Nehemiah
ID
hn011
Langue
EN
Durée totale
00:47:56
Nombre
1
Références bibliques
inconnu
Description
Nehemiah
Transcription automatique:
…
Nehemiah chapter 1 and the first verse, the word of the Lord, sorry, the word of Nehemiah the son
of Hekeliah, and it came to pass in the month Jislu in the 20th year, as I was in Juzan 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. Shall we turn to the second chapter?
An answer to his prayer is that he gets to Jerusalem, and the 11th verse of the second
chapter reads, so I came to Jerusalem and was there three days, and I arose in the night,
I and some few men with me, neither told I any man what my God had put in my heart to do at
Jerusalem, neither was there any beast with me, save the beast that I rode upon. And I went out
by night by the gate of the valley, even before the dragon well, and to the dung port, and viewed
the walls of Jerusalem which were broken down, and the gates thereof were consumed with fire.
Then I went on to the gate of the fountain, and to the king's pool, but there was no place for the
beast that was under me to pass. Then went I up in the night by the brook, and viewed the wall,
and turned back, and entered by the gate of the valley, and so returned. And the elders knew not
whether I went or what I did, neither had I as yet told it to the Jews, nor to the priests, nor to
the nobles, nor to the rulers, nor to the rest of that did the work. Then said I unto them,
You see the distress that we are in, how Jerusalem lieth waste, and the gates thereof are
burned with fire. Come, and let us build up the wall of Jerusalem, that we be no more a reproach.
Then I told them of the hand of my God which was good upon me, as also the king's words that he had
spoken unto me, and they said, Let us arise up and build, so they strengthened their hands for this
good work. But when Sanballat the Horonite, and Tobiah the Servant the Ammonite, and Geshem the
Arabian heard it, they laughed as to scorn, and despised us, and said, What is this thing ye do?
Will ye rebel against the king? Then answered I them, and said unto them, The God of heaven,
he will prosper us, therefore we his servants will arise and build, but ye have no portion,
nor rite, nor memorial in Jerusalem. Just a few verses at the beginning of the next chapter.
Then Eliashib the high priest rose up with his brethren the priests, and they builded the
sheep gate, and they sanctified it, and set up the doors of it, even unto the tower of Meir
they sanctified it, unto the tower of Hananiel, and next unto him builded the men of Jericho,
and next to them builded Zachar the son of Imri. The fourth chapter.
The first verse. But it came to pass that when Sanballat heard that we builded the wall,
he was wroth, and took great indignation, and mocked the Jews. And he spake before his brethren
and the army of Samaria, and said, What do these feeble Jews? Will they fortify themselves?
Will they sacrifice? Will they make an end in a day? Will they revive the stones out of the heaps
of the rubbish which are burned? Now Tobiah the Ammonite was by him, and he said,
Even that which they build, if a fox go up, he shall break, even break down their stone wall.
Hear, O our God, for we are despised, and turn their reproach upon their own head,
and give them for a prey in the land of captivity. A little lower down, the tenth verse.
Just the tenth verse. And Judah said, The strength of the bearers of burdens is decayed,
and there is much rubbish, so that we are not able to build the wall.
Now should we turn over to the sixth chapter?
And the first verse. Now it came to pass when Sanballat, and Tobiah, and Geshem the Arabian,
and the rest of our enemies heard that I had builded the wall, and that there was no breach
left therein, though at that time I had not set up the doors upon the gates, that Sanballat and
Geshem sent unto me, saying, Come, let us meet together in some one of the villages in the plain
of Ono. But they sought to do me mischief. And I sent messengers unto them, saying,
I am doing a great work, so that I cannot come down. Why should the work cease while I leave it
and come down to you? Yet they sent unto me four times after this sort, and I answered them after
the same manner. And lastly, toward the end of the chapter, the fifteenth verse. 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,
that they were much cast down in their own eyes, for they perceived that this work was wrought
of our God. May the Lord bless to us those readings of his word.
