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Nehemiah
Chapter Six
Nehemiah 6
Chapter Contents
Sanballat's plot to hinder Nehemiah. (1-9) False prophets
try to frighten Nehemiah. (10-14) The wall finished, Treachery of some among
the Jews. (15-19)
Commentary on Nehemiah 6:1-9
(Read Nehemiah 6:1-9)
Let those who are tempted to idle merry meetings by vain
companions, thus answer the temptation, We have work to do, and must not
neglect it. We must never suffer ourselves to be overcome, by repeated urgency,
to do anything sinful or imprudent; but when attacked with the same temptation,
must resist it with the same reason and resolution. It is common for that which
is desired only by the malicious, to be falsely represented by them as desired
by the many. But Nehemiah knew at what they aimed, he not only denied that such
things were true, but that they were reported; he was better known than to be
thus suspected. We must never omit any known duty for fear it should be
misconstrued; but, while we keep a good conscience, let us trust God with our
good name. God's people, though loaded with reproach, are not really fallen so
low in reputation as some would have them thought to be. Nehemiah lifted up his
heart to Heaven in a short prayer. When, in our Christian work and warfare, we
enter upon any service or conflict, this is a good prayer, I have such a duty
to do, such a temptation to grapple with; now, therefore, O God, strengthen my
hands. Every temptation to draw us from duty, should quicken us the more to
duty.
Commentary on Nehemiah 6:10-14
(Read Nehemiah 6:10-14)
The greatest mischief our enemies can do us, is, to
frighten us from our duty, and to lead us to do what is sinful. Let us never
decline a good work, never do a bad one. We ought to try all advice, and to
reject what is contrary to the word of God. Every man should study to be
consistent. Should I, a professed Christian, called to be a saint, a child of
God, a member of Christ, a temple of the Holy Ghost, should I be covetous,
sensual, proud, or envious? Should I yield to impatience, discontent, or anger?
Should I be slothful, unbelieving, or unmerciful? What effects will such
conduct have upon others? All that God has done for us, or by us, or given to
us, should lead us to watchfulness, self-denial, and diligence. Next to the
sinfulness of sin, we should dread the scandal.
Commentary on Nehemiah 6:15-19
(Read Nehemiah 6:15-19)
The wall was begun and finished in fifty-two days, though
they rested on the sabbaths. A great deal of work may be done in a little time,
if we set about it in earnest, and keep close to it. See the mischief of
marrying with strangers. When men once became akin to Tobiah, they soon became
sworn to him. A sinful love leads to a sinful league. The enemy of souls
employs many instruments, and forms many projects, to bring reproach on the
active servants of God, or to take them from their work. But we should follow
the example of Him who laid down his life for the sheep. Those that simply
cleave to the Lord and his work will be supported.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on
Nehemiah》
Nehemiah 6
Verse 1
[1] 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;)
The doors — Not all of them.
Verse 2
[2] 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
thought to do me mischief.
Meet — To consult about the common service of our master the
king of Persia, or to make a friendly accommodation.
Verse 4
[4] Yet they sent unto me four times after this sort; and I
answered them after the same manner.
Four times, … — We must never be overcome by the
greatest importunity, to do anything ill or imprudent: but when we are attacked
with the same temptation, still resist it with the same reason and resolution.
Verse 5
[5] Then sent Sanballat his servant unto me in like manner
the fifth time with an open letter in his hand;
Open letter — As speaking of a thing commonly
known.
Verse 7
[7] And thou hast also appointed prophets to preach of thee
at Jerusalem, saying, There is a king in Judah: and now shall it be reported to
the king according to these words. Come now therefore, and let us take counsel
together.
A king — We have now a king of our nation.
Counsel — That we may impartially examine the matter, that thy
innocency may be cleared.
Verse 9
[9] For they all made us afraid, saying, Their hands shall
be weakened from the work, that it be not done. Now therefore, O God,
strengthen my hands.
Strengthen my hands — A good prayer, when
we are entering on any particular services or conflicts in our Christian
warfare.
Verse 10
[10] Afterward I came unto the house of Shemaiah the son of
Delaiah the son of Mehetabeel, who was shut up; and he said, Let us meet
together in the house of God, within the temple, and let us shut the doors of
the temple: for they will come to slay thee; yea, in the night will they come
to slay thee.
Shut up — In his chamber adjoining to the temple, upon pretence
of singular devotion, and communion with God, and withal upon pretence of
certain knowledge, by the Spirit of God concerning their approaching danger,
from which thy could be safe nowhere but in the temple. For if Nehemiah had
done this, the people would have left their work, and every one have shifted
for his own safety.
Verse 11
[11] And I said, Should such a man as I flee? and who is
there, that, being as I am, would go into the temple to save his life? I will
not go in.
As I — I the chief governor, upon whose presence, the very
life of the whole city and nation in a great measure depends: I who have
professed such resolution, and courage, and confidence in God. I, who have had
such eminent experience of God's assistance, of his calling me to this
employment, and carrying me through it when our danger was greater than now it
is. Shall I now dishonour God and religion, and betray the people and city of
God by my cowardice? Go in - Tho' his life depended upon it.
Verse 13
[13] Therefore was he hired, that I should be afraid, and do
so, and sin, and that they might have matter for an evil report, that they
might reproach me.
And sin — By going into a place forbidden to me, and that in
such a manner, which would have been both sinful and shameful.
Reproach — As a coward, and conscious of my own guilt, that they
might make me contemptible and odious both to my own people, and to the king of
Persia.
Verse 14
[14] My God, think thou upon Tobiah and Sanballat according
to these their works, and on the prophetess Noadiah, and the rest of the
prophets, that would have put me in fear.
My God, … — This prayer we are not to
imitate.
Verse 15
[15] So the wall was finished in the twenty and fifth day of
the month Elul, in fifty and two days.
Elul — Answering part to our August, and part to September.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Nehemiah》
06 Chapter 6
Verses 1-19
Now it came to pass, when Sanballat.
The witness to the truth
I. His trial, from
the stratagems of enemies. The circumstances of his trial were peculiar. Faith
and prayer and pains had now achieved great things in Jerusalem. For many days
the patriots had persevered, with unremitting toil, to rebuild the wall. And
now their enterprise was ready to be crowned with triumphant success. This, to
them, was a time of joyous anticipation, mingled, no doubt, with solicitude,
lest their work should be marred on the very eve of completion. But to the
enemies of Zion it was a moment of vexation and dismay. “They heard,” says
Nehemiah, “that I had builded the wail, and that there was no breach left
therein.” In spite of their vaunting words and feeble arms the good work had
advanced, and, unless they could instantly crush it, they plainly saw that all
would be lost. Yet what shall they do to arrest the sacred enterprise? They
have tried mockery already, but have found, to their chagrin, that these men of
Judah will not be driven by ridicule from what, to them, is a work of
conscience and religion. They have, moreover, attempted force; but they have
learned, to their dismay, that the Israelites are ready to resist unto blood
the invasion of their liberty to serve God in the city called by His name.
Foiled, therefore, in these modes of attack, they are compelled to resort to
stratagem in order, if possible, to gain their wicked purpose. This desperation
of the enemies of Judah is just a picture of the rage of the great adversary at
the progress of the Church and the growing sanctification of each believer in
Christ. More than once in the history of the Church’s advance has the devil come down in
“great wrath, because he knoweth he hath but a short time.” But trials in the
religious life often prove the occasion of higher manifestations of mercy than
could have been experienced without them. Trial, therefore, here comes to
Nehemiah; and what is the form in which it assails him?
1. He is first tried by the wiles of enemies to draw him from his
work and involve him in danger. As if for the purpose of consultation, they
sent unto him, saying, “Come, let us meet together in some one of the villages
in the plain of One.” The object of these crafty foes was to get possession of
the person of Nehemiah; and in all probability to take away his life. But the
noble Israelite answered after this manner, “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?” Who can but admire the wisdom and fortitude of the servant of God in
this hour of trial? Is not this a grand example to imitate in Christ’s service
and our own salvation? Our life on earth is so transient, and our work for
eternity so arduous, that we have no time to waste. “This I say, then, Walk in
the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh.”
2. Further, Nehemiah is tried by the false accusations of
enemies, designed to undermine
his character. “Sanballat sent his servant the fifth time with an open letter
in his hand.” And why was the letter sent “open”? It was no doubt intended to
give all the people opportunity to know its contents, that their jealousy might
be aroused at the alleged ambitious aims of their leader, or their fears be
excited of incurring the wrath of the king by continuing their work; but it was
meant, moreover, thus to offer an insult to Nehemiah. It might have been
thought that a life singularly blameless and disinterested as his would have
been exempt from reproach. But who may expect to be free from the assaults of
malice and envy, since the Son of God, the holy, harmless, undefiled One, did
not escape the shafts of calumny? And so here, one of the lowliest and most
upright of good men is falsely accused of ambition and rebellion. How striking
an instance is this of misrepresentation and craft in the enemies of truth to
thwart a servant of God in a Divine work. It often happens, as here, that the
sacred form of friendship is assumed to seduce the children of faith into a
betrayal of their trust; and they who would draw them aside from duty pretend a
regard to their welfare. Yet under the guise of affection there lurks a deadly
hostility that seeks only their hurt and the ruin of their good name.
II. His testimony
to the truth. Men in high place are little to be envied. They are often exposed
to special dangers, both in principle and person. He bears testimony to the
truth by fidelity to his trust in midst of imminent danger. He was fortified by
a good conscience, while beset with wiles and accusations; and he possessed his
soul in patience through the hour of trial. He looks on the field of danger
with the eye of an eagle, and walks over it with the heart of a lion. He
combines a clear perception of the plots of the enemy with a heroic courage to
confront all their power. How quickly the adversary shifts his method of
assault! and the good soldier must alter his manner of repulse in order to
overcome. The enemies of Nehemiah here follow the same crafty course. They
found they could not draw him into the country for counsel, and now they seek
to drive him into the temple for safety. This was a mean as well as a wicked
device of the heathen; but it is melancholy to reflect that men were found in
Judah base enough to abet their machinations. It was not among the common
people that the treacherous spirit appeared, but among the professed prophets
and messengers of God. Noble things are always most vile when they become
corrupt; and in this case these so-called ambassadors of heaven debase their
high vocation by lending all its influence to the work of the enemies of
religion. But these arts, employed to intimidate and seduce Nehemiah, were all
in vain. He bore testimony to the truth by steadfast adherence to duty, even in
face of threatened death. Much as he may value life, and wish to preserve it
till the work is done which is so dear to his heart, yet he loves God and a
good conscience far more. This is a noble example for our imitation. What
faithful care does this man of God exercise to prove all things, and to hold
fast that which is good!
