The 2nd Book of Esdras - complete text
The Second Book of Esdras
Chapter 1
The second book of
the prophet Esdras, the son of Saraias, the son of Azarias, the son
of Helchias, the son of Sadamias, the sou of Sadoc, the son of
Achitob, The son of Achias, the son of Phinees, the son of Heli, the
son of Amarias, the son of Aziei, the son of Marimoth, the son of And
he spake unto the of Borith, the son of Abisei, the son of Phinees,
the son of Eleazar, The son of Aaron, of the tribe of Levi; which was
captive in the land of the Medes, in the reign of Artexerxes king of
the Persians.
And the word of the
Lord came unto me, saying, Go thy way, and shew my people their
sinful deeds, and their children their wickedness which they have
done against me; that they may tell their children’s children:
Because the sins of their fathers are increased in them: for they
have forgotten me, and have offered unto strange gods.
Am not I even he
that brought them out of the land of Egypt, from the house of
bondage? but they have provoked me unto wrath, and despised my
counsels.
Pull thou off then
the hair of thy head, and cast all evil upon them, for they have not
been obedient unto my law, but it is a rebellious people.
How long shall I
forbear them, into whom I have done so much good?
Many kings have I
destroyed for their sakes; Pharaoh with his servants and all his
power have I smitten down.
All the nations have
I destroyed before them, and in the east I have scattered the people
of two provinces, even of Tyrus and Sidon, and have slain all their
enemies.
Speak thou therefore
unto them, saying, Thus saith the Lord, I led you through the sea and
in the beginning gave you a large and safe passage; I gave you Moses
for a leader, and Aaron for a priest.
I gave you light in
a pillar of fire, and great wonders have I done among you; yet have
ye forgotten me, saith the Lord.
Thus saith the
Almighty Lord, The quails were as a token to you; I gave you tents
for your safeguard: nevertheless ye murmured there, And triumphed not
in my name for the destruction of your enemies, but ever to this day
do ye yet murmur.
Where are the
benefits that I have done for you? when ye were hungry and thirsty in
the wilderness, did ye not cry unto me, Saying, Why hast thou brought
us into this wilderness to kill us? it had been better for us to have
served the Egyptians, than to die in this wilderness.
Then had I pity upon
your mournings, and gave you manna to eat; so ye did eat angels’
bread.
When ye were
thirsty, did I not cleave the rock, and waters flowed out to your
fill? for the heat I covered you with the leaves of the trees.
I divided among you
a fruitful land, I cast out the Canaanites, the Pherezites, and the
Philistines, before you: what shall I yet do more for you? saith the
Lord.
Thus saith the
Almighty Lord, When ye were in the wilderness, in the river of the
Amorites, being athirst, and blaspheming my name, I gave you not fire
for your blasphemies, but cast a tree in the water, and made the
river sweet.
What shall I do unto
thee, O Jacob? thou, Juda, wouldest not obey me: I will turn me to
other nations, and unto those will I give my name, that they may keep
my statutes.
Seeing ye have
forsaken me, I will forsake you also; when ye desire me to be
gracious unto you, I shall have no mercy upon you.
Whensoever ye shall
call upon me, I will not hear you: for ye have defiled your hands
with blood, and your feet are swift to commit manslaughter.
Ye have not as it
were forsaken me, but your own selves, saith the Lord.
Thus saith the
Almighty Lord, Have I not prayed you as a father his sons, as a
mother her daughters, and a nurse her young babes, That ye would be
my people, and I should be your God; that ye would be my children,
and I should be your father?
I gathered you
together, as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings: but now,
what shall I do unto you?
I will cast you out
from my face.
When ye offer unto
me, I will turn my face from you: for your solemn feastdays, your new
moons, and your circumcisions, have I forsaken.
I sent unto you my
servants the prophets, whom ye have taken and slain, and torn their
bodies in pieces, whose blood I will require of your hands, saith the
Lord.
Thus saith the
Almighty Lord, Your house is desolate, I will cast you out as the
wind doth stubble. And your children shall not be fruitful; for they
have despised my commandment, and done the thing that is an evil
before me.
Your houses will I
give to a people that shall come; which not having heard of me yet
shall believe me; to whom I have shewed no signs, yet they shall do
that I have commanded them.
They have seen no
prophets, yet they shall call their sins to remembrance, and
acknowledge them.
I take to witness
the grace of the people to come, whose little ones rejoice in
gladness: and though they have not seen me with bodily eyes, yet in
spirit they believe the thing that I say.
And now, brother,
behold what glory; and see the people that come from the east: Unto
whom I will give for leaders, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, Oseas, Amos,
and Micheas, Joel, Abdias, and Jonas, Nahum, and Abacuc, Sophonias,
Aggeus, Zachary, and Malachy, which is called also an angel of the
Lord. (II Esdras 1:1-40 [KJVA])
Chapter 2
Thus saith the Lord,
I brought this people out of bondage, and I gave them my commandments
by menservants the prophets; whom they would not hear, but despised
my counsels.
The mother that bare
them saith unto them, Go your way, ye children; for I am a widow and
forsaken.
I brought you up
with gladness; but with sorrow and heaviness have I lost you: for ye
have sinned before the Lord your God, and done that thing that is
evil before him.
But what shall I now
do unto you?
I am a widow and
forsaken: go your way, O my children, and ask mercy of the Lord.
As for me, O father,
I call upon thee for a witness over the mother of these children,
which would not keep my covenant, That thou bring them to confusion,
and their mother to a spoil, that there may be no offspring of them.
Let them be
scattered abroad among the heathen, let their names be put out of the
earth: for they have despised my covenant.
Woe be unto thee,
Assur, thou that hidest the unrighteous in thee!
O thou wicked
people, remember what I did unto Sodom and Gomorrha; Whose land lieth
in clods of pitch and heaps of ashes: even so also will I do unto
them that hear me not, saith the Almighty Lord.
Thus saith the Lord
unto Esdras, Tell my people that I will give them the kingdom of
Jerusalem, which I would have given unto Israel.
Their glory also
will I take unto me, and give these the everlasting tabernacles,
which I had prepared for them.
They shall have the
tree of life for an ointment of sweet savour; they shall neither
labour, nor be weary.
Go, and ye shall
receive: pray for few days unto you, that they may be shortened: the
kingdom is already prepared for you: watch.
Take heaven and
earth to witness; for I have broken the evil in pieces, and created
the good: for I live, saith the Lord.
Mother, embrace thy
children, and bring them up with gladness, make their feet as fast as
a pillar: for I have chosen thee, saith the Lord.
And those that be
dead will I raise up again from their places, and bring them out of
the graves: for I have known my name in Israel.
Fear not, thou
mother of the children: for I have chosen thee, saith the Lord.
For thy help will I
send my servants Esau and Jeremy, after whose counsel I have
sanctified and prepared for thee twelve trees laden with divers
fruits, And as many fountains flowing with milk and honey, and seven
mighty mountains, whereupon there grow roses and lilies, whereby I
will fill thy children with joy.
Do right to the
widow, judge for the fatherless, give to the poor, defend the orphan,
clothe the naked, Heal the broken and the weak, laugh not a lame man
to scorn, defend the maimed, and let the blind man come into the
sight of my clearness.
Keep the old and
young within thy walls.
Wheresoever thou
findest the dead, take them and bury them, and I will give thee the
first place in my resurrection.
Abide still, O my
people, and take thy rest, for thy quietness still come. Nourish thy
children, O thou good nurse; stablish their feet.
As for the servants
whom I have given thee, there shall not one of them perish; for I
will require them from among thy number.
Be not weary: for
when the day of trouble and heaviness cometh, others shall weep and
be sorrowful, but thou shalt be merry and have abundance.
The heathen shall
envy thee, but they shall be able to do nothing against thee, saith
the Lord.
My hands shall cover
thee, so that thy children shall not see hell.
Be joyful, O thou
mother, with thy children; for I will deliver thee, saith the Lord.
Remember thy
children that sleep, for I shall bring them out of the sides of the
earth, and shew mercy unto them: for I am merciful, saith the Lord
Almighty.
Embrace thy children
until I come and shew mercy unto them: for my wells run over, and my
grace shall not fail.
I Esdras received a
charge of the Lord upon the mount Oreb, that I should go unto Israel;
but when I came unto them, they set me at nought, and despised the
commandment of the Lord.
And therefore I say
unto you, O ye heathen, that hear and understand, look for your
Shepherd, he shall give you everlasting rest; for he is nigh at hand,
that shall come in the end of the world.
Be ready to the
reward of the kingdom, for the everlasting light shall shine upon you
for evermore. Flee the shadow of this world, receive the joyfulness
of your glory: I testify my Saviour openly. O receive the gift that
is given you, and be glad, giving thanks unto him that hath led you
to the heavenly kingdom.
Arise up and stand,
behold the number of those that be sealed in the feast of the Lord;
Which are departed from the shadow of the world, and have received
glorious garments of the Lord.
Take thy number, O
Sion, and shut up those of thine that are clothed in white, which
have fulfilled the law of the Lord.
The number of thy
children, whom thou longedst for, is fulfilled: beseech the power of
the Lord, that thy people, which have been called from the beginning,
may be hallowed.
I Esdras saw upon
the mount Sion a great people, whom I could not number, and they all
praised the Lord with songs.
And in the midst of
them there was a young man of a high stature, taller than all the
rest, and upon every one of their heads he set crowns, and was more
exalted; which I marvelled at greatly.
So I asked the
angel, and said, Sir, what are these?
He answered and said
unto me, These be they that have put off the mortal clothing, and put
on the immortal, and have confessed the name of God: now are they
crowned, and receive palms.
Then said I unto the
angel, What young person is it that crowneth them, and giveth them
palms in their hands?
So he answered and
said unto me, It is the Son of God, whom they have confessed in the
world. Then began I greatly to commend them that stood so stiffly for
the name of the Lord.
Then the angel said
unto me, Go thy way, and tell my people what manner of things, and
how great wonders of the Lord thy God, thou hast seen. (II Esdras
2:1-48 [KJVA])
Chapter 3
In the thirtieth
year after the ruin of the city I was in Babylon, and lay troubled
upon my bed, and my thoughts came up over my heart: For I saw the
desolation of Sion, and the wealth of them that dwelt at Babylon.
And my spirit was
sore moved, so that I began to speak words full of fear to the most
High, and said, O Lord, who bearest rule, thou spakest at the
beginning, when thou didst plant the earth, and that thyself alone,
and commandedst the people, And gavest a body unto Adam without soul,
which was the workmanship of thine hands, and didst breathe into him
the breath of life, and he was made living before thee.
And thou leadest him
into paradise, which thy right hand had planted, before ever the
earth came forward.
And unto him thou
gavest commandment to love thy way: which he transgressed, and
immediately thou appointedst death in him and in his generations, of
whom came nations, tribes, people, and kindreds, out of number.
And every people
walked after their own will, and did wonderful things before thee,
and despised thy commandments.
And again in process
of time thou broughtest the flood upon those that dwelt in the world,
and destroyedst them.
And it came to pass
in every of them, that as death was to Adam, so was the flood to
these. Nevertheless one of them thou leftest, namely, Noah with his
household, of whom came all righteous men.
And it happened,
that when they that dwelt upon the earth began to multiply, and had
gotten them many children, and were a great people, they began again
to be more ungodly than the first.
Now when they lived
so wickedly before thee, thou didst choose thee a man from among
them, whose name was Abraham.
Him thou lovedst,
and unto him only thou shewedst thy will: And madest an everlasting
covenant with him, promising him that thou wouldest never forsake his
seed.
