NEHEMIAH BUILDS THE WALL
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Nehemiah 4:1-16
04-20-86
Well,
that’s an answer to prayer. I found out
this last week that three of our men had taken our Minister of Music, Denny
Dawson on a ski trip. And so I prayed,
oh, God, let him come back and let him not have his neck broken. So he came back and God answered that
prayer, didn’t break his neck, but he sure did burn his face.
Did you know this last week also, the manufacturing
company from way up north has shipped us our beautiful, plush opera chairs for
our balcony all the way around? And
they’ll be here now—oh, that’s going to be the best thing in the world. They’ll be here now in just a few days. And they’re red—as God wants every color to
be red.
And
this is going to be the most beautiful auditorium and most comfortable place to
be seated in all the earth. And all of
this decorated balcony around this balustrade will be beautifully, Gothically
arranged. We’re going to have the most
precious place in the world to call upon the name of our Lord.
You
are welcome listening on radio and television to our First Baptist Church in
Dallas. And this is the pastor bringing
the message entitled: Nehemiah
Builds the Wall. And let’s turn now
to Nehemiah, chapter 4 and we shall read together the first six verses:
Nehemiah, 1 and 2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah right in the middle of the Old
Testament. The book of Nehemiah. And we’re going to read the first six
verses.
And
in the eighth chapter of this Book in the fifth verse it says: “When Ezra
opened the book all the people stood up,” and that’s what we do. All the people stood up in the presence of
the Lord, and it’s holy and heavenly worthy.
Nehemiah,
chapter 4, we read out loud the first six verses. Now together:
But it came to pass, that when Sanballat
heard that we builded the wall, he was wroth, and took great indignation, and
mocked the Jews. And he spake before
his brethren and the army of Samaria, and said, What do these feeble Jews? Will they fortify themselves? Will they sacrifice? Will they make an end in a day? Will they revive the stones out of the heaps
of the rubbish which are burned? Now
Tobiah the Ammonite was by him, and he said, Even that which they build, if a
fox go up, he shall even break down their stone wall.
Hear, O our God; for we are despised:
and turn their reproach upon their own head, and give them for a prey in the
land of captivity: And cover not their
iniquity, and let not their sin be blotted out from before thee: for they have
provoked thee to anger before the builders.
So built we the wall; and all the wall
was joined together unto the half thereof: for the people had a mind to work.
Now, let’s read that last
verse again, verse 6. Let’s read it out
loud again:
So built we the wall; and all the wall was joined together unto
the half thereof: for the people had a mind to work.
Now,
we’ll be seated. There are several most
interesting things about this Book of Nehemiah and about the man who inspired
it. First, he was a layman. He was not a professional religionist. He didn’t make his living by serving in the
house of the Lord. He was a layman. He was the cupbearer of the king. We would say in our modern political
nomenclature, he was the Prime Minister of the Persian Empire. He was a layman.
Another
thing about him, he lived in an era of the greatest men who have ever existed
in this earth. He was the Prime
Minister under Artaxerxes Longimanus.
Longimanus means "long hands." Longimanus was born with a deformed right hand. And as the emperor and king of the Persian
Empire, he was known as Longimanus. He
reigned over forty years. And under him
the Persian Empire reached its highest glory.
He
lived in the era of the greatest men of the ancient Greek kingdoms. In the days Pericles--in the days of
Nehemiah, Pericles flourished in Athens.
Their military leader and ruler and philosopher, Pericles was doubtless
the greatest Greek who ever lived.
In
the days of Nehemiah, Herodotus, the father of history began to write. And Thucydides, the incomparable historian
and Xenophon, who wrote the March of the
Ten Thousand, all of them lived in the days of Nehemiah.
In
the days of Nehemiah, Socrates was teaching Plato. In the days of Nehemiah, Aeschylus was writing his incomparable
tragedies and Aristophanes was writing his brilliant comedies. In the days of Nehemiah, Democritus was
propounding his atomic theory of the nature of matter, of existence. You’d think he lived in this modern day,
Democritus.
In
the days of Nehemiah, Ezra the scribe and Malachi the prophet were
flourishing. It was a marvelous era in
the history of men. Nehemiah himself is
one of the most unusual men to whom you could ever be introduced. He was a contrasting personality. He was as sensitive as a woman. And he was as iron in resolution as a
prophet of God.
