Intimacy With God
The Work of Revitalization
Yahweh’s Comfort
The Call of Prayer
We sometimes feel anger or despair rather than grief at the sin of God’s people. Our anger or despair is often a way of coping with our grief, but not the best way. We must learn to feel grief before we express anger. It is better to pour out our grief to God, as Nehemiah did. Notice the order in Chapters 1 and 2: first grief, then prayer, then action! This was not disabling grief, but enabling grief; it was not self-indulgent grief, but grief that resulted in sacrificial and productive action.
What a great insight into the inner life of Nehemiah. As Matthew Henry wrote, ‘he records not only the works of his hands, but the workings of his heart’.
What happens when we pray intensively, extensively and expressively is that we finally come to form the prayer we really want to pray, that is deep within us, and needs time and energy to come to the surface.
Sins of omission (things we fail to do), lead to sins of commission (things we do that are wrong). It is not enough to recognise difficult circumstances; we must also learn to recognise sin.
It is wonderful to see that for Nehemiah prayer was not a system, nor was it a mechanical process; rather, it expressed the relationship that God had established with his people, and that Nehemiah and God’s people had with their God.
The Answer to Prayer
We sometimes think of prayer as an escape from the world. We sometimes use prayer as a way of avoiding our responsibility for the world. Nehemiah prayed about the world and its problems. And his prayer made him alert to how he might play a part in God’s answer to his prayer.