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Defeating Discouragement
Topic: #3 of 154 for Sermons on Nehemiah
Scripture:
Nehemiah 4:1-4:23
Sermon Series: One Holy Passion
Denomination: Evangelical Free
Date Added: March 2001
Audience: Believer Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
One Holy Passion
Nehemiah 4
March 11, 2001
“Defeating Discouragement”
“The Bible tells us to love our neighbors and to love our enemies,” said G.K. Chesterton, “probably because they are generally the same people!” In the case of the Jews rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem, this was certainly true. In the course of this chapter, we come to find out that the people of Jerusalem are surrounded by hostile enemies on all four sides coming at them from all four directions—it is their neighbors who do their dead-level best to discourage them from continuing the work that God has called them to.
As we read this chapter in a moment, one thing that jumps out at us is the fact that, once again, the Bible doesn’t gloss over the reality of the situation. Hey, these were real flesh-and-blood people here who experienced the same range of emotions and physical sensations that we do. They were people who could praise God and get excited about His working in and through them, and the next day could fall into discouragement. They could eagerly volunteer to be a part of a tremendous project, but then when the project got going they’d come home and nurse muscles and joints as sore as ours get when we tackle a building project.
Let’s read the account together, through verse 14 for now:
PRAYER
How we deal with adversity says more about our character than most anything else. You want to know what a person is really like? Watch them when things go wrong; when they are imposed upon; when they are made to wait; when someone cuts them off in traffic; when they are tired and achy. Some people whine while other people shine. Some people learn from their situation, while others burn with resentment. We can learn a whole lot from Nehemiah about how to deal with discouragement in the work of God.
Sources of Discouragement:
1. Ridicule :1-3
Sanballat is ticked off. He, remember, is a governor of a nearby territory who no doubt feared the potential of a strong Jerusalem emerging as a threat to his territory. Now it is obvious that these Jews are serious about the project, and Sanballat is steamed about it. And so he resorts to the tool of a loser: ridicule! Thomas Carlyle said, “Ridicule is the language of the devil”; indeed, the Bible indicates that Satan is a liar and an accuser of the brethren. It is his business to deceive and discourage, and make no mistake about it: while Sanballat and Tobiah might have been the mouthpieces, Satan was the one who was behind this whole deal! And sometimes ridicule works! Let me read to you briefly from an article that appeared in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on January 7 of this year. It is written by a fellow who will remain nameless but who is a professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Kansas; he had previously spent twenty years in Pittsburgh at the Carnegie Science Center. What has him all worked up is the proposal to change science teaching standards in Pennsylvania public schools to allow for the possibility that naturalistic, Darwinian explanations cannot account for the creation of life on earth.
Now, before I quote from the article, what would you expect from a scientist? Wouldn’t you expect some reasoning which would defend his position? Wouldn’t you think that a learned man such as this would take at least a portion of the article to reinforce his belief? You’d
Nehemiah 4
March 11, 2001
“Defeating Discouragement”
“The Bible tells us to love our neighbors and to love our enemies,” said G.K. Chesterton, “probably because they are generally the same people!” In the case of the Jews rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem, this was certainly true. In the course of this chapter, we come to find out that the people of Jerusalem are surrounded by hostile enemies on all four sides coming at them from all four directions—it is their neighbors who do their dead-level best to discourage them from continuing the work that God has called them to.
As we read this chapter in a moment, one thing that jumps out at us is the fact that, once again, the Bible doesn’t gloss over the reality of the situation. Hey, these were real flesh-and-blood people here who experienced the same range of emotions and physical sensations that we do. They were people who could praise God and get excited about His working in and through them, and the next day could fall into discouragement. They could eagerly volunteer to be a part of a tremendous project, but then when the project got going they’d come home and nurse muscles and joints as sore as ours get when we tackle a building project.
Let’s read the account together, through verse 14 for now:
PRAYER
How we deal with adversity says more about our character than most anything else. You want to know what a person is really like? Watch them when things go wrong; when they are imposed upon; when they are made to wait; when someone cuts them off in traffic; when they are tired and achy. Some people whine while other people shine. Some people learn from their situation, while others burn with resentment. We can learn a whole lot from Nehemiah about how to deal with discouragement in the work of God.
Sources of Discouragement:
1. Ridicule :1-3
Sanballat is ticked off. He, remember, is a governor of a nearby territory who no doubt feared the potential of a strong Jerusalem emerging as a threat to his territory. Now it is obvious that these Jews are serious about the project, and Sanballat is steamed about it. And so he resorts to the tool of a loser: ridicule! Thomas Carlyle said, “Ridicule is the language of the devil”; indeed, the Bible indicates that Satan is a liar and an accuser of the brethren. It is his business to deceive and discourage, and make no mistake about it: while Sanballat and Tobiah might have been the mouthpieces, Satan was the one who was behind this whole deal! And sometimes ridicule works! Let me read to you briefly from an article that appeared in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on January 7 of this year. It is written by a fellow who will remain nameless but who is a professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Kansas; he had previously spent twenty years in Pittsburgh at the Carnegie Science Center. What has him all worked up is the proposal to change science teaching standards in Pennsylvania public schools to allow for the possibility that naturalistic, Darwinian explanations cannot account for the creation of life on earth.
Now, before I quote from the article, what would you expect from a scientist? Wouldn’t you expect some reasoning which would defend his position? Wouldn’t you think that a learned man such as this would take at least a portion of the article to reinforce his belief? You’d
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