Sermon #161 Through The Bible Series
Title: Nehemiah
“Build
Thou the Walls of Jerusalem”
Text: Nehemiah
6:3
Subject: Building the Walls of
Jerusalem—The Message of Nehemiah
Introduction:
As the Book of Ezra
describes the great work of rebuilding the temple in Jerusalem, the Book of
Nehemiah describes the rebuilding of the walls of Jerusalem. The Book of
Nehemiah is really just a continuation of the Book of Ezra. The theme in
both books is the restoration of divine worship and the restoration of God’s
people.
These two things always go
hand in hand. When there is a revival of true worship, there is revival in the
hearts of God’s elect. And when the Lord sends revival to his people, the
worship of God is restored and set in order. This is clearly set before us in
David’s prayer of repentance in Psalm 51:18-19.
(Psalms
51:18-19) "Do good in thy good
pleasure unto Zion: build thou the walls of Jerusalem. {19} Then shalt
thou be pleased with the sacrifices of righteousness, with burnt offering and
whole burnt offering: then shall they offer bullocks upon thine altar."
Separation
As the temple of God speaks
of the place of divine worship and sacrifice, and represents the whole work of
salvation, the salvation of God’s elect by the sacrifice, intercession, and
grace of Christ, the walls of Jerusalem (the city of God—the church) represent
another aspect of grace and salvation. The walls represent both the security of
God’s elect in Christ and that which separates the people of God from all the
people of the world (1 Cor. 4:7; Ex. 11:7).
(1 Corinthians 4:7) "For who maketh thee to differ from
another? and what hast thou that thou didst not receive? now if thou didst
receive it, why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it?"
(Exodus
11:7) "But against any of the
children of Israel shall not a dog move his tongue, against man or beast: that
ye may know how that the LORD doth put a difference between the Egyptians and
Israel."
What separates us from
others?
Grace, nothing but the free, sovereign, saving grace of God!
·
Electing Grace
·
Redeeming Grace
·
Calling Grace
·
Keeping Grace
Four times, Sanballat, Tobiah, and Geshem, the leaders of those who conspired against Ezra, Nehemiah and Judah sent word to Nehemiah to leave off the work of building the walls of Jerusalem to come down and meet them. Though their real purpose was to stop the work, their pretense was that they wanted to work out a plan whereby they could unite in the great work. Four times, Nehemiah gave them the same reply (Neh. 6:3).
(Nehemiah
6:3) "And I sent messengers unto
them, saying, I am doing a great work, so that I cannot come down: why
should the work cease, whilst I leave it, and come down to you?"
Proposition: Like Nehemiah, our concern
in this world, the work to which we have been called, is the building of God’s
church; and we must not allow anything or anyone to turn us aside from that
which our God has sent us to do.
There was an interval of about twelve years between
the work of Ezra’s reforms and the time that Nehemiah obtained permission from
King Artaxerxes, to whom he was cup-bearer, to go up to Jerusalem.
Artaxerxes
Reading the books of
Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther, we frequently run across the names of Artaxerxes and Ahasuerus. But really,
these are not the names of different kings, but the titles given to them. That
fact gives us a little difficulty. But it really should not. Many years later,
the rulers of Rome were called “Caesar,” but their were several different
Caesars. The title “Artaxerxes” means "the great king." “Ahasuerus”
means "the venerable father." The titles Artaxerxes in Nehemiah and
Ahasuerus in Esther refer to the same king, King Darius spoken of in the book
of Daniel. Then, to add to the confusion, Artaxerxes in the book of Ezra is not
the same Artaxerxes spoken of in Nehemiah. That Artaxerxes was opposed to the
work Ezra and Nehemiah led the Judah to perform. He opposed the building of the
temple (Ezra 4:21-24). He was probably Darius’ son.
Nehemiah’s Concern
Nehemiah was deeply distressed by the news that his
brethren gave him concerning the God’s people in Jerusalem (1:1-4).
(Nehemiah
1:3-4) "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. {4} 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"
The rest of the first chapter (vv. 5-11) records his
great prayer of intercession to God. Nehemiah was imminently a man of prayer.
Throughout these 13 chapters, he interjects brief prayers. As he worked and
labored in his great cause, he continually sought God’s direction and help, depending
upon him.
