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Living A Godly Legacy Series
Contributed by Dana Chau on Jul 15, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: What would you like for future generations to say about you after you die? What if you knew the truths about living a legacy instead of leaving a legacy? We invite you to reflect on the example of Nehemiah and learn key components of legacy-building!
Living a Godly Legacy
Nehemiah 1-8
This is the last Sunday of 2012. When it was October 11, 2012, my kids said, "This is the last 10/11/12." Then one daughter said, "No. October 12, 3012. But we won't be around to see it."
We are here today, and there will be days in the future we will not see. Here's a good question: "Will our being here today result in a better, same, or poorer future for others?" Will those living in 3012 be worse off, the same or better off because of the way we lived in 2012?
We're not talking about new year resolutions. We are talking about living a legacy. Jim Rohn said this, "Those who came before leave us the world we live in. Those who will come after will have only what we leave them. We are stewards of this world, and we have a calling in our lives to leave it better than how we found it, even if it seems like such a small part."
Young people, don't wait until you are old to consider what you will leave behind. You can't make choices carelessly today and expect to correct them in the future. One college student said, "Pray for me to live sexually pure." And I replied, "Your future wife will thank you for your current pursuit of purity."
Retirees, don't think you're done. You're not done until your eulogy is read at your funeral. Let your eulogy echo that of the Apostle Paul's, " I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith (2 Timothy 4:7)." Finish well.
Sometime ago, I was talking to my mentor about leaving a legacy. He said, "Dana, you can't leave a legacy. You live a legacy. Your legacy is the life you are living now."
This morning, I want to share with you two components for living a legacy from Nehemiah 1 through 8. Pastor Steve and Pastor John already covered chapters 1 through 7. I won't re-teach these chapters. I'll draw one component from these seven chapters and a second component from chapter 8.
Nehemiah records the rebuilding of the walls of Jerusalem. Chapter 1 records Nehemiah receiving the disgraceful news that the Jews in Jerusalem were unprotected by broken walls and burned down gates. Chapter 7 records the completion of the walls and gates around Jerusalem.
Here's the first component of living a legacy: Construct for God's glory.
Living a legacy involves building for God's glory. Nehemiah 2:11-12 read, " I [Nehemiah] went to Jerusalem, and after staying there three days I set out during the night with a few others. I had not told anyone what my God had put in my heart to do for Jerusalem...." Nehemiah didn't just rebuild the walls and gates because he was a Jew, but because God put it in his heart to do for Jerusalem. He did it for God's glory.
Three construction workers were at a building site. When the first one was asked what he was doing, he replied, “Can’t you see I’m laying bricks?” When the second person was asked what he was doing, he replied, “I’m working to provide for my family.” When the third person was asked what he was doing, he beamed and replied, “I’m building a apartment complex for God to bless many families.”
I sometimes hear from student leaders, campus ministers and parents about the problems their teens are giving them. Without being glib, I respond with, "That's why you're there. If your teens were perfect, you would be unnecessary."
After studying Nehemiah, I am changing my encouragement to, "Remember, we're doing this for God's glory." Colossians 3:23-24 read, "Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving."
Sometime ago, Pat Lim told me about a missionary with Overseas Missionary Fellowship, who said, "My goal is to serve Christ in the mission field and be forgotten." He understood. D; he will not forget your work and the love you have shown him as you have helped his people and continue to help them." God remembers the work we do for His glory. His reward far outweighs anyone else's.
Let's bring this to where we live, today. Construct for God's glory. To construct means to build up. What areas of our lives do we sense God calling us to build up for His glory?
What has God put in your heart to build up in yourself and / or your family? Is it faith in Jesus Christ? Is it godly character? Is it loving relationship? Is it compassion to serve others? What has God put in your heart to build for your family?