Nehemiah
Old Testament book review
31 Aug 2024
DC Yang
Overview
- Events that took place ca. 444 BC, 12 years after Ezra.
- Thought to be written 445–420 BC, by Nehemiah.
- Originally the second part of the joint narrative of Ezra-Nehemiah, about the fulfillment of Jeremiah's prophecies.
- Zerubbabel rebuilds the temple.
- Ezra rebuilds a Torah-reading community.
"second Moses, revaluing the Law" - Nehemiah rebuilds the city walls.
"second Joshua, revaluing the land"
-
Recurring motif
- Persian King is moved by God
to send a leader to Jerusalem.
(offering resources and support) - The leader faces opposition to rebuilding.
- The leader overcomes the opposition
but is led to a strange and anti-climactic ending.
- Persian King is moved by God
In the words of numerous theologians,
including Bryan O'Neal
of Moody Bible Institute.
Nehemiah comes
to Jerusalem [⇥Ch 3]
- Nehemiah, the cupbearer of King Artaxerxes,
was a man of prayer and he prayed passionately
for his people. - Artaxerxes gives Nehemiah permission
to go to Jerusalem and rebuild its walls.- also gives him authority, armed escorts,
and resources for construction.
- also gives him authority, armed escorts,
- Gates rebuilt: Fish, "Old", Valley, Dung, Fountain,
Water, Horse, Inspection, Sheep. - Other structures: Broad Wall, Tower of the Ovens,
the Angle, Tower on Ophel.
"Nehemiah
the governor"
[10:1]
Opposition [⇥Ch 6]
- Like the preceding prophets in the exile
(Zerubbabel & Ezra), Nehemiah faces opposition.- by the descendents of those who opposed Zerubbabel and Ezra.
- 3 leaders: Tobiah, Sanballat, Geshem.
- Nehemiah tells the opposers that they have
no part in Jerusalem. - Nehemiah goes on to complete the city walls,
arming the builders and appointing half of them
as guards by rotation. [Ch 4]
Aside: According to prophet Zechariah,
who lived a few decades before,
the New Jerusalem of the Kingdom of God
would be a city without walls. [Zec 2:4–5]
God's presence would surround it,
and people from all nations would come
and join the people of the covenant.

Upon completion [⇥Ch 12]
- The wall took 52 days to complete.
- 42,360 exiles return to Jerusalem.
- Ezra and Nehemiah bring about spiritual renewal
among the people. [Ch 9] - Nehemiah's reforms
-
Public reading of the law
(7-day Torah-reading marathon) - Festival of shelters (booths) observed
- National confession of sin
- Israel's vow of faithfulness
- Dedication of the wall
-
Public reading of the law
Aftermath [Ch 13]
- Nehemiah takes some time off to visit King Artaxerxes.
- He comes back to discover that ...
- The temple had been neglected.
Tobiah was allowed to creep into its facilities. - The Israelites do not honor the sabbath.
- The Israelites (in particular, the grandson
of the high priest Eliashib) marry Gentiles
who do not believe in God.
- The temple had been neglected.
- Nehemiah repeatedly (x8) beseeches God
to remember his efforts thus far.
Summing up
- A series of anti-climactic moments
(continuing from Ezra) are placed there intentionally.- Ezra-Nehemiah begins with hope,
but ends in disappointment. - The book points out a need for
a holistic transformation of one's heart
in their commitment to love and obey God.
- Ezra-Nehemiah begins with hope,
- The book leaves us near the end of the OT division of historical books, urging us to continue reading toward the wisdom and prophetic books.
- We are to find out what God is going to do to fulfill his promises of the covenant.
Review of Nehemiah
By ChangMo “David” Yang
Review of Nehemiah
Review of Nehemiah
- 18