Nehemiah’s heart was broken. His soul was stirred by
the news of the desolate condition of the city with its broken walls. So much
so that, as he served King Artaxerxes, the king asked him what was wrong with
him (2:2-3).
(Nehemiah
2:2-3) "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, {3} 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 fathers'
sepulchres, lieth waste, and the gates thereof are consumed with
fire?"
The king then asked him what he wanted and sent him
to Jerusalem to build the walls of the city. To put it in Nehemiah’s words, “So
it pleased the king to send me…And the king granted me, according to the
good hand of my God upon me” (vv. 6-8).
Nehemiah found things in horrible condition at
Jerusalem. He gathered the elders together and told them of the good hand of
his God upon him, and they said, “Let us
rise up and build. So they strengthened their hands for this good work” (2:18).
Nehemiah’s Prayer
This book is full of lessons for us. It begins with
Nehemiah’s confession of sin and prayer to God on behalf of his people (chapter
1).
·
His great concern is for the house of God, the people of God, and the
worship of God (vv. 1-4).
·
He ascribes to God the glory and praise of his greatness as God (v. 5).
(Nehemiah
1:5) "And 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:"
·
Throughout this prayer, he describes God’s people in such a way as to
move him to be gracious, seeking mercy on the grounds of God’s greatness and
the desperate need of his people.
(Nehemiah
1:6-11) "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.
{7} 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. {8} Remember, I beseech thee, the word that
thou commandedst thy servant Moses, saying, If ye transgress, I will
scatter you abroad among the nations: {9} 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. {10} Now these are thy servants
and thy people, whom thou hast redeemed by thy
great power, and by thy strong hand. {11} 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, thy
servant this day, and grant him mercy in the sight of this man. For I was the
king's cupbearer."
Workers Together (Chapter 3)
Nehemiah was sent by the king to do the work, but
neither he nor the king thought that this great work would be the work of one
man. The work involved all those who feared God. Nehemiah and the people of
Judah labored side by side as “laborers together with God” (1 Cor. 3:9).
·
Christianity is not a spectator sport. The work of the church is not
the work of one man, but of many, working together with God. This is not my
ministry, but ours—Yours, mine, and Christ’s! (Our Tapes, Our Books, Our
Service).
As
they built the walls of Jerusalem, they began at the Sheep Gate and completely
enclosed the city (chapter 3). Priests, rulers, goldsmiths, apothecaries, and
merchants, all worked side by side, brothers working together in the common
cause of God. We are told exactly who set up the various gates, with the locks
and the bars thereof.
No
work done for God’s glory is overlooked by him no mater how small it might
appear in our eyes. He delights to place on record the humblest service. It is
written, "And
I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write, Blessed are the dead which
die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from
their labours; and their works do follow them" (Rev. 14:13).
That is what we are doing, laboring together
for the glory of God, for the worship of God, to build the kingdom of God. Let us be like “Baruch, the son of Zabbai, (who) earnestly repaired the other piece, from the turning of the wall unto
the door of the house of Eliashib the high priest” (3:20).
Our Enemies (Chapters 4-6)
But, in chapters 4-6, the descendants of the
Samaritans, who had harassed Zerubbabel, were relentless in their efforts to
hinder the work. First they mocked them: “What
do these feeble Jews? That which they build, if a fox go up, he shall even
break down their stone wall.” “Hear, O our God; for we are despised,” was
Nehemiah’s prayer. “So built we the wall;
and all the wall was joined together unto the half thereof: for the people had
a mind to work” (4:1-6).
When their mockery could not stop the faithful from
their work, Judah’s foes conspired to fight against Jerusalem. But Nehemiah
says, “We made our prayer unto our God,
and set a watch day and night.” He
armed the workers and gave orders that at the sound of the trumpet they
were to run to the place needing help and defend the city.
That is when Sanballat and his crowd sent the
messages to Nehemiah, asking him to meet them in the plain of Ono. His reply
was, “I am doing a great work: why should
the work cease, whilst I leave it, and come down to you?” Then they accused
Judah of rebellion (antinomianism), and sought to weaken their hands and make
them afraid, but Nehemiah replied to Tobiah: “There are no such things done as thou sayest, but thou feignest them
out of thine own heart.” And as a last resort, one urged Nehemiah to take
refuge in the Temple, “for they will come
to slay thee.” “Should such a man as I flee?” was Nehemiah’s steadfast reply. “So the wall was finished in fifty and two days” (6:15).
