Sermon's Archive

Search Sermons

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

1/20/13 - Epiphany 3 - Nehemiah 8:1-10

YOU NEED IT

Eight Straight Days

            Eight straight days.  For eight straight days God’s Old Testament people gathered around the Word of God.  And for hours on end they listened to those words and they worshiped with those words and they even cried over those words.  Why?  Because they hadn’t heard those words in a long, long time.  And they needed those words.  They needed them more than they had ever known. 

            These people were in Jerusalem for these eight days: a city that was surrounded by brand new walls, a city whose governor at the time was a man named Nehemiah, a city whose high priest was a man named Ezra.  140 years before, the Babylonian armies had come in, knocked down the walls of the city, burned down the temple of the Lord, and deported the people of Israel to another country.  But the grandchildren and great grandchildren of these people were back, the temple had been rebuilt, and the walls had just now been reconstructed a century and a half later.  And they Israelites were overjoyed!  Their capital city was finally intact once again and now they could start to become the nation they once had been!  And to celebrate this event, God’s people observed one of the three main festivals of Old Testament worship life: the Feast of Tabernacles. 

            The Feast of Tabernacles was an eight day celebration during which the people lived in tents and lean-tos made out of leaves and branches.  That’s what “tabernacle” means: it means “tent.”  And they did this so that they would remember how their ancestors had lived in tents and lean-tos when they had come out of the land of Egypt centuries and centuries before.  For the first seven days they were supposed to live like this, but then on the final day of this festival they were to gather together in a grand celebration, praising the Lord for what he had given them.  And so during the time Nehemiah on the first day of this festival for the first time in 1000 years, this is what happened: “All the people assembled as one man in the square before the Water Gate. They told Ezra the scribe to bring out the Book of the Law of Moses, which the LORD had commanded for Israel.  So on the first day of the seventh month Ezra the priest brought the Law before the assembly, which was made up of men and women and all who were able to understand.  He read it aloud from daybreak till noon as he faced the square before the Water Gate in the presence of the men, women and others who could understand. And all the people listened attentively to the Book of the Law.”

            Did you notice how long they listened to God’s Word being read?  From daybreak until noon!  For six hours the people stood there outside listening to Ezra read from the Bible!  But that wasn’t the last time they listened to God’s Word during this festival.  The story continues later on saying, “Day after day, from the first day to the last, Ezra read from the Book of the Law of God” (v.18).  They listened to God’s Word for eight straight days!  But even more impressive than the time they spent listening to the Word of God is the fact that they wanted to!  They weren’t forced to listen to God’s Word.  They weren’t required to listen to God’s Word.  They were the ones who asked that it be read!  “They told Ezra the scribe to bring out the Book of the Law of Moses.”  It wasn’t Ezra’s idea; it was their idea!  And so for six hours on the first day and then day after day throughout the festival, the people listened attentively to the Word of God.  They couldn’t get enough of it!  They wanted more!  They needed more. 

We Can’t Find the Time

            In my office upstairs I have at least nine Bibles of various translations in various languages.  In the conference room upstairs there are about 25 more.  In our house there are probably another ten Bibles - kid and adult - lying around.  And you undoubtedly have a few in your home too, don’t you?  And on top of all that, we can get the Bible on the internet instantly.  Dozens of different English translations in a split second.  And if you have a Kindle or a Nook or an ipad or any other hand held device, you can get free Bibles in a couple seconds that you carry around in your pocket.  We have access to God’s Word at any time of day in any place.  So have often do you take advantage of that?  How often do you actually read and listen to God’s Word that is right there at your fingertips?  The Israelites during the time of Nehemiah didn’t have instant access to the Word of God.  But they craved it!  They wanted it!  They needed it!  And when they got it they couldn’t get enough of it!  Do you crave God’s Word?  Do you want it so badly that you would stand outside for hours just to hear it?  Do you need it so much that you would take an eight day vacation just to be around it?  Or don’t you need it that much at all?

            There are some nights when I’m exhausted from the day’s work.  And when it comes time for me to read my Bible on my own for my own personal benefit, sometimes I convince myself that I don’t really “need” to read it right now, what I really “need” is sleep.  And so I crawl into bed and leave God’s Word unopened.  And then there are other times when I really need to spend more time digging deeper into God’s Word to make sure that I understand it correctly, but then I tell myself that what I really “need” is to get these other things done and God’s Word can wait.  And there are still other times when I get so busy with the details of this life - those projects that I “need” to get done and those deadlines that I “need” to meet and those people that I “need” to see and those activities that I “need” to do - that reading and listening to God’s Word doesn’t even cross my mind as something that I “need” at all.

            Do you feel the “need” to read your Bible every day or is it something that you can easily let slip by?  Do you feel that you really “need” to go to Bible study today after our worship service or do you have more important things that you “need” to get done?  Do you think that you really “need” to show up to a worship service every single week or do you have other “needs” that far outweigh the spoken Word of God in this building? 

