Nehemiah
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cc007
Langue
EN
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00:56:01
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1
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Nehemiah
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inconnu
Transcription automatique:
…
I'd like to take you to the Old Testament tonight, and to the book of Nehemiah.
And I'll read the whole of chapter one, and a few verses down into chapter two.
The words of Nehemiah, the son of Hakaliah, and it came to pass in the month Chislew,
in the twentieth year, as I was in Shushan the palace, that Hanani, one of my brethren
came, he and certain men of Judah, and I asked them concerning the Jews that had escaped,
which were left of the captivity, and concerning Jerusalem.
And they said unto me, the remnant that are left of the captivity there in the province
are in great affliction and reproach.
The wall of Jerusalem also is broken down, and the gates thereof are burned with fire.
And it came to pass, when I heard these words, that I sat down and wept, and mourned certain
days, and fasted, and prayed before the God of heaven.
And I said, I beseech thee, O Lord God of heaven, the great and terrible God, that keepeth
covenant and mercy for them that love him, and observe his commandments, let thine ear
now be attentive, and thine eyes open, that thou mayest hear the prayer of thy servant,
which I pray before thee now, day and night, for the children of Israel, thy servants,
and confess the sins of the children of Israel, which we have sinned against thee.
Both I and my father's house have sinned.
We have dealt very corruptly against thee, and have not kept the commandments, nor the
statutes, nor the judgments, which thou commandedst thy servant Moses.
Remember, I beseech thee, the word that thou commandest thy servant Moses, saying, If ye
transgress, I will scatter you abroad among the nations.
But if ye turn unto me, and keep my commandments, and do them, though there were of you cast
out unto the uttermost part of the heaven, yet will I gather them from thence, and will
bring them unto the place that I have chosen to set my name there.
Now these are thy servants, and thy people, whom thou hast redeemed by thy great power,
and by thy strong hand.
O Lord, I beseech thee, let now thine ear be attentive to the prayer of thy servant,
and to the prayer of thy servants, who desire to fear thy name, and prosper, I pray thee,
let thy servant this day grant him mercy in the sight of this man, for I was the king's
cup-bearer.
And it came to pass in the month of Nisan, in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes the king,
that wine was before him, and I took up the wine, and gave it unto the king.
Now I had not been before time sad in his presence, wherefore the king said unto me,
Why is thy countenance sad, seeing thou art not sick?
This is nothing else but sorrow of heart.
Then I was very sore afraid, and said unto the king, Let the king live for ever.
Why should not my countenance be sad, when the city, the place of my father's sepulchres,
lieth waste, and the gates thereof are consumed with fire?
Then the king said unto me, For what dost thou make request?
So I prayed to the God of heaven, and I said unto the king, If it please the king, and
if thy servant have found favour in thy sight, that thou wouldst send me unto Judah, unto
the city of my father's sepulchres, that I may build it.
Now just, if you would turn the page, there are a couple of verses at the end of chapter
six, which I think I perhaps ought to read as well.
Chapter six, and verse fifteen, the story of the repairing of the wall and the rebuilding
of the wall at Jerusalem comes in between, of course, but here verse fifteen says, So
the wall was finished in the twenty and fifth day of the month Elul, in fifty and two days.
And it came to pass that when all our enemies heard thereof, and all the heathen that were
about us saw these things, they were much cut down in their own eyes, for they perceived
that this work was wrought of our God.
I may, of course, have to ask you just to take note of a few things in those intervening
chapters and perhaps also in some of the rather later chapters, but as a start into the book
of Nehemiah and as a completion of one phase of the story which is in the book of Nehemiah,
I thought these were the best verses to read to you.
I don't know whether you've ever, sitting down there in the audience, thought of what
it's like to be in the shoes of a person that stands up here and speaks to you.
Perhaps you've not allowed yourselves to imagine what it must be like to get up here and speak.
But, you know, it isn't done all that easily, I will say, and certainly it needs a lot of
dependence on the Lord to do it at all in an acceptable way.
And I suppose it's fair to say that my position is slightly more difficult than usual in that
I have listened to what Michael has been saying this afternoon, and certainly he has presented
some pretty searching, challenging things to us this afternoon.
