Their leaders were not only among the people, they made the sacrifice to be there first.
“Now the leaders of the people settled in Jerusalem, and the rest of the people cast lots to bring one out of every ten to live in Jerusalem, the holy city, while the remaining nine were to stay in their own towns. The people commended all the men who volunteered to live in Jerusalem.” Nehemiah 11:1-2
This truly was a sacrifice. The nation literally gave a tithe of their people, of their sons and daughters, of their brothers and sisters, of their neighbors and friends to this city of God. Yet much more was required of those in leadership. It was good that the leaders of the people set the example by living in Jerusalem. Leaders must set the pattern by their lives. They had no right to expect the people to live in Jerusalem if they themselves were not living there.
And all who lived there were blessed. Verse two tells us that the people “commended” all who volunteered to live there. The word for commended is the Hebrew word, “Barak”, which means to bless or congratulate together.
“It was in these days in the rebuilding of Jerusalem that God asked and important question through the prophet Zechariah: For who has despised the day of small things? (Zechariah 4:10). The answer is, “Many of us have!” But these who offered themselves to willingly live at Jerusalem, so as to take what is small and build it up before the Lord, have decided to not despise the day of small things. (Enduring Word Commentary)”
If such a blessing is reserved for those who willingly offered to live in Jerusalem, there was something special about the challenge of living in Jerusalem.
i. To live in Jerusalem, you had to re-order your view of material things. You had to give up land in your previous region and take up some kind of new business in Jerusalem.
ii. To live in Jerusalem, you had to re-arrange your social priorities, certainly leaving some friends and family behind in your old village.
iii. To live in Jerusalem, you had to have a mind to endure the problems in the city. It had been a ghost town for 70 years, and was now basically a slightly rebuilt, somewhat repopulated ghost town. The city didn’t look all that glorious and it needed work.
iv. To live in Jerusalem, you had to live knowing you were a target for the enemy. There were strong walls to protect you, but since Jerusalem was now a notable city with rebuilt walls, the fear was more from whole armies than bands of robbers. The old village was nice, but not in much danger from great armies.
v. The Bible tells us there is a city coming down from heaven to earth, when God is done with this earth as we know it, and it calls that city New Jerusalem (Revelation 21:2). People don’t want to be citizens of the New Jerusalem for the same reasons many didn’t want to be citizens of Nehemiah’s Jerusalem.
I can’t help but think about the sacrifices I’ve made in life for my faith. They seem so small in comparison to what others have made. I’m challenged to not only identify where else these sacrifices should be made, but also how much more I should DELIGHT to dwell “where holy persons and opportunities of spiritual improvement most abound”.
Do we drudgingly move like a first grader getting ready for school on a Monday morning? Or do we pursue, remain, pray, seek or even discover with freshness out of love for the “City of our God”?
“Let us seek first the favor of God, and his glory; let us study to be patient, contented, and useful in our several stations, and wait, with cheerful hope, for admission into the holy city of God.” – Matthew Henry
Aaaawwwww yeah, that's right. I what your saying baby....it's business time. You know how I know it's business time.....it's Wednesday, there's nothing on TV......
ReplyDeleteVery insightful Tray. I wonder if Nehemiah wore Business Socks?
ReplyDeleteThe line in Henry's quote about seeking and then waiting. That is the hard part in my mind. Seeking is the easy part. We can seek daily. We need to seek daily. We need to study, read and pray with and to God all the time. The waiting part is the stumbling block. We want to hear from God daily. We want it laid out in front of us right now. We want to know exactly what it is that He wants. We want to have all of this right now. Well, that is not how God works. He waits until He is ready. That does not always end up on our time table.
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