"Go your way; eat the
fat and drink the sweet, and send portions unto him for whom
nothing is prepared; for this day is holy unto our Lord. Neither
be ye grieved, for the joy of the Lord is your strength."
(Nehemiah 8:10) - or stronghold - "The joy of the Lord
is your stronghold".
My intention is just to take
that last sentence - "The joy of the Lord is your
stronghold".
Really to get the meaning and
value of that statement, it is necessary, of course, to see it in
relation to the context; that is, in its setting in this whole
book: so we must approach it along that line.
An
End-Time Message
You are aware, I believe, that
Nehemiah is the last bit of inspired Hebrew history in the Bible.
Its position, of course, in the binding, is a little misleading,
but that is the fact. Until the year 1560, the books of Ezra and
Nehemiah were one book, and they were called the First and Second
Books of Ezra. They go together; they form what I have said is
the last piece of inspired Hebrew history in the Bible, i.e., in
the Old Testament. Now, of course, as you read these two books,
you find yourself in the presence of conditions which are not
difficult to discern in our own time. These books mark events and
conditions at the end of the 'old' dispensation. They cover about
one hundred and twenty years. Ezra and Nehemiah give the history
of that period. Zechariah and Haggai are the Prophets of the same
period. And during that one hundred and twenty years, beginnings
had been made to try to recover what had been lost when Israel
went into captivity. A remnant returned, and set to work to try
to rebuild, and then the effort faded, and a period of some years
marked inaction; and then another attempt was made, a little
progress was achieved, and another interruption, and another
period of inaction and silence and waiting. One period lasted for
sixty years with repeated attempts to recover the original
position and fulness, but by reason of a low state of spiritual
life, spiritual declension and weakness, there were these
interruptions, these periods of inaction, when the work of
recovery was suspended.
It is not difficult to see a
similarity between that dispensation and this. Remember the days
of fulness under Joshua - what days they were! Conquest and
possession and fulness! Remember the days under David - what days
they were! What a forty years of fulness and life! How the order
of God obtained! And now - look at all that has been lost.
We too, we Christians, look
back to beginnings in fulness, the great days of the Church at
the beginning, what fulness! what life! what Divine order! And
then - the same things happened. Many attempts have been made to
recover; movements have taken place, and then they have faded
out, For some reason they have been arrested; the whole thing has
been brought into suspense. And there are those periods in the
history of the Church when nothing was happening, all seemed to
be silent; and then a fresh movement, and for a time, things
seemed to be back on the way again; and again, interruption - and
that is the history of the Church. And I think that today there
is not a very great deal of difference between the situation as
in Nehemiah's time and our own. Lost fulness, ruined Divine
order, through spiritual declension, a low standard of spiritual
life.
The
Former Glory - And Now
The people who had this burden
upon their hearts are the people who are here before us in the
Book called the Book of Nehemiah. Look then into their hearts,
and you will get the clue to these words of this verse. First of
all, they were very conscious of the difference between what
things were formerly and what they were in their own day. That
comes out very clearly. There were old men who remembered, and
when they saw even this reproduction, wept; when they remembered
the former glory, they said that this was nothing like it was. Of
course, there are always a lot of people who are always living
sentimentally in a past, but, in this case it was quite true; and
while we do not want to be pessimistic and melancholy, there is
no doubt about it that conditions today are very different from
what they were at the beginning; and although we have not lived
in those days, we know well enough, both in the Word, and in our
hearts, that a great deal has been lost: the Church is not today
the effective, spiritually wealthy thing that it was at the
beginning.
And then these people were also
bitterly conscious of their own loss, their own spiritual loss.
You know that they had lost their language: and there, as they
were gathered together by Ezra and Nehemiah, they had to have a
large number of interpreters scattered among them, when the
Scriptures were read, because, in the seventy years, they had
lost their own language, and did not understand the Scriptures;
and as the Word was read in public, the interpreters had to say -
'That is that; the meaning of that is so-and-so': and they were
conscious, made keenly conscious, that they had lost their
understanding of the Word of God. It is a very paralysing thing
to realise that the Word of God is so very largely closed; there
is so little spiritual understanding of the things of God. You
know how baffling it is to realise that God's Word is not an open
book, and is not a disclosed revelation to the heart. Well, that
is how they were, a great deal had been lost in that way.
And then their desire, strong
as it was, and true as it was, to recover this testimony, this
former glory, this former fulness, was beset by enemies on every
side. You know the story - Sanballat, Tobiah and Geshem, and all
the rest - enemies all round! A little, weakened, despised,
crippled people, of so little account, and enemies everywhere.
