THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR
"Ought Ye Not to Walk in the Fear of God?”
Rev. Carl Haak
(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) July 9, 2006; No. 3314
(Printed copies in a four-message booklet
can be sent monthly without charge.
Request from: Reformed Witness Hour, |
Dear radio friends,
Ought ye not to
walk in the fear of God? Let that
question hang over your soul today. It
is a rhetorical question. You know the
answer. Of course it is “Yes.”
You, who have been
redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ from the cruelest bondage and slavery of
sin, ought you not to walk in reverence for God? You, who have been given to
belong to God’s glorious cause and covenant and given the privilege to
represent Him and to work in His church, ought you not walk in the fear
of God? You, to whom God has shown such
mercy, kindness, faithfulness, and who have received the blessing of His
covenant of fellowship, ought your life not be characterized by reverence for
God?
Ought ye not walk in the fear of God towards your brother? Ought you not be
forgiving? Ought you not to be
forbearing? Ought you
not be understanding and compassionate toward one another in marriage, in your
weaknesses, towards your sister, towards your husband, towards your
brother? Shouldest
not thou also have had compassion on thy fellow servant, even as I had pity on
thee?
Beloved,
if God so loved us, ought we not also to love one another? Be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted,
forgiving one another, even as God, for Christ’s sake, hath forgiven you. Ought ye not to walk in the fear of God
because of the reproach of the heathen, our enemies? What will the unbelieving world say about
your God if you who confess His name and represent His cause do not walk a new
and holy life? Is your life, as a
believer, is mine, the occasion for the name of God to be blasphemed among the
unbelieving world?
Especially, is God
reproached by how we treat each other in the church? What is said about God in the way you think
about your fellow church member, how you treat each other? How you live within your family (husband and
wife), what is said about God in how you live together as husband and wife, as
a congregation of the Lord Jesus Christ?
What is your
answer? What do you have to say when
confronted by God’s Word?
There is the
silence of conviction. We read in
Nehemiah 5:8,
“Then held they their peace, and found
nothing to answer.” There is the promise
of repentance (v. 12): “Then said they, We will restore them, and will require nothing of
them.” Then there is the vow to keep the
promise (v. 13): “And the people did
according to this promise.”
Continuing our
study of the book of Nehemiah, we come today to the fifth chapter. In each chapter God’s servant Nehemiah is
confronted with yet another crisis, a problem more grievous still than the one
formerly endured.
The crisis of
chapter 5, which Nehemiah addresses with the heartrending cry: “Ought ye not to walk in the fear of God?”
came when Nehemiah’s hands were full and his mind absorbed in the great
struggle of building the walls. His plate
was full. He could hardly be blamed if
he said when another problem came to him:
“I’m overwhelmed. You will have
to see to this problem. Don’t you
understand? I haven’t even changed my
clothes for the last two weeks.”
We must learn that
God works this way in Nehemiah and in us.
We must not think that just because we are enduring a great trial now
that we ought, therefore, to be exempted by God from enduring yet more.
The problem that
Nehemiah faced in chapter 5 could not have come at a worse time, humanly
speaking. He was enduring bitter
slander, threats, and plots from the enemies to get the work of the walls, the
rebuilding of the walls, to cease. And
it was at that time, as his hands are full and he is fully engaged in a great work, that the people, according to verse 1 of chapter 5,
come to him. Specifically the wives come
to him, with a great cry, a great lament.
And the cry is this: “Our
families are starving. We can’t buy
corn. We can’t mortgage our property for
cash to get groceries and to pay real estate tax. We can’t pay.
Our wealthy brethren want 12% on the dollar. And they have taken our land in default. Now for payment, they want us to give them
our sons and daughters as slaves. And some
of our daughters have already been sold as chattel.”
That was the most
serious problem yet, as Nehemiah knew. Worse than Sanballat’s words and worse
than the weariness of the bricklayers.
It was the threat of sin within the people of God. Nehemiah knew that, though he built
Exactly what was
the problem? We learn of it in verses
1-5 of chapter 5. Economically it was a
hard time. Ever since the return from
the Babylonian captivity it was tough.
Many families had not been able to get their feet under them. Due to a dearth, or famine, it had been
especially hard. And in Nehemiah’s day
it was hard to get grain or food. No
doubt the enemies restricted the trade.
