But it came to pass, that when Sanballat heard that we builded the wall, he was wroth, and took great indignation, and mocked the Jews.
Sanballat and Tobiah grew furious because they feared what a walled Jerusalem would become: strong and formidable against them. Their scorn was malice dressed up as mockery, yet it backfired. They despised the work as foolish and beneath serious opposition, so they delayed their attacks until the Jews had already made too much progress to be stopped.
AI summary
Commenting on Nehemiah 4:1-6
But it came to pass, that when Sanballat heard that we builded the wall,.... Or were building it; for as yet it was not finished, see Neh 4:6, he was wroth, and took great indignation; inwardly, though outwardly he pretended to treat the work with contempt, as if it never would be accomplished, which yet he feared: and mocked the Jews; as a set of...
Neh 4:1-2 (Hebrew_Bible_3:33-34)The ridicule of Tobiah and Sanballat. - As soon as Sanballat heard that we were building (בּנים, partic., expresses not merely the resolve or desire to build, but also the act of commencing), he was wroth and indignant, and vented his anger by ridiculing the Jews, saying before his brethren, i.e., the rulers of his people, and the army of Samaria (חיל, like...
Commenting on Nehemiah 4:1-2