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have seen the kindred and parents of the dismissed, shutting up their denied suits with rage and threats: there, the abandoned children kneeling to their seemingly-cruel father, beseeching him not to cast off the fruit of his own loins; and expostulating, what they have offended in being his. The resolved Israelites must be deaf or blind to these moving objects; and so far forget nature, as to put off part of themselves. Personal inconveniences have reason to yield to public mischiefs. Long entertainment makes that sin hard to be ejected, whose first motions might have been repelled with ease.

Had not the prohibition of these marriages been express, and their danger and mischief palpable, the care of their separation had not bred so much tumult in Israel. He, that ordained matrimony, had, upon fearful curses, forbidden an unequal yoke with infidels. Besides the marring of the Church by the mixture of an unholy seed, religion suffered for the present, and all good hearts with it. Many tears, many sacrifices, need to expiate so foul an offence, and to set Israel straight again.

All this while, even these mesline Jews were yet forward to build the temple. The worst sinners may yield an outward conformity to actions of piety. Ezra hath done more service in pulling down, than the Jews in building: without this act, the temple might have stood, religion must needs have fallen; Babel had been translated to Jerusalem, Jews had turned Gentiles. Oh happy endeavours of devout and holy Ezra, that hath at once restored Judah to God, and to itself!

CONTEMPLATION II.-NEHEMIAH BUILDING
THE WALLS OF JERUSALEM.

NEHEMIAH I., II., III., IV.

THIRTEEN years were now passed, since Ezra's going up to Jerusalem; when Nehemiah, the religious courtier of Artaxerxes, inquires of the estate of his country, and brethren of Judea.

He might well find that holy scribe had not been idle. The commission of Artaxerxes had been improved by him to the utmost. Disorders were reformed, but the walls lay waste: the temple was built, but the city was ruinous; and if some streets were repaired, yet they stood unguarded; open to the mercy of an enemy, to the infestation of ill neighbourhood. Great bodies must have slow motions: as Jerusalem, so the Church of God, whose type it was, must be finished by leisure.

Nehemiah sate warm in the court at Shushan, favoured by the great king Artaxerxes. Nothing could be wanting to him, whe

ther for pleasure or state. What needed he to trouble his head, with thoughts for Jerusalem? What if those remote walls lay on heaps, while himself dwelt fair? What if his far-distant countrymen be despised, while himself is honoured by the great monarch of the world? It is not so easy, for gracious dispositions to turn off the public calamities of God's Church: neither can they do other, than lose their private felicities, in the common distresses of the universal body. If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning; if I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth.

Many Jews went up from Babylon and Shushan, to Jerusalem; few ever returned voluntarily from their native home, to the region of their captivity. Some occasion drew Hanani, with certain others of Judah, to this voyage. Of them doth Nehemiah carefully inquire the present condition of Jerusalem. It was no news, that the people were afflicted and reproached, the walls broken down, the gates burnt with fire. Ever since the furious devastation of Nebuzaradan, that city knew not better terms. Seldom when doth the spiritual Jerusalem fare otherwise, in respect of outward estate? External glory, and magnificence, is an unsure note of the Church.

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Well had Nehemiah hoped, that the gracious edict and beneficence of Darius, and the successive patronage of his lord Artaxerxes, had, by the continuance of twenty years' favour, advanced the strength and glory of Jerusalem; but now, finding the holy city to lie still in the dust of her confusion, neglected of God, despised of men, he sits down and weeps, and mourns, and fasts, and prays to the God of heaven. How many saw those ruins, and were little affected! He hears of them afar off, and is thus passionate. How many were upon this sight affected with a fruitless sorrow! His mourning is joined with the endeavours of redress. In vain is that grief, which hath no other end than itself.

Nehemiah is resolved to kneel to the king his master, for the repair of his Jerusalem. He dares not attempt the suit, till he have begun with God. This good courtier knew well, that the hearts of these earthly kings are in the overruling hand of the King of heaven, to incline whither he pleaseth. Our prayers are the only true means to make way for our success. If, in all our occasions, we do not begin with the First Mover, the course is preposterous, and commonly speeds thereafter.

Who dares censure the piety of courtiers, when he finds Nehemiah standing before Artaxerxes? Even the Persian palace is not uncapable of a saint. No man, that waits on the altar at Jerusalem, can compare for zeal with him, that waits on the cup of a pagan monarch. The mercies of God are unlimited to places, to callings.

Thus armed with devotions, doth Nehemiah put himself into

the presence of his master Artaxerxes. His face was overclouded with a deep sadness; neither was he willing to clear it. The king easily notes the disparity of the countenance of the bearer, and the wine that he bears; and, in a gracious familiarity, asks the reason of such unwonted change. How well it becomes the great, to stoop unto a courteous affability; and to exchange words of respect, even with their humble vassals!

Nehemiah had not been so long in the court, but he knew that princes like no other, than cheerful attendants; neither was he wont to bring any other face into that presence, than smooth and smiling.

Greatness uses to be full of suspicion; and, where it sees a dejection and sourness of the brows, is ready to apprehend some sullen thoughts of discontentment; or, at the least, construes it, for a disrespect to that sovereignty, whose beams should be of power to disperse all our inward mists.

Even good manners forbid a man to press into the presence of a prince, except he can either lay by these unpleasing passions, or hide them. So had Nehemiah hitherto done: now, he purposely suffers his sorrow to look through his eyes, that it may work both inquiry and compassion from his master: neither doth he fail of his hopes in either; Why is thy countenance sad, seeing thou art not sick? How sensible do we think the Father of mercies is of all our pensive thoughts, when a heathen master is so tender of a servant's grief! How ready should our tongues be, to lay open our cares to the God of all comfort, when we see Nehemiah so quick, in the expressions of his sorrow to an uncertain ear!

