Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: July 28th (Nehemiah 6 & John 4:27-54)
Episode Date: July 27, 2021Nehemiah escapes the plots of his enemies. The healing of the official's son. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are intereste...d in supporting this project, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Nehemiah chapter 6. Now when Sambalot and Tobiah and Geshim the Arab and the rest of our enemies heard that I had built the wall and that there was no breach left in it, although up to that time I had not set up the doors in the gates, Sambalat and Gesham sent to me, saying,
Come and let us meet together at Hakafirim in the plain of Ono, but they intended to do me harm, and I sent messengers to them saying, I am doing a great work and I cannot come down. Why should the work stop while I leave it and come down to you?
you. And they sent to me four times in this way, and I answered them in the same manner. In the same way,
Sambalot for the fifth time sent his servant to me with an open letter in his hand. In it was written.
It is reported among the nations, and Gashem also says it, that you and the Jews intend to rebel.
That is why you are building the wall, and according to these reports, you wish to become their king.
And you have also set up prophets to proclaim concerning you in Jerusalem. There is a king in Judah.
And now the king will hear of these reports. So now come and let us take counsel together.
Then I sent to him, saying, no such things as you say have been done, for you are inventing them out of your own mind.
For they all wanted to frighten us, thinking their hands will drop from the work, and it will not be done.
But now, O God, strengthen my hands. Now when I went into the house of Shemaya, the son of Delia, son of Mehetabel, who was confined to his home, he said,
let us meet together in the house of God within the temple. Let us close the doors of the temple,
for they are coming to kill you. They are coming to kill you by night. But I said,
should such a man as I run away, and what man such as I could go into the temple and live,
I will not go in. And I understood and saw that God had not sent him, but he had pronounced the
prophecy against me because Tobiah and Sambalat had hired him. For this purpose he was hired,
that I should be afraid and act in this way and sin,
and so they could give me a bad name in order to taunt me.
Remember Tobiah and Sam Ballard,
oh my God, according to these things that they did,
and also the prophetess Noah Dyer,
and the rest of the prophets who wanted to make me afraid.
So the wall was finished on the 25th day of the month, Elol, in 52 days,
and when all our enemies heard of it,
all the nations around us were afraid and fell greatly in their own esteem,
for they perceived that this work.
had been accomplished with the help of our God.
Moreover, in those days, the nobles of Judah sent many letters to Tobiah, and Tobiah's letters
came to them. For many in Judah were bound by oath to him, because he was the son-in-law
of Shekiniah, the son of Ara, and his son, Jeho-Hanan, had taken the daughter of Mashulam,
the son of Berakaya as his wife. Also, they spoke of his good deeds in my presence,
and reported my words to him, and Tobias sent letters to make me afraid.
In Nehemiah chapter 6, the threats, plots, intimidation and other forms of opposition to the rebuilding of the walls of Jerusalem continue, but the wall is finally successfully completed.
In this chapter, much of the opposition that Nehemiah faces is deceptive and veiled, requiring not merely courage but shrewdness to overcome.
Although chapter 3 spoke of the doors, bolts and bars of the various gates being put in place, that chapter concerned the complete project of the rebuilding of the wall.
In the beginning of the narrative of Chapter 6, however, the doors have not yet been set in place,
although all of the breaches in the wall have been closed and it was entirely rebuilt.
For the opponents of the project, he had chiefly represented by the Samaritan, Ammonite and Arab leaders,
their time was running out and they needed to hatch a successful plot against Nehemiah quickly.
They are likely becoming desperate at this point.
San Balot and Gashem's first plot is an assassination attempt.
Using the ruse of diplomacy, they seek to lure Nehemiah out of the relative safety of Jerusalem
to a town nearer the border of Sumeria, presumably hoping that, if they kill Nehemiah,
the rest of the Jews will abandon the remaining rebuilding of the wall out of fear.
Without their courageous and resourceful governor, they will lack the confidence to complete the project.
They would also lose the powerful advantage of Nehemiah's good favour with the king.
Nehemiah recognises what they are planning, but he does not betray that fact in his response,
even though it is likely that both parties knew that the other party knew what was going on.