III. His triumph
over all opposition. It is instructive to remark the means by which Nehemiah
achieved this victory. He was first of all careful to ascertain facts, and to
detect the plots of enemies through all the mazes of their falsehood. For this
purpose he gave his mind to weigh evidence, to examine character, to balance
circumstances, that he might arrive at the truth. But we note, as his chief
means of success, effectual fervent prayer to God. His labours were now crowned
with triumphant success. “So,” he writes, “the wall was finished in the twenty
and fifth day of the month Elul, in fifty and two days.” This was the hour of
Israel’s triumph, and of their enemies’ humiliation. “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 cast down in their own eyes.” They were much cast
down, as persons who have staked their full strength and reputation on a bad
end, and yet have utterly failed in its attainment. They suffered the
humiliation of those who boast of their power, put it forth to the utmost, and,
after all, feel themselves completely defeated by the people whose might they
had despised. It is not given to all witnesses for God to bear testimony for
Him amid great works and conflicts like these; but He appoints each of us our
duty here to stand by His truth, and to contend earnestly for the faith against
all assaults on it. The dominant forms of opposition to Bible truth in these
days are unbelief, or error in creed, and worldliness, or error in conduct; and
in face of both God calls us to be witnesses for His cause. Whenever you
profess your faith in the Bible, the whole Bible, as the Word of God, your creed is pronounced
antiquated, and regarded with wonder or an ill-dissembled sneer. Yet all is
surrendered if the integrity, the infallibility, the inspiration of the whole
Bible is given up. (W. Ritchie.)
Nehemiah’s heroism
Well, to come to the history, when Nehemiah was coming to an end,
and thought he had got through all his difficulties, Sanballat and the others
came wheedling and coaxing, and they said, “Come, Nehemiah, let us meet
together in one of the villages in the plain of One.” And they sent messengers
four times to try, if they could, to prevent the thorough fulfilment and
accomplishing of God’s work and Nehemiah’s design. Anything they would do, the
enemies of Nehemiah, as our enemies also would do, to diminish our zeal for God
and truth and righteousness. Thus we might paraphrase the arguments used, “Now, Nehemiah, you really
are a most excellent man, and, though we say it ourselves, we too are excellent
men; and if we can only just meet together in a quiet little spot, we shall
soon settle everything. You see, Nehemiah, we have misunderstood one another--a
very common thing among good people. You thought we were against you, but there
never was a greater mistake. We were misrepresented. Come now, and let us shake
hands; and when we have looked into each other’s faces, we shall discover
amidst apparent diversity of purpose that our hearts, our aims, were really
one, that we are seeking the same object.” After such fashion, we can imagine
they thought to draw Nehemiah from his purpose. “But they thought to do me
mischief,” says Nehemiah. Nehemiah says, “Why should the work cease, whilst I
leave it, and come down to you?” And you will find the more you buckle to God’s
work--that is to say, to strive to be first of all a sterling, righteous man in
lip and life, in thought, in word, and deed--and the more you try to recover
the blight and disaster in London or round about you, the more you will find
opposition of different kinds, and perhaps to-day the secret, sly, and cunning
opposition which is to be dreaded far more than the open, the overt. I wonder
how many invitations you will get to parties this week? because I want you to
work for God in this coming ten days’ mission. Very likely never so many as
this week. “We have a nice little party this week. Come down; don’t be
righteous overmuch. Don’t spoil yourself, and take all the pleasure out of
life.” Let us make up our mind and heart to work, work, work. “Why should I let
the work cease, and come down to you?” Let them answer that. Why should God’s
work cease while I leave it, and come down to you; so as to weaken my interest
in God’s work, and hinder my pace in the actual doing of God’s work? Here is
the test and touchstone. How do these things tell upon the work? Do they lower
my temperature, and take away my energies from God’s work? Then they are of the
devil; and to see that is to be kept right. From Nehemiah’s answer (verse 3) we
see the great blessing of having pure motives and clean hands. Oh, for this whole-heartedness
in the cause of God! Nehemiah said, “I will not cease doing the work, for I am
sure it is not for my own personal ends, it is not for my own aggrandisement,
my own vainglory. There are no such things as thou sayest, but thou feignest them
out of thine own heart.” They shot sore at poor Nehemiah, when they said,
“Nehemiah, it is your own glory that leads you on in this work, not zeal for
God.” And don’t think Nehemiah did not feel this; that message came with a
thump to him. And what preserved him? His integrity and innocence. He could
lift up his voice, and say, “It is a lie; it is not true. Do as you like! Say
what you like! I know whom I am serving. You may try all manner of means, but
you will never shake me from this, that God has sent me here, given me this
work to do; and in His name I give myself to it, with singleness of heart and
effort.” If God promote you, and make you prominent in His work, remember it is
He who does it; and you must stay at your post, do your day’s work and leave
your reputation in the hands of the Lord. Then comes another temptation (verse
10). I think this man, this Shemaiah, was a man who had a particular reputation
for wisdom and prudence. “Oh, Nehemiah!” he would say, “now you are wrong. You
will allow me to speak plainly with you. No one rejoiced more than I did when
you came from Persia, and I rejoice to see what is going on at Jerusalem. But
the position is far different from what you think. And I have been here longer
than you; and I know the currents of thought and feeling, which you don’t know
anything about. And, believe me, that sometimes the roundabout road is the
nearest; and sometimes to go straight tramping on, you know, is the way never
to reach what you want. You are carrying things, they think, with too high a
hand. But if you would take time, stop and let things blow over a little, you
will get R done far more easily. Believe me, Nehemiah, I know the temper of
this people” (and here he spoke truly), “and I tell you they are against you,
and are going to seek your life. Now let us meet together in the temple, and
let us shut the doors of the temple: for they will come and slay thee.” And
Nehemiah said to him, “Should such a man as I flee?” He virtually stood up and
said, “What, Nehemiah fleeing after all he has gone through I Get thee behind
me, Satan! Thou savourest not of the things that be of God, but those that be
of men.” The same temptation came to the greater than Nehemiah, to the greatest
Worker that ever God sent to work and to “pray for the peace of Jerusalem,”
even the Lord Jesus Christ. And as with the Master, so with the servant. The
servant will be tempted and seduced in every way, that the work may cease, that
the temperature, the heat of our zeal may go down, and the worse may appear the
better reason, and carry us away from our post. Some men go to the temple, but
to them it is simply a coward’s castle. This is about all that God gets from
some of us. We go sneaking into our churches on the Sunday, but not to do God’s
work. God pity you! You never stand up for Him out there on London wall.
Exactly! Well, this invitation from Shemaiah to go into the temple was not good
enough for Nehemiah--and he was about as devout a man as most of us. He was a
man who feared God with all his heart, didn’t he? But they were going to make
the temple a coward’s castle. Listen l I will bring it nearer to us. There is
some young fellow here hard beset with his surroundings. You are set there on
that commercial bit of the wall, to be true, to be honest, to unfurl the flag
there, and to work with and for God there. And the battle is thickening, and
coming to you in your business; the devil as an angel of light is trying to get
you to leave your work and go and study for the ministry! Go into the temple to
save your life. It was that kind of thing that was happening to the early
Church. Men and women were going to leave the conflict and struggle, to run
away into cloisters and convents, with their “dim, religious light.” And so you
would go and shut yourself up, and give yourself up to a life of contemplation,
you say. It is a
delusion; it won’t do. Let us see how Nehemiah acted when asked to go into the
temple. He would have been spoiled if he had yielded to that temptation. He no
doubt loved the house of God, the worship of God as we do. We love all its
regular services. How sweet it is to us to meet together, to hold communion, to
join in our solemn feasts and hymns of love and praise! But that is on Sabbath
days. And the end for which we meet is to strengthen us for the work of
testifying for God and Christ. What is that? I think I see Nehemiah with his
note-book in his hand after the work was all finished, and he is turning over
and going through in his mind all that he had done and suffered. And he is thinking
over it all, and wondering what made all the opposition to the building of
these walls. “I never could rightly understand,” he would say, “why that was
such a tough job, and why there were continually things coming against my legs
to trip me up from unexpected quarters. I felt some one was not fighting fair,
that the enemy had got into our own camp and was fighting against me unfairly.”
And it was the mother-in-law that was the whole secret. They--families of God’s
people and their
enemies--were married and intermarried with each other; and so they had their
grappling-irons on the Israelitish vessel. And they pulled the vessel close by
this intermarriage relationship, and they got on board, and could not be kept
off. By this marriage relationship Tobiah had got in with the very chief of
them, and so struck hard and constantly at Nehemiah. And it was through this
marriage relationship they tried to get at Nehemiah and pull him down, and thus
cause God’s work to cease. Says Christ, “I am not come to send peace, but a
sword; to set the father against the son, and the daughter against the mother,
and the mother-in-law against the daughter-in-law: and a man’s foes shall be those of his own
household.” Indeed, you will ofttimes be fairly perplexed. You say, “I feel the
devil at my elbow, and he is whispering in my ear with my own flesh and blood,
and would overcome me unless I set watch with vigilance.” This same thing is
working to-day. Now, for example, I know a young fellow, he started with great
vigour in the cause of God, he started with great vigour to build the wall,
especially to build the total abstinence wall. But by and by he married a
daughter of a wine merchant, and that brought the building to a stop. Yes. He
says now he thinks there are a great many excellent people among the brewers.
Was not that the kind of thing they said to Nehemiah? “Moreover, they reported
Tobiah’s good deeds,” and they said this and that about him. Very
innocent-looking things may seduce
you and take the backbone out of you. Once upon a time your friends called you
old-fashioned and Puritanical, But lately you got married, and that has brought
you into close contact with a class of people with whom you had little or no dealings before. You
had nothing in common. And to make a long story short you were at the theatre
the other evening--with your mother-in-law. She has soon called you in off the
wall! Everything is altered now. And instead of your going over to carry war
into the enemy’s camp, they have come unto you, and have overcome you; and you
have purred like a pussy-cat where before you were bold and outspoken: and the reason is the
marriage, the mother-in-law; and the marrow of principle is being thereby
sucked out of some of you. You need to be spoken to, and I would that my words
were like fire, and would burn. Oh I that some of you would come back to your
earlier faith, enthusiasm in God’s work, and the blood-heat of your early zeal.
