Seraiah should not be confused with Sariah.
Seraiah or Sraya (שְׂרָיָה "Soldier/Prince/Princess of/is the LORD", Standard Hebrew Səraya, Tiberian Hebrew Śərāyā) is the name of several people mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, and a name with other non-biblical uses.
See 2 Samuel KJV.
Contemporary of Zedekiah. He was later carried captive by Nebuchadnezzar to Babylon, and there put to death (2 Kings KJV)Patrilineal AncestryAs per 1 Chronicles chapter 5
(40:8 KJV), one of the officials who survived the defeat and exile of Judea, a Netophathite (2 Kings KJV).
Also son of Kenaz (1 Chronicles KJV). It is unlikely that this Joab is the son of Tsruiah, King David's sister, because the Seraiah mentioned in the Book of Chronicles was the brother of Othniel, the nephew of Caleb, who lived centuries earlier. 4:13 KJV, 15:17 KJV.
Also father of Joshibiah and son of Asiel (4:35 KJV).
Seraiah is listed among those who returned from exile with Zerubbabel in Ezra NKJV and 12:1 NKJV. 12:12 NKJV names him as the head of a priestly family.
Seraiah is named as the father of Ezra in Ezra's genealogy (Ezra NKJV). Charles Souvay, in the Catholic Encyclopedia, notes that he is often understood "in a broad sense", meaning that Seraiah, the chief priest, spoken of in Kings 25:18-21 (at the time of the fall of Judah and the deportation to Babylon), was one of Ezra's ancestors.[1] The son of Azariah, the son of Hilkiah and brother of Jeremiah.
Son of Azriel
The son of Neriah. When Zedekiah made a journey to Babylon to do homage to Nebuchadnezzar, Seraiah had charge of the royal gifts to be presented on that occasion. Jeremiah took advantage of the occasion, and sent with Seraiah a word of cheer to the exiles in Babylon, and an announcement of the doom in store for that guilty city. The scroll containing this message (Jeremiah KJV) Seraiah was to read to the exiles, and then, after fixing a stone to it, was to throw it into the Euphrates, uttering, as it sank, the prayer recorded in 51:59-64 KJV. Babylon was at this time in the height of its glory, the greatest and most powerful monarchy in the world. Scarcely seventy years elapsed when the words of the prophet were all fulfilled. 51:59 KJV is rendered in the Revised Version, "Now Seraiah was chief chamberlain," instead of "was a quiet prince," as in the Authorized Version.
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