You Don’t Rebuild a Wall from the Couch
Just Ask Nehemiah...
Sometimes people in the church, members of the church:
Get Comfortable.
Comfortable with watching.
Comfortable with critiquing.
Comfortable with letting a handful of people do the heavy lifting while you sip coffee and nod politely.
Which is not how God builds anything.
Meet Nehemiah: The Guy Who Actually Did Something
Jerusalem’s wall is in ruins.
Burned down, broken, embarrassing.
The city is vulnerable.
The people are anxious.
Nehemiah shows up.
He doesn’t complain.
He doesn’t form committees.
He doesn’t tweet about how unfair it all is.
He surveys the rubble, prays, and then rolls up his sleeves.
And here’s the kicker: he doesn’t rebuild the wall himself.
He organizes the people. He assigns sections. He says:
“Here’s your piece. Guard it. Build it. Make it stand.”
And the people respond:
“Let us rise up and build!”
Not:
“Let Nehemiah handle it.”
Not:
“Let the professionals figure it out.”
Not:
“We’ll wait until the coast is clear.”
Nehemiah’s wall was rebuilt by ownership — one section, one family, one stone at a time.
Detractors Everywhere
Here’s the part most people skip over: Nehemiah had haters.
Sanballat, Tobiah, and the rest of the neighborhood gossip squad mocked, threatened, and schemed to stop the work.
“Look at those amateurs trying to rebuild a wall!”
“Who do they think they are?”
“They’re vulnerable. They’ll fail.”
“This is messy. This is risky. Let’s just wait and see.”
Sound familiar? Heritage, that is every church that relies on spectators.
Modern Heritage Detractors
If Nehemiah had sent a wall-building text to some of us today, the responses might look like this:
“I’d help, but I just started a new Netflix series and can’t pause it.”
“Do we have a committee for that? I only participate if there’s a sign-up sheet.”
“Sorry, I’ve got too much going on. Can someone FaceTime me when it’s done?”
“I would lift stones, but the gym membership expires tomorrow.”
“I’m on board, but only if there’s a PowerPoint explaining the spiritual significance of each brick.”
“I would guard the wall, but my emotional energy is maxed out from voting in Facebook polls.”
“Can’t I just cheer from the pew? That seems like enough participation.”
Meanwhile, the wall stays half-built.
Meanwhile, the neighbors are laughing.
Meanwhile, the community suffers.
Nehemiah’s response?
“Pick up the hammer. Lift the stone. Guard your section. Stop complaining and start building.”
Hands, Not Excuses
Here’s the simple truth:
Walls don’t rebuild themselves. Churches don’t thrive on nostalgia or sentiment.
Ownership looks like:
Picking up the tools, the stones, the work that belongs to you.
Encouraging neighbors instead of waiting for them to motivate themselves.
Risking failure and still moving forward.
Nehemiah assigned everyone a piece of the wall. No one got to say,
“That’s not my gift,” or “I’m just here to watch.”
Heritage, right now, too many of you are watching.
You are critiquing the section the rest of the people are carrying.
And the wall doesn’t just sit there waiting for permission — it stays half-built, and God’s work stalls.
The Wall Rises One Stone at a Time
The miracle of Nehemiah is simple: Discipleship is action.
The wall went up because:
People stopped waiting.
People picked up their section.
People worked together.
People ignored the mockery.
Ownership is contagious.
Responsibility is infectious.
And the wall?
It eventually stood tall and strong.
You are not called to sit back and admire what God is doing.
You are not called to critique, analyze, or measure.
You are called to lift a stone.
To guard your section.
To build what is yours.
To encourage others.
To ignore the detractors and keep moving.
The wall will rise only if you rise with it.
Spectators do not build walls.
Spectators watch them crumble.
Stop watching.
Start building.
Own your section.
Move your hands.
Protect your wall.
Nehemiah had a city to save, and so do we.
Rise. Build. Repeat.
Prayers,
Rev. John Roberts
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This is an important message! To build something, all have to participate!