Chapter 52
A
Man of Opportunity
NEHEMIAH, one
of the Hebrew exiles, occupied a position of influence and honor in the
Persian court. As cupbearer to the king he was admitted freely to the
royal presence. By virtue of his position, and because of his abilities
and fidelity, he had become the monarch's friend and counselor. The
recipient of royal favor, however, though surrounded by pomp and splendor,
did not forget his God nor his people. With deepest interest his heart
turned toward Jerusalem; his hopes and joys were bound up with her
prosperity. Through this man, prepared by his residence in the Persian
court for the work to which he was to be called, God purposed to bring
blessing to His people in the land of their fathers.
By messengers
from Judea the Hebrew patriot learned that days of trial had come to
Jerusalem, the chosen city. The returned exiles were suffering affliction
and reproach. The temple and portions of the city had been rebuilt; but
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the work of
restoration was hindered, the temple services were disturbed, and the
people kept in constant alarm by the fact that the walls of the city were
still largely in ruins.
Overwhelmed
with sorrow, Nehemiah could neither eat nor drink; he "wept, and
mourned certain days, and fasted." In his grief he turned to the
divine Helper. "I . . . prayed," he said, "before the God
of heaven." Faithfully he made confession of his sins and the sins of
his people. He pleaded that God would maintain the cause of Israel,
restore their courage and strength, and help them to build up the waste
places of Judah.
As Nehemiah
prayed, his faith and courage grew strong. His mouth was filled with holy
arguments. He pointed to the dishonor that would be cast upon God, if His
people, now that they had returned to Him, should be left in weakness and
oppression; and he urged the Lord to bring to pass His promise: "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." See Deuteronomy 4:29-31. This promise had been
given to Israel through Moses before they had entered Canaan, and during
the centuries it had stood unchanged. God's people had now returned to Him
in penitence and faith, and His promise would not fail.
Nehemiah had
often poured out his soul in behalf of his people. But now as he prayed a
holy purpose formed in his mind. He resolved that if he could obtain the
consent of the king, and the necessary aid in procuring implements
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and material,
he would himself undertake the task of rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem
and restoring Israel's national strength. And he asked the Lord to grant
him favor in the sight of the king, that this plan might be carried out.
"Prosper, I pray Thee, Thy servant this day," he entreated,
"and grant him mercy in the sight of this man."
Four months
Nehemiah waited for a favorable opportunity to present his request to the
king. During this time, though his heart was heavy with grief, he
endeavored to bear himself with cheerfulness in the royal presence. In
those halls of luxury and splendor all must appear light-hearted and
happy. Distress must not cast its shadow over the countenance of any
attendant of royalty. But in Nehemiah's seasons of retirement, concealed
from human sight, many were the prayers, the confessions, the tears, heard
and witnessed by God and angels.
At length the
sorrow that burdened the patriot's heart could no longer be concealed.
Sleepless nights and care-filled days left their trace upon his
countenance. The king, jealous for his own safety, was accustomed to read
countenances and to penetrate disguises, and he saw that some secret
trouble was preying upon his cupbearer. "Why is thy countenance
sad," he inquired, "seeing thou art not sick? this is nothing
else but sorrow of heart."
The question
filled Nehemiah with apprehension. Would not the king be angry to hear
that while outwardly engaged in his service, the courtier's thoughts had
been far away with his afflicted people? Would not the offender's life be
forfeited? His cherished plan for restoring the strength of
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Jerusalem--was
it about to be overthrown? "Then," he writes, "I was very
sore afraid." With trembling lips and tearful eyes he revealed the
cause of his sorrow. "Let the king live forever," he answered.
"Why should not my countenance be sad, when the city, the place of my
fathers' sepulchers, lieth waste, and the gates thereof are consumed with
fire?"
The recital
of the condition of Jerusalem awakened the sympathy of the monarch without
arousing his prejudices. Another question gave the opportunity for which
Nehemiah had long waited: "For what dost thou make request?" But
the man of God did not venture to reply till he had sought direction from
One higher than Artaxerxes. He had a sacred trust to fulfill, in which he
required help from the king; and he realized that much depended upon his
presenting the matter in such a way as to win his approval and enlist his
aid. "I prayed," he said, "to the God of heaven." In
that brief prayer Nehemiah pressed into the presence of the King of kings
and won to his side a power that can turn hearts as the rivers of waters
are turned.
To pray as
Nehemiah prayed in his hour of need is a resource at the command of the
Christian under circumstances when other forms of prayer may be
impossible. Toilers in the busy walks of life, crowded and almost
overwhelmed with perplexity, can send up a petition to God for divine
guidance. Travelers by sea and land, when threatened with some great
danger, can thus commit themselves to Heaven's protection. In times of
sudden difficulty or peril the heart may send up its cry for help to One
who
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has pledged
Himself to come to the aid of His faithful, believing ones whenever they
call upon Him. In every circumstance, under every condition, the soul
weighed down with grief and care, or fiercely assailed by temptation, may
find assurance, support, and succor in the unfailing love and power of a
covenant-keeping God.
Nehemiah, in
that brief moment of prayer to the King of kings, gathered courage to tell
Artaxerxes of his desire to be released for a time from his duties at the
court, and he asked for authority to build up the waste places of
Jerusalem
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and to make
it once more a strong and defensed city. Momentous results to the Jewish
nation hung upon this request. "And," Nehemiah declares,
"the king granted me, according to the good hand of my God upon
me."
Having
secured the help he sought, Nehemiah with prudence and forethought
proceeded to make the arrangements necessary to ensure the success of the
enterprise. He neglected no precaution that would tend to its
accomplishment. Not even to his own countrymen did he reveal his purpose.
While he knew that many would rejoice in his success, he feared that some,
by acts of indiscretion, might arouse the jealousy of their enemies and
perhaps bring about the defeat of the undertaking.
His request
to the king had been so favorably received that Nehemiah was encouraged to
ask for still further assistance. To give dignity and authority to his
mission, as well as to provide protection on the journey, he asked for and
secured a military escort. He obtained royal letters to the governors of
the provinces beyond the Euphrates, the territory through which he must
pass on his way to Judea; and he obtained, also, a letter to the keeper of
the king's forest in the mountains of Lebanon, directing him to furnish
such timber as would be needed. That there might be no occasion for
complaint that he had exceeded his commission, Nehemiah was careful to
have the authority and privileges accorded him, clearly defined.
This example
of wise forethought and resolute action should be a lesson to all
Christians. God's children are not only to pray in faith, but to work with
diligent and provident
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care. They
encounter many difficulties and often hinder the working of Providence in
their behalf, because they regard prudence and painstaking effort as
having little to do with religion. Nehemiah did not regard his duty done
when he had wept and prayed before the Lord. He united his petitions with
holy endeavor, putting forth earnest, prayerful efforts for the success of
the enterprise in which he was engaged. Careful consideration and
well-matured plans are as essential to the carrying forward of sacred
enterprises today as in the time of the rebuilding of Jerusalem's walls.
Nehemiah did
not depend upon uncertainty. The means that he lacked he solicited from
those who were able to bestow. And the Lord is still willing to move upon
the hearts of those in possession of His goods, in behalf of the cause of
truth. Those who labor for Him are to avail themselves of the help that He
prompts men to give. These gifts may open ways by which the light of truth
shall go to many benighted lands. The donors may have no faith in Christ,
no acquaintance with His word; but their gifts are not on this account to
be refused.
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