Thursday, August 2, 2012

Do you Identify or Deny! (Nehemiah 1:6 Part 2)




… let your ear be attentive and your eyes open, to hear the prayer of your servant that I now pray before you day and night for the people of Israel your servants, confessing the sins of the people of Israel, which we have sinned against you. Even I and my father’s house have sinned.

THE STUDY:

          Continuing on in verse 6 we read how Nehemiah inserted himself into the situation. Even though he was a leader, Nehemiah emphasized his identification with the people and with their sins. Note that Nehemiah used the pronoun “we” and not “they,” identifying himself with the sins of a generation he didn’t even know. Leaders must not consider themselves superior to others; admission of fault will not ruin effectiveness. Corporate solidarity is an important part of the Old Testament view of things, although not to the extent of minimizing individual responsibility. Each of God’s children is a part of the believing community and is identified with that community. Nehemiah identified with his people in humility as Jesus did at his baptism. Even though Jesus did not sin, he so identified with the people who were coming to repent of their sins that he insisted on being baptized by John the Baptist.[1] It would have been easy to look back and blame his ancestors for the reproach of Jerusalem, but Nehemiah looked within and blamed himself! “We have sinned! We have dealt very corruptly!”[2] This is a character that is not found in our culture today.
                  
WHAT WE CAN WALK AWAY WITH ….

  • We walk away with the understanding that the body of Christ is just that “a body!” When the foot does something wrong the rest of the body feels it or knows it. When the one hand does something good the entire body is praised for it. The same can be said of the other hand. If it does something wrong the entire body is feels or knows about the punishment. Identifying with the body is what is expected by God not denying.

APPLICATION:

          A few years ago, when the “media scandals” brought great reproach to the church, Warren Wiersby wrote in his book The Integrity Crisis:

To begin with, the integrity crisis involves more than a few people who were accused of moral and financial improprieties. The integrity crisis involves the whole church. I am not saying that people didn’t sin, nor am I preaching “collective guilt,” whatever that is. I only want to emphasize that, in the body of Christ, we belong to one another, we affect one another, and we can’t escape one another. The press did not create the crisis, the church did; and the church will have to solve it (Nashville: Oliver-Nelson, 1988; p. 18).[3]

          Today, we can be like the rest of the world and look to blame someone else for the problems in our families, workplace, or churches. Or we can identify with these entities (family, workplace, church) and call on the one who can restore, heal, or do greater things than we could have ever imagined. We know what Nehemiah did, but what will we do today? Identify or Deny?  

Blessings my friends
Pastor Rod

[1] Breneman, M. (1993). Vol. 10: Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther (electronic ed.). The New American Commentary (172). Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers.
[2] Wiersbe, W. W. (1996). Be Determined. “Be” Commentary Series (18). Wheaton, IL: Victor Books.
[3] Wiersbe, W. W. (1996). Be Determined. “Be” Commentary Series (18). Wheaton, IL: Victor Books.

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