The book is traditionally associated with Nehemiah's memoir material, shaped within the postexilic historical record of Judah's restoration under Persian rule.
Nehemiah Hears, Mourns, Prays, and Seeks Mercy for Jerusalem
God forms faithful servants by turning covenant grief into confession, dependence, and courageous obedience before him.
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God forms faithful servants by turning covenant grief into confession, dependence, and courageous obedience before him.
Nehemiah 1 argues that true restoration begins when God's people interpret their broken condition through God's covenant word and seek his mercy with confession, faith, and obedient readiness.
The restored covenant community of Judah, later generations of Israel, and all readers learning how covenant grief, confession, prayer, and obedient leadership belong together before God.
The chapter opens in the citadel of Susa during the month of Kislev while Nehemiah serves in the Persian royal court as cupbearer to King Artaxerxes. Jerusalem has been resettled after exile, but the city remains vulnerable and dishonored because its wall is broken down and its gates have been burned.
God forms faithful servants by turning covenant grief into confession, dependence, and courageous obedience before him.
The book is traditionally associated with Nehemiah's memoir material, shaped within the postexilic historical record of Judah's restoration under Persian rule.
The restored covenant community of Judah, later generations of Israel, and all readers learning how covenant grief, confession, prayer, and obedient leadership belong together before God.
The chapter opens in the citadel of Susa during the month of Kislev while Nehemiah serves in the Persian royal court as cupbearer to King Artaxerxes. Jerusalem has been resettled after exile, but the city remains vulnerable and dishonored because its wall is broken down and its gates have been burned.
- Returned exiles are living with reproach, insecurity, and political vulnerability. Nehemiah lives in relative influence within Persia, yet he bears the burden of his people and the shame of Jerusalem.
City walls in the ancient Near East represented protection, civic order, honor, and public stability. A broken wall and burned gates signaled danger, disgrace, and the unfinished condition of restoration. A royal cupbearer was a trusted official with close access to the king, but any request touching imperial policy required wisdom, courage, and providential favor.
Nehemiah 1 belongs to the postexilic restoration period. The exile has ended in part, the temple has been rebuilt, but the restoration remains incomplete. The chapter exposes the tension between fulfilled mercy and ongoing need, pointing forward to the need for deeper covenant renewal, faithful mediation, and ultimately the greater restoration God brings through Christ.
News of Jerusalem's disgrace drives Nehemiah into mourning, fasting, confession, covenant appeal, and a request for mercy before taking action.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Nehemiah 1 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's people need more than external repair. They need mercy for covenant-breaking sin, a faithful mediator, and restoration grounded in God's redeeming power. The chapter prepares readers to see that the deepest disgrace is sin before God and the ultimate answer is not a rebuilt wall but the redeeming work of Christ.
The memoir-like opening identifies Nehemiah, the time, the place, and the arrival of those who bring news from Judah.
The condition of the remnant and Jerusalem is summarized in terms of trouble, disgrace, broken walls, and burned gates.
Nehemiah's first movement is toward God through weeping, mourning, fasting, and prayer.
Nehemiah grounds his prayer in the character of God as great, awesome, covenant-keeping, and steadfast in love toward those who love him and obey his commandments.
Nehemiah confesses the sins of Israel, including his own house, acknowledging corrupt conduct and disobedience to God's commands, decrees, and laws.
Nehemiah recalls God's covenant warning of scattering for unfaithfulness and covenant promise of gathering for repentance and obedience.
Nehemiah appeals to God's ownership of his servants, whom he redeemed by great strength and a mighty hand.
Nehemiah asks for attentive mercy, success, and favor before the king, linking prayer to imminent obedience.
- 1:1-3: Nehemiah hears that the remnant in Judah is in great trouble and disgrace because Jerusalem remains defenseless and dishonored.
- 1:4: The report breaks Nehemiah's heart and sends him into sustained mourning, fasting, and prayer before God.
- 1:5-10: Nehemiah prays according to God's character, Israel's guilt, Moses' covenant warnings and promises, and God's prior redemption of his people.
- 1:11: Nehemiah asks God for mercy and success as he prepares to approach the king, showing that true prayer does not excuse obedience but prepares for it.
Pastoral Entry
יְהֹוָה is the personal name of the God of Israel — the name He chose for Himself and by which He chose to be known, remembered, and called upon. It is not a title, not a category, and not an office. Every other word for God in the Hebrew scriptures — Elohim, El Shaddai, Adonai — describes what God is or what He does. This name announces who He is. The difference matters enormously. Titles can be shared; names belong to persons.
The name comes into focus at the burning bush in Exodus 3, where God says to Moses: I am who I am. This is not evasion. It is the most concentrated statement of divine self-existence ever given. God's being depends on nothing outside Himself. He was before anything else was. He will be when everything else has ceased. He does not become; He simply is. This is the God who gives this name — and gives it not to a philosopher searching for first causes, but to a trembling fugitive shepherd standing before a fire that does not consume.
But יְהֹוָה is not simply the name for transcendent being. It is the name bound to covenant. From Exodus onward, this name marks the God who makes and keeps promises, who rescues enslaved people from Egypt, who walks with Israel through the wilderness, who gives the law and forgives the breaking of it, who speaks through the prophets, who calls a people back when they wander and disciplines them when they rebel. The name does not stand above the story of redemption — it is the name that drives the story forward.
The ancient Israelites read this name with such reverence that in public reading they substituted Adonai — Lord — in its place. This is the origin of the convention in most English translations of rendering יְהֹוָה as Lord in small capitals. That tradition preserves genuine reverence, but it can obscure for modern readers that what they are reading is not a title but a name. The people of God did not simply trust in a Lord. They trusted in this Lord — the one who told Abraham to leave Ur, who heard slaves crying in Egypt, who made Himself known at Sinai, who promised David a throne that would not end, who spoke through Isaiah and Jeremiah and Hosea. The name gathers all of that history into itself.
Pastorally, יְהֹוָה is the anchor for everything. The God who saves is not an unnamed force or a generic divine principle. He has a name. He has a history with His people. He has made promises. He keeps them. The gospel does not invent a new God; it reveals that this covenant God, the Lord, has sent His Son so that all who call on the name of the Lord will be saved.
Sense The covenant name of Israel's God.
Definition The personal covenant name of God, emphasizing his self-existence, faithfulness, and covenant relationship with his people.
References Nehemiah 1:5
Lexicon The covenant name of Israel's God.
Why it matters Nehemiah's prayer is not generic spirituality. It is addressed to the covenant Lord who has bound himself to his people and revealed his character and promises.
Sense The sovereign God who rules from heaven over earthly powers.
Definition A title emphasizing God's universal sovereignty, especially significant in Persian-period contexts.
References Nehemiah 1:4-5
Lexicon The sovereign God who rules from heaven over earthly powers.
Why it matters Nehemiah is under Persian authority, yet he prays to the God who rules above kings and empires.
Pastoral Entry
בְּרִית (berit) is the Hebrew Bible's primary word for covenant — the formal relational bond that establishes binding obligations between parties. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 284 occurrences, spanning human covenants (treaties, alliances) and the central theological reality of God's binding commitment to His people. The word's etymology is debated, but its usage is consistent: a berit is a sworn, binding relationship that reshapes the entire future of those who enter it.
