The Power of Perseverance | Nehemiah 4:1–23 | Message 5

  • Opposition to the Rebuilding

    When Sanballat heard that we were rebuilding the wall, he became angry and was greatly incensed. He ridiculed the Jews, and in the presence of his associates and the army of Samaria, he said, “What are those feeble Jews doing? Will they restore their wall? Will they offer sacrifices? Will they finish in a day? Can they bring the stones back to life from those heaps of rubble—burned as they are?”

    Tobiah the Ammonite, who was at his side, said, “What they are building—even a fox climbing up on it would break down their wall of stones!”

    Hear us, our God, for we are despised. Turn their insults back on their own heads. Give themover as plunder in a land of captivity. Do not cover up their guilt or blot out their sins from your sight, for they have thrown insults in the face of the builders.

    So we rebuilt the wall till all of it reached half its height, for the people worked with all their heart.

    But when Sanballat,Tobiah, the Arabs, the Ammonites and the people of Ashdod heard that therepairs to Jerusalem’s walls had gone ahead and that the gaps were being closed, they were very angry. They all plotted together to come and fight against Jerusalem and stir up trouble against it. But we prayed to our God and posted a guard day and night to meet this threat.

    10 Meanwhile, the people in Judah said, “The strength of the laborers is giving out, and thereis so much rubble that we cannot rebuild the wall.”

    11 Also our enemies said, “Before they know it or see us, we will be right there among them and will kill them and put an end to the work.”

    12 Then the Jews who lived near them came and told us ten times over, “Wherever you turn, theywill attack us.”

    13 Therefore I stationed some ofthe people behind the lowest points of the wall at the exposed places, posting them by families, with their swords, spears and bows. 14 After I looked things over, I stood up and said to the nobles, the officials and the rest of the people, “Don’t be afraid of them. Remember the Lord, who is great and awesome, and fight for your families, your sons and your daughters, your wives and your homes.”

    15 When our enemies heard that we were aware of their plot and that God had frustrated it, we all returned to the wall, each to our own work.

    16 From that day on, half of my men did the work, while the other half were equipped with spears, shields, bows and armor. The officers posted themselves behind all the people of Judah 17 who were building the wall. Those who carried materials did their work with one hand and held a weapon in the other, 18 and each of the builders wore his sword at his side as he worked. But the man who sounded the trumpet stayed with me.

    19 Then I said to thenobles, the officials and the rest of the people, “The work is extensiveand spread out, and we are widely separated from each other along the wall. 20 Wherever you hear the sound of the trumpet, join us there. Our God will fight for us!”

    21 So we continued the work withhalf the men holding spears, from the first light of dawn till the stars came out. 22 At that time I also said to the people, “Have every man and his helper stay inside Jerusalem at night, so they can serve us as guards by night and as workers by day.” 23 Neither I nor my brothers nor my men nor the guards with me took off our clothes; each had his weapon, even when he went for water.

    Nehemiah 4:1–23

Are you about to give up? Ready to collapse under the crushing weight of your struggle? What if I told you that the very problem, person, or pressure keeping you awake at night is no match for God’s solution? The real question is this: will you hang on—will you refuse to quit—until God shows up with His perfect timing and decisive action?

There is one defining quality that separates success from failure: perseverance. Not a flash of effort. Not a temporary burst of passion. Perseverance is gritty, determined, relentless persistence when everything in you screams, stop. It means pressing through setbacks, delays, and obstacles with resilience that refuses to quit. It’s choosing not to measure progress by how easy the road feels or how fast results come. Perseverance is the unshakable resolve to trust God and keep going—even when the outcome looks uncertain and the waiting feels endless.

And here’s the truth: perseverance will always attract opposition. Critics will mock, enemies will plot, and temptation will whisper the shortcut of compromise. Nehemiah’s story in chapter 4 gives us a front-row seat to this reality—and teaches us how to overcome it:

  • Problem People vs. Perseverance – Meet Sanballat, Tobiah, and Geshem. Nehemiah’s enemies may look a lot like your own adversaries today.

  • Propaganda Designed to Discourage – Lies, slander, and constant negativity—the devil’s favorite tools to wear you down.

  • Prayer Powering Perseverance – Nehemiah refused to push forward in his own strength. He fueled his persistence through prayer.

  • Perseverance Pursues the Vision – Eleven more leadership principles leap off this chapter, showing how Nehemiah pressed forward with clarity.

  • Peril of Life Threatened – The Arabs, Ammonites, and Ashdodites joined forces against Nehemiah. Satan also knows how to build a crowd against you.

  • Prowess of a Great Leader – God equips His leaders to face the fight. I love Nehemiah 4:15: “When our enemies heard that it was known to us, and that God had brought their plot to nothing.” God Himself will fight your battles.

  • Perseverance Wins – The opposition didn’t slow Nehemiah—it accelerated the work! What a powerful lesson for us today.

History confirms this truth:

  • Robert Louis Stevenson, author of Treasure Island, battled illness his entire life, yet declared, “The saints are the sinners who keep on going.”

  • Samuel Johnson, the great English writer, insisted, “Great works are performed not by strength, but by perseverance.”

  • Charles Spurgeon took 27 years to complete The Treasury of David.

  • Edward Gibbon spent 26 years writing The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.

  • Noah Webster labored 36 years to produce his Dictionary.

  • Leonardo da Vinci poured 10 years into painting The Last Supper.

And author Irving Stone, who studied greatness all his life through his biographies of Michelangelo, Van Gogh, and others, put it this way:

“I write about people who sometime in their life have a vision or dream of something that should be accomplished and they go to work. They are beaten over the head, knocked down, vilified, and for years they get nowhere. But every time they’re knocked down they stand up. You cannot destroy these people. And at the end of their lives they’ve accomplished some modest part of what they set out to do.”

This is the power of perseverance: when the enemy strikes, when critics sneer, when progress slows—stand back up. God’s people are not defined by how many times they fall, but by how many times they rise. Join me in Nehemiah chapter four.

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Leadership’s Secrets for Success | Nehemiah 3:1–32 | Message 4

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The Leader: A Future Forecaster | Nehemiah 5:1–19 | Message 6