The chapter continues the memoir-shaped narrative associated with Nehemiah, preserving His first-person account of royal access, providential favor, personal inspection, and public leadership.
Nehemiah Receives Royal Favor, Surveys Jerusalem, and Calls the People to Rise and Build
God moves His burdened servant from prayer to action by granting providential favor, wise discernment, communal courage, and confidence against opposition.
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God moves His burdened servant from prayer to action by granting providential favor, wise discernment, communal courage, and confidence against opposition.
Nehemiah 2 argues that the God who hears prayer also governs kings, opens doors, provides resources, exposes opposition, and strengthens His people for obedient rebuilding.
The restored covenant community of Judah and later readers learning how prayerful dependence, wise action, courageous leadership, and covenant restoration operate under God's providence.
The chapter begins in the month of Nisan in the twentieth year of King Artaxerxes, within the Persian royal court, and then moves to Jerusalem after Nehemiah receives permission, letters, and resources for the work.
God moves His burdened servant from prayer to action by granting providential favor, wise discernment, communal courage, and confidence against opposition.
The chapter continues the memoir-shaped narrative associated with Nehemiah, preserving His first-person account of royal access, providential favor, personal inspection, and public leadership.
The restored covenant community of Judah and later readers learning how prayerful dependence, wise action, courageous leadership, and covenant restoration operate under God's providence.
The chapter begins in the month of Nisan in the twentieth year of King Artaxerxes, within the Persian royal court, and then moves to Jerusalem after Nehemiah receives permission, letters, and resources for the work.
- Nehemiah faces the danger of appearing sad before the king, the uncertainty of royal response, the burden of Jerusalem's disgrace, and later the hostility of regional opponents who resent the welfare of the Israelites.
Persian kings held immense authority, and access to the king was both privilege and danger. Royal letters could authorize safe passage and material provision. A night inspection allowed Nehemiah to assess Jerusalem's damage quietly before announcing the work. Regional officials such as Sanballat, Tobiah, and Geshem had political reasons to oppose renewed Jewish strength in Jerusalem.
Nehemiah 2 advances the postexilic restoration from prayerful burden to providential action. Jerusalem's rebuilding unfolds under Gentile imperial permission, showing both the partial mercy of God in the return and the unfinished nature of restoration before the coming of Christ and the final kingdom.
God answers Nehemiah's prayer by granting royal favor, bringing Him safely to Jerusalem, leading Him to inspect the ruins, and enabling Him to call the people to rebuild despite opposition.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Nehemiah 2 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's people need gracious intervention, not merely human initiative. Nehemiah receives favor from an earthly king to address Jerusalem's disgrace, but Christ secures favor from God for sinners and removes the deeper disgrace of sin through His cross and resurrection. The chapter points toward the God who restores by grace, raises up a servant, gathers a people, and builds what human sin has ruined.
Nehemiah's inner burden becomes externally visible before Artaxerxes, placing Him in a dangerous but providential moment.
Nehemiah respectfully explains that His sadness concerns the ruined city where His ancestors are buried.
The king asks what Nehemiah wants, creating the opening for which Nehemiah had prayed.
Before answering the king, Nehemiah prays to the God of heaven, showing that dependence continues even in the moment of action.
The king grants Nehemiah time, safe-conduct letters, and timber because God's gracious hand is upon Him.
Nehemiah reaches the governors with royal letters, while opposition begins immediately from those troubled by Judah's welfare.
Nehemiah surveys the ruins privately, gathering firsthand understanding before mobilizing the people.
Nehemiah calls the people to rebuild, grounding the appeal in the visible disgrace, God's favor, and royal permission.
Nehemiah responds to mockery and accusation by confessing confidence in God's success and rejecting the opponents' claim to Jerusalem.
- 2:1-4: Nehemiah's sorrow over Jerusalem becomes visible before Artaxerxes, and the king asks what He desires.
- 2:4-8: Nehemiah prays and requests permission, protection, and provision. The king grants it because God's gracious hand is upon Him.
- 2:9-10: Nehemiah arrives with authorization, but Sanballat and Tobiah are deeply disturbed by His concern for the welfare of Israel.
- 2:11-16: Nehemiah privately inspects Jerusalem's ruined walls and gates, learning the actual condition before rallying others.
- 2:17-18: Nehemiah presents the need, testifies to God's favor, and summons the people to rebuild. They respond with readiness.
- 2:19-20: When mocked and accused, Nehemiah declares that the God of heaven will give success and that the opponents have no rightful portion in the work.
Theological Argument
Nehemiah 2 argues that the God who hears prayer also governs kings, opens doors, provides resources, exposes opposition, and strengthens His people for obedient rebuilding.
Private prayer becomes public courage; royal favor becomes covenant service; careful inspection becomes communal mobilization; mockery becomes confession of confidence in God.
- 1.God brings hidden burdens into providential moments.
- 2.Dependence on God continues in the moment of action.
- 3.God's providence works through earthly authority without being controlled by it.
- 4.God's work often provokes opposition from those threatened by the welfare of his people.
- 5.Faithful leadership combines prayer with careful observation.
- 6.The testimony of God's hand strengthens communal obedience.
- 7.Confidence in God's success steadies God's people under ridicule and accusation.
Theological Focus
- Providence over rulers and resources
- Prayerful courage
- God's gracious hand
- Restoration of God's people
- Leadership under divine authority
- Opposition to covenant restoration
- Communal obedience
- Confidence in God's success
- Prayer and action
- Providence through empire
- Opposition to the welfare of God's people
- Wise and patient leadership
- Corporate strengthening
- Providence
- Prayer
- Grace
- Courage
- Leadership
- Restoration
- Opposition to God's Work
- People of God
Theological Themes
Nehemiah explains the king's favor not as luck, charisma, or political skill, but as the gracious hand of God upon Him.
The chapter refuses the false divide between prayer and planning. Nehemiah prays, asks, travels, inspects, speaks, and leads.
God advances His restoration purposes through the permission and resources of a Persian king, showing divine rule over earthly authority.
The enemies are disturbed because someone has come to seek the good of Israel. The chapter frames opposition as resistance to covenant restoration.
Nehemiah does not announce the work before He understands the situation. He combines courage with restraint.
The people are moved from disgrace to resolve as Nehemiah testifies to God's favor and calls them to shared labor.
Covenant Significance
Nehemiah 2 shows covenant restoration moving from prayerful appeal to visible obedience. Jerusalem's wall is not merely an urban project; it concerns the honor, security, and ordered life of the covenant community. Yet the restoration remains partial and dependent on God's gracious hand.