"What do these feeble Jews?" All that, I say,
constituted a situation, a state of things, very disheartening,
and created a need for some refuge from despair, some refuge from
overwhelming sense of weakness and hopelessness, some stronghold,
into which to flee.
In that context we have these
encouraging words: - "Neither be ye grieved; for the joy of
the Lord is your strength". What does that mean, what does
the 'joy of the Lord,' mean? The Lord's joy - a
stronghold: that is the word here. 'The Lord's joy - a
stronghold'. Well, see it, as you may from the earthly
standpoint; but the Lord is evidently looking upon this in a
different way, from Heaven.
You know, it does not look like
it, but if you like to go to Isaiah 35:10 you will find these
words "And the ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come
with singing unto Zion and everlasting joy shall be upon their
heads...; and sorrow and sighing shall flee away." That was
a prophecy as to the return of this very remnant. The Lord sees
here a ransomed people. It was never any pleasure or joy to the
Lord that they went into exile - that broke His heart. If the cry
of the prophets echoed the heart of God, it was a broken heart,
when His people had to go into exile and captivity. And when the
Lord brought again out of captivity a people, be they but a small
people, a despised and weakened people, nevertheless, a people
whose heart was set upon His satisfaction, the Lord had
something that gave Him joy, and turned His sorrow away. The joy
of the Lord is in having a people, be it ever so small, so
despised, so weak, nevertheless, whose heart is set upon that
which is according to His heart. If you are in oneness with the
heart-beat of God, you may have many enemies, and you may have
many things to deplore and grieve over, in yourself, and in
yourselves, nevertheless, if you are one with the heart-purpose
of God, you are right in the way of the Lord's delight, the
Lord's pleasure, the Lord's joy; that can be a refuge for you. It
is a tremendous thing to have the assurance that, after all, weak
as we may be, imperfect as we may be, despised as we may be,
opposed and persecuted as we may be, nevertheless, we are on the
line of the Lord. Our hearts are for the Lord; it is what will
satisfy the Lord that is the only thing that concerns us.
Remember, that is a strong position. The Lord draws around such
His mighty defences: it is all right! You are in a strong
position if you are one with Him, no matter what you may be in
yourself.
A
Ransomed People
In having a ransomed people -
ah, yes, - not only in that initial sense, of being converted and
saved, but a people ransomed from what Babylon means! Ransomed
from those conditions which have emaciated and weakened and
spoiled His testimony through the ages. Ransomed from those
things - they are His people, but His people as a ransomed
people; not ransomed in that they have become His people,
but now as His people, they are ransomed from those things. That
is a special joy to the Lord. And to be with the Lord in that, is
to be in a strong position - "the joy of the Lord is your
stronghold".
A
Representative Remnant
But then, they were also a
representative people. You know the Lord has always found joy in
something that is representative of His mind. In every sphere it
is like that. Take the harvest - well, He ordained that in the
time of the harvest, they should go out in the fields and scan
the crops, every day, to discover, to see, the very first ripe
ears, and when they found, over the whole field, just a few ripe
ears, according to His ordinance, they gathered them, and brought
them into the presence of the Lord, as representing all the rest
that would come afterward; and there was joy, the joy of harvest,
in just the few ears. It was something taken account of by the
Lord - a simple Divine ordinance, but embodying a wonderful
principle. And you can extend that over other things, such as the
firstborn as precious to the Lord - it is representative. Now
today, He is the Firstborn from among the dead, and oh, the
preciousness of Him, as representative of all the sons that He is
going to bring. This remnant was representative of God's thought
and mind about His people; and they, therefore, were very
precious to Him, very precious to Him. Malachi, the last
one to prophesy, makes it very clear: 'They shall be my peculiar
treasure in that day that I do make'. Something specially
precious to the Lord. And, dear friends, it is a strong position
to be in, to be very precious to the Lord: as representative of
His mind; when there may be much otherwise, that He might have
some who do answer to His heart. 'My peculiar treasure' -
something the Lord gathers around, as though that were to be
looked after for Him.
The Lord Does
Not Lose Heart
Here in this, we have a
recovered testimony, and everywhere, everywhere it is made so
clear in the Word, the Lord has never given up; everything may
have seemed to have gone at times. Yes, there may be long periods
of silence, with nothing happening, but the Lord has not
abandoned it; He has not given up. And any sign of movement,
again and again, towards completion, restoration, finds Him
there, finds Him in that, finds Him interested, finds Him alive.
