II Esdras = IV Esdras

Full title
II Esdras = IV Esdras
Research notes

MB/not checked/20/03/2024

Reference type
Author(s)
Myers, Jacob M
Year
1974
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Anchor Yale Bible Commentary
Series Title
I and II Esdras: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary
Publisher
Yale University Press
Place of Publication
New Haven
Pages
107-354
Work type
Abstract

Written about 10 BC, I Esdras is a history ranging from the pious reign of Josiah to the religious reforms of Ezra. For this period Josephus follows I Esdras in his antiquities of the Jews.

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An apocalyptic work, written 250 years later, II Esdras seeks to offer strength, courage, and hope to those whose faith was severely shaken in the gloom and despondency that followed upon the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70. Its chief purpose was to inspire trust in God and the ultimate triumph of righteousness, if not in this world, then in the world to come. “Tracts for the times such as II Esdras,” writes Jacob M. Myers in his preface, “have a message for us who in a revolutionary age are obsessed with the impatience reflected by Ezra; it was not that he lacked faith in God but that he, like Job, questioned his ways and the delay, perhaps seeming inactivity, in the face of what appeared to the prophet to be terrible urgencies. The questions posed are still asked in the context of our age.”

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Eight photographs of ancient Near Eastern sculpture and coins help the reader visualize both the events recounted in I Esdras and the apocalyptic imagery in II Esdras. Each book has its own introduction and bibliography.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
Composition / Author
Composition / Author