I feel rather glad that I had not felt inclined to take up some totally different type of
passage from this that we have been listening to this afternoon.
This that is presented to us in this Old Testament book of Nehemiah, in a sense, has its links
with what we have been hearing about this afternoon.
There will be points that I might have made that Michael has made already, and there will
be some other kind of lines that I would want to press out of this passage that perhaps
Michael has not mentioned.
But by and large we're on the same sort of realm of teaching, and I feel comforted by
that because I very much felt I was dependent on the Lord as to what I should be speaking
about here tonight, and I very much felt that this was his guidance, that I should
go to the book of Nehemiah and press some of the lessons for us today that come out
of this very far away story.
In one sense it is.
It takes us away into Old Testament times.
It takes us away into places very different geographically from our own.
It takes us into situations which were not quite our situation in the Christian day,
but at the same time the book of Nehemiah and the book of Ezra with it, I would say,
the two together, Ezra and Nehemiah, are passages, are books of the Bible, which are not strange
and far away, but are very much on the mark as far as help for us in the present day is
concerned.
And I want to say this, that when we read a book like that, though it may not be the
kind of book that we are referring to every day of our lives, we are reading about something
which is absolutely relevant, and there are lessons in it which are absolutely relevant
for us, hearers of the word of God today.
And the relevance of these passages comes out a little bit more clearly, needless to
say, if we understand the background of the book.
So I would like to say just a little about Nehemiah and Nehemiah's times, and in particular
to say just a little at first about the parallelism that seems to exist between the Old Testament
story of the children of Israel and the New Testament story of Christianity here on earth.
And one of the things that one can say straight away is the history of the children of Israel
under the hand of God had a bright beginning, there were marvellous parts to that story.
In its heyday, Israel, at its brightest, as God picked her up and as God made her, the
object of his favour set her up in those early days, if one goes, for instance, to the days
of David and Solomon, the brightness of the display of God that took place when God had
his way with his people and the testimony to the God of Israel was something that shone
out in all its brilliance and in all its certainty in those early days, something that
nobody that reads the Old Testament, particularly the parts leading up to and at the time of
David and Solomon, God was known, the God of Israel was borne witness to by his earthly
people in a way that made an impact on the surrounding nations and there was a bright
testimony to what God, in marvellous blessing and marvellous favour, would do for the people
of his choice and that is a story that is bright and brilliant and glorious from the
days of Solomon and the days of David leading up to Solomon were days when God, the God of
Israel, was in display in a very firm and obvious way and people were attracted to the God of
Israel. Think about the Queen of Sheba, for instance. Think about Ruth Morbitus earlier
than that. The God that was known in Israel was a God that was known in his attractive qualities
to outsiders and the witness to God, the true God, known in Israel was a very plain and open
thing in those days but of course though it began so brightly and though it began so wonderfully
it deteriorated and after Solomon there was the split in the kingdom and one lot went
downhill faster than the other but they both went downhill pretty clearly and read through
the books of Kings, read about the dishonour done to God amongst that people that God had been
so favourable towards. God had shown his favour, shown his sovereignty, shown his matchless
intentions of blessing to them and in answer they had departed from the God that had blessed them
so and the Old Testament story, the story of the children of Israel, is a story of great
movements from God at the beginning but it's also a story of great departure from God before the
end is reached and there was a great beginning but there was great departure, great distortion
of the representation of God that was supposed to be there amongst his earthly people,
great dishonour, great breakdown. You know as well as I do, I'm not telling you anything new,
that the story went downhill and instead of there being the bright display of God,
God was dishonoured and God was represented in a shameful way amongst his people and it
finished up by them going into, they disappeared out of sight, the ten tribes, they were taken
captive and they were never seen again. God knows where they are but they went into oblivion as far
as you and I are concerned. The other tribes, Judah and Benjamin, lasted a little bit longer
but before long they were captive and the very nations around them that might have been
on the receiving end of their witness to God, instead of that they were used by God as the
disciplining way that he used to correct them and to shame them and to bring them down
in repentance before himself. It's a sad story and it's a true story that the people of God
losing sight of the glory of the God whose name they were supposed to represent went downhill
and went badly downhill and were a disgrace to the God that they belonged to and he dealt with
them severely but righteously and rightly and they were in captivity to Babylon and the marvel is
that anybody came back from that captivity to Babylon. It's a story of great beginnings,
great movements from God, sovereignly God acted, but a story of great departure,
great dishonor, great distortion of the representation of God which ought to have
been there amongst them. And of course what I'm trying to press is that while that is one thing
and we read about that in the Old Testament, it's not very different when you move over into the New
Testament. In fact it's very much the same and this is why the lessons that come out of these
Old Testament passages are still very opposite, very much on the ball so to speak, on the mark
as far as we are concerned. I don't have to tell you that Christianity had a marvelous beginning.
