THE
REFORMED WITNESS HOUR
"When I Heard, I Wept and Prayed"
Rev.
Carl Haak
(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) May 28, 2006; No. 3308(Printed copies in a four-message booklet can
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Dear radio friends,
Today we are going
to begin a series on the Old Testament book of the Bible called Nehemiah. The theme of this book of Holy Scripture is
given in the second chapter, verse 10. There
we read, “When Sanballat the Horonite,
and Tobiah the servant, the Ammonite, heard of it, it
grieved them exceedingly that there was come a man to seek the welfare of the
children of
Nehemiah returned
to Jerusalem in the year 445 BC and was part of the end of the Old Testament
days after the return of the Jews from the Babylonian Captivity, when the
glories of David and Solomon and of the world-power that the Jews had once been
were long in the past and God’s covenant people were accounted the offscouring, the ragtag group in Palestine. God’s people were characterized by weariness,
by loss of hope, and by many inroads of sin among them.
God now raises up
Nehemiah. His name means “The Lord
comforts.” He is the instrument to
promote the welfare of God’s people, to put things back into God-honoring
order, to lead the people of God, and to establish them in the hope of Jesus
Christ. Nehemiah is a man whom God calls
from a palace. He was the king’s
cupbearer. He was cupbearer to the king
of
Nehemiah was no
prophet, though he spoke the Word of God forthrightly, firmly, and in holy
passion. Nehemiah was no priest, though
he lived his life in the presence of God, was devoted to God’s church, and
lived his life in prayer. Nehemiah was
no king, though he had courage and God used him to inspire His people to do
good.
Nehemiah was unknown
in the world of his day. His
contemporaries were Demosthenes and Plato.
Nehemiah is not known in the records of history. He was a man who never wore a crown, never
conquered a country, and never developed a philosophy. Yet, by the grace of God, as a fruit of the
redeeming grace of God in Christ, he served God in his generation. He sought the things of God and the honor of
God. He was a great instrument of God
for the good of the church.
So, why do I choose
this book of Nehemiah? For one reason: commitment.
That is so sorely and desperately needed – spiritual commitment to God’s
cause, to the church, to God’s name, to God’s people, to God’s honor. Nehemiah represents commitment to God’s cause
and truth and church and people.
As I was saying,
Nehemiah was a Jew of the dispersion. He
was the cupbearer to the king of
That news had a
most powerful effect upon Nehemiah. We
read, “And it came to pass, when I heard these words, that I sat down and wept,
and mourned certain days, and fasted, and prayed before the God of heaven” (v.
4).
Now picture
that. The picture is not this: a question is asked, “Well, how are things
back in the old country where we grew up?
How are things back there in the church?” And the answer: “Oh, not good at all. No preaching.
No Sabbath observance. Toleration
of all types of ungodliness. Things are
in a spiritual shambles.” And then the
response was not this: “Oh, too
bad. Oh, well. Back to my life. I have a meeting at 2:00 on the schedule of
the royal calendar for the year. Then,
at 3:30 there’s going to be a garden party in the royal gardens. Then, tonight, my friends and I are having
dinner on the
The response was
that the man was shattered. He
wept. He fasted. He prayed.
The love of his heart, the hope of his life, was in great need. If you do not love the church, if you do not
love the people of God, and then you hear distressing news about the church,
well, you will either shrug your shoulders and go back to your life, or you
will arise up and say, “Shame on them!”
Let us pause. Nehemiah was not asking for news as a
disinterested spectator. He was not
looking for something to gossip about, material to gossip about over the coffee
table. But deep veins of love for God’s
church and people had been deposited in his heart by grace.
Why was that news
so devastating to Nehemiah, that
Today those walls
represent the establishment and the growth of the
How are the walls
of
Nehemiah’s soul
sought the well-being of God’s children.
He desired that the walls be strong and not broken down. Look about.
The walls are broken down around God’s church in Zion.
There is the denial
of Holy Scripture – denial of the inspiration by the theories of evolution
taking over in the church. There is the
removal of expository preaching. Instead
of expository preaching from many a pulpit there is the “cheer-up and smile”
message. There is the “happy-clappy” service.
There is no longer a reverence for the living and the lovely God. There is minimal church attendance. There is the cancellation of Sunday evening
services. There is the desire that
religion be what suits me, and the desire to merge with this world.
What about
ourselves? Is there within you a spirit
of apathy and detachment concerning the well-being of God’s glorious
church? Do your children see that you
are burdened in love for the cause of God on earth? Do you have commitment? Do you have compassion upon the needs of the
church? What is the motivating force of
your life? Are the bricks of God’s truth
being formed up as walls in your heart?
Or are the truths of God like a brickyard after an explosion –
everything scattered around – there is no structure in your mind? You do not care about the truths of God’s
Word except, perhaps, occasionally to pick up a brick of God’s truth and fling
it at someone.
Nehemiah was
burdened. He was burdened because he
wanted the walls of truth and godliness to be built up around God’s
church. So it drove him to his knees.
In the rest of the
first chapter we read of Nehemiah’s passionate prayer. There are things that stand out in this
prayer. It was steeped in the
Scripture. Nehemiah drew from Moses and
from Solomon and from David and from Daniel and from Ezra. He shows that his prayer is formed out of an
intimate knowledge of the Holy Scriptures.
