Day 1

Scripture to Read: Nehemiah 5:1-5

When we ended last week’s devotions in Nehemiah 4, we found the Israelites in Jerusalem all working together to rebuild the wall. The people were ready for battle with one hand and working on the wall with the other hand. As we read Nehemiah 5, there is no mention of the wall being worked on, but there is a great outcry among the people. Since the people of Jerusalem had become united against their enemies, they suddenly became focused on each other, and they started fighting among themselves. Our enemy, Satan, and all the fallen angels, the demons, will attack us, as believers, any way they can. If the attack from outside the body of believers does not work, then the spiritual forces of darkness will seek to get us to fight among each other. As believers, we must guard our hearts and minds from being distracted by the things of this world. God warns us in Ephesians 6:12 that our true battle is against an enemy we cannot see with our physical eyes. We must make sure we are obeying what God has told us to do in Ephesians 6:10-18 to be prepared for battle and to make sure we’re waging war against the right enemy. If we are fighting among ourselves, then we are losing the daily battles because our true enemies know we’re not battling against them. Also, when we’re battling each other, we are distracted from the work God has for us to accomplish each day.

Challenge & Application

1. What did God teach you today about how our enemies work against us? 2. What will you do each day to prepare for battle and to not get distracted from the work God has for you to do?

Don’t forget to pray using the A.C.T.S. (Adoration, Confession, Thanksgiving, Supplication) method!

Devotionals from this week

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Day 1

When we ended last week’s devotions in Nehemiah 4, we found the Israelites in Jerusalem all working together to rebuild the wall. The people were ready for battle with one hand and working on the wall with the other hand. As we read Nehemiah 5, there is no mention of the wall being worked on, but there is a great outcry among the people. Sinc...

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Day 2

We read today in Nehemiah 5:1-5 that the families in Jerusalem were having financial struggles. In Nehemiah 5:2, we can gather that the people of Jerusalem had been working on the wall for so long that they had neglected to work in their fields to get grain. In Nehemiah 5:3, we read that their struggle was due to the famine and that the peopl...

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Day 3

Today we find, in Nehemiah 5:6, after hearing the outcry of the people, that Nehemiah became angry. Anger is a God-given emotion, and anger is not always a sin. God warns us in Ephesians 4:26-27, “Be angry, and yet do not sin; do not let the sun go down on your anger, 27 and do not give the devil an opportunity.” Our Lord Jesus Christ became ...

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Day 4

As we read Nehemiah 5:7, we find that Nehemiah took the whole situation into careful consideration. Nehemiah did not react to his first initial feelings of anger. When we get angry, we need to think through things carefully, as we saw in the devotion yesterday, so we do not fall into sin. If Nehemiah had let his anger control him, he probably...

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Day 5

As we saw in yesterday’s devotion, some of the nobles and rulers of Jerusalem were charging interest to their brothers and sisters in Jerusalem for the basic necessities of life. As we also saw yesterday, this is sin and this sin needed to be dealt with immediately. God also makes this truth clear in James 2:14-17. If we claim to know Christ ...

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Day 6

As we saw yesterday, God used Nehemiah to rebuke the nobles and rulers in Jerusalem. We also read the nobles’ and rulers’ response: that they would give back everything they had taken from their brothers and sisters in Jerusalem. Nehemiah knew that words amount to nothing if the action does not follow. So, in Nehemiah 5:13, God led Nehemiah t...

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Day 7

As we finish Nehemiah 5 today, we see several truths here for us to follow. Nehemiah had been appointed governor in Judah, and though he had the right to tax the people and live off those taxes, Nehemiah chose not to tax them. Nehemiah feared God and did not want to do anything that might bring dishonor to His Lord or cause the people of Juda...

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