13 Therefore, now, arrange your house and counsel your people, comfort the humbled, and renounce corruption,
14 And cast away mortal thoughts from yourself, discard human burdens, remove the weaknesses of nature, and lay aside burdensome thoughts, and prepare to move away from these times.”
The writer continues:
“In Ezra’s case, the promised transit could only be realized one way — the Lord must take him into His Kingdom:
15 ‘For there will be more troubles than you have seen now,’ says the Lord.” But in the case of the last White King, the work and the transition are only beginning. Meanwhile, it is time for the White King to organize his house, instruct the people, comfort the humbled, and transform his mind in order to lead Holy Rus. As a parallel prophecy from the Collection of Leo the Wise says before ascending to the kingdom: 9 The one who is considered as if dead and avoids attention or recognition, many know him though no one sees him; he will suddenly rise like from a wine feast and will undoubtedly hold the scepters of the kingdom.
67 You, wanderer living in a stone house, go, leave it. Enough of living sadly, crying, and tending a garden in the countryside; it is time to renew your life. 68 You who were dead and full of sorrows; remember once more the best of all and forever scatter the trophy of injustice and lawlessness.
Ezra believes that in due time, at the end of days, the Lord will send someone to do what Ezra himself did — to instruct the people and prepare them for the great events ahead.
18 Then I answered and said: Here I am before You, Lord;
19 I will go as You commanded me and instruct the current people; but who will teach those who will be born later?
20 For the age lies in darkness, and those living in it are without light.” Again, you see, it’s interesting, right? The age is in darkness and people are without light.
“21 Because Your law is burned, and therefore no one knows what You have done or what they should do.