Nehemiah declared that he was undertaking a great work
and couldn't afford to abandon it before it was completed.
Of course that is exactly what they were hoping for him to do.
They persisted sending him the same request four times
with Nehemiah always responding in the same manner.
The fifth time, Sam Ballot sent to Nehemiah,
he made a more public accusation,
which he presumably intended to spread as a dangerous rumor.
The letter was an open one.
which the official was presumably supposed to read and communicate to other parties beyond Nehemiah himself.
The letter's claim is that it was widely reported that Nehemiah was planning to rebel with the rest of the Jews,
and that this was the real cause for the urgency of the wall rebuilding effort.
One could imagine that this would greatly concern Nehemiah.
Such a false claim had already successfully halted the rebuilding of Jerusalem's walls back in Ezra Chapter 4.
Should Arctic Xerxes be persuaded by such a case again,
Nehemiah and the Jews would be in trouble.
Nehemiah, of course, has the great advantage of being well known by and in favour with the king.
Nevertheless, a widespread rumour, confirmed by several witnesses, would be a very dangerous thing.
Sam Ballot suggests that Nehemiah needs to act immediately and comply with his request,
lest news of the rumour get back to Arctic Xerxes.
San Balot's intent, presumably, is to intimidate Nehemiah into meeting up with him.
Nehemiah, however, is not intimidated. He is assured that he has the king's confidence,
and that Art Exerxes won't credit such baseless rumours concerning him, so he calls San Balot's bluff.
Recognising the cunning of his adversaries, and their desperate desire to divert him from the task,
he appeals to the Lord for renewed strength in his labours.
The second ruse of the adversaries is even more cunning, involving a supposed friendly figure,
Shemaiah the Prophet, and other false prophets.
Shemaiah is confined to his house for some reason, about which we can only speculate.
Perhaps it was a false prophetic sign with Shemaiah's confinement in his house,
representing the confinement that Nehemiah must seek in the temple.
It may have been the result of ritual impurity,
although this wouldn't seem to square with Shemaiah's suggestion that they go to the temple together.
Maybe Shemaya wanted to present himself as fearing assassination.
Sambalot and Tobiah had intended to assassinate Nehemiah,
and by this point they presumably knew that
he knew. Consequently, their next plot was designed to use that fact against him. They intended to
incite him through false prophecy and fear to violate the holiness of the sanctuary by taking refuge
within it as a layman. In 2 Chronicles chapter 26, King Uzziah had been struck with lifelong
leprosy by the Lord for seeking to enter the Lord's house in an unlawful manner. Nehemiah,
knowing that the Lord would not prophetically command him to act against his law in such a manner,
recognizes that Shemaiah is a false prophet in the pay of Tobiah and Sambalot.
Had he listened, the effect could have been catastrophic.
Nehemiah would have allowed his fear to lead him to break the law of the Lord.
This would have put him at odds with the very God who was strengthening his hand as the leader of the Jews.
His reputation among the people would have been ruined,
as they saw him violate the law of God out of fear.
His cowardice would likely have proved contagious,
especially because his courage and determination had been so contagious to this point,
and, on top of everything else, by confining himself within the temple,
Nehemiah would have put himself out of commission for the rebuilding work,
leaving it leaderless and rudderless.
Shemeyer was not the only false prophet in the employ of Sambalit and Tobiah.
Noah Dyer and several others added their voices to his.
Once again, as he does elsewhere, Nehemiah commits judgment and justice in these matters to the Lord.
not seek vengeance himself, even though he has plenty of power to wield, but entrust the judgment
of his enemies to the Lord. The work on the wall was finally finished after 52 days. Andrew Steinman
reckons that the date of the completion was August 12, 445 BC. This might seem surprisingly quick,
but we should appreciate that much of the original walls of Jerusalem from its last days prior to
its overthrow by Nebuchadnezzar likely remained, albeit in a ruined state. Other parts had
already been largely rebuilt earlier in the reign of Arctic Xerxes, in the work described in
Ezra chapter 4. The rebuilding of the wall was mostly a task of addressing almost 140 years' worth
of neglect in some parts, alongside the completion of rebuilding efforts from earlier in the reign
of Arctic Xerxes, restoring ruins and some other parts, while building a few parts from the
ground up. The wall was not being built from scratch. The enemies of the Jews had been attempting to
sap their determination and courage, and to bring them to abandon their work out of fear.
