Prophets and Kings
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 55: Heathen Plots
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In response to Sanballat's invitation, Nehemiah wrote that he would
not go down to meet with them or stop the work of building the wall.
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Sanballat and his confederates dared not make open war upon
the Jews; but with increasing malice they continued their secret efforts to
discourage, perplex, and injure them. The wall about Jerusalem was rapidly
approaching completion. When it should be finished and its gates set up, these
enemies of Israel could not hope to force an entrance into the city. They were
the more eager, therefore, to stop the work without further delay. At last they
devised a plan by which they hoped to draw Nehemiah from his station, and while
they had him in their power, to kill or imprison him. {PK 653.1}
Pretending to desire a compromise of the opposing parties,
they sought a conference with Nehemiah, and invited him to meet them in a
village on the plain of Ono. But enlightened by the Holy Spirit as to their
real purpose, he refused. "I sent messengers unto them," he writes,
"saying, I am [654] doing a great work, so that I
cannot come down: why should the work cease, whilst I leave it, and come down
to you?" But the tempters were persistent. Four times they sent a message
of similar import, and each time they received the same answer. {PK 653.2}
Finding this scheme unsuccessful, they resorted to a more
daring stratagem. Sanballat sent Nehemiah a messenger bearing an open letter
which said: "It is reported among the heathen, and Gashmu saith it, that
thou and the Jews think to rebel: for which cause thou buildest the wall, that
thou mayest be their king. . . . And thou hast also appointed
prophets to preach of thee at Jerusalem, saying, There is a king in Judah: and
now shall it be reported to the king according to these words. Come now
therefore, and let us take counsel together." {PK 654.1}
Had the reports mentioned been actually circulated, there
would have been cause for apprehension; for they would soon have been carried
to the king, whom a slight suspicion might provoke to the severest measures.
But Nehemiah was convinced that the letter was wholly false, written to arouse
his fears and draw him into a snare. This conclusion was strengthened by the
fact that the letter was sent open, evidently that the people might read the
contents, and become alarmed and intimidated. {PK 654.2}
He promptly returned the answer. "There are no such
things done as thou sayest, but thou feignest them out of thine own
heart." Nehemiah was not ignorant of Satan's devices. He knew that these
attempts were made in order to weaken the hands of the builders and thus
frustrate their efforts. [655] {PK 654.3}
Again and again had Satan been defeated; and now, with
deeper malice and cunning, he laid a still more subtle and dangerous snare for
the servant of God. Sanballat and his companions hired men who professed to be
the friends of Nehemiah, to give him evil counsel as the word of the Lord. The
chief one engaged in this iniquitous work was Shemaiah, a man previously held
in good repute by Nehemiah. This man shut himself up in a chamber near the
sanctuary as if fearing that his life was in danger. The temple was at this
time protected by walls and gates, but the gates of the city were not yet set
up. Professing great concern for Nehemiah's safety, Shemaiah advised him to
seek shelter in the temple. "Let us meet together in the house of God,
within the temple," he proposed, "and let us shut the doors of the
temple: for they will come to slay thee; yea, in the night will they come to slay
thee." {PK 655.1}
Had Nehemiah followed this treacherous counsel, he would
have sacrificed his faith in God, and in the eyes of the people he would have
appeared cowardly and contemptible. In view of the important work that he had
undertaken, and the confidence that he professed to have in the power of God,
it would have been altogether inconsistent for him to hide as if in fear. The
alarm would have spread among the people, each would have sought his own
safety, and the city would have been left unprotected, to fall a prey to its
enemies. That one unwise move on the part of Nehemiah would have been a virtual
surrender of all that had been gained. {PK 655.2}
Nehemiah was not long in penetrating the true character and
object of his counselor. "I perceived that God had [656] not
sent him," he says, "but that he pronounced this prophecy against me:
for Tobiah and Sanballat had hired him. Therefore was he hired, that I should
be afraid, and do so, and sin, and that they might have matter for an evil
report, that they might reproach me." {PK 655.3}
The infamous counsel given by Shemaiah was seconded by more
than one man of high reputation, who, while professing to be Nehemiah's
friends, were secretly in league with his enemies. But it was to no avail that
they laid their snare. Nehemiah's fearless answer was: "Should such a man
as I flee? and who is there, that, being as I am, would go into the temple to
save his life? I will not go in." [657] {PK 656.1}
Notwithstanding the plots of enemies, open and secret, the
work of building went steadily forward, and in less than two months from the
time of Nehemiah's arrival in Jerusalem the city was girded with its defenses
and the builders could walk upon the walls and look down upon their defeated
and astonished foes. "When all our enemies heard thereof, and all the
heathen that were about us saw these things," Nehemiah writes, "they
were much cast down in their own eyes: for they perceived that this work was
wrought of our God." {PK
657.1}
Yet even this evidence of the Lord's controlling hand was
not sufficient to restrain discontent, rebellion, and treachery among the
Israelites. "The nobles of Judah sent many letters unto Tobiah, and the