For now you are as namby-pamby as the devil could wish. “I used to think,” says
another, “very harshly of those who didn’t hold my views. But now I have learnt
to be charitable. I have discovered that many things which I thought were
essential are only accidental.” Softly, my friend: ‘twas the mother-in-law made
the discovery. You have gone off on that charitable dodge. Ah, God’s Word has
an eye in every direction. “Also they reported his good deeds before me,” and
as good as said, “We know Tobiah; and, Nehemiah, you are wrong about him altogether. He is an
excellent man, and he gave five shillings to this, he gave ten shillings to
that; and he is a wonderful fellow altogether. He is wonderfully like
yourself?’ Really it is such a pity that two such good men should not meet
together and shake hands. But they never could, and Nehemiah kept his hands
behind his back and said, “I choose my own company. I know the hands of these
fellows too well.” (John McNeill.)
Persistency
We have here persistency of opposition, persistency of endeavour.
I. This principle
of persistency is illustrated in all the circle of nature and life.
1. Everywhere there is exhibition of hostile force. All natural
forces, all life, all energy creep to their goal as the wave creeps to the
shore after many a rebuff, and after many a spurning.
2. It is so with man in all social life.
3. The Bible represents all moral victory as against deep and
persistent hostility.
II. This principle
of persistency is illustrated in the general history of the kingdom of God.
III. The same
principle is illustrated in individual salvation and work. (Homiletic
Commentary.)
Hinderers
How strange it is that no good work can be attempted without
exciting opposition, and the better the work the more intense its hindrances!
No beneficent measure has ever been propounded without obstacles being put in
its way, oftentimes by the very people it is intended to benefit. The
promulgation of Christianity is a notable example. Some of the means of
hindrance are--
I. The restless
activity of evil. Sin is essentially aggressive. It cannot let well alone.
II. The jealousy of
the unrighteous. They cannot bear to see anything prosper in which they are not
the leaders. They will never attempt any good work, but when they see it in
progress they would hinder and destroy.
III. The vindictive
spirit of Satan. (Homilist.)
Verses 1-19
Now it came to pass, when Sanballat.
The witness to the truth
I. His trial, from
the stratagems of enemies. The circumstances of his trial were peculiar. Faith
and prayer and pains had now achieved great things in Jerusalem. For many days
the patriots had persevered, with unremitting toil, to rebuild the wall. And
now their enterprise was ready to be crowned with triumphant success. This, to
them, was a time of joyous anticipation, mingled, no doubt, with solicitude,
lest their work should be marred on the very eve of completion. But to the
enemies of Zion it was a moment of vexation and dismay. “They heard,” says
Nehemiah, “that I had builded the wail, and that there was no breach left
therein.” In spite of their vaunting words and feeble arms the good work had
advanced, and, unless they could instantly crush it, they plainly saw that all
would be lost. Yet what shall they do to arrest the sacred enterprise? They
have tried mockery already, but have found, to their chagrin, that these men of
Judah will not be driven by ridicule from what, to them, is a work of
conscience and religion. They have, moreover, attempted force; but they have
learned, to their dismay, that the Israelites are ready to resist unto blood
the invasion of their liberty to serve God in the city called by His name.
Foiled, therefore, in these modes of attack, they are compelled to resort to
stratagem in order, if possible, to gain their wicked purpose. This desperation
of the enemies of Judah is just a picture of the rage of the great adversary at
the progress of the Church and the growing sanctification of each believer in
Christ. More than once in the history of the Church’s advance has the devil come down in
“great wrath, because he knoweth he hath but a short time.” But trials in the
religious life often prove the occasion of higher manifestations of mercy than
could have been experienced without them. Trial, therefore, here comes to Nehemiah;
and what is the form in which it assails him?
1. He is first tried by the wiles of enemies to draw him from his
work and involve him in danger. As if for the purpose of consultation, they
sent unto him, saying, “Come, let us meet together in some one of the villages
in the plain of One.” The object of these crafty foes was to get possession of
the person of Nehemiah; and in all probability to take away his life. But the
noble Israelite answered after this manner, “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?” Who can but admire the wisdom and fortitude of the servant of God in
this hour of trial? Is not this a grand example to imitate in Christ’s service
and our own salvation? Our life on earth is so transient, and our work for
eternity so arduous, that we have no time to waste. “This I say, then, Walk in
the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh.”
2. Further, Nehemiah is tried by the false accusations of
enemies, designed to undermine
his character. “Sanballat sent his servant the fifth time with an open letter
in his hand.” And why was the letter sent “open”? It was no doubt intended to
give all the people opportunity to know its contents, that their jealousy might
be aroused at the alleged ambitious aims of their leader, or their fears be
excited of incurring the wrath of the king by continuing their work; but it was
meant, moreover, thus to offer an insult to Nehemiah. It might have been
thought that a life singularly blameless and disinterested as his would have
been exempt from reproach. But who may expect to be free from the assaults of
malice and envy, since the Son of God, the holy, harmless, undefiled One, did
not escape the shafts of calumny? And so here, one of the lowliest and most
upright of good men is falsely accused of ambition and rebellion. How striking
an instance is this of misrepresentation and craft in the enemies of truth to
thwart a servant of God in a Divine work. It often happens, as here, that the
sacred form of friendship is assumed to seduce the children of faith into a
betrayal of their trust; and they who would draw them aside from duty pretend a
regard to their welfare. Yet under the guise of affection there lurks a deadly
hostility that seeks only their hurt and the ruin of their good name.
II. His testimony
to the truth. Men in high place are little to be envied. They are often exposed
to special dangers, both in principle and person. He bears testimony to the
truth by fidelity to his trust in midst of imminent danger. He was fortified by
a good conscience, while beset with wiles and accusations; and he possessed his
soul in patience through the hour of trial. He looks on the field of danger
with the eye of an eagle, and walks over it with the heart of a lion. He
combines a clear perception of the plots of the enemy with a heroic courage to
confront all their power. How quickly the adversary shifts his method of
assault! and the good soldier must alter his manner of repulse in order to overcome.
The enemies of Nehemiah here follow the same crafty course. They found they
could not draw him into the country for counsel, and now they seek to drive him
into the temple for safety. This was a mean as well as a wicked device of the
heathen; but it is melancholy to reflect that men were found in Judah base
enough to abet their machinations. It was not among the common people that the
treacherous spirit appeared, but among the professed prophets and messengers of
God. Noble things are always most vile when they become corrupt; and in this
case these so-called ambassadors of heaven debase their high vocation by
lending all its influence to the work of the enemies of religion. But these
arts, employed to intimidate and seduce Nehemiah, were all in vain. He bore
testimony to the truth by steadfast adherence to duty, even in face of
threatened death. Much as he may value life, and wish to preserve it till the
work is done which is so dear to his heart, yet he loves God and a good
conscience far more. This is a noble example for our imitation. What faithful
care does this man of God exercise to prove all things, and to hold fast that
which is good!
III. His triumph
over all opposition. It is instructive to remark the means by which Nehemiah
achieved this victory. He was first of all careful to ascertain facts, and to
detect the plots of enemies through all the mazes of their falsehood. For this
purpose he gave his mind to weigh evidence, to examine character, to balance
circumstances, that he might arrive at the truth. But we note, as his chief
means of success, effectual fervent prayer to God. His labours were now crowned
with triumphant success. “So,” he writes, “the wall was finished in the twenty
and fifth day of the month Elul, in fifty and two days.” This was the hour of
Israel’s triumph, and of their enemies’ humiliation. “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 cast down in their own eyes.” They were much cast down,
as persons who have staked their full strength and reputation on a bad end, and
yet have utterly failed in its attainment. They suffered the humiliation of
those who boast of their power, put it forth to the utmost, and, after all,
feel themselves completely defeated by the people whose might they had
despised. It is not given to all witnesses for God to bear testimony for Him
amid great works and conflicts like these; but He appoints each of us our duty
here to stand by His truth, and to contend earnestly for the faith against all
assaults on it. The dominant forms of opposition to Bible truth in these days
are unbelief, or error in creed, and worldliness, or error in conduct; and in
face of both God calls us to be witnesses for His cause. Whenever you profess
your faith in the Bible, the whole Bible, as the Word of God, your creed is pronounced
antiquated, and regarded with wonder or an ill-dissembled sneer. Yet all is
surrendered if the integrity, the infallibility, the inspiration of the whole
Bible is given up. (W. Ritchie.)
Nehemiah’s heroism
Well, to come to the history, when Nehemiah was coming to an end,
and thought he had got through all his difficulties, Sanballat and the others
came wheedling and coaxing, and they said, “Come, Nehemiah, let us meet
together in one of the villages in the plain of One.” And they sent messengers
four times to try, if they could, to prevent the thorough fulfilment and
accomplishing of God’s work and Nehemiah’s design. Anything they would do, the
enemies of Nehemiah, as our enemies also would do, to diminish our zeal for God
and truth and righteousness. Thus we might paraphrase the arguments used, “Now, Nehemiah, you really
are a most excellent man, and, though we say it ourselves, we too are excellent
men; and if we can only just meet together in a quiet little spot, we shall
soon settle everything. You see, Nehemiah, we have misunderstood one another--a
very common thing among good people. You thought we were against you, but there
never was a greater mistake. We were misrepresented. Come now, and let us shake
hands; and when we have looked into each other’s faces, we shall discover
amidst apparent diversity of purpose that our hearts, our aims, were really
one, that we are seeking the same object.” After such fashion, we can imagine
they thought to draw Nehemiah from his purpose. “But they thought to do me
mischief,” says Nehemiah. Nehemiah says, “Why should the work cease, whilst I
leave it, and come down to you?” And you will find the more you buckle to God’s
work--that is to say, to strive to be first of all a sterling, righteous man in
lip and life, in thought, in word, and deed--and the more you try to recover
the blight and disaster in London or round about you, the more you will find
opposition of different kinds, and perhaps to-day the secret, sly, and cunning
opposition which is to be dreaded far more than the open, the overt. I wonder
how many invitations you will get to parties this week? because I want you to
work for God in this coming ten days’ mission. Very likely never so many as
this week. “We have a nice little party this week. Come down; don’t be
righteous overmuch. Don’t spoil yourself, and take all the pleasure out of
life.” Let us make up our mind and heart to work, work, work. “Why should I let
the work cease, and come down to you?” Let them answer that. Why should God’s
work cease while I leave it, and come down to you; so as to weaken my interest
in God’s work, and hinder my pace in the actual doing of God’s work? Here is
the test and touchstone. How do these things tell upon the work? Do they lower
my temperature, and take away my energies from God’s work? Then they are of the
devil; and to see that is to be kept right. From Nehemiah’s answer (verse 3) we
see the great blessing of having pure motives and clean hands. Oh, for this
whole-heartedness in the cause of God! Nehemiah said, “I will not cease doing
the work, for I am sure it is not for my own personal ends, it is not for my
own aggrandisement, my own vainglory. There are no such things as thou sayest,
but thou feignest them out of thine own heart.” They shot sore at poor
Nehemiah, when they said, “Nehemiah, it is your own glory that leads you on in
this work, not zeal for God.” And don’t think Nehemiah did not feel this; that
message came with a thump to him. And what preserved him? His integrity and
innocence. He could lift up his voice, and say, “It is a lie; it is not true.