- Jerusalem's disgrace - The city's ruined condition reflects the lingering shame of covenant judgment and incomplete restoration.
- God's providential favor - The king's permission and provision are interpreted as God's gracious hand, showing covenant mercy operating through history.
- Renewed communal responsibility - The people must participate in the work rather than remain passive in their disgrace.
- Opposition to covenant welfare - Sanballat, Tobiah, and Geshem resist the restoration of Jerusalem and the welfare of God's people.
- Separation of rightful inheritance - Nehemiah's response to the opponents emphasizes that they have no share, claim, or memorial right in Jerusalem.
- Deuteronomy 30:1-10 - The covenant promise of restoration after exile stands behind Nehemiah's mission.
- 1 Kings 8:46-53 - Solomon's prayer anticipated repentant appeal and God's mercy after exile.
- Ezra 1:1-4 - As God stirred Cyrus for temple restoration, He now grants favor through Artaxerxes for Jerusalem's rebuilding.
- Isaiah 58:12 - The language of rebuilding ancient ruins and repairing broken walls resonates strongly with Nehemiah's task.
- Zechariah 2:1-13 - Zechariah's vision of Jerusalem's future security gives prophetic depth to the concern for the city, while also pointing beyond mere walls.
Canonical Connections
Nehemiah's language of God's gracious hand parallels Ezra and reinforces that postexilic restoration is driven by divine favor, not merely imperial permission.
God uses Gentile kings to advance His purposes, as seen in Cyrus's decree and Artaxerxes's permission.
The rebuilding of Jerusalem connects with prophetic restoration hopes concerning ruined places and repaired walls.
The opposition in Nehemiah reflects the recurring biblical pattern of resistance against God's people and purposes.
Nehemiah seeks the good of Israel, joining the biblical theme of servants who seek the peace, welfare, and restoration of God's people.
The physical rebuilding of Jerusalem's wall points forward only typologically and partially to the greater reality of Christ building His church and forming His people into a spiritual house.
Cross References
coming to him, a living stone, rejected indeed by men, but chosen by God, precious. You also, as living stones, are built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus...
Continue steadfastly in prayer, watching in it with thanksgiving, praying together for us also, that God may open to us a door for the word, to speak the mystery of Christ, for which I am also in bonds, that I may reveal it as I ought to...
For through him we both have our access in one Spirit to the Father.
So then you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and of the household of God, being built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the chief cornerstone; in...
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...
I also tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my assembly, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it.
Behold, Yahweh your God has set the land before you. Go up, take possession, as Yahweh the God of your fathers has spoken to you. Don’t be afraid, neither be dismayed.”
Now in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, that Yahweh’s word by Jeremiah’s mouth might be accomplished, Yahweh stirred up the spirit of Cyrus king of Persia, so that he made a proclamation throughout all his kingdom, and put it also...
Then the people of the land weakened the hands of the people of Judah, and troubled them in building. They hired counselors against them, to frustrate their purpose, all the days of Cyrus king of Persia, even until the reign of Darius king...
Who says of Cyrus, ‘He is my shepherd, and shall perform all my pleasure,’ even saying of Jerusalem, ‘She will be built;’ and of the temple, ‘Your foundation will be laid.’ ”
Those who will be of you will build the old waste places. You will raise up the foundations of many generations. You will be called Repairer of the Breach, Restorer of Paths with Dwellings.
The king’s heart is in Yahweh’s hand like the watercourses. He turns it wherever he desires.
When I heard these words, I sat down and wept, and mourned several days; and I fasted and prayed before the God of heaven, and said, “I beg you, Yahweh, the God of heaven, the great and awesome God, who keeps covenant and loving kindness...
In the month Nisan, in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes the king, when wine was before him, I picked up the wine, and gave it to the king. Now I had not been sad before in his presence. The king said to me, “Why is your face sad, since you...
Then I said to them, “You see the bad situation that we are in, how Jerusalem lies waste, and its gates are burned with fire. Come, let’s build up the wall of Jerusalem, that we won’t be disgraced.” I told them of the hand of my God which...
Then Eliashib the high priest rose up with his brothers the priests, and they built the sheep gate. They sanctified it, and set up its doors. They sanctified it even to the tower of Hammeah, to the tower of Hananel. Next to him the men of...
But when Sanballat heard that we were building the wall, he was angry, and was very indignant, and mocked the Jews. He spoke before his brothers and the army of Samaria, and said, “What are these feeble Jews doing? Will they fortify...
For though we walk in the flesh, we don’t wage war according to the flesh; for the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh, but mighty before God to the throwing down of strongholds, throwing down imaginations and every high thing that...
Now thanks be to God, who always leads us in triumph in Christ, and reveals through us the sweet aroma of his knowledge in every place.
“For truly, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the people of Israel, were gathered together against your holy servant, Jesus, whom you anointed, to do whatever your hand and your council foreordained to happen. Now, Lord,...
Now, Lord, look at their threats, and grant to your servants to speak your word with all boldness, while you stretch out your hand to heal; and that signs and wonders may be done through the name of your holy Servant Jesus.” When they had...
Nehemiah 2 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's people need gracious intervention, not merely human initiative. Nehemiah receives favor from an earthly king to address Jerusalem's disgrace, but Christ secures favor from God for sinners and removes the deeper disgrace of sin through His cross and resurrection. The chapter points toward the God who restores by grace, raises up a servant, gathers a people, and builds what human sin has ruined.
- Grace precedes rebuilding - The work begins not with human strength but with God's gracious hand granting favor.
- Disgrace requires restoration - Jerusalem's visible disgrace points to the deeper biblical theme of shame caused by sin and judgment.
- A servant acts for the good of the people - Nehemiah seeks the welfare of Israel, anticipating the greater servant who gives Himself for His people.
- Opposition cannot overthrow God's purpose - Mockery and accusation arise, but God's work advances according to His will.
- Final restoration is greater than walls - The rebuilt wall is real mercy, but the gospel reveals a fuller restoration through Christ's redeeming work and the building of His people.
- Do not make Nehemiah the savior of the chapter. He is a servant under God's gracious hand.
- Do not reduce the gospel connection to leadership inspiration or project completion.
- Do not allegorize every wall, gate, letter, and piece of timber into a hidden New Testament meaning.
- Do not treat earthly favor as proof of spiritual success in every case. In this chapter, the text itself identifies God's gracious hand as the explanation.
- Do not confuse partial postexilic restoration with final new-creation fulfillment.
coming to him, a living stone, rejected indeed by men, but chosen by God, precious. You also, as living stones, are built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus...
