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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Nehemiah 3:15

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Nehemiah 3:15

But the gate of the fountain repaired Shallun the son of Col-hozeh, the ruler of part of Mizpah; he built it, and covered it, and set up the doors thereof, the locks thereof, and the bars thereof, and the wall of the pool of Siloah by the king’s garden, and unto the stairs that go down from the city of David.

15. But the gate of the fountain ] R.V. And the fountain gate. See Neh 2:14. According to the old view, Nehemiah’s description here passes over a considerable space (nearly half a mile in straight line) between the ‘dung gate’ and the ‘fountain gate.’ The omission is capable of being explained as due either to the omission of certain details, cf. Neh 3:11, or to the fact that the precipitous nature of the ground rendered little work necessary upon the southern wall. But it can hardly be accidental that a similar omission has to be understood in the other description of the wall’s circuit (ch. Neh 12:31; Neh 12:37). It seems reasonable to incline to the recent suggestion, that, ‘the valley’ of Neh 3:13, being the Tyropon, the circuit of the fortification wall did not include the Western Hill, but ran directly S. down the E. side of ‘the valley’ as far as ‘the dung gate’, when it began to deflect eastward.

Shallun ] The A.V. (1611) spelling ‘Shallum’ is perhaps due to Neh 3:12.

the ruler of part of Mizpah ] R.V. the ruler of the district of Mizpah. A distinction is drawn between the town of Mizpah and the adjacent district. Cf. ‘the district of Jerusalem,’ Neh 3:9 ; Neh 3:12. ‘The ruler of Mizpah’ itself is mentioned in Neh 3:19. See also on Neh 3:7.

covered it ] The word so rendered does not occur elsewhere in the Bible. The LXX. renders . It seems to correspond to the expression ‘laid the beams thereof’ in Neh 3:3; Neh 3:6.

and the wall of the pool of Siloah by the king’s garden ] R.V. And the wall of the pool of Shelah by the king’s garden. Marg. ‘In Isa 8:6, Shiloah ’. On Siloam (= Birket Silwn), cf. Joh 9:7. ‘The pool of Shelah,’ or of ‘leading,’ is fed by a subterranean channel leading from the Virgin’s Spring, distant 1708 feet, through the Ophel rock. The connexion was discovered by Sir Charles Warren. The tunnel is a remarkable piece of engineering. On the very ancient inscription describing its construction which was found in 1880, see Sayce’s Fresh Lights.

The pool here mentioned is probably the same as the lower pool, the modern ‘Birket el Hamra.’ The water from the pool flowed through ‘the king’s garden.’ The old city wall extended much further south than the modern city. The pool was formed by a heavy dam of masonry, probably part of the city wall. ‘The king’s garden’ is mentioned also in 2Ki 25:4; Jer 39:4; Jer 52:7. We cannot conclude for certain from this verse that it was included within the walls. But the water supply of the town depending largely upon the pool, the pool was probably enclosed by the wall. The double walls mentioned in 2Ki 25:4 probably protected both pool and gardens.

and unto the stairs, &c.] R.V. even unto the stairs, &c. These ‘stairs’ mark the limit of Shallum’s work in a northerly direction. The ‘stairs’ were the steps ascending the steep declivity of the ‘Ophel’ or southern spur of Mt. Zion, on the eastern side of the city, and leading to the ‘water gate’ mentioned in Neh 8:1; Neh 8:16, above ‘the house of David’ (see Neh 12:37). See Sayce, p. 87. ‘Remains of these stairs have been discovered by Schick and Guthe a little to the east of the Pool of Siloam, as well as a little to the south of the Virgin’s Spring (but within the line of the old wall), so that they must have run up the eastern slope of Zion, and ended not very far from the square in front of the watergate.’

from the city of David ] The ‘city of David’ was the name given to the fortress captured by David, known as Zion. Its locality has been much disputed. (1) General tradition has identified it with the southern extremity of the western hill; (2) recently Conder and Warren have assigned it to the northern elevated portion of the same hill; (3) there is, however, good reason for identifying it with ‘the Temple hill.’ This last view is favoured by the language of the O. T. associating Zion with the dwelling or Temple of Jehovah. The present context almost conclusively proves that the ‘city of David’ lay on the eastern or Temple Hill.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

The pool of Siloah lies at the southwestern foot of the temple hill, near the lower end of the Tyropoeon. It appears to have been at all times beyond the line of the city wall, but was perhaps joined to the city by a fortification of its own.

