“Let us start rebuilding.” (3)
[Nehemiah 2:19-20]
A complaining young man came to the king and begged
him to teach him how to live a successful life. The king poured wine into a goblet and gave it
to the young man, saying: ‘Go around town with a glass of wine and I will teach
you the secret of success. However, if
you spill the wine, your head will be cut off.’ The young man walked around the city sweating
profusely. Then the king asked: ‘What
did you see while walking around the city? Have you seen beggars and merchants in the
streets? Have you ever heard the singing
leaking from the bar?’ The young man
replied: ‘I didn’t see or hear anything because I was paying attention to my
wine glass.’ Then the king said: ‘That
is the secret of success. If you set a
firm goal in life and focus on your work, you will not hear the temptations and
criticisms around you.’ People who don't
work complain a lot. A person who has a
clear view of life and is immersed in work has no time to complain (Internet).
What is your view of life? What is the firm goal that you have set? Are you focusing on that goal and running
without looking back to achieve that goal?
When we think of Nehemiah, he had a firm goal in life. It was to rebuild the city of Jerusalem. He risked his life to achieve this goal. In other words, he had a sense of duty. We have already meditated that this, a send
of duty, is the first necessary element in rebuilding the Lord's house. Second,
we have already meditated on the fact that motivation is a necessary factor in
rebuilding the Lord's house. For the
third time today, I want to meditate on Nehemiah 2:19-20, under the title “Let
us start rebuilding (3)”. I hope and pray
that God will give us the assurance of success while thinking about “Assurance of
success,” which is an essential element in rebuilding the city of Jerusalem.
Third, we must have
assurance of success.
Look at Nehemiah 2:20 – “I answered them by saying, ‘The
God of heaven will give us success. We
his servants will start rebuilding, but as for you, you have no share in
Jerusalem or any claim or historic right to it.’” What does “success” mean? It usually means everything is going well. More specifically, it means that everything we
do goes well, everything works out as we want, and we become prosperous materially
(Internet). However, "success"
in the Bible means ‘the blessing of living by putting God's Word into practice
and working together for good in God's will.’
When only God's good will is fulfilled through our lives of obedience to
the Word, we call it prosperity or success. Then, what was the good that Nehemiah had
experienced by working together in the will of God? It was to receive grace in front of King
Artaxerxes. Look at Nehemiah 1:11 – “’O
Lord, let your ear be attentive to the prayer of this your servant and to the
prayer of your servants who delight in revering your name. Give your servant
success today by granting him favor in the presence of this man.’ ….” The
grace received in front of King Artaxerxes is nothing other than that God
allowed King Artaxerxes to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the city, which
Nehemiah wanted (2:8). King Artaxerxes
not only allowed Nehemiah to return to the city of Jerusalem and rebuild it,
but also fulfilled Nehemiah's demands by giving two letters, one for safe
passage to Judah (v. 7) and the other to Asaph, the king’s forest manager, to
give Nehemiah timber for beams (v. 8). This
Nehemiah gave a short speech of his personal testimony before the people of
Judah upon arrival in Jerusalem: “I also told them about the gracious hand of
my God upon me and what the king had said to me. …” (2:18a). At that time, the stumbling block to success
for Nehemiah and the people of Judah appeared (again). They were the Gentiles, Sanballat, Tobiah, and
Geshem, who were the leaders of the neighborhood around Jerusalem. Look at Nehemiah 2:19 – “But when Sanballat
the Horonite, Tobiah the Ammonite official and Geshem the Arab heard about it,
they mocked and ridiculed us. ‘What is
this you are doing?’ they asked. ’Are
you rebelling against the king?’” First,
they despised Nehemiah and the people of Judah. They committed the sin of mocking Nehemiah,
the servant of God, and they also committed the sin of mocking God's people. And they laughed at what Nehemiah and the
people of Judah were trying to do: “What is this you are doing?" They ridiculed the rebuilding of the city of
Jerusalem. Then they said, “Are you
rebelling against the king?” This is a
question that reminds Nehemiah and the people of Judah to go back to the time
of Ezra and to remind them of the incident in which King Artaxerxes prevented
the rebuilding of Jerusalem (Ezra 4). However,
Nehemiah came with permission from King Artaxerxes. The enemies must have known this. Even so, what they said was intended to
discourage Nehemiah and the people of Judah.
