What is the meaning of Ezra 10:35? Benaiah Ezra 10:35 drops us into a long list of Israelites who had married foreign women—a practice God had clearly forbidden. Benaiah is the first name in this little trio. Even though we know nothing else about him, his inclusion teaches big lessons. • Ezra’s careful record shows that sin is personal. Each name, including Benaiah’s, is a real man who had to own his failure (Ezra 10:18–19). • God had warned, “You must not intermarry with them… for they will turn your sons away from following Me” (Deuteronomy 7:3-4). Benaiah ignored that warning, illustrating how compromise starts with individuals. • Yet Benaiah also stood up to repent. Verse 44 notes, “All these had married foreign women, and some of them had children by these wives”. He accepted Ezra’s call to “make a covenant with our God… and send away all these wives” (Ezra 10:3). That response mirrors Israel’s earlier Passover return to purity (Ezra 6:21). • His story reminds us that God’s people are called to holiness (1 Peter 1:15-16) and that genuine repentance is possible no matter how personal the failure. Bedeiah The next man, Bedeiah, reinforces the same themes while pointing to corporate responsibility. • Ezra groups these names under “the descendants of Bani” (Ezra 10:34), showing how one family’s choices can affect the whole community (cf. Joshua 7:1). • Bedeiah’s compromise stands against God’s covenant demand: “Do not give your daughters to their sons or take their daughters for your sons” (Exodus 34:15-16). • When Ezra hears of such intermarriage he tears his garment and prays, “Our guilt has risen above our heads” (Ezra 9:6). Bedeiah’s name appears because that prayer led to specific, practical obedience—ending unequal marriages (Ezra 10:11-12). • The ripple effect of one man’s repentance encourages the entire community to realign with God’s standard, much like later reforms under Nehemiah (Nehemiah 13:23-27). Cheluhi Cheluhi completes the trio, underscoring the cost of covenant loyalty. • Sending away foreign wives was emotionally wrenching, especially when children were involved (Ezra 10:44). Cheluhi had to choose faithfulness to God over family ties, echoing Jesus’ later call to love Him above all others (Luke 14:26). • Malachi, a contemporary prophet, declares, “Judah has been unfaithful… by marrying the daughter of a foreign god” (Malachi 2:11). Cheluhi’s decision to separate shows what repentance looked like in real time. • This obedience preserved Israel’s distinct identity, safeguarding the lineage that would ultimately bring forth the Messiah (cf. Matthew 1:1-17). • Cheluhi’s name, though obscure, testifies that no act of repentance is too small for God to notice (Hebrews 4:13). summary Ezra 10:35 may read like a simple roll call—“Benaiah, Bedeiah, Cheluhi”—but each name highlights God’s unwavering call to holiness, the personal nature of sin, and the grace of repentance. By recording these men individually, Scripture shows that every believer’s choices matter, that obedience sometimes requires painful sacrifice, and that faithful response keeps God’s people on the path of blessing and purpose. |