When the Rubble Starts Talking

Fathers — Remember the Lord and Fight for Your Family

Governing Spine

When the rubble starts talking, God calls fathers to remember the Lord, build on the Living Stone, and fight for their family so that the assaults they survived do not become the patterns their family must survive.

Movement Logic

Scripture Reading

Nehemiah 4:10–14

“And Judah said, The strength of the bearers of burdens is decayed, and there is much rubbish; so that we are not able to build the wall.

And our adversaries said, They shall not know, neither see, till we come in the midst among them, and slay them, and cause the work to cease.

And it came to pass, that when the Jews which dwelt by them came, they said unto us ten times, From all places whence ye shall return unto us they will be upon you.

Therefore set I in the lower places behind the wall, and on the higher places, I even set the people after their families with their swords, their spears, and their bows.

And I looked, and rose up, and said unto the nobles, and to the rulers, and to the rest of the people, Be not ye afraid of them: remember the Lord, which is great and terrible, and fight for your brethren, your sons, and your daughters, your wives, and your houses.”

1 Peter 2:4–6

“To whom coming, as unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God, and precious,

Ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ.

Wherefore also it is contained in the scripture, Behold, I lay in Sion a chief corner stone, elect, precious: and he that believeth on him shall not be confounded.”

Manuscript

1. When the Rubble Starts Talking

In this first movement, we are listening for how the rubble gets a voice.

Literal Rubble and the Sermon Title

Church, Nehemiah brings us to a people standing in the middle of what has been broken.

They are not building on clean ground. They are not working in calm conditions. The wall has been damaged. The city has been mocked. The people are tired. The opposition is organized. And Judah says:

And before we make this a fatherhood sermon, we have to honor what the text is first showing us. Nehemiah is not watching one isolated man repair a private wall. He is standing with a covenant people rebuilding together. Nobles, rulers, workers, families, brothers, sons, daughters, wives, and houses are all caught up in the work. The fatherhood charge in this sermon grows out of that communal scene. It is a contextual extension of the text, not a claim that the text only speaks to fathers.

“There is much rubbish; so that we are not able to build the wall.”

The King James says rubbish.

We might call it rubble.

And rubble is not just trash. Rubble is what is left after something has been broken down. Rubble tells you something happened here. Something was attacked here. Something was burned here. Something was neglected here. Something that once stood has been torn down.

Around You, Inside You, Through You

But the danger in Nehemiah is not only that the rubbish was in the street.

In the text, you can hear it happen. Judah said, “There is much rubbish; so that we are not able.”

The rubble was no longer just under their feet. It was in their conclusion.

It was no longer just around their work. It was now speaking through their words.

That is what this sermon is about:

When the Rubble Starts Talking.

Rubble starts talking when what happened around you becomes the voice inside you.

It starts talking when damage becomes a narrator.

It starts talking when what has been broken begins to tell the builders, “You cannot build.”

But I do not want to make you wait until the end of the sermon to hear the answer. The answer to talking rubble is not louder rubble. It is not a father trying to out-shout his pain. The answer begins when the people of God hear the greater voice.

Nehemiah shows us rubble, but Peter shows us the Living Stone.

So even while we recognize the voice of the rubble, we already know where this sermon is going: rubble may tell us what has been broken, but Christ tells us what can still be built.

From Nehemiah’s Rubble to Racialized Rubble

Now, church, we must bring this forward carefully. Nehemiah is dealing with Jerusalem’s broken wall. We are not pretending that our situation is identical to theirs. But the text gives us a pattern: a people trying to rebuild while opposition, exhaustion, and old damage begin to shape what they believe is possible.

And in our present moment, Black and brown families know something about rubble that does not stay quiet.

This is not generic pressure. This is racialized rubble. It is the accumulated wreckage left by systems that have attacked Black life across generations — slavery, racial terror, Jim Crow, redlining, mass incarceration, school underfunding, over-policing, voter suppression, distorted history, economic exclusion, and the constant demand that Black people prove their humanity in a country that has too often benefited from denying it.

And this rubble is not only old. Some of it is fresh.

Contemporary Rubble: The Places Where It Speaks

Let me name these places not as separate sermons, but as witnesses. Each one is saying the same thing: rubble tries to move from the world around us into the voice within us.

We have seen it in courtrooms, where one moment can stretch itself over the rest of a young person’s life. A child leaves home for an ordinary day, a confrontation breaks out, somebody dies, a jury speaks, and now a future is being counted in decades.