From the world's point of view, Nehemiah and the
people of Judah did not prosper. How can
we know that? It was because prosperity was
generally when everything was going well for them, but then the enemies
reappeared. However, success from God's
point of view does not say that there will be no enemies when we live by practicing
God's Word. The Bible says that success is
when God's good will is fulfilled amidst the persecution of enemies. An example is Joseph in Genesis 39:2-3: “The
LORD was with Joseph and he prospered, and he lived in the house of his
Egyptian master. When his master saw
that the LORD was with him and that the LORD gave him success in everything he
did.” The Bible refers to Joseph as ‘a
prosperous (successful) man,’ and says that Potiphar also saw that God made Joseph
prosper (successful) in all he did. However,
from the world's point of view, did Joseph really prosper in all things? Did everything go well? If Joseph is a successful person from the
world's point of view, how does he go to prison with a false accusation? How can such a person be called a prosperous
or successful person? However, the Bible
says that Joseph was a prosperous (successful) man. There is also persecution and suffering in the
life of a prosperous (successful) person. So why do we wonder about this biblical
prosperity? The reason is because we envy
the prosperity of sinners. Look at
Proverbs 23:17 – “Do not let your heart envy sinners, but always be zealous for
the fear of the LORD.” Keep Sunday
diligently, worship well, read the Bible, give tithes... Even though we try to live a life that is in
accordance with God's heart, things do not go well, the person next to us does
not lead a righteous life and seems to earn money and live a good life despite
bullying others. Seeing that, I think in
my heart, "Did I live the wrong way? Shall I live like that too?" But we should envy the prosperity of such
people. The prosperity of sinners refers
to worldly prosperity. The Bible tells
us not to envy the prosperity of the wicked.
Look at Psalms 37:7 – “Be still before the LORD and wait patiently for
him; do not fret when men succeed in their ways, when they carry out their
wicked schemes.”
What did Nehemiah do when obstacles to success
reappeared? Look at Nehemiah 2:20 – “I
answered them by saying, ‘The God of heaven will give us success. We his servants will start rebuilding, but as
for you, you have no share in Jerusalem or any claim or historic right to it.’” Here Nehemiah is saying two things:
(1) Nehemiah
firmly states that he will continue to promote the rebuilding of the city of
Jerusalem with the conviction that “the God of heaven” will make it successful.
The
basis of Nehemiah's assurance of success was the "God of heaven." He had already experienced prosperity as the
heavenly God answered his prayer when he wept bitterly and fasted and prayed
before the “God of heaven” after hearing about the situation in Jerusalem
(1:4-5). D
We
also learned from Nehemiah 2:4 that when King Artaxerxes asked, “What is it you
want?” Nehemiah prayed silently to the God of heaven. Nehemiah was certain that the God of heaven
who made prosperity was with him, so he was certain that God would also
accomplish the work of rebuilding the city of Jerusalem. With that confidence, Nehemiah told his
enemies that he would rise up with the people of Judah and build the city of
Jerusalem. If the certainty of success
is not God, but something else like ourselves, other people, or material or
circumstances, even if we try to rise up and build, when the enemy comes, we
may waver, doubt, and give up in fear. An
example of this is found in the book of Haggai.
Because of the enemy, the people of Israel built the temple in
Jerusalem, but only laid the foundation. They were afraid of the enemy's threat and
gave up rebuilding the temple (Hag. 1:9).
(2)
Nehemiah boldly tells the people of
Judah that his enemies are not servants of God.
What
does this mean? We can think of it in
three ways: (a) Sanballat, Tobiah, and Geshem mean that there is no legal
division in arranging the Jewish nation.
(b) They are saying that there is no statutory right in Jerusalem. (c)
They say that they have no right to celebrate Jewish religious ceremonies
(Fensham).
There is a report that investigated the
secret of success by tracking successful people among graduates of the Carnegie
Institute of Technology in the United States.
Experience or skill only contributed 15 percent to success. The remaining 85 percent had good
interpersonal relationships.’ Especially,
they were good at three visits for interpersonal relationships, which were
´mouth visitation´, ´hand visitation´, and ´foot visitation´. The visit of the mouth is to soften and give
courage to a person's heart by complimenting, and the visit of the hand is to
write a letter and deliver the heart of true love. Foot visitation is when someone is sick or in
trouble. The more compliments you give,
the more letters you write, the more impressed you are, and the more you find
someone in need, the more friendly you become. Take a good look at the
successful people around you. They will
have good relationships with the people around them by not neglecting the
little things that others consider insignificant and taking good care of them
(Internet). What is the secret to
success taught in the Bible? We can
think of it in 3 ways:
(1) God's
presence is the secret to success.
Look
at Genesis 39:23 – “… because the LORD
was with Joseph and gave him success in whatever he did.” The God who was with Nehemiah, the God whose
good hand helped Nehemiah (Neh 2:8, 18) and moved his heart to work (2:12). And the “God of heaven” was with Nehemiah’s
success (2:8, 18). This is the secret to success.
(2) Keeping
God's commandments is the secret to success.
Look
at Joshua 1:7-8: “Be strong and very courageous. Be careful to obey all the law my servant
Moses gave you; do not turn from it to the right or to the left, that you may
be successful wherever you go. Do not
let this Book of the Law depart from your mouth; meditate on it day and night,
so that you may be careful to do everything written in it. Then you will be prosperous and successful.” Nehemiah did not pursue his own will, but God's
will, that is, to rebuild the city of Jerusalem.
(3) Seeking
God, that is, praying, is the secret to success.
Look
at 2 Chronicles 26:5 – “He sought God during the days of Zechariah, who
instructed him in the fear of God. As long as he sought the LORD, God gave him
success.” As a man of prayer, Nehemiah
prayed to God.
댓글
댓글 쓰기