And unto him thou
gavest Isaac, and unto Isaac also thou gavest Jacob and Esau.
As for Jacob, thou
didst choose him to thee, and put by Esau: and so Jacob became a
great multitude.
And it came to pass,
that when thou leadest his seed out of Egypt, thou broughtest them up
to the mount Sinai.
And bowing the
heavens, thou didst set fast the earth, movedst the whole world, and
madest the depths to tremble, and troubledst the men of that age.
And thy glory went
through four gates, of fire, and of earthquake, and of wind, and of
cold; that thou mightest give the law unto the seed of Jacob, and
diligence unto the generation of Israel.
And yet tookest thou
not away from them a wicked heart, that thy law might bring forth
fruit in them.
For the first Adam
bearing a wicked heart transgressed, and was overcome; and so be all
they that are born of him.
Thus infirmity was
made permanent; and the law (also) in the heart of the people with
the malignity of the root; so that the good departed away, and the
evil abode still.
So the times passed
away, and the years were brought to an end: then didst thou raise
thee up a servant, called David: Whom thou commandedst to build a
city unto thy name, and to offer incense and oblations unto thee
therein.
When this was done
many years, then they that inhabited the city forsook thee, And in
all things did even as Adam and all his generations had done: for
they also had a wicked heart: And so thou gavest thy city over into
the hands of thine enemies.
Are their deeds then
any better that inhabit Babylon, that they should therefore have the
dominion over Sion?
For when I came
thither, and had seen impieties without number, then my soul saw many
evildoers in this thirtieth year, so that my heart failed me.
For I have seen how
thou sufferest them sinning, and hast spared wicked doers: and hast
destroyed thy people, and hast preserved thine enemies, and hast not
signified it.
I do not remember
how this way may be left: Are they then of Babylon better than they
of Sion?
Or is there any
other people that knoweth thee beside Israel?
Or what generation
hath so believed thy covenants as Jacob?
And yet their reward
appeareth not, and their labour hath no fruit: for I have gone here
and there through the heathen, and I see that they flow in wealth,
and think not upon thy commandments. Weigh thou therefore our
wickedness now in the balance, and their’s also that dwell the
world; and so shall thy name no where be found but in Israel.
Or when was it that
they which dwell upon the earth have not sinned in thy sight?
Or what people have
so kept thy commandments?
Thou shalt find that
Israel by name hath kept thy precepts; but not the heathen. (II
Esdras 3:1-36 [KJVA])
Chapter 4
And the angel that
was sent unto me, whose name was Uriel, gave me an answer, And said,
Thy heart hath gone to far in this world, and thinkest thou to
comprehend the way of the most High?
Then said I, Yea, my lord.
And he answered me,
and said, I am sent to shew thee three ways, and to set forth three
similitudes before thee:
Whereof if thou canst declare me one, I will
shew thee also the way that thou desirest to see, and I shall shew
thee from whence the wicked heart cometh.
And I said, Tell on,
my lord.
Then said he unto
me, Go thy way, weigh me the weight of the fire, or measure me the
blast of the wind, or call me again the day that is past.
Then answered I and
said, What man is able to do that, that thou shouldest ask such
things of me? And he said unto me, If I should ask thee how great
dwellings are in the midst of the sea, or how many springs are in the
beginning of the deep, or how many springs are above the firmament,
or which are the outgoings of paradise:
Peradventure thou wouldest
say unto me, I never went down into the deep, nor as yet into hell,
neither did I ever climb up into heaven.
Nevertheless now
have I asked thee but only of the fire and wind, and of the day
where through thou hast passed, and of things from which thou canst
not be separated, and yet canst thou give me no answer of them.
He said moreover
unto me, Thine own things, and such as are grown up with thee, canst
thou not know;
How should thy vessel then be able to comprehend the
way of the Highest, and, the world being now outwardly corrupted to
understand the corruption that is evident in my sight?
Then said I unto
him, It were better that we were not at all, than that we should live
still in wickedness, and to suffer, and not to know wherefore.
He answered me, and
said, I went into a forest into a plain, and the trees took counsel,
And said, Come, let us go and make war against the sea that it may
depart away before us, and that we may make us more woods.
The floods of the
sea also in like manner took counsel, and said, Come, let us go up
and subdue the woods of the plain, that there also we may make us
another country.
The thought of the
wood was in vain, for the fire came and consumed it.
The thought of the
floods of the sea came likewise to nought, for the sand stood up and
stopped them.
If thou wert judge
now betwixt these two, whom wouldest thou begin to justify?
Or whom wouldest
thou condemn?
I answered and said,
Verily it is a foolish thought that they both have devised, for the
ground is given unto the wood, and the sea also hath his place to
bear his floods.
Then answered he me,
and said, Thou hast given a right judgment, but why judgest thou not
thyself also?
For like as the
ground is given unto the wood, and the sea to his floods: even so
they that dwell upon the earth may understand nothing but that which
is upon the earth: and he that dwelleth above the heavens may only
understand the things that are above the height of the heavens.
Then answered I and
said, I beseech thee, O Lord, let me have understanding:
For it was
not my mind to be curious of the high things, but of such as pass by
us daily, namely, wherefore Israel is given up as a reproach to the
heathen, and for what cause the people whom thou hast loved is given
over unto ungodly nations, and why the law of our forefathers is
brought to nought, and the written covenants come to none effect, and
we pass away out of the world as grasshoppers, and our life is
astonishment and fear, and we are not worthy to obtain mercy.
What will he then do
unto his name whereby we are called? of these things have I asked.
Then answered he me,
and said, The more thou searchest, the more thou shalt marvel; for
the world hasteth fast to pass away, And cannot comprehend the things
that are promised to the righteous in time to come: for this world is
full of unrighteousness and infirmities.
But as concerning
the things whereof thou askest me, I will tell thee; for the evil is
sown, but the destruction thereof is not yet come.
If therefore that
which is sown be not turned upside down, and if the place where the
evil is sown pass not away, then cannot it come that is sown with
good.
For the grain of
evil seed hath been sown in the heart of Adam from the beginning, and
how much ungodliness hath it brought up unto this time?
And how much shall
it yet bring forth until the time of threshing come?
Ponder now by
thyself, how great fruit of wickedness the grain of evil seed hath
brought forth.
And when the ears
shall be cut down, which are without number, how great a floor shall
they fill? Then I answered and said, How, and when shall these things
come to pass?
Wherefore are our
years few and evil?
And he answered me,
saying, Do not thou hasten above the most Highest: for thy haste is
in vain to be above him, for thou hast much exceeded.
Did not the souls
also of the righteous ask question of these things in their chambers,
saying, How long shall I hope on this fashion?
When cometh the
fruit of the floor of our reward?
And unto these
things Uriel the archangel gave them answer, and said, Even when the
number of seeds is filled in you: for he hath weighed the world in
the balance.
By measure hath he
measured the times; and by number hath he numbered the times; and he
doth not move nor stir them, until the said measure be fulfilled.
Then answered I and
said, O Lord that bearest rule, even we all are full of impiety.
And for our sakes
peradventure it is that the floors of the righteous are not filled,
because of the sins of them that dwell upon the earth.
So he answered me,
and said, Go thy way to a woman with child, and ask of her when she
hath fulfilled her nine months, if her womb may keep the birth any
longer within her.
Then said I, No,
Lord, that can she not.
And he said unto me,
In the grave the chambers of souls are like the womb of a woman:
For
like as a woman that travaileth maketh haste to escape the necessity
of the travail: even so do these places haste to deliver those things
that are committed unto them.
From the beginning,
look, what thou desirest to see, it shall be shewed thee.
Then answered I and
said, If I have found favour in thy sight, and if it be possible, and
if I be meet therefore, Shew me then whether there be more to come
than is past, or more past than is to come. What is past I know, but
what is for to come I know not.
And he said unto me,
Stand up upon the right side, and I shall expound the similitude unto
thee.
So I stood, and saw,
and, behold, an hot burning oven passed by before me: and it happened
that when the flame was gone by I looked, and, behold, the smoke
remained still.
After this there
passed by before me a watery cloud, and sent down much rain with a
storm; and when the stormy rain was past, the drops remained still.
Then said he unto
me, Consider with thyself; as the rain is more than the drops, and as
the fire is greater than the smoke; but the drops and the smoke
remain behind: so the quantity which is past did more exceed.
Then I prayed, and
said, May I live, thinkest thou, until that time?
Or what shall happen
in those days?
He answered me, and
said, As for the tokens whereof thou askest me, I may tell thee of
them in part: but as touching thy life, I am not sent to shew thee;
for I do not know it. (II Esdras 4:1-52 [KJVA])
Chapter 5
Nevertheless as
coming the tokens, behold, the days shall come, that they which dwell
upon earth shall be taken in a great number, and the way of truth
shall be hidden, and the land shall be barren of faith.
But iniquity shall
be increased above that which now thou seest, or that thou hast heard
long ago. And the land, that thou seest now to have root, shalt thou
see wasted suddenly.
But if the most High
grant thee to live, thou shalt see after the third trumpet that the
sun shall suddenly shine again in the night, and the moon thrice in
the day:
And blood shall drop out of wood, and the stone shall give
his voice, and the people shall be troubled:
And even he shall rule,
whom they look not for that dwell upon the earth, and the fowls shall
take their flight away together:
And the Sodomitish sea shall cast
out fish, and make a noise in the night, which many have not known:
but they shall all hear the voice thereof.
There shall be a
confusion also in many places, and the fire shall be oft sent out
again, and the wild beasts shall change their places, and menstruous
women shall bring forth monsters:
And salt waters shall be found in
the sweet, and all friends shall destroy one another; then shall wit
hide itself, and understanding withdraw itself into his secret
chamber, And shall be sought of many, and yet not be found: then
shall unrighteousness and incontinency be multiplied upon earth.
One land also shall
ask another, and say, Is righteousness that maketh a man righteous
gone through thee?
And it shall say,
No. At the same time shall men hope, but nothing obtain: they shall
labour, but their ways shall not prosper.
To shew thee such
tokens I have leave; and if thou wilt pray again, and weep as now,
and fast even days, thou shalt hear yet greater things.
Then I awaked, and
an extreme fearfulness went through all my body, and my mind was
troubled, so that it fainted.
So the angel that
was come to talk with me held me, comforted me, and set me up upon my
feet.
And in the second night it came to pass, that Salathiel the
captain of the people came unto me, saying, Where hast thou been? and
why is thy countenance so heavy?
Knowest thou not
that Israel is committed unto thee in the land of their captivity?
Up then, and eat
bread, and forsake us not, as the shepherd that leaveth his flock in
the hands of cruel wolves.
Then said I unto
him, Go thy ways from me, and come not nigh me.
And he heard what I
said, and went from me.
And so I fasted
seven days, mourning and weeping, like as Uriel the angel commanded
me.
And after seven days
so it was, that the thoughts of my heart were very grievous unto me
again, And my soul recovered the spirit of understanding, and I began
to talk with the most High again.
And said, O Lord that bearest rule,
of every wood of the earth, and of all the trees thereof, thou hast
chosen thee one only vine:
And of all lands of the whole world thou
hast chosen thee one pit: and of all the flowers thereof one lily:
And of all the depths of the sea thou hast filled thee one river: and
of all builded cities thou hast hallowed Sion unto thyself:
And of
all the fowls that are created thou hast named thee one dove: and of
all the cattle that are made thou hast provided thee one sheep:
And
among all the multitudes of people thou hast gotten thee one people:
and unto this people, whom thou lovedst, thou gavest a law that is
approved of all.
