The Big Problem
Nehemiah's people did amazing things. They rebuilt Jerusalem's walls in just 52 days. They moved their families into a dangerous, empty city. They organized worship and sang at the dedication.
None of it made them right with God.
That surprises us. But it's true and it matters for your life too.
Nobody Measures Up
God's people have always struggled to obey him. Israel got God's law at Mount Sinai. They worshiped a golden calf days later. God gave them a homeland. They chased other gods almost immediately.
The pattern never changes. The Bible names it plainly:
"There is no one righteous, not even one." — Romans 3:10
Every person falls short of God's perfect standard. That includes you, and it includes me. No amount of good behavior closes that gap.
Only God can declare a person truly righteous.
Grace Changes Everything
So how does anyone get right with God?
The answer is grace, God's free gift through faith.
Nehemiah's people offered sacrifices and worshiped God. They weren't earning points with God. They were trusting his promise to send a Savior. Every sacrifice pointed forward to Jesus.
Paul puts it simply in Ephesians 2:8-10:
- We are saved by grace, through faith.
- It is God's gift — not something we earn.
- But God created us to do good works too.
Grace doesn't cancel out works. It puts them in the right place.
A Thread That Proves the Point
Look at one priestly family in Nehemiah 12 — the division of Abijah.
King David organized priests into 24 teams around 960 BC. Abijah was the eighth team. Babylon destroyed Jerusalem. The priests went into exile. But when the people returned, Abijah's family came home too. Nehemiah wrote their name in his list.
Five hundred years later, a priest named Zechariah served his rotation. An angel appeared to him in the temple. His son would be John the Baptist — the one who announced Jesus.
Luke 1:5 says Zechariah "belonged to the priestly division of Abijah."
Those priests didn't earn that moment. They just showed up. They were faithful in their rotation. God worked through their ordinary obedience for extraordinary purposes.
That's your story too.
What Works Really Are
If grace saves us, why do works matter? Three reasons.
- Works are a thank-you. Nehemiah's people sang at the walls because God had rescued them. We serve God because he already saved us — not to get him to save us.
- Works are a public statement. James 2:18 says faith shows itself through action. What we do tells the world who we belong to. Our lives speak louder than our words.
- Works are Spirit-powered change. Growing in Christ isn't just trying harder. God's Spirit changes what we want. He moves us from selfishness toward generosity. That change shows up in how we live.
- Moses prayed: "Establish the work of our hands." — Psalm 90:17
- He wasn't asking God to bless his achievements. He was asking God to make his small efforts matter for big purposes.
Two Wrong Turns
This doctrine warns us about two common mistakes.
Mistake 1: Thinking you can earn God's favor.
This man performs well and feels proud. He fails and feels crushed. He can never rest. He is always keeping score. But he's not serving God, he's auditing himself.
Mistake 2: Thinking effort doesn't matter.
This man hears "grace saves you" and stops trying. He thinks being forgiven means being passive. But Ephesians 2:10 says we were created for good works. God prepared them for us in advance.
Both mistakes miss the point. Grace produces devotion. It never replaces it.
You Are Part a Bigger Story
Abijah's priests didn't know they were 500 years upstream from John the Baptist. They couldn't see the thread running through their faithfulness. They just served their rotation and trusted God.
You are in the same spot.
You don't see what God is doing through your faithfulness. You don't know which conversation or act of service he will use. But you are here, in this moment, for his purposes.
The question isn't "Am I impressive enough?" The question is simpler: "Am I faithful where God has placed me?"
Three Things to Remember
You are secure. God holds you — not because you perform well, but because Jesus did.
You are grateful. Every act of service is a thank offering, not a down payment.
You are active. God prepared good works for you. Go do them.
The walls of Jerusalem were built by imperfect people serving a perfect God. Their faithfulness outlasted their lifetimes. So will yours.
"Establish the work of our hands for us — yes, establish the work of our hands." — Psalm 90:17
Scripture references: Romans 3:10 / Ephesians 2:8-10 / Romans 11:6; Galatians 2:16; 2 Timothy 1:9; Titus 3:4-8; James 2:14-18; 2 Peter 1:5-11 / Psalm 90:16-17
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