Ezra 10:36Vaniah, Meremoth, Eliashib,
The setting
Jerusalem, 458 BC. The reading continues. More names, more families. Each name took months to investigate and decide. Modern-day Jerusalem, Israel.
The emotion here: methodically documenting heartbreaking but necessary separations
The original word
badal (בָּדַל) — to separate, divide, the same word used when God separated light from darkness
Why it matters
This process took three months - they didn't rush these life-changing decisions
Read with care
What most readers miss in Ezra 10:36
These weren't quick divorces - each case was carefully examined by a council of elders
Common misconceptionPeople think these men were heartless. The careful, months-long process shows they agonized over these decisions - obedience to God was costly, not easy.
The thread continues
Verses that echo Ezra 10:36
Bible Genome reading
Ezra 10:36 — Bible Genome reading
Emotional genome
Ezra 10:36 comes from the book of Ezra, written during the Post-Exile period. These words are attributed to Narrator. The dominant emotion in this verse is grieving, with a comfort power of 20% and a tone that is reflective. It belongs to the genealogy genre of biblical literature. Key themes include repentance, family restoration. Notable phrases: Vaniah; Eliashib.
Emotionally similar
Verses that meet the same grieving
“By the sweat of your face will you eat bread until you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken. For you are dust, and to dust you…”
— Genesis 3:19
“Jesus wept.”
— John 11:35
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from helping me, and from the words of my groaning?”
— Psalms 22:1
“They divide my garments among them. They cast lots for my clothing.”
— Psalms 22:18
“for all have sinned, and fall short of the glory of God;”
— Romans 3:23
Your reflection
What does Ezra 10:36 mean to you, today?
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