I wanted to speak very simply on this book tonight, this wonderful book of Nehemiah,
because I feel that with this book there is so much up-to-date teaching for us, so much that
we can benefit in the day in which we live. To tell you the truth, I do like this book very much,
and aren't they reading it in the young people's meetings on the last Saturday in the month,
how I'd like to be there, but I'm not always able to get away on Saturday, but
how wonderful a book it is to read, and how much we can benefit by it. Now, you remember we were
hearing concerning the temple this afternoon, and after the temple had been built, those people had
worked in such a wonderful way, worked with all the energy that they might, they had been very
energetic in spite of enemies that were around them, and then there was the lull. I wonder why.
Sometimes, you know, when we have a work to do for the Lord, when we see the end of that work,
then we drop our hands, and then things begin to go wrong, don't they?
Here, it appears that for quite a number of years, there had been nothing done in that city.
There was the temple, and there those men had worked so faithfully, but now I'm afraid that
things had gone backward instead of going forward. Had anybody noticed the going back there? Had
anybody noticed the grieving conditions there in Jerusalem at that time? It appears that few
people had noticed much concerning it. If they'd noticed, as that good man Hanani, they'd taken
little care concerning it, but God noticed. God noticed because of the very fact that city had
been placed there to his glory. It was a wonderful city, the city of blessing, and as he'd noticed
these things, it was not to be allowed to stay as it was. What would he do? Would he use somebody?
Yes, he'd firstly raise up a servant, and then, of course, a servant cannot be used on his own.
He must have others in fellowship with him in the work that he does for the Lord, and therefore,
having raised a servant, he would gather servants round him so that they would be able to work
and restore that city to some of its former glory. Who would he use? There was Hanani in the city,
and with regard to him, Nehemiah, his brother, said at a later time, but he was a good man.
He was a good man, and I feel that he's like so many of us today, a good man, but doing nothing
about those things that are for the glory and the honour of the Lord. He was a good man. He was a
good man, and if we turn and if we look among our brethren today, we can say concerning so many,
he was a good, he's a good man. But what are we doing, brethren, in these later days, just before
the coming of the Lord, with these conditions that prevail in our midst? What are we doing
about these things? So I feel just at that moment, God had not a man in the city of Jerusalem among
that 50,000 men that could do that task for himself. So where would he look? Well, he looked
outside, miles, hundreds of miles away to that place, Shushan the palace. He looked to Nehemiah.
Now you say, well, why didn't Nehemiah go back? He was, if he was such a faithful man,
why didn't he go back with the 50,000 that went? There was the willingness and readiness for the
authorities to allow them to go back. Why didn't he go back? Now there is a grave warning here
for every one of us that will do any service for the Lord. I would suggest to you with regard to
Nehemiah, he had not been led of the Lord to go back with those 50,000 other of the Israelites
that went back. He was not. No, he hadn't been led of the Lord and he stayed just where he was
until this time when the Lord would be able to use him in such a greater way in influence with
regard to the authorities so that he could go and be instrumental in the rebuilding of Jerusalem's
walls. Isn't there a warning? Isn't there a lesson for us in this? That whatever other people might
be called to do, don't let us do that same thing. Don't let us move a step because they're moving.
Let it be that we wait till we hear the word of the Lord speaking to us and then let us move
and not before. So we see here that Hanani, that good man with several of his friends,
go that long journey and they go to Nehemiah who is found in Shushan the palace. Look up at the
map at the back of your Bible and look at the journey that he took and you'll ask yourself,
did he take this journey because of the very fact that he desired to see his brother?
I feel that he was led of the Lord even to take that journey so that he might communicate with
his brother concerning the sad conditions in Jerusalem. And it appears he's not long in the
company of his brother before his brother asks him, how is Jerusalem? Well it was natural for
him, was it not, to ask for that place because it had such a great place in his heart, that place
Jerusalem. The place that he had come from, the place where God had chosen to place his name,
what a great place it had in the heart of this man Nehemiah and the people that were there,
how much he cared for them although he was so far away. And he asked the question, how are they doing
in Jerusalem? And he says the gates are burned with fire, the walls are broken down.