letters of Tobiah came unto them. For there were many in Judah sworn unto him,
because he was the son-in-law of Shechaniah." Here are seen the evil
results of intermarriage with idolaters. A family of Judah had become connected
with the enemies of God, and the relation had proved a snare. Many others had
done the same. These, like the mixed multitude that came up with Israel from
Egypt, were a source of constant trouble. They were not wholehearted in His
service; and when God's work demanded a sacrifice, they were ready to violate
their solemn oath of co-operation and support. {PK 657.2}
Some who had been foremost in plotting mischief against the
Jews, now professed a desire to be on friendly terms with them. The nobles of
Judah who had become entangled in idolatrous marriages, and who had held
traitorous correspondence with Tobiah and taken oath to serve him, now [658]
represented him as a man of ability and foresight, an alliance with whom would
be greatly to the advantage of the Jews. At the same time they betrayed to him
Nehemiah's plans and movements. Thus the work of God's people was laid open to
the attacks of their enemies, and opportunity was given to misconstrue
Nehemiah's words and acts, and to hinder his work. {PK 657.3}
When the poor and oppressed had appealed to Nehemiah for
redress of their wrongs, he had stood boldly in their defense and had caused
the wrongdoers to remove the reproach that rested on them. But the authority
that he had exercised in behalf of his downtrodden countrymen he did not now
exercise in his own behalf. His efforts had been met by some with ingratitude and
treachery, but he did not use his power to bring the traitors to punishment.
Calmly and unselfishly he went forward in his service for the people, never
slackening his efforts or allowing his interest to grow less. {PK 658.1}
Satan's assaults have ever been directed against those who
have sought to advance the work and cause of God. Though often baffled, he as
often renews his attacks with fresh vigor, using means hitherto untried. But it
is his secret working through those who avow themselves the friends of God's
work, that is most to be feared. Open opposition may be fierce and cruel, but
it is fraught with far less peril to God's cause than is the secret enmity of
those who, while professing to serve God, are at heart the servants of Satan.
These have it in their power to place every advantage in the hands of those who
will use their knowledge to hinder the work of God and injure His servants. [659]
{PK 658.2}
Every device that the prince of darkness can suggest will be
employed to induce God's servants to form a confederacy with the agents of
Satan. Repeated solicitations will come to call them from duty; but, like
Nehemiah, they should steadfastly reply, "I am doing a great work, so that
I cannot come down." God's workers may safely keep on with their work,
letting their efforts refute the falsehoods that malice may coin for their
injury. Like the builders on the walls of Jerusalem they must refuse to be
diverted from their work by threats or mockery or falsehood. Not for one moment
are they to relax their watchfulness or vigilance, for enemies are continually
on their track. Ever they must make their prayer to God "and set a watch
against them day and night." Nehemiah 4:9. {PK 659.1}
As the time of the end draws near, Satan's temptations will
be brought to bear with greater power upon God's workers. He will employ human
agents to mock and revile those who "build the wall." But should the
builders come down to meet the attacks of their foes, this would but retard the
work. They should endeavor to defeat the purposes of their adversaries, but
they should not allow anything to call them from their work. Truth is stronger
than error, and right will prevail over wrong. {PK 659.2}
Neither should they allow their enemies to gain their
friendship and sympathy, and thus lure them from their post of duty. He who by
any unguarded act exposes the cause of God to reproach, or weakens the hands of
his fellow workers, brings upon his own character a stain not easily removed,
and places a serious obstacle in the way of his future usefulness. [660]
{PK 659.3}
"They that forsake the law praise the wicked."
Proverbs 28:4. When those who are uniting with the world, yet claiming great
purity, plead for union with those who have ever been the opposers of the cause
of truth, we should fear and shun them as decidedly as did Nehemiah. Such
counsel is prompted by the enemy of all good. It is the speech of timeservers,
and should be resisted as resolutely today as then. Whatever influence would
tend to unsettle the faith of God's people in His guiding power, should be
steadfastly withstood. {PK
660.1}
In Nehemiah's firm devotion to the work of God, and his
equally firm reliance on God, lay the reason of the failure of his enemies to
draw him into their power. The soul that is indolent falls an easy prey to
temptation; but in the life that has a noble aim, an absorbing purpose, evil
finds little foothold. The faith of him who is constantly advancing does not
weaken; for above, beneath, beyond, he recognizes Infinite Love, working out all
things to accomplish His good purpose. God's true servants work with a
determination that will not fail because the throne of grace is their constant
dependence. {PK 660.2}
God has provided divine assistance for all the emergencies
to which our human resources are unequal. He gives the Holy Spirit to help in
every strait, to strengthen our hope and assurance, to illuminate our minds and
purify our hearts. He provides opportunities and opens channels of working. If
His people are watching the indications of His providence, and are ready to
co-operate with Him, they will see mighty results. {PK 660.3}
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"Instructed in the Law of God"
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