The covenant structure of the OT is the spine of the entire biblical narrative. God's covenants with Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, and the promise of a new covenant (Jeremiah 31) are not independent events but a single, developing story of God's commitment to restore creation through a particular people. Each covenant adds to and builds on what preceded it: the Noahic covenant is cosmic (with all creation); the Abrahamic is particular (with one family for the sake of all); the Sinaitic is constitutive (the covenant community's life and worship); the Davidic is royal (the king through whom the covenant's promises will be mediated); the new covenant is consummating (the inner transformation that all the others pointed toward).
Genesis 15 is the most dramatic covenant-making scene in Scripture: God passes through the divided animals as a smoking firepot and flaming torch, taking on Himself the covenant curse if the covenant is broken. In the ancient Near East, both parties to a treaty would pass through divided animals, invoking the curse on the breaker. God alone passes through — making the covenant unilaterally His own responsibility. This is the theological heart of biblical covenant: God binds Himself to His promises in a way that goes beyond mere promise to the assumption of the covenant's consequences.
Jeremiah 31:31-34 prophesies the new covenant that addresses the old covenant's failure: 'I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts... they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest... for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.' The new covenant resolves what the Sinai covenant exposed: that external law-giving cannot produce internal covenant loyalty. The new covenant writes what the old could only command.
For the preacher, בְּרִית is the word that names the non-negotiable relational commitment at the center of the biblical story — God's binding of Himself to His people, which reaches its fullest expression in the blood of Christ, 'the blood of the new covenant' (Mat 26:28).
Sense A solemn binding relationship established by God with obligations and promises.
Definition Covenant bond or agreement, often used for God's committed relationship with his people.
References Nehemiah 1:5
Lexicon A solemn binding relationship established by God with obligations and promises.
Why it matters Nehemiah's appeal rests on God's covenant faithfulness, not on Israel's worthiness.
Pastoral Entry
חֶסֶד is one of the richest and most theologically freighted words in the Hebrew Bible. English translations reach for it with words like lovingkindness, steadfast love, mercy, loyal love, or covenant faithfulness, and none of these alone carries the full weight. What the word names is a kind of committed, active, loyal goodness that holds fast to a relationship even when it is not obligated to do so. It is not merely warm feeling. It is love that acts, love that costs, love that stays.
In its human dimension, חֶסֶד describes the loyalty owed within covenant bonds, whether between king and servant, between friends, between allies, or within a family. When Jonathan asks David to show him חֶסֶד, he is not asking for sentiment. He is asking for the kind of active, faithful, protecting love that holds when everything else might give way. When David shows חֶסֶד to Mephibosheth for the sake of Jonathan, it is costly, deliberate, and unconditional. It moves before merit is established and remains after circumstances have changed.
In its divine dimension, חֶסֶד becomes the defining word for the character of the God of Israel. He is the God who keeps חֶסֶד to thousands of those who love Him, who does not remove His חֶסֶד from David, whose חֶסֶד endures forever. It is this word that lies behind the great covenant confessions of the Old Testament. When Lamentations says that the steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, the word under that translation is חֶסֶד. When Isaiah promises that God's covenant of peace will not be removed, the word behind that covenant loyalty is חֶסֶד. The word does not describe God's passing affection. It describes His covenantal commitment, active across time, faithful in the face of human failure, and anchored in His own character rather than in our performance.
For the preacher and teacher, חֶסֶד is irreplaceable. It resists every reduction of God's love to sentiment or permissiveness. It insists that God's love is relational, purposeful, and covenant-shaped. It pushes against every view that God's mercy is passive or impersonal. And it raises a direct challenge to every congregation: because you have been the recipients of God's חֶסֶד, what does faithful חֶסֶד look like in how you treat one another?
Sense Covenant loyalty, mercy, steadfast love.
Definition Faithful covenant love expressed in loyal mercy and committed kindness.
References Nehemiah 1:5
Lexicon Covenant loyalty, mercy, steadfast love.
Why it matters Nehemiah seeks mercy from the God whose covenant love remains the hope of a sinful and broken people.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
מִצְוָה (mitsvah) is the Hebrew word for commandment — the specific directive from YHWH to his covenant people that defines faithful life. The local Hebrew artifact indexes it at about 184 occurrences, concentrated in the Torah and Psalm 119. The mitsvah is not a constraint on freedom but the form in which covenant relationship expresses itself: to have a mitsvah is to stand in relationship with the One who gives it.
Deuteronomy 6:25 gives mitsvah its most important relational-theological framing: 'And it will be righteousness for us, if we are careful to do all this mitsvah before YHWH our God, as he has commanded us.' The mitsvah done before YHWH produces tsedaqah (righteousness) — not as merit but as conformity to the covenant relationship. The mitsvah is the shape of the relationship, and doing it before YHWH is the lived form of covenant faithfulness. The preceding verses (Deut 6:4-9, the Shema) establish the context: 'Hear, O Israel: YHWH our God, YHWH is one. You shall love YHWH your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart.' The mitsvot flow from the Shema: they are the practical expression of the love commanded in verse 5.
Numbers 15:39 gives mitsvah its memory-and-holiness function: the tassels (tsitsit) on garments are for Israel 'to look at and remember all the mitsvot of YHWH and do them, not following after your own heart and your own eyes, which you are inclined to whore after. So you shall remember and do all my mitsvot, and be holy to your God.' The mitsvot remembered and done is the path to holiness — the tsitsit are a physical mnemonic for the mitsvot, and the mitsvot are the content of covenant holiness.
Psalm 119 is the supreme meditation on mitsvah, using it as one of eight synonyms for YHWH's word throughout the psalm's 176 verses. Verse 35: 'Make me walk in the path of your mitsvot, for I delight in it.' Verse 47: 'I will delight myself in your mitsvot, which I have loved.' Verse 93: 'I will never forget your precepts, for with them you have revived me.' The mitsvah in Psalm 119 is not experienced as burden but as life: the psalmist meditates on it all day (v. 97), it is sweeter than honey (v. 103), and the soul that walks in it is revived (v. 93).
Exodus 20:6 and Deuteronomy 7:9 give mitsvah its love-and-covenant-keeping framing: YHWH shows 'steadfast love (hesed) to thousands of those who love me and keep my mitsvot.' The mitsvah is the covenant-keeping side of the love-relationship — not the condition of love but the natural expression of it. Those who love YHWH keep his mitsvot; those who keep his mitsvot receive his hesed to a thousand generations.
For the preacher, מִצְוָה (mitsvah) is the specific form of covenant love: the mitsvah is not law imposed on strangers but direction given to the beloved. The New Testament's 'new commandment' — love one another as I have loved you (John 13:34) — is the NT mitsvah, and Jesus's summary of 'all the law and the prophets' in the two great mitsvot (Matt 22:36-40) is the heart of the covenant relationship given its clearest possible form.
Sense Divine commands given by God.
Definition Commands or instructions that express God's will for covenant obedience.
References Nehemiah 1:5, 1:7
Lexicon Divine commands given by God.
Why it matters Nehemiah confesses that Israel's trouble is tied to disobedience against God's revealed commandments.