However, as Nehemiah and the people persevered and completed the work,
their success caused the nations themselves to fear,
recognising that they were losing the dominance that they had formerly enjoyed,
and that Judah was rising again within the region.
They also, most importantly, saw that God was with the Jews.
Tobar the Ammonite had tentacles throughout the Judahite nobility,
on account of his familial connections and shrewd alignments,
Mashalam, the son of Berwickai, was likely one of the priests, and is mentioned in the account of the building of the wall.
Tobiah's influence meant that he could create resistance to Nehemiah from within Judah itself.
Indeed, Tobiah was far more connected with the class of Judah's nobility than Nehemiah himself was.
Nehemiah would consequently frequently hear the voice of Tobiah coming from the lips of those around him.
A question to consider. Much of this chapter concerns deceptive words that need to be seen through.
of Sambalot and Gresham, the false prophecy of Shemaiah, and the words of the Jewish nobility
who had been influenced by Tobiah? What are some of the principles by which a faithful man
like Nehemiah could test the truth of the words that he heard? John chapter 4 verses 27 to 54.
Just then his disciples came back. They marveled that he was talking with a woman, but no one said,
What do you seek? Or, why are you talking with her? So the woman left her water jar and went away
into town and said to the people, come see a man who told me all that I ever did. Can this be the
Christ? They went out of the town and were coming to him. Meanwhile the disciples were urging him saying,
Rabbi eat, but he said to them, I have food to eat that you do not know about. So the disciples
said to one another, has anyone brought him something to eat? Jesus said to them, my food is to do
the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work. Do you not say, there are yet form
months, then comes the harvest. Look, I tell you, lift up your eyes and see that the fields are
white for harvest. Already the one who reaps is receiving wages and gathering fruit for eternal life,
so that sower and reaper may rejoice together. For here the saying holds true, one sows and another
reaps. I sent you to reap that for which you did not labour. Others have laboured, and you have
entered into their labour. Many Samaritans from that town believed in him, because of the woman's
testimony. He told me all that I ever did. So when the Samaritans came to him, they asked him to
stay with them, and he stayed there two days. And many more believed because of his word. They said to the
woman, it is no longer because of what you said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves,
and we know that this is indeed the savior of the world. After the two days, he departed for Galilee,
for Jesus himself had testified that a prophet has no honor in his own hometown. So when he came to
Galilee, the Galileans welcomed him, having seen all that he had done in Jerusalem at the feast,
for they too had gone to the feast. So he came again to Cana in Galilee, where he had made the water
wine, and at Copernium there was an official whose son was ill. When this man heard that Jesus had come
from Judea to Galilee, he went to him and asked him to come down and heal his son, for he was at
the point of death. So Jesus said to him, unless you see signs and wonders, you will not believe.
the official said to him, Sir, come down before my child dies. Jesus said to him, go, your son will live.
The man believed the word that Jesus spoke to him and went on his way. As he was going down,
his servants met him and told him that his son was recovering. So he asked them the hour when he began
to get better, and they said to him, yesterday, at the seventh hour, the fever left him.
The father knew that that was the hour when Jesus had said to him, your son will live.
and he himself believed in all his household.
This was now the second sign that Jesus did
when he had come from Judea to Galilee.
In John chapter 4 verse 27,
we continue the narrative of Jesus' conversation
with the Samaritan woman,
just after he had declared himself to be the Messiah.
At this point, his disciples return
and are surprised to see him in conversation with this woman.
J. Ramsey-Michel suggests that the
What-Do-you-seek question
might be designed to recall Jesus' earlier statement about the father's seeking of people to worship him in spirit and truth in verse 23.
We've already seen that Jews did not have dealings with, or perhaps share drinking vessels with Samaritans,
a matter that had already provoked a question from the woman herself.
