Skip to content
Home » (Through The Bible) – Nehemiah and Esther: Zac Poonen (Transcript)

(Through The Bible) – Nehemiah and Esther: Zac Poonen (Transcript)

Full text of Zac Poonen’s teaching on ‘NEHEMIAH AND ESTHER’ which is part of the popular series called Through The Bible.

Listen to the MP3 Audio here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Zac Poonen – Bible Teacher

Let’s turn today this evening to Nehemiah. In our last session we were considering Ezra, and I mentioned that there were these two movements of Israel described in great detail in the Old Testament. One was their movement from Egypt to Canaan, which speaks of our personal walk with God, coming out of sin, the devil’s grip out of the world, through the Red Sea of baptism, into a life of victory over sin. It relates to our personal life.

The other I said was the movement of God’s people from Babylon to Jerusalem. And Babylon speaks of a corrupt Christianity. I just want to mention one thing here, that very often I have noticed that people think that certain denominations are Babylon, and that certain other denominations are Jerusalem. Now I don’t subscribe to that view.

I believe that anyone — any Christian who lives after the flesh is really building Babylon. Anyone who is seeking his own, even if he is sitting in the most spiritual denomination in the world, is actually building Babylon.

And to build the body of Christ, that true Jerusalem that the Bible says, the heavenly Jerusalem, requires a selflessness, the Spirit of Christ where we are concerned with the glory of God, where we no longer live for ourselves. And that is the thing that characterizes these men. Many people have made the mistake of thinking they leave some dead system and have left Babylon. I wish it were that easy. It’s not that easy.

Babylon dwells deep within us, the spirit of Babylon. See, Babylon is a commercial system, and the principle of all commercial systems is the principle of profit, of gain for myself. And as long as a man lives by that principle of what can I gain out of Christianity, what can I gain out of doing this for the Lord, what can I gain out of joining this church, what can I gain out of joining this organization, what can I gain by working here, he is motivated by the principle of Babylon.

Whereas Jerusalem is a city of sacrifice. It’s the opposite of business. It’s what David said, ‘I will not offer to the Lord that which cost me nothing.’ (2 Samuel 24:24) And wherever a man is motivated by that principle, he is motivated by the principle of Jerusalem. And God may have somebody like that in what you think is a dead denomination, a man who lives selflessly for Christ.

So I’m talking about when we seek to build the body of Christ, it’s very important that we gather together people who have understood this principle of sacrifice. Otherwise we shall just build another system like so many of the other so-called separated assemblies which today are just as dead, sometimes more dead than the old denominations. This is the state of affairs today in Christendom.

And that is because people have thought if I move from here to here, I’ve come out of Babylon. It’s not true. It’s a spiritual system. We need to understand that.

And here was this movement of God’s people from Babylon to Jerusalem, and we saw that very few people really came out of that system. And Nehemiah was also one of those people who were involved in this movement.

The temple had already been built. This is a time 70 years after Zerubbabel and Joshua had gone out to build the temple, the prophecy of Haggai and Zechariah, and about 13 years after Ezra. Ezra and Nehemiah lived around the same time, but Nehemiah came a little later.

Nehemiah’s burden — see the burden of Haggai, Zechariah, Joshua and Zerubbabel was the building of the temple. The burden of Ezra was to teach the word of God. And the burden of Nehemiah was to build the city properly with walls and organize the city and reestablish the people in the covenant that they had gone back from and bring a reformation among the people.

And here we read in NEHEMIAH CHAPTER 1, in verses 1 to 3, he was living in Susa, the capital of this world power those days. And that is King Artaxerxes was the king and the Babylonian empire was over. It was the Medo-Persian empire now. And he was living in the capital city of Susa.

And one of his brothers — one of the brothers means a fellow Israeli came from Judah, verse 2. And Nehemiah, you see here, has a concern. Hanani, this man who came did not offer Nehemiah some information. Nehemiah had a concern to find out what is the state of Jerusalem. Is something being done? He had a concern to see whether God’s house and God’s city was being built.

And this is what I want to say is the primary characteristic of any man whom God can use. God does not use a man who has no concern. And he asked Hanani, how are things there? How are things going on there?

And Hanani said, well, the walls are broken down, the gates are burnt with fire. In the book of Isaiah chapter 60 and verse 18, the walls are called the walls of salvation and the gates of praise. The walls speak of separation from the world and of security. There is a security when you have a wall, there is a separation from the rest of the world. And God desires that the church be separate from the world. That’s the meaning of these walls around Jerusalem. And they have to be high walls so that a worldly minded person cannot easily be a part of your church.

If a worldly-minded person can easily be a part of your church, we’d say the walls are not very high. In Jerusalem, it’s difficult to be a part of it.