What happens when a community returns home to find that home no longer looks the way they remembered? In this episode of the Bible in a Year podcast, Old Testament scholar Cameron Howard joins hosts Kathryn Schifferdecker and Kristofer Phan Coffman to explore Ezra & Nehemiah, two books originally written as one, chronicling the return from Babylonian exile and the long, complicated work of rebuilding. Cameron traces the key plot points of both books, from the edict of Cyrus the Great and the reconstruction of the second temple in Ezra, to the rebuilding of the walls of Jerusalem in Nehemiah, all set against the backdrop of Persian imperial rule.
Cameron also unpacks the deeper themes running through Ezra & Nehemiah, including questions of community identity, boundary making, and what it means to negotiate grief and hope at the same time. Along the way, he shares his favorite passage in the entire Hebrew Bible, a scene from Ezra 3 where the sounds of weeping and shouting for joy were so intertwined that no one could tell them apart.
This episode is part of The Bible in a Year from Luther Seminary podcast, where we journey through each book of the Bible over 52 weeks.
Resources Mentioned
- The Old Testament for a Complex World by Cameron Howard
Bible Bingo: Key Words to Watch For
- Persian Empire
- Second Temple
- Walls of Jerusalem
- Zerubbabel (and Jeshua)
- Lists
Cameron’s 7-Word Summary
“Nothing is ever like it was before.”