God acted again sovereignly and marvelously in grace. God acted in Christ and all those
wonderful things that God did off his own initiative so to speak in Christ, what wonderful
things were those. And then the Holy Spirit came down from heaven after Christ ascended back to
the glory and there were great movements on earth in those early days, Pentecost and afterwards,
great movements from God in those days. Christianity had a marvelous start and
there was obedience and honor to God, obedience amongst the people of God in the power of the
Holy Spirit, testimony to God in those early days in such a marvelous and patent and irresistible
sort of way. God acted and the Holy Spirit was there and the people of God in tune with what
God was doing carried the name of Christ with great honor and great effect in those early days.
Christianity began well, but I don't have to persuade anybody here, surely I don't have to
persuade anybody here that Christianity today is not exactly on the lines of New Testament
Christianity. Christianity in the broad so to speak as we look around and see it today,
what a different thing it is from New Testament Christianity, how great the distortion,
how great the difference is as we look at Christianity as a whole today with all that's
gone on, all the honor to God seems to have melted away, everything's smart, everything's disfigured
in the closing days of the church's history on earth, great disunity, great chaos I suppose you
might call it. Sometimes we talk about the general thing which is Christendom or Christianity in
general, we talk about it being system but it seems to me it's not exactly system but it's chaos
and Babylon is not a bad name for Christianity today. Christianity is a great babel of voices
and practices and ways of doing things according to men's likes and needless to say you'll have a
great deal of difficulty in finding anything that's at all like New Testament Christianity
in Christianity in the broad today. So what I'm really pressing is that if it began well in the
Old Testament days and went downhill because of men's unfaithfulness and men's departure,
hasn't been different in the Christian day, you know, it began well but the New Testament itself
depicts for us the last days and if you were to read in 2nd Timothy for instance, we get guidance
for the last days in the Christian picture, in the Christian scene and there is a great deal
of need for that guidance in our kind of surroundings, in our kind of day when what was
of God has suffered so much change and so much distortion and is so untrue and unfaithful
to God so that the story of Israel is paralleled by the story of Christianity. This is the only
point that I'm wanting to make. There are differences but there are these similarities
and it's out of this similar situation which exists that we are in the end times so to speak
of the Christian era just as Nehemiah was in the end times of the Old Testament era of the people
of God and Nehemiah of course is one of the post-exilic books as they're often called,
the books which relate what happened after the captivity when the Persian emperor gave permission
for them to return to the center around which the Jewish system revolved, where the name of Jehovah
was honored, the place where God had put his name and that remnants, only a fraction of all
the people of God went back and seemed to try to start again on the lines that had been at
the beginning. What they accomplished was only a shadow of what had been there at the beginning
but they were doing God's will and they were pleasing God and God honored them for seeking
to be pleasurable to him in the day of departure and the day of distortion of the truth of God
as it was known in that day and God of course will honor those that will make movements which
are pleasing to him today and we're not without guidance as to how to please him today and one
of the things that will be necessary is to recognize the climate in which we live Christian
wise so to speak, see the situation as it really is according to God's word and take the obedient
line to his word in a day like ours. So that you see Ezra and Nehemiah tell us about that small
fraction of all the people of God that left behind the false position where they were,
certainly away in Babylon in captivity they were not in the place where God had intended them to
be but they were in the place where their own misdemeanors and disobedience had landed them
but they were in the false position. It was untrue to what they were as the people of God to be in
captivity in Babylon and a small fraction got the opportunity and took the opportunity that God
provided for them to return. The emperor was favorable to them. The Persian emperor allowed
them to return to Jerusalem and to start again so to speak and to return in a small way to what
had been at the beginning and so they went and so they went with God's approval for what they were
doing. They left the false position. They returned to the center where God's name was honored and
what they did was only a shadow of what had been going on in those centuries before but it was
pleasurable to God and of course as they did the will of God in their day it has lessons for us
about doing the will of God in our day and that is why a book like Nehemiah has very direct and
very apposite lessons for us today. The first six chapters of Ezra, just to put you in the picture
very briefly, the first six chapters of Ezra speak about the return from Babylon. Now that was so
they say in about 537 BC and as soon as they got there they started rebuilding the temple.