But, remember, many farmers had left their fields to work on the
walls. And Nehemiah had wanted them now
to stay within
The complaint was
this: “Nehemiah, we are at the mercy of
our brothers. And they are
heartless. They are cruel. We love our children as much as they love
theirs. Yet, we have been forced to sell
everything we have, even our children into slavery.” This was a grievous wrong. There was a great wail arising from the women
against their brethren. That opposition
was brought on by a grievous failure to love the brothers in the love of God,
by a lack of the bowels of compassion in Jesus Christ. It was brought on by greed and self-love and
by self-advancement and by power and by monopolization and dominance. All of these things had cauterized the love
of God in their heart. It was caused by
“Me-first,” love of earthly things, resulting in an inward indifference to the
need of one’s brothers and sisters.
Materialism makes a scrooge of the child of God.
And it had gone to
unimaginable lengths. Sons and daughters
were being taken from the arms of their mother.
The times were tough. The bills
needed to be paid. Now son and daughter
had to be sold. Then there was this too: “We have to borrow money for the king’s
tribute, and that upon our lands and vineyards.” The creditors took the title. The creditors took the possessions and said,
“You pay the past property tax. That’s
your debt, not mine.”
Shall we, then,
simply pass on today and say, “Boy, that was heartless. That was really cruel.” We may not do that. We must seek to apply the Word of God to
ourselves. That, you see, is our
nature. Apart from grace, that is
exactly how we would treat each other in the church and in our marriages and in
the home. Do you see that? Do you forgive your brother his debts? Or have you been charging interest on that
debt? Have you been vindictive, just
waiting to get even? Do we do good to one another thinking that this puts them in our debt
and makes them beholding to us? Do we gossip about each other, backbite? Do we take away their land, their vineyard,
their place among the people of God? Do
we lower them to the place of a pauper?
Do you berate your children? Do
you oppress them? Do you deal with them
in irritation and in anger? Do we show
compassion to each other, or has this spirit of the age, this spirit of
materialism, this spirit of “Me,” made the bowels of compassion to be
constipated within us? “Do not let another
person’s need in the church or in the church throughout the world interfere
with my time, my pleasures. I’m not
going to sacrifice for them!”
Nehemiah took
immediate steps to correct this sin. We
read, “And I was very angry when I heard their cry and these words.” We can understand that! Here Nehemiah is engaged in the great work of
God’s cause – building the walls of
But note, he did not act in that anger. He mastered himself. He consulted, and he carefully prepared his
response. We read, “Then I consulted
with myself.” He thought it over. He did not allow anger to control his
response. He brought himself to how he
would approach this grievous condition.
He views them as erring brothers to whom he would appeal with spiritual
argument and seek their repentance. He
did not say, “Those reprobates, those charlatans! Bring them here. I’ll settle the score with those guys!” But he chose firm, strong measures.
He called them to a
great assembly. He did not decide to
reason it out privately with each one.
He decided to make it a public matter.
He did not want to spend hour after hour with the problem. He wanted the people of God all to witness
what he would say and what would be done.
Strong, firm, unanswerable arguments in which he
showed them their sin.
His speech to them
can be summarized in three ways.
First, he appealed
to the union that had been established in the blood of Jesus Christ. “And I said unto them.” This is, now, as Nehemiah has gathered the
people and the perpetrators of this evil all together. “And I said unto them, We
after our ability have redeemed our brethren the Jews, which were sold unto the
heathen; and will ye even sell your brethren? Or shall they be sold unto
us?” The returning captives from
Behind this whole
point of redemption, of course, was the picture of the precious blood of Jesus
Christ that was to be shed for the church.
Through the blood of Jesus Christ we are forgiven and made to belong to
Jesus Christ. All of us have had a debt
released that we could never have paid.
And now, shall we treat each other that way? Can you treat a member of Christ that way,
you who have been redeemed with the precious blood of Christ from a debt that
you could never have paid?
His second appeal
was this. “Restore, I pray you, to them,
even this day, their lands, their vineyards, their oliveyards,
and their houses, also the hundredth part of the money, and of the corn, the
wine, and the oil, that ye exact of them.”
Nehemiah was simply bringing the requirement of the Old Testament law
that required that they could not take advantage of their poor brothers, that they
could not charge usury, that they could not profit on loans, that they could
not make another Jew, by compulsion, a slave, and that the debts had to be
released in the year of Jubilee.
“Restore them their possessions.
Treat them as you would treat something of mine,” says God. God says, “I have redeemed you. Now you must treat them as I have redeemed
you.”