And now, O Lord, why
hast thou given this one people over unto many?
And upon the one
root hast thou prepared others, and why hast thou scattered thy only
one people among many?
And they which did
gainsay thy promises, and believed not thy covenants, have trodden
them down. If thou didst so much hate thy people, yet shouldest thou
punish them with thine own hands.
Now when I had
spoken these words, the angel that came to me the night afore was
sent unto me, And said unto me, Hear me, and I will instruct thee;
hearken to the thing that I say, and I shall tell thee more.
And I said, Speak
on, my Lord.
Then said he unto
me, Thou art sore troubled in mind for Israel’s sake: lovest thou
that people better than he that made them?
And I said, No,
Lord: but of very grief have I spoken: for my reins pain me every
hour, while I labour to comprehend the way of the most High, and to
seek out part of his judgment.
And he said unto me,
Thou canst not.
And I said,
Wherefore, Lord? whereunto was I born then?
Or why was not my
mother’s womb then my grave, that I might not have seen the travail
of Jacob, and the wearisome toil of the stock of Israel?
And he said unto me,
Number me the things that are not yet come, gather me together the
dross that are scattered abroad, make me the flowers green again that
are withered, Open me the places that are closed, and bring me forth
the winds that in them are shut up, shew me the image of a voice: and
then I will declare to thee the thing that thou labourest to know.
And I said, O Lord
that bearest rule, who may know these things, but he that hath not
his dwelling with men?
As for me, I am
unwise: how may I then speak of these things whereof thou askest me?
Then said he unto
me, Like as thou canst do none of these things that I have spoken of,
even so canst thou not find out my judgment, or in the end the love
that I have promised unto my people. And I said, Behold, O Lord, yet
art thou nigh unto them that be reserved till the end: and what shall
they do that have been before me, or we that be now, or they that
shall come after us?
And he said unto me,
I will liken my judgment unto a ring: like as there is no slackness
of the last, even so there is no swiftness of the first.
So I answered and
said, Couldest thou not make those that have been made, and be now,
and that are for to come, at once; that thou mightest shew thy
judgment the sooner?
Then answered he me,
and said, The creature may not haste above the maker; neither may the
world hold them at once that shall be created therein.
And I said, As thou
hast said unto thy servant, that thou, which givest life to all, hast
given life at once to the creature that thou hast created, and the
creature bare it: even so it might now also bear them that now be
present at once.
And he said unto me,
Ask the womb of a woman, and say unto her, If thou bringest forth
children, why dost thou it not together, but one after another?
Pray her therefore
to bring forth ten children at once. And I said, She cannot: but must
do it by distance of time.
Then said he unto
me, Even so have I given the womb of the earth to those that be sown
in it in their times.
For like as a young
child may not bring forth the things that belong to the aged, even so
have I disposed the world which I created.
And I asked, and
said, Seeing thou hast now given me the way, I will proceed to speak
before thee: for our mother, of whom thou hast told me that she is
young, draweth now nigh unto age.
He answered me, and
said, Ask a woman that beareth children, and she shall tell thee.
Say unto her,
Wherefore are unto they whom thou hast now brought forth like those
that were before, but less of stature?
And she shall answer
thee, They that be born in the the strength of youth are of one
fashion, and they that are born in the time of age, when the womb
faileth, are otherwise.
Consider thou
therefore also, how that ye are less of stature than those that were
before you.
And so are they that
come after you less than ye, as the creatures which now begin to be
old, and have passed over the strength of youth.
Then said I, Lord, I
beseech thee, if I have found favour in thy sight, shew thy servant
by whom thou visitest thy creature. (II Esdras 5:1-56 [KJVA])
Chapter 6
And he said unto me,
In the beginning, when the earth was made, before the borders of the
world stood, or ever the winds blew.
Before it thundered
and lightened, or ever the foundations of paradise were laid.
Before the fair
flowers were seen, or ever the moveable powers were established,
before the innumerable multitude of angels were gathered together.
Or ever the heights
of the air were lifted up, before the measures of the firmament were
named, or ever the chimneys in Sion were hot.
And ere the present
years were sought out, and or ever the inventions of them that now
sin were turned, before they were sealed that have gathered faith for
a treasure.
Then did I consider
these things, and they all were made through me alone, and through
none other: by me also they shall be ended, and by none other.
Then answered I and
said, What shall be the parting asunder of the times?
Or when shall be the
end of the first, and the beginning of it that followeth?
And he said unto me,
From Abraham unto Isaac, when Jacob and Esau were born of him,
Jacob’s hand held first the heel of Esau.
For Esau is the end
of the world, and Jacob is the beginning of it that followeth.
The hand of man is
betwixt the heel and the hand: other question, Esdras, ask thou not.
I answered then and
said, O Lord that bearest rule, if I have found favour in thy sight,
I beseech thee, shew thy servant the end of thy tokens, whereof thou
shewedst me part the last night.
So he answered and
said unto me, Stand up upon thy feet, and hear a mighty sounding
voice.
And it shall be as
it were a great motion; but the place where thou standest shall not
be moved.
And therefore when
it speaketh be not afraid: for the word is of the end, and the
foundation of the earth is understood.
And why?
Because the speech
of these things trembleth and is moved: for it knoweth that the end
of these things must be changed.
And it happened,
that when I had heard it I stood up upon my feet, and hearkened, and,
behold, there was a voice that spake, and the sound of it was like
the sound of many waters.
And it said, Behold,
the days come, that I will begin to draw nigh, and to visit them that
dwell upon the earth.
And will begin to
make inquisition of them, what they be that have hurt unjustly with
their unrighteousness, and when the affliction of Sion shall be
fulfilled;
And when the world,
that shall begin to vanish away, shall be finished, then will I shew
these tokens: the books shall be opened before the firmament, and
they shall see all together:
And the children of
a year old shall speak with their voices, the women with child shall
bring forth untimely children of three or four months old, and they
shall live, and be raised up.
And suddenly shall
the sown places appear unsown, the full storehouses shall suddenly be
found empty:
And the trumpet
shall give a sound, which when every man heareth, they shall be
suddenly afraid.
At that time shall friends fight one against another
like enemies, and the earth shall stand in fear with those that dwell
therein, the springs of the fountains shall stand still, and in three
hours they shall not run.
Whosoever remaineth
from all these that I have told thee shall escape, and see my
salvation, and the end of your world.
And the men that are
received shall see it, who have not tasted death from their birth:
and the heart of the inhabitants shall be changed, and turned into
another meaning.
For evil shall be
put out, and deceit shall be quenched.
As for faith, it
shall flourish, corruption shall be overcome, and the truth, which
hath been so long without fruit, shall be declared.
And when he talked
with me, behold, I looked by little and little upon him before whom I
stood. And these words said he unto me; I am come to shew thee the
time of the night to come.
If thou wilt pray
yet more, and fast seven days again, I shall tell thee greater things
by day than I have heard.
For thy voice is
heard before the most High: for the Mighty hath seen thy righteous
dealing, he hath seen also thy chastity, which thou hast had ever
since thy youth.
And therefore hath
he sent me to shew thee all these things, and to say unto thee, Be of
good comfort and fear not.
And hasten not with
the times that are past, to think vain things, that thou mayest not
hasten from the latter times.
And it came to pass
after this, that I wept again, and fasted seven days in like manner,
that I might fulfil the three weeks which he told me.
And in the eighth
night was my heart vexed within me again, and I began to speak before
the most High.
For my spirit was
greatly set on fire, and my soul was in distress.
And I said, O Lord,
thou spakest from the beginning of the creation, even the first day,
and saidst thus; Let heaven and earth be made; and thy word was a
perfect work.
And then was the
spirit, and darkness and silence were on every side; the sound of
man’s voice was not yet formed.
Then commandedst
thou a fair light to come forth of thy treasures, that thy work might
appear.
Upon the second day thou madest the spirit of the firmament,
and commandedst it to part asunder, and to make a division betwixt
the waters, that the one part might go up, and the other remain
beneath.
Upon the third day
thou didst command that the waters should be gathered in the seventh
part of the earth: six pats hast thou dried up, and kept them, to the
intent that of these some being planted of God and tilled might serve
thee.
For as soon as thy
word went forth the work was made.
For immediately
there was great and innumerable fruit, and many and divers pleasures
for the taste, and flowers of unchangeable colour, and odours of
wonderful smell: and this was done the third day.
Upon the fourth day
thou commandedst that the sun should shine, and the moon give her
light, and the stars should be in order:
And gavest them a
charge to do service unto man, that was to be made.
Upon the fifth day
thou saidst unto the seventh part, where the waters were gathered
that it should bring forth living creatures, fowls and fishes: and so
it came to pass.
For the dumb water
and without life brought forth living things at the commandment of
God, that all people might praise thy wondrous works.
Then didst thou
ordain two living creatures, the one thou calledst Enoch, and the
other Leviathan; And didst separate the one from the other: for the
seventh part, namely, where the water was gathered together, might
not hold them both.
Unto Enoch thou
gavest one part, which was dried up the third day, that he should
dwell in the same part, wherein are a thousand hills:
But unto Leviathan
thou gavest the seventh part, namely, the moist; and hast kept him to
be devoured of whom thou wilt, and when.
Upon the sixth day
thou gavest commandment unto the earth, that before thee it should
bring forth beasts, cattle, and creeping things:
And after these,
Adam also, whom thou madest lord of all thy creatures: of him come we
all, and the people also whom thou hast chosen.
All this have I
spoken before thee, O Lord, because thou madest the world for our
sakes.
As for the other people, which also come of Adam, thou hast
said that they are nothing, but be like unto spittle: and hast
likened the abundance of them unto a drop that falleth from a vessel.
And now, O Lord,
behold, these heathen, which have ever been reputed as nothing, have
begun to be lords over us, and to devour us.
But we thy people,
whom thou hast called thy firstborn, thy only begotten, and thy
fervent lover, are given into their hands.
If the world now be
made for our sakes, why do we not possess an inheritance with the
world? how long shall this endure? (II Esdras 6:1-59 [KJVA])
Chapter 7
And when I had made
an end of speaking these words, there was sent unto me the angel
which had been sent unto me the nights afore:
And he said unto me,
Up, Esdras, and hear the words that I am come to tell thee.
And I said, Speak
on, my God.
Then said he unto
me, The sea is set in a wide place, that it might be deep and great.
But put the case the
entrance were narrow, and like a river;
Who then could go
into the sea to look upon it, and to rule it?
If he went not
through the narrow, how could he come into the broad?
There is also
another thing;
A city is builded,
and set upon a broad field, and is full of all good things:
The entrance thereof
is narrow, and is set in a dangerous place to fall, like as if there
were a fire on the right hand, and on the left a deep water:
And one only path
between them both, even between the fire and the water, so small that
there could but one man go there at once.
If this city now
were given unto a man for an inheritance, if he never shall pass the
danger set before it, how shall he receive this inheritance?
And I said, It is
so, Lord.
Then said he unto
me, Even so also is Israel’s portion.
Because for their
sakes I made the world: and when Adam transgressed my statutes, then
was decreed that now is done.
Then were the
entrances of this world made narrow, full of sorrow and travail: they
are but few and evil, full of perils,: and very painful.
For the entrances of
the elder world were wide and sure, and brought immortal fruit.
If then they that
live labour not to enter these strait and vain things, they can never
receive those that are laid up for them.
Now therefore why
disquietest thou thyself, seeing thou art but a corruptible man?
And why art thou
moved, whereas thou art but mortal?
Why hast thou not
considered in thy mind this thing that is to come, rather than that
which is present?
