[The King’s Cup-Bearer by Amy Catherine Walton]@TWC D-Link book
The King’s Cup-Bearer

CHAPTER III
12/13

Look at the south-east corner, who will ever be able to clear away the heaps that have accumulated there ?' Another would have been sure to grumble at the expense, would have asked how they, poor down-trodden Jews as they were, could ever afford to give time or money to such a vast undertaking?
A third would have risen with a long face, and would have asked, 'What will Sanballat say if we rebuild the wall?
What will Tobiah do?
What will Geshem whisper?
Now indeed we have no open rupture with the governors, but who can tell what the result of our taking action in this matter will be?
Surely it is better to let well alone.' A fourth would have given as his opinion, that what had served for 150 years would surely last their time.

True, Jerusalem was forlorn and defenceless, but they had grown accustomed to it now.

It struck Nehemiah, of course, coming as he did fresh from the glories of Shushan, but they had become used to it, and he would soon do the same.

There was no need surely to make a disturbance about it or to run into any risk about it.
A fifth would have suggested, with some warmth, that surely old inhabitants of the city were better judges of its requirements than a stranger, and that it was for the town council to propose such a scheme if they saw the necessity for it, and not for a new-comer who had been less than a week in Jerusalem.
These, and countless other objections, might have been raised, had the meeting been called in our lukewarm days.
But the Jerusalem committee did not act thus, they did not fill Nehemiah's way with difficulties and his soul with discouragement.

A plain bit of work lay before him and before them; he was ready to lead, and they were ready to follow.


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