The leader, the prime mover in that return, the first return from Babylon was a man called
Zerubbabel and the temple took a lot of building. It stopped and started. There were standstills
and there were setbacks but the temple was the first thing that was erected and it took a time
and by 516 with certain standstill periods in between the temple was completed and you'll find
the first six chapters of Ezra tell about the return, tell about the rebuilding of the temple,
tell about the opposition, tell about the difficulties that were faced and overcome
in those days. When you get to chapter 7 of Ezra you begin to read about Ezra himself
and Ezra in fact did not go at the start to go back to Jerusalem. Ezra followed later and in
fact it was nearly a whole lifetime later. It was in 458 BC. Ezra went along and Ezra was the
person who was a scribe and he had set in his heart to study and to imbibe the law of God
and not only to know it but to do it and to teach it as well and Ezra was one of those
weighty men of God in that day and he went back with the vessels for the temple which was still
in Babylon up to that moment and he traveled to Jerusalem and what was most important about Ezra's
activities was that he underlined what was God's will, God's revealed will. The law of our God was
the thing that he had in mind to press and not only to obey it himself but to exemplify it in
his behavior and to press it upon that returned remnant there in Jerusalem. Ezra went along and
Ezra pressed the contents of the word of God. It was not the whole word of God as you and I know
of course but it was the law that Ezra read to them and insisted on pressing obedience to the
law. Nehemiah of course overlapped in time with Ezra at Jerusalem. Nehemiah in fact arrived later
than Ezra. He arrived in 445 BC and that I think is the firmest date of all these dates. The date
when Artaxerxes gave the commandment to rebuild the city of Jerusalem is a firm date of history
and that's 445 BC and that's what we're reading about here as we have read in these first two
chapters of Nehemiah. Nehemiah was concerned about the broken down state of Jerusalem
long before he got there but there came a moment when he was able to go and we've read about how
it was allowed for him to go and when Nehemiah went to Jerusalem the thing that he was anxious
that the temple was already built thing that he was anxious to set up was the the rebuilding of
the city of Jerusalem and in particular the walls and all those early chapters are about the
starting to build the walls and the completing the building of the walls around Jerusalem.
So that if you like thinking about the three persons Zerubbabel was the the person that moved
first, the leader of those that returned to Jerusalem at all from Babylon and the man that
got going with the rebuilding of the temple. Ezra came later and he was pressing the written word
of God, the law of Jehovah and Nehemiah comes along and the thing that he is most concerned
about and the thing that he gets going is the rebuilding and the repairing of the wall. First
thing that Nehemiah does when he gets to Jerusalem is to have a good look around in private without
having told anybody else what it was about. He goes and examines the picture, sees the broken
down state of those walls and sees all the places that needed the gaps in the defenses that needed
to be rebuilt. So Nehemiah has a good look around and before long he has the situation in hand,
the rebuilding of the walls is afoot and it happens in 52 days. I suppose that's quite
remarkable when you think about it, the walls of Jerusalem that had been so desolated and broken
down and shattered, decimated by the enemies that had been moving there for so long over the
centuries, they were rebuilt in 52 days and that tells me that it must have been a pretty dedicated
and efficient operation. Nehemiah got it going and Nehemiah got an awful lot of cooperation from
the people of God there in Jerusalem and Nehemiah got the walls rebuilt in 52 days. We have to bear
in mind that amongst the people of God the idea of the temple is an important one. The thought that
God dwells in his people and that there are standards which are properly representative
of God and there needs to be a character about the people of God which bears witness to him and
responds to him, that's one part of what we need to keep always in mind. But the thought that God
has expressed his mind in written form and that we have the revealed will of God in our hands
more than Ezra had. Ezra had the Pentateuch. I suppose he didn't have terribly much more perhaps
but Ezra had a total respect for the written word of God and he could say that obedience
to what God expressed as his mind for his people was the absolute paramount thing so to speak
and Ezra was one of those that pressed and himself showed obedience to the written word of God and
then Nehemiah built the walls. You know we have to think about God amongst us and what that really
means in the way of privilege and what that really means in the way of life but also what it means in
the way of testimony and proper response to the God who dwells amongst us. There's a certain character
that goes rightly with those amongst whom God dwells and we need to be responsive to him because
he has poured out his wealth upon us and revealed himself in such marvelous ways but in our lives
and in our assembly lives there needs to be a character which is consistent with a God who