Finally, Nehemiah
appealed to the testimony that would be left of God’s name. That was the heart of it (v. 9), “Also I
said, It is not good that ye do: ought ye not to walk in the fear of our God
because of the reproach of the heathen our enemies?” Everything that we say and do to each other
as the people of God has to do with what is said about our God. The worst thing possible is that our life, as
we live with each other, would give occasion for the enemies of God to reproach
our God. You say that your God is
merciful? You say that your God is
gracious to the undeserving? You say
that your God is the God of love unimaginable – to give His Son even unto hell
for us? You say that your God is
compassionate upon the lowly and filled with lovingkindness
for those who are destitute? You worship
Him, and you are cruel, merciless, mean toward your
brothers and sisters? You laugh at their
mistakes? You hurt them with your
words? You torture them when you get
together by gossiping about them? You
blow up – you cannot forgive? You hold a
grudge? You cannot take anything? What kind of God, then, do you serve? You say your God is compassionate, but we do
not believe you. We believe that your
God is the same as you are – just as cruel as you are.
Beloved, our
behavior with each other is our testimony of God. Our behavior with each other is louder speech
than the words spoken with the mouth. We
can speak eloquently of the love of Jesus.
But the world says, “I can’t hear you.
You are catty with your friends.
You are bitter as a husband. You
are resentful as a wife. You are not
honest in your business. You are not
pure with your eyes. You are just like
us.”
Everything we do
with each other is our testimony of God.
And the world is always watching.
The world may not study the Bible.
But the world does study those who profess the Bible. What a reproach of God when the children of
God do not walk in love.
Nehemiah, as I
said, was aiming at their repentance.
The people acknowledge their sin and promise to make amends. “Then said they, We
will restore them, and will require nothing of them; so will we do as thou sayest.” So the
people were brought, by the grace of God, to repentance.
Then Nehemiah did
something dramatic as a warning that they must walk in repentance. Verse 13, “Also I shook my lap, and said, So
God shake out every man from his house, and from his labour,
that performeth not this promise, even thus be he
shaken out, and emptied.” This was very
significant to the Jews. It was a
sign. In other words, Nehemiah stood up
and he shook the crumbs off his lap. And
he said, “Just as I shake the crumbs from my lap, so will God shake out of His
covenant, out of His people, out of His church, those imposters who do not walk
in repentance seen in compassion toward their brothers and sisters.”
God brought
repentance.
We are left then
with a pointed example. Nehemiah knew
the power of example. He led the people
of God from the front. He was a man
himself of compassion and reverence for God and self-sacrifice. Therefore, Nehemiah did not oppose a
legitimate tax for the support of the governor, something that the former governors
had done. But he used this as an
example. He said, “I and my brethren
have not eaten the bread of the governor.”
Before him, the practice had been that a portion of the food had to be
given, just given, to the governor. That
was legitimate. That was proper. But Nehemiah says, “No, not I. I don’t need it. I’m not going to sequester oxen and corn from
you. I’m not going to do that.” Why?
He says, “because the bondage is heavy upon
this people.” He paid the cost of his
own upkeep and of the functioning of his governor’s house. When visiting dignitaries on the way to Shushan stopped by his house as a governor, he bore the
expense. He did not tax the people to
pay for it. The example he gave was in
his own life of sacrifice. And an example of being aware of the needs of God’s people.
Then he concludes
with these words: “Think upon me, my
God, for good, according to all that I have done for this people.” He did not do this for the praise of men. He said, “If men forget me, that doesn’t matter. I’m not doing this for the recognition of
people. But let my God think upon
me. Let my God be pleased with me. Let my God say, ‘Well done, good and faithful
servant.’” So he labored to promote the
good cause of God’s people in self-sacrifice.
And he himself lived as an example to follow.
Now we are back to
the beginning. Ought we not to walk in
the fear of God? Ought we, who
have received the gracious pardon of God, the fullness of His covenant blessing, ought we not to seek our brothers and sisters’ good to
edification?
The answer is: Of course, yes! Then, let us do that. Let us advance the cause of God. Let us show mercy and compassion to the
destitute. Let us testify of the glory
of our God. Let us do that by showing
mercy and compassion and patience and forgiveness one to another. Let us do that because God has so loved us.
Let us pray.
Father in heaven, we again thank Thee for Thy Word and ask that it may be the light upon our pathway in this week. Bless the study of Nehemiah and return us next week again to another portion from this wonderful book. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Last modified:
24-jul-2006