Nehemiah 5:1-8

1 A great protest was mounted by the people, including the wives, against their fellow Jews.
2 Some said, "We have big families, and we need food just to survive."
3 Others said, "We're having to mortgage our fields and vineyards and homes to get enough grain to keep from starving."
4 And others said, "We're having to borrow money to pay the royal tax on our fields and vineyards.
5 Look: We're the same flesh and blood as our brothers here; our children are just as good as theirs. Yet here we are having to sell our children off as slaves - some of our daughters have already been sold - and we can't do anything about it because our fields and vineyards are owned by somebody else."
6 I got really angry when I heard their protest and complaints.
7 After thinking it over, I called the nobles and officials on the carpet. I said, "Each one of you is gouging his brother."
8 I told them, "We did everything we could to buy back our Jewish brothers who had to sell themselves as slaves to foreigners. And now you're selling these same brothers back into debt slavery! Does that mean that we have to buy them back again?" They said nothing. What could they say?

Nehemiah 5:1-8 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO EZRA 5

In this chapter is a complaint of the poor against the rich for oppression of them, Ne 5:1-5 for which Nehemiah being angry, reproved them, and made them promise, and swear to it, to make restitution, Ne 5:6-13 and set them an example himself, taking nothing of them during his twelve years' government, supporting himself and his at his own expenses, Ne 5:14-19.

Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.