Pastoral Entry
חָטָא is the OT's primary word for sin as a moral and relational reality. The root image is missing — not hitting what you aimed at, not arriving where you were bound to go. But this is not mere imprecision. In the OT, missing is ordinarily relational: it happens in relation to someone. Joseph says 'How could I sin against God?' (Gen 39:9). David says 'Against You, You only, have I sinned' (Ps 51:4).
Sin is not failure measured against an abstract standard; it is an offense committed against a Person. The word also spans remedy: the Piel stem means to decontaminate, to perform the priestly act that removes what the Qal named. The architecture is built into the root itself: the same word that names the wound also names the work of cleansing it.
Sense To sin, miss the mark, act wrongly against God.
Definition Moral and covenantal failure before God.
References Nehemiah 1:6
Lexicon To sin, miss the mark, act wrongly against God.
Why it matters Nehemiah does not treat Jerusalem's condition as merely unfortunate. He confesses sin as the deeper issue beneath the community's trouble.
Form in passage Qal · Infinitive construct What is this?
Sense To act corruptly, deal destructively, ruin.
Definition To behave corruptly or destructively.
References Nehemiah 1:7
Lexicon To act corruptly, deal destructively, ruin.
Why it matters The confession exposes sin as corruption, not mere weakness or inconvenience.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
זָכַר is the Old Testament's primary word for remembrance — but the English word barely reaches what the Hebrew is doing. In modern usage, to remember means to mentally retrieve a fact. In the world of Scripture, זָכַר carries active weight. When God remembers, something moves. When Israel is commanded to remember, a whole orientation of the self — not merely the mind — is being summoned.
The BDB root suggests the idea of marking something so it can be recognised, a kind of deliberate attentiveness that produces a response. This is why זָכַר does so much theological work in the Old Testament. When God remembered Noah, the waters began to recede (Gen 8:1). When God remembered his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, he acted to deliver Israel from slavery (Exod 2:24). Remembrance in the divine life is not passive cognition — it is covenantal fidelity taking concrete form. God does not simply think about what he has promised; he moves toward it.
When Israel is commanded to remember, the summons is equally active. To remember the Sabbath is to order the whole week around it (Exod 20:8). To remember the Exodus is to let that defining moment of grace shape how you live, how you treat the stranger, how you relate to your God (Deut 8:2). Forgetting, in this framework, is not simply a lapse of memory — it is a failure of fidelity, a turning of the back on what God has done.
זָכַר can also mean to mention or invoke — to bring someone's name or situation before God in speech, or to declare God's deeds before others. The Psalms move in both directions: the psalmist brings his suffering before God in lament, and brings God's saving history before his own soul in praise. Remembrance is the spiritual practice that keeps the people of God oriented toward their covenant Lord.
Sense To remember, call to mind, act in accordance with what is remembered.
Definition Biblical remembering often includes covenantal attention leading to action.
References Nehemiah 1:8
Lexicon To remember, call to mind, act in accordance with what is remembered.
Why it matters Nehemiah asks God to remember his word, not because God forgets, but because covenant prayer appeals to what God has revealed and promised.
Pastoral Entry
שׁוּב is the great turning-word of the Hebrew Bible. At its most basic it describes physical motion — someone who goes away and comes back, an army that retreats, a hand that is withdrawn. But from that material root, Scripture draws something far more weighty: the movement of the whole person away from destruction and back toward God. In the prophets especially, שׁוּב becomes the central verb of appeal, the word God uses when He calls His people to abandon the path they are on and orient themselves toward Him again. It is not merely an emotional experience or a private spiritual adjustment. It is a reorientation — a turning of direction, will, loyalty, and practice.
Two dimensions of שׁוּב must be held together. The first is departure: genuine covenantal turning involves leaving something — an idol, a pattern of injustice, a posture of self-sufficiency, a covenant broken. The prophets are clear that returning to God means turning away from what is wrong. The second is arrival: the movement is not only away from sin but toward a Person. The prophets consistently frame this as return to YHWH, to His ways, to His covenant. שׁוּב is therefore not self-reform. It is relational re-entry — coming home to the God who has not moved.
What makes this word theologically irreplaceable is the exile context in which it burns most brightly. Israel's displacement from the land is never presented simply as a geopolitical catastrophe. It is the spatial consequence of a spiritual direction. The nation had turned away from God, and the curses of the covenant followed. But through the prophets, God calls שׁוּב — not simply as a demand, but as the announcement that return is still possible, that the door has not closed, that the God who judged is also the God who restores.
In pastoral use, שׁוּב must not be reduced to a single sermon moment or an altar-call transaction. Its roughly 1,073 occurrences span the full range of Israelite life — narrative, law, wisdom, prophecy, and prayer — which means the turn it names can be initial, repeated, communal, individual, urgent, and ongoing. The NT counterpart G3340 metanoeō carries forward this same dual structure: a change of mind that issues in a changed direction. To understand שׁוּב is to understand why biblical repentance is neither self-flagellation nor superficial remorse. It is the movement of a person, or a people, who turn from where they were headed and walk back toward the God who has been waiting.
Sense To turn, return, repent, come back.
Definition A key covenant term for returning to God and his ways.
References Nehemiah 1:9
Lexicon To turn, return, repent, come back.
Why it matters The hope of gathering is connected to returning to God and keeping his commandments.
Pastoral Entry
פָּדָה (padah) is one of the two primary Hebrew verbs for redemption, meaning to ransom or to buy back. Where גָּאַל (gaal, H1350) emphasizes the kinship relationship that creates the obligation to redeem, padah emphasizes the transaction itself: something or someone is held, and a price is paid to secure their release.
The word is used in legal contexts (ransoming a firstborn son, Exod 13:13-15; ransoming an ox that has killed someone, Exod 21:30) and in the great redemptive narrative contexts: YHWH redeemed Israel from Egypt by padah, and the word becomes a technical term for the Exodus event. What happened at the Red Sea was not merely rescue — it was ransom: YHWH paid the full cost of Israel's freedom.
The pastoral significance of padah is that it frames salvation in transactional terms that are not cold or mechanical but weighty and covenantal. Someone paid to bring you out. The question padah repeatedly raises is: what was the price? In the NT, the answer is the blood of Christ — 'you were bought with a price' (1 Cor 6:20) and 'ransomed from the futile ways' (1 Pet 1:18-19) are both NT uses of the padah concept.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense To ransom, redeem, deliver.
Definition To rescue or release by a redemptive act.
References Nehemiah 1:10
Lexicon To ransom, redeem, deliver.
Why it matters Nehemiah grounds his plea in God's prior redemption of his people by great power and a mighty hand.
Pastoral Entry
רַחֲמִים (the plural form of רַחַם) names the tender-mercy dimension of God's compassion, the inward mercy Scripture can describe with womb-rooted imagery. The womb-root is the theological anchor: just as a mother's love for her newborn is one of Scripture's strongest images of embodied care, YHWH's רַחֲמִים toward His people has that quality. Lam 3:22 — 'the steadfast love (חֶסֶד) of the Lord never ceases; his mercies (רַחֲמִים) never come to an end; they are new every morning' — places חֶסֶד and רַחֲמִים side by side as the two inseparable qualities of YHWH that survive the destruction of Jerusalem.