Do as you like! Say what you like! I know whom I am serving. You may try all
manner of means, but you will never shake me from this, that God has sent me
here, given me this work to do; and in His name I give myself to it, with
singleness of heart and effort.” If God promote you, and make you prominent in
His work, remember it is He who does it; and you must stay at your post, do
your day’s work and leave your reputation in the hands of the Lord. Then comes
another temptation (verse 10). I think this man, this Shemaiah, was a man who
had a particular reputation for wisdom and prudence. “Oh, Nehemiah!” he would
say, “now you are wrong. You will allow me to speak plainly with you. No one
rejoiced more than I did when you came from Persia, and I rejoice to see what
is going on at Jerusalem. But the position is far different from what you
think. And I have been here longer than you; and I know the currents of thought
and feeling, which you don’t know anything about. And, believe me, that
sometimes the roundabout road is the nearest; and sometimes to go straight
tramping on, you know, is the way never to reach what you want. You are
carrying things, they think, with too high a hand. But if you would take time,
stop and let things blow over a little, you will get R done far more easily.
Believe me, Nehemiah, I know the temper of this people” (and here he spoke
truly), “and I tell you they are against you, and are going to seek your life.
Now let us meet together in the temple, and let us shut the doors of the
temple: for they will come and slay thee.” And Nehemiah said to him, “Should
such a man as I flee?” He virtually stood up and said, “What, Nehemiah fleeing
after all he has gone through I Get thee behind me, Satan! Thou savourest not
of the things that be of God, but those that be of men.” The same temptation
came to the greater than Nehemiah, to the greatest Worker that ever God sent to
work and to “pray for the peace of Jerusalem,” even the Lord Jesus Christ. And
as with the Master, so with the servant. The servant will be tempted and
seduced in every way, that the work may cease, that the temperature, the heat
of our zeal may go down, and the worse may appear the better reason, and carry
us away from our post. Some men go to the temple, but to them it is simply a
coward’s castle. This is about all that God gets from some of us. We go
sneaking into our churches on the Sunday, but not to do God’s work. God pity
you! You never stand up for Him out there on London wall. Exactly! Well, this
invitation from Shemaiah to go into the temple was not good enough for Nehemiah--and
he was about as devout a man as most of us. He was a man who feared God with
all his heart, didn’t he? But they were going to make the temple a coward’s
castle. Listen l I will bring it nearer to us. There is some young fellow here
hard beset with his surroundings. You are set there on that commercial bit of the
wall, to be true, to be honest, to unfurl the flag there, and to work with and
for God there. And the battle is thickening, and coming to you in your
business; the devil as an angel of light is trying to get you to leave your
work and go and study for the ministry! Go into the temple to save your life.
It was that kind of thing that was happening to the early Church. Men and women
were going to leave the conflict and struggle, to run away into cloisters and
convents, with their “dim, religious light.” And so you would go and shut
yourself up, and give yourself up to a life of contemplation, you say. It is a delusion;
it won’t do. Let us see how Nehemiah acted when asked to go into the temple. He
would have been spoiled if he had yielded to that temptation. He no doubt loved
the house of God, the worship of God as we do. We love all its regular
services. How sweet it is to us to meet together, to hold communion, to join in
our solemn feasts and hymns of love and praise! But that is on Sabbath days.
And the end for which we meet is to strengthen us for the work of testifying
for God and Christ. What is that? I think I see Nehemiah with his note-book in
his hand after the work was all finished, and he is turning over and going
through in his mind all that he had done and suffered. And he is thinking over
it all, and wondering what made all the opposition to the building of these
walls. “I never could rightly understand,” he would say, “why that was such a
tough job, and why there were continually things coming against my legs to trip
me up from unexpected quarters. I felt some one was not fighting fair, that the
enemy had got into our own camp and was fighting against me unfairly.” And it
was the mother-in-law that was the whole secret. They--families of God’s people
and their
enemies--were married and intermarried with each other; and so they had their
grappling-irons on the Israelitish vessel. And they pulled the vessel close by
this intermarriage relationship, and they got on board, and could not be kept
off. By this marriage relationship Tobiah had got in with the very chief of
them, and so struck hard and constantly at Nehemiah. And it was through this
marriage relationship they tried to get at Nehemiah and pull him down, and thus
cause God’s work to cease. Says Christ, “I am not come to send peace, but a
sword; to set the father against the son, and the daughter against the mother,
and the mother-in-law against the daughter-in-law: and a man’s foes shall be those of his own
household.” Indeed, you will ofttimes be fairly perplexed. You say, “I feel the
devil at my elbow, and he is whispering in my ear with my own flesh and blood,
and would overcome me unless I set watch with vigilance.” This same thing is
working to-day. Now, for example, I know a young fellow, he started with great
vigour in the cause of God, he started with great vigour to build the wall,
especially to build the total abstinence wall. But by and by he married a
daughter of a wine merchant, and that brought the building to a stop. Yes. He
says now he thinks there are a great many excellent people among the brewers.
Was not that the kind of thing they said to Nehemiah? “Moreover, they reported
Tobiah’s good deeds,” and they said this and that about him. Very
innocent-looking things may seduce
you and take the backbone out of you. Once upon a time your friends called you
old-fashioned and Puritanical, But lately you got married, and that has brought
you into close contact with a class of people with whom you had little or no dealings before. You
had nothing in common. And to make a long story short you were at the theatre
the other evening--with your mother-in-law. She has soon called you in off the
wall! Everything is altered now. And instead of your going over to carry war
into the enemy’s camp, they have come unto you, and have overcome you; and you
have purred like a pussy-cat where before you were bold and outspoken: and the reason is the
marriage, the mother-in-law; and the marrow of principle is being thereby
sucked out of some of you. You need to be spoken to, and I would that my words
were like fire, and would burn. Oh I that some of you would come back to your
earlier faith, enthusiasm in God’s work, and the blood-heat of your early zeal.
For now you are as namby-pamby as the devil could wish. “I used to think,” says
another, “very harshly of those who didn’t hold my views. But now I have learnt
to be charitable. I have discovered that many things which I thought were
essential are only accidental.” Softly, my friend: ‘twas the mother-in-law made
the discovery. You have gone off on that charitable dodge. Ah, God’s Word has
an eye in every direction. “Also they reported his good deeds before me,” and
as good as said, “We know Tobiah; and, Nehemiah, you are wrong about him altogether. He is an excellent
man, and he gave five shillings to this, he gave ten shillings to that; and he
is a wonderful fellow altogether. He is wonderfully like yourself?’ Really it
is such a pity that two such good men should not meet together and shake hands.
But they never could, and Nehemiah kept his hands behind his back and said, “I
choose my own company. I know the hands of these fellows too well.” (John
McNeill.)
Persistency
We have here persistency of opposition, persistency of endeavour.
I. This principle
of persistency is illustrated in all the circle of nature and life.
1. Everywhere there is exhibition of hostile force. All natural
forces, all life, all energy creep to their goal as the wave creeps to the
shore after many a rebuff, and after many a spurning.
2. It is so with man in all social life.
3. The Bible represents all moral victory as against deep and
persistent hostility.
II. This principle
of persistency is illustrated in the general history of the kingdom of God.
III. The same
principle is illustrated in individual salvation and work. (Homiletic
Commentary.)
Hinderers
How strange it is that no good work can be attempted without
exciting opposition, and the better the work the more intense its hindrances!
No beneficent measure has ever been propounded without obstacles being put in
its way, oftentimes by the very people it is intended to benefit. The
promulgation of Christianity is a notable example. Some of the means of
hindrance are--
I. The restless
activity of evil. Sin is essentially aggressive. It cannot let well alone.
II. The jealousy of
the unrighteous. They cannot bear to see anything prosper in which they are not
the leaders. They will never attempt any good work, but when they see it in
progress they would hinder and destroy.
III. The vindictive
spirit of Satan. (Homilist.)
Verse 3
A great work.
A great work
A story is told of an old man who rived long ago. A friend
asked him the cause of his complaints, since in the evening he so often
complained of great weariness and pain. “Alas,” answered he, “I have every day
so much to do: I have two falcons to tame, two hares to keep from running away,
two hawks to manage, a serpent to confine, a lion to chain, and a sick man to
tend and wait upon.” “Why, this is only folly,” said the friend; “no man has
all these things to do at once.” “Yes indeed,” he answered, “it is with me as I have said. The two
falcons are my two eyes, which I must diligently guard, lest something should
please them which may be hurtful to my salvation; the two hares are my feet,
which I must hold back lest they should run after evil objects, and walk in the
ways of sin; the two hawks are my two hands, which I must train and keep to
work, in order that I may be able to provide for myself and for my brethren who
are in need; the serpent is my tongue, which I must always keep in with a
bridle, lest it should speak anything unseemly; the lion is my heart, with
which I have to maintain a continual fight in order that vanity and pride may
not fill it, but that the grace of God may dwell and work there; the sick man
is my body, which is ever needing my watchfulness and care. All this daily
wears out my strength.” The friend listened with wonder, and then said, “Dear
brother, if all men laboured and struggled after this manner, the times would
be better, and more according to the will of God.” (J. M. Randall.)
