I should like to call your attention
to the prophet Nehemiah. We may gain some help
from that distinguished man who accomplished a great
work. He was one of the last of the prophets,
was supposed to be contemporary with Malachi, and
perhaps his book was one of the last of the Old Testament
books that was written. He might have known Daniel,
for he was a young man in the declining years of that
very eminent and godly statesman. We are sure
of one thing at least-he was a man of sterling
worth. Although he was brought up in the Persian
court among idolaters, yet he had a character that
has stood all these centuries.
Notice his prayer in which he made
confession of Israel’s apostasy from God.
There may be some confessions we need to make to be
brought into close fellowship with God. I have
no doubt that numbers of Christians are hungering
and thirsting for a personal blessing, and have a
great desire to get closer to God. If that is
the desire of your heart, keep in mind that
if there is some obstacle in the way which you can
remove, you will not get a blessing until you remove
it. We must cooperate with God. If there
is any sin in my heart that I am not willing to give
up then I need not pray. You may take a bottle
and cork it up tight, and put it under Niagara, and
not a drop of that mighty volume of water will get
into the bottle. If there is any sin in my heart
that I am not willing to give up, I need not expect
a blessing. The men who have had power with God
in prayer have always begun by confessing their sins.
Take the prayers of Jeremiah and Daniel. You
find Daniel confessing his sin, when there isn’t
a single sin recorded against him; but he confesses
his sin and the sins of the people. Notice how
David confessed his sins and what power he had with
God. So it is a good thing for us to begin as
Nehemiah did.
It seems that some men had come down
from his country to the Persian court, perhaps to
see the king on business. This man, who was in
high favor with the king, met them, and finding that
they had come from Jerusalem he began to inquire about
his country. He not only loved his God, but he
LOVED HIS COUNTRY.
I like to see a patriotic man.
He began to inquire about his people and about the
city that was very near to his heart, Jerusalem.
He had never seen the city. He had no relations
back there in Jerusalem that he knew of. Nehemiah
was not a Jewish prince, although it is supposed he
had royal blood in his veins. He was born in captivity.
It was about one hundred years after Jerusalem was
taken that he appeared upon the horizon. He was
in the court of Artaxerxes, a cupbearer to the king,
and held a high position. Yet he longed to hear
from his native land. When these men told him
the condition of the city, that the people were in
great want and distress and degradation, and that
the walls of the city were still down, that the gates
had been burned and never restored, his patriotic heart
began to burn. We are told he fasted and prayed
and wept, and not only did he pray for one week, or
one month, but he kept on praying. He prayed
“day and night.” Having many duties
to perform, of course he was not always on his knees,
but in heart he was ever before the throne of grace.
It was not hard for him to understand and obey the
precept, “Pray without ceasing.” He
began the work in prayer, continued in prayer, and
the last recorded words of Nehemiah are a prayer.
It was in November or December when
those men arrived at that court, and this man prayed
on until March or April before he spoke to the king.
If a blessing doesn’t come to-night, pray harder
to-morrow, and if it doesn’t come to-morrow,
pray harder, and then, if it doesn’t come keep
right on, and you will not be disappointed. God
in heaven will hear your prayers, and will answer
them. He has never failed, if a man has
been honest in his petitions and honest in his confessions.
Let your faith beget patience. God is never in
a hurry, said St. Augustine, because He has all eternity
to work.
In the first chapter of Nehemiah is
THE PRAYER
of this wonderful man, his cry which
has been on record all these years, and a great help
to many people:
“I beseech thee, O Lord God
of heaven, the great and terrible God, that keepeth
covenant and mercy for them that love him and observe
his commandments: let thine ear now be attentive,
and thine eyes open, that thou mayest hear the prayer
of thy servant, which I pray before thee now, day
and night, for the children of Israel thy servants,
and confess the sins of the children of Israel, which
we have sinned against thee: both I and my father’s
house have sinned. We have dealt very corruptly
against thee, and have not kept the commandments,
nor the statutes, nor the judgments, which thou commandedst
thy servant Moses. Remember, I beseech thee, the
word that thou commandedst thy servant Moses, saying,
If ye transgress, I will scatter you abroad among
the nations: but if ye turn unto me, and keep
my commandments, and do them; though there were of
you cast out unto the uttermost part of the heaven,
yet will I gather them from thence, and will bring
them unto the place that I have chosen to set my name
there. Now these are thy servants and thy people,
whom thou hast redeemed by thy great power, and by
thy strong hand. O Lord, I beseech thee, let
now thine ear be attentive to the prayer of thy servant,
and to the prayer of thy servants, who desire to fear
thy name: and prosper, I pray thee, thy servant
this day, and grant him mercy in the sight of this
man.”
