character profile

Biblical Profile: Ezra

By Tyndale House PublishersSource: Content from Tyndale Open Study Notes (https://www.tyndaleopenresources.com). Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/).320 words

Ezra

Ezra was a priest and scribe of the high-priestly line of Zadok (Ezra 7:1-5, 11-12; cp. Neh 8:2, 9). He was a leader in Judah following the Jews’ return from exile. As a scribe, Ezra was not just a copyist but a disciplined student of God’s laws (Ezra 7:6) who was qualified to teach, preach, and interpret the Scriptures.

As an important official who assisted the king with Jewish affairs in the Persian Empire, Ezra visited Jerusalem around 458 BC, bringing articles for the Temple and the mission of establishing God’s laws and the laws of Persia. One of his first reforms was to confront the sin of intermarriage with pagan neighbors (9:1–10:44). Later, after the city walls were rebuilt in 445 BC (Neh 6:15), Ezra led the community to obey God’s law more fully (Neh 8:13-15).

Ezra honored God through his handling of finances. The Persian king trusted Ezra’s judgment and allowed him to ask for more money when needed (Ezra 7:15-20). Ezra gave others the responsibility for financial affairs whenever he could and required strict financial integrity (8:24-30). He identified certain financial resources as holy and belonging to God.

Ezra humbled himself before God when the people began their journey (8:21-23), when he found out about the people’s unholy marriages (9:5-15), and when he gathered those required to divorce their pagan wives (10:6). He always recognized that God’s gracious hand—not his own ability or wisdom—enabled good things to happen (7:6, 9, 28; 8:18, 22, 31; 9:8-9). He studied and lived by God’s Word and taught others to follow what God revealed (7:10). He was a teacher and servant-leader, not a self-important official who lorded it over other people.

Ezra’s piety and dedication, demonstrated through prayer and fasting, put his reforming zeal in proper spiritual perspective. He set the pattern for life in the postexilic Jewish community, making God’s Word and worship central priorities.

Passages for Further Study

Ezra 7:1–10:44; Neh 8:1-18; 12:1, 26, 36

Topics & Themes

Scripture References

More Illustrations for Ezra 7:1-10:44

1 more illustration anchored to this passage

Related Illustrations

👤character profileUniversal

Biblical Profile: Eleazar

Eleazar Eleazar was the third son of Aaron, the first high priest (Exod 6:23). Eleazar’s two older brothers, Nadab and Abihu, offended God by offering incense in a different way than what God had com

biblical_peoplefaithcovenantNumbers 26:1-26:4
👤character profileUniversal

Biblical Profile: Rachel

Rachel Rachel, Laban’s beautiful younger daughter, was Jacob’s favorite wife. He first met her as he arrived at Paddan-aram in Haran, when he helped her remove the stone from a well and watered her f

biblical_peoplegraceGenesis 29:6-30:26
👤character profileUniversal

Biblical Profile: Joshua

Joshua Joshua, son of Nun, was Moses’ assistant and successor as Israel’s leader. Joshua brought the young nation across the Jordan River into the Promised Land of Canaan, faithfully following God’s

biblical_peoplesalvationfaithJoshua 1:1-24:33
👤character profileUniversal

Biblical Profile: Aaron

Aaron Moses’ older brother, Aaron (see Exod 6:20; 7:7), played a crucial role in founding Israel and its institutions, particularly the priesthood. He first appears after Moses’ calling at the burnin

biblical_peoplecovenantholinessExodus 4:14-4:16
👤character profileUniversal

Biblical Profile: The Son of Man

The Son of Man The Hebrew and Aramaic idiom “son of man” simply means “human being.” But the majestic yet humble figure in Daniel 7:13-14, who is “like a son of man”—meaning that he looked like a man

biblical_peoplecovenantholinessDaniel 7:13-7:14
👤character profileUniversal

Biblical Profile: Zadok

Zadok Zadok was an important transitional figure in the history of Israel’s priesthood. Since he seemingly appears out of nowhere in the narrative of 2 Samuel (8:17), some scholars suggest that he wa

biblical_peoplefaithprophecy2 Samuel 8:17