The kings gardens – See 2Ki 25:4 note.

The stairs – A flight of steps, still to be seen, led from the low valley of the Tyropoeon up the steep sides of Ophel to the city of David, which it reached probably at a point not far south of the temple.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Neh 3:15

By the kings garden.

The kings garden

There are six of these kings gardens to which I shall conduct you, but we shall not have time to tarry in more than one of them. I The garden of paradise, which was situate in the midst of Eden.


II.
The garden of Gethsemane..


III.
The garden of the burial and the resurrection.


IV.
The garden of the human heart. The heart is meant to be a garden for God. By nature it scarcely deserves the name; it is rather a tangled wilderness of all manner of noisome things. What must be done to this neglected garden? The rough plough of conviction must be dragged through it. The spade of trouble must break up the surface, and smash in pieces the clods, and kill the weeds. Into this prepared soil the Holy Spirit must put in the seeds of faith, and love and hope, and patience and perseverance, and zeal. Then there must be drained out of us much superfluity of naughtiness and excess of carnal confidence, or our heart will be a cold swamp, a worthless plant-killing bog. And in addition to all this, there must be constant hoeing and raking and digging. After a garden is made, the flower-beds are never left long alone; if they were left to themselves they would soon breed weeds again, and return to the old confusion. So with the garden of the heart, cleansing and pruning must be done every day, and God must do it through ourselves, and we must do it through constant examination and repentance.


V.
The garden of The Christian Church. Follow me in each word of the text.

1. What is it? A garden. So it is called in the book of Solomons Song. Many thoughts are gathered in that one metaphor like bees in a hive.

(1) It implies separation. I earnestly desire to see the wall of separation between the Church and the world made broader and stronger. Christians should always wear their regimentals as Christs soldiers. They are to go forth without the camp bearing His reproach. Be not conformed to this world.

(2) It is a place of order. You do not, when you go into a garden, find the plants arranged anyhow, but the wise gardener arranges them according to their tints and hues, so that in the midst of summer the garden shall look like a rainbow that has been broken to pieces and let down upon the earth. Let us all try to maintain order in all things as the servants of Christ. We seek not the order which consists in all sleeping in their places, like corpses in the catacombs, but we desire the order which finds all working in their places for the common cause of the Lord Jesus.

(3) A garden is a place of beauty. Such should the Christian Church be. If there be no holiness, no love, no zeal, no prayerfulness outside in the world, yet you should see these things in the Church.

(4) It is a place of growth.

(5) It is a place of retirement. When a man is in his garden, he does not expect to see all his customers walking down between the beds to do business with him. So the Lord Jesus would have us reserve the Church to be a place in which He can manifest Himself to us as He doth not to the world.

2. Whose is it? It is the Kings garden. He chose it for Himself. He bought it. What a nobility this gives to Christs Church?

3. What does it need?

(1) It requires labour. In every Church there should be–

(a) Planters. I had a letter last week from a young woman. She says she has been here for two years, that she has been very anxious about her soul, and she has often wished that somebody would speak to her, but nobody has done so. Somebody has been negligent, very negligent. We want planters who can get the young slips and put them where they will grow.

(b) Some to watch over those who are planted.

(c) Some to collect the straggling.

(d) Some to burn up the rubbish and sweep up the leaves. In the best Church there will always be some falling leaves. Whenever a brother sees any mischief he ought to sweep it up and say nothing about it. Whenever you find that such and such a brother is going a little amiss, talk to him quietly; do not spread it all over the Church and make jealousies and suspicions. Pick up the leaf and destroy it. When a brother member has offended you, so that you feel vexed, forgive him. If every one would seek to make peace, there never could be much accumulation of discord in the Kings garden to annoy Him.

(2) It wants new plants.

(3) It wants rain and sunshine; the dew of the Holy Spirit and the sunshine of the Divine favour.

4. What does it produce? Herein is My Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit.


VI.
The garden of the paradise above (Rev 22:1-5). (C. H. Spurgeon.)

The garden of the heart

Very often when I am going through a garden I come to some little bit marked off from the rest by a stick or a row of stones, and some lad or some little maiden comes running up; This is my garden, they say, my very own, to do whatever I like with. Now each of us has a garden, our very own, and yet it ought to be, and must be, the Kings garden. It is the garden of the heart.


