AHAB, KING OF ISRAEL
Three years Famine in Israel — Elijah meets Obadiah and
Ahab
— The Gathering on Mount Carmel — The Priests of Baal —
Description of their Rites — The time of the Evening
Sacrifice —
Elijah prepares the Sacrifice — Elijah 's Prayer — The
Answer by
Fire — Israel's Decision — Slaughter of the Priests of Baal
— The
Cloud not bigger than a Man's Hand — Elijah runs before Ahab
to Jezreel.
(1 Kings 18)
Three and a half years had passed since the ban of Elijah
had driven
clouds and rain from the sky of Israel, and the dry air
distilled no dew on
the parched and barren ground (comp. Luke 4:25; James 5: 17
1 ). Probably
one of these years had been spent by the prophet in the
retirement of Wadi Cherith; another may have passed before the widow's son
was
restored from death to life; while other eighteen months of
quiet may have
followed that event. Surely, if ever, the terrible
desolation which the
prophet's word had brought upon the land must by this time
have had its
effect upon Israel. Yet we meet no trace of repentance in
king or people:
only the sullen silence of hopeless misery. What man could
do, had been
attempted, but had signally failed. As the want and misery
among the
people became more pressing, King Ahab had searched both the
land and
all neighboring countries for Elijah, but in vain (1 Kings
18:10), while
Jezebel had wreaked her impotent vengeance on all the
prophets of
Jehovah on whom she could lay hands, as if they had been
Elijah's
accomplices, to be punished for what she regarded as his
crime. If all the
representatives of Jehovah were exterminated, His power
could no longer
be exercised in the land, and she would at the same time
crush resistance to
her imperious will, and finally uproot that hated religion
which was alike
the charter of Israel's spiritual allegiance and of civil
liberty. Yet neither
Ahab nor Jezebel succeeded. Though Elijah was near at hand,
either in
Ahab's dominions or in those of Jezebel's father, neither
messenger nor
king could discover his place of retreat. Nor could Jezebel
carry out her
bloody design. It affords most significant illustration of
God's purpose in
raising up "prophets," and also of the more wide sense in
which we are
here to understand that term, that such was their number,
that, however
many the queen may have succeeded in slaying, at least a
hundred of them
could still be hid, by fifties, in the limestone caverns
with which the land is
burrowed. And this, we infer, must have been in the
immediate
neighborhood of the capital, as otherwise Obadiah (the
"servant of
Jehovah"), the pious governor of Ahab's palace (comp. 1
Kings 4:6; 2
Kings 18:18; Isaiah 22:15), could scarcely have supplied
their wants
without being detected (1 Kings 18:4). Nor was Obadiah the
only one in
Israel who "feared Jehovah," though his position may have
been more
trying than that of others. As we know, there were still
thousands left in
Israel who had not bowed to Baal (1 Kings 19:18).
But there was at least one general effect throughout the
land of this terrible
period of drought. Every one must have learned that it had
followed upon
the announcement of Elijah; every one must have known what
that
announcement had been, with all concerning Jehovah and His
prophet that
it implied; and, lastly, if no general repentance had taken
place, every one
must at least have been prepared for the