Dealing with Opposition
“So the wall was completed… When all our enemies heard about this, all the surrounding nations were afraid and lost their confidence, because they realized that this work had been done with the help of our God.” — Nehemiah 6:15–16
Opposition is a reality of life. Whenever we set out
to do something meaningful, resistance will rise to meet us. Sometimes it comes
from outside—critics who mock our vision, systems that make progress difficult,
or circumstances that test our endurance. At other times, it comes from
within—fear, hesitation, or the quiet whisper of self-doubt. Nehemiah’s story
is one of the clearest biblical illustrations of how opposition works and how
we can stand firm against it.
From the very beginning of his mission to rebuild
Jerusalem’s walls, Nehemiah faced ridicule. Sanballat, Tobiah, and Geshem
laughed at his vision and tried to discredit his leadership. As the work
advanced, their resistance grew stronger. They plotted attacks, spread rumors,
and attempted to frighten the workers. Yet Nehemiah pressed forward, showing us
that opposition is not only loud and obvious but often subtle and insidious.
Subtle opposition is especially dangerous because it
does not confront us head-on. Instead, it creeps in quietly, eroding confidence
and focus over time. It may take the form of distractions that lure us into
endless debates or unnecessary tasks. It may whisper discouragement through
seemingly harmless comments that plant seeds of insecurity.
It may spread half-truths or outright lies that cloud
judgment and make us question our motives. Nehemiah’s enemies tried to draw him
into meetings that would waste his time and halt progress. Their tactic was not
to defeat him directly but to wear him down slowly, hoping he would abandon the
work out of exhaustion. This is how opposition often works in our own lives. It
does not always need to win; it only needs to drain us until we quit.
Constant criticism, repeated obstacles, and subtle
discouragement can wear down even the strongest resolve. Fear and intimidation
can create a climate of anxiety that makes progress feel impossible. Nehemiah’s
workers built with one hand while holding a weapon in the other, a vivid
picture of how opposition forces us to live in tension, balancing progress with
vigilance.
Yet Nehemiah’s response was not despair but clarity.
When invited to waste time in fruitless meetings, he answered simply: “I am
doing a great work and cannot come down” (Nehemiah 6:3). His clarity of purpose
shielded him from distraction.
His reliance on prayer gave him strength beyond human
endurance. Prayer was not an occasional act for Nehemiah; it was his reflex. He
prayed at the beginning of the work, during ridicule, and when plots of
violence emerged. Prayer was woven into every stage of his leadership,
reminding us that human determination alone will eventually run dry, but divine
strength does not.
The lesson is clear: dealing with opposition requires
more than toughness. It requires clarity to stay anchored in purpose, courage
to face resistance head-on, discernment to recognize subtle distractions, and
resilience to endure when the struggle is long. It requires prayer, because
prayer connects us to a source of strength that cannot be exhausted.
Opposition is not a sign of failure. More often, it is
evidence that the work we are doing matters. When resistance rises, it often
signals that the work has weight—that it threatens the status quo or challenges
forces that prefer things to remain unchanged. Nehemiah’s enemies didn’t waste
their energy opposing something trivial; they opposed him because his mission
carried significance.
The most dangerous resistance is not the one that
shouts in our face but the one that whispers behind our back, slowly eroding
conviction. Recognizing these tactics is the first step to resisting them.
Staying anchored in truth, guarding our focus, and renewing our strength in
prayer ensures that even the quietest resistance cannot derail us.
Nehemiah’s story reminds us that progress often comes
through steady, daily effort. Each time we choose to continue the work despite
whispers of doubt or subtle distractions, we reinforce our confidence and
weaken the power of opposition. Persistence itself becomes an act of defiance
against erosion. And when clarity, courage, integrity, and prayer work
together, opposition becomes less of a barrier and more of a steppingstone
toward growth and victory.

Stand for Christ always.
ReplyDeleteThe church has failed in 2019.Are we going to fail in 2025?Are we going to push back hell wear it belongs?
What stays with me is people,said the churches are so powerful.Why are they shut down?
This time we need to stand as Gods Army and not shrink back.We need to be ready.
I believe God is allowing things to happen not just for a Revival but to see if we his people are going to rise back not shrink back.
Let opposition come as it is.
We serve an almighty all powerful above all GOD so let's rise up