I.
I should like you to remember that gardens are made out of waste places. We want our heart to be nice and kind, and like a kings garden ought to be; and we look at the brambles and the waste places, and fear sometimes that it never can be made into a garden. I never shall be good, you say; I never shall be like so-and-so. When I was a little boy I learnt drawing, and one day when I had tried again and again, and couldnt do it right, I flung down the pencil and said angrily, I never shall be able to draw. The master was a very and a very wise man. He laughed pleasantly, and said, Come–never is a long time. I couldnt draw any better than you can when I was your age. That put new life into me. He who could draw anything with his pencil, and could make it exactly right with just a touch–to think that once he could not draw any better than I could! I went at it again then, and never felt inclined to give up afterwards. And so with all good people that ever lived–their hearts were wild and waste before they became the Kings garden.


II.
Before the king can make a garden he must own the land. Jesus says to us, My son, give Me thine heart. He wants the heart, not because it is a garden, but that He may make a Kings garden of it.


III.
It must be cleared and planted. Ah, you say, this is hard work. The weeds will grow so fast when youve pulled them up. But suppose you could get some one to come and change the ground, so that instead of bringing forth weeds it should bring forth flowers and fruits. That is just what we can do. Jesus has come on purpose to create clean hearts.


IV.
We have to keep this garden for the king.

1. We must plant it well. The seed is the Word of God.

2. We must water it twice a day, and prayer is the watering.

3. We must watch against enemies.

When I was a boy we used to set little heaps of grains to attract the slugs and snails, and then creep out at night with a lantern and take these mischievous creatures, that otherwise would have spoiled all the fruit and many of the flowers. Take care of these, of habits that spoil all the fruit; of little neglects and forgetfulnesses that ruin the Kings garden. The peach-trees and plum-trees have a matting or net hung in front of them–in winter to keep off the frosts, or in summer to keep off the busy birds. We must be watchful against all things that hurt the Kings garden. We must be on our guard against bad companions, bad books, and bad influences of all kinds, and also of hasty words, thoughtless ways, and little harmful thoughts and feelings.


V.
If it be the kings garden the king himself will come to it. Cyrus used to say, I take so much interest in my garden because I have planted every plant, and have sown every seed in it. So it is that Jesus loves His garden. He turned it from a waste into a garden, and has sown the good seed and planted the trees. I have heard of a poor man who lived in a very poor cottage far away from everybody else. One day somebody called to see him and said, My friend, you must be very lonely here. Lonely! he replied, ah, so I might be, but Jesus is such blessed company! He had been walking in the Kings garden with the King, and this made him so happy. (Mark Guy Pearse.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 15. The pool of Siloah] This is probably the same as that mentioned by the evangelists.

The stairs that go down from the city of David.] Jerusalem being built on very uneven ground, and some hills being taken within the walls; there was a necessity that there should be in different places steps by which they could ascend and descend: probably similar to what we see in the city of Bristol.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

The wall of the pool of Siloah; that part of the wall which was directly against that pool.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

But the gate of the fountain,…. Of which see Ne 2:14

repaired Shallum, the son of Colhozeh, the ruler of part of Mizpah; of a tract, district, town, or city so called; perhaps that in the tribe of Benjamin; see Ne 3:7,

he built it, and covered it; roofed it, which is not said of any of the other gates, whether because of the fountain at it:

and set up the doors thereof, c. finished it completely:

and the wall of the pool of Siloah, by the king’s garden which was formerly without the wall, on the west, but afterwards taken in by Manasseh, who built it; see 2Ch 33:14, and from hence the king’s garden was watered:

and unto the stairs that go down from the city of David: Zion, which was built on an eminence, from which they went down by steps into the lower city Acra.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