When
Hanani, his brother came back from Judah and gave a report to Nehemiah, it says
that Nehemiah prayed and wept from Chisleu, when Hanani came to Shushan, the
summer palace of the Persian king, from Chisleu—that’s November, December—until
Nisan—that’s in April. That’s how long
this great man wept and prayed before the Lord.
He
did not say: “Don’t tell me of my people and don’t burden my heart with the
tragedy of their captivity and servitude.”
Rather, he opened his heart to their need and to their cry. The sensitivity of this layman to his
people.
On
the other hand, he was an iron resolute.
Jeopardized his life in making an appeal for his people. But like Esther, I die, I die. And when the king was moved by his request
and appeal, he made tremendous preparation for the purpose to which he was
dismissed for a while to go to Jerusalem in Judea.
When
he arrived, when Nehemiah arrived, he saw the city in ruins. And the wall had lain in rubbish for one
hundred and fifty years as it had been torn down by the Babylonian king,
Nebuchadnezzar. And the people—the
little struggling band that had returned from Babylon to Judea, the little
struggling band that lived there were subject to raid and pillage and violence
and robbery by all of their hostile neighbors.
Nehemiah
then dedicated himself to the building of the wall. And he accomplished it miraculously within fifty-two days. His dedication of the wall was, was wonderful. That’s when Ezra read the Bible, read the
Book. “And when he opened the Book, all
the people stood up.”
It
is wonderful to see people in a deeply reverent attitude toward the Word of
God. Not taking it flippantly or
lightly or indifferently, but reverently and earnestly and prayerfully. “When Ezra opened the Book, all the people
stood up.” And the record of their
dedication is just simply, incomparably great.
“And at the dedication of the wall of Jerusalem, they sought out all the
Levites in all of the places and brought them to Jerusalem to keep the
dedication with gladness, with thanksgiving, with singing, with cymbals,
psalteries and with harps.”
Verse
35: “And the priests’ sons sounded the trumpets.”
Verse
36: “And they played with the musical instruments of David, the man of
God.”
So
they stood there and gave thanks to the Lord and the singers sang loud. “And they rejoiced for God had made them
rejoice with great joy. The wives also
and the children rejoiced so that the joy of Jerusalem was heard even afar off…
For as in the days of David and Asaph of old, they were the singers. And songs of praise and thanksgiving, they
offered unto the Lord.”
Now,
that’s what I like, too. It says here
in the Bible: “And they sang loud.” I like
that. When you sing, don’t sing
apologetically, as though you wish you were hidden in a corner or
something. Sing it out, my
brother. Make it known. And when the trumpets play, play them. And when the trombones plays, outshine the
trumpets. Don’t let them give you a
complex. And when these flutists flout,
when the flutists play the flute—oh, it’s wonderful! I can’t tell you how I rejoice in you. A wonderful music program, that’s God.
Can
you imagine what they sounded like? In
the days of David, there were over four thousand Levites that sang. Think of it, choir, over four thousand
singers and 297 instrumentalists, all of them playing to the ability of their
souls and lives and love and glory to God.
Well, that’s the way they dedicated that wall.
The
assignment that Nehemiah had, we also have.
We have a building to seek from the hands of God and to prepare for the
use of our young people. This is a
providence and a gracious one of the Lord.
On that corner, beyond the Plaza where Federal and Ervay Streets come
together, God hath given us a building that we are dedicating to our young
people. It costs four million, six
hundred thousand dollars. It costs one
million dollars to remodel it for their use.
And it will cost a hundred thousand dollars to furnish it.
Part
of that we have already paid. We lack
four million dollars and in the precious providence of God, Mrs. Ruth Ray Hunt
has given us two million dollars, half of it, and asked that all the rest of us
match the two million dollars, dollar for dollar. For every dollar we give, she gives a dollar. This is our assignment; our building program
in this moment and day of our blessedness and remembrance from God.
In
the Arabian Nights, the wall rises by
magic in one night. You’ll find nothing
of that in the Bible. Nothing! When you read of the building of the wall in
Nehemiah, it is in prayer and in dedicated labor, in whole-hearted devotion.
In
prayer. When I look at the first
chapter of Nehemiah, in verse 4: “I prayed before the God of heaven.”
In
verse 6: Twice it says that he prays.