Then answered I and
said, O Lord that bearest rule, thou hast ordained in thy law, that
the righteous should inherit these things, but that the ungodly
should perish.
Nevertheless the
righteous shall suffer strait things, and hope for wide: for they
that have done wickedly have suffered the strait things, and yet
shall not see the wide.
And he said unto me.
There is no judge
above God, and none that hath understanding above the Highest.
For there be many
that perish in this life, because they despise the law of God that is
set before them.
For God hath given
strait commandment to such as came, what they should do to live, even
as they came, and what they should observe to avoid punishment.
Nevertheless they
were not obedient unto him; but spake against him, and imagined vain
things;
And deceived themselves by their wicked deeds; and said of
the most High, that he is not; and knew not his ways:
But his law have
they despised, and denied his covenants; in his statutes have they
not been faithful, and have not performed his works.
And therefore,
Esdras, for the empty are empty things, and for the full are the full
things.
Behold, the time
shall come, that these tokens which I have told thee shall come to
pass, and the bride shall appear, and she coming forth shall be seen,
that now is withdrawn from the earth.
And whosoever is
delivered from the foresaid evils shall see my wonders.
For my son Jesus
shall be revealed with those that be with him, and they that remain
shall rejoice within four hundred years.
After these years
shall my son Christ die, and all men that have life.
And the world shall
be turned into the old silence seven days, like as in the former
judgments: so that no man shall remain.
And after seven days
the world, that yet awaketh not, shall be raised up, and that shall
die that is corrupt.
And the earth shall
restore those that are asleep in her, and so shall the dust those
that dwell in silence, and the secret places shall deliver those
souls that were committed unto them.
And the most High
shall appear upon the seat of judgment, and misery shall pass away,
and the long suffering shall have an end:
But judgment only
shall remain, truth shall stand, and faith shall wax strong:
And the work shall
follow, and the reward shall be shewed, and the good deeds shall be
of force, and wicked deeds shall bear no rule.
Then said I, Abraham
prayed first for the Sodomites, and Moses for the fathers that sinned
in the wilderness:
And Jesus after him
for Israel in the time of Achan:
And Samuel and David
for the destruction:
And Solomon for them
that should come to the sanctuary:
And Helias for those
that received rain; and for the dead, that he might live:
And Ezechias for the
people in the time of Sennacherib: and many for many.
Even so now, seeing
corruption is grown up, and wickedness increased, and the righteous
have prayed for the ungodly:
Wherefore shall it
not be so now also?
He answered me, and
said, This present life is not the end where much glory doth abide;
therefore have they prayed for the weak.
But the day of doom
shall be the end of this time, and the beginning of the immortality
for to come, wherein corruption is past.
Intemperance is at
an end, infidelity is cut off, righteousness is grown, and truth is
sprung up.
Then shall no man be
able to save him that is destroyed, nor to oppress him that hath
gotten the victory.
I answered then and
said, This is my first and last saying, that it had been better not
to have given the earth unto Adam: or else, when it was given him, to
have restrained him from sinning.
For what profit is
it for men now in this present time to live in heaviness, and after
death to look for punishment?
O thou Adam, what
hast thou done?
For though it was
thou that sinned, thou art not fallen alone, but we all that come of
thee.
For what profit is
it unto us, if there be promised us an immortal time, whereas we have
done the works that bring death?
And that there is
promised us an everlasting hope, whereas ourselves being most wicked
are made vain?
And that there are
laid up for us dwellings of health and safety, whereas we have lived
wickedly? And that the glory of the most High is kept to defend them
which have led a wary life, whereas we have walked in the most wicked
ways of all?
And that there
should be shewed a paradise, whose fruit endureth for ever, wherein
is security and medicine, since we shall not enter into it? (For we
have walked in unpleasant places.)
And that the faces
of them which have used abstinence shall shine above the stars,
whereas our faces shall be blacker than darkness?
For while we lived
and committed iniquity, we considered not that we should begin to
suffer for it after death.
Then answered he me,
and said, This is the condition of the battle, which man that is born
upon the earth shall fight;
That, if he be
overcome, he shall suffer as thou hast said: but if he get the
victory, he shall receive the thing that I say.
For this is the life
whereof Moses spake unto the people while he lived, saying, Choose
thee life, that thou mayest live.
Nevertheless they
believed not him, nor yet the prophets after him, no nor me which
have spoken unto them.
That there should
not be such heaviness in their destruction, as shall be joy over them
that are persuaded to salvation.
I answered then, and
said, I know, Lord, that the most High is called merciful, in that he
hath mercy upon them which are not yet come into the world, And upon
those also that turn to his law;
And that he is
patient, and long suffereth those that have sinned, as his creatures;
And that he is
bountiful, for he is ready to give where it needeth;
And that he is of
great mercy, for he multiplieth more and more mercies to them that
are present, and that are past, and also to them which are to come.
For if he shall not
multiply his mercies, the world would not continue with them that
inherit therein. And he pardoneth;
For if he did not so
of his goodness, that they which have committed iniquities might be
eased of them, the ten thousandth part of men should not remain
living.
And being judge, if
he should not forgive them that are cured with his word, and put out
the multitude of contentions.
There should be very
few left peradventure in an innumerable multitude.
(II Esdras 7:1-70
[KJVA])
Chapter 8
And he answered me,
saying, The most High hath made this world for many, but the world to
come for few.
I will tell thee a
similitude, Esdras;
As when thou askest
the earth, it shall say unto thee, that it giveth much mould whereof
earthen vessels are made, but little dust that gold cometh of:
Even so is the
course of this present world.
There be many
created, but few shall be saved.
So answered I and
said, Swallow then down, O my soul, understanding, and devour wisdom.
For thou hast agreed
to give ear, and art willing to prophesy: for thou hast no longer
space than only to live.
O Lord, if thou
suffer not thy servant, that we may pray before thee, and thou give
us seed unto our heart, and culture to our understanding, that there
may come fruit of it; how shall each man live that is corrupt, who
beareth the place of a man?
For thou art alone,
and we all one workmanship of thine hands, like as thou hast said.
For when the body is
fashioned now in the mother’s womb, and thou givest it members, thy
creature is preserved in fire and water, and nine months doth thy
workmanship endure thy creature which is created in her.
But that which
keepeth and is kept shall both be preserved: and when the time
cometh, the womb preserved delivereth up the things that grew in it.
For thou hast
commanded out of the parts of the body, that is to say, out of the
breasts, milk to be given, which is the fruit of the breasts.
That the thing which
is fashioned may be nourished for a time, till thou disposest it to
thy mercy. Thou broughtest it up with thy righteousness, and
nurturedst it in thy law, and reformedst it with thy judgment.
And thou shalt
mortify it as thy creature, and quicken it as thy work.
If therefore thou
shalt destroy him which with so great labour was fashioned, it is an
easy thing to be ordained by thy commandment, that the thing which
was made might be preserved.
Now therefore, Lord,
I will speak; touching man in general, thou knowest best; but
touching thy people, for whose sake I am sorry;
And for thine
inheritance, for whose cause I mourn; and for Israel, for whom I am
heavy; and for Jacob, for whose sake I am troubled;
Therefore will I
begin to pray before thee for myself and for them: for I see the
falls of us that dwell in the land. But I have heard the swiftness of
the judge which is to come.
Therefore hear my
voice, and understand my words, and I shall speak before thee.
This is the
beginning of the words of Esdras, before he was taken up: and I said,
O Lord, thou that dwellest in everlastingness which beholdest from
above things in the heaven and in the air;
Whose throne is
inestimable; whose glory may not be comprehended; before whom the
hosts of angels stand with trembling.
Whose service is
conversant in wind and fire; whose word is true, and sayings
constant; whose commandment is strong, and ordinance fearful;
Whose look drieth up
the depths, and indignation maketh the mountains to melt away; which
the truth witnesseth:
O hear the prayer of
thy servant, and give ear to the petition of thy creature.
For while I live I
will speak, and so long as I have understanding I will answer.
O look not upon the
sins of thy people; but on them which serve thee in truth.
Regard not the
wicked inventions of the heathen, but the desire of those that keep
thy testimonies in afflictions.
Think not upon those
that have walked feignedly before thee: but remember them, which
according to thy will have known thy fear.
Let it not be thy
will to destroy them which have lived like beasts; but to look upon
them that have clearly taught thy law.
Take thou no
indignation at them which are deemed worse than beasts; but love them
that always put their trust in thy righteousness and glory.
For we and our
fathers do languish of such diseases: but because of us sinners thou
shalt be called merciful.
For if thou hast a
desire to have mercy upon us, thou shalt be called merciful, to us
namely, that have no works of righteousness.
For the just, which
have many good works laid up with thee, shall out of their own deeds
receive reward.
For what is man,
that thou shouldest take displeasure at him?
Or what is a
corruptible generation, that thou shouldest be so bitter toward it?
For in truth them is
no man among them that be born, but he hath dealt wickedly; and among
the faithful there is none which hath not done amiss.
For in this, O Lord,
thy righteousness and thy goodness shall be declared, if thou be
merciful unto them which have not the confidence of good works.
Then answered he me,
and said, Some things hast thou spoken aright, and according unto thy
words it shall be.
For indeed I will
not think on the disposition of them which have sinned before death,
before judgment, before destruction:
But I will rejoice
over the disposition of the righteous, and I will remember also their
pilgrimage, and the salvation, and the reward, that they shall have.
Like as I have
spoken now, so shall it come to pass.
For as the
husbandman soweth much seed upon the ground, and planteth many trees,
and yet the thing that is sown good in his season cometh not up,
neither doth all that is planted take root: even so is it of them
that are sown in the world; they shall not all be saved.
I answered then and
said, If I have found grace, let me speak.
Like as the
husbandman’s seed perisheth, if it come not up, and receive not thy
rain in due season; or if there come too much rain, and corrupt it:
Even so perisheth
man also, which is formed with thy hands, and is called thine own
image, because thou art like unto him, for whose sake thou hast made
all things, and likened him unto the husbandman’s seed.
Be not wroth with us
but spare thy people, and have mercy upon thine own inheritance: for
thou art merciful unto thy creature.
Then answered he me,
and said, Things present are for the present, and things to cometh
for such as be to come.
For thou comest far
short that thou shouldest be able to love my creature more than I:
but I have ofttimes drawn nigh unto thee, and unto it, but never to
the unrighteous.
In this also thou
art marvellous before the most High:
In that thou hast
humbled thyself, as it becometh thee, and hast not judged thyself
worthy to be much glorified among the righteous.
For many great
miseries shall be done to them that in the latter time shall dwell in
the world, because they have walked in great pride.
But understand thou
for thyself, and seek out the glory for such as be like thee.
For unto you is
paradise opened, the tree of life is planted, the time to come is
prepared, plenteousness is made ready, a city is builded, and rest is
allowed, yea, perfect goodness and wisdom.
The root of evil is
sealed up from you, weakness and the moth is hid from you, and
corruption is fled into hell to be forgotten:
Sorrows are passed,
and in the end is shewed the treasure of immortality.
And therefore ask
thou no more questions concerning the multitude of them that perish.
For when they had
taken liberty, they despised the most High, thought scorn of his law,
and forsook his ways.
Moreover they have
trodden down his righteous, And said in their heart, that there is no
God; yea, and that knowing they must die.
For as the things
aforesaid shalt receive you, so thirst and pain are prepared for
them: for it was not his will that men should come to nought:
But they which be
created have defiled the name of him that made them, and were
unthankful unto him which prepared life for them.
And therefore is my
judgment now at hand.
