of divine providence, communal repentance, Torah centrality, and covenantal responsibility. Readers are invited to reflect on enduring issues such as leadership, assimilation, collective memory, and the role of sacred texts in shaping ethical and spiritual resilience. 

Grounded in rigorous scholarship yet written with accessibility, this book bridges ancient text and contemporary application, offering insight for scholars, students, and anyone seeking to understand how Ezra and Nehemiah continue to speak to the heart of Jewish continuity and renewal.

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Description

In 539 BCE Cyrus the Great writes an edict allowing the Jews who had been exiled by the former Neo-Babylonian empire to return to Jerusalem and rebuild their temple. Many remain behind in Babylon, but some Jews pick up and return, and thus begins sefer Ezra-Nehemiah. What follows are the twists and turns of what becomes known as the Period of Restoration in Israel. The period is remarkable, and teeming with potential, but it is also fraught with unprecedented challenges. The ways in which the Jewish community and its leaders contend with those challenges make up the bulk of the sefer. But, as with all historiographical works in Tanakh, the events of the period aren’t simply chronicled. Language, genres, motifs, and personalities are carefully curated to persuade the reader of the sefer’s unique ideology and worldview.

Ezra-Nehemiah takes its readers on a literary tour of 6th-5th century Judea, an era in which cohesiveness among fragmented Jewish communities was being tested, the parameters of Jewish identity were being re-assessed, political tact was being learned by necessity, and Biblical literacy was at long last, becoming the centerpiece of the Jewish community. In a sefer that feels more timely than ever, modern students of Ezra-Nehemiah are likely to learn as much about the times through which they are living, as they are about the trailblazers of their past.