dwells amongst us and has revealed himself to us. We need total obedience without any questioning
and without any arguing and without any doubting and to the word of God obedience to his word
what an important and vital ingredient that is in proper behavior responsive to God in our day
as well in as in Nehemiah's day but on top of those two things which are if you like
the temple and the book of the law tell us about there's also this wall building business
which Nehemiah was engaged in and I want to say just a little bit about these walls that Nehemiah
rebuilt you know from the very word go when God picked up his people Israel the first thing and
perhaps the most important thing that you've got to say about God's chosen people is that they were
separated to himself and Israel was a separate people and the thought that there is a line of
demarcation between God's people and the rest the outside world is one that still carries over
into the new testament day as well Israel was a separate people and it was absolutely vital that
there should be a preservation of the pure knowledge of God which they possessed which
God had given them of himself a preservation of the purity of their knowledge of God and also
a preservation of the the rightness the trueness of their witness to the God that they represented
and the fact that they were a separate people was something that God ordained so that
the practices of the nations around and the things that went on in the heathendom around
didn't invade and didn't make their incursions into the behavior and into the practices
of the people of God how quickly the true representation of God would have been
swamped and submerged if only the practices of the surrounding nations had got in and had got
diluting the behavior of the people of God there were to be a separate people so that they might
represent God aright and might be true to the God who had blessed them and favored them in such
a marvelous way Israel was a separate people they carried the revelation of God in the old testament
day and on their shoulders so to speak there was that right representation of God which was to be
maintained and any mixing any dilution with the practices and the idolatry and the heathen ways
around the worldly ways around would have been so much cancellation of the truth of God that
they stood for and so Israel was a separate people and it was absolutely essential that
they should be consistent in character with him the God who had blessed them and separated them
to himself it's true of course and I must say this I suppose to keep the picture clear
that the wall of partition between Jew and Gentile has gone in Christianity in the church
in the body of Christ Jew and Gentile and people of other kinds of differences as well
are all subsumed into one body you read in the epistle of Ephesians those that are blessed
Christian wise in Christ the barriers between nations the barriers between Jew and Gentile
the barriers between bond and free male and female all those things have gone there's a sense
that in Christ all the barriers are down as far as testimony to the world is concerned
there are no limits to the world wideness so to speak of God's intentions of grace in the
Christian day more so than in the Old Testament day there are no barriers at all as far as the
outflow of God's grace to the world are concerned but nevertheless this idea of the walls which is
in this Old Testament picture something that is just as important to stress and to get the lesson
from today in the Christian day as it ever was and we cannot be slapped and I say this
deriving it from the Old Testament picture we cannot be slapped about incursions from outside
which would spoil our Christian character make us untrue to the God that has blessed us we need
to be guarding all that God has revealed of himself to us we need to be resisting all those
influences from outside that would creep in and that would invade and spoil and dilute our right
representation of the God who in his marvelous grace has blessed us we need to be discerning
we need to be on the alert about influences that would creep in and spoil and destroy our true
Christian character one of the things that is so marvelously true about this man Nehemiah
is that he seems to be in such dependence on God and that's where he got the wisdom from he was
totally dependent on God and he was totally loyal to the God who he depended on and as a result of
being dependent on God he discerned troubles in advance and he forestalled the things that
might have blown up and was able to meet them in advance because he was a wide awake character
discerning with guidance from God the things which would have spoiled their reality in the position
to which they had been recovered Nehemiah he discerned these things and we need such a clear
sight and would God that we could have a clearer sight of our weaknesses and the ease with which
the enemy can creep in the ease with which the enemy can get a hold on us so to speak
the gaps in our defenses we need to be wide awake to their existence we need not to pretend
we need to we must not pretend that we are not weak we must not pretend that we have no
weaknesses we need to be alert to the places that need rebuilding and the gaps in the defenses that
need to be fortified again the wiles of the devil are so very real and our weakness is so very real
as well and how dependent on God and how under the guidance of God we need to be to see to it