            For thousands of years God himself spoke through Christian men to produce the Bible that we have today.  And for thousands of years more God himself has worked to preserve that Word in pristine condition so that generation after generation can hear and read and learn and know of his love.  Our God has hand-crafted a five course meal for us that he has laid out in the words of the Bible available any time we want it.  Do we crave that food?  Do we want that food and need that food?  Or do we pick at it?  Do we eat that feast on our plates like we are starving to death or do we treat it like a little child might treat the food his mother worked so hard to prepare?  “I’m not hungry.” 

            Our Lord has worked hard to prepare his Word for us.  In fact, he died in the process.  And so it does not make him too happy when we act like we don’t need that food at all and we let it just sit there with an “I’m not all that hungry” kind of attitude.  In fact, after a while, the Lord tends to take that food away if all people do is pick at it.  He took it away from his own Old Testament people a number of times.  And if he takes away his Word, how can faith be fed?  And if faith cannot be fed, how can faith survive?  And if faith in your Savior cannot survive, how can you expect to end up in heaven?

What We Really Need

            Then Nehemiah the governor, Ezra the priest and scribe, and the Levites who were instructing the people said to them all, “This day is sacred to the LORD your God. Do not mourn or weep.” For all the people had been weeping as they listened to the words of the Law.  Nehemiah said, “Go and enjoy choice food and sweet drinks, and send some to those who have nothing prepared. This day is sacred to our Lord. Do not grieve, for the joy of the LORD is your strength.”

            Why do you think the people were weeping as they heard the words of the Law of Moses being read?  The people were crying because they realized how bad they had been, how many commands they had broken, and how often they had sinned against their Lord.  But Nehemiah said, “No!  Don’t cry!  This is not a day of sadness but a day of happiness!  God’s Word is once again being read and you, God’s people, are once again hearing it!  Do not be sad; the joy of the Lord is your strength!”  The joy of the Lord was their strength.  He was happy with them, not angry.  He was thrilled that they were listening to his Word, not frustrated.  And he forgave them.  He forgave them for the years of neglect and the decades of selfishness and the generations and generations of rebellion.  He forgave them for everything.  And that’s also what they heard being read.  Since Ezra was reading from the book of the law of Moses - the first five books of the Bible - the people not only would have heard commands, they would have also heard about the special Prophet who was to come from their own people many years later.  They would have heard about all of the sacrifices that were daily announcements of the sacrifice of their Savior yet to come.  They would have heard about the promise given to Abraham that through his Descendant all nations on earth would be blessed.  They would have heard about how God preserved the line of the Savior throughout the centuries, how God directed everything in this world to set up the coming of the Messiah, and how he had promised the Savior to the very first human beings on this earth, Adam and Eve.  The Israelites would have heard a lot about their Savior in those first five books of the Bible.  And that’s exactly what they needed to hear.

            That’s exactly what we need to hear.  We need to hear those hundreds of prophecies in the Old Testament about Jesus coming into this world.  We need to hear about the stories of Jesus himself: his birth, his miracles, his teachings, his healing, his thoughts, his attitudes, his emotions, his passion.  We need to hear about Jesus’ life: what he did, what he went through, what he suffered, what he accomplished.  We need to hear about his love for us and his compassion for us and his sacrifice for us.  We need to hear about his resurrection from the dead and his ascension into heaven.  We need to hear about his rule and his authority and his guarantee.  We need to hear all of that.  And we need to hear it all the time.  Which is why when you come to a worship service, we repeat the same truths week in and week out.  There aren’t a lot of new things you learn in a worship service because it is the same forgiveness and the same salvation and same eternal life that you’ve heard before.  But we need to hear it again.  We need to be comforted by it again.
       
So Many Opportunities

            But don’t just wait to hear it here on a Sunday morning.  You have that opportunity every day when you open up your own Bible at home.  You have that opportunity multiple times a week in a number of Bible classes here at church.  You’ll have the opportunity on Wednesday evenings starting next month during the season of Lent.  You have an unique opportunity this morning once again as we gather together for the Lord’s Supper.  Because here at the altar we receive our Savior’s love, his body, his blood, and his victory once again.  Here at the altar we receive the real forgiveness of sins, the same forgiveness he won on Calvary, given to us in tangible form.   That’s why the Lord’s Supper is the third “Mark of the Church.”  The gospel in Word, the gospel in baptism, the gospel in the Lord’s Supper. 

            So eat it up!  All of it.  Here in the Lord’s Supper, here from the pulpit, here in a Bible study, there in your own Bibles at home.  Because that is what you need!  You don’t need much of anything in this life.  A little food, a little water, a little shelter… but most importantly, you need God’s Word.  That is the only way your faith in your Savior grows and builds and strengthens.  That is the only connection with Christ you have.  That is the only means through which you are saved.  You need it.  You need it.  I need it.  And we actually have it.  A five course feast prepared by God himself.  Don’t let it go to waste.

            Amen.