Oh, how applicable to today! Let
us understand that prayer must not be rote repetition. The language and the attitude and the
reverence of prayer must all flow from acquaintance with the Word of God.
Nehemiah’s prayer,
if you would read it, will be found to be intense and sincere. Nehemiah was committed to prayer. He went on persistently for three months,
praying to God concerning this need.
Let us look very
briefly at a few elements of his prayer.
First of all, in
his prayer Nehemiah looked up to God in dependence (vv. 5, 6). “I beseech thee, O Lord God of heaven, the great and terrible (that is, majestic)
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.” He is
praying out of a new principle, the new principle of grace. He is humbled before God. To him God was and is great. He is the God of covenant mercy. And Nehemiah said, “I am utterly dependent
upon Thee.”
Secondly, his
prayer not only was looking up to God in dependence, but he looked to God in
repentance (vv. 6, 7): “...and confess
the sins of the children of
Then his prayer
looked back in gratitude to God, to encourage himself concerning the
future. He said (v. 8), “Remember, I
beseech thee, the word that thou commandedst thy
servant Moses, saying, (and then he brings up God’s promise to a repentant
people).”
Nehemiah, then,
when he heard the news of the walls of Jerusalem devastated and the spiritual
shambles of the people of God, turned to God in a prayer of dependence,
repentance, and gratitude, to God who would be faithful to His promises.
This is very
important for us today. Let us pause and
consider some lessons that we can learn.
First of all, this
lesson. Behold the direction of
Nehemiah’s life. What was the motivating
force? And what is the motivating force
in your life? What are you really
concerned about? What do you want to see
prosper? You would not need to ask
Nehemiah. It is very plain that the
Nehemiah, remember,
was the king’s cupbearer. That means
that he had climbed the ladder of success.
Cupbearer to a king? That was
recognized dignity. He wore fancy
clothes. He was next in rank to
princes. He had influence in the
court. In today’s terms, he had an
office on the 92nd floor of the Standard Oil building. His name was on the door. He was a face and a force to be reckoned
with. He had a social life that was the
envy of many. He had friends in high
places. He was a man of gifts and
abilities. He was a man of force of
character. He was driven around by a
chauffeur.
But his heart was
not set on those things. His life was
not wrapped up in those things that men count dear and important. His love was directed elsewhere. It was upon the things of God and of His
Christ. It was upon the things of the
church and His people. It was toward
those things that his heart and his life moved.
This is what mattered to him. Did
So, the question
is: What is the direction of your
life? What counts for you? Home, finance, business, things, pleasure,
self? Or the house of God? Do you involve yourself in the church? Do you shoulder your responsibility? Do you value membership in a Bible-believing,
true church? Do you use your talents to
build up the walls of faith and truth?
Or are earthly ambitions, wealth, and fame the motivating force of your
heart? Or are they the things of Jesus
Christ? Young people, let me ask
you: Where are you headed? To what have you made your commitment, the
commitment of your heart? Towards
yourself, pleasure, things, drink, sex?
Toward finding men and women of the world who are exciting? Are you afraid of being considered
narrow-minded as a follower of Jesus Christ?
Do you hang on by a thread to the church? Throw in your heart to the only cause that is
glorious, the only cause that matters – the cause of God’s church and truth on
the earth.
Then the second
lesson is this. Behold this man’s
natural identity with God’s people.
Nehemiah thought corporately. Or
you can put it this way: Nehemiah
thought covenantally.
He did not think independently.
This is the vital lesson that is needed today concerning the
We must not think
this way, “Well, what are those guys doing in the church over there? What are those guys doing as elders and
deacons? What are the other people
doing? What did the church do for me
lately? The problem is this and
this. Well, if those problems weren’t
there, then I would be a part of it.”
Nehemiah did not think that way.
He knew the covenant union of God’s people. When he heard about the church, he thought
this way: “I’m part of the body of Jesus
Christ. When the body suffers, I
suffer. When the body rejoices, I
rejoice.” We live in a world of
individualism: Me, me! But that is not the way it must be in the
Finally, behold the
God in whom Nehemiah believed.
Nehemiah’s God, as you read the first chapter of Nehemiah, was not a “wanna-be” God – if only you will let Him be God. Nehemiah’s God was the great and the
universal sovereign, the God of heaven.
Nehemiah’s God was totally reliable.
He kept covenant and mercy.
Nehemiah’s God was unutterably holy.
He had no fellowship with sin.
Nehemiah’s God was compassionate and merciful to bring His people back
even though they did not deserve it.
Nehemiah’s God was glorious in power.
He had a strong hand to accomplish His will. Nehemiah’s God was intimately near to
him. Nehemiah stood in the presence of
God. There is the secret of the
man! There is the secret of Nehemiah. It is really no secret. It is found in his God. He loved and he lived for the living
God. And because he loved and lived for
the living God, the cause of God lay claim to his being and to his soul and to
his heart. He sought the things of God’s
kingdom.
Is that what lays
claim to your heart?
Let us pray.
Father, we thank
Thee for Thy word. Bless us as we begin
this series of studies on the book of Nehemiah.
May it be a great blessing to us.
In Jesus’ name do we pray, Amen.