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When the Israelites were in captivity, the walls of Jerusalem had been broken down into rubble. The very city that held the presence of God was in pieces and the walls were just piles of stones. Even when the Israelites began going back to live there. When Nehemiah heard this, he was cupbearer to the king of Persia and his heart was troubled. He knew that he needed to do something and so the king gave him permission to fix the wall.
Clearly, fixing the wall was something that God had called him to do. The way we know this is because his passion to do so was arisen in him and he sought God in every turn. In just a short while (versus what most people had expected), Nehemiah and the people of Israel completed rebuilding the wall -- accomplishing the task that God had called him to.
This is the perfect story of being called into service by God, the realities of service and the attitude and approach we should have in service. Here are some of the learnings I took out of this:
- Pray at every turn: From the very beginning when he talked to Artaxerxes about building the walls, he prayed to God before each step. This was clearly not about him, but about what God was leading him to do. How many times do we start projects because of a calling of God, but once we get into them, we make our own decisions and take it on ourselves to complete it. Too many in my case.
- Seek willing help with the same heart: The rebuilding of the wall was a tremendous task. Nehemiah knew that without others who were committed to the effort, it would never get done. So, he went out with his plans to the leaders and officials of the people and gave each family part of the wall to build. Sometimes I find myself in the middle of a calling by God trying to do everything myself and not asking others to step in and help. If it’s God’s calling, he will provide the resources to help, we must be prepared to ask.
- Be prepared for opposition: Whenever people step up to God’s calling, Satan does all he can to oppose the work. In Nehemiah’s case, the rebuilding of the wall incensed the neighboring people. So much that they threatened to attack them and murder Nehemiah. When the people heard about this they became discouraged. The work was already hard, and now there were threats on their lives. But Nehemiah knew that God was in control so he set up the people to provide defensive protection for the work. He told them not to be afraid, but to “remember the Lord, who is great and awesome”. I love this description of what they did: “Those who carred materials did their work with one hand and held a weapon in the other, and each of the builders wore his sword at his side as he worked” (Nehemiah 4:17-18). The truth is, if we serve God, we need to we need to be constantly armed against the work of Satan which will inevitably try to frustrate it. We cannot allow ourselves to become discouraged no matter what battles we have to face and “remember the Lord” in all things.
Nehemiah had lots of tools and lots of people working with him to rebuild the wall of Jerusalem, but the most important tool was his trust and commitment to God regardless of the challenge.
What walls are you trying to build for God? Make sure to carry Him in your tool belt.
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