𝑳𝒆𝒕’𝒔 𝒔𝒕𝒂𝒓𝒕 𝒘𝒊𝒕𝒉 𝒐𝒖𝒓 𝒏𝒆𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒃𝒐𝒓𝒉𝒐𝒐𝒅 .
Nehemiah 3:28 - Above the horse gate repaired the priests, everyone over against his own house.
“Everyone over against his house.” The priests and others (verses.
10, 23, 29, 30), whose houses were near the wall, repaired that part of the
wall opposite each of their dwellings. This suggests an important rule for
Christian workers. Let every one do the work which lies nearest to him. Let him
begin with his own family. No amount of good work elsewhere will compensate for
neglect there. Christian parents can do their best for the community by
training their children well. Then, as ability and opportunity permit, let each
seek the good of his dependents, friends, neighbours, the congregation he
worships, the city or town, the country, the Church at large, the world.
There is a reason for doing this order-
1. That which is nearest is usually best known. Its needs
can be best perceived, and how to meet them.
2. It appeals most powerfully to our hearts. Partly because
best known. The eye affects the heart (Lamentations 3:51). Partly because of
the natural affections that belong to the closer relationships. Now the
emotions of the heart are both a call to duty and a qualification for its
efficient performance. Words spoken, gifts bestowed, with feeling, are most
powerful for good.
3. It has the first claim upon us. God has placed men in
close relationships and proximity so that they may be mutually helpful as the occasion
arises. We violate the Divine order when we care for the distant to the neglect
of the near.
4. We can most easily reach it.
5. We may hope for more success in dealing with it. Because
our work will be with more knowledge more heart, and less waste of resources;
and will carry with it the weight of known character, of personal sympathy, and
the thousand influences that spring from family life, friendship, neighborhood,
etc. A man can nowhere work with so much effect as “over against his house.”
6. In caring for it we may be most effectually protecting
our houses. As those priests and others who built up the piece of wall nearest
them. There are perils to us and our families which may be averted by doing our
duty to those nearest to us; perils from the sullen enmity which indifference
and neglect may generate in them; perils from their ignorance, grossness, or
vice; perils from their diseases, etc.
7. When each does the work nearest to him, the whole work
will be most surely and rapidly done. Christians have yet thoroughly to follow
this order. Nevertheless, it must be admitted that there is much to be done
which cannot thus be reached. There were many parts of the wall at Jerusalem
which were opposite the house of no one, or of none able to repair them, and
there were many able and willing to assist in the work whose dwellings were not
in Jerusalem, or, if in the city, not near the wall. And so they had to labour
at a distance from their houses. In like manner, there is much Christian work
to be done where no Christians exist, or none capable of doing it; and so there
is ample room for those organizations which enable the benevolent to do good at
a distance, and even in far-off lands.
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