Continue steadfastly in prayer, watching in it with thanksgiving, praying together for us also, that God may open to us a door for the word, to speak the mystery of Christ, for which I am also in bonds, that I may reveal it as I ought to...
For through him we both have our access in one Spirit to the Father.
So then you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and of the household of God, being built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the chief cornerstone; in...
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...
I also tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my assembly, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it.
Primary Emphasis
Nehemiah 2 contributes to the biblical hope of restoration by showing a servant who approaches the throne, receives favor, acts for Jerusalem's good, and leads the people to rebuild despite opposition. Yet Nehemiah remains a limited restorer. The wall can be rebuilt, but the deeper ruin of sin remains. The chapter points forward to Christ, the greater Servant and Mediator, who secures not merely royal permission but divine redemption, not merely timber for gates but a cross for sinners, not merely civic restoration but a new-covenant people built together as God's dwelling.
Chapter Contribution
Nehemiah 2 argues that the God who hears prayer also governs kings, opens doors, provides resources, exposes opposition, and strengthens His people for obedient rebuilding.
Restoration is not an individual project. God’s people rise together in covenant solidarity.
Faith does not negate risk. Nehemiah acts boldly under God’s authority, trusting Him with the outcome.
God sovereignly directs circumstances and rulers to accomplish His redemptive purposes. The king’s favor is ultimately God’s doing.
Confidence in mission flows from the assurance that God Himself grants success.
Nehemiah models persistent and situational prayer. Long-term intercession does not eliminate the need for moment-by-moment reliance.
Whenever God advances restoration, opposition arises. The displeasure of Sanballat and Tobiah signals spiritual resistance to covenant renewal.
Those outside God’s covenant have no share in His redemptive work. Opposition cannot nullify God’s purposes.
Faithful leadership requires thoughtful assessment and discernment. Zeal must be guided by knowledge.
God sovereignly works through timing, emotion, royal authority, legal documents, material provision, travel, and opposition to advance His purposes.
Prayer is both sustained and immediate. Nehemiah's long season of prayer prepares Him for a short prayer in a decisive moment.
The favorable answer of the king is explicitly attributed to the gracious hand of God upon Nehemiah.
Faithful courage is not the absence of fear but obedience under fear before God.
Godly leadership joins prayer, preparation, discernment, truthful assessment, public encouragement, and confidence in God.
Jerusalem's rebuilding is an act of covenant mercy, yet it remains partial and points beyond itself to deeper restoration.
Resistance arises when God's people seek covenant welfare and restoration, but opposition does not define the outcome.
The welfare of the Israelites and the rebuilding of Jerusalem concern the ordered life and witness of God's covenant people.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Nehemiah 2 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's people need gracious intervention, not merely human initiative. Nehemiah receives favor from an earthly king to address Jerusalem's disgrace, but Christ secures favor from God for sinners and removes the deeper disgrace of sin through His cross and resurrection. The chapter points toward the God who restores by grace, raises up a servant, gathers a people, and builds what human sin has ruined.
Sense The sovereign God who rules from heaven over earthly kings and circumstances.
Definition A title emphasizing God's universal authority and heavenly rule.
References Nehemiah 2:4, 2:20
Lexicon The sovereign God who rules from heaven over earthly kings and circumstances.
Why it matters Nehemiah prays to and later confesses confidence in the God of heaven while standing before earthly authority and facing earthly opposition.
Sense To pray, intercede, plead.
Definition To address God in prayer, often with dependence and petition.
References Nehemiah 2:4
Lexicon To pray, intercede, plead.
Why it matters Nehemiah's quick prayer before answering the king reveals that dependence continues in decisive moments.
Sense God's favorable, effective, providential help.
Definition The hand of God as an image of his active power, favor, and providential blessing.
References Nehemiah 2:8, 2:18
Lexicon God's favorable, effective, providential help.
Why it matters The chapter explicitly interprets the king's favorable response as the result of God's gracious hand upon Nehemiah.
Sense King, ruler, sovereign authority.
Definition A monarch or ruler with governing authority.
References Nehemiah 2:1-8
Lexicon King, ruler, sovereign authority.
Why it matters The Persian king has real authority in the narrative, yet His favor is governed by the higher sovereignty of God.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense Mercy, compassion, favorable regard.
Definition Tender mercy or compassion extended to one in need.
References Nehemiah 1:11; Nehemiah 2:8
Lexicon Mercy, compassion, favorable regard.
Why it matters Nehemiah had prayed for mercy before the king in chapter 1, and chapter 2 narrates God's merciful answer.
Sense Good, welfare, benefit, favorable condition.
Definition That which is good, beneficial, pleasing, or welfare-producing.
References Nehemiah 2:10
Lexicon Good, welfare, benefit, favorable condition.
Why it matters Sanballat and Tobiah are disturbed that someone has come to seek the welfare of the Israelites, exposing opposition to covenant good.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense Jerusalem, the covenant city associated with temple, kingship, worship, and restoration hope.
Definition The central city of Judah, associated with God's chosen place, temple worship, and redemptive-historical hope.
References Nehemiah 2:5, 2:11, 2:17
Lexicon Jerusalem, the covenant city associated with temple, kingship, worship, and restoration hope.
Why it matters The chapter's burden centers on Jerusalem's disgrace, ruins, and restoration under God's gracious hand.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense Wall, especially a city wall for defense and public order.
Definition A protective city wall or fortification.
References Nehemiah 2:13, 2:15, 2:17
Lexicon Wall, especially a city wall for defense and public order.
Why it matters The broken wall embodies Jerusalem's vulnerability and disgrace, becoming the visible focus of Nehemiah's rebuilding mission.
Sense Gates, entrances of a city, often places of defense, commerce, justice, and civic life.
Definition City gates functioning as entryways and civic-security points.
References Nehemiah 2:13, 2:17
Lexicon Gates, entrances of a city, often places of defense, commerce, justice, and civic life.
Why it matters The burned gates signal Jerusalem's vulnerability, public shame, and inability to function securely.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense Reproach, shame, disgrace.
Definition A condition of public shame, dishonor, or reproach.
References Nehemiah 2:17
Lexicon Reproach, shame, disgrace.
Why it matters Nehemiah's call to rebuild is driven by the need to remove Jerusalem's reproach, not merely improve infrastructure.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 1st Person · Common · Plural What is this?
Sense To arise, stand, take action.
Definition To rise, stand up, or begin decisive action.
References Nehemiah 2:18
Lexicon To arise, stand, take action.