Determination of purpose
The ancient Greeks had an aphorism which is worthy of remembrance: “He is formidable who
does one thing.” A man must have a fixed design, or he will not have a steady
course. As the instrument tuned to no key-note, so is the man whose spirit is
strung to no commanding aim. In vain does the vessel launch forth from the
harbour if she have no haven for which to steer and no helm by which to shape
her voyage. Take a just view of your life, and all is but dung and dross in
comparison with your final acceptance with God. This is the object, the one
object which you must enterprise, prosecute, and secure. What a work is before
us! (Hugh Stowell, M. A.)
A great work in the face of strong antagonism
The Christian has a great work to do for himself, working out
under gospel influences his own salvation with fear and trembling. It is great
in regard of others. We are not merely children of God going home to glory; but
we are fellow-workers with God--keepers of beacons to imperilled mariners in a
dark night of storms--oarsmen of a lifeboat out on the wild ocean saving
drowning souls from destruction. Yea, we have a great work in regard of our
glorious God and Saviour. We may not understand it, yet we are assured by God
Himself of the truth that more than in all His works of creation and providence
is there manifestation made of His manifold wisdom in this work of salvation.
Every soul saved on earth by our human instrumentality is a radiant diadem in
the many crowns of Jesus. Moreover, like Nehemiah, we are doing this great work
in the face of strong antagonisms, and against the insidious opposition of
enemies striving to hinder us. Alas! how many are the Sanballats and Tobiahs of
the world! I am not railing at the world itself, for it is a good world for
Christian work--a world whereof we are to make the most; and the pleasures and
honours and riches of it, when accepted as gifts of God and used for His glory,
are among our mighty means of grace, whereby our own souls may be edified and
Christ’s kingdom enlarged. I am thinking now of the world as used by Satan to
hinder Christian work--those scornful words or seductive arts of temptation,
and, I repeat, they are many. Pleasure comes to the scene of Christian labour
with all-bewitching beauty and bewildering blandishments, and she pleads for
sensual indulgence, and would draw the worker for Christ forth and down to the
fair plains of Ono. Avarice comes with jewels of great price, and keys offering
coffers of untold wealth in the stronghold of Mammon. Ambition comes, in the
pomp and glory of an archangel, fallen from heaven, and points to a perspective
of surpassing splendour, with shining palms and triumphal processions,
outflashing diadems and uprising throne. With these and many other specious
beguilements come the great adversaries of the soul and the Church. They plead
with the Christian worker as he builds the walls of Zion, crying eloquently and
earnestly, “Oh, come down and meet us in some plain of Ono!” And to all this
our reply should be just that of Nehemiah, “I am doing a great work, and I
cannot come down.” Oh, fellow-worker with God in this glorious salvation, take
to your heart as the inspiration of your lives this strong argument; rise to a
comprehension of the magnificent part you are acting in the face of the
universe; of the vastness of the issues you are working out for God! Say to the
assaulting tempter, “Let me alone. I am working--working. I am working out my
own destiny. I am striving for a guerdon in the skies grander than the
Conqueror’s. I am working for others--for the beloved of my own house-hold--my
child, my parent, my brother, my friend. Oh, do not hinder me! I am working for
a world--a world for which the Son of God bled in the garden--died on the
Cross! See! see! that world rolls like a shattered wreck on the stormy seas of
time, and I am keeping the beacon aflame! Oh, hinder me not! Nay, more, I am
working for Jehovah--that God who, when I was lost, sent His own Son to save
me.” (T. L. Cuyler.)
Nehemiah, the model man of business
In studying Nehemiah as a man of business we notice--
I. He was a model of earnstness.
II. He was a
model of unselfishness.
III. He was a model of faithfulness.
IV. He was a model of prayer. (R. Newton, D. D.)
A good man in a great work
This narrative illustrates--
I. The
characteristics of a great work. It has--
1. A high purpose. It was--
2. Beset with difficulties. A true work will have generally to
surmount--
II. The temptations
that beset a great work.
1. Temptations from armed enemies.
2. Temptations from professed friends.
III. The spirit of a
true worker. There will be--
1. Prayer for the work.
2. Earnest prosecution of it.
3. Resistance of all temptations to leave it. (Urijah R. Thomas.)
The great work
We learn from these words--
I. That Nehemiah
was “doing a great work.”
II. That there were
those who endeavoured to hinder him.
III. That the
magnitude of the work required that he should not cease or allow himself to be
hindered from prosecuting it.
IV. We may learn
from the context that Nehemiah succeeded in accomplishing the work by prayer
and painstaking diligence. (James Shore, M. A.)
The great work
I. That the work
of religion in general is a great work. This will appear when we contemplate it
as being--
1. God’s work. It originated with God; its foundations were laid in
heaven; it emanated from the throne of the Eternal; it is the product of
infinite wisdom, love, and truth. It bears on its countenance the image of its
immaculate Author, and it is every way worthy of its great Original.
Unmistakable traces and manifestations of its Divinity are seen in the
loftiness of its character, in the purity of its principles, and in the
efficiency and permanency of its influences. Nothing is worth the name of
greatness compared with the system God has devised to heal the sorrows and
cleanse the pollutions of the soul. And is there not a glory and majesty about
it immeasurably great? God appears great in the works of creation. If, then,
God is so great throughout the wide range of creation, how great must He be in
restoring man to His favour, in giving life, vigour, and beauty to souls once
dead in trespasses and sins! That religion is a great work is evident--
2. From the importance attached to it in the Bible. The Bible, God’s
holy book, is pregnant with it, its glory and beauty being reflected from every
page. This book was written expressly to pourtray religion, its doctrines,
principles, and duties. Let the question be settled in our minds--religion is
the “principal thing”; it is emphatically the world’s great bless ing; so the
sacred penmen estimate it. They speak of it as “God’s salvation”; as the “great
salvation”; as the “pearl of great price”; as the “one thing needful”; as the
“good part”; the “more excellent way”; “the bread of life”; and “life eternal.”
That religion is a great work is evident from--
3. The qualifications necessary to engage in it. A high state of
intellect is not essential to it. The most gigantic intellect is no
qualification for God’s service, if not renewed and sanctified by the Holy
Ghost. The qualifications necessary to engage in this work must have their seat
in the heart rather than in the head. Right moral emotions cannot be dispensed
with.
4. That religion is a great work appears from its blessed results on
human character and conduct. The history of the past in relation to God’s work
unfolds a series of wonderful achievements and glorious results. Its wide
spread influence amongst the various nations and tribes of men has told a
marvellous tale.
II. The good man is
engaged in this work. This expression denotes--
1. Decision of character. In a world like ours fixedness of purpose
is invaluable, whether it relate to the active duties of every-day life or to
the more lofty and ennobling duties of religion. It is essential to success.
The man whose movements are changeable, and who is never steady to one point or
purpose, brings nothing to a good issue. What a paralysing influence indecision
has upon the soul in relation to religion. Men dream and talk about their
future course of action, and yet they are never found at the starting-point.
They are decided for the future, but not for the present. The diligent man
says, “‘I am doing a great work’; I am in it; it form part and parcel of my
very being.” The Scriptures furnish us with specimens of the decision we plead
for. We see it in Joshua, when he says, “As for me and my house, we will serve
the Lord.” So, too, David said, “O God, my heart is fixed”; “I have chosen the
way of truth.”
2. Labour. “I am doing a great work.” Religion is essentially active;
it has no sympathy with sloth and inactivity.
III. The spirit of
perseverance is required in this work. The good man engaged in this work cannot
come down, because--
1. The work requires close and constant application. To acquire
anything like an approach to perfection or completeness in religion is no easy
task. The world, with its blandishments, its false maxims, and glittering
snares, says, “Come down.” The flesh, naturally in favour of indulgence and
ease, and opposed to self-denial, joins in the cry, and says, “Come down.”
Satan, whose malice breaks out more bitterly as he sees the wall rising higher,
repeats the order, “Come down.” Thus every new stone added to the building is
the subject of dispute. The builder cannot leave his work, because--
2. Shame and misery would be the result. A more pitiful sight than
that of a good man “cast down from his excellency” is certainly not to be
found. My reason, my judgment, my conscience, all concur with the inspired
admonition, “Stand fast, therefore, in the liberty wherewith Christ has made
you free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage.”
IV. “Why should the
work cease, whilst i leave it, and come down to you?” We must not suppose that
God’s work would entirely cease, even though a thousand such men as Nehemiah
were to desert it.
1. All the infidelity and wickedness of men cannot stop this work.
Observe, finally, that--
2. Were it possible that His work should cease, it would be the
greatest calamity the world ever knew. (A. Twiss.)
The pre-eminence of God’s work
I. God’s work is
still a great work. It resolves itself into two parts--
1. Work in relation to one’s self--faith in the Redeemer, progressive
holiness and final glory.
2. Work in relation to others.
II. God’s work must
be done first. To Sanballat’s complimentary note Nehemiah replied by his
conduct, “God’s work first, compliments next.”
III. God’s work
preserves from mischief and misery.
IV. God’s work
should be loved for its own sake.
V. God’s work
should be begun, continued, and ended with prayer. (Homilist.)
Safety in Christian work
Christian work is--
1. A safeguard against vice. All honest work, indeed, is an antidote
to vice, but Christian work is especially so.
1. It fills up those leisure hours that so often prove fatal to the
unguarded soul.
2. By its very nature it supplies positive motives against temptation.
II. A safegaurd
against spiritual declension. Our spiritual life depends in the first instance
on the work of Christ for us; but its continuance is dependent on activity--on
the work we do for Christ.
1. Physical growth is dependent on activity.
2. So, too, with intellectual life.
3. So in a still higher degree it is in spiritual life.
Selfishness is the greatest spiritual poverty. Life loses in the
proportion in which it withholds itself, and gains by all it gives. According
to the width of my sympathies and the self-forgetting ardour of my zeal is the
true power and opulence of my being. If it be lawful or possible to enlist the higher selfishness in
the service of unselfishness, as you value your religious life, as you would
protect it on the one hand against innate tendencies to declension, and on the
other against the sapping and undermining influences of the outer world, give
your sympathies, your energies, your substance to the cause of God and man. It
is not enough for your religious safety that you abstain from evil--you must
engage in positive good.