These things have I
not shewed unto all men, but unto thee, and a few like thee.
Then answered I and
said, Behold, O Lord, now hast thou shewed me the multitude of the
wonders, which thou wilt begin to do in the last times: but at what
time, thou hast not shewed me. (II Esdras 8:1-63 [KJVA])
Chapter 9
He answered me then,
and said, Measure thou the time diligently in itself: and when thou
seest part of the signs past, which I have told thee before.
Then
shalt thou understand, that it is the very same time, wherein the
Highest will begin to visit the world which he made.
Therefore when there
shall be seen earthquakes and uproars of the people in the world:
Then shalt thou well
understand, that the most High spake of those things from the days
that were before thee, even from the beginning.
For like as all that
is made in the world hath a beginning and an end, and the end is
manifest:
Even so the times
also of the Highest have plain beginnings in wonder and powerful
works, and endings in effects and signs.
And every one that
shall be saved, and shall be able to escape by his works, and by
faith, whereby ye have believed, Shall be preserved from the said
perils, and shall see my salvation in my land, and within my borders:
for I have sanctified them for me from the beginning.
Then shall they be
in pitiful case, which now have abused my ways: and they that have
cast them away despitefully shall dwell in torments.
For such as in their
life have received benefits, and have not known me;
And they that have
loathed my law, while they had yet liberty, and, when as yet place of
repentance was open unto them, understood not, but despised it;
The same must know
it after death by pain.
And therefore be
thou not curious how the ungodly shall be punished, and when: but
enquire how the righteous shall be saved, whose the world is, and for
whom the world is created.
Then answered I and
said, I have said before, and now do speak, and will speak it also
hereafter, that there be many more of them which perish, than of them
which shall be saved:
Like as a wave is
greater than a drop.
And he answered me,
saying, Like as the field is, so is also the seed; as the flowers be,
such are the colours also; such as the workman is, such also is the
work; and as the husbandman ls himself, so is his husbandry also: for
it was the time of the world.
And now when I
prepared the world, which was not yet made, even for them to dwell in
that now live, no man spake against me.
For then every one
obeyed: but now the manners of them which are created in this world
that is made are corrupted by a perpetual seed, and by a law which is
unsearchable rid themselves.
So I considered the
world, and, behold, there was peril because of the devices that were
come into it.
And I saw, and
spared it greatly, and have kept me a grape of the cluster, and a
plant of a great people.
Let the multitude
perish then, which was born in vain; and let my grape be kept, and my
plant; for with great labour have I made it perfect.
Nevertheless, if
thou wilt cease yet seven days more, (but thou shalt not fast in
them, But go into a field of flowers, where no house is builded, and
eat only the flowers of the field; taste no flesh, drink no wine, but
eat flowers only;)
And pray unto the
Highest continually, then will I come and talk with thee.
So I went my way
into the field which is called Ardath, like as he commanded me; and
there I sat among the flowers, and did eat of the herbs of the field,
and the meat of the same satisfied me.
After seven days I
sat upon the grass, and my heart was vexed within me, like as before:
And I opened my
mouth, and began to talk before the most High, and said, O Lord, thou
that shewest thyself unto us, thou wast shewed unto our fathers in
the wilderness, in a place where no man treadeth, in a barren place,
when they came out of Egypt.
And thou spakest
saying, Hear me, O Israel; and mark my words, thou seed of Jacob.
For, behold, I sow
my law in you, and it shall bring fruit in you, and ye shall be
honoured in it for ever.
But our fathers,
which received the law, kept it not, and observed not thy ordinances:
and though the fruit of thy law did not perish, neither could it, for
it was thine;
Yet they that
received it perished, because they kept not the thing that was sown
in them.
And, lo, it ls a
custom, when the ground hath received seed, or the sea a ship, or any
vessel meat or drink, that, that being perished wherein it was sown
or cast into.
That thing also
which was sown, or cast therein, or received, doth perish, and
remaineth not with us: but with us it hath not happened so.
For we that have
received the law perish by sin, and our heart also which received it.
Notwithstanding the law perisheth not, but remaineth in his force.
And when I spake
these things in my heart, I looked back with mine eyes, and upon the
right side I saw a woman, and, behold, she mourned and wept with a
loud voice, and was much grieved in heart, and her clothes were rent,
and she had ashes upon her head.
Then let I my
thoughts go that I was in, and turned me unto her, And said unto her,
Wherefore weepest thou?
Why art thou so
grieved in thy mind?
And she said unto
me, Sir, let me alone, that I may bewail myself, and add unto my
sorrow, for I am sore vexed in my mind, and brought very low.
And I said unto her,
What aileth thee?
Tell me.
She said unto me, I
thy servant have been barren, and had no child, though I had an
husband thirty years, And those thirty years I did nothing else day
and night, and every hour, but make my, prayer to the Highest.
After thirty years
God heard me thine handmaid, looked upon my misery, considered my
trouble, and gave me a son: and I was very glad of him, so was my
husband also, and all my neighbours: and we gave great honour unto
the Almighty.
And I nourished him
with great travail.
So when he grew up,
and came to the time that he should have a wife, I made a feast. (II
Esdras 9:1-47 [KJVA])
Chapter 10
And it so came to
pass, that when my son was entered into his wedding chamber, he fell
down, and died.
Then we all
overthrew the lights, and all my neighbours rose up to comfort me: so
I took my rest unto the second day at night.
And it came to pass,
when they had all left off to comfort me, to the end I might be
quiet; then rose I up by night and fled, and came hither into this
field, as thou seest.
And I do now purpose
not to return into the city, but here to stay, and neither to eat nor
drink, but continually to mourn and to fast until I die.
Then left I the
meditations wherein I was, and spake to her in anger, saying, Thou
foolish woman above all other, seest thou not our mourning, and what
happeneth unto us?
How that Sion our
mother is full of all heaviness, and much humbled, mourning very
sore?
And now, seeing we
all mourn and are sad, for we are all in heaviness, art thou grieved
for one son? For ask the earth, and she shall tell thee, that it is
she which ought to mourn for the fall of so many that grow upon her.
For out of her came
all at the first, and out of her shall all others come, and, behold,
they walk almost all into destruction, and a multitude of them is
utterly rooted out.
Who then should make
more mourning than she, that hath lost so great a multitude; and not
thou, which art sorry but for one?
But if thou sayest
unto me, My lamentation is not like the earth’s, because I have
lost the fruit of my womb, which I brought forth with pains, and bare
with sorrows;
But the earth not
so: for the multitude present in it according to the course of the
earth is gone, as it came:
Then say I unto
thee, Like as thou hast brought forth with labour; even so the earth
also hath given her fruit, namely, man, ever since the beginning unto
him that made her.
Now therefore keep
thy sorrow to thyself, and bear with a good courage that which hath
befallen thee.
For if thou shalt
acknowledge the determination of God to be just, thou shalt both
receive thy son in time, and shalt be commended among women.
Go thy way then into
the city to thine husband.
And she said unto
me, That will I not do: I will not go into the city, but here will I
die.
So I proceeded to
speak further unto her, and said, Do not so, but be counselled. by
me: for how many are the adversities of Sion?
Be comforted in
regard of the sorrow of Jerusalem.
For thou seest that
our sanctuary is laid waste, our altar broken down, our temple
destroyed;
Our psaltery is laid
on the ground, our song is put to silence, our rejoicing is at an
end, the light of our candlestick is put out, the ark of our covenant
is spoiled, our holy things are defiled, and the name that is called
upon us is almost profaned:
Our children are put
to shame, our priests are burnt, our Levites are gone into captivity,
our virgins are defiled, and our wives ravished; our righteous men
carried away, our little ones destroyed, our young men are brought in
bondage, and our strong men are become weak;
And, which is the
greatest of all, the seal of Sion hath now lost her honour; for she
is delivered into the hands of them that hate us.
And therefore shake
off thy great heaviness, and put away the multitude of sorrows, that
the Mighty may be merciful unto thee again, and the Highest shall
give thee rest and ease from thy labour.
And it came to pass
while I was talking with her, behold, her face upon a sudden shined
exceedingly, and her countenance glistered, so that I was afraid of
her, and mused what it might be.
And, behold, suddenly she made a
great cry very fearful: so that the earth shook at the noise of the
woman.
And I looked, and,
behold, the woman appeared unto me no more, but there was a city
builded, and a large place shewed itself from the foundations:
Then was I afraid,
and cried with a loud voice, and said, Where is Uriel the angel, who
came unto me at the first?
For he hath caused me to fall into many
trances, and mine end is turned into corruption, and my prayer to
rebuke.
And as I was
speaking these words behold, he came unto me, and looked upon me.
And, lo, I lay as
one that had been dead, and mine understanding was taken from me: and
he took me by the right hand, and comforted me, and set me upon my
feet, and said unto me, What aileth thee?
And why art thou so
disquieted?
And why is thine
understanding troubled, and the thoughts of thine heart?
And I said, Because
thou hast forsaken me, and yet I did according to thy words, and I
went into the field, and, lo, I have seen, and yet see, that I am not
able to express.
And he said unto me,
Stand up manfully, and I will advise thee.
Then said I, Speak
on, my lord, in me; only forsake me not, lest I die frustrate of my
hope.
For I have seen that
I knew not, and hear that I do not know.
Or is my sense
deceived, or my soul in a dream?
Now therefore I
beseech thee that thou wilt shew thy servant of this vision.
He answered me then,
and said, Hear me, and I shall inform thee, and tell thee wherefore
thou art afraid: for the Highest will reveal many secret things unto
thee.
He hath seen that
thy way is right: for that thou sorrowest continually for thy people,
and makest great lamentation for Sion.
This therefore is
the meaning of the vision which thou lately sawest:
Thou sawest a woman
mourning, and thou begannest to comfort her:
But now seest thou
the likeness of the woman no more, but there appeared unto thee a
city builded. And whereas she told thee of the death of her son, this
is the solution:
This woman, whom
thou sawest is Sion: and whereas she said unto thee, even she whom
thou seest as a city builded, Whereas, I say, she said unto thee,
that she hath been thirty years barren: those are the thirty years
wherein there was no offering made in her.
But after thirty
years Solomon builded the city and offered offerings: and then bare
the barren a son. And whereas she told thee that she nourished him
with labour: that was the dwelling in Jerusalem. But whereas she said
unto thee, That my son coming into his marriage chamber happened to
have a fail, and died: this was the destruction that came to
Jerusalem.
And, behold, thou
sawest her likeness, and because she mourned for her son, thou
begannest to comfort her: and of these things which have chanced,
these are to be opened unto thee.
For now the most
High seeth that thou art grieved unfeignedly, and sufferest from thy
whole heart for her, so hath he shewed thee the brightness of her
glory, and the comeliness of her beauty:
And therefore I bade
thee remain in the field where no house was builded:
For I knew that the
Highest would shew this unto thee.
Therefore I
commanded thee to go into the field, where no foundation of any
building was.
For in the place
wherein the Highest beginneth to shew his city, there can no man’s
building be able to stand.
And therefore fear
not, let not thine heart be affrighted, but go thy way in, and see
the beauty and greatness of the building, as much as thine eyes be
able to see:
And then shalt thou
hear as much as thine ears may comprehend.
For thou art blessed
above many other, and art called with the Highest; and so are but
few.
But to morrow at
night thou shalt remain here;
And so shall the
Highest shew thee visions of the high things, which the most High
will do unto them that dwell upon the earth in the last days.
So I slept that
night and another, like as he commanded me. (II Esdras 10:1-59
[KJVA])
Chapter 11
Then saw I a dream,
and, behold, there came up from the sea an eagle, which had twelve
feathered wings, and three heads.