Why it matters The people's response, 'Let us start rebuilding,' marks the movement from disgrace to communal obedience.
Sense To build, rebuild, establish.
Definition To construct or rebuild, often used in restoration contexts.
References Nehemiah 2:5, 2:17-18, 2:20
Lexicon To build, rebuild, establish.
Why it matters The chapter's central action is the call to rebuild Jerusalem's wall under God's gracious favor.
Cross-language bridge 4 links · View in lexicon
Form in passage Hiphil · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense To prosper, succeed, advance effectively.
Definition To succeed or make progress under favorable empowerment.
References Nehemiah 2:20
Lexicon To prosper, succeed, advance effectively.
Why it matters Nehemiah's confidence is not in technique or numbers but in the God of heaven who will give success.
Sense Portion, share, inheritance, allotted part.
Definition An assigned portion, share, or rightful part.
References Nehemiah 2:20
Lexicon Portion, share, inheritance, allotted part.
Why it matters Nehemiah denies the opponents any rightful share in Jerusalem, drawing a boundary around the covenant work.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense Right, righteousness, just claim.
Definition Righteousness or rightful claim depending on context.
References Nehemiah 2:20
Lexicon Right, righteousness, just claim.
Why it matters Nehemiah asserts that the opponents have no legitimate claim in Jerusalem's restoration.
Sense Memorial, remembrance, recorded claim.
Definition A remembrance or memorial standing as a recognized record.
References Nehemiah 2:20
Lexicon Memorial, remembrance, recorded claim.
Why it matters Nehemiah denies the opponents even memorial standing in Jerusalem, emphasizing their exclusion from the covenant work.
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
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
God governs kings, timing, resources, and opposition for the sake of His covenant purposes.
God's servants must learn to move from prayer to obedient action without leaving dependence behind.
Prayerful courage, wise restraint, clear action, communal encouragement, and God-centered confidence.
- Pray both long and short prayers
- Ask specifically
- Acknowledge God's hand
- Inspect before leading
- Strengthen others with testimony
- Answer opposition with truth
- The chapter warns against prayer that never becomes obedience, action that proceeds without dependence, leadership that speaks before discerning, and discouragement that gives opponents more authority than God. It also warns against confusing visible restoration with final redemption.
- Reading Nehemiah 2 as a simple leadership strategy manual. - The chapter contains leadership wisdom, but its controlling emphasis is God's providence, prayerful dependence, covenant restoration, and divine favor.
- Treating Nehemiah's request as mere political skill. - Nehemiah uses wisdom and preparation, but the text explicitly attributes the favorable outcome to God's gracious hand.
- Assuming prayer replaces careful planning. - Nehemiah prays deeply and acts wisely. He asks for specific letters, resources, travel authorization, and later inspects the damage carefully.
- Assuming careful planning replaces prayer. - Even in the moment before answering the king, Nehemiah prays to the God of heaven.
- Making the opponents merely symbolic of generic negativity. - Sanballat, Tobiah, and Geshem are concrete political opponents who resist the welfare and restoration of the covenant community.
- Equating the rebuilding of Jerusalem's wall with final messianic restoration. - The rebuilding is a real act of mercy but remains partial, fragile, and forward-pointing.
- Has God given You a burden that requires both prayer and courageous action?
- Do You recognize God's providential openings, or do You dismiss them as ordinary circumstances?
- When pressure rises, do You pray before speaking?
- Are Your requests to God and others clear, wise, and connected to faithful obedience?
- Where do You need to inspect the true condition of something before speaking publicly or leading others?
- Are You more moved by the disgrace of God's people or by the discomfort of addressing it?
- How do You respond when obedience is mocked, questioned, or misrepresented?
- Do You give God the credit when doors open, resources come, and favor is granted?
- Private prayer prepares believers for pressured moments when they must act, speak, or ask with courage.
- Faithful leadership is not impulsive. It prays, waits, asks clearly, observes carefully, and mobilizes wisely.
- Congregational rebuilding requires honest recognition of disgrace, testimony to God's grace, and shared resolve to labor together.
- Fear in the presence of earthly power does not negate faith. Nehemiah is afraid, yet He speaks.
- God's people should expect opposition when seeking the welfare of God's people and the honor of God's name.
- Not every burden should be announced immediately. Wise servants observe, understand, and then speak.
- God may use secular authority, official documents, material provision, and vocational position to advance His purposes.
Nehemiah's sadness becomes the occasion for honest, respectful, courageous speech before the king.
His prayer does not remain vague. It becomes concrete action and clear petition.
The king's permission moves Nehemiah toward Jerusalem, not toward personal comfort.
Nehemiah assesses the ruins before calling the people to rebuild.
The chapter ends with opposition answered by faith in the God of heaven.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace the Spirit's presence, empowerment, renewal, and mission-bearing work across Scripture.
Follow faith, believing response, trust, and persevering allegiance across Scripture.
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Study kingdom reign, divine rule, and gospel kingdom proclamation across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
God answers Nehemiah's prayer by granting royal favor, bringing Him safely to Jerusalem, leading Him to inspect the ruins, and enabling Him to call the people to rebuild despite opposition.
Nehemiah 2 shows covenant restoration moving from prayerful appeal to visible obedience. Jerusalem's wall is not merely an urban project; it concerns the honor, security, and ordered life of the covenant community. Yet the restoration remains partial and dependent on God's gracious hand.
Nehemiah 2 clarifies the gospel by showing that God's people need gracious intervention, not merely human initiative. Nehemiah receives favor from an earthly king to address Jerusalem's disgrace, but Christ secures favor from God for sinners and removes the deeper disgrace of sin through His cross and resurrection. The chapter points toward the God who restores by grace, raises up a servant, gathers a people, and builds what human sin has ruined.
Prayerful courage, wise restraint, clear action, communal encouragement, and God-centered confidence.
Focus Points
- Providence over rulers and resources
- Prayerful courage
- God's gracious hand
- Restoration of God's people
- Leadership under divine authority
- Opposition to covenant restoration
- Communal obedience
- Confidence in God's success
- Prayer and action
- Providence through empire
- Opposition to the welfare of God's people
- Wise and patient leadership
- Corporate strengthening
- Providence
- Prayer
- Grace
- Courage
- Leadership
- Restoration
- Opposition to God's Work
- People of God
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Nehemiah 2:1-10
Neh 2:6 The king and the queen, who was sitting near him (שׁגל, Psa 45:10), grant him permission to depart after he has, in answer to their inquiry, fixed the period of his absence. Nehemiah makes the result of the conversation, “And it pleased the king,” etc. , follow immediately upon the question of the king and queen: For how long shall thy journey be, and when wilt thou return?
before telling us what was his answer to this question, which is not brought in till afterwards, so that זמן לו ואתּנה must be understood as expressing: since I had determined the time.