Here in Nehemiah, so far as would be, and could be, under those
Old Testament conditions, things were coming to completion, the
wall was being finished, the Temple was built, the testimony was
being recovered in representation, in type, and, well, here is
the spirit of it. "Go your way, eat the fat, and drink the
sweet, and send portions unto him for whom nothing is prepared;
for this day is holy unto our Lord". Holy unto our Lord -
something sacred to the Lord. "Neither be ye grieved; FOR
the joy of the Lord is your stronghold".
In a word, it is to be in a
strong position to be in what the Lord really desires and has His
heart set upon - His pleasure. Even if there is much to regret,
much for which to be sorry, and even if there is much opposition,
if there is that which the Lord really wants, it is a strong
position to be in. "The joy of the Lord is your
stronghold".
How the Lord
Sees Things
You see, the Lord sees
everything. The Lord did not just see those poor attempts, those
imperfect successes, but He saw them in the light of His end; He
saw, this was right in line with the end. Oh yes, this city may
be a comparatively poor thing, even when it is finished, and it
may fail again: but the Lord sees beyond this. It is a token, it
is a pointer, it is in the direct line of His eternal city. He
sees through this city to the greater City. You see, this is
symbolic of that ultimate, and although this will fail, ah, it is
on the way to the one that will never fail, and the Lord sees
through the token, to that which it betokens. We may only have
the token, and it may be poor and imperfect, but, it is precious
to the Lord because it is in line with what He is after, what He
has set His heart upon. And He has set His heart upon "the
city which, hath the foundations, whose builder and maker is
God."
There may be still much
disappointment, but if we have that which is true - in principle
- to God's purpose, although not full and perfect in expression,
but true in principle, and our hearts are set upon all that can
possibly be of that kind, Heaven will make perfect our
imperfections at last, and the perfect City will swallow up the
imperfect one.
God Needs Men
Now, I close by reminding you -
and here is a very practical application of this - Nehemiah was
not an official prophet, nor was he an official king, nor an
official priest; he was only a man among the people. The official
side of things was in much weakness. Kings had all gone wrong and
failed; the priests were corrupt: even Joshua the high priest,
was clothed in a filthy garment. The prophets, well, they had
done their work, and were seeking to do it, but there was much
weakness. But here is a man who is none of those
officially, just a man, and he rises up to take this whole thing
as the burden upon his heart, to bring God full satisfaction. My
point is this, what God wants is men, who will take the
thing on their hearts. You may not have official designations,
you may not belong to the official ecclesiastical, or political
class, but you can be a man for God; you can be a person
who takes this on your heart. You may meet the disheartenments
that Nehemiah had to encounter, you may find there is much
slackness amongst the Lord's people, as he found, but he
stands out as a man of courage, a man of faith, and he brought
the testimony as far on to recovery as ever it was brought at the
end of that dispensation. If we could catch something of the
meaning of this - "the joy of the Lord is your
strength", it would deliver us from a great deal. That is,
let me change the word, 'the pleasure of.the Lord', that comes
from Isaiah 53 "and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper
in his hand": that is only another way of saying 'the joy of
the Lord'. To be in the Lord's pleasure because in line with the
Lord's end, will save us from much. You see what it meant here.
"Go your way" - what they might have done and said - 'I
have lost my appetite; I am not inclined to eat anything, or
drink anything: I am going away to be miserable': 'it is all a
poor look-out'!
But mark you, here it is; you
are in the way of the Lord's purpose; therefore, eat the meat,
drink the sweet; send portions to those for whom nothing is
prepared. This joy of the Lord is a great delivering thing from
ourselves, and our own troubles. It turns us out to others. It
releases us for service. We are no good in service if we are
miserable; that is, if we are self-occupied with our own
troubles, whatever they may be, spiritual or anything else. If we
are turned in on ourselves, that cripples us for service. It is
only when we come into line with what the Lord is after, really
in line with that, the Lord's joy, the Lord's pleasure, that we
are any use to anyone else. "Send portions" - great
delivering from self-occupation, to be occupied with the good of
others - send portions. And it is a command - "Neither be ye
grieved". That is not just a kindly exhortation, a little
bit of trying to stimulate us to be a little more cheerful.
"Neither be ye grieved" - we are commanded to rejoice
in the Lord. "Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I
say, Rejoice!"
First published in "A Witness and A
Testimony" magazine, Jan-Feb 1957, Vol 35-1