When he began to pray I have no idea
that he thought he was to be the instrument in God’s
hand of building the walls of Jerusalem. But
when a man gets into sympathy and harmony with God,
then God prepares him for the work He has for him.
No doubt he thought the Persian king might send one
of his great warriors and accomplish the work with
a great army of men, but after he had been praying
for months, it may be the thought flashed into his
mind:
“Why should not I go to Jerusalem
myself and build those walls?”
Prayer for the work will soon arouse
your own sympathy and effort.
Now mark, it meant a good deal for
Nehemiah to give up the palace of Shushan and his
high office, and identify himself with the despised
and captive Jews. He was among the highest in
the whole realm. Not only that, but he was a
man of wealth, lived in ease and luxury, and had great
influence at court. For him to go to Jerusalem
and lose caste was like Moses turning his back on
the palace of Pharaoh and identifying himself with
the Hebrew slaves. Yet we might
NEVER HAVE HEARD OF
either of them if they had not done
this. They stooped to conquer; and when you get
ready to stoop God will bless you. Plato, Socrates,
and other Greek philosophers lived in the same century
as Nehemiah. How few have heard of them and read
their words compared with the hundreds of thousands
who have heard and read of Nehemiah during the last
two thousand years!
If you and I are to be blessed in
this world, we must be willing to take any position
into which God puts us. So, after Nehemiah had
prayed a while, he began to pray God to send him, and
that he might be the man to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem.
After he had been praying some time,
he was one day in the banqueting hall, and the king
noticed that his countenance was sad. We might
not have called the face sad; but much prayer and fasting
CHANGE THE VERY COUNTENANCE
of a man. I know some godly men
and women, and they seem to have the stamp of heaven
on them. The king noticed a strange look about
this cupbearer, and he began to question him.
Then the thought came to Nehemiah that he would tell
the king what caused his sorrow,-how his
own nation was degraded, and how his heart was going
out for his own country. After he had told the
king, the king said:
“What is your request?”
Now, some men tell us they don’t
have time to pray, but I tell you if any man has God’s
work lying deep in his heart he will have time
to pray. Nehemiah
SHOT UP A PRAYER
to heaven right there in the king’s
dining hall that the Lord would help him to make his
request in the right way. He first looked beyond
Artaxerxes to the King of Kings. You need not
make a long prayer. A man who prays much in private
will make short prayers in public. The Lord told
Nehemiah what to ask for, that he might be sent to
his own country, that some men might go with him, and
that the king would give him letters to the governors
through whose provinces he would pass so that he might
have a profitable journey and be able to rebuild the
walls of his city. God had been preparing the
king, for the king at once granted the request, and
before long this young prince was on his way to Jerusalem.
When he reached the city he didn’t
have a lot of men go before him blowing trumpets and
saying that the cupbearer of the great Persian king,
THE CONVERTED CUPBEARER,
had arrived from the Persian court,
and was going to build the walls of Jerusalem.
There are some men who are always telling what they
are going to do. Man, let the work speak for itself.
You needn’t blow any horns; go and do the work,
and it will advertise itself. Nehemiah didn’t
have any newspapers writing about him, or any placards.
However, there was no small stir. No doubt every
one in town was talking about it, saying that a very
important personage had arrived from the Persian court;
but he was there three days and three nights without
telling anyone why he had come.
One night he went out to survey the
city. He couldn’t ride around; even now
you cannot ride a beast around the walls of Jerusalem.
He tried to ride around, but he couldn’t, so
he walked. It was a difficult task which he had
before him, but he was not discouraged. That
is what makes character. Men who can go into a
hard field and succeed, they are the men we want.
Any quantity of men are looking for easy places, but
the world will never hear of them. We want men
who are looking for hard places, who are willing to
go into the darkest corners of the earth, and make
those dark places bloom like gardens. They can
do it if the Lord is with them.
Everything looked dark before Nehemiah.
The walls were broken down. There was not a man
of influence among the people, not a man of culture
or a man of wealth. The nations all around were
looking down upon these weak, feeble Jews. So
it is in many churches today, the walls are down,
and people say it is no use, and their hands drop
down by their side. Everything seemed against
Nehemiah, but he was a man who had the fire of
God in his soul; he had come to build the walls
of Jerusalem. If you could have bored a hole into
his head, you would have found “Jerusalem”
stamped on his brain. If you could have looked
into his heart you would have found “Jerusalem”
there. He was a fanatic; he was terribly in earnest;
he was an enthusiast. I like to see a man take
up some one thing and say, “I will do it; I
live for this thing; this one thing I am bound to do.”