I am not standing here to retry a case from the pulpit. But I am standing here to say what every father knows: some moments are not just moments. Some moments are looking for your child’s future.

That is when the rubble starts talking.

We have seen it in places of worship, when a man armed for harm can move toward the house of prayer and the people of God have to be reminded again that sacred space is not always safe from violent imagination. That kind of rubble says, “Not even worship is beyond threat.”

That is when the rubble starts talking.

We have seen it in classrooms, when a child has ability, but nobody stretches it. When a son has brilliance, but it gets interpreted as attitude. When a daughter has leadership, but it gets called too much. When a child is present in the room, but the expectation over that child is too small for what God placed in them.

Because sometimes the wall is not made of brick. Sometimes the wall is made of lowered expectations.

That is when the rubble starts talking.

We have seen it on the job, where a Black man can be hired into the room and still not be allowed to be fully present in the room.

That is not just workplace stress.

That is rubble with a badge, a salary, a policy, and a performance review.

And if he is not careful, that rubble follows him home. He comes home still braced. Still edited. Still proving. Still defending. Still carrying the voice that told him, “Do not be too much. Do not say too much. Do not feel too much. Do not challenge too much.”

And now the danger is that the job starts talking through the father.

That is when the rubble starts talking.

We have seen it in public spaces, where Black children have to be taught extra instructions for ordinary places.

Not because they are wrong.

But because the world has made ordinary Black life carry extra instructions.

That is when the rubble starts talking.

We have seen it in politics, when lines are redrawn, rules are changed, protections are weakened, and then people are told, “Your voice still counts.” Power does not always have to silence you if it can make your voice smaller.

That is when the rubble starts talking.

We have seen it in the story America tells about us, when truth is called divisive, repair is called unfair, and Black history is treated like a threat while Black pain is expected to be endured quietly.

Because if the rubble gets to tell the whole story, it will make our children think damage is their identity.

That is when the rubble starts talking.

Movement 1 Landing: When the Voice Enters the House

And here is where the first movement has to come home: the rubble does not only want to surround the house. It wants to speak through the house.

That is when the rubble starts talking.

Once the rubble begins speaking through the house, the next question is not merely what the rubble says, but whose voice will govern the family.

2. Remember the Lord

In this second movement, the answer to the rubble is the greater voice of God.

Recovering the Greater Voice

But Nehemiah does not leave the people under the voice of the rubble.

Nehemiah stands up in the middle of the broken place and says:

“Remember the Lord.”

That is not a decorative religious phrase. That is spiritual resistance. That is a call to recover the greater voice.

Remember the Lord.

Because when the rubble starts talking, somebody has to recover the greater voice.

But the church has to answer, “Threat may come near the room, but threat is not Lord of the room.”

And because we preach on this side of Calvary, we remember the Lord through Jesus Christ.

Christ-Centered Anchor: Come to the Living Stone

Peter says, “To whom coming, as unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God, and precious.”

Peter is writing to believers who know what it means to live as strangers, to be misunderstood, misnamed, and treated with suspicion by the world around them.

And Peter does not first say, “Try harder.”

That is a strange and holy image. A stone sounds fixed, strong, stable. But this Stone is living. Christ is not dead material for religious construction. Christ is alive. He is the foundation God builds on.

Then Peter says Christ was “disallowed indeed of men.” That means rejected. Examined and refused. Looked at and ruled out. Human judgment looked at Jesus and said, “Not Him.”

But God looked at the rejected Stone and said, “Chosen. Precious. Foundation.”

So the world’s rejection does not get the final word over what God has chosen.

Peter is not saying our rejection is identical to Christ’s rejection. He is telling us that human rejection never outranks God’s verdict.

And Peter does not stop with Christ as the Living Stone. He says, “Ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house.”

That means Christ is not only rescuing individuals. Christ is building a people. He takes lives that have been pressured, rejected, misnamed, and pushed aside, and He builds them into a spiritual house.

So when we speak of being chosen, we are not making a detached claim about personal greatness. We are confessing what Peter says: in Christ, God is building a people. Our worth is not self-invented; it is received from the Living Stone who was rejected by men and chosen by God.

And fathers, that means you cannot build your house from what broke you.

Build on the Living Stone.

What It Means for Christ to Be the Living Stone

And when we say Christ is the Living Stone, we have to make that plain.

That does not mean Christ is just a religious word we add to our pain. It does not mean Christ is a picture on the wall, a Bible on the table, or a song we sing on Sunday while the house is still governed by the wound.