that we are alert to what is needed and to keep out the things which will spoil and destroy our
true Christian character and our true Christian representation of God this of course was a return
to God's center to the place where his name was paramount now there had been those that didn't
return of course I suppose it is true that the number that returned from Babylon to Jerusalem
was quite a minority as compared with the whole Jewish population dispersed abroad in those
Middle East areas they tell me that there was a Jewish population in Alexandria in those days
lots and lots of Jews the few that went back to Jerusalem were literally a few
as compared with the total number and of course I suppose those in the post-exilic period that
didn't return from to Jerusalem had the most comfortable life of it if we want to opt for
the easiest life well being God might not be the easiest thing to do of the many options but the
thing is that God was honored by their action and we have to ask the question whether we put what
honors God before other things and these few at least that did go from Babylon to Jerusalem
they had honored God and in these books Ezra and Nehemiah you'll find lists of names
God seems to take care to put in his roles of honor the names of those that went and those
that obeyed and those that honored him in the day when so many others were not honoring him
it was a return to God's center and of course in the history of the church there have been these
kind of things as well we have behind us of course in the 20th century looking back over church
history the church has known dark times there have been times in the middle ages I suppose
when all Christian life was virtually out of sight doubtless there were real people but the
the true character of the church was completely blotted out so to speak by and large I'm speaking
in general now there have been times when over the history of the church there has been disobedience
to scripture untrueness to God and there have been dark dark times over many of those centuries
that are now behind us there have also been recoveries and bright recoveries which God has
sent along and it has been the work of God when it's happened we had mention of the reformation
this afternoon and what a bright time that was and what bright light shone out again it was there
already but it was recovered and uncovered again in the days of the reformation and what a great
work of God went on in those days and of course you and I I suppose we can look back in a rather
special way to things that happened in last century times there were great movements of the spirit of
God in the previous century to our century over a hundred years back now when men of God and you
know who I'm talking about the early brethren if you want me to define it that's what I'm
talking about in those days at the beginning of the 1800s men of God searching their bibles
found anew the truth of the church and found anew the guidance for the last days
of church times which is found in scripture and you know those early brethren were men of God
that found in the word of God instructions for the very day in which they lived and they acted
in obedience to the word of God and though it cost them a lot and though they they had to act
in their own initiative so to speak though with God behind them they did act in obedience to God's
word they saw the general state of the church they saw the chaos that was there they saw the
Babylon-like features that were there and they found the truth for the last days and the
kind of behavior for the last days there and they acted on it and they saw that the right line was
to be disassociated with this great bubble of voices babel of voices which was all around
they saw that their right course was to be disassociated with the systems of Christianity
and to be obedient to the scriptural guidelines for the present day the last days of the Christian
era and they saw that it was right to get back rather as the people away in Babylon saw that
it was right to get back to Jerusalem they saw that it was right according to scripture to get
back to behavior in continuity with the new testament the new testament pattern of assembly
behavior and not only did they see that it was right to do this but they've set it going they
did it themselves they were obedient themselves to the things and the guidance from God that came
to them in those days and of course we of course are the inheritors of the guidance that their
example provides for us and we need help not only to be in the position which we say to be
scriptural but to be have the reality about us that goes with it you know you know i find it
very searching i suppose you must do so too to remember uh that they'd come back from Babylon
almost a century before certainly a lifetime before these people that were around when nehemiah
went out to them were people that had been in the right place because their predecessors had moved
there a century beforehand now they were in the right place but they needed an awful lot of help
to be true to it and you know not much use being in the right place if we're not being true to it
and this is something that i want to get just a little bit here tonight we need help to be alive
and true to what is supposedly true of us we need humble conviction that we are where we are because
it is according to God and pleasing to God and doing his will to be where we are and we need to