What a sad picture Hanani brought to Nehemiah just at this time and what effect
would it have on this wonderful man that God would raise up? There are things that he didn't do but
there are many things that he would do in these circumstances. Firstly, there was one thing that
we are so prone to do, he didn't criticize, did he? He might have said concerning those 50,000 that
had gone, well you know I really expected that, didn't you? There was nobody among them that could
do anything much and well it's just left and I can expect it. No he didn't criticize.
The easiest thing brethren is to criticize and how sad it is when we criticize others. I know
that there can be constructive criticism and later on in the second chapter
you'll see, he says, you'll see what distress we are in, that's the kind of criticism that's desired
today. On the other hand, he didn't shrug his shoulders. He might have said with regard to
himself where he was, well look I've got my service to do here with the king and however can I be of
any use, how can I leave the work that I'm on here and come to you? I might have the qualities to do
that work but however is it possible I just can't do it. You know sometimes we are we are prone to
do that. Sometimes it is with regard to ourselves we would like to think that others can do the
service of the Lord but there are so many things in our lives that are a hindrance to us, well we
just can't do it. But what did he do? He full well knew the difficulties in his pathway with regard
to this. He full well knew the problems that he had with this great man, this one of the greatest
monarchs, and as he thought of the difficulties it says that he sat down. That's a thing that we
very rarely do easily, is it to sit down. What we want to do, immediately there's something to be
got on with for the Lord. We want to get on with that task but here this man I feel that he wouldn't
be so popular today in the fact that before he started his service for the Lord he'd sat down
and he'd prayed, he'd wept, he'd mourned, he'd planned for four months. You'd say what a waste of time.
No, no waste of time. The scripture doesn't it say in one place that the man of God must not make haste
and this man of God truly did not make haste in the fact that firstly with regard to him he sat
down and contemplated the people of God there in Jerusalem and the condition that they were in.
Here was a man then that had a care for the people of God and such a care for the people
of God that now he sits down and contemplates their conditions, the prevailing conditions in
Jerusalem. I wonder how often we sit down, we who have a care for the Lord's people, I wonder how
often we sit down and contemplate the Lord's people in the condition and position that they
find themselves today. You know there's so much that we should contemplate. I feel that these
contemplations should not make us so morbid and so unhappy that we have no joy in the Lord. Let it
ever be that our joy is in the Lord and that when we come together we have such a joy in him that he
has a portion in us. But let it be that in this last day we contemplate the people of God in their
sad condition today and let it be that here as we contemplate them we have a real care for them.
This man did. Firstly by that which he did I feel that he had a real care for them in that here
he sat down. Not alone did he sit down but the scripture says concerning him this great, this
strong man, this man that would stand in the presence of the king so often because of who he was
it says that he wept, he wept. I would suggest to you just at this moment that as I see this man
weeping he's now taking the sides with God who at this moment alone grieved about the condition of
the people of God. He takes his side with a grieving God with regard to the conditions that prevailed
in Jerusalem. That's what he does. Don't you see the same attitude with regard to Elijah when he
sees the people astray and when he takes sides with God and when he prays as God would allow him
to pray according to my word? Yes he's a man because he has a care for the people of God.
He takes sides with God in grieving concerning that which had come in. Not alone though did he
take sides with God but with regard to him it says that he mourned. He took his place as one that
mourned because of the sad conditions that were prevailing and he was one of those that he felt
was responsible for the conditions that were there. If you read the prayer that he prays in the first
chapter you'll see I and my father's house have sinned. That's the mourning. He not only took his
place with God grieving because of the condition but now he takes his place with the people
and he takes his place so that he might in that way show how grieved he is concerning
the sad condition which they find themselves and he finds themselves in being one of them.
So he sat down, he mourned, he wept, he prayed. He prayed! Let's think of that for a moment
because that's the right approach with regard to prayer to firstly contemplate and then mourn
yes and grieve and then to pray. You think for a moment that sometimes we're in the position
or in the attitude for prayer when something comes into our lives. Isn't it first that we
should contemplate us before the Lord and then with the mourning and with the weeping then get
down before him and pray and pray as this man prayed in all his earnestness. Firstly confessing
the sins of his father's house and then praying for those people and then not only praying for
those people but at the end praying for the man. He speaks of this great monarch perhaps the greatest
man living at that time and he says to God concerning him well have mercy on me so that
in the position I am I might find grace with this man because that was not he was nothing more than
that to him. In this position we must know that he as a godly man showed the respect to him as a
master in the next chapter but here as before God he was a man. He was a man and a man in God's hand.