The fountain-gate and a portion of wall adjoining it was repaired by Shallum the son of Col-hozeh, the ruler of the district of Mizpah. occurs again, Neh 11:5, apparently as the name of another individual. To is added , he covered it, from , to shade, to cover, answering to the of Neh 3:3 and Neh 3:6, probably to cover with a layer of beams. The position of the fountain-gate is apparent from the description of the adjoining length of wall which Shallum also repaired. This was “the wall of the pool of Shelach (Siloah) by the king’s garden, and unto the stairs that go down from the city of David.” The word recalls ; the pool of Shelach can be none other than the pool which received its water through the , i.e., mission ( aquae ). By the researches of Robinson ( Pal. ii. p. 148f.) and Tobler ( Die Siloahquelle u. der Oelberg, p. 6f.), it has been shown that the pool of Siloah receives its water from a subterranean conduit 1750 feet long, cut through the rock from the Fountain of the Virgin, Ain Sitti Miriam, on the eastern slope of Ophel. Near to the pool of Siloah, on the eastern declivity of Zion, just where the Tyropoean valley opens into the vale of Kidron, is found an old and larger pool ( Birket el Hamra), now covered with grass and trees, and choked with earth, called by Tobler the lower pool of Siloah, to distinguish it from the one still existing, which, because it lies north-west of the former, he calls the upper pool of Siloah. One of these pools of Siloah, probably the lower and larger, is certainly the king’s pool mentioned Neh 2:14, in the neighbourhood of which lay, towards the east and south-east, the king’s garden. The wall of the pool of Shelach need not have reached quite up to the pool, but may have gone along the edge of the south-eastern slope of Zion, at some distance therefrom. In considering the next particular following, ”unto the stairs that go down from the city of David,” we must turn our thoughts towards a locality somewhat to the north of this pool, the description now proceeding from the south-eastern corner of the wall northward. These stairs are not yet pointed out with certainty, unless perhaps some remains of them are preserved in the “length of rocky escarpment,” which Robinson ( Pal. ii. p. 102, and Biblical Researches, p. 247) remarked on the narrow ridge of the eastern slope of the hill of Zion, north of Siloam, at a distance of 960 feet from the present wall of the city, ”apparently the foundations of a wall or of some similar piece of building.”

(Note: Bertheau’s view, that these stairs were situated where Mount Zion, upon which stood the city of David, descends abruptly towards the east, and therefore on the precipice running from south to north, which still rises ninety-one feet above the ground northwards of the now so-called Bab el Mogharibeh or dung-gate, opposite the southern part of the west wall of the temple area, is decidedly incorrect. For this place is two thousand feet, i.e., more than one thousand cubits, distant from the pool of Siloah, while our text places them immediately after the length of wall by this pool. The transposition of these “steps” to a position within the present wall of the city is, in Bertheau’s case, connected with the erroneous notion that the fountain-gate (Neh 3:15 and Neh 2:14) stood on the site of the present dung-gate ( Bab el Mogharibeh), for which no other reason appears than the assumption that the southern wall of the city of David, before the captivity, went over Zion, in the same direction as the southern wall of modern Jerusalem, only perhaps in a rather more southerly direction, – an assumption shown to be erroneous, even by the circumstance that in this case the sepulchres of David, Solomon, and the kings of Judah would have stood outside the city wall, on the southern part of Zion; while, according to the Scripture narrative, David, Solomon, and the kings of Judah were buried in the city of David (1Ki 2:10; 1Ki 11:42; 1Ki 14:31; 1Ki 15:8, and elsewhere). But apart from this consideration, this hypothesis is shattered by the statements of this fifteenth verse, which Bertheau cannot explain so inconsistently with the other statements concerning the building of the wall, as to make them say that any one coming from the west and going round by the south of the city towards the east, would first arrive at the fountain-gate, and then at the portion of wall in question; but is obliged to explain, so that the chief work, the building of the fountain-gate, is mentioned first; then the slighter work, the reparation of a length of wall as supplementary; and this makes the localities enumerated in Neh 3:13 succeed each other in the following order, in a direction from the west by south and east towards the north: “Valley-gate – one thousand cubits of wall as far as the dung-gate; dung-gate – the wall of the conduit towards the king’s garden, as far as the stairs which lead from the city of David – fountain-gate.” No adequate reason for this transposition of the text is afforded by the circumstance that no portion of wall is mentioned (Neh 3:14 and Neh 3:15) as being repaired between the dung-gate and the valley-gate. For how do we know that this portion on the southern side of Zion was broken down and needing repair? Might not the length between these two gates have been left standing when the city was burnt by the Chaldeans?)

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

(15) He covered it.Similar to laid the beams in Neh. 3:3; Neh. 3:6.

The pool of Siloah.Called before the kings pool, which received its water as sent through a long subterranean conduit, and supplied the kings gardens.

The stairs.Down the steep sides of Ophel, of which traces are thought still to remain. From this point it is very hard to trace the exact course.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

15. The gate of the fountain Situated near the southeastern corner of the city, and near the pool of Siloam, from which, perhaps, it took its name. See note, Neh 2:14.