We spread out so much, and try to do so many things,
that
WE SPREAD SO THIN
the world never hears of us.
After he had been in the city three
days and nights, he called the elders of Israel together,
and told them for what he had come. God had been
preparing them, for the moment he told them they said:
“Let us rise up and build.”
But there has not been a work undertaken
for God since Adam fell which has not met with opposition.
If Satan allows us to work unhindered, it is because
our work is of no consequence. The first thing
we read, after the decision had been made to rebuild
the walls, is:
“When Sanballat the Horonite,
and Tobiah the servant, the Ammonite, and Geshem the
Arabian, heard it, they laughed us to scorn, and despised
us, and said, What is this thing that ye do? will ye
rebel against the king?”
These men were very indignant.
They didn’t care for the welfare of Jerusalem.
Who were they? A mixed multitude who had no portion
nor right nor memorial in Jerusalem. They didn’t
like to see the restoration of the ruins, just as
people nowadays do not like to see the cause of Christ
prospering. The offence of the cross has not
ceased.
It doesn’t take long to build
the walls of a city if you can only get the whole
of the people at it. If the Christians of this
country would only rise up, we could evangelize America
in twelve months. All the Jews had a hand in
repairing the walls of Jerusalem. Each built
over against his own house, priest and merchant, goldsmith
and apothecary, and even the women. The men of
Jericho and other cities came to help. The walls
began to rise.
This stirred up Nehemiah’s enemies,
and they began to ridicule.
RIDICULE
is a mighty weapon.
“What do these feeble Jews?”
said Sanballat. “Will they fortify themselves?
Will they sacrifice? Will they make an end in
a day? Will they revive the stones out of the
heaps of the rubbish which are burned?”
“Even that which they build,
if a fox go up, he shall even break down their stone
wall,” said Tobiah the Ammonite.
But Nehemiah was wise. He paid
no attention to them. He just looked to God for
grace and comfort:
“Hear, O our God; for we are
despised: and turn their reproach upon their
own head, and give them for a prey in the land of captivity:
and cover not their iniquity, and let not their sin
be blotted out from before: for they have provoked
thee to anger before the builders.”
Young man, if you wish to be successful
in this world, don’t mind Sanballat or Tobiah.
Don’t be kept out of the kingdom of God or out
of active Christian work by the scorn and laughter
and ridicule of your godless neighbors and companions.
Next, these enemies conspired to come
and fight against Jerusalem.
Nehemiah was warned, and took steps
to guard against them. Half of the people were
on the watch, and the other half held a sword in one
hand and a trowel in the other. There was
NO EIGHT-HOUR WORKING DAY
then; they were on duty from the rising
of the morning till the stars appeared. They
did not take off their clothes except to wash them.
Fancy, this man who came from the Persian court with
all its luxury, living and sleeping in his clothes
for those fifty-two days! But he was in earnest.
Ah, that is what we want! men who will set themselves
to do one thing, and keep at it day and night.
All the people were bidden to lodge
within the city, so that they should always be on
hand to work and fight. Would to God that we
could get all who belong inside the church to come
in and do their share. “Happy is the church,”
says one, “whose workers are well skilled in
the use of the Scripture, so that while strenuously
building the Gospel Wall, they can fight too, if occasion
require it.” We ought all be ready to use
the Sword of the Spirit.
By and by the men wrote a friendly
letter, and wanted Nehemiah to go down on the plain
of Ono and have a friendly discussion. It is
A MASTERPIECE OF THE DEVIL
to get men into friendly discussions.
I don’t know whether Nehemiah had a typewriter
in those days or not; I don’t know whether he
had a printed form of letters, but he always sent
back the same reply:
“I am doing a great work, so that I cannot come
down.”
How many a church has turned aside
for years to discuss “questions of the day,”
and has neglected the salvation of the world because
they must go down to the “plain of Ono”
and have a friendly discussion! Nehemiah struck
a good keynote-“I am doing a great
work, so that I cannot come down.” If God
has sent you to build the walls of Jerusalem, you
go and do it.
They sent him another letter, and
again he sent word back, “I am doing a great
work, so that I cannot come down.” He did
not believe in “coming down.” They
sent him another, and he sent back the same word.
They sent him a fourth letter, with the same result.
