He had just been handed something rare — a second chance for an entire people.
Jerusalem had fallen. The Babylonians had taken most of Judah into exile, but a remnant remained in the land. Nebuchadnezzar appointed Gedaliah as governor over them and stationed him at Mizpah. Scattered commanders began returning with their men. Farmers came back to their fields. For a brief, fragile moment, something like normal life was possible again.
Then a trusted ally pulled Gedaliah aside with urgent news: a man named Ishmael — royal blood, a grudge, and the backing of a foreign king — was coming to kill him. Johanan, one of his own field commanders, even offered to go eliminate the threat quietly before it could land. Gedaliah refused to believe it. He told Johanan he was speaking falsely about Ishmael. Then he sat down to eat.
Ishmael, posing as a friend, came to dinner with ten men.
That's all it took. Ten men, one invitation, and a host too proud — or too naïve — to imagine that someone could sit at his table and mean him harm. Gedaliah didn't make it to dessert. His guards died with him. Then they snagged seventy pilgrims on their way to worship, slaughtered them and tossed them into a cistern. The entire community was taken captive and marched out of town. All of it, because one man would not listen.