And I saw, and,
behold, she spread her wings over all the earth, and all the winds of
the air blew on her, and were gathered together.
And I beheld, and
out of her feathers there grew other contrary feathers; and they
became little feathers and small.
But her heads were
at rest: the head in the midst was greater than the other, yet rested
it with the residue.
Moreover I beheld,
and, lo, the eagle flew with her feathers, and reigned upon earth,
and over them that dwelt therein.
And I saw that all
things under heaven were subject unto her, and no man spake against
her, no, not one creature upon earth.
And I beheld, and,
lo, the eagle rose upon her talons, and spake to her feathers,
saying, Watch not all at once: sleep every one in his own place, and
watch by course:
But let the heads be
preserved for the last.
And I beheld, and,
lo, the voice went not out of her heads, but from the midst of her
body.
And I numbered her
contrary feathers, and, behold, there were eight of them.
And I looked, and,
behold, on the right side there arose one feather, and reigned over
all the earth; And so it was, that when it reigned, the end of it
came, and the place thereof appeared no more: so the next following
stood up. and reigned, and had a great time;
And it happened,
that when it reigned, the end of it came also, like as the first, so
that it appeared no more.
Then came there a
voice unto it, and said, Hear thou that hast borne rule over the
earth so long: this I say unto thee, before thou beginnest to appear
no more.
There shall none after thee attain unto thy time, neither
unto the half thereof.
Then arose the
third, and reigned as the other before, and appeared no more also.
So went it with all
the residue one after another, as that every one reigned, and then
appeared no more.
Then I beheld, and,
lo, in process of time the feathers that followed stood up upon the
right side, that they might rule also; and some of them ruled, but
within a while they appeared no more:
For some of them
were set up, but ruled not.
After this I looked,
and, behold, the twelve feathers appeared no more, nor the two little
feathers:
And there was no more upon the eagle’s body, but three
heads that rested, and six little wings.
Then saw I also that
two little feathers divided themselves from the six, and remained
under the head that was upon the right side: for the four continued
in their place.
And I beheld, and,
lo, the feathers that were under the wing thought to set up
themselves and to have the rule.
And I beheld, and,
lo, there was one set up, but shortly it appeared no more.
And the second was
sooner away than the first.
And I beheld, and,
lo, the two that remained thought also in themselves to reign:
And when they so
thought, behold, there awaked one of the heads that were at rest,
namely, it that was in the midst; for that was greater than the two
other heads.
And then I saw that
the two other heads were joined with it.
And, behold, the
head was turned with them that were with it, and did eat up the two
feathers under the wing that would have reigned.
But this head put
the whole earth in fear, and bare rule in it over all those that
dwelt upon the earth with much oppression; and it had the governance
of the world more than all the wings that had been.
And after this I
beheld, and, lo, the head that was in the midst suddenly appeared no
more, like as the wings.
But there remained
the two heads, which also in like sort ruled upon the earth, and over
those that dwelt therein.
And I beheld, and,
lo, the head upon the right side devoured it that was upon the left
side.
Then I head a voice,
which said unto me, Look before thee, and consider the thing that
thou seest. And I beheld, and lo, as it were a roaring lion chased
out of the wood: and I saw that he sent out a man’s voice unto the
eagle, and said, Hear thou, I will talk with thee, and the Highest
shall say unto thee, Art not thou it that remainest of the four
beasts, whom I made to reign in my world, that the end of their times
might come through them?
And the fourth came,
and overcame all the beasts that were past, and had power over the
world with great fearfulness, and over the whole compass of the earth
with much wicked oppression; and so long time dwelt he upon the earth
with deceit.
For the earth hast
thou not judged with truth.
For thou hast
afflicted the meek, thou hast hurt the peaceable, thou hast loved
liars, and destroyed the dwellings of them that brought forth fruit,
and hast cast down the walls of such as did thee no harm.
Therefore is thy
wrongful dealing come up unto the Highest, and thy pride unto the
Mighty.
The Highest also
hath looked upon the proud times, and, behold, they are ended, and
his abominations are fulfilled.
And therefore appear
no more, thou eagle, nor thy horrible wings, nor thy wicked feathers
nor thy malicious heads, nor thy hurtful claws, nor all thy vain
body:
That all the earth
may be refreshed, and may return, being delivered from thy violence,
and that she may hope for the judgment and mercy of him that made
her. (II Esdras 11:1-46 [KJVA])
Chapter 12
And it came to pass,
whiles the lion spake these words unto the eagle, I saw, And, behold,
the head that remained and the four wings appeared no more, and the
two went unto it and set themselves up to reign, and their kingdom
was small, and fill of uproar.
And I saw, and,
behold, they appeared no more, and the whole body of the eagle was
burnt so that the earth was in great fear: then awaked I out of the
trouble and trance of my mind, and from great fear, and said unto my
spirit, Lo, this hast thou done unto me, in that thou searchest out
the ways of the Highest.
Lo, yet am I weary
in my mind, and very weak in my spirit; and little strength is there
in me, for the great fear wherewith I was afflicted this night.
Therefore will I now
beseech the Highest, that he will comfort me unto the end.
And I said, Lord
that bearest rule, if I have found grace before thy sight, and if I
am justified with thee before many others, and if my prayer indeed be
come up before thy face;
Comfort me then, and
shew me thy servant the interpretation and plain difference of this
fearful vision, that thou mayest perfectly comfort my soul.
For thou hast judged
me worthy to shew me the last times.
And he said unto me,
This is the interpretation of the vision:
The eagle, whom thou
sawest come up from the sea, is the kingdom which was seen in the
vision of thy brother Daniel.
But it was not
expounded unto him, therefore now I declare it unto thee.
Behold, the days
will come, that there shall rise up a kingdom upon earth, and it
shall be feared above all the kingdoms that were before it.
In the same shall
twelve kings reign, one after another:
Whereof the second
shall begin to reign, and shall have more time than any of the
twelve.
And this do the
twelve wings signify, which thou sawest.
As for the voice
which thou heardest speak, and that thou sawest not to go out from
the heads but from the midst of the body thereof, this is the
interpretation:
That after the time
of that kingdom there shall arise great strivings, and it shall stand
in peril of failing: nevertheless it shall not then fall, but shall
be restored again to his beginning.
And whereas thou
sawest the eight small under feathers sticking to her wings, this is
the interpretation:
That in him there
shall arise eight kings, whose times shall be but small, and their
years swift.
And two of them
shall perish, the middle time approaching: four shall be kept until
their end begin to approach: but two shall be kept unto the end.
And whereas thou
sawest three heads resting, this is the interpretation:
In his last days
shall the most High raise up three kingdoms, and renew many things
therein, and they shall have the dominion of the earth, And of those
that dwell therein, with much oppression, above all those that were
before them: therefore are they called the heads of the eagle.
For these are they
that shall accomplish his wickedness, and that shall finish his last
end.
And whereas thou
sawest that the great head appeared no more, it signifieth that one
of them shall die upon his bed, and yet with pain.
For the two that
remain shall be slain with the sword.
For the sword of the
one shall devour the other: but at the last shall he fall through the
sword himself.
And whereas thou
sawest two feathers under the wings passing over the head that is on
the right side;
It signifieth that
these are they, whom the Highest hath kept unto their end: this is
the small kingdom and full of trouble, as thou sawest.
And the lion, whom
thou sawest rising up out of the wood, and roaring, and speaking to
the eagle, and rebuking her for her unrighteousness with all the
words which thou hast heard;
This is the
anointed, which the Highest hath kept for them and for their
wickedness unto the end:
He shall reprove
them, and shall upbraid them with their cruelty.
For he shall set
them before him alive in judgment, and shall rebuke them, and correct
them.
For the rest of my
people shall he deliver with mercy, those that have been pressed upon
my borders, and he shall make them joyful until the coming of the day
of judgment, whereof I have spoken unto thee from the the beginning.
This is the dream
that thou sawest, and these are the interpretations.
Thou only hast been
meet to know this secret of the Highest.
Therefore write all
these things that thou hast seen in a book, and hide them:
And teach them to
the wise of the people, whose hearts thou knowest may comprehend and
keep these secrets.
But wait thou here
thyself yet seven days more, that it may be shewed thee, whatsoever
it pleaseth the Highest to declare unto thee.
And with that he
went his way.
And it came to pass,
when all the people saw that the seven days were past, and I not come
again into the city, they gathered them all together, from the least
unto the greatest, and came unto me, and said, What have we offended
thee?
And what evil have
we done against thee, that thou forsakest us, and sittest here in
this place?
For of all the
prophets thou only art left us, as a cluster of the vintage, and as a
candle in a dark place, and as a haven or ship preserved from the
tempest.
Are not the evils
which are come to us sufficient?
If thou shalt
forsake us, how much better had it been for us, if we also had been
burned in the midst of Sion?
For we are not
better than they that died there.
And they wept with a
loud voice.
Then answered I
them, and said, Be of good comfort, O Israel; and be not heavy, thou
house of Jacob:
For the Highest hath
you in remembrance, and the Mighty hath not forgotten you in
temptation.
As for me, I have
not forsaken you, neither am I departed from you: but am come into
this place, to pray for the desolation of Sion, and that I might seek
mercy for the low estate of your sanctuary.
And now go your way home
every man, and after these days will I come unto you.
So the people went
their way into the city, like as I commanded them:
But I remained still
in the field seven days, as the angel commanded me; and did eat only
in those days of the flowers of the field, and had my meat of the
herbs (II Esdras 12:1-51 [KJVA])
Chapter 13
And it came to pass
after seven days, I dreamed a dream by night:
And, lo, there arose
a wind from the sea, that it moved all the waves thereof.
And I beheld, and,
lo, that man waxed strong with the thousands of heaven: and when he
turned his countenance to look, all the things trembled that were
seen under him.
And whensoever the
voice went out of his mouth, all they burned that heard his voice,
like as the earth faileth when it feeleth the fire.
And after this I
beheld, and, lo, there was gathered together a multitude of men, out
of number, from the four winds of the heaven, to subdue the man that
came out of the sea.
But I beheld, and,
lo, he had graved himself a great mountain, and flew up upon it.
But I would have
seen the region or place whereout the hill was graven, and I could
not.
And after this I
beheld, and, lo, all they which were gathered together to subdue him
were sore afraid, and yet durst fight.
And, lo, as he saw
the violence of the multitude that came, he neither lifted up his
hand, nor held sword, nor any instrument of war:
But only I saw that
he sent out of his mouth as it had been a blast of fire, and out of
his lips a flaming breath, and out of his tongue he cast out sparks
and tempests.
And they were all
mixed together; the blast of fire, the flaming breath, and the great
tempest; and fell with violence upon the multitude which was prepared
to fight, and burned them up every one, so that upon a sudden of an
innumerable multitude nothing was to be perceived, but only dust and
smell of smoke: when I saw this I was afraid.
Afterward saw I the
same man come down from the mountain, and call unto him another
peaceable Multitude.
And there came much
people unto him, whereof some were glad, some were sorry, and some of
them were bound, and other some brought of them that were offered:
then was I sick through great fear, and I awaked, and said, Thou hast
shewed thy servant these wonders from the beginning, and hast counted
me worthy that thou shouldest receive my prayer:
Shew me now yet the
interpretation of this dream.
For as I conceive in
mine understanding, woe unto them that shall be left in those days
and much more woe unto them that are not left behind!
For they that were
not left were in heaviness.
Now understand I the
things that are laid up in the latter days, which shall happen unto
them, and to those that are left behind.