So what did he do you say in the first chapter? Well he sat down, he wept, he mourned, he fasted
and he prayed but that wasn't all. That's a good I was going to say a good and a proper start with
regard to any work of the Lord and yes it is but with regard to that man there is something that
is left out of that first chapter that we must put in because of the very fact that afterwards
we see that it's there. Wasn't there the fact that on at this time during those four months
he was able to plan because of the fact that he had prayed in faith.
If you look at the beginning of the second chapter you'll see he stands before that man
the king and you'll see that there he was in fear and trembling of his life but he's been praying
and he was praying in such a way that when the king says well what is your request he was able
to tell him the time that he would be away from the palace able to tell him all that he needed
for his journey and for his business there and in every way we see that he had that mind that
was directed by God to plan this work that was before him. You know I don't think I've got much
time for people that don't sit down and think much about their ministry if they've got something
before them of the Lord. I don't think we should have too much tabulated you know but I think it
should be gone over in the presence of the Lord so that when there is something like this arise
we've got the plan before us and we're able to go on and therefore with regard to Nehemiah he was
blessed of the Lord his prayer was answered his plan was submitted and there he goes to Jerusalem.
What's he go for? To see the conditions that prevailed in Jerusalem and as he goes with
just a few no doubt at this time we see that he tells nobody concerning what he's going to do.
Now he would be a man that would be looked up to among those people in Israel in Judah and with
regard to him coming amongst them he might have been in a position of authority and he might
in one way have shown that authority over them but he just didn't. What he did was that he came
in all humility so that he might work not only over them but with them and among them he was not
going to lord it over them was he and therefore he comes in all humility he waits three days before
he begins to look around the city and those days were not wasted. I would feel that this man being
the godly man and the great man that he was he spent those those days in a supplication to his
God concerning the great service that he had and as he was filmed there at the end of the three
days it's his time and God says go God says go. When does he go? He goes at night and as I think
of him going at night it shows me that with regard to his position among them there he wasn't going
to be a carping critic. No he hadn't come in that way. A critic is somebody that I feel that we can
do without unless his criticism is constructive and unless he speaks as afterward this man spoke
concerning the conditions of these people. He goes out by night and he's going to view the city and
how should he view the city? Should he go and where the wall is still raised should he go and view it
from the top of the wall? No he goes through the valley gate. He goes through the valley gate
and he returns through the valley gate. It is with regard to this man he's clothed with humility
and he goes forth in this way and as he goes forth in the night looking at the various conditions
of the city he finds what a sad case this city is in and so on the next day he gathers the people
together and as he gathers them together he says you see what distress we are in, we are in.
How saddened he was concerning the position of the people there in those ruins and how sad he
was to see that city that had been glorious now burned, the gates burned with fire. You see what
distress we are in. I want you to notice how he speaks to these people that have been living in
these conditions and not bothering about them. He spoke concerning the condition and the distress
that they were in then he spoke of the good the hand of his God that was good upon him. The hand
of his God that was good upon him. I wonder what he told them at this time. Well he must tell them
firstly I think concerning Han and I coming with a message concerning their city and that he would
say is how I knew concerning the conditions and then he must say concerning the prayer that he
prayed before God and then he must say concerning the time when he spoke to that king that was lord
over him when he spoke to him he said I told them of the good hand of my God upon me and also the
words of the king. Now see he brought them in on this work because he just couldn't do this work
on his own. He was not going to do this work on his own. Every work of the Lord needs fellowship
among the people of God so they work together and here going down and sitting with them and owning
his sin owning his departure with them in that then telling them the encouraging thing about
the hand of the Lord and what can be more powerful then they say and they say as a whole let us arise
and build. Now would to God that spirit was amongst us today how different would our meetings be
how different would be the work in various ways today if we were able to realize and appreciate
the good hand of the Lord amongst us and that which is at our disposal. He had so much at his
disposal because of the word of the king and how different our conditions would be if we knew
something of that. Wouldn't it bring joy to our hearts today if we in our little meetings could
hear the word of everyone in the meeting let us rise and build. Now somebody I know will say with
regard to what I'm saying yes but don't forget brother this is a day of small things and we
don't expect, you don't? You don't expect any blessing? Well you just won't get it will you?