III. A safeguard
against scepticism. Not that scepticism cannot be met in the field of argument.
But argument is not, in every case, the best way to meet the native scepticism
of the heart. Christian truth is of such a nature that to understand it fully
you must live it. “If any man will do God’s will he shall know of the
doctrine.” There was a minister who at an early period of his life was in doubt
about the truth of Christianity. He had almost lost his faith, when hearing
this text he resolved to make trial of it. He went and gathered a number of
boys together from the streets and taught them as best he could; from that he
went to something else as opportunity offered, with the result that he found
the text to be true; that in doing God’s will, especially in doing good to
others, his doubts had all fled and never troubled him more. He found, as
Carlyle says, “that doubt of whatever kind can be ended by action alone.” As a
rule it is not from the great class of Christian workers that scepticism draws
its recruits, but from those who stand aloof from all Christian activities, and
in many cases look down on them with contempt.
IV. A safeguard
against despondency. It is an old saying and true that while the water flows
and the mill-stones revolve unless the grain be thrown between them to be
ground, the stones will grind each other. So the heart and mind which are
inactive, which have no subjects of interest, to engross them, turn their force
inward and prey upon themselves. The water that is stagnant soon loses its
freshness of colour and of flavour, and engenders the worthless weed, the green
scum, the foul mud and noxious exhalations; so the man or woman who leads a
useless, purposeless, inactive life not only degenerates in inward character,
but loses the freshness and brightness of life, becomes restless, discontented,
and a prey to melancholy. To a woman of the desponding type who was wont to
bewail her spiritual poverty in the language of the prophet, “My leanness i my
leanness I “ a shrewd and faithful friend, well-known for her good works,
administered the needed and merited reproof, “Nay, but it would better become
you to say, ‘My laziness! my laziness!’“ (Robert Whyte, D. D.)
Hindrances to revivals
I. A revival of
religion is a great work.
II. Several things
may put a stop to a
revival. A revival will cease--
1. Whenever the Church believes it is going to cease.
2. When Christians consent that it should cease.
3. Whenever Christians suppose the work will go on without their aid.
4. When Christians begin to proselytise.
5. When the Church in any way grieves the Holy Spirit.
6. When Christians lose the spirit of brotherly love.
7. When Christians are frequently reconverted.
III. Things which
ought to be done to continue a revival.
1. Ministerial humiliation.
2. Churches which have opposed revivals must repent.
3. Those who promote the work of revivals must repent their mistakes.
(G. Finney.)
Verse 6-7
Gashmu saith it.
Detraction
I. What is
detraction?
1. In general it is an unjust violation of another’s reputation or
that good report which is due to him.
(a) Malice and ill-will.
(b) Uncharitable credulity, whereby men easily believe a false report,
and so propagate and convey it to others.
(c) Rashness and unruliness of tongue.
(d) Carnal zeal, which is nothing else but passion for our different
interests and opinions.
2. In particular.
II. THE HEINOUSNESS
OF THE SIN. (T. Manton.)
Gashmu
I. MARK THE CHARACTER
OF GASHMU. His history we know nothing of. Parentage, training, chieftainship,
whether inherited or won, life’s events, end--all are secret from us. But it is
not secret that he was in friendship with Nehemiah’s enemies Sanballat and
Tobiah. These three were one in their desire to keep Jerusalem weak. Whatever
Gashmu thought of Sanballat, we can see that Sanballat thought much of him.
“Gashmu says it.” That must, thinks Sanballat, carry conviction of peril even
to Nehemiah and bring him to a stand.
1. Gashmu evidently was a man with a great reputation. His word had
weight. It was the word of a superior person--of one who perhaps spoke but
little, but who took care when he did speak to put a sting into what he said.
He took care not hastily to commit himself. He not only thought before he
spoke, but chose the words in which to pack most strikingly the thought. His
was a quoted opinion. It went on long journeys. “A wise word that! A fine
remark that! Whose?” “Gashmu says it!” Men looked up to Gashmu. From silent
heights he spoke down to them. He despised most of them, as one of a loftier
race, and yet strangely loved their reverential attention, prompt praise, and
their homage to his wisdom in quoting:far and wide his opinion. He was great in
criticism. If there was a fault in anybody, he could spot it. No number of
excellences, however bright, could blind him to that fault. He could not only
see it, but could excel all others in speaking disagreeably about it. Who could
expect such a superior person to have pity on human infirmities? It is not a
difficult thing for a man to build up to-day such a reputation as Gashmu’s. Let
him be blind to all that is good in others. Let him darken and exaggerate the
faults he sees, and when he cannot see them, imagine them. Let him pick the
keenest and most poisonous words. Never ,commend anybody. Let him have a clever
tongue, with a bad heart, and he would be a great man among pigmy souls. Let
Christian men and women be on their guard. In the effort to live purely, and to
serve God by serving their generation, they will meet with Gashmu. Let not such
hinder you from Christian life and labour. Answer not this railing with
railing; answer it only with a more devoted piety, and a larger Christian
service.
2. Gashmu was a man without sympathy with goodness. Nehemiah was a
patriot. From love to his country and his God he had given up an honourable and
lucrative office at the Persian Court. If Nehemiah is dependent upon outside
sympathy for the prosecution and completion of his work, he had better at once
get his retinue together and go back to Babylon! No sympathy for him from
clever and oft-quoted Gashmu! Welcome to all the inspiration of sympathy. The
kindly eye, the warm-grasping hand, the love-kindling appreciation, how
welcome! Difficult duty becomes easier, the burthened life is lightened of its
load. But do not live on this; don’t look for this. Live a life that lives
above it. Live in God. Then let not their opinion dishearten you. Does Gashmu
say it? Who is Gashmu? A man who, whatever his worldly shrewdness and
reputation, is in the gall of bitterness and the bonds of iniquity. What judge
can he be of the quality of Christian labour, of the beauty of a holy and
Christian life?
3. Gashmu had keen hatred of religious enthusiasm. Nehemiah’s
religion was the root of his patriotism. He lost no time in carrying out the
rebuilding of the ruined wall. He allowed not the quickened and responsive zeal
of the people to flag. He was as ready to fight as to build. No specious
pretence could call him from the work. On it went--on till done. This was gall
and wormwood to Gashmu. If Nehemiah had only talked, however loudly, of his
intentions, it had not mattered. Gashmu could not tolerate enthusiasm. He is
still alive, though in English garb. The earnest Christian is certain to meet
with him. He hates earnestness, and enthusiasm he cannot away with.
4. Gashmu was a man skilful to read motives. Or so he deemed himself.
He could not only look at the rising walls of the city, but right through them.
He could not only see Nehemiah on the wall inspiriting the armed masons; but he
could see into Nehemiah’s heart. He knew the secret meaning of all this rapid
labour. “What do you think, Gashmu, about it?” He knew, and soon the report is
flying abroad among the surrounding heathens, that the Jews intend to rebel
against the Persian power, and that Nehemiah means to be their king--King
Nehemiah. So the lying rumour goes on its journey, and “Gashmu saith it” gives it
wings. Not an atom of truth in it! But Gashmu smiled and nodded, and calmly
whispered into willing ears the lie that no amount of confidence and conceit
and cleverness could make true. But his lie is written here. “Gashmu says it!”
And for that lie Gashmu is remembered to-day. Live to God--do any brave stroke
of work for Him, and some present-day Gashmu will know all about your motive
for doing it. He will know more about you than you know about yourself. Engage
in work for Christ, and Gashmu will say, “I know pride is at the bottom of this; he
wants to show how much better he is than anybody else. He wants to be talked
about. Anything to make headway. Anything to build up business. He knows that
Sunday will help Monday.” Slanderous Gashmu! Is he not alive to-day?
II. Imitate
Nehemiah’s treatment of Gashmu. He would not be hindered. He kept to prayer. He
kept to work. He would not go down. Are you seeking to build up your character
in truth, purity, holiness? This is God’s work. Be not hindered in it. Be not
diverted from it. Are you seeking to build up some other--some neglected,
broken-down, and ruined character? Do the work--finish it. (G. T. Coster.)
Gashmu
I. Who Gashmu was.
Personally we do not know Gashmu from the ten thousand men of his era. He was Gashmu
the Arabian, and that is all. But his real identity is not centred on the year
of his birth, or who was his father, or how much he was worth. When our life
begins, our name is almost everything; but when our life is ended it has been
heavily freighted with good or evil, and is what the things are to which it
gives personal identity. What we do know about Gashmu is that he came out
square against a man who was determined to do good, and was earnestly doing it,
and tried to put him down.
II. What he tried
to do. A good man was doing a good work and bad men tried to stop him. They
tried to hurt his person. Gashmu was above that, yet he will sit there and
nurse his dislike, and be glad to hear the petty stories that float like
thistledown in the neighbourhood against the innocent man. One story in
particular gets credence. This man means to be a king. Gashmu hears the
floating absurdity. On any other subject he would pronounce anything so empty
as this silly; but when this man is the subject of the rumour, he would rather
believe it than not. He goes and sees for himself, and when he returns, ready
ears listen, and the fatal word is uttered: “That man, certainly means to be a king.”
Before night it is repeated by twenty tongues: “He intends to rebel; Gashmu
says it.” Gashmu has permitted his prejudices grow into a lie. He is the
representative man of unprincipled gossips and narrow bigots.
1. There are Gashmus in the Church, and “Gashmu said it” is at the
bottom of nine-tenths of all the differences in Christendom.
2. There are Gashmus in social life. Your social Gashmu means well on
his own estimate of things. Perhaps he is on the whole a good man, lives a life
that wins the respect; of a whole town; tells the truth so constantly that his
word is as good as gold. But some one man does not train with him, he does not
like that man at all; does not understand him; and so cultivates a little
feeling of dislike, until it bulges into a receptiveness of idle rumours, that
would be like mere straws if they were reported of a man he loves. Yet he will
nurse them and cherish them, and at some moment his dislike will come to a
head, and he will say, “I have no doubt it is true.” Then “Gashmu said it”
clips that man’s margin at the bank, draws the sunshine out of half the faces
he meets on the street, and puts him in a position that, it may be, brings the
very tendencies for which Gashmu has spotted him. How many grown men and women
regret bitterly to-day some such misjudgment on another--the hasty word of a single moment,
that we could never recall and never atone for, by which the life of the man or
woman about whom we said it has been darkened and injured past redemption! It
was a small matter of itself, but Gashmu said it, and that was like sowing the
thing in black prairie loam, insuring to us a harvest of bitter regrets, and to
our victim a harvest of bitter memories.