Jesus seems to be contravening some of the conventions that would typically have governed the relations between Jews and Samaritans.
Besides this, the Samaritan woman is seemingly alone in the middle of the day getting water,
and a Jewish man is asking to drink of some of her water.
Besides going against certain Jewish principles of ritual purity,
it likely also violated certain cultural bounds of propriety.
A man talking to an unrelated woman in a public space without any other people around
might lead to questions, and Jewish society tended to treat such interactions with great caution.
While the disciples don't seem to be offended, they are quite surprised by the fact that Jesus is doing this,
and the narrator wants us to know that,
although they might have wanted to ask what Jesus was seeking and what they were talking about,
they did not do so. Jesus' contravening of cultural norms here may be a significant part of the story.
This is a case that Jerome Nere has argued. In our modern society, which tends to valorise
transgression, such contraventions are often taken as straightforward dismissals of various cultural
taboos, norms or expectations, and the concerns or impulses that produce them. But something
more subtle and interesting may be going on in this case. To appreciate this, we will need to pay
more attention to the details of the story in terms of its cultural background. In his treatment of
this passage, Nere begins by reminding us that the worlds Jesus and the Samaritan woman inhabited
were divided by gender, the private indoors domestic sphere of kinship circles being a more
female realm, concerned to avoid shame, and the public open-air realm being a realm of male
pursuit of honour. Clothing and behaviour, perhaps especially in respect to speech, would maintain
and reinforce this distinction. The Samaritan woman at the well, Nere observes, is there alone at
midday, an unusual time for a woman to be at the well. One would usually expect the women to come to the
well together in the morning and the evening. This has led a number of commentators to speculate that
she was socially marginalised on account of her history. Then she is speaking with a strange
man in a public place with no other persons present, and he's a Jewish man at that. In addition,
he intentionally revealed in conversation that she had five husbands, and that she was currently
in a relationship with a man who was not her husband. This does not seem to be a woman of
respectable character and firm social standing, but an unrelated man talking with her about such
matters would seem to exacerbate the issue. Jesus sends the woman to call her husband and come back,
and in verses 28 to 29, she performs a
similar act as she leaves her water jar, goes into the town and summons the people. In summoning
them, she declares the fact that Jesus had told her all that she ever did, presumably referring to
her having five husbands and a man not her husband. Her telling of others is reminiscent both of
earlier stories of women at Wells and Scripture, whether women hurried to tell their families,
and also of the initial disciples passing on the news of Jesus to their friends and relatives
in Chapter 1. The Samaritan woman is an outsider in several
respects. She is a Samaritan, she is a woman, and what's more, she is a seemingly shameless or
shamed woman, marginalized within her own society. In speaking as he does with her, Jesus temporarily
violates cultural expectations, norms and boundaries. However, as Nere argues, the woman who was
isolated at the beginning of the narrative is at the center of a new inside group by the end of it,
a company of Samaritan disciples of Jesus, who initially believed through her informal testimony,
but later came to believe more fully because of Jesus' own word.
At the end, they asked Jesus to stay with them,
to bring him into the circle of their own community.
Jesus initially violates social boundaries.
However, he does this not simply to transgress society,
but to transform and restore society.
The marital themes evoked by meeting a woman at a well
might also be significant here.
The unknown persons who are summoned by the woman
are destined to become family.
We should probably consider the similarities in the contrast between the private and night-time conversation with Nicodemus,
the highly honored male teacher of the Jews in Chapter 3,
and the open-air conversation with the Shamed Samaritan woman in Chapter 4.
Both accounts contain key elements of misunderstanding that drive the conversation,
but the persons with whom Jesus speaks are at opposite ends of the cultural and social hierarchy.
Although we later see Nicodemus playing the part of a secret believer,
Jesus' conversation with him produces far less obvious fruit
than the conversation with the socially marginalised Samaritan woman.
While the woman went into the town to call people to see Jesus,
the disciples asked Jesus whether he had anything to eat,
inviting him to take some food.
Their misunderstanding concerning the food that Jesus speaks of
parallels the woman's misunderstanding concerning the water he spoke of earlier.