How can you get a blessing if you're not expecting it and isn't it always possible that God can give
a little reviving but we are to be in the spirit so that the Lord can use us we are to be in the
spirit of revival not that we are to be dropping our hands and knowing that it's the last days to
just give up that's not the thought at all. Let us arise and build. Now I wonder how they built and
what they did. Now if you looked into the third chapter well I wouldn't like to read it through
here I make enough mistakes as I read already and I'd make more I suppose if I read that chapter
but in that chapter we see they began to build and they did begin to build and as we see them
building you'd say well where did they begin? Where did they begin then? Because if you look at the
beginning of the chapter you'll find one man Eliashib he began to build and he put the door
on the hinges he rebuilt the sheep gate. Yes that was where the work began at the sheep gate
and when I think of that which they were going to do they were going to restore the walls to some of
their former glory I would say some of their former power those walls were there to keep out
the enemy and so that the people of God might be in their separation might be in their separation
and here when I think of the walls and the gates being rebuilded again how much that's necessary
today how much it is necessary to get back to the very thought that we are trying to keep the enemy
out and also that we are showing more than we do today that separation that is becoming to the
people of God I feel that that's something that's lacking but if there is to be any service for the
Lord I would realise where it is to begin and where it is to end they began working at the
sheep gate and if you remember in the fifth chapter of the Gospel of John you'll find a man there in
the sheep gate the sheep market it says there but it's the sheep gate and that's the place where the
Lord met that man in his need in the sheep gate and that's the place where we firstly meet the
Lord Jesus Christ we meet him in our need we meet him at the cross and as I think of the Lord Jesus
Christ as the lamb offered for sin I feel that that's the place where we start you know I don't
quote courses very often in an address but there is a course that comes to my mind at Calvary's
crosses where we begin where we begin our work and if there is one that is unconverted here tonight
I would say to you you can't participate in any work at all for the Lord it could not be possible
in the Old Testament times and you'll see that at the end of the second chapter of this book
they couldn't participate in the work of the Lord neither can you but as I look into the third
chapter I see that it was for everyone that was a person belonging to God every one of them were to
participate in the work of the Lord here and they began at the sheep gate and that reminds me so much
of our Lord Jesus Christ and his cross of suffering that's brethren where we must begin
where did they end if you look concerning those 10 gates that are mentioned in that chapter
you'll see and they built right round again to the sheep gate let us never get away from the cross
let it be that whatever we may do for the Lord in service for him whatever we may be let it be that
always we come back to the cross and sit there and see him there dying for our sins and let us be
humble before him because of the position that he took for us it will be humbling if we think
of the Lord of life and glory bowed in death for us yes that's where they began at the sheep gate
and as I think of them if you had read the chapter you would have seen concerning them
and next to him and next to him and next to him all the way through the chapter so that we see
there there's a little a thin line of workers all the way around the city separated maybe by
distance but joined in that one great work and what a wonderful work it was next to him next to
him next to him what does that teach me today it teaches me something that more than ever before
should characterize air gatherings and that is unity next to him next to him and as we see this
thin line of workers all the way around inside that city wall we'll see that they so worked
so that after 52 days the walls were rebuilt and the doors were there hanging ready for people to
go in and out again so the unity in the service made it that that great work was completed
to Hanani's satisfaction to Nehemiah's satisfaction but above all to the satisfaction
of a God a holy and a righteous God who was then called the God of heaven the God of heaven
now when we think of them working in that way in unity then aren't we aren't we surprised that we
don't work in that way today isn't it that today we seek to do this or to do that and sometimes
we're isolated instead of having the unity of our brethren as we think of them let's remember
this work brethren firstly in the fact that they work together although they were that thin line
around inside the wall everyone worked together in that unity so that that work was completed
but I wonder how they did work how did they work well with regard to them firstly I would like to
say to you that there were so many different kinds of workers among these that worked there