3. There are Gashmus in the nation and the public life.
III. What came of
it. It came to nothing. It was common rumour, and Gashmu on the one side, and God
and the right on the other; and alas for Gashmu when he is found fighting
against God!
Conclusion:
To every earnest man and woman I would say--
1. Keep true to your task, whatever it may be, and never mind Gashmu.
2. When Gashmu comes and begins to say this and that to annoy you, do
not come down to talk to him.
3. If you come across Gashmu in the Church, or in society, or in: any way whatever, keep
out of his way as much as you
can--have nothing to say to him.
4. Let us take care that we are not Gashmus.
5. We must pity Gashmu. (R. Collyer.)
An ancient school for scandal
That some people will say things about their neighbours is
a great evil. That some persons will repeat what others, have said is a greater
evil. That some persons will be disturbed by what other persons report that
other persons have said about them or their friends, and will permit themselves
to be turned aside from useful service, to be embittered in their personal
feelings by such reports--this is the greatest evil of all. We hear a great
deal about bigotry, intolerance, and persecution. These things have ever
withstood the onward march of truth and righteousness. But no fiercest blast of
persecution, no form of open antagonism, has ever injured the Church or
hindered its work to such a degree as the secret and unrecorded workings of
gossip and slander. The power of these evils lies in their very uncertainty and
elusiveness. Whoever would fight them finds himself beating the air. Who tries
to hold them fast closes his fingers upon a shadow. Do you wish to know all
about the spirit of gossip and the method of its working? Then read the sixth
chapter of Nehemiah. It antedates Sheridan’s “School for Scandal” by more than
twenty centuries, and surpasses it in quality even more than in age. It is a
drama from real life. Toward every case Of slander or gossip four relations may
be sustained. In the completing of the chain four persons may be involved.
These relations and persons are represented by Sanballat, Gashmu, Shemaiah, and
Nehemiah. First is Sanballat. He is not the originator of the slander, but he
is the originator of the mischief,
for he reports what he has heard, or professes to have heard, from another.
Here is your typical scandal-monger. Who among us is so fortunate that he does
not know Sanballat, yes, many Sanballats? The tribe of Sanballat is numerous.
They are the persons who tell you so much, not on their own responsibility, but
on the authority of others. They are dealers in cast-off testimony, traders in
biographical second-hands. They keep no new goods, but they are master hands at
polishing up that which is old and giving it a fresh lustre. They are the real
mischief-makers, I say, for it is chiefly by this process of polishing and
revamping that stories or statements become injurious and acquire unpleasant
sharpness of venom. The most innocent and well-meant utterance falls into the
hands of one of these repeaters and it is quickly transformed into a poisonous
shaft. Some little modification of emphasis or inflection, an added or omitted
word, and it becomes a source of heartburnings and bitterness and pain, a wedge
that may sunder the strongest ties of affection and friendship. We are wont
most severely to denounce the careless speaker, to lay all the blame of gossip
and slander on the heads of those who say things about their fellows. And far
be it from me to excuse or justify unkind speech even at first-hand, or to
minify the sinfulness of “idle words.” But I insist that he is a greater sinner
who repeats what others say, especially if in the repetition he gives it the
slightest change of form or emphasis. It is the Sanballat who comes to you with
some story and tells you that “Gashmu saith it” who deserves the severest
rebuke. He is the real pest of society, the enemy of all good. We may almost
say, with Carlyle, that he “is among the most indubitable malefactors omitted,
or inserted, in the criminal calendar.” But what of Gashmu, the originator of
the story? Who was Gashmu? A most important question, and one that has never been
satisfactorily answered. The name occurs nowhere else except in this verse. The
preceding narrative speaks of “Geshem the Arabian,” and all the commentators
assume that Gashmu is Geshem. Every reader assumes that the two are one. In
fact, nobody doubts it. But it is worthy of notice that the names are not
identical. Sanballat does not say, “Geshem saith it,” but “Gashmu saith it.”
Why? He wants Nehemiah to understand the source of his information, but he does
not propose to get caught by an exact statement. Nehemiah might take it into
his head to trace the slander, and that would be extremely awkward for
Sanballat. Is it not true to life? Is not Gashmu about as near as the modern
retailer of gossip ever comes to Geshem? How often has one come to you with
some injurious tale and left on your mind a very distinct impression as to its
source without exactly telling you? How many a spicy bit of personal news is
laid on the shoulders of the general public in the words, “They say.” It
matters little that you think you know Gashmu. Try to identify him and make him
a responsible author of stories, and he will elude you every time. Go to Geshem
with the stories that are attributed to Gashmu, and he will know nothing
whatever about them. He will be utterly surprised that you could have imagined
him to be their author. He will probably be very indignant that any one should
have had the hardihood to invent such tales. Now this Gashmu, unreal though he
may be, is an absolutely essential link in every chain of gossip. Gossip could
not live without him. It were easier to spare the Prince of Denmark from the
play of Hamlet than to omit Gashmu from the real School for Scandal. That is to
say, there must be some point on the way which gossip has travelled where the
trail becomes lost. Authority must vanish into impersonality. You attempt to
follow up any bit of gossip or slander
that you hear, and if you do not come to Gashmu sooner or later, your
experience will be unique, not to say marvellous. The third person in this drama
is Shemaiah. Shemaiah is the man who is afraid of gossip and runs away to hide
himself, turning aside from good work and letting duty go by default. His
invitation to meet in the house of God has a very pious sound, but, after all,
it is only the
expression of cowardice. Not for worship, but for safety, does he wish to enter
the sanctuary. Now this, I submit, is a greater evil than gossip--this minding
of gossip. You say that people will talk about you. Well, what if they do? Did
talk ever kill anybody yet? Did it ever seriously hurt anybody when he was hard at
work minding his own business and the Lord’s? Keep a clear conscience, then,
and you need have no fear of gossip, however venomous. Now listen to Nehemiah,
the last of this quartet:
“And I said, Should such a man as I flee? and who is there, that, being such as
I, would go into the temple to save his life?” That is the secret of it all.
Get so thoroughly absorbed in work for God and man that the work shall seem
great, and you will not mind gossip and slander any more than you mind the buzzing
of flies outside the screen. Gossip may be afloat, but we are not obliged to
hear it, still less to flee from it, or to pay it respectful attention, Our
hearing is for the most part a matter of choice as well as our speaking. We are
as truly responsible for the right use of our ears as for the right use of our
tongues, though we seldom look at the matter in that light. “Take heed what ye
hear.” (G. H. Hubbard, D. D.)
Serene indifference to slander
A young clerk’s eyes flashed as he read an article in the
morning papers. It was an outrageous attack upon the gentleman at the head of
his department for a course of action which was represented as both base and
cowardly. All the correspondence relating to the affair had passed through the
young man’s hands, so he knew that the published statements were false and most
damaging to the reputation of his beloved chief. Carrying the paper to the
gentleman assailed, he asked if he might write a reply. The elder man read the paragraphs
calmly, smiled, and shook his head. “What will you do?” the clerk asked. “Live
it down,” was the reply, “as I have done so many other calumnies. Talking back
is the most futile and undignified exertion in the world. If you succeed in
cutting up one falsehood, each part will begin to wriggle against you. Let it
alone, and it will die of starvation.” Frederick the Great looked with serene
indifference on all that his enemies might say of him. One day, as he rode
through Berlin, he saw a crowd of people staring up at something on the wall,
and, on sending his groom to inquire what it was, found it to be a caricature
of himself. The placard was put so high that it was difficult to read it, so
Frederick ordered it to be placed lower in order that the people might not have
to stretch out their necks. The words were hardly spoken when, with a joyous
shout, the placard was pulled down and torn into a thousand pieces, while a
hearty cheer followed the king as he rode away. (Christian Age.)
Verse 9
Now therefore, O God, strengthen my hands.
God’s various ways of strengthening His people’s hands
He sometimes does it by infusing into them an extraordinary
measure of wisdom and knowledge. Joseph and Daniel appear to have been thus
enriched, the faculty of interpreting dreams being conferred upon them, at a
momentous juncture, to qualify them for a great and special work; our Lord
promised His disciples that, in the critical moment, though not before, they
should be supplied with the mouth of wisdom, that might answer all their
adversaries. Sometimes the hands of such believers are strengthened by a
strange alteration in the feelings of powerful foes towards them, or by an
unexpected accession of friends from quarters where, perhaps, they have
expected the least. “When a man’s ways please the Lord, He maketh even His
enemies to be at peace with him.” Laban shall be arrested in a dream by night,
with the stern command, “See that thou speak not to Jacob good or bad”; the
gaoler’s heart shall be softened, that he bring forth Paul and Silas “out of
their dungeon,” and “wash their stripes, and set meat before them”; and the
Pharisees, those determined foes of the gospel, moved by their hatred of the
Sadducees, take the part of the preacher of the resurrection. God may add to
our strength by confounding and debilitating our enemies; as He acted by David,
when on his behalf He “turned the counsel of Ahithophel into foolishness”; when
He struck the inhabitants of Sodom with blindness; when He poured terror on the
Syrian army that invaded Judea; and when the host of the Midianites fled in
dismay before the lamps and pitchers of Gideon, and not a sword was drawn. And
now that miracles are not wrought, we must still recognise in thousands of
instances the overruling providence of God, working under the cover of natural
causes to strengthen His people’s hands. (J. N. Pearson, M. A.)
Verses 10-13
Should such a man as I flee?
Panic
I. PANIC.
Unreasoning, helpless fright.