Where חֶסֶד is the covenant-faithfulness dimension, רַחֲמִים is the tenderness dimension. The morning renewal imagery is important: YHWH's compassion is not depleted by the night's sorrow; it is replenished with each new day.
Sense Compassion, mercy, tender concern.
Definition Deep mercy or compassion shown toward those in need.
References Nehemiah 1:11
Lexicon Compassion, mercy, tender concern.
Why it matters Nehemiah's final request depends on God's mercy as he prepares to seek favor before the king.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
| v.1 | H1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.10 | H6299פָּדָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.11 | H1961הָיָהQal · Imperfect · JussiveH1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.2 | H7604שָׁאַרNiphal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.3 | H7604שָׁאַרNiphal · Perfect · IndicativeH6555פָּרַץPual · Participle passiveH3341יָצַתNiphal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.4 | H3427יָשַׁבQal · Perfect · IndicativeH6684צוּםQal · Participle |
| v.5 | H8104שָׁמַרQal · Participle |
| v.6 | H1961הָיָהQal · Imperfect · JussiveH6605פָּתַחQal · Participle passiveH6419פָּלַלHithpael · ParticipleH2398חָטָאQal · Perfect · IndicativeH2398חָטָאQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.7 | H2254חָבַלQal · Infinitive constructH2254חָבַלQal · Perfect · IndicativeH8104שָׁמַרQal · Perfect · IndicativeH6680צָוָהPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.8 | H2142זָכַרQal · Imperative · ImperativeH6680צָוָהPiel · Perfect · IndicativeH4603מָעַלQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH6327פּוּץHiphil · Imperfect · Indicative/cohortative |
| v.9 | H1961הָיָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH977בָּחַרQal · Perfect · Indicative |
Aspect in Hebrew is grammatical form, not tense. Perfect = completed action; Imperfect = incomplete/ongoing. Stem modifies action type (Qal=simple, Niphal=passive, Piel=intensive).
Morphology: OSHB WLC (Open Scriptures, CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible TEHMC (Tyndale House, CC BY 4.0)
Theological Argument
Nehemiah 1 argues that true restoration begins when God's people interpret their broken condition through God's covenant word and seek his mercy with confession, faith, and obedient readiness.
Report leads to lament; lament leads to confession; confession leads to covenant appeal; covenant appeal leads to mission-shaped petition.
- 1.The shame of Jerusalem is not merely civic failure but covenant grief.
- 2.Faithful leadership begins with Godward sorrow.
- 3.Prayer must be governed by the revealed character and word of God.
- 4.Confession identifies with the guilt of God's people instead of hiding behind personal distance.
- 5.God's past redemption becomes the ground for present appeal.
- 6.Prayer prepares God's servant for costly obedience.
Theological Focus
- Covenant faithfulness of God
- Corporate confession of sin
- Prayerful dependence
- Providence through earthly authority
- Burdened spiritual leadership
- Restoration after exile
- The relationship between repentance and mission
- God's mercy as the ground for obedient action
- Prayer before action
- Covenant memory
- Corporate guilt and personal identification
- Restoration still incomplete
- Providence in vocation
- Doctrine of God
- Sin and Confession
- Covenant Faithfulness
- Prayer
- Providence
- Mediation
- Restoration
Theological Themes
Nehemiah does not separate practical leadership from spiritual dependence. The work begins before God before it moves before the king.
Nehemiah's prayer is saturated with God's covenant word, especially the Mosaic pattern of disobedience, scattering, repentance, and gathering.
Nehemiah does not confess sin from a distance. He stands among the people and acknowledges both national and household guilt.
The return from exile has begun, but the city remains vulnerable. The chapter preserves the tension between partial restoration and ongoing need.
Nehemiah's position as cupbearer is not accidental. God places his servant near earthly power for the sake of covenant mercy.
Covenant Significance
Nehemiah 1 is covenant-shaped from beginning to end. The crisis is interpreted through covenant unfaithfulness, the hope is grounded in covenant mercy, and the appeal rests on God's promise to gather his people when they return to him.
- Covenant Lord addressed - Nehemiah prays to the Lord as the great and awesome God who keeps his covenant of love.
- Covenant breach confessed - Israel's trouble is not treated as random misfortune. Nehemiah confesses corruption and disobedience to God's commands, decrees, and laws.
- Covenant warning remembered - Nehemiah recalls that unfaithfulness leads to scattering among the nations.
- Covenant promise remembered - Nehemiah also recalls that repentance and obedience are met with God's gathering mercy.
- Covenant people redeemed - Nehemiah appeals to God's ownership of the people he redeemed by his mighty hand.
- Leviticus 26:33-45 - The covenant pattern of scattering for disobedience and remembering the covenant after confession stands behind Nehemiah's prayer.
- Deuteronomy 4:25-31 - Moses warned of exile for idolatry and promised mercy when God's people seek him with all their heart.
- Deuteronomy 30:1-10 - The promise of return and restoration after repentance directly informs Nehemiah's covenant appeal.
- 1 Kings 8:46-53 - Solomon's prayer anticipated exile, confession, and God's hearing of repentant prayer toward the land and city.
Canonical Connections
Nehemiah's prayer directly depends on the covenant pattern in the Torah: unfaithfulness brings scattering, but repentance is met with gathering mercy.
Solomon anticipated a future in which Israel would sin, be exiled, confess, and seek God's mercy. Nehemiah's prayer stands within that same theological framework.
Ezra and Nehemiah together show that restoration involves temple, Torah, confession, community ordering, and reform, not merely physical return to the land.
Jerusalem's brokenness after exile keeps alive the longing for fuller restoration, security, righteousness, and the presence of God among his people.
Nehemiah joins the line of servants who plead for God's people, while also exposing the need for a greater and final mediator.
Nehemiah seeks mercy and favor before an earthly king, while the gospel invites believers to draw near through Christ to receive mercy and grace from God.
Cross References
But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession, that you may proclaim the excellence of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. In the past, you were not a people, but...
Having then a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let’s hold tightly to our confession. For we don’t have a high priest who can’t be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, but one who has been...
Many, indeed, have been made priests, because they are hindered from continuing by death. But he, because he lives forever, has his priesthood unchangeable. Therefore he is also able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God...
When he came near, he saw the city and wept over it, saying, “If you, even you, had known today the things which belong to your peace! But now, they are hidden from your eyes. For the days will come on you, when your enemies will throw up...
He said to them, “This is what I told you, while I was still with you, that all things which are written in the law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms, concerning me must be fulfilled.” Then he opened their minds, that they might...
If they sin against you (for there is no man who doesn’t sin), and you are angry with them, and deliver them to the enemy, so that they carry them away captive to the land of the enemy, far off or near; yet if they repent in the land where...
I set my face to the Lord God, to seek by prayer and petitions, with fasting and sackcloth and ashes. I prayed to Yahweh my God, and made confession, and said, “Oh, Lord, the great and dreadful God, who keeps covenant and loving kindness...
But it shall come to pass, if you will not listen to Yahweh your God’s voice, to observe to do all his commandments and his statutes which I command you today, that all these curses will come on you and overtake you. You will be cursed in...
