Nehemiah: Rebuilding A CommunityThe Poor
Nehemiah 5:1-19
The Poor (v. 1-6)
Last week the problems were from the outside
This week, the problem is closer to home
Fellow Jews taking advantage of their own brothers and sisters
Inequality and Injustice
There was a great “outcry” from men and women (v. 1)
Because both were involved in this building process
The word “outcry” is the same word used in Ex. 3:9...
Nehemiah: Rebuilding A Community
The Poor
Nehemiah 5:1-19
The Poor (v. 1-6)
- Last week the problems were from the outside
- This week, the problem is closer to home
- Fellow Jews taking advantage of their own brothers and sisters
- There was a great “outcry” from men and women (v. 1)
- Because both were involved in this building process
- The word “outcry” is the same word used in Ex. 3:9
- It affected 3 different groups of people:
- Workers with no land ownership (v. 2)
- Large families needing to buy food
- Prices increased during times of famine
- Families were working on the wall and were not able to earn money through normal employment
- Landowners forced to borrow for grain (v. 3)
- The land was not producing enough because of a famine
- Interest rate was adding to their financial problems
- Those unable to pay the taxes due (v. 4)
- King Artaxerxes was still getting his during this time
- Forced to sell sons & daughters into slavery
Dealing with the Issue (v. 7-13)
- Nehemiah takes time before speaking (v. 7)
- Knows he needs to let his anger subside
- Deals with the issue biblically
- Usury: charging excess interest
- Called a “large” meeting
- All parties together to get this resolved
- Work stopped on the wall
- Jews in slavery were bought back only to have their brothers enslave them again
- Nehemiah leaves them without words
- And he explains why it is wrong (v. 9) (Deut. 10:12)
- Nehemiah calls them to stop the usury and return what was gained off the backs of the poor
- To their credit, they acknowledge their wrong and agree to correct them
- Nehemiah calls the priests to bind the agreement
- “Shook out the folds of my robe”= God will take away from those that disobey
- They all praised the Lord!
Setting the Example (v. 14-19)
- Nehemiah had been made the governor of Judah
- He was able to take his share for the title but never did
- He and his men focused on the work at hand and did not further tax the people
- Instead, they opened up their house and resources to serve others
- Ends with a statement about his right actions
- Not that God needed reminding
So What?
- External forces could not stop the progress, but internal strife brought things to a stand still
- A story of Inequality and Injustice
- Do we view ourselves as equals with those in our community or above those in need?
- Does the injustice others face cause us concern or are we comfortable because it is their problem?
- Unity allows God’s plans to move forward
Meditation Verse: Phil. 2:4
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