Those who oppose Christ and the gospel we preach
will employ any means they can to hinder or discourage us from doing God’s
work. Let us, like Nehemiah, ever remember who has commissioned us, and praying
and relying upon our God, completely disregard, utterly ignore their carpings.
Christ Our Priest (Chapter 7)
The register of those who first came from Babylon
under Zerubbabel is again repeated in chapter 7. Some of the priests names
could not be found in the genealogy. could not be found, “Therefore were they, as polluted, put from the priesthood. And the
Tirshatha (Governor) said unto the,
that they should not eat of the most holy things, till there stood up a priest
with Urim and Thummim” (7:63-65).
Here we have here one of those instances in the Old
Testament when the Face of Christ suddenly shines forth in the most unexpected
and unlikely places. This is only a register and a few priests who could not
find their place in it. But it makes our hearts thrill with the consciousness
that we have a great High Priest – the Lord Jesus Christ – who has the Urim and
Thummim, who is the “Light and Perfection.” He settles the question as to our
right to communion with God, symbolized in the eating of the most holy things.
He declares that, as those who are made priests unto God by him, we are worthy
to partake of the holy things. His blood and righteousness makes us worthy.
·
To Approach God
·
To Be Baptized
·
To Receive the Lord’s Supper
·
To Wear the Name “Sons of God!”
He has, by his own blood, entered in once for all
into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us (Heb. 9:12). And
if we trust in his one great sacrifice for sins for ever, we also may draw nigh
and have communion with God, not once a year, or once a month, or once a week,
merely, but continually!
Christ is our great High Priest – not by genealogy
from Aaron, but “after the order of
Melchizedek,” who was “without
genealogy” (Heb. 7:3 RV). Melchizedek’s genealogy was, no doubt, omitted to
fit him all the more to be a type of Christ who had no earthly father. God has
called us in Christ to be Priests unto him, and our right of priesthood depends
upon whether we have been born again and have our names written, not in an
earthly register, but in the Lamb’s Book of Life. He has, moreover, provided
for our fitness in the present tenses of John’s Epistle. First, “The blood cleanseth,” so that there
need never be any cloud between our souls and God. Second, “The anointing abideth,” so that there need never be any lack of
the supply of His Spirit for service.
Place of Preaching (Chapters 8-12)
When we get to chapter 8 we see that the immediate
result of the work of restoration was a great hunger for God’s Word. The people
gathered themselves together as one man unto Ezra before the Water Gate, and
begged him to bring forth the Book of the Law of Moses.
Here Ezra, perhaps an old man now, comes forward
again, and we see him and Nehemiah uniting in God’s service. We are given a
striking picture of Ezra’s preaching. Already we have seen him as a reformer,
and as a man of prayer, and now all his skill in the Law of the Lord comes out
as he stands on that pulpit of wood – “made
for the purpose” – with thirteen of the leaders of the people standing
beside him, and all the people thronging round. He opened the roll of the
book, and having prayed, read the Law distinctly, and gave the sense, and
caused the people to understand it. Hour after hour, and subsequently
day after day, they listened, men and women and children, “all that could understand.”
His preaching stirred Jerusalem as Savonarola’s
preaching stirred Florence. The people wept as they found how far short they
had come of God’s will. But Ezra and Nehemiah and the Levites stilled the
people, and told them not to weep, and their weeping was turned
into joy by the preaching of God’s great goodness revealed in his work, that
which is recorded in his Word. “And the
people went their way…to make great mirth, because they had understood the
words that were declared unto them” (8:12). “Great peace have they that love Thy law.”
·
Kept the Feast of Tabernacles
·
Made a Covenant, Renewed Consecration
The children of Israel sealed themselves under a
solemn covenant to keep the Law, especially with regard to marriages with the
heathen, to keeping the Sabbath, and to maintaining the worship of God.
The dedication of the walls was a joyful occasion,
for “God had made them rejoice with great
joy: the wives also and the children rejoiced; so that the joy of Jerusalem was
heard even afar off” (12:43).
More Decline (Chapter 13)
Yet, in spite of all the
grace and goodness they had experienced, these blessed people show us again
that God’s people in this world are but sinners saved by grace.
Once more twelve years have passed, and Nehemiah,
who had been back at the Court of Shushan, returned to Jerusalem, to find all
the terms of the covenant broken and the Law disregarded. He dealt with all
these abuses firmly. Eliashib, the priests, because he was allied unto Tobiah
the Ammonite, had given a chamber in the Temple to this enemy of the Lord.
Nehemiah turned him out immediately. Again, Nehemiah contended with the rulers
because he found that the service of the house of the Lord was neglected. Next
he found a wholesale disregard of the sabbath.
Such contempt for the things of God, his honor, his
worship and the blessed rest of faith symbolized in the sabbath day must not be
tolerated. If it is, it will inevitably lead to utter apostasy. It is a sign of
the perilous times of these last days, when “Men
shall be lovers of their own selves…loves of pleasure more than lovers of God” (2
Tim. 3:1-4).
Compromise
Nehemiah found that the Jews had married among the
heathen, violating God’s express command is both an act of defiance and
idolatry (Ex. 34:14-17). Great evil is sure to follow. The result here was that
their children spoke half in the speech of Ashdod, and half in the Jews’
language. In other words, their children learned by their compromise to be
idolaters.
Believers are to marry “only in the Lord.” We must “not
be unequally yoked together with unbelievers” in any area of life, but most particularly in marriage. Those
who disobey God’s revealed will in this matter, marrying unbelievers, can
expect nothing but sorrow as a result.
The argument (excuse) is frequently used that the
believer will be able to win the unbelieving to Christ. But we must never
expect God’s blessing upon our disobedience. I have often seen the Lord
graciously intervene; but, more often than not, the result of such a union is
that the person professing to be a believer is gradually drawn, (It may be
almost imperceptibly.), to love the things of the world, and is found –
together with the children of such a marriage – speaking “half the speech of Ashdod,” and unable to speak as a citizen of
the heavenly city. The spirit of compromise with the world mars the usefulness
for Christ of many homes and churches, just as it did in Solomon’s.
In all these breaches of God’s law Nehemiah “contended with the Jews,” whether they were
nobles or rulers or the common people, he dealt with them pointedly. He did not
rest till all was put right. This was no lack of love on his part, but just the
opposite. He was willing to spend and be spent for his people. It is an
evidence of true love to deal faithfully with compromise, false doctrine and
rebellion of any kind. Any church today blessed of God with a pastor who has
the boldness, love and faithfulness Nehemiah had to deal with such things, has
reason to give thanks to God for his goodness in giving his church pastors
according to his own heart (Jer. 3:15).
God’s People Still
Having said all that, let us not set ourselves up as
judges over one another when the Lord’s people are overtaken in a fault,
condemning them as unbelieving and reprobate. Evil must be reproved by God’s
servants, by the faithful exposition of holy Scripture, as it was by Ezra and
Nehemiah. But when our brothers and sisters in Christ are overcome in a fault,
let it be ours to fulfill the law of Christ, bearing their burden, doing what
we are able to restore them in meekness, considering ourselves (Gal. 6:1-4).
The Holy Spirit specifically illustrates the fact
that those who are truly beloved of the Lord are yet subject to such evils, by
using Solomon as an example both of the sins of the Jews on this occasion and
of the immutability of God’s mercy, love and grace to his elect (Neh. 13:26;
Mal. 3:6).
The fall of another reminds us that we are all sinners saved by grace. None of us are beyond temptation. None of us are beyond weakness. None of us are beyond sin. There is nothing we would not do, and completely justify ourselves in doing it, if the Lord left us to ourselves for a moment.
The
falls of others give us opportunity to love and help. These sad events in the lives
of God’s saints in this world should serve as reminders that salvation is
altogether the work of God’s free grace, that our only righteousness before God
is the righteousness of God in Christ, and that the only thing that makes one
to differ from another is God’s goodness and grace in Christ. Therefore, it is
written, in Ephesians 4:32-52—"And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one
another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you. Be ye therefore
followers of God, as dear children; and walk in love, as Christ also hath loved
us, and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a
sweetsmelling savour."
1 Date: Danville—Tuesday Evening—May 20, 2003
Redeemer Baptist Church, Louisville KY (Friday PM 05/23/03)
Tape # X-60b
Readings: Bob Poncer and Bobbie Estes