In
verse 11: Three times he is described as praying.
In
verse 4: “So I prayed to the God of heaven.”
In
chapter 4:9 and chapter 11:17: He is bowed before God in prayer.
They
did it in praying. First, he prayed;
they prayed. Then when I turn to the
third chapter of the Book of Nehemiah, they all shared in the labor, all of
them. It starts off with the priest,
with the pastors. They builded. And next under them builded. Then they.
And next under them repaired.
And next under them repaired.
Then next under them; and next under them; and next under them; and next
under them; and next under them; and that entire third chapter -- and it’s a
long chapter with thirty-two verses—everyone of those verses begins with: “And
next unto them repaired. And next unto
them builded.”
They
all shared in it. It was something in
which each took a part. And each one
builded over against his own house. And
I can just hear the shout as they complete this section of the wall and the
trumpet sounds and the people sing and rejoice; and then this one—and then that
one and that one—until the whole sacred circle is complete. They prayed unto the God of heaven and they
poured their devoted labor into the task.
And that will bring a like wonderful victory to us as we seek the
payment for our building and the arrangement of it for the use of our young
people.
Now,
in closing, I have two things to observe about it. One arises in the light of the future, and the other is in the
light of the past. First, in the light
of the future. There came to me about
ten days ago or so, there came to me four fine, gifted, dedicated businessmen
from a sister Baptist church in our queenly City of Dallas.
And
they said to me, "Our church is dying.
And we just wanted to talk to you about the possibility of the
amalgamation of our congregations. That
we be a part of the First Baptist Church in Dallas."
Then
as they talked to me about their church they said, "The average age of all
of the members of our congregation, the average age is over sixty-seven. The average age is over sixty-seven. And our church is dying."
Strange
thing how sometimes your mind will work.
And this is one of those strange providences. When they said to me, "Our church is dying and the average
age of our congregation is over sixty-seven," my mind went back to a
conversation that I had in one of my visits with David Ben-Gurion who was the
first Prime Minister of the new state of Israel. I was telling Mr. Ben-Gurion about our City of Dallas and about
the Jewish community in our city and their affluence, and their dedication to
the cause of Israel and to the great response they make when they have those
drives and appeals for funding the state of Israel. I was describing to him our Jewish community in Dallas.
And
he said to me, he said, "What we need is not their money; and what we need
is not their support; and what we need is not their influence and affluence,
though we are blessed by it." He
said, "What we need is their young people. We need their young people.
And if they will send us their young people, we have an assured destiny
and future for the state of Israel."
Isn’t
that an amazing observation to make?
“What we need is our young people.”
When I turned that over in my mind that was what came to
remembrance. When those men said to me,
"Our church is dying. The average
age of our convert, of our congregation is sixty-seven. We don’t have any young people."
The
future lies in them. And if we have any
destiny, if there is any tomorrow for our congregation and for our church and
for the witness of Christ in the heart of this city, it lies in those children
and in those teenagers. And that is our
futuristic appeal. We are with God’s
help, building a wonderful church and a wonderful witness for the morrow in
supporting these young people.
Now,
my second and last observation concerns the past. What do you think you would feel in your heart if you supported
them? If you did something gracious for
them – what do you think? Would you be
glad that you did? Would you be
grateful to God that you tried and helped?
Would you?
As
most of you know, for thirty-six years Pat Zondervan, who heads the great
Zondervan Corporation, by far the largest religious publishing house in the
world, and my dear precious friend—for thirty-six years, Pat Zondervan has come
to visit us here in our church on the second Sunday in January. He comes, as you remember, to make an appeal
for the Gideons, taking up an offering.
And we always graciously respond to buying Bibles distributed by the
Gideons.
Well,
this year, we were in the Vietnam War, and when Pat Zondervan stood here to
make his appeal, he had a little testament, one of those little military New
Testaments that he held up in his right hand.
And as he held it up in his right hand, he said, "This little New
Testament was taken off of the body of an American soldier. He was a Georgia boy." And he said, "These bullet holes that went
through this little New Testament, went also through the heart of that Georgia
boy and he lay there and sacrificed for our country."
And
as he held up that little New Testament with the bullet holes through it, that
had been taken off of that American soldier, he said, "I wish that it had
been my forty-seven cents that bought that New Testament carried next to the
heart of that Georgia American soldier boy."
