Nehemiah 5:1-13
This is the last sermon in this short series on Nehemiah. I finished it feeling like we could have just kept going.
As I developed this message, I was led to focus, at least in the last half, on the way in which we see Satan attacking the work of God in the book of Nehemiah, and how those tactics are still used today. If you missed the sermon, you will need to listen to it to catch all of that.
By stopping the series at this point in Nehemiah (basically through chapter 6), we miss the great celebration that ensured when the wall was completed. You can read that celebration in chapter 12:27-47. It is said that the "rejoicing in Jerusalem could be heard far away" (12:43).
In the sermon I spent some time talking about the heavy taxes people had to pay to the Persian government, which levied a huge burden on the individual families, especially considering there was a general famine going on and that most of their time was taken up working on the wall. What bears mention in all this, and which I did not take time to mention in the sermon, is the posture Nehemiah took as the Governor. As a Persian King appoint ruler, he could have demanded a tax from the people, but he did not, and he could have lived very well off the allotted rations that were his right as the Governor. Rather than indulge in all this for himself, he used it to feed 150 people a day at his table, as well as other visitors. He did not claim any land and he did not add to the burden of the people. What a man. Read 5:14-19 for this information.
Finally, I came across another great resource on the Book of Nehemiah in the course of this study. It is a book called Jerusalem in the time of Nehemiah by Leen and Kathleen Ritmeyer. Leen is a well-known archaeologist who has worked on any number of digs around Jerusalem. The book is not large, but is filled with color maps and reconstructions that really help you visualize what the city was like in Nehemiah's time. I got my copy through Christianbook.com. Amazon has it too.
Thanks for digging deeper
I thought that you were just getting to the point of interest. I hope you continue this idea later on in some series lke "Satans, he is alive and not well"
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I with you Bro....
Thanks Rob and I concur we need more teaching on Satan's tactics, especially in this post-modern world. For the future...
DeletePlease pardon my late comments - this was a GREAT series - I am just now reading the book "A Passion for Faithfulness" and it has ignited a real fire for 'going deeper' so I am only now visiting the blogwork you have with the sermon series. Thanks. Also - agree with Rob's comment!
ReplyDeleteNo problem. Great to have you as a reader.
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