When Christ is the Living Stone in our lives, He becomes the foundation under our identity. What rejected us does not get to name us. What wounded us does not get to rule us. What exhausted us does not get to form us. What tried to disallow us does not get to become the voice of God in us.

When Christ is the Living Stone in our homes, He becomes the foundation under the atmosphere.

When Christ is the Living Stone in the home, a son does not have to become hard to be called strong. A daughter does not have to disappear to be called safe. A wife does not have to absorb wounds she did not create to keep peace in the house. And a father does not have to pretend he is whole; he can come to Christ and be built again.

That is why Peter says, “To whom coming.” We keep coming to Him — with our wounds, our weariness, our failures, our families, and our houses. Christ is not a dead stone. He is the Living Stone. He is alive enough to heal what the rubble damaged, correct what the wound distorted, and make the father a builder again.

So when Christ is the Living Stone, the rubble may still be real, but it is not the foundation. The wound may still be real, but it is not the foundation. The rejection may still be real, but it is not the foundation. Christ is the foundation.

Peter adds that the one who trusts this Cornerstone “shall not be confounded”: building on Christ does not erase the assault, but the assault cannot finally shame, invalidate, or overturn the foundation God has chosen.

The rubble may tell us what has been broken, but Christ tells us what can still be built.

Remember the Lord. Rise up. Fight for your family.

Remembering the Lord is not retreat from the struggle. It recovers the father’s center, settles the foundation, and prepares his hands to fight for the right people in the right way.

3. Fight for Your Family

In this third movement, remembered hands learn how to fight for the family without being governed by the wound.

The Charge and the Order

Nehemiah says:

“Remember the Lord... and fight for your brethren, your sons, and your daughters, your wives, and your houses.”

Notice the order.

Remember first.

Fight second.

A father who forgets the Lord may still fight, but he may fight from ego, panic, trauma, exhaustion, pride, rage, or pain that has never been surrendered.

Peter says, “To whom coming, as unto a living stone,” and that we are “built up a spiritual house.” So remembering the Lord is more than recalling His name; it is coming back to Christ before the rubble governs our response.

Because when Christ is the Living Stone in the home, the rubble may be real, but the rubble is not the foundation.

The Family Nehemiah Names

And when Nehemiah names who is at stake, he widens the room.

He says brethren because fathers cannot do this work alone. Black fatherhood was never meant to survive by isolation. The work needs brothers, uncles, deacons, mentors, teachers, coaches, and men who strengthen hands instead of weakening them.

In Nehemiah, families are stationed together, but the wall is still a shared work. That matters. A father can be responsible without being solitary. Sometimes fighting for the family means letting trusted people help you see what your wound cannot see, pray when your hands are tired, correct you when your anger is misfiring, and stand beside your children with you rather than leaving you to carry the whole burden alone.

He says sons because the next generation of men is at stake. A father fights for his son not only by warning him about the world, but by showing him how to live without becoming what the world expects him to be.

He says daughters because the future is not male-only, and because daughters experience a father’s wounds in ways that are often overlooked.

A father does not fight for his daughter only by telling her to be careful, stay close, or watch the world. He fights for her by making sure his protection does not become possession, his survival instincts do not become control, his absence does not become her measure of love, and his unhealed pain does not become her emotional assignment.

A father fighting for his daughter teaches her that her wisdom is not rebellion, her strength does not cancel her need for tenderness, her body is not a battleground for somebody else’s anxiety, and her future is not collateral damage in anybody’s war.

He says wives because fathers cannot claim to fight for the house while making women carry what fathers refuse to heal.

A wife is not merely the background support system for a man’s calling. She is not the emotional container for pain he will not process. She is not the shock absorber for everything the world did to him.

And sons and daughters are watching.

A father’s treatment of women is a sermon his sons and daughters hear before they understand his words.

So a father fights for his wife not only by providing, but by honoring, listening, telling the truth, repenting, partnering, and refusing to make her carry the weight of wounds she did not create.

In a Black household under assault, the wife cannot be treated as the shock absorber for everything the world did to the man. The father must bring that wound to God, not hand it to his wife and call it marriage.

And he says houses because a house can have food, rules, and a roof and still be governed by the wrong spirit.

So the father’s question is not only, “What have I provided?”

When the Fight Gets Captured

Nehemiah 6 helps us understand why the fight has to be governed by remembrance. Nehemiah names the strategy: “Their hands shall be weakened from the work, that it be not done.”