Covered it An expression used of no other gate. It suggests that this gate had received a more architectural finish or broader covering than others.

Wall of the pool This may mean the wall by which the pool itself was stoned up or inclosed, or it may mean the city wall opposite or nearest to the pool.

Siloah , hashelach, the sent; compare Joh 9:7, note. The pool probably received this name from the fact that its waters are sent down to it through a subterranean aqueduct from another pool higher up in the Kedron valley. Josephus describes the pool of Siloam as situated at the mouth of the Tyropoeon valley, (Neh 5:4) and there can be no doubt of its identity with the Siloah of this text, and the Shiloah of Isa 8:6, the Siloam of Joh 9:7, and the cistern still known by the same name at the southeast of Jerusalem.

By the king’s garden This lay at the mouth of the Tyropoeon, and stretched off in terraces down into the Kedron valley below. The water of Siloam runs off and is lost in this garden. The king’s garden probably extended some distance down the Kedron valley beyond its junction with the valley of Hinnom. Robinson speaks of “the small oblong plain there formed,” as now “covered with an olive grove, and with the traces of former gardens extending down the valley from the present gardens of Siloam. Indeed, this whole spot is the prettiest and most fertile around Jerusalem.”

The stairs that go down from the city of David Tristram identifies these stairs with a series of steps recently discovered at the southwest corner of Zion, but the order followed by the sacred writer should lead us rather to look for them on the eastern side of Zion, leading down towards the pool of Siloam. Their exact locality, however, is doubtful.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘And Shallun the son of Col-hozeh, the ruler of the district of Mizpah, repaired the fountain gate. He built it, and covered it, and set up its doors, its bolts and its bar, and the wall of the pool of Shelah by the king’s garden, even to the stairs that go down from the city of David.’

The section after the Dung Gate was repaired by Shallun, ruler of the district of Mizpah, along with his helpers. This included the Fountain or Spring Gate which was fairly close to the Dung Gate, and was fully repaired. Also within his responsibility was the wall of the Pool of Shelah by the King’s Garden, as far as the stairs that go down from the city of David. Two gates close together (the Dung Gate and the Fountain Gate) were necessary because one was for the disposal of rubbish, whilst the other was by the King’s Garden, and led down to a water supply, possibly the King’s Pool (Neh 2:14).

The Pool of Shelah may well be the same as the Pool of Shiloah (Isa 8:6; the consonants are the same), possibly also the Pool of Siloam, and ‘the upper pool’ (2Ki 18:17; Isa 7:3; Isa 36:2). It was within the walls, and supplied by Hezekiah’s tunnel (2Ki 20:20), but watered the King’s Garden, possibly situated on the hillside leading down from the gate, by means of a conduit as the water also supplied the King’s Pool. It was by this conduit that the Assyrian generals stood as they addressed the inhabitants of the city (2Ki 18:17), possibly on the stairs that go down from the city of David, which may have led to this pool. The geography is not, however, certain.

‘Ruler of Mizpah.’ Compare Neh 3:19 where Ezer is also ruler of Mizpah. But this is not difficult to understand for there were a number of Mizpahs, which simply means ‘watchtower’. The main Mizpah was a Benjamite city north of Jerusalem, near Gibeon and Ramah and it was where Gedaliah, the governor appointed by Nebuchadnezzar after the destruction of Jerusalem, ruled and was assassinated (2Ki 25:22-26; Jer 40:6; Jer 41:1-2). There was another Mizpah in the Shephelah not far from Lachish (see Jos 15:38-39). Alternately one may have ruled the city of Mizpah, while the other ruled the surrounding district, also called Mizpah.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Neh 3:15 But the gate of the fountain repaired Shallun the son of Colhozeh, the ruler of part of Mizpah; he built it, and covered it, and set up the doors thereof, the locks thereof, and the bars thereof, and the wall of the pool of Siloah by the king’s garden, and unto the stairs that go down from the city of David.

Ver. 15. He built it, and covered it ] A Chaldee word. This people, in their captivity, though they had not lost the use of their native tongue, yet they had got a tincture of the Chaldee; and of the Hebrew and Chaldee came the Syriac, the mother tongue in Christ’s time, as appears by Talitha cumi, and other like passages.