It shall happen, when all these things have come on you, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before you, and you shall call them to mind among all the nations where Yahweh your God has driven you, and return to Yahweh your God and...
Yahweh didn’t set his love on you nor choose you, because you were more in number than any people; for you were the fewest of all peoples; but because Yahweh loves you, and because he desires to keep the oath which he swore to your...
“ ‘If you in spite of this won’t listen to me, but walk contrary to me, then I will walk contrary to you in wrath. I will also chastise you seven times for your sins. You will eat the flesh of your sons, and you will eat the flesh of your...
Now when the adversaries of Judah and Benjamin heard that the children of the captivity were building a temple to Yahweh, the God of Israel; they came near to Zerubbabel, and to the heads of fathers’ households, and said to them, “Let us...
Canon-Wide Connections
Cross-reference data: OpenBible.info (CC BY 4.0)
Nehemiah 1 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's people need more than external repair. They need mercy for covenant-breaking sin, a faithful mediator, and restoration grounded in God's redeeming power. The chapter prepares readers to see that the deepest disgrace is sin before God and the ultimate answer is not a rebuilt wall but the redeeming work of Christ.
- Sin is confessed, not excused - Nehemiah's prayer refuses shallow optimism. The people's condition is tied to real covenant disobedience.
- Mercy rests on God's character - Nehemiah appeals to the God who keeps covenant and shows steadfast love.
- Redemption grounds appeal - The people are God's servants because he redeemed them by great strength and a mighty hand.
- Intercession points forward - Nehemiah's intercession anticipates the need for a greater mediator who can deal finally with sin.
- Restoration must reach the heart - The broken wall matters, but the book's larger witness will expose that external rebuilding cannot substitute for inward covenant faithfulness.
- Do not turn Nehemiah into a self-help leadership manual detached from sin, covenant, mercy, and redemption.
- Do not imply that human resolve can restore what covenant-breaking sin has ruined.
- Do not bypass the Old Testament context by forcing a direct allegory from every wall or gate to Christ.
- Do not reduce the gospel connection to civic rebuilding. The chapter points toward the deeper need for atonement, mediation, and new-covenant restoration.
But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession, that you may proclaim the excellence of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. In the past, you were not a people, but...
Having then a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let’s hold tightly to our confession. For we don’t have a high priest who can’t be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, but one who has been...
Many, indeed, have been made priests, because they are hindered from continuing by death. But he, because he lives forever, has his priesthood unchangeable. Therefore he is also able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God...
When he came near, he saw the city and wept over it, saying, “If you, even you, had known today the things which belong to your peace! But now, they are hidden from your eyes. For the days will come on you, when your enemies will throw up...
He said to them, “This is what I told you, while I was still with you, that all things which are written in the law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms, concerning me must be fulfilled.” Then he opened their minds, that they might...
Primary Emphasis
Nehemiah 1 does not directly announce Christ, but it contributes to the biblical trajectory that finds its fullness in him. Nehemiah stands as an intercessory servant who identifies with the people, confesses sin, appeals to covenant mercy, and prepares to act for the restoration of Jerusalem. Yet Nehemiah himself is not the final restorer. His grief over a broken city points beyond walls and gates to the deeper ruin of sin.
His prayerful mediation anticipates the greater Mediator, Jesus Christ, who not only identifies with his people but bears their sin, secures forgiveness through his death and resurrection, and builds a people who belong to God.
Chapter Contribution
Nehemiah 1 argues that true restoration begins when God's people interpret their broken condition through God's covenant word and seek his mercy with confession, faith, and obedient readiness.
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
Trace the Spirit's presence, empowerment, renewal, and mission-bearing work across Scripture.
Biblical repentance often involves confessing the sins of the community as one’s own. Nehemiah identifies with the guilt of his ancestors and people, modeling how believers today can confess not only personal but corporate failure before God.
Nehemiah approaches God for favor before he approaches the Persian king, recognizing that the king’s heart is ultimately in God’s hand. Human authority is real but secondary to the rule of the God of heaven.
God remains faithful to His covenant, bringing deserved discipline for sin yet holding out real promises of restoration for those who return to Him. Nehemiah’s confidence rests on God’s steadfast love, not on the people’s performance.
Nehemiah’s prayer is saturated with covenant language drawn from the Law of Moses. True intercession clings to what God has already spoken, aligning requests with His revealed will rather than treating prayer as a means to bend God to our desires.
Nehemiah calls Israel ‘Your servants and Your people whom You redeemed.’ Their identity and hope are anchored not in their current condition but in God’s past redeeming work, pointing forward to the definitive redemption accomplished in Christ.
God is great, awesome, covenant-keeping, merciful, attentive to prayer, and sovereign over rulers and circumstances.
Sin is personal and corporate, involving corrupt conduct and disobedience to God's revealed commands. Faithful prayer names sin honestly before God.
God's covenant includes both warning and mercy. The scattering of the people and the hope of gathering are interpreted through the covenant word.
Prayer is the first act of dependent obedience, rooted in God's character and Word, and aimed toward mercy-shaped action.
Nehemiah's role before the king reveals God's providential placement of his servant within imperial structures for the sake of his people.
Nehemiah acts as an intercessory servant for the people, anticipating the broader biblical need for faithful mediation before God.
The chapter frames restoration as more than rebuilding infrastructure. True restoration requires covenant mercy, repentance, and God's redeeming action.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Nehemiah 1 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's people need more than external repair. They need mercy for covenant-breaking sin, a faithful mediator, and restoration grounded in God's redeeming power. The chapter prepares readers to see that the deepest disgrace is sin before God and the ultimate answer is not a rebuilt wall but the redeeming work of Christ.
God's people must learn to see brokenness through the lens of God's covenant character, not merely through circumstances.
The chapter forms servants who carry the condition of God's people with holy grief, honest confession, and courageous dependence.
Burdened, repentant, prayerful, Scripture-governed courage.
- Pray before planning
- Confess without distance
- Anchor prayer in Scripture
- Discern providential placement
- Seek mercy for obedience
- The chapter warns against treating the broken condition of God's people as merely practical, political, or organizational. It also warns against burdenless leadership, prayerless action, confession without ownership, and action without dependence on God's mercy.
- Reducing Nehemiah 1 to a leadership technique chapter. - The chapter certainly shapes leadership, but its center is theological: God's covenant, Israel's sin, prayer, mercy, and providence.
- Treating Nehemiah's mourning as emotional weakness. - His grief is covenant-shaped spiritual strength. He feels the reproach of God's people because he knows God's promises and purposes.
- Using Nehemiah as a model for self-made visionary leadership. - Nehemiah is not self-made. He is burdened by God, governed by Scripture, dependent in prayer, and seeking mercy before he acts.
- Assuming the physical wall is the ultimate point of restoration. - The wall matters in the narrative, but the book will show that physical restoration without covenant faithfulness is insufficient.
- Reading the promise of gathering as if the postexilic return is final consummation. - The return is real but partial. The ongoing weakness of the community points forward to fuller restoration.
- When you hear of spiritual weakness, trouble, or disgrace among God's people, do you move first toward criticism, strategy, despair, or prayer?