In Nehemiah, fear was one tactic. But the goal was larger than fear. The goal was to make the work stop.

Nehemiah 6:13 exposes the next layer of the strategy: provoke the builder into a wrong action, then use the action as an evil report against him. The assault does not only want weak hands; it wants a misstep it can use.

That distinction matters for us. I am not here to say Black fathers are simply afraid. That is too small. Many fathers have been fighting all their lives — fighting through suspicion, fighting through exhaustion, fighting through systems that misread their bodies, their anger, their children, and their pain.

The contemporary assault does not only create fear. Sometimes it creates rage. Sometimes numbness. Sometimes cynicism. Sometimes hypervigilance. Sometimes isolation. Sometimes overcontrol. Sometimes a survival logic that sounds like wisdom but is no longer governed by God.

The danger is not only that fathers stop fighting.

The danger is that the fight gets captured.

That is why Nehemiah’s prayer matters:

“Now therefore, O God, strengthen my hands.”

That is the prayer I want fathers to carry:

Lord, strengthen my hands.

Fences: A Mirror of the Fight Turned Inward

And this is why the fight has to be governed by remembrance.

August Wilson’s Fences is not our Scripture. Nehemiah is our Scripture. Christ is our foundation. But Fences gives us a mirror.

It shows what can happen when a father survives the rubble outside the house, but the rubble starts talking through him inside the house.

Troy Maxson is a man marked by real injustice. He knows what it means to be blocked. He knows what it means to have a gift and live in a world that does not give that gift room to breathe.

But the tragedy is that the wound he survived outside the house begins to speak inside the house.

A father’s life becomes a curriculum in the house. Sons and daughters are learning even when no lesson is announced. They are learning from how a father handles disappointment, how he speaks when he is tired, how he uses authority, how he treats women, how he apologizes, how he refuses to apologize, how he carries the wounds of the world, and how he remembers God when the rubble starts talking.

So fathers must ask:

A father must not become the closed door he once prayed would open.

That is why Nehemiah says, “Remember the Lord.”

Because if a father only remembers the wound, the wound may start leading the house.

If he only remembers the door that closed, he may become a closed door to his son.

If he only remembers the system that denied him, he may start denying room to his daughter, his wife, and his family.

But when a father remembers the Lord, he does not have to let the wound become the foundation.

Oppression explains the wound, but it does not bless the weapon.

When Christ is the Living Stone, the wound cannot be the foundation.

So bring the wound to Christ before the wound becomes the weather in the home.

And pray:

Lord, strengthen my hands.

Do not fight the world and wound the house.

What the Fight Looks Like

So what does the fight look like?

Let me make it plain enough to practice today.

A father fights when he prays over his children by name.

So fathers have to teach more than caution. They have to teach discernment.

A father fights when he teaches his children how traps work.

A father fights when he tells his son:

“Every insult does not deserve your future.”

A father fights when he tells his daughter:

“You are not emotional collateral for anybody’s war.”

A father fights when he shows up where decisions are being made.

And fathers have to show up and ask: What are they calling my child? What are they expecting from my child? What class did they place my child in? What future are they preparing my child to believe is possible?

A father fights when he asks:

And fathers have to teach the house that voting is not a side issue. School boards, judges, city councils, state houses — these are places where walls are either repaired or left broken.

And fathers have to tell the story before the rubble tells it.

A father fights when he honors his wife in front of his children and repents when he has not.

And if a father hears this and knows, “I have already let the rubble use my voice,” the gospel does not leave him in shame. Christ calls him to repentance, repair, accountability, and restoration. The Living Stone is not only strong enough to build what is broken; He is merciful enough to rebuild the builder.

A father fights when he says:

That is not weakness.

That is fatherhood under God.

Remember the Lord. Rise up. Fight for your family.

Celebration / Close

Fathers, we have been talking about when the rubble starts talking.

And the rubble has been talking.

But the sermon does not end with the rubble talking.

Nehemiah says, “Remember the Lord.”

So when the rubble speaks, fathers remember another voice.

And when the fight tries to get captured, fathers do not just tighten their grip.

They pray:

Lord, strengthen my hands.

And Peter brings us back to Christ.

Christ is the Living Stone.

So the world’s disallowance is not God’s verdict.

The system’s rejection is not God’s foundation.

The rubble may be loud, but the Living Stone speaks louder.

Fathers, when the rubble speaks, remember the Lord; then fight from the life of the Living Stone — not from rage, but for healing; not to wound your house, but to build it.

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