Nehemiah, in Christian leadership studies, tends to be presented first as a man of character. Ted Engstrom epitomises this approach: “We see how great he was." But in a (collaborative) term paper I once wrote on Nehemiah, I found something else. His most significant breakthroughs as a leader came at those points where he "saw God". For example, he informed the citizens of Jerusalem "of the hand of God which was good on me". It is then that the people responded: "Let us rise up and build." Or, when faced with their first major threat, Nehemiah proclaimed: "The God of heaven, He will prosper us." It is then that "Eliashab the high priest rose up." OBSERVATION: This dynamic is found elsewhere in the Bible, too. For example, in Moses and Aaron (Exodus 4:31), and in Paul and Barnabas (Acts 15:12).
In my own ministry, I have sought continually to reveal what God is doing, and I believe it has been crucial.
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