far from the attitude of shallow irresponsibility about our christian assembly behavior we need to
be deeply serious about this and needless to say we need also to be very much guarded about
high-mindedness about this that's an awful trap isn't it you know people that claim to be more
than they are are more likely to sin than philadelphian people that are proud of what
they are and say we've got the right light on things as they are today well they're in danger
of not having the humble spirit that goes with philadelphia we need to be humble minded we need
to be low in our thoughts of ourselves but we need to be anxious to be obedient to God and to be
honoring him and we want to be where we are not because it is the most comfortable life for us
but because it is the God-honoring life that we wish to be pursuing well then we need to be free
from shallow shallowness and we need to be free from haughtiness but when all that's been said
there are other things that would drag us down and i must be finishing in five minutes but you know i
find in these passages a lot of things that are helpful because one of the things that is
absolutely pertinent as you read through these chapters between chapter one and chapter six
is that the enemy has certain tactics and he's not going to sit down and watch he's going to be active
and he's going to intervene to try to divert us from the course nehemiah sets up the walls
and he's anxious to have them as a distinctive people separate true to the god that they belong
to and those enemies that are around are anxious to destroy the whole thing and to swamp it and to
bring it to nothing and they're pretty well bent on it and nehemiah needs to be dependent on god
and very alert to what is happening and you and i will need to be dependent on god and very alert
to what is happening as well the first thing that they did was to ridicule these people that had
suddenly arrived and started to rebuild the walls and rebuild the city well nehemiah had a way of
uh uniting them uh i suppose it was his own faith and his own confidence in god
he took the initiative and they told them what to do and he managed to get them all together
their morale was high because his faith was so true to god and ridicule didn't seem to hurt
them very much they stood it and withstood it it didn't destroy their activity they went on
with what they knew to be god's will you'll find the ridicule in chapter four verses one to six
then you'll find that they tried a pretty head-on opposition and it seemed pretty threatening and
it seemed pretty frightening uh to those that were going to feel the brunt of it but you know
they were confident that the great god who was with them was more than equal to all the opposition
and the threat of opposition but made them more dependent on god and more conscious of the great
god who was with them and people might want to kill our loyalty to god but let us be dependent
on him and let us be conscious of the great god for whom we are placed in for whom we can
to whom we can bring honor in our conduct here in our day and so the head-on opposition
you know what they did they had a sword and they had a trowel and they got on with the wall
building and they had the sword there in case the enemy was there as well and of course the work
went on and the defense was there if needs be the sword of the spirit how good a weapon that is
for us to meet the enemy opposing the attacks but let us not only be waiting for attacks but let
us be doing the work which pleases god as well and there was a bit of internal dissent in chapter
five the head-on opposition comes at the end of chapter four there was the seeds of internal
dissent amongst the very people who were all supposed to be acting together some of them
were gaining advantage at the expense of others and they were rather pleased to be doing that
it was a pretty shameful thing to be doing when they all were supposedly supposed to be facing
the enemy but nehemiah has some words to them and nehemiah lets them see how shameful this
self-seeking self-advantaging attitude was and somehow or other they all got pretty quickly
into the frame of mind that was repentant for that bit of dissension that arose amongst them
what a danger that is dissension amongst those that supposedly the people of god standing for
him in a difficult day well it blew over rather quickly and nehemiah seemed to have the means of
presenting his own example to them in a way that made them a bit shame-faced about what they had
been doing and they repented for what they would have got on with the work and then there was the
compromise that was suggested to them in chapter six the first four verses the enemy comes along
with a proposition he said they proposed that they go and have a conference about it and it
was fairly obvious that there was going to be a give-and-take so to speak and nehemiah didn't
want anything to do with the confessions to the enemy wasn't going to be a man that would
compromise anything when god's standards need to be maintained and compromise is a proposition
that comes from the enemy and it's better taken no notice of the work is more important to get on
with so nehemiah thought and nehemiah was right in this we can be pretty sure he said i'm doing
a great work it wasn't a proud statement but it was the truth i'm doing a great work and i can't
come down i'm not going to be diverted into conferences talk with you folk about compromise