were the apothecaries there were the princes there was the priests there were so many there
was the merchants the goldsmiths all kinds of workers all working together to one end and that
was so that the wall might be built again to the glory of God but they were all working together
some it seemed as though the tasks might be impossible for them but there they worked
and as we see them work in this way what a wonderful thing it is that the Lord has a work
for every one of his servants I can imagine that in those wonderful days when they began to work
that work that great work for God that there would be those that would come to Nehemiah and said what
should I do and there were very very few that weren't doing anything for the Lord that weren't
doing anything for the Lord and that should touch their hearts but what kind of workers were that
were they now I'd like you to think of the first one in the third chapter because well it's sad to
see that so great a man a representative man as Eliashib the high priest should do his work in
such a slipshod way I know that there are older brethren that are here that will say tonight yes
he put no bolts or bars on his gate no that's one thing that he did not do and if you look right at
the end of the book in the 12th chapter you'll find with regard to him he let one of those enemies in
that we read of this evening Tobiah the Anamite Ammonite he let him in the gate he let him in
the gate he wasn't careful he was careless how do we do our work as I think of the work that God
would have us to do let us do it as one did in that chapter and it says concerning him he worked
earnestly for the Lord he worked earnestly here they were working in a careless way and then it
was in that same chapter that in the fifth verse I think it is that there were Techoites mentioned
the fifth verse of the third chapter and as we see those Techoites mentioned it says concerning
them but their nobles put not their necks to the work of their Lord now what a hindrance it is when
we look at those that are older or those perhaps that we feel are more spiritual if they're lacking
in earnestness in the work of the Lord how well how frustrating it is for younger people to do to
see this as we see these Techoite princes as we see them the nobles there they are and as the work
is continuing they haven't got a will to work they haven't got a will to work but what effect
did it have on these Techoites the ones that should have been under them in that service
well they so worked in that place that if we look I think it's in the 27th verse of the same chapter
it says concerning them they built another piece they not only were able to work hard just where
they were for the Lord but it says concerning them that they built another piece they built
another piece and how wonderful it is when we are willing and ready so to work that God put
something in our hand in another place he gives us another piece to work and to do for him but you
say well this is all very well there they were inside the wall and there they seem to be going
on very well but did they have any hindrances to the work because you know in our meeting we have
so many hindrances don't we you don't know the hindrances that we have in our meeting but they
had greater hindrances inside their wall than you have in your meeting and those hindrances I will
go into one or two of them before I close but when I think of the so many hindrances they made no
difference to the work of the Lord they were willing and ready to do the service in spite of
the hindrances in the second chapter the 19th verse when Sanballat sees that which they are doing
it says concerning him when he saw this thing and when Tobiah saw it they laughed as to scorn
they laughed us to scorn and if there's one thing this poor old pride doesn't like it doesn't like
to be laughed at does it do you like to be laughed at they laughed us to scorn but here
Nehemiah the one that was here called the Tershatha or the governor he was the one that when this
laughing came to him he realized the greatness of his work and he he would realize that scorn
would be that which would be meted out to him and when I think of the Lord Jesus Christ and when I
think of the shame and the scorn that was his can we expect any better treatment in our lives
those of us that trust in him yes they they laughed them to scorn but yet brethren don't
you think that sometimes the enemy is able to laugh us to scorn in the way that we do the
work of the Lord I don't think that he was able to hear but I would suggest to you that I feel
that sometimes he's able to laugh us to scorn in the way that we do our service for the Lord
it may be that he looks into the prayer meeting and on that prayer meeting night don't think
that he knows that doesn't know the inside of our room where we hold the prayer meeting
but he looks and sees just two or three there in perhaps 40 30 or 40 in the meeting and what's he
do well he laughs us to scorn he knows that if there's not that energy in prayer as before the
Lord he knows that if there's not the earnestness with regard to the service that's in that little
meeting well there's no bother there and he can laugh us to scorn he laughs us to scorn sometimes