Let the king live for ever : why should not my countenance be sad, when the city, the place of my fathers' sepulchres, lieth waste, and the gates thereof burnt with fire? Not without an humble preface, doth Nehemiah lay forth his grievance. Complaints have ever an unpleasing harshness in them; which must be taken off, by some discreet insinuation: although it could not but sound well in the generous ear of Artaxerxes, that his servant was so careful for the honour of his country. As nature hath made us all members of a community, and hath given us common interests, so, it is most pleasing to us, to see these public cares divide us from our own.

The king easily descries a secret supplication wrapt up in this moanful answer, which the modest suitor was afraid to disclose; and therefore he helps that bashful motion into the light; For what dost thou make request? It is the praise of bounty, to draw on the just petitions of fearful suppliants.

Nehemiah dares not open his mouth to the king, till his heart hath opened itself, by a sudden ejaculation, to his God. No business can be so hasty, but our prayer may prevent it; the wings whereof are so nimble, that it can fly up to heaven, and

solicit God, and bring down an answer, before ever our words need to come forth of our lips. In vain shall we hope that any design of ours can prosper, if we have not first sent this messenger on our errand.

After this silent and insensible preparation, Nehemiah moves his suit to the king: yet not at once, but by meet degrees. First, he craves leave for his journey, and for building: then, he craves aid for both. Both are granted. Nehemiah departs; furnished with letters to the governors, for a convoy; with letters to the keeper of the king's forest, for timber: not more full of desire, than hope.

Who ever put his hand to any great work, for the behoof of God's Church, without opposition? As the walls of the temple found busy enemies, so shall the walls of the city; and these so much more, as they promise more security and strength to Jerusalem. Sanballat the deputy-lieutenant of the Moabites, and Tobiah the like officer to the Ammonites, and Geshem to the Arabians, are galled with envy, at the arrival of a man authorized to seek the welfare of the children of Israel. There cannot be a greater vexation to wicked hearts, than to see the spiritual Jerusalem in any likelihood of prosperity. Evil spirits and men need no other torment, than their own despight.

This wise courtier hath learnt, that secresy is the surest way of any important dispatch. His errand could not but be known to the governors: their furtherance was enjoined, for the provision of materials; else the walls of Jerusalem had overlooked the first notice of their heathen neighbours. Without any noise doth Nehemiah arise, in the dead of night; and, taking some few into his company, none into his counsel, he secretly rounds the decayed walls of Jerusalem, and views the breaches, and observes the gates, and returns home in silence, joying in himself to foresee those reparations, which none of the inhabitants did once dream of: at last, when he had fully digested this great work in his own breast, he calls the rulers and citizens together; and, having condoled with them the common distress and reproach, he tells them of the hand of his God, which was good upon him; he shows them the gracious commission of the king his master, for that good work. They answer him, with a zealous encouragement of each other, Let us rise up and build.

Such a hearty invitation, countenanced by authority, hath easily strengthened the hands of the multitude. With what observance and dearness, do they now look upon their unexpected patron! How do they honour him, as a man sent from heaven, for the welfare of Jerusalem! Every man flies to his hod and trowel; and rejoices to second so noble a leader, in. laying a stone in that wall of their common defence.

Those emulous neighbours of theirs, Sanballat, Tobiah, Geshem, the chief commanders of Moab, Ammon, Arabia, have

soon espied the first mortar, that is laid upon that old foundation. Envy is usually more quick-sighted than love. And now, they scornfully apply themselves to these despised Jews, and think to scoff them out of their work. The favourablest persecution of any good cause, is, the lash of lewd tongues, whether by bitter taunts or by scurrilous invectives; which it is as impossible to avoid, as necessary to contemn.

The barking of these dogs doth not hinder Nehemiah from walking on his way. Professing his confidence in the God of heaven, whose work that was, he shakes off their impotent malice, and goes on cheerfully to build.

Every Israelite knows his station. Eliashib the high priest, and the rest of that sacred tribe, put the first hand to this work. They build the sheep-gate, and sanctify it; and in it, all the rest. As the first fruits of the field, so the first stones of the wall, are hallowed to God, by the consecration of those devout agents. That business is like to prosper, which begins with God.

No man was idle; no part was intermitted. All Jerusalem was, at once, encompassed with busy labourers.. It cannot be, but the joint endeavours of faithful hearts must raise the walls of the Church.

Now Sanballat and his brethren find some matter to spend their scoffs upon; What do these feeble Jews? will they fortify themselves? will they sacrifice? will they make an end in a day? will they revive the stones out of the heaps of rubbish which are burnt?

How basely do carnal minds think of the projects and actions of God's children! Therefore vilifying them, because they measure them by no other line, than outward probability. O foolish Moabites, this work is God's; and, therefore, in despite of all your tongues and hands, it shall prosper. He hears you, whom ye have blasphemed; and shall turn your reproach upon your own heads. And thou, proud Ammonite, that couldst say, If a fox go upon their stone-wall, he shall break it down, shalt well find, that all the wolvish troops of your confederates shall not be able to remove one stone of this sure fortification. While Moab and Ammon repine and bluster in vain, this wall shall rise; and when Moab and Ammon shall lie in the dust, this wall shall stand. The mortar, that hath been tempered with so many prayers, cannot but outlast all the flints and marbles of human confidence.

Now, the growth of this wall hath turned the mirth of the adversaries into rage. These Moabites, Ammonites,_ Arabians, Ashdadites, conspire all together, to fight against Jerusalem; and, while the mortar is yet green, to demolish those envied heaps.

What hath this city offended, in desiring to be defenced?

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