They could not get him down; they wanted to slay him
on the way.
I have seen many Christian men on
the plain of Ono, men who were doing a splendid work
but had been switched off. Think how much work
has been neglected by temperance advocates in this
country because they have gone into politics and into
discussing woman’s rights and woman’s
suffrage. How many times the Young Men’s
Christian Association has been switched off by discussing
some other subject instead of holding up Christ before
a lost world! If the church would only keep right
on and build the walls of Jerusalem they would soon
be built. Oh, it is a wily devil that we have
to contend with! Do you know it? If he can
only get the church to stop to discuss these questions,
he has accomplished his desire.
His enemies wrote him one more letter,
AN OPEN LETTER,
in which they said that they had heard
he was going to set up a kingdom in opposition to
the Persians, and that they were going to report him
to the king. Treason has an ugly sound, but Nehemiah
committed himself to the Lord, and went on building.
Then his enemies hired a prophet,
one of his friends. A hundred enemies outside
are not half so hard to deal with as one inside-a
false friend. When the devil gets possession of
a child of God he will do the work better than the
devil himself. Temptations are never so dangerous
as when they come to us in a religious garb. So
Tobiah and Sanballat bought up one of the prophets,
and hired him to try to induce Nehemiah to go into
the temple, that they might put him to death there.
“Now, Nehemiah, there is a plan
to kill you, come into the temple. Let’s
go in and stay for the night.”
He came near being deceived, but he
said, “Shall I, such a man as I, be afraid of
my life, and do that to save my life?”
After he had refused their invitation
he saw that this man was a false prophet; and so by
his standing his ground he succeeded in fifty-two
days in building the walls of Jerusalem. Then
the gates were set up and the work was finished.
Now during all these centuries that
story has been told. If Nehemiah had remained
at court, he might have died a millionaire, but he
never would have been heard of twenty years after his
death. Do you know the names of any of Nineveh’s
millionaires? This man stepped out of that high
position and took a low position, one that the world
looked down upon and frowned upon, and his name has
been associated with the walls of Jerusalem all these
centuries. Young man, if you want to be immortal,
become identified with God’s work, and pay no
attention to what men outside say. Nehemiah and
his associates began at sunrise and worked until it
grew so dark they could not see. A man who will
take up God’s work, and work summer and winter
right through the year, will have a harvest before
the year is over, and the record of it will shine
after he enters the other world.
The next thing we learn of Nehemiah
is that he got up a great
OPEN-AIR MEETING
for the reading of the law of Moses
in the hearing of the people. A pulpit of wood,
large enough to hold Ezra the Scribe and thirteen
others, was built. The people wept when they heard
the words of the law, but Nehemiah said:
“Mourn not, nor weep. Go
your way, eat the fat, and drink the sweet, and send
portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared:
for this day is holy unto our Lord: neither be
ye sorry; for the joy of the Lord is your strength.”
He did not forget the poor. Reading
the Bible and remembering the poor-a combination
of faith and works-will always bring joy.
Nehemiah then began to govern the
city, and correct the abuses he found existing.
He gathered about fifty priests and scribes together
and made them sign and seal a written covenant.
There were five things in that covenant I want to
call attention to.
First, they were not to give their
daughters to the heathen.
They had been violating the law of
God, and had been marrying their daughters to the
ungodly. God had forbidden them to intermarry
with the heathen nations in the land of Canaan; “for
they will turn away thy son from following me, that
they may serve other gods: so will the anger
of the Lord be kindled against you and destroy thee
suddenly.” I have known many a man who
has lost his power by being identified with the ungodly.
If you want to have the blessing of God rest upon
you, you must be very careful about your alliances.
The Jews always got into trouble when they married
with the nations round about. The houses of Ahab
and of Solomon lost their kingdom by that sin.
That was the cause of the overthrow of David’s
kingdom. Families who marry for wealth, and marry
the godly to the ungodly, always bring distress into
the family.
Then he made them sign a covenant
that they would keep the Sabbath, that they
would not buy upon the Sabbath.
Think of a man going from a heathen
court where they had no Sabbath, a man brought up
in that atmosphere, coming up to Jerusalem and enforcing
the law of Moses! It is recorded that they brought
up fish, and he would not let them into the city on
the Sabbath, and the fish spoiled. After they
had tried that a few times, they gave it up.
If you will take your stand for God, even if you stand
alone, it will not be very long before you will get
other men to stand with you. God stood with this
man, and he carried everything before him.