Neh 2:7-8 Hereupon Nehemiah also requested from the king letters to the governors beyond (west of) the river (Euphrates), to allow him to travel unmolested through their provinces to Judah (לי יתּנוּ, let them give me = let there be given me; העביר, to pass or travel through a country, comp. Deu 3:20); and a letter to Asaph, the keeper (inspector) of the royal forests, to give him timber to make beams for the gates of the citadel by the temple, and for the walls of the city, and for the governor’s own house.
These requests were also granted. פּרדּס in Sol 4:13; Ecc 2:5, signifies a park or orchard; it is a word of Aryan origin (in Armenian pardez , the garden round the house, in Greek παράδεισος), and is explained either from the Sanscrit parta-dêça , a superior district, or (by Haug) from the Zend. pairi-daêza , a fenced-in place. In Old-Persian it probably denoted the king’s pleasure-grounds, and in our verse a royal wood or forest.
Of the situation of this park nothing reliable can be ascertained. As wood for extensive buildings was to be taken from it, the sycamore forest in the low plains, which had been the property of King David (1Ch 27:28), and became, after the overthrow of the Davidic dynasty, first a Babylonian, and then a Persian possession, may be intended. לקרות, to timber, to overlay, to cover with beams (comp.
2Ch 34:11) the gates of the citadel which belongs to the house, i. e. , to the temple. This citadel - בּירה, in Greek Βᾶρις - by the temple is mentioned here for the first time; for in 1Ch 29:1, 1Ch 29:19, the whole temple is called בּירה. It was certainly situate on the same place where Hyrcanus I, son of Simon Maccabaeus, or the kings of the Asmonean race, built the akro'polis and called it Baris (Jos.
Ant . xv. 11. 4, comp. with xviii. 4. 3). This was subsequently rebuilt by Herod when he repaired and enlarged the temple, and named Antonia, in honour of his friend Mark Antony. It was a citadel of considerable size, provided with corner towers, walls, chambers, and spacious courts, built on a north-western side of the external chambers of the temple, for the defence of that edifice, and did not extend the entire length of the north side of the present Haram , as Robinson (see Biblical Researches , p.
300) seeks to show; comp. , on the other hand, Tobler, Topographic von Jerusalem , i. p. 688f. , and Rosen, Haram von Jerusalem , p. 25f. וּלחומת is coordinate with לקרות: “and for the walls of the city;” the timber not being used for building the wall itself, but for the gates (Neh 3:3, Neh 3:6). “And for the house into which I come (to dwell). ” This must be Nehemiah’s official residence as Pecha.
For though it is not expressly stated in the present chapter that Nehemiah was appointed Pecha (governor) by Artaxerxes, yet Nehemiah himself tells us, Neh 5:14, that he had been Pecha from the twentieth year of Artaxerxes. Former governors had perhaps no official residence becoming their position. By לבּית the temple cannot, as older expositors thought, be intended.
This request also was granted by the king, “according to the good hand of my God upon me;” comp. rem. on Ezr 7:6.
Neh 2:7-8 Hereupon Nehemiah also requested from the king letters to the governors beyond (west of) the river (Euphrates), to allow him to travel unmolested through their provinces to Judah (לי יתּנוּ, let them give me = let there be given me; העביר, to pass or travel through a country, comp. Deu 3:20); and a letter to Asaph, the keeper (inspector) of the royal forests, to give him timber to make beams for the gates of the citadel by the temple, and for the walls of the city, and for the governor’s own house.
These requests were also granted. פּרדּס in Sol 4:13; Ecc 2:5, signifies a park or orchard; it is a word of Aryan origin (in Armenian pardez , the garden round the house, in Greek παράδεισος), and is explained either from the Sanscrit parta-dêça , a superior district, or (by Haug) from the Zend. pairi-daêza , a fenced-in place. In Old-Persian it probably denoted the king’s pleasure-grounds, and in our verse a royal wood or forest.
Of the situation of this park nothing reliable can be ascertained. As wood for extensive buildings was to be taken from it, the sycamore forest in the low plains, which had been the property of King David (1Ch 27:28), and became, after the overthrow of the Davidic dynasty, first a Babylonian, and then a Persian possession, may be intended. לקרות, to timber, to overlay, to cover with beams (comp.
2Ch 34:11) the gates of the citadel which belongs to the house, i. e. , to the temple. This citadel - בּירה, in Greek Βᾶρις - by the temple is mentioned here for the first time; for in 1Ch 29:1, 1Ch 29:19, the whole temple is called בּירה. It was certainly situate on the same place where Hyrcanus I, son of Simon Maccabaeus, or the kings of the Asmonean race, built the akro'polis and called it Baris (Jos.
Ant . xv. 11. 4, comp. with xviii. 4. 3). This was subsequently rebuilt by Herod when he repaired and enlarged the temple, and named Antonia, in honour of his friend Mark Antony. It was a citadel of considerable size, provided with corner towers, walls, chambers, and spacious courts, built on a north-western side of the external chambers of the temple, for the defence of that edifice, and did not extend the entire length of the north side of the present Haram , as Robinson (see Biblical Researches , p.
300) seeks to show; comp. , on the other hand, Tobler, Topographic von Jerusalem , i. p. 688f. , and Rosen, Haram von Jerusalem , p. 25f. וּלחומת is coordinate with לקרות: “and for the walls of the city;” the timber not being used for building the wall itself, but for the gates (Neh 3:3, Neh 3:6). “And for the house into which I come (to dwell). ” This must be Nehemiah’s official residence as Pecha.
For though it is not expressly stated in the present chapter that Nehemiah was appointed Pecha (governor) by Artaxerxes, yet Nehemiah himself tells us, Neh 5:14, that he had been Pecha from the twentieth year of Artaxerxes. Former governors had perhaps no official residence becoming their position. By לבּית the temple cannot, as older expositors thought, be intended.
This request also was granted by the king, “according to the good hand of my God upon me;” comp. rem. on Ezr 7:6.
Neh 2:9 Nehemiah delivered the letter when he came to the governors on this side Euphrates. The king had also sent with him captains of the army and horsemen. The second half of Neh 2:9 contains a supplementary remark, so that ויּשׁלח must be expressed by the pluperfect. Ezra had been ashamed to request a military escort from the Persian monarch (Ezr 8:22); but the king gave to the high dignitary called Pecha a guard of soldiers, who certainly remained with him in Jerusalem also for his protection (Ezr 4:17).