when it is that a few old brothers get to the reading and perhaps younger ones could get there
I know that it's not always possible but what a great thing it is if we can grow in grace and in
the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ by getting to the Bible reading and hearing the word as
it is expounded but I feel that sometimes it's not and he laughs us to scorn I feel that sometimes
you know after a meeting such as this if we are not occupied truly with that which has been brought
before us during the meetings and we're occupied with anything and everything apart he can laugh
us to scorn can he not because of the very fact that that which we come together to receive the
Lord by the time we reach our homes he's all gone and he laughs us to scorn and then a little later
you remember the words that were spoken as they were building the wall and Tobiah the Ammonite
came along with Sanballat and as they looked upon that which was done that man Tobiah said well if
a fox came along he would knock down their stone wall they said what a weak lot you are what a weak
lot you are look at the work that you're doing and the work that they were doing so graciously and so
fervently for the Lord they were laughed at again and they were mocked I know that here tonight
amongst us there are many that serve the Lord in various ways and don't forget the words that
Nehemiah said concerning this work later on you are doing a great work let it not be that mockery
and that which we hear from others makes any difference to our work we are serving the Lord
Christ we are doing a great work and in that great work let it not be that we take notice of opposition
of others and then later on I'm sorry I'm sorry to say we read in the fourth chapter
concerning others that were the hindrance and there I see concerning Judah I think it's in
the fourth chapter verse 10 it says Judah says the strength of the bearers of burdens is
decayed and there is much rubbish so there was the weariness and the rubbish that were a hindrance
to the building of that wall for the Lord the weariness and the rubbish and in the day in which
we live how much weariness there is isn't there so weary we are that we are not able to take up
in some ways the work of the Lord that we should so weary we are in so many things and it is sometimes
because of the rubbish that comes into our lives the rubbish the much rubbish now this weary uh
these weary ones later on we see I think it's in the 12th chapter they found time to write
letters to Tobiah the enemy and if they could find time to encourage and speak to the enemy
certainly they could have found more energy in the service of the Lord but there it is much rubbish
and lastly before I close I see at the beginning of the sixth chapter there that although the enemy
had not prevailed against them and although the walls were now so much that they were well up but
the gates were not hung it is that now the enemy comes in in another way and he sends a letter
now I feel that sometimes letters are sent that ought never to be sent this letter ought never to
be sent and how horribly spiteful some letters can be and how much discord can be spread about
through letters and here a man brings a letter he brought four letters and let's see how Nehemiah
dealt with this letter what was in this letter it was an invitation from these men Sanballat,
Tobiah and the rest an invitation to them to come down come down with us into the plane of no
oh no come down so that we may talk with you see why don't you compromise why don't you come from
your high position in serving your God can't it be that you can lend a little time to us so that
you come down with us why couldn't they go up with the people of God because they had no lot or part
in the work of God and therefore if the enemy can get in anywhere at all he'll say come down
and he said to Nehemiah and those that were with him come down but what was his answer it was to
the plane of oh no and without being too sentimental he could say a plane oh no I'm not going down
I'm not going down and the letter was sent to him four times but there was no prevailing
over this great man at this juncture it was that he said I am uh I am doing a great work
why should the work be hindered while I come down to you and brethren when we think of these
hindrances to the work of the Lord we know them as we see them in our pathways today
let's be warned against these hindrances and let us realize that with regard to these hindrances
the great work of the Lord must come first so we see at the end of the chapter I think it's in the
15th verse so the wall was completed in 52 days and straightway somebody here in going out the
door tonight will say good night uh oh for a Nehemiah though yes but why oh for a Nehemiah
this man as Elijah was a man of like passions as ourselves God has no superman in this day
neither has he ever had a superman in any day the Lord Jesus Christ I would not for a moment speak
of in that way because holy and reverend is his name but let's remember God has a man a man that
has a care for the Lord's people a man that prays a man that weeps a man that mourns but
a man also that's willing to plan and to work and if that's true concerning each one of us
how much work will be done for the Lord before his coming again …