And unto the stairs ] By these David descended into the lower city, and suitors ascended to his palace. This is allegorically applied by some to Christ (the true Jacob’s ladder, Joh 1:51 ), who came down and humbled himself to the utmost; that we by him might have access, with success, in all our suits.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Neh 3:15

15Shallum the son of Col-hozeh, the official of the district of Mizpah, repaired the Fountain Gate. He built it, covered it and hung its doors with its bolts and its bars, and the wall of the Pool of Shelah at the king’s garden as far as the steps that descend from the city of David.

Neh 3:15 mizpah The name (BDB 859) means watchtower and is used of several sites in Palestine. This is possibly the one in the tribal allocation of Judah (cf. Jos 15:38) or the one in Benjamin (cf. Jos 18:26). The one in Benjamin is the one mentioned most in the OT (location is uncertain, but probably the height five miles north of Jerusalem.

covered it Apparently the gates had some type of roof. In Neh 3:3; Neh 3:6, beams refers to roof beams.

the Pool of Shelah at the King’s Garden Many believe this to be the Pool of Siloam, which was in the most southern end of the walled city. Its water came from a water channel cut through rock from the Gihom spring outside the walls during Hezekiah’s reign (701 B.C.).

the steps that descend from the city of David David captured the heights of Jebus (later Jerusalem) and made it his city. It encompassed several hills. The walls were placed on the sides of the hills, part way from the bottom. Later as the city grew a suburb to the north developed outside the wall.

Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley

gate. See App-59.

Siloah = sent. See Joh 5:1, Joh 5:2. Compare Joh 9:7 At south-east corner of Ophel.

king’s garden. See 2Ki 25:4.

stairs. On east side of the city. This fixes the site of Zion. See note on first occurrence (2Sa 5:7). Compare Neh 12:37. Discovered by Dr. Bliss, Quarterly Statement, Palestine Exploration Fund, Jan., 1897.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Neh 3:15-27

Neh 3:15-27

REGARDING THE WALL INCLUDING THE FOUNTAIN GATE

“And the fountain gate repaired Shellun the son of Colhozeh, the ruler of the district of Mizpah; he built it, and covered it, and set up the doors thereof, the bolts thereof, and the bars thereof, and the wall by the pool of Shelab by the king’s garden even unto the stairs that go down from the city of David. After him repaired Nehemiah the son of Azbuk, the ruler of half the district of Beth-zur, unto the place over against the sepulchres of David, and unto the pool that was made, and unto the house of the mighty men. After him repaired the Levites, Rehum the son of Bani. Next unto him repaired Hashabiah, the ruler of the district of Keilah, for his district. After him repaired their brethren, Bavvai the son of Henadad, the ruler of half the district of Keilah. And next to him repaired Ezer the son of Jeshua, the ruler of Mizpah, another portion, over against the ascent to the armory at the turning of the wall. After him Baruch the son of Zabbai earnestly repaired another portion, from the turning of the wall to the door of the house of Eliashib the High Priest. After him repaired Meremoth the son of Uriah the son of Hakkoz another portion, from the door of house of Eliashib even to the end of the house of Eliashib. And after him repaired the priests, the men of the Plain. And after them repaired Benjamin and Hasshub over against their house. After them repaired Azariah the son of Maaseiah the son of Ananiah beside his own house. After him repaired Binnui the son of Henadad another portion, from the house of Azariah unto the turning of the wall, and unto the corner. Palal the son of Uzai repaired over against the turning of the wall, and the tower that standeth out from the upper house of the king, which is by the court of the guard. After him Pedaiah the son of Parosh repaired. (Now the Nethinim dwelt in Ophel, unto the place over against the water gate toward the east, and the tower that standeth out.) After him, the Tekoites repaired another portion, over against the great tower that standeth out, and unto the wall of Ophel.”

It is significant that many of the prominent citizens of Jerusaelm, whose houses were near the wall, elected to repair that section of the wall that was beside their: houses. This is easily understood, because their own personal safety and security were thus procured and protected.

The exact locations and extent of each one of these various “repairs,” although unknown to us, and vigorously disputed as to details by special scholars in the topography of ancient Jerusalem, are nevertheless of little interest to present day Christians. The big point in all of this is simply that the total population of Judah and Jerusalem enthusiastically joined hands and hearts and re-fortified the ancient city. No doubt, those walls were finished, during the period when Sanballat and Tobiah were either sending someone, or going themselves to see Artaxerxes I in the hope of stopping it. Such a journey, round trip, would have taken at least six or eight months; and long prior to that, the walls were completed, the great gates rebuilt, the bolts and the bars put in place, and the city secured by the military. What a magnificent achievement!

