
When we stopped in the story in my last post, Nehemiah had just received permission and favor from the king whom he served as cupbearer while in exile to return to Jerusalem to rebuild the walls and city. He was granted a letter of safe passage and timber from the king’s own forests to rebuild the gates.
As we read the text in the Bible, the next scene is his arrival in his home city of Jerusalem. The thing I pause to consider is what the text does not include. How far was the journey and how long would it have taken him? It can be so easy for us today to give little thought to the distances from one place to another in the Bible and how long it would likely have taken them.
We would not have been talking highways, speed trains, buses, or planes. Even a roadway would have been primitive by our standards. If a person had the means, he might be blessed to ride on a donkey or perhaps a camel. Most of the time, the travel would be on foot for many of the people of that day.
We know Nehemiah was traveling from Susa, which was in Persia (modern day Iran) to Jerusalem. Historians tell us that he would have most likely taken the long overland route on what was known as the Persian Royal Road into northern Mesopotamia. He would then have needed to head west into Syro-Palestine to Jerusalem. The distance was about 900 miles and would have taken about four months.
The distance and difficulty of such a lengthy trip increases our understanding of why Nehemiah would have needed letters of safe passage through so many regions. Not all of the areas may have been friendly or at peace.
And where was the king’s forest he was permitted to harvest timber from for the gates? Again we look to historians for their guess. It is suspected that the forest was likely in Lebanon, which had been overtaken by the Persians in the sixth century B.C. There were also some areas of the coastal plain of Palestine that may have provided some of the timber needed. During those times the walls would have been made primarily of stone and mud brick, but timber was needed to stabilize the walls and for the gateways into and out of the city.
When I consider the trip, its length, danger, and requirements, I am impacted by the courage, tenacity, passion, and faith of Nehemiah. Prior to his role as a cupbearer, servant/slave of the king, there is no indication of his background. Yet because of his concern for his homeland, his name goes down in history and we hear of him.
How like God to choose an ordinary man whose heart was His to fulfill His purposes!
Today we can be tempted to look for the high profile persons among us for important roles or tasks. Very often these same people seek them for the added prestige it brings them, but not so with God. Time and time again, He demonstrates throughout the Bible that He chooses the youngest, the smallest, the weakest, the most lowly in station.
Clearly God had chosen Nehemiah for the task and the journey. It reminds me of the humbling His choice of any one of us truly is. It also takes my mind to God’s choice of David that we read about in 1 Samuel. Samuel was certain he would find the next king among Jesse’s sons when he arrived at his home. God reminded him in 1 Samuel 16:7 of a characteristic of His election we should all remember:
“But the Lord said to Samuel, “Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The Lord does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.”
1 Samuel 16:7 (NIV)
You may doubt your value or usefulness to the Lord for any number of reasons, but look anywhere from Genesis to Revelation and you will discover the truth of God’s words to Samuel.
Join me again next time as we look at another characteristic of Nehemiah as he arrives in Jerusalem.

Pam, thank you for showing me how important it is to dig deeper for details we would otherwise overlook. A 900 mile trip which took four months – I never realized this and yet, it reveals much about Nehemiah. I appreciated the encouragement this post brought today.
I don’t always do that with a passage, but when I do I am excited because of all it adds. Reading and pausing to wonder about something like how long the trip was (in this case) adds a lot. Recently in a book I reviewed (The King of Glory), the author wrote that 10,000 wagons were needed to bring the quarried stone to the site to build the temple in Jerusalem. That blew my mind. Have a blessed weekend, friend.💕
WOW, yes travel comes so easy to us nowadays, vs what happened in the Bible. Thank you for the historian background as it does give perspective to what happened.
Thank you for sharing your links with us at #273 SSPS Linky. See you again next week.
It does indeed (even with flight delays and road construction). Have a great weekend and see you next week for more of this story.
Thanks, see you Monday Pam
Your explanations really put his trip in perspective, Pam. Lots of encouragement for us all in God’s willingness to choose the least of us.
His choice of me always stuns me and all the biblical stories of other ordinary and fallen creatures He used tells me it is truly who He is and how much He loves humankind.💕