- What burdens has God placed before you that you have felt emotionally but not yet carried faithfully before him?
- Does your prayer life include honest confession, or only requests for changed circumstances?
- How does Nehemiah's appeal to God's Word challenge the way you pray in seasons of distress?
- Where has God placed you vocationally, relationally, or socially for the good of his people?
- What would it look like to seek God's mercy before taking the next step of obedience?
- Teach believers to begin with God, not as a delay tactic, but as the first act of faith-filled obedience.
- Spiritual leadership must be burdened, Scripture-governed, repentant, and dependent. Technique without dependence becomes fleshly management.
- The broken places among God's people must be addressed with confession and hope, not denial or mere institutional repair.
- Nehemiah models confession that does not excuse, minimize, or distance itself from sin.
- Prayer prepares believers to step into difficult conversations, risky obedience, and providential opportunities.
- Believers can work faithfully in unfinished situations because God's covenant mercy is greater than visible weakness.
Nehemiah does not consume bad news passively. He turns the report into prayer.
His sorrow does not remain general. It becomes honest confession of sin.
Nehemiah does not confess into hopelessness. He confesses before the God who keeps covenant and shows mercy.
The chapter ends with a request for favor, preparing the reader for Nehemiah's approach to the king in chapter 2.
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
News of Jerusalem's disgrace drives Nehemiah into mourning, fasting, confession, covenant appeal, and a request for mercy before taking action.
Nehemiah 1 is covenant-shaped from beginning to end. The crisis is interpreted through covenant unfaithfulness, the hope is grounded in covenant mercy, and the appeal rests on God's promise to gather his people when they return to him.
Nehemiah 1 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's people need more than external repair. They need mercy for covenant-breaking sin, a faithful mediator, and restoration grounded in God's redeeming power. The chapter prepares readers to see that the deepest disgrace is sin before God and the ultimate answer is not a rebuilt wall but the redeeming work of Christ.
Burdened, repentant, prayerful, Scripture-governed courage.
Focus Points
- Covenant faithfulness of God
- Corporate confession of sin
- Prayerful dependence
- Providence through earthly authority
- Burdened spiritual leadership
- Restoration after exile
- The relationship between repentance and mission
- God's mercy as the ground for obedient action
- Prayer before action
- Covenant memory
- Corporate guilt and personal identification
- Restoration still incomplete
- Providence in vocation
- Doctrine of God
- Sin and Confession
- Covenant Faithfulness
- Prayer
- Providence
- Mediation
- Restoration
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Nehemiah 1:1-11
Neh 1:6 “Let Thine ear be attentive, and Thine eyes open,” like 2Ch 6:40; 2Ch 7:15 - לשׁמע, that Thou mayest hearken to the prayer of Thy servant, which I pray, and how I confess concerning ... מתדּה still depends upon אשׁר in the sense of: and what I confess concerning the sins. היּום does not here mean to-day, but now, at this time, as the addition “day and night” compared with ימים in Neh 1:4 shows.
To strengthen the communicative form לך חטאנוּ, and to acknowledge before God how deeply penetrated he was by the feeling of his own sin and guilt, he adds: and I and my father’s house have sinned.
Neh 1:7 We have dealt very corruptly against Thee. חבל is the inf. constr . instead of the infin. abs ., which, before the finite verb, and by reason of its close connection therewith, becomes the infin. constr ., like אהיה היות, Psa 50:21; comp. Ewald, §240, c . The dealing corruptly against God consists in not having kept the commandments, statutes, and judgments of the law.
Neh 1:8-10 With his confession of grievous transgression, Nehemiah combines the petition that the Lord would be mindful of His word declared by Moses, that if His people, whom He had scattered among the heathen for their sins, should turn to Him and keep His commandments, He would gather them from all places where He had scattered them, and bring them back to the place which He had chosen to place His name there. This word (הדּבר) he designates, as that which God had commanded to His servant Moses, inasmuch as it formed a part of that covenant law which was prescribed to the Israelites as their rule of life.
The matter of this word is introduced by לאמר: ye transgress, I will scatter; i. e. , if ye transgress by revolting from me, I will scatter you among the nations, - and ye turn to me and keep my commandments (i. e. , if ye turn to me and ... ), if there were of you cast out to the end of heaven (i. e. , to the most distant regions where the end of heaven touches the earth), thence will I gather you, etc.
נדּח, pat. Niphal , with a collective meaning, cast-out ones, like Deu 30:4. These words are no verbal quotation, but a free summary, in which Nehemiah had Deu 30:1-5 chiefly in view, of what God had proclaimed in the law of Moses concerning the dispersion of His people among the heathen if they sinned against Him, and of their return to the land of their fathers if they repented and turned to Him.
The clause: if the cast-out ones were at the end of heaven, etc. , stands verbally in Neh 1:4. The last words, Neh 1:9, “(I will bring them) to the place which I have chosen, that my name may dwell there,” are a special application of the general promise of the law to the present case. Jerusalem is meant, where the Lord caused His name to dwell in the temple; comp.
Deu 12:11. The entreaty to remember this word and to fulfil it, seems ill adapted to existing circumstances, for a portion of the people were already brought back to Jerusalem; and Nehemiah’s immediate purpose was to pray, not for the return of those still sojourning among the heathen, but for the removal of the affliction and reproach resting on those who were now at Jerusalem.
Still less appropriate seems the citation of the words: If ye transgress, I will scatter you among the nations. It must, however, be remembered that Nehemiah is not so much invoking the divine compassion as the righteousness and faithfulness of a covenant God, the great and terrible God that keepeth covenant and mercy (Neh 1:5). Now this, God had shown Himself to be, by fulfilling the threats of His law that He would scatter His faithless and transgressing people among the nations.
Thus His fulfilment of this one side of the covenant strengthened the hope that God would also keep His other covenant word to His people who turned to Him, viz. , that He would bring them again to the land of their fathers, to the place of His gracious presence. Hence the reference to the dispersion of the nation among the heathen, forms the actual substructure for the request that so much of the promise as yet remained unfulfilled might come to pass.
Nehemiah, moreover, views this promise in the full depth of its import, as securing to Israel not merely an external return to their native land, but their restoration as a community, in the midst of whom the Lord had His dwelling, and manifested Himself as the defence and refuge of His people. To the re-establishment of this covenant relation very much was still wanting.
Those who had returned from captivity had indeed settled in the land of their fathers; and the temple in which they might worship God with sacrifices, according to the law, was rebuilt at Jerusalem. But notwithstanding all this, Jerusalem, with its ruined walls and burned gates, was still like a city lying waste, and exposed to attacks of all kinds; while the inhabitants of Jerusalem and the cities of Judah were loaded with shame and contempt by their heathen neighbours.
In this sense, Jerusalem was not yet restored, and the community dwelling therein not yet brought to the place where the name of the Lord dwelt. In this respect, the promise that Jahve would again manifest Himself to His repentant people as the God of the covenant was still unfulfilled, and the petition that He would gather His people to the place which He had chosen to put His name there, i.
e. , to manifest Himself according to His nature, as testified in His covenant (Exo 34:6-7), quite justifiable. In Neh 1:10 Nehemiah supports his petition by the words: And these (now dwelling in Judah and Jerusalem) are Thy servants and Thy people whom Thou hast redeemed, etc. His servants who worship Him in His temple, His people whom He has redeemed from Egypt by His great power and by His strong arm, God cannot leave in affliction and reproach.