Besides these, there were in his retinue his brethren, i. e. , either relations or fellow-countrymen, and servants, comp. Neh 4:10; Neh 5:10. That this retinue is not mentioned in the present verses, is owing to the fact that the journey itself is not further described, but only indirectly alluded to.
Neh 2:10 When Sanballat the Horonite and Tobiah the Ammonite heard of his coming, it caused them great annoyance (להם ירע is strengthened by גּדולה רעה, as in Jon 4:1) that a man (as Nehemiah expresses himself ironically from their point of view) was come to seek the welfare of the children of Israel. Sanballat is called the Horonite either after his birthplace or place of residence, yet certainly not from Horonaim in Moab, as older expositors imagined (Isa 15:5; Jer 48:34), since he would then have been called a Moabite, but from either the upper or nether Beth-horon, formerly belonging to the tribe of Ephraim (Jos 16:3, Jos 16:5; Jos 18:13), and therefore in the time of Nehemiah certainly appertaining to the region of the Samaritans (Berth.)
Tobiah the Ammonite is called העבד, the servant, probably as being a servant or official of the Persian king. These two individuals were undoubtedly influential chiefs of the neighbouring hostile nations of Samaritans and Ammonites, and sought by alliances with Jewish nobles (Neh 6:17; Neh 13:4, Neh 13:28) to frustrate, whether by force or stratagem, the efforts of Ezra and Nehemiah for the internal and external security of Judah.
Nehemiah mentions thus early their annoyance at his arrival, by way of hinting beforehand at their subsequent machinations to delay the fortifying of Jerusalem. Nehemiah’s arrival at Jerusalem. He surveys the wall, and resolves to restore it . - Neh 2:11 Having arrived at Jerusalem and rested three days (as Ezra had also done, Ezr 8:32), he arose in the night, and some few men with him, to ride round the wall of the city, and get a notion of its condition.
His reason for taking but few men with him is given in the following sentence: “I had told no man what my God had put in my heart to do for Jerusalem. ” Although he had come to Jerusalem with the resolution of fortifying the city by restoring its circumvallation, he spoke of this to no one until he had ascertained, by an inspection of the wall, the magnitude and extent of the work to be accomplished.
For, being aware of the hostility of Sanballat and Tobiah, he desired to keep his intention secret until he felt certain of the possibility of carrying it into execution. Hence he made his survey of the wall by night, and took but few men with him, and those on foot, for the sake of not exciting attention. The beast on which he rode was either a horse or a mule.
Neh 2:13 “And I went out by night by the valley-gate, and towards the dragon-well, and to the dung-gate. ” אל־פּני, in the direction towards. The dragon-well only occurs here by this name. Judging from its position between the valley-gate and the dung-gate, it is either identical with the well of Gihon (Robinson, Palestine , ii. p. 166), whose waters supply the upper and lower pools in the valley of Gihon, the present Birket el Mamilla and Birket es Sultan , or situate in its immediate neighbourhood.
The valley-gate is the modern gate of the city leading to the valley of Gihon, and situated at or near the present Jaffa gate; see rem. on Neh 3:13. The dung-gate (האשׁפּת שׁער), which in Neh 3:13 also is placed next the valley-gate, and was a thousand cubits distant therefrom, must be sought for on the south-western side of Zion, where a road, to the south of Nebi Dâûd and the Zion gate, now descends into the valley of Hinnom, towards Sûr Baher .
“And I viewed the walls of Jerusalem which lay broken down, and its gates which were consumed by fire. ” The word שׁבר, which the lxx read, “I was breaking down,” gives no tolerable sense; for it cannot mean, I broke through the walls, or, I made a path through the ruins. Many MSS, however, and several editions, offer שׂבר; and R. Norzi informs us that D. Kimchi and Aben Ezra read שׁבר.
שׂבר, of which only the Piel occurs in Hebrew, answers to the Aramaean סבר, to look to something; and to the Arabic sbr , to investigate; and ב סבר means to look on, to consider, to direct the eyes and thoughts to some object. In the open מ of הם Hiller conjectures that there is a trace of another reading, perhaps מפרצים; comp. Neh 1:3.
Neh 2:14 “And I went on to the fountain-gate, and to the king’s pool, and there was no room for the beast to come through under me. ” The very name of the fountain-or well-gate points to the foundation of Siloah (see rem. on Neh 3:15); hence it lay on the eastern declivity of Zion, but not in the district or neighbourhood of the present Bâb el Mogharibeh , in which tradition finds the ancient dung-gate, but much farther south, in the neighbourhood of the pool of Siloah; see rem.
on Neh 3:15. The King’s pool is probably the same which Josephus ( bell. Jud . v. 4. 2) calls Σολομῶνος κολυμβήθρα, and places east of the spring of Siloah, and which is supposed by Robinson ( Palestine , ii. pp. 149, 159) and Thenius ( das vorexil. Jerus . , appendix to a commentary on the books of the Kings, p. 20) to be the present Fountain of the Virgin.
Bertheau, however, on the other hand, rightly objects that the Fountain of the Virgin lying deep in the rock, and now reached by a descent of thirty steps, could not properly be designated a pool. He tries rather to identify the King’s pool with the outlet of a canal investigated by Tobler ( Topogr . i. p. 91f.) , which the latter regards as a conduit for rain-water, fluid impurities, or even the blood of sacrificed animals; but Bertheau as an aqueduct which, perhaps at the place where its entrance is now found, once filled a pool, of which, indeed, no trace has as yet been discovered.
But apart from the difficulty of calling the outlet of a canal a pool (Arnold in Herzog’s Realencycl . xviii. p. 656), the circumstance, that Tobler could find in neither of the above-described canals any trace of high antiquity, tells against this conjecture. Much more may be said in favour of the view of E. G. Schultz ( Jerusalem , p. 58f.) , that the half-choked-up pool near Ain Silwan may be the King’s pool and Solomon’s pool; for travellers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries mention a piscina grandis foras and natatoria Siloë at the mouth of the fountain of Siloah (comp.
Leyrer in Herzog’s Realencycl . xvi. p. 372). See also rem. on Neh 3:15. Here there was no room for the beast to get through, the road being choked up with the ruins of the walls that had been destroyed, so that Nehemiah was obliged to dismount.