1. National panic.
2. Business panic.
3. Personal panic.
4. Spiritual panic,
II. The effect of
panic. All of these forms are commonly groundless; the wave is not so high as
it seems to the retreating bather who hears its hiss behind him. It gathers all
the selfishness
of man to a focus. It substitutes a brief madness for calm thoughtfulness and
decision. It makes a man behave unworthily--
1. Of himself.
2. Toward his fellows.
3. Of his God.
III. The correctives
of panic. Remembrance of--
1. A man’s own dignity.
2. Others
3. God. (Homiletic Commentary.)
Christian firmness
I. The subtlety
with which our great adversary will assault us.
1. To neglect our social duties to further our spiritual welfare.
2. To conform to the world with a view to conciliate their regard.
3. To use undue means with a view to obtain some desirable end.
II. The firmness
with which we should resist him. We should set the Lord ever before us, bearing in mind--
1. Our relation to Him.
2. Our obligations to Him.
3. Our expectations from Him.
4. The interest which God Himself has in the whole of our conduct. (C.
Simeon.)
Courage
1. In the prosecution
of this work, whilst building the spiritual wall of Zion, there are many
artifices to be resisted. Our enemies will seek to draw us away from our work.
We shall be invited to enter into friendly conformity with the world, and we
shall be told that conciliation on our side will be met by concessions on
theirs; but this is a mistake, for the world will take all and give none.
2. Our spiritual enemies will resort to intimidation. If they cannot
draw they will drive. What fair offers were made of seeming friendship to the
noble army of martyrs, and when these failed, intimidation followed. The
offence of the Cross has not ceased. It is “through much tribulation” we must
enter the kingdom, and the Christian will be threatened with the loss of caste
or of business if he determine to maintain his consistency. Evil motives will be ascribed
to him, wicked reports will be propagated concerning him. Ridicule and reproach
are weapons of great severity. “Should such a man as I flee? and who is there,
that, being as I am, would go into the temple to save his life? I will not go
in.”
Let the earnest Christian resist the solicitations of evil in a
similar manner.
1. Consider your relation to God. Say to yourself, “I am a child of
God, a disciple of Christ, a temple of the Holy Ghost, and ‘should such a man
as I flee,’ give way to temptation, dishonour my high calling, disobey my
blessed Captain, and grieve the Spirit of grace?”
2. Consider your obligations to redeeming mercy. Say to your heart,
“O Christian, I have been loved with an everlasting love, called by sovereign
grace, washed in the blood of Jesus, and comforted by innumerable tokens of
goodness and mercy, and ‘should such a man as I flee?’”
3. “Consider your expectations. You are a candidate for eternity. Say
to yourself, ‘O Christian, life is short and uncertain; death may be near; my
Lord Himself may come in His glory. In that day of His boundless mercy He will
call me His brother, His own, and He will bestow upon me an inheritance of
surpassing lustre; and ‘should such a man as I flee?’ shall I be guilty of base
cowardice or perfidious ingratitude?” (J. M. Randall.)
Faith, courage, and prudence
We may consider this blending of faith, courage, and prudence in
Nehemiah as worthy of admiration and imitation.
1. Sometimes we find a brave man who lacks both faith and prudence.
In this case his courage is very apt to degenerate into a foolish bravado; and
possibly he may do more harm than good by his unwise daring.
2. When prudence is the marked feature of a character it is apt to
degenerate into selfish cunning and calculating cowardice.
3. Even when courage and prudence are found united, the character is
still sadly defective if there be no spiritual faith--it is apt to fall into an
unbecoming and dangerous self-sufficiency.
4. On the other hand, faith without prudence may degenerate into
fanaticism, or into a “quietism” which cultivates the passive to the neglect of
the active virtues. (I. Campbell Finlayson.)
Fortitude in duty
Holy courage is not that natural bravery which belongs to some men
constitutionally--this is little more than strength of nerve and robustness of
animal spirits, and in thousands of instances is found to exist apart from
Christian principle; it is rather the bravery of the lion than the bravery of
the mind and the man. Some of the most valorous have been the most depraved;
and some who dragged their enemies at their chariot-wheels have themselves been
dragged through the mire of pollution by their own appetites and passions. As
water cannot rise higher than its level, neither can a moral quality rise
higher than its principle. Holy courage springs from the fear of God, from
“seeing Him who is invisible.” Hence the soldier of Christ is fearless to do
right, fearful to do wrong--afraid to sin, but not afraid to suffer. In considering
the scope for this virtue, notice--
I. He that will be
a follower of God must take up arms against himself. It was finely said by
Richard Cecil that “a humble Christian, battling against the world, the flesh,
and the devil, is a greater hero than Alexander the Great.”
II. It requires a
courageous spirit to have respect to all God’s commandments.
III. It requires
great courage to overcome the world. (Hugh Stowell, M. A.)
The higher self-appeal
When I lived in the country years ago, I remember one of our friends
was a great smoker, and used to smoke morning, noon, and night, and his friends
used to say it was a very bad practice, and inconvenient and expensive, and all
those arguments with which we are familiar. He always used to smile one of
those tranquil smiles which come from parties of that kind. That man could not
give up his pipe, and declared that he could not, and that he would smoke till
he died. One day there was a mouth trouble. He went to a distinguished
physician, and he told him that he was afraid the excessive smoking was
inducing cancer. That put his pipe out. It did; he dropped it that very day. It
was marvellous; he had done with that. It is one thing when it touches your
shillings; one thing when it is a question of convenience and inconvenience; it
is another thing when it touches you. And I say to you, when the day of
darkness, the day of temptation, when all the sorcery and besetment of evil is
around you, don’t say, “Iniquity will mar my health or cloud my reputation or
shorten my days”; say with Nehemiah, “Should such a man as I do this
evil”--such a man as I, with reason and conscience, the heir of the ages, the
master of the planet, redeemed with the blood of the Son of God, called to a
great destiny--should such a man as I do this mean thing, this base thing?
Appeal in the sight of God to your own greatness, and He shall strengthen you
in the day when the worst comes to the worst. (W. L. Watkinson.)
Valour is sometimes the soul of discretion
We are constantly being reminded that discretion is the better
part of valour; but there are occasions, and those not a few, when valour is
the very soul of discretion, when at all hazards we must stand our ground and
face the foe, that the work be not stopped. (W. P. Lockhart.)
Verse 13
Therefore was he hired.
Bribery
I. Its existence
and varieties.
1. In statecraft.
2. In trade.
3. In morals and religion.
II. Its effects.
1. Personal degradation.
2. General disorganisation.
3. Hindrance of all good.
III. Its cure.
1. Self-denial.
2. Resolute unmercifulness to the briber.
3. Trust in God and faith in right. (Homiletic Commentary.)
Verse 15
So the wall was finished in the twenty and fifth day . . . in
fifty and two days.
Fifty-two days’ work
Let us make a parable of the story and use the text as a motto of
a deeper theme. Fifty-two Sundays and their work.
I. How quickly
they pass.
II. What
opportunities they furnish.
1. Of rest.
2. Of spiritual friendship.
3. Of Divine instruction.
4. Of moral renewal.
III. What results
they leave.
1. In memory.
2. In life.
3. For judgment.
Application:
1. Thank God for the day of days.
2. Use each day as it comes.
3. Determine upon a rounded result for each cycle of fifty-two. (Homiletic
Commentary.)
Finished work
1. The work of human redemption. Yes, the work was done. The atoning
sacrifice was offered and accepted, as was demonstrated when Jesus rose again
from the dead.
2. And is there ground for hope that the great and blessed work of
renewal, begun in the believer’s heart, will be perfected?
3. The progress of the Church at large is also assured. (T.
Rowson.)
Success
There was great exultation when Lesseps completed the Suez Canal,
by which the communication between Europe and the East has been materially
expedited. There was great exultation when the favourite project of Count
Cavour for a tunnel through Mont Cents was brought to a successful termination,
by which Paris and Turin have been approximated within a few hours of each
other. There was great exultation
and loyal thankfulness when, in 1873, the Prince of Wales put the top stone to
the Portland Breakwater. The foundation-stone of this work had been laid
twenty-three years before, by his august father; and it was an interesting
moment when the Prince completed the magnificent undertaking by adding to the
words by which he formally announced the fact, “These are imperial works, and
worthy kings”; and echoing shouts of joy went up, from two hundred thousand
spectators. Similarly, it was a great day for Jerusalem when her walls and
bulwarks were commended to the blessing of the Almighty. (J. M. Randall.)
Verse 16
For they perceived that the work was wrought of our God.
The crown of Christian evidence
Christianity does not stand in any merely literary defence,
although its literary defence is complete; it stands rather in its beneficent
accomplishments, in its regenerated hearts, its elevated lives, its new spirit
of consecration, its broad unselfishness, its generous sympathy--“Go and show
John again those things which ye do hear and see.” (J. Parker, D. D.)
The world’s acknowledgment of God
I. World’s past
acknowledgment of God.
1. Biblical instances.
2. Later instances.
II. World’s present
acknowledgment of God.
1. Unconscious acknowledgments. Think of the way in which
Christianity penetrates the life of the modern world.
2. Unwilling acknowledgment.
3. Frank acknowledgment.
III. The world’s
future acknowledgment.
1. Willing.
2. Enforced.
Application:
1. Make acknowledgment of God.
2. Now. (Homiletic Commentary.)
Nothing succeeds like success
It is amazing sometimes to find how many there are who heartily
endorse a good work when it has arrived at or is approaching success, however
much they may have frowned at it, or even opposed it, when it was struggling
with difficulties. (W. P. Lockhart.)
God acknowledged in results
In the present day there is an impatient craving for immediate
results which comes perilously near to mistrust of God. But verily there are
results, and when such results are seen, then even enemies are constrained to
admit that God’s hand is in the work. The faith of converts must always be
evidenced by their works, otherwise the world will not, cannot, perceive that God is
working with us. (W. P. Lockhart.)
Verse 19
Also they reported his good deeds before me.
The bad men praised
I. Bad men do get
praised.
1. Sometimes this praise is real.
2. Sometimes this praise is mistaken.
3. Sometimes this praise is fictitious altogether.
II. Bad men are
anxious for praise.
1. In this there is a sentence of condemnation.
2. In this there is an indirect homage to virtue.
III. Bad men are not
hidden by the praise of the world.
1. Good men detect.
2. God detects.
Application:
1. Do not be discouraged by this misdirected praise.
2. Do not be deceived into any lowering of the standard of
righteousness. (Homiletic Commentary.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》