The words: “redeemed with great power” ... are reminiscences from Deu 7:8; Deu 9:26, Deu 9:29, and other passages in the Pentateuch, and refer to the deliverance from Egypt.
Neh 1:8-10 With his confession of grievous transgression, Nehemiah combines the petition that the Lord would be mindful of His word declared by Moses, that if His people, whom He had scattered among the heathen for their sins, should turn to Him and keep His commandments, He would gather them from all places where He had scattered them, and bring them back to the place which He had chosen to place His name there. This word (הדּבר) he designates, as that which God had commanded to His servant Moses, inasmuch as it formed a part of that covenant law which was prescribed to the Israelites as their rule of life.
The matter of this word is introduced by לאמר: ye transgress, I will scatter; i. e. , if ye transgress by revolting from me, I will scatter you among the nations, - and ye turn to me and keep my commandments (i. e. , if ye turn to me and ... ), if there were of you cast out to the end of heaven (i. e. , to the most distant regions where the end of heaven touches the earth), thence will I gather you, etc.
נדּח, pat. Niphal , with a collective meaning, cast-out ones, like Deu 30:4. These words are no verbal quotation, but a free summary, in which Nehemiah had Deu 30:1-5 chiefly in view, of what God had proclaimed in the law of Moses concerning the dispersion of His people among the heathen if they sinned against Him, and of their return to the land of their fathers if they repented and turned to Him.
The clause: if the cast-out ones were at the end of heaven, etc. , stands verbally in Neh 1:4. The last words, Neh 1:9, “(I will bring them) to the place which I have chosen, that my name may dwell there,” are a special application of the general promise of the law to the present case. Jerusalem is meant, where the Lord caused His name to dwell in the temple; comp.
Deu 12:11. The entreaty to remember this word and to fulfil it, seems ill adapted to existing circumstances, for a portion of the people were already brought back to Jerusalem; and Nehemiah’s immediate purpose was to pray, not for the return of those still sojourning among the heathen, but for the removal of the affliction and reproach resting on those who were now at Jerusalem.
Still less appropriate seems the citation of the words: If ye transgress, I will scatter you among the nations. It must, however, be remembered that Nehemiah is not so much invoking the divine compassion as the righteousness and faithfulness of a covenant God, the great and terrible God that keepeth covenant and mercy (Neh 1:5). Now this, God had shown Himself to be, by fulfilling the threats of His law that He would scatter His faithless and transgressing people among the nations.
Thus His fulfilment of this one side of the covenant strengthened the hope that God would also keep His other covenant word to His people who turned to Him, viz. , that He would bring them again to the land of their fathers, to the place of His gracious presence. Hence the reference to the dispersion of the nation among the heathen, forms the actual substructure for the request that so much of the promise as yet remained unfulfilled might come to pass.
Nehemiah, moreover, views this promise in the full depth of its import, as securing to Israel not merely an external return to their native land, but their restoration as a community, in the midst of whom the Lord had His dwelling, and manifested Himself as the defence and refuge of His people. To the re-establishment of this covenant relation very much was still wanting.
Those who had returned from captivity had indeed settled in the land of their fathers; and the temple in which they might worship God with sacrifices, according to the law, was rebuilt at Jerusalem. But notwithstanding all this, Jerusalem, with its ruined walls and burned gates, was still like a city lying waste, and exposed to attacks of all kinds; while the inhabitants of Jerusalem and the cities of Judah were loaded with shame and contempt by their heathen neighbours.
In this sense, Jerusalem was not yet restored, and the community dwelling therein not yet brought to the place where the name of the Lord dwelt. In this respect, the promise that Jahve would again manifest Himself to His repentant people as the God of the covenant was still unfulfilled, and the petition that He would gather His people to the place which He had chosen to put His name there, i.
e. , to manifest Himself according to His nature, as testified in His covenant (Exo 34:6-7), quite justifiable. In Neh 1:10 Nehemiah supports his petition by the words: And these (now dwelling in Judah and Jerusalem) are Thy servants and Thy people whom Thou hast redeemed, etc. His servants who worship Him in His temple, His people whom He has redeemed from Egypt by His great power and by His strong arm, God cannot leave in affliction and reproach.
The words: “redeemed with great power” ... are reminiscences from Deu 7:8; Deu 9:26, Deu 9:29, and other passages in the Pentateuch, and refer to the deliverance from Egypt.
Neh 1:8-10 With his confession of grievous transgression, Nehemiah combines the petition that the Lord would be mindful of His word declared by Moses, that if His people, whom He had scattered among the heathen for their sins, should turn to Him and keep His commandments, He would gather them from all places where He had scattered them, and bring them back to the place which He had chosen to place His name there. This word (הדּבר) he designates, as that which God had commanded to His servant Moses, inasmuch as it formed a part of that covenant law which was prescribed to the Israelites as their rule of life.
The matter of this word is introduced by לאמר: ye transgress, I will scatter; i. e. , if ye transgress by revolting from me, I will scatter you among the nations, - and ye turn to me and keep my commandments (i. e. , if ye turn to me and ... ), if there were of you cast out to the end of heaven (i. e. , to the most distant regions where the end of heaven touches the earth), thence will I gather you, etc.
נדּח, pat. Niphal , with a collective meaning, cast-out ones, like Deu 30:4. These words are no verbal quotation, but a free summary, in which Nehemiah had Deu 30:1-5 chiefly in view, of what God had proclaimed in the law of Moses concerning the dispersion of His people among the heathen if they sinned against Him, and of their return to the land of their fathers if they repented and turned to Him.
The clause: if the cast-out ones were at the end of heaven, etc. , stands verbally in Neh 1:4. The last words, Neh 1:9, “(I will bring them) to the place which I have chosen, that my name may dwell there,” are a special application of the general promise of the law to the present case. Jerusalem is meant, where the Lord caused His name to dwell in the temple; comp.
Deu 12:11. The entreaty to remember this word and to fulfil it, seems ill adapted to existing circumstances, for a portion of the people were already brought back to Jerusalem; and Nehemiah’s immediate purpose was to pray, not for the return of those still sojourning among the heathen, but for the removal of the affliction and reproach resting on those who were now at Jerusalem.
Still less appropriate seems the citation of the words: If ye transgress, I will scatter you among the nations. It must, however, be remembered that Nehemiah is not so much invoking the divine compassion as the righteousness and faithfulness of a covenant God, the great and terrible God that keepeth covenant and mercy (Neh 1:5). Now this, God had shown Himself to be, by fulfilling the threats of His law that He would scatter His faithless and transgressing people among the nations.
Thus His fulfilment of this one side of the covenant strengthened the hope that God would also keep His other covenant word to His people who turned to Him, viz. , that He would bring them again to the land of their fathers, to the place of His gracious presence. Hence the reference to the dispersion of the nation among the heathen, forms the actual substructure for the request that so much of the promise as yet remained unfulfilled might come to pass.