Neh 2:15 Then I (went on) ascending the valley and viewing the wall, and so entered by the valley-gate, and returned. ואהי with the participle expresses the continuance of an action, and hence in this place the continuous ascent of the valley and survey of the wall. The נחל which he ascended was doubtless the valley of Kidron (קדרון נחל, 2Sa 20:23; 1Ki 2:37, and elsewhere).
ואבוא ואשׁוּב are connected, שׁוּב expressing merely the idea of repetition (Gesenius, heb. Gram . §142, 3): I came again into the valley-gate. Older expositors incorrectly explain these words to mean, I turned round, traversing again the road by which I had come; Bertheau: I turned to go farther in a westerly direction, and after making the circuit of the entire city, I re-entered by the valley-gate.
This sense is correct as to fact, but inadmissible, as requiring too much to complete it. If we take אשׁוּב adverbially, these completions are unnecessary. Nehemiah does not give the particulars of the latter portion of his circuit, but merely tells us that after having ascended the valley of Kidron, he re-entered by the valley-gate, and returned to his residence, obviously assuming, that from the upper part of the vale of Kidron he could only return to the valley-gate at the west by passing along the northern part of the wall.
Neh 2:16-17 He had spoken to no one of his purpose (Neh 2:12); hence the rulers of the city knew neither whither he was going nor what he was doing (i. e. , undertaking) when he rode by night out of the city gate accompanied by a few followers. As yet he had said nothing either to the Jews (the citizens of Jerusalem), the priests, the nobles, the rulers, or the rest who did the work.
החרים and הסּגנים are connected, as in Ezr 9:2 השּׂרים and הסּגנים. The nobles (חרים, nobiles ) or princes are the heads of the different houses or races of the people; סגנים, the rulers of the town, the authorities. המּלאכה עשׂה, the doers of the work, are the builders; comp. Ezr 3:9. When these are, in comparison with the priests, nobles, and rulers, designated as יתר, the remnant, this is explained by the fact that the priests and rulers of the people were not actively engaged in building.
המּלאכה, the work in question, i. e. , here the building of the walls. כּן עד, until thus, i. e. , until now, until the time apparent from the context. Nehemiah then, having inspected the condition of the ruined walls, and being now persuaded of the possibility of restoring them, made known his resolution to the nobles, the rulers, and the community, i. e. , to a public assembly called together for this purpose (Neh 2:17).
“Ye see (have before your eyes, know from experience) the distress that we are in, that Jerusalem lieth waste: come (לכוּ), let us build up the walls of Jerusalem, that we be no more a reproach. ” In other words: Let us by building our walls put an end to the miserable condition which gives our adversaries occasion to reproach us.
Neh 2:16-17 He had spoken to no one of his purpose (Neh 2:12); hence the rulers of the city knew neither whither he was going nor what he was doing (i. e. , undertaking) when he rode by night out of the city gate accompanied by a few followers. As yet he had said nothing either to the Jews (the citizens of Jerusalem), the priests, the nobles, the rulers, or the rest who did the work.
החרים and הסּגנים are connected, as in Ezr 9:2 השּׂרים and הסּגנים. The nobles (חרים, nobiles ) or princes are the heads of the different houses or races of the people; סגנים, the rulers of the town, the authorities. המּלאכה עשׂה, the doers of the work, are the builders; comp. Ezr 3:9. When these are, in comparison with the priests, nobles, and rulers, designated as יתר, the remnant, this is explained by the fact that the priests and rulers of the people were not actively engaged in building.
המּלאכה, the work in question, i. e. , here the building of the walls. כּן עד, until thus, i. e. , until now, until the time apparent from the context. Nehemiah then, having inspected the condition of the ruined walls, and being now persuaded of the possibility of restoring them, made known his resolution to the nobles, the rulers, and the community, i. e. , to a public assembly called together for this purpose (Neh 2:17).
“Ye see (have before your eyes, know from experience) the distress that we are in, that Jerusalem lieth waste: come (לכוּ), let us build up the walls of Jerusalem, that we be no more a reproach. ” In other words: Let us by building our walls put an end to the miserable condition which gives our adversaries occasion to reproach us.
Neh 2:18 To gain the favourable regard of the assembly for his design, he informs them how God had so far prospered his undertaking: I told them of the hand of my God, that it = that the hand my God had graciously provided for me, i. e. , that God had so graciously arranged my journey to Jerusalem; and the king’s words that he had spoken to me, sc. with respect to the building of the wall, of which we are told Neh 2:8 only thus much, that the king gave orders to the keeper of the royal forest to give him wood for building.
Encouraged by this information, the assembly exclaimed, “Let us arise and build;” and “they strengthened their hands for good,” i. e. , they vigorously set about the good work.
Neh 2:19 When the adversaries of the Jews heard this, they derided their resolution. Beside Sanballat and Tobiah (comp. Neh 2:10), Geshem the Arabian is also named as an adversary: so, too, Neh 6:1-2, and Neh 6:6, where Gashmu, the fuller pronunciation of his name, occurs. He was probably the chief of some Arab race dwelling in South Palestine, not far from Jerusalem (comp.
the Arabians, Neh 6:1). These enemies ironically exclaimed: What is this thing that ye do? will ye rebel against the king? The irony lies in the fact that they did not give the Jews credit for power to build fortifications, so as to be able to rebel. Comp. Neh 6:6, where Sanballat, in an open letter to Nehemiah, again reproaches them with rebellion.
Neh 2:20 Nehemiah replied with impressive gravity: “The God of heaven, He will prosper us, and we His servants will arise and build; but ye have no portion, nor right, nor memorial in Jerusalem. ” צדקה like 2Sa 19:29. זכּרון, memorial; only members of the congregation, who may hope to live in their descendants in Jerusalem, can be said to have a memorial there.
The Building of the Walls and Gates of Jerusalem - Neh 3:1 In these two chapters is described the building of the walls and gates of Jerusalem: the individuals and families who performed the work, and the portion of wall and the gates on which different families were respectively employed, being specified in Neh 3; ; while the attempts of Sanballat and his associates to obstruct the building and the defensive measures resorted to by Nehemiah follow, 4:1-17. Verses 1-32.
The enumeration of the builders, and of the gates and portions of wall built , begins with the sheep-gate and the portion of the wall adjoining it, built by the priests (Neh 3:1 and Neh 3:2), and concludes with the goldsmiths and merchants who built up to the sheep-gate (Neh 3:32). Throughout it is almost constantly said of the several parties of builders that they built ידו על, by the side of, next to, the party previously named.
Hence we are justified in inferring that the course of the wall is adhered to in this statement, and that the gates are mentioned in the actual order in which they were found in the walls.