When
he came back to be seated by me there, I said to him, "Pat, would you put
that little Bible in my hand? Let me
have it." So he put it in my hand
and I turned it to the back, and on the back these are the words that I read: “On this day—and he dated it—on this day, I,
Eldred Thomas take Jesus Christ as my personal Savior.” And he signed his name again, “Eldred
Thomas.”
I
felt like Pat Zondervan. I wish it had
been my forty-seven cents that had bought that Bible for that American
boy. I feel the same about our appeal
for these teenagers today. If one of
them is saved, I wish it could have been my gift that helped guide the
youngster to the Lord Jesus. And if one
of them grows in the faith, I wish it could have been what I gave that would
have helped that youngster in the way of the Lord.
In
all of the unfolding future and as I look at what I have done, I will be
grateful to God that I had a part; that some of me is in that dedicated
ministry to these teenagers. This will
almost certainly be the last project that I shall ever have a part in guiding
to fruition and consummation. And I
love to think that it is dedicated to young people. Nothing could please my own heart more than that we had a part;
we shared in doing this for them.
And old man going a lone highway,
Came in the evening cold and gray
To a chasm, vast and deep and wide,
Through which was flowing a sullen
tide.
The old man crossed in the twilight dim
The sullen stream held no fears for
him.
But he turned when safe on the other
side,
And built a bridge to span the
tide.
“Old man,” said a fellow pilgrim near,
“You’re wasting strength with building
here.
Your journey will end with the ending
day.
You never again will pass this way.
You have crossed the chasm, deep and
wide.
Why do you build the bridge at the
evening tide?”
The builder lifted up his old gray head,
“Good friend, in the path I have come,”
he said,
“There followeth after me today,
A youth whose feet must pass this
way.
This chasm that has been naught to me,
To that fair-haired youth may a pitfall
be.
He, too, must cross in the twilight
dim.
Good friend, I am building this bridge
for him.”
[“The Bridge Builder” by Will Dromgoole]
We
are like that in this dear church. We
are getting ready for the ministry of Christ and the witness of our Lord in the
years that are yet to come. And we do
it through these children and these teenagers.
The church in the immediate and next generation.
And
with what fullness of heart do I come before the Lord in prayer that God will
move us, each one of us to respond. And
that we have the joy of seeing these youngsters growing up in the faith and
nurture and knowledge of the Lord.
To
you who are visiting in the church, at the 8:15 service, our youngsters are the
choir. And they are beginning to fill
up this whole front of our congregation.
And on Wednesday night, I see they are the choir again at our Wednesday
evening service.
Oh,
dear God in heaven, how could I frame the word to say it? How could I verbalize it? How could I put it in sentence and syllable,
the infinite gratitude of my soul for our children and our young people, our
church tomorrow?
Now,
may we pray? “Our Lord in heaven,
looking down upon us in grace and in love, in Thy goodness and remembrance,
dear Lord, make it a glorious success, the appeal that we make in behalf of our
children and our young people. They are
called in the Bible the heritage of the Lord and they are no less that to
us.
“We
thank Thee for them. Even all the
trials that sometimes attend their going up and their growing up and their
preparing for the work that lies before them.
For all of it, Lord, we are grateful to Thee. And glad that we can have a part in it and that You assigned us
the responsibility for it. And dear
Lord, may our church find it in heart and love and prayer and intercession and
gift and response, may they find it a joy and a gladness to do this for them
and for Thee.”
And
in this moment that we bow before the Lord, the appeal is made for you to
respond to the urging, to the invitation of the Spirit of our blessed Savior. To come for prayer: “Pastor, I would be so
grateful if someone would share with me the burden of my heart and life.” We would love doing it.
“Pastor,
I want to accept the Lord Jesus openly and publicly as my Savior and I’m
coming. Pastor, this is my family, all
of us are coming into the fellowship of our dear church. God has called me for an assignment and I’m
giving my life in response.”
As
the Spirit shall press the appeal to your heart, answer with your life. Make that decision now. And in this moment when we stand to sing, on
the first note of the first stanza, come.
May the angels attend you in the way and may God bless you in the
response of your life.
“And
thank You, Lord, for the gracious harvest You give us, these who come this meaningful
hour. In Thy wonderful, saving and
keeping and blessed name, Amen.” While
we stand and while we sing.
.