E.M. Zerr:

Neh 3:15. This fountain is referred to in Neh 2:14.’ It was a place of much water for Nehemiah’s horse could not pass over the spot. A gate was to be built there and the work was in charge of Shallum. This man was another ruler of the vicinity of Mizpah. Siloa is another form of “Siloam,” and we recall that a pool was at that place (Joh 9:7). The king also had a garden near the spot, and in connection with all these interesting things were some steps constructed leading from the district of Jerusalem called Zion or the city of David. The part of the wall enclosing all these objects was in charge of this same man, Shallum.

Neh 3:16. The name Nehemiah is a coincidence with the author of this book. He was another one of the kind of rulers that means men of influence. His territory was half of the town of Beth-zur. His work on the wall reached from that of Shallum to the part of the city where the burial ground of David was. His span of the work also passed the pool (2Ki 20:20), and the house of the mighty, which was an arsenal.

Neh 3:17. The two Levites were Rehum and Hashabiah. The last named was another ruler, or man of personal influence, and his part of the territory for such prestige was half of the town of Keilah.

Neh 3:18. Bavai was the ruler having the other half of Keilah. He and several others named in the chapter were Levites.

Neh 3:19. Another piece means another section of the wall. Armoury is from NESHEQ and Strong defines it, “military equipment, i. e. (collectively) arms (offensive or defensive), or (concretely) an arsenal.” Turning of the wall means the corner of it. This man repaired that part of the wall that went near the arsenal and on to the corner of the enclosure of the city.

Neh 3:20. Baruch had a section of the wall beginning at the corner that we have just turned, and reaching as far as the opening made for the house of the high priest.

Neh 3:21. The house of the high priest would certainly not be of excessive length. Yet Meremoth was assigned only that much of the wall as reached from the door of this house to the end of it.

Neh 3:22. The priests who worked on this job were the ones of the descendants of Aaron who were eligible for the office. There were a great many of them by this time. Not all who were thus qualified were in active priestly service, but all of them would be called priests as regards the work on the wall. However, the unit of these priests who worked on this section of the wall were the ones from a distinct locality called the plain. The singular pronoun is used when we know that a number of men worked. That is because each group would be under the foremanship of one man.

Neh 3:23. The three men named in this verse lived near the wall and they were assigned the section nearest their homes. That was not only a gracious provision, but it enabled them to lose less time getting to their work. It was necessary for them to go to their houses occasionally (Neh 4:23).

Neh 3:24. Certain men had homes near the wall, and their houses were used as the marking place of beginning of some section of the wall. Binnui had the section extending from the spot near the home of Azariah to the next corner of the structure.

Neh 3:25. This section was repaired by two men, and the part of their assignment began just at the corner that was left by Bennui, and extended past one of the towers described previously. This tower was especially important, because it overlooked the house of the king that was near the prison.

Neh 3:26. The Nethinims were a class of servants that originated in the days of Solomon. The objects that located the section assigned to them were, one of the gates and one of the towers referred to above. This particular tower was for the defense of this water gate, and it was on the east side of the city.

Neh 3:27. Ophel was a ridge of ground inside Jerusalem, and it was the site of certain dwellings. Wall of Ophel just means that part of the wall reaching that far. The Tekoites were inhabitants of Tekoa.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

the gate: Neh 2:14, Neh 12:37, 2Ch 32:30

the ruler: Neh 3:9, Neh 3:12, Neh 3:14

Mizpah: Neh 3:7, Jdg 20:1, Jdg 20:3, Mizpeh, Jer 40:6

Siloah: Siloah was situated under the eastern wall of Jerusalem, between that city and the brook Kedron, and is described by Chateaubriand as lying at the foot of Mount Zion. Dr. Richardson represents the pool of Siloam as occurring higher up the valley of Jehoshaphat, towards the north, than the well of Nehemiah, a little beyond the village of Siloa, and nearly opposite the tombs of Jehoshaphat and Zechariah. Isa 8:6, Shiloah, Luk 13:4, Joh 9:7, Siloam

the stairs: 2Sa 5:6, 2Sa 5:7

Reciprocal: 2Ki 9:13 – on the top Neh 3:19 – Mizpah Neh 11:5 – Colhozeh

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge