Nehemiah10
Signatories of the Covenant
The Community Joins the Oath
Vows Regarding Social and Economic Life
Vows Regarding Temple Support and Offerings
Study Notes for Nehemiah 10
Verse 1
Nehemiah, the governor (Tirshatha), heads the list, emphasizing the official nature and civil authority behind this renewed covenant. The sealing process formally ratifies the public commitment made by the community in the preceding chapter (Nehemiah 9).
Verse 8
This verse concludes the list of the twenty-one priestly families who sealed the document, representing the formal consensus of the religious leadership.
Verse 28
This section highlights that the commitment was not limited to the leadership (vv. 1–27), but included the entire population—Levites, Temple servants, and all those who had separated themselves from foreign groups to adhere to the Law.
Verse 29
Entering into a 'curse and into an oath' meant invoking divine judgment upon themselves if they failed to keep the Mosaic Law. This solemn action stresses the gravity and binding nature of their public commitment to complete obedience.
Verse 30
This vow addresses the crucial issue of mixed marriages, identified in Ezra and Nehemiah as the primary threat to Israel's ethnic and religious purity after the return from Babylonian exile.
Verse 31
The commitment to strict Sabbath observance (no buying/selling) and the Sabbatical Year (debt cancellation and resting the land) demonstrates a renewed adherence to the core economic justice demands of the Torah (Exod 23:10-11; Deut 15:1-2).
Verse 32
This ordinance established a fixed annual temple tax (a third of a shekel), slightly less than the half-shekel mandated in the wilderness (Exod 30:13). This tax ensured necessary funds for the continuous function and maintenance of the sacrificial system.
Verse 34
The 'wood offering' was essential for keeping the altar fire burning continually for the burnt offerings. Casting lots ensured that this necessary but burdensome task of supplying fuel was shared equitably among the families.
Verse 37
This verse clarifies the essential mechanism of financial support: firstfruits (dough, wine, oil) supported the priests in the Temple chambers, while the tithes were distributed to the Levites in the surrounding agricultural towns.
Verse 38
This mandates the 'tithe of the tithe,' requiring the Levites to give 10% of the tithes they received back to the priests (the sons of Aaron). This ensured the integrity of the Temple treasury and supported the high-ranking religious officials.
Verse 39
The chapter concludes with a powerful theological declaration: the fulfillment of these financial and ceremonial obligations is directly tied to national faithfulness. To support the Temple is to commit, 'we will not forsake the house of our God.'