· Translation: KJV

Ezra 2:20The children of Gibbar, ninety-five.

The setting

Jerusalem, Israel, 538 BC. Scribes meticulously record each family returning from 70 years of Babylonian exile...

The emotion here: methodical reverence for preserving every faithful remnant

The original word

yeled (יֶלֶד) — children, descendants who carry the family name forward

Why it matters

Gibbar was likely a small clan that maintained their identity through 70 years of exile

Read with care

What most readers miss in Ezra 2:20

Every number represents families who refused to assimilate and disappear in Babylon

Common misconceptionPeople skip genealogies as boring, but this is actually a victory list - these 95 people chose God over comfort in Babylon.

Bible Genome reading

Ezra 2:20 — Bible Genome reading

SpeakerEzra
EraPost-Exile
Primary emotionresting
Literary typegenealogy

Emotional genome

Comfort power20%
Quotability10%
Memorability10%
Crisis relevance10%
Standalone20%
Themes:returnrestoration

In context

No verse stands alone.

Read the conversation around it.

Open Ezra 2

Ezra 2:20 comes from the book of Ezra, written during the Post-Exile period. These words are attributed to Ezra. The dominant emotion in this verse is resting, with a comfort power of 20% and a tone that is reflective. It belongs to the genealogy genre of biblical literature. Key themes include return, restoration. Notable phrases: children of Gibbar.

Your reflection

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