i'm getting the work done it's far more important that i should be getting on with a positive work
for god and then in the next verses chapter six verses five to nine they come along with
another bit of propaganda as it seems to me they misrepresent what they're doing and they make sure
that this untruth about what they are doing in jerusalem gets to the right ears and they think
to spoil the work of god by misrepresenting it and nehemiah says no such thing as what you are
saying really happening the truth is sufficient defense if it's pure misrepresentation of what
we are doing we can stand misrepresentation if we know that it's not true but at the same time we
have to be a little bit careful about being lured into ways which will be dishonoring to god and
nehemiah was trapped almost he wasn't quite of course he was alert to it but there was a trap
laid for him in chapter 6 verse 10 they said
your life's at risk let's have a discussion in the security of the temple and so they proposed
that they should go into a quiet place in the temple and have a good talk about it nehemiah
and the enemies of the people of god of course it was true really that nehemiah was not allowed to
go into the temple he wasn't one of those that could go into the temple according to the law
of god and so they were putting disobedience to the law of god to him as a means of saving his
own skin so to speak and getting on with a discussion about the problem that was facing
them all nehemiah wouldn't go nehemiah wouldn't be trapped into disobedience to god you and i have
to be awfully careful because the enemy is pretty astute you know pretty clever he will lure us
into false moves rather easily and we have to be awfully careful whether what we allow ourselves
to do is not false to the god whom we have to obey and nehemiah was one of those that knew that
lesson well didn't fall into that trap could have provided a lot of ammunition for them against him
if he had disobeyed the law in that point but he didn't do it i would say the enemy was fairly
wily wasn't he in suggesting that to nehemiah so we have to be careful about the things that lure
into false moves when it's all boiled down you know it amounts to whether we are ready to spare
ourselves first or whether obedience to scripture comes first and this is what i find just rather
searching about this whole story you know um the heart of the matter really is where our loyalties
lie and nehemiah was loyal to his god even though it might mean risky things that might be done
dangerous things that might be done um the heart of the matter is where our loyalties
really are is sparing of ourselves the first thing that we think about
or is obedience to scripture the first thing that we think about uh i read a little book i don't
know whether any of you will have seen this book it's a little bit of a uh
hard-hitting book to read it but it's a book called the sacred cow i don't know if anybody
has read that and the sacred cow that's enshrined in the title is money and the author of that book
i've just written out just a little bit of what he said in one sentence he said we today we
christians today too are so imbued with the value system of this world we're like sponges soaked
like sponges soaked with the value levels and the value system of this world and one of the sad
things and it's what michael was saying already is that we don't recognize worldliness when it's
with us we can see it in other people as well but a lot of our makeup a lot of our ways of doing
things or worldly ways of doing things and the kind of general outlook uh that marks the world
self-comfort self-satisfaction self-pleasing even in the church that we go to even in the
place where we worship people say i don't like it there we'll go here pleasing themselves as
to what they are doing that's worldliness that's a habit that belongs to this world
to look after number one first and even in our christianity that is something that invades
always of doing things well we're fairly close to defeat on the score of worldliness and we
need to see ourselves as pretty close to defeat on the score of worldliness be not conformed to
this world john paul says to the romans but be transformed by the renewing of your mind
that you may prove what is that good and acceptable perfect will of god the stamp of this world has
such a shape about it that it so easily stamped itself on us as well and we're so like the world
uh and the renewing of our mind to be true to our god and to be obedient to our god and to be loyal
to his word and obedient to his word to be after the things that are honoring to him to be so taken
up by the splendor of the glory that he has revealed to us in the person of christ and the
richness of the grace that he has presented to us to be so moved by the rich things which god has
revealed to us that our character may be stumped by that and not by the world as it is around us
well may it be that we can be like that you know there's a lot that can't be said about nehemiah
the man and there are various things that one could go on to talk about about the forthright
way in which nehemiah did everything in his faith and in his outrightness and his closeness
to the god that he sought to serve but perhaps what we have said will be sufficient and it is
my prayer that the lessons that come out of this old testament book might be well learned
and well obeyed by those of us who have been listening to this these things here this afternoon …