Therefore are they
come into great perils and many necessities, like as these dreams
declare.
Yet is it easier for
him that is in danger to come into these things, than to pass away as
a cloud out of the world, and not to see the things that happen in
the last days.
And he answered unto
me, and said, The interpretation of the vision shall I shew thee, and
I will open unto thee the thing that thou hast required.
Whereas thou hast
spoken of them that are left behind, this is the interpretation:
He that shall endure
the peril in that time hath kept himself: they that be fallen into
danger are such as have works, and faith toward the Almighty.
Know this therefore,
that they which be left behind are more blessed than they that be
dead.
This is the meaning
of the vision:
Whereas thou sawest
a man coming up from the midst of the sea:
The same is he whom
God the Highest hath kept a great season, which by his own self shall
deliver his creature: and he shall order them that are left behind.
And whereas thou
sawest, that out of his mouth there came as a blast of wind, and
fire, and storm;
And that he held
neither sword, nor any instrument of war, but that the rushing in of
him destroyed the whole multitude that came to subdue him; this is
the interpretation:
Behold, the days
come, when the most High will begin to deliver them that are upon the
earth. And he shall come to the astonishment of them that dwell on
the earth.
And one shall
undertake to fight against another, one city against another, one
place against another, one people against another, and one realm
against another.
And the time shall
be when these things shall come to pass, and the signs shall happen
which I shewed thee before, and then shall my Son be declared, whom
thou sawest as a man ascending.
And when all the
people hear his voice, every man shall in their own land leave the
battle they have one against another.
And an innumerable
multitude shall be gathered together, as thou sawest them, willing to
come, and to overcome him by fighting.
But he shall stand
upon the top of the mount Sion.
And Sion shall come, and shall be
shewed to all men, being prepared and builded, like as thou sawest
the hill graven without hands.
And this my Son
shall rebuke the wicked inventions of those nations, which for their
wicked life are fallen into the tempest;
And shall lay before
them their evil thoughts, and the torments wherewith they shall begin
to be tormented, which are like unto a flame: and he shall destroy
them without labour by the law which is like unto me.
And whereas thou
sawest that he gathered another peaceable multitude unto him;
Those are the ten
tribes, which were carried away prisoners out of their own land in
the time of Osea the king, whom Salmanasar the king of Assyria led
away captive, and he carried them over the waters, and so came they
into another land.
But they took this
counsel among themselves, that they would leave the multitude of the
heathen, and go forth into a further country, where never mankind
dwelt.
That they might
there keep their statutes, which they never kept in their own land.
And they entered
into Euphrates by the narrow places of the river.
For the most High
then shewed signs for them, and held still the flood, till they were
passed over.
For through that
country there was a great way to go, namely, of a year and a half:
and the same region is called Arsareth.
Then dwelt they
there until the latter time; and now when they shall begin to come,
The Highest shall stay the springs of the stream again, that they may
go through: therefore sawest thou the multitude with peace.
But those that be
left behind of thy people are they that are found within my borders.
Now when he
destroyeth the multitude of the nations that are gathered together,
he shall defend his people that remain.
And then shall he
shew them great wonders.
Then said I, O Lord
that bearest rule, shew me this:
Wherefore have I
seen the man coming up from the midst of the sea?
And he said unto me,
Like as thou canst neither seek out nor know the things that are in
the deep of the sea: even so can no man upon earth see my Son, or
those that be with him, but in the day time.
This is the
interpretation of the dream which thou sawest, and whereby thou only
art here lightened.
For thou hast
forsaken thine own way, and applied thy diligence unto my law, and
sought it.
Thy life hast thou
ordered in wisdom, and hast called understanding thy mother.
And therefore have I
shewed thee the treasures of the Highest: after other three days I
will speak other things unto thee, and declare unto thee mighty and
wondrous things.
Then went I forth
into the field, giving praise and thanks greatly unto the most High
because of his wonders which he did in time;
And because he
governeth the same, and such things as fall in their seasons: and
there I sat three days. (II Esdras 13:1-58 [KJVA])
Chapter 14
And it came to pass
upon the third day, I sat under an oak, and, behold, there came a
voice out of a bush over against me, and said, Esdras, Esdras.
And I said, Here am
I, Lord And I stood up upon my feet.
Then said he unto
me, In the bush I did manifestly reveal myself unto Moses, and talked
with him, when my people served in Egypt:
And I sent him and
led my people out of Egypt, and brought him up to the mount of where
I held him by me a long season.
And told him many wondrous things,
and shewed him the secrets of the times, and the end; and commanded
him, saying, These words shalt thou declare, and these shalt thou
hide.
And now I say unto
thee, That thou lay up in thy heart the signs that I have shewed, and
the dreams that thou hast seen, and the interpretations which thou
hast heard:
For thou shalt be
taken away from all, and from henceforth thou shalt remain with my
Son, and with such as be like thee, until the times be ended.
For the world hath
lost his youth, and the times begin to wax old.
For the world is
divided into twelve parts, and the ten parts of it are gone already,
and half of a tenth part:
And there remaineth
that which is after the half of the tenth part.
Now therefore set
thine house in order, and reprove thy people, comfort such of them as
be in trouble, and now renounce corruption, Let go from thee mortal
thoughts, cast away the burdens of man, put off now the weak nature,
And set aside the thoughts that are most heavy unto thee, and haste
thee to flee from these times.
For yet greater
evils than those which thou hast seen happen shall be done hereafter.
For look how much
the world shall be weaker through age, so much the more shall evils
increase upon them that dwell therein.
For the time is fled
far away, and leasing is hard at hand: for now hasteth the vision to
come, which thou hast seen.
Then answered I
before thee, and said, Behold, Lord, I will go, as thou hast
commanded me, and reprove the people which are present: but they that
shall be born afterward, who shall admonish them?
Thus the world is
set in darkness, and they that dwell therein are without light.
For thy law is
burnt, therefore no man knoweth the things that are done of thee, or
the work that shall begin.
But if I have found
grace before thee, send the Holy Ghost into me, and I shall write all
that hath been done in the world since the beginning, which were
written in thy law, that men may find thy path, and that they which
will live in the latter days may live.
And he answered me,
saying, Go thy way, gather the people together, and say unto them,
that they seek thee not for forty days.
But look thou
prepare thee many box trees, and take with thee Sarea, Dabria,
Selemia, Ecanus, and Asiel, these five which are ready to write
swiftly;
And come hither, and
I shall light a candle of understanding in thine heart, which shall
not be put out, till the things be performed which thou shalt begin
to write.
And when thou hast
done, some things shalt thou publish, and some things shalt thou shew
secretly to the wise: to morrow this hour shalt thou begin to write.
Then went I forth,
as he commanded, and gathered all the people together, and said, Hear
these words, O Israel.
Our fathers at the
beginning were strangers in Egypt, from whence they were delivered:
And received the law
of life, which they kept not, which ye also have transgressed after
them.
Then was the land,
even the land of Sion, parted among you by lot: but your fathers, and
ye yourselves, have done unrighteousness, and have not kept the ways
which the Highest commanded you.
And forasmuch as he
is a righteous judge, he took from you in time the thing that he had
given you.
And now are ye here,
and your brethren among you.
Therefore if so be
that ye will subdue your own understanding, and reform your hearts,
ye shall be kept alive and after death ye shall obtain mercy.
For after death
shall the judgment come, when we shall live again: and then shall the
names of the righteous be manifest, and the works of the ungodly
shall be declared.
Let no man therefore
come unto me now, nor seek after me these forty days.
So I took the five
men, as he commanded me, and we went into the field, and remained
there.
And the next day,
behold, a voice called me, saying, Esdras, open thy mouth, and drink
that I give thee to drink.
Then opened I my
mouth, and, behold, he reached me a full cup, which was full as it
were with water, but the colour of it was like fire.
And I took it, and
drank: and when I had drunk of it, my heart uttered understanding,
and wisdom grew in my breast, for my spirit strengthened my memory:
And my mouth was
opened, and shut no more.
The Highest gave
understanding unto the five men, and they wrote the wonderful visions
of the night that were told, which they knew not: and they sat forty
days, and they wrote in the day, and at night they ate bread.
As for me, I spake
in the day, and I held not my tongue by night.
In forty days they
wrote two hundred and four books.
And it came to pass,
when the forty days were filled, that the Highest spake, saying, The
first that thou hast written publish openly, that the worthy and
unworthy may read it:
But keep the seventy
last, that thou mayest deliver them only to such as be wise among the
people:
For in them is the
spring of understanding, the fountain of wisdom, and the stream of
knowledge. And I did so. (II Esdras 14:1-48 [KJVA])
Chapter 15
Behold, speak thou
in the ears of my people the words of prophecy, which I will put in
thy mouth, saith the Lord:
And cause them to be
written in paper: for they are faithful and true.
Fear not the
imaginations against thee, let not the incredulity of them trouble
thee, that speak against thee.
For all the
unfaithful shall die in their unfaithfulness.
Behold, saith the
Lord, I will bring plagues upon the world; the sword, famine, death,
and destruction.
For wickedness hath
exceedingly polluted the whole earth, and their hurtful works are
fulfilled.
Therefore saith the
Lord, I will hold my tongue no more as touching their wickedness,
which they profanely commit, neither will I suffer them in those
things, in which they wickedly exercise themselves: behold, the
innocent and righteous blood crieth unto me, and the souls of the
just complain continually.
And therefore, saith
the Lord, I will surely avenge them, and receive unto me all the
innocent blood from among them.
Behold, my people is
led as a flock to the slaughter:
I will not suffer
them now to dwell in the land of Egypt:
But I will bring
them with a mighty hand and a stretched out arm, and smite Egypt with
plagues, as before, and will destroy all the land thereof.
Egypt shall mourn,
and the foundation of it shall be smitten with the plague and
punishment that God shall bring upon it.
They that till the
ground shall mourn: for their seeds shall fail through the blasting
and hail, and with a fearful constellation.
Woe to the world and
them that dwell therein!
For the sword and
their destruction draweth nigh, and one people shall stand up and
fight against another, and swords in their hands.
For there shall be
sedition among men, and invading one another; they shall not regard
their kings nor princes, and the course of their actions shall stand
in their power.
A man shall desire
to go into a city, and shall not be able.
For because of their
pride the cities shall be troubled, the houses shall be destroyed,
and men shall be afraid.
A man shall have no
pity upon his neighbour, but shall destroy their houses with the
sword, and spoil their goods, because of the lack of bread, and for
great tribulation.
Behold, saith God, I
will call together all the kings of the earth to reverence me, which
are from the rising of the sun, from the south, from the east, and
Libanus; to turn themselves one against another, and repay the things
that they have done to them.
Like as they do yet
this day unto my chosen, so will I do also, and recompense in their
bosom.
Thus saith the Lord
God;
My right hand shall
not spare the sinners, and my sword shall not cease over them that
shed innocent blood upon the earth.
The fire is gone
forth from his wrath, and hath consumed the foundations of the earth,
and the sinners, like the straw that is kindled.
Woe to them that
sin, and keep not my commandments! saith the Lord.
I will not spare
them: go your way, ye children, from the power, defile not my
sanctuary.
For the Lord knoweth
all them that sin against him, and therefore delivereth he them unto
death and destruction.
For now are the
plagues come upon the whole earth and ye shall remain in them: for
God shall not deliver you, because ye have sinned against him.
Behold an horrible
vision, and the appearance thereof from the east:
Where the nations of
the dragons of Arabia shall come out with many chariots, and the
multitude of them shall be carried as the wind upon earth, that all
they which hear them may fear and tremble.
