Today, I am reading and commenting on Nehemiah 1-3.
Today has a follow-up theme to yesterday’s. When Nehemiah received news about the state of things in Jerusalem, he sat down and wept. Once he had wept for a short time, he began to fast and pray. After fasting and praying before God for “some days”, Nehemiah went before the king of Persia, Artaxerxes, with a plan. Interestingly, he does not tell us he had a plan, but we can tell that he had one because he was able to answer Artaxerxes when the latter asked him when he would return. Further, once Nehemiah knew that Artaxerxes looked favorably on his mission, he had a list of things he requested of Artaxerxes. So, when Nehemiah prayed to God asking God to fix the terrible situation in Jerusalem, he did not just petition God, he listened to God speaking to him and followed the plans he heard God giving him. We see more of the way Nehemiah combined prayer, faith, and thought from his account of what he did when he got to Jerusalem. When he got there, he did not tell the people there the purpose of his coming to Jerusalem until he had time to assess the situation. First, Nehemiah went out and inspected the walls so that he would have an idea of what the project would entail before he began talking to the leaders who had been here all along. So, likewise, we should not just pray about the problems which God places upon our hearts. We should pray, and sometimes fast, and listen to God telling us what actions He wants us to take. Then, while still praying and fasting (if fasting is called for), we should begin planning how we can carry out what God has laid on our hearts to do, listening to God’s prompting the entire time.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.