I don’t believe we shall have
the right atmosphere in this country until we can
get men who have backbone enough to stand up against
the thing they believe is wrong. If it is a custom
rooted and grounded for a hundred years, never mind;
you take your stand against it if you believe it is
wrong. If you have gatherings, and it is fashionable
to have wine and champagne, and you are a teetotaler;
if they ask you anywhere and you know that they are
to have drink, tell them you are not going. A
man said to me some years ago:
“Mr. Moody, now that I am converted,
must I give up the world?”
I said: “No, you haven’t
got to give up the world. If you give a good
ringing testimony for the Son of God, the world will
give you up pretty quick; they won’t want you
around.”
They were going to have a great celebration
at the opening of a saloon and billiard hall in Chicago,
in the northern part of the city, where I lived.
It was to be a gateway to death and to hell, one of
the worst places in Chicago. As a joke they sent
me an invitation to go to the opening. I took
the invitation and went down and saw the two men who
had the saloon, and I said:
“Is that a genuine invitation?”
They said it was.
“Thank you,” I said, “I
will be around; if there is anything here I don’t
like I may have something to say about it.”
They said: “You are not going to preach?”
“I may.”
“We don’t want you. We won’t
let you in.”
“How are you going to keep me
out?” I asked; “there is the invitation.”
“We will put a policeman at the door.”
“What is the policeman going to do with that
invitation?”
“We won’t let you in.”
“Well,” I said, “I will be there.”
I gave them a good scare, and then
I said, “I will compromise the matter; if you
two men will get down here and let me pray with you,
I will let you off.”
I got those two rumsellers down on
their knees, one on one side of me, and the other
on the other side, and I prayed God to save their
souls and smite their business. One of them had
a Christian mother, and he seemed to have some conscience
left. After I had prayed, I said:
“How can you do this business?
How can you throw this place open to ruin young men
of Chicago?”
Within three months the whole thing
smashed up, and one of them was converted some time
after. I have never been invited to a saloon
since.
You won’t have to give up the
world, not by a good deal. If you go to reunions,
and there is drinking, get up and go away. Don’t
you be party to it. That is the kind of men we
want. When you find anything that is ruining
your fellow men, fight it to its bitter end.
Nehemiah said, “We will not
have desecration of the Sabbath.” Not sell
the Sunday paper? Not buy a Sunday paper?
How many read the Sunday newspapers?
I suppose that if you had Nehemiah
as mayor of New York, he would stop that sort of thing.
Here we have boys who are kept away from the Sunday
school to sell papers on the streets-trains
running in order that the papers can be distributed.
I don’t believe a man is in a fit state to hear
a sermon whose mind is full of such trash as the Sunday
newspaper is filled with. Men break the Sabbath
and wonder why it is they have not spiritual power.
The trouble nowadays is that it doesn’t mean
anything to some people to be a Christian. What
we must have is a higher type of Christianity in this
country. We must have a Christianity that has
in it the principle of self -denial. We must
deny ourselves. If we want power, we must be
separate.
The next thing they were to do-(and
bear in mind this was a thing they had to sign)-was
to give their land rest.
For four hundred and ninety years
they had not let their land rest, so God took them
away to Babylon for seventy years, and let the land
rest. A man that works seven days in the week
right along is cut off about five or ten years earlier.
You cannot rob God. Why is it that so many railroad
superintendents and physicians die early? It is
because they work seven days in the week. So Nehemiah
made them covenant to keep the law of Moses.
If the nations of the earth had kept that law, the
truth would have gone to the four corners of the earth
before this time.
Then he made them sign a covenant
that they would not charge usury.
They were just grinding the poor down.
I believe that the reason we are in such a wretched
state in this country to-day is on account of crowding
the poor, and getting such a large amount of money
for usury. People evade the law, and pay the
interest, and then they give a few hundred dollars
to negotiate the loan. There is a great amount
of usury, and see where we are to-day! See what
a wretched state of things we are having, not only
in this country, but all over the world!
The fifth thing he made them do was
to bring their first fruits to the sons of Levi.
They were to give God a tenth, the
first and best. As long as Israel did that they
prospered, and when they turned away from that law
they did not prosper. You can look through history
and look around you and see the same thing to-day.
As long as men keep God’s law and respect God’s
testimony, they are going to prosper, but when they
turn aside, like Samson, they lose their strength;
they have no power.
If you take these five things and
carry them out, you will have prosperity. Let
us all do it personally. If it was good for those
men it is good for us. The moment we begin to
rob God of time or talents then darkness and misery
and wretchedness will come.