Jesus says that his food is to do the will of him who sent him
and to accomplish his work.
Perhaps we might see some reference back to the story of the temptation in the wilderness here,
particularly the first temptation. John does not record the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness,
as the synoptics do, but at this point, and then in a few moments later in this text,
there are allusions back to details of that account and what follows it.
Before the woman returns, Jesus mentions the conventional belief that there are four months,
and then the harvest comes. One typically has to wait for some time before harvesting one's crop.
sow, but you'll have to wait some time before you will reap. However, the harvest is about to
appear almost instantaneously. The seed sown in the heart of the Samaritan woman is about to yield
an immediate and bountiful crop of believers among the Samaritans. This might recall the prophecy
of Amos chapter 9 verse 13, which describes a similar situation. Behold, the days are coming,
declares the Lord, when the ploughman shall overtake the reaper, and the treader of grapes,
him who sows the seed, the mountain shall drip sweet wine, and all the hills shall flow with it.
While John and the prophets that preceded him sowed seed in tears, and expended great labour and suffering
to sow that seed, Christ and his mission was seeing fruitfulness from the very outset,
it was important that the disciples recognised that they were entering into the labours of others
who had gone ahead of them, enjoying the fruit of their work. After a short stay with the Samaritans,
Jesus returns to his primary base of operations in Galilee.
The evangelist mentions in passing that he has testified that a prophet has no honour in his own hometown,
a statement he made in his sermon in Nazareth in Luke chapter 4.
When he comes to Galilee, he's welcomed, however, by the Galileans,
who had seen all that he did in the feast.
He then goes to Cana, the same place where he had made water wine,
performing a second sign at Copernium.
In the first half of John's Gospel, there are seven key signs that Jesus
performs, seven being a number associated with creation and Sabbath. This sign is numbered as the
second sign in verse 54. There is a royal official in Copernium, presumably a Herodian, whose son is
ill and who asks Jesus to come down and heal him. One can imagine that such a person, although
in many ways at the opposite end of the social hierarchy as the Samaritan woman, might be unpopular
among many of the Jews. Jesus responds by claiming that unless the people see signs and wonders, they will
not believe. They are looking for some dramatic display of power, and yet when Jesus actually gives a
sign, he takes the form of something very understated. Jesus performs signs, but they are hidden,
and a warning against a dependence upon spectacle. Jesus does not give some dramatic,
pyrotechnic work of wonder. Rather, he gives a simple word, go, your son will live. He doesn't
even go to the man's house. He doesn't perform some great act of wizardry or an elaborate ritual. He just
gives the man the instruction and the man believes the word and goes his way. Rather than great wonders,
Jesus gives people his words, and as they believe those words, great wonders follow. Another important
thing to observe here is how simple the responses to Jesus in the gospel are. His instructions
tend to be very basic things, draw some water from the jars, go home, take up your bed and walk,
have the people sit down, go wash in the pool of Siloam, etc. And in several of these cases,
Jesus isn't even present when the wonder happens.
The power of His Word holds nonetheless.
There are similarities between this sign and the first one.
In both cases, Jesus is asked to do something,
gives a seemingly discouraging response to the person who requests,
but the person persists in their request and then receives what they ask for.
As in the synoptic gospels, we see here the importance of persistence in prayer.
The emphasis upon trust in Jesus' word is also the same.
Likewise, the issue of knowing and not knowing in a conversation between a master and his servants.
In this case, it is the master who knows what has happened, and the servants who don't.
Both miracles are followed by a conversation that seems to play an important role
in displaying the character of the miracle as a sign.
In both cases, people believe in response.
The reference to the two days in the preceding verses might also present this episode as another
third-day resurrection-style event.
The hour of the son's healing is the seventh hour.
Jesus' meeting with the woman was in the sixth hour, and there he spoke of the coming hour.
The seventh hour might relate to that.
A question to consider, throughout the Gospel of John there are people who function as paradigms of response to Christ and of faith or unbelief.
How might the Samaritan woman function as a paradigm of Christian faith and witness?
