Although the temple was rebuilt and God's people were hearing God's word, the walls and gates around Jerusalem were still not repaired. This is where the book of Nehemiah comes in. He was a cupbearer to the king. When he heard about the situation at Jerusalem, it both shocked and saddened him. One day the king noticed it and asked him what was going on. Nehemiah took this opportunity to ask the king to send him back to Jerusalem to build the walls so his city would not be in peril and shame.
My ornamental cherry tree |
Why was this such a big deal to Israelites anyway? I've learned from my reading the Life-Study of Nehemiah that the city of Jerusalem with its wall represents the kingdom of God which protects the house of God and allows God to carry out His interests on the earth. So it mattered a lot that the wall got rebuilt!
In chapter one and two Witness Lee points out how over and over we see Nehemiah's aggressiveness in this book. He didn't let things happen, he made them happen: You can see that in this verse: The God of heaven Himself will make us prosper; therefore we His servants will rise up and build. Nehemiah 2:20
On page 12 of chapter 2 Witness Lee talks about how Nehemiah had a bold and strong character and had the virtue of aggressiveness:
"All who have been used by God through history have been aggressive persons. For example, both Paul and Martin Luther were very aggressive. Brother Nee also, even though he was a gentleman, was very aggressive. Nehemiah surely was an aggressive person....He had a burden to rebuild the city of Jerusalem. His aggressiveness was very much used by God....In our reading of the book of Nehemiah, we need to pay attention to Nehemiah's aggressiveness. Although he was a common man, a servant of the king, he was aggressive to volunteer himself to God and to his burden concerning the building up of the city. He was also aggressive in making his requests known to the king. When the king asked him about his sad face, he spoke to the king in a bold, aggressive way about his burden for the city of Jerusalem" (Lee, Witness. Life-Study of 1 & 2 Chronicles, Ezra & Nehemiah. Anaheim: Living Stream Ministry. 1995, Print).You can also see Nehemiah's aggressiveness in the way he worked on the wall. He and other Israelites were stationed on the wall 24/7 until the wall was built.Some of them even held a tool in one hand and a weapon in the other. At the end of chapter two Witness Lee closes by saying that it's important to see that because Nehemiah was an aggressive person who trusted and loved God, the holy land, the holy temple, and Jerusalem he even became the representative of God on earth.
You can listen to excerpts of Witness Lee's speaking the Life-Study of 1 & 2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, & Esther on Life Study of the Bible with Witness Lee. You can also read the online Life-Studies of these books and check out other resources available to enhance your study of the Bible on Living Stream Ministry's website.
Other Posts from the Life-Study of 1 & 2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, & Esther:
From the Life-Study of 1 & 2 Chronicles - How did Watchman Nee & Witness Lee Take a Stand For the Truth?
From the Life-Study of 1 & 2 Chronicles - Why Did God Make Man in His Image?
From the Life-Study of Ezra - How God Used a Gentile King to Fulfill His Purpose?
From the Life-Study of Ezra - Why Did Ezra Return to Jerusalem?
How Did God Use Nehemiah's Aggressiveness in Nehemiah 2:20?
Why Did Nehemiah Charge Ezra to Read the Bible to the People in Nehemiah 8:1-8?
What's Really Happening in the Story of Esther?
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