Also the Carmanians
raging in wrath shall go forth as the wild boars of the wood, and
with great power shall they come, and join battle with them, and
shall waste a portion of the land of the Assyrians.
And then shall the
dragons have the upper hand, remembering their nature; and if they
shall turn themselves, conspiring together in great power to
persecute them.
Then these shall be
troubled bled, and keep silence through their power, and shall flee.
And from the land of
the Assyrians shall the enemy besiege them, and consume some of them,
and in their host shall be fear and dread, and strife among their
kings.
Behold clouds from
the east and from the north unto the south, and they are very
horrible to look upon, full of wrath and storm.
They shall smite one
upon another, and they shall smite down a great multitude of stars
upon the earth, even their own star; and blood shall be from the
sword unto the belly, And dung of men unto the camel’s hough.
And there shall be
great fearfulness and trembling upon earth: and they that see the
wrath shall be afraid, and trembling shall come upon them.
And then shall there
come great storms from the south, and from the north, and another
part from the west.
And strong winds
shall arise from the east, and shall open it; and the cloud which he
raised up in wrath, and the star stirred to cause fear toward the
east and west wind, shall be destroyed.
The great and mighty
clouds shall be puffed up full of wrath, and the star, that they may
make all the earth afraid, and them that dwell therein; and they
shall pour out over every high and eminent place an horrible star.
Fire, and hail, and
flying swords, and many waters, that all fields may be full, and all
rivers, with the abundance of great waters.
And they shall break
down the cities and walls, mountains and hills, trees of the wood,
and grass of the meadows, and their corn.
And they shall go
stedfastly unto Babylon, and make her afraid.
They shall come to
her, and besiege her, the star and all wrath shall they pour out upon
her: then shall the dust and smoke go up unto the heaven, and all
they that be about her shall bewail her.
And they that remain
under her shall do service unto them that have put her in fear.
And thou, Asia, that
art partaker of the hope of Babylon, and art the glory of her person:
Woe be unto thee,
thou wretch, because thou hast made thyself like unto her; and hast
decked thy daughters in whoredom, that they might please and glory in
thy lovers, which have always desired to commit whoredom with thee.
Thou hast followed
her that is hated in all her works and inventions: therefore saith
God, I will send plagues upon thee; widowhood, poverty, famine,
sword, and pestilence, to waste thy houses with destruction and
death.
And the glory of thy
Power shall be dried up as a flower, the heat shall arise that is
sent over thee.
Thou shalt be
weakened as a poor woman with stripes, and as one chastised with
wounds, so that the mighty and lovers shall not be able to receive
thee.
Would I with
jealousy have so proceeded against thee, saith the Lord, If thou
hadst not always slain my chosen, exalting the stroke of thine hands,
and saying over their dead, when thou wast drunken, Set forth the
beauty of thy countenance?
The reward of thy
whoredom shall be in thy bosom, therefore shalt thou receive
recompence.
Like as thou hast
done unto my chosen, saith the Lord, even so shall God do unto thee,
and shall deliver thee into mischief.
Thy children shall
die of hunger, and thou shalt fall through the sword: thy cities
shall be broken down, and all thine shall perish with the sword in
the field.
They that be in the
mountains shall die of hunger, and eat their own flesh, and drink
their own blood, for very hunger of bread, and thirst of water.
Thou as unhappy
shalt come through the sea, and receive plagues again.
And in the passage
they shall rush on the idle city, and shall destroy some portion of
thy land, and consume part of thy glory, and shall return to Babylon
that was destroyed.
And thou shalt be
cast down by them as stubble, and they shall be unto thee as fire;
And shall consume
thee, and thy cities, thy land, and thy mountains; all thy woods and
thy fruitful trees shall they burn up with fire.
Thy children shall
they carry away captive, and, look, what thou hast, they shall spoil
it, and mar the beauty of thy face. (II Esdras 15:1-63 [KJVA])
Chapter 16
Woe be unto thee,
Babylon, and Asia! woe be unto thee, Egypt and Syria!
Gird up yourselves
with cloths of sack and hair, bewail your children, and be sorry; for
your destruction is at hand.
A sword is sent upon
you, and who may turn it back?
A fire is sent among
you, and who may quench it?
Plagues are sent
unto you, and what is he that may drive them away?
May any man drive
away an hungry lion in the wood?
Or may any one
quench the fire in stubble, when it hath begun to burn?
May one turn again
the arrow that is shot of a strong archer?
The mighty Lord
sendeth the plagues and who is he that can drive them away?
A fire shall go
forth from his wrath, and who is he that may quench it?
He shall cast lightnings, and who shall not fear?
He shall cast lightnings, and who shall not fear?
He shall thunder,
and who shall not be afraid?
The Lord shall
threaten, and who shall not be utterly beaten to powder at his
presence?
The earth quaketh,
and the foundations thereof; the sea ariseth up with waves from the
deep, and the waves of it are troubled, and the fishes thereof also,
before the Lord, and before the glory of his power:
For strong is his
right hand that bendeth the bow, his arrows that he shooteth are
sharp, and shall not miss, when they begin to be shot into the ends
of the world.
Behold, the plagues
are sent, and shall not return again, until they come upon the earth.
The fire is kindled,
and shall not be put out, till it consume the foundation of the
earth.
Like as an arrow
which is shot of a mighty archer returneth not backward: even so the
plagues that shall be sent upon earth shall not return again.
Woe is me! woe is
me! who will deliver me in those days?
The beginning of
sorrows and great mournings; the beginning of famine and great death;
the beginning of wars, and the powers shall stand in fear; the
beginning of evils!
What shall I do when
these evils shall come?
Behold, famine and
plague, tribulation and anguish, are sent as scourges for amendment.
But for all these
things they shall not turn from their wickedness, nor be always
mindful of the scourges.
Behold, victuals
shall be so good cheap upon earth, that they shall think themselves
to be in good case, and even then shall evils grow upon earth, sword,
famine, and great confusion.
For many of them
that dwell upon earth shall perish of famine; and the other, that
escape the hunger, shall the sword destroy.
And the dead shall
be cast out as dung, and there shall be no man to comfort them: for
the earth shall be wasted, and the cities shall be cast down.
There shall be no
man left to till the earth, and to sow it.
The trees shall give
fruit, and who shall gather them?
The grapes shall
ripen, and who shall tread them?
For all places shall
be desolate of men:
So that one man
shall desire to see another, and to hear his voice.
For of a city there
shall be ten left, and two of the field, which shall hide themselves
in the thick groves, and in the clefts of the rocks.
As in an orchard of
Olives upon every tree there are left three or four olives;
Or as when a
vineyard is gathered, there are left some clusters of them that
diligently seek through the vineyard:
Even so in those
days there shall be three or four left by them that search their
houses with the sword.
And the earth shall
be laid waste, and the fields thereof shall wax old, and her ways and
all her paths shall grow full of thorns, because no man shall travel
there through.
The virgins shall
mourn, having no bridegrooms; the women shall mourn, having no
husbands; their daughters shall mourn, having no helpers.
In the wars shall
their bridegrooms be destroyed, and their husbands shall perish of
famine.
Hear now these
things and understand them, ye servants of the Lord.
Behold, the word of
the Lord, receive it: believe not the gods of whom the Lord spake.
Behold, the plagues
draw nigh, and are not slack.
As when a woman with
child in the ninth month bringeth forth her son, with two or three
hours of her birth great pains compass her womb, which pains, when
the child cometh forth, they slack not a moment:
Even so shall not
the plagues be slack to come upon the earth, and the world shall
mourn, and sorrows shall come upon it on every side.
O my people, hear my
word: make you ready to thy battle, and in those evils be even as
pilgrims upon the earth.
He that selleth, let
him be as he that fleeth away: and he that buyeth, as one that will
lose:
He that occupieth
merchandise, as he that hath no profit by it: and he that buildeth,
as he that shall not dwell therein:
He that soweth, as
if he should not reap: so also he that planteth the vineyard, as he
that shall not gather the grapes:
They that marry, as
they that shall get no children; and they that marry not, as the
widowers.
And therefore they
that labour labour in vain:
For strangers shall
reap their fruits, and spoil their goods, overthrow their houses, and
take their children captives, for in captivity and famine shall they
get children.
And they that occupy
their merchandise with robbery, the more they deck their cities,
their houses, their possessions, and their own persons:
The more will I be
angry with them for their sin, saith the Lord.
Like as a whore
envieth a right honest and virtuous woman:
So shall
righteousness hate iniquity, when she decketh herself, and shall
accuse her to her face, when he cometh that shall defend him that
diligently searcheth out every sin upon earth.
And therefore be ye
not like thereunto, nor to the works thereof.
For yet a little,
and iniquity shall be taken away out of the earth, and righteousness
shall reign among you.
Let not the sinner
say that he hath not sinned: for God shall burn coals of fire upon
his head, which saith before the Lord God and his glory, I have not
sinned.
Behold, the Lord
knoweth all the works of men, their imaginations, their thoughts, and
their hearts:
Which spake but the
word, Let the earth be made; and it was made:
Let the heaven be
made; and it was created.
In his word were the
stars made, and he knoweth the number of them.
He searcheth the
deep, and the treasures thereof; he hath measured the sea, and what
it containeth.
He hath shut the sea
in the midst of the waters, and with his word hath he hanged the
earth upon the waters.
He spreadeth out the
heavens like a vault; upon the waters hath he founded it.
In the desert hath
he made springs of water, and pools upon the tops of the mountains,
that the floods might pour down from the high rocks to water the
earth.
He made man, and put
his heart in the midst of the body, and gave him breath, life, and
understanding.
Yea and the Spirit of Almighty God, which made all things, and searcheth out all hidden things in the secrets of the earth, Surely he knoweth your inventions, and what ye think in your hearts, even them that sin, and would hide their sin.
Yea and the Spirit of Almighty God, which made all things, and searcheth out all hidden things in the secrets of the earth, Surely he knoweth your inventions, and what ye think in your hearts, even them that sin, and would hide their sin.
Therefore hath the
Lord exactly searched out all your works, and he will put you all to
shame.
And when your sins
are brought forth, ye shall be ashamed before men, and your own sins
shall be your accusers in that day.
What will ye do? or
how will ye hide your sins before God and his angels?
Behold, God himself
is the judge, fear him:
Leave off from your sins, and forget your
iniquities, to meddle no more with them for ever:
So shall God lead
you forth, and deliver you from all trouble.
For, behold, the
burning wrath of a great multitude is kindled over you, and they
shall take away certain of you, and feed you, being idle, with things
offered unto idols.
And they that
consent unto them shall be had in derision and in reproach, and
trodden under foot.
For there shall be
in every place, and in the next cities, a great insurrection upon
those that fear the Lord.
They shall be like
mad men, sparing none, but still spoiling and destroying those that
fear the Lord.
For they shall waste
and take away their goods, and cast them out of their houses.
Then shall they be
known, who are my chosen; and they shall be tried as the gold in the
fire.
Hear, O ye my
beloved, saith the Lord: behold, the days of trouble are at hand, but
I will deliver you from the same.
Be ye not afraid
neither doubt; for God is your guide.
And the guide of
them who keep my commandments and precepts, saith the Lord God: let
not your sins weigh you down, and let not your iniquities lift up
themselves.
Woe be unto them
that are bound with their sins, and covered with their iniquities
like as a field is covered over with bushes, and the path thereof
covered with thorns, that no man may travel through!
It is left
undressed, and is cast into the fire to be consumed therewith. (II
Esdras 16:1-78 [KJVA])
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