Neh 3:1 The narrative of the building is connected with what precedes by ויּקם, which alludes to the carrying out of the resolve, נקוּם, Neh 2:18. The enumeration begins with Eliashib the high priest and his brethren, i. e. , the ordinary priests. These built the sheep-gate, rightly sought by modern topographers in the eastern wall north of Haram, the site of the ancient temple, i.
e. , in the position or neighbourhood of the present St. Stephen’s gate, through which the Bedouins to this day drive sheep into the town for sale (Tobler, Topogr . i. p. 149). “Although,” as Bertheau remarks, “we are not generally justified, after the lapse of so many centuries, during which great changes have been made in the positions of the gates and walls, and in face of the fact that the present walls and gates were not erected till the years 1536, 1537, and 1539, in determining the direction and extent of the walls between the several gates, and the locality of the gates in this description, by the direction and extent of the wall and the locality of the gates in modern Jerusalem (Tobl.
Topogr. Dritte Wanderung , p. 265), yet in the present instance valid arguments exist in favour of this view. The very neighbourhood of the temple and the nature of the soil bear witness that from ancient times a gate was placed here which took its name from the circumstance that sheep were driven in by it, whether for sale in the market or for sacrificial purposes.
” They sanctified it and set up its doors: and to the tower Hammeah they sanctified it unto the tower Hananeel. קדּשׁ, to sanctify, to dedicate (comp. 1Ki 8:64), can here only mean that the priests dedicated that portion of building on which they were engaged, as soon as they had finished it, for the purpose of sanctifying the whole work by this preliminary consecration; the solemn dedication of the whole wall not taking place till afterwards, and being related Neh 12:27.
The setting up of the doors in the gates did not, according to Neh 6:1, take place till after all the breaches in the wall had been repaired, i. e. , till the building of the wall was completed. It is, however, mentioned here, and in Neh 3:3, Neh 3:6, etc. , contemporaneously with the wall-building; because the builders of the several gates, undertaking also the construction and setting up of the doors, the intention is to give a summary of the work executed by the respective building parties.
המּאה ועד־מגּדּל is still dependent on יבנוּ, that is to say, this verb must be mentally repeated before the words: they built to the tower Hammeah, they sanctified it (the suffix in קדּשׁוּהוּ can only relate to מגּדּל). יבנוּ must also be repeated before חננאל מגּדּל עד: and they built further, unto the tower Hananeel. The tower המּאה (the hundred) is only mentioned here and Neh 12:39, but the tower Hananeel is likewise spoken of Jer 31:38 and Zec 14:10.
From these passages it appears that the two towers were so situated, that any one going from west to east along the north wall of the city, and thence southward, would first come to the tower Hananeel, and afterwards to the tower Hammeah, and that both were between the fish-gate and the sheep-gate. From the passages in Jeremiah and Zechariah especially, it is evident that the tower Hananeel stood at the north-east corner of the wall.
Hence the statement in this verse, that the portion of wall built by the priests extended to the north-east corner of the wall; and the tower Hammeah must be sought between the sheep-gate and the north-east corner of the wall. Whence the names of these towers were derived is unknown.
Neh 3:2 Next to him built the men of Jericho (comp. Ezr 2:24); and next to them built Zaccur the son of Imri. The suffix of the first ידו על, though in the singular number, refers to Eliashib and the priests (Neh 3:1), and that of the second to the men of Jericho, while in Neh 3:4 and Neh 3:9, on the contrary, a singular noun is followed by ידם על; both ידו על and ידם על expressing merely the notion beside, next to, and builders of the respective portions being at one time regarded as in a plural, at another in a singular sense (as a company).
The portion built by the men of Jericho and Zaccur the son of Imri, the head of a family, not mentioned elsewhere, let between the tower Hananeel and the fish-gate in the north wall. When individuals are, like Zaccur, mentioned in the following description, e. g. , Neh 3:4, Neh 3:6, as builders or repairers of portions of wall, they are heads of houses who engaged in the work of building at the head of the fathers of families and individuals who were dependent on them.
Neh 3:3 The fish-gate did the sons of Senaah build (see rem. on Ezr 2:35); they laid its beams, and set up its doors, bolts, and bars. The fish-gate probably received its name from the fish-market in its neighbourhood, to which the Syrians brought sea-fish (Neh 3:13, Neh 3:16); it is also mentioned in Neh 12:39; 2Ch 33:14, and Zep 1:10. It was not situated, as Thenius has represented it in his plan of Jerusalem, close to the corner tower of Hananeel, but somewhat to the west of it in the north wall; two lengths of wall being, according to Neh 3:2, built between this tower and the gate in question.
With respect to קרוּהוּ, see rem. on Neh 2:8. Besides the doors for the gate, מנעוּיו and בּריחיו are mentioned, as also Neh 3:6, Neh 3:13-15. Both words denote bars for closing doors. בּרחים are, to judge from the use of this word in the description of the tabernacle (Exo 26:26. and elsewhere), longer bars, therefore cross-bars, used on the inner side of the door; and מנעוּלים the brackets into which they were inserted.
Neh 3:4-5 Next to these, Meremoth the son of Urijah, the son of Hakkoz, Meshullam the son of Berechiah, Zadok the son of Baana, and the Tekoites, repaired in the above order, each a portion of wall. החזיק, to strengthen, means here to repair the gaps and holes in the wall; comp. Neh 3:9, Neh 3:27. Meremoth ben Urijah repaired, according to Neh 3:21, another portion besides.
Meshullam ben Berechiah was, according to Neh 6:18, a person of consideration in Jerusalem. The men of Tekoa, who do not occur among those who returned with Zerubbabel (Ezra 2), also repaired a second portion. “But their nobles brought not their neck to the service of their Lord. ” The expression “to bring the neck to service” is, according to Jer 27:11, to be understood as meaning: to bring the neck under the yoke of any one, i.
e. , to subject oneself to the service of another. צוּרם stands for צוּארם. It is questionable whether אדניהם is to be taken as the plural of excellence, and understood of God, as in Deu 10:17; Psa 135:3; Mal 1:6; or of earthly lords or rulers, as in Gen 40:1; 2Sa 10:3; 1Ki 12:27. The former view seems to us decidedly correct, for it cannot be discerned how the suffix should (according to Bertheau’s opinion) prevent our thinking of the service of God, if the repairing of the wall of Jerusalem may be regarded as a service required by God and rendered to Him.
Besides, the fact that אדנים is only used of kings, and is inapplicable whether to the authorities in Jerusalem or to Nehemiah, speaks against referring it to secular rulers or authorities.