Nehemiah, moreover, views this promise in the full depth of its import, as securing to Israel not merely an external return to their native land, but their restoration as a community, in the midst of whom the Lord had His dwelling, and manifested Himself as the defence and refuge of His people. To the re-establishment of this covenant relation very much was still wanting.
Those who had returned from captivity had indeed settled in the land of their fathers; and the temple in which they might worship God with sacrifices, according to the law, was rebuilt at Jerusalem. But notwithstanding all this, Jerusalem, with its ruined walls and burned gates, was still like a city lying waste, and exposed to attacks of all kinds; while the inhabitants of Jerusalem and the cities of Judah were loaded with shame and contempt by their heathen neighbours.
In this sense, Jerusalem was not yet restored, and the community dwelling therein not yet brought to the place where the name of the Lord dwelt. In this respect, the promise that Jahve would again manifest Himself to His repentant people as the God of the covenant was still unfulfilled, and the petition that He would gather His people to the place which He had chosen to put His name there, i.
e. , to manifest Himself according to His nature, as testified in His covenant (Exo 34:6-7), quite justifiable. In Neh 1:10 Nehemiah supports his petition by the words: And these (now dwelling in Judah and Jerusalem) are Thy servants and Thy people whom Thou hast redeemed, etc. His servants who worship Him in His temple, His people whom He has redeemed from Egypt by His great power and by His strong arm, God cannot leave in affliction and reproach.
The words: “redeemed with great power” ... are reminiscences from Deu 7:8; Deu 9:26, Deu 9:29, and other passages in the Pentateuch, and refer to the deliverance from Egypt.
Neh 1:11 The prayer closes with the reiterated entreaty that God would hearken to the prayer of His servant (i. e. , Nehemiah), and to the prayer of His servants who delight to fear His name (יראה, infin . like Deu 4:10 and elsewhere), i. e. , of all Israelites who, like Nehemiah, prayed to God to redeem Israel from all his troubles. For himself in particular, Nehemiah also request: “Prosper Thy servant to-day (היּום like Neh 1:6; לעבדּך may be either the accusative of the person, like 2Ch 26:5, or the dative: Prosper his design unto Thy servant, like Neh 2:20), and give him to mercy (i.
e. , cause him to find mercy; comp. 1Ki 8:50; Psa 106:46) before the face of this man. ” What man he means is explained by the following supplementary remark, “And I was cup-bearer to the king,” without whose favour and permission Nehemiah could not have carried his project into execution (as related in Neh 2). Nehemiah Journeys to Jerusalem with the King’s Permission, and Furnished with Royal Letters.
Three months after receiving the tidings concerning Jerusalem, Nehemiah perceived a favourable opportunity of making request to the king for leave to undertake a journey to the city of his fathers for the purpose of building it, and obtained the permission he entreated, together with letters to the governors on this side the Euphrates to permit him to pass through their provinces, and to the keeper of the royal forests to supply wood for building the walls and gates, and an escort of captains of the army and horsemen for his protection (Neh 2:1-9), to the great vexation of Sanballat the Horonite and Tobiah the Ammonite (Neh 2:10). In the third night after his arrival at Jerusalem, Nehemiah rode round the city to survey the walls, and incited the rulers of the people and the priests to undertake the work of rebuilding them (Neh 2:11-18).
Sanballat and other enemies of the Jews expressed their contempt thereat, but Nehemiah encountered their ridicule with serious words (Neh 2:19, Neh 2:20). Neh 2:1 In the month Nisan, in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes, when wine was before him, Nehemiah as cupbearer took the wine and handed it to the king. Nisan is, according to the Hebrew calendar, the first month of the year; yet here, as in Neh 1:1-11, the twentieth year of Artaxerxes is named, and the month Chisleu there mentioned (Neh 1:1), which, after the Hebrew method of computing the year, was the ninth month and preceded Nisan by three months, is placed in the same year.
This can only be explained on the grounds that either the twentieth year of Artaxerxes did not coincide with the year of the calendar, but began later, or that Nehemiah here uses the computation of time current in anterior Asia, and also among the Jews after the captivity in civil matters, and which made the new year begin in autumn. Of these two views we esteem the latter to be correct, since it cannot be shown that the years of the king’s reign would be reckoned from the day of his accession.
In chronological statements they were reckoned according to the years of the calendar, so that the commencement of a year of a reign coincided with that of the civil year. If, moreover, the beginning of the year is placed in autumn, Tishri is the first, Chisleu the third, and Nisan the seventh month. The circumstances which induced Nehemiah not to apply to the king till three months after his reception of the tidings which so distressed him, are not stated.
It is probable that he himself required some time for deliberation before he could come to a decision as to the best means of remedying the distresses of Jerusalem; then, too, he may not have ventured at once to bring his request before the king from fear of meeting with a refusal, and may therefore have waited till an opportunity favourable to his desires should present itself. לפניו יין, “wine was before the king,” is a circumstantial clause explanatory of what follows.
The words allude to some banquet at which the king and queen were present. The last sentence, “And I have not been sad before him” (רע according to רעים פּניך of Neh 2:2, of a sad countenance), can neither mean, I had never before been sad before him (de Wette); nor, I was accustomed not to be sad before him; but, I had not been sad before him at the moment of presenting the cup to him (Bertheau), because it would not have been becoming to serve the king with a sad demeanour: comp.
Est 4:2. The king, however, noticed his sadness, and inquired: “Why is thy countenance sad, since thou art not sick? this is nothing but sorrow of heart, i. e. , thy sadness of countenance can arise only from sorrow of heart. Then I was very sore afraid;” because the unexpected question obliged him to explain the cause of his sorrow, and he could not tell how the king would view the matter, nor whether he would favour his ardent desire to assist his fellow-countrymen in Judah.
Neh 2:3 He nevertheless openly expressed his desire, prefacing it by the accustomed form of wishing the king prosperity, saying: “Let the king live for ever;” comp. Dan 2:4; Dan 3:9. “Why should not my countenance be sad? for the city, the place of my fathers’ sepulchres, lieth waste, and its gates are burned with dire.” The question, Why ... ? means: I have certainly sufficient reason for sadness. The reason is, that (אשׁר) the city where are the graves of my fathers lieth waste.
Neh 2:4-5 Then the king, feeling interested, asked him: For what dost thou make request? על בּקּשׁ, to make request for or concerning a thing, like Ezr 8:23; Est 4:8; Est 7:7. The question shows that the king was inclined to relieve the distress of Jerusalem which had been just stated to him. “And so I prayed to the God of heaven,” to ensure divine assistance in the request he was about to lay before the king.
Then Nehemiah answered (Neh 2:5), “If it please the king, and if thy servant is well-pleasing before thee, (I beg) that thou wouldest send me to Judah, to the city of my fathers’ sepulchres, that I may build it. ” לפני ייטב, here and Est 5:14, is of like meaning with בּעיני ייטב or טּוב, Est 8:5; 2Sa 18:4 : if thy servant is right in thine eyes, i. e. , if he thinks rightly concerning the matter in question.
The matter of his request is directly combined with this conditional clause by אשׁר, the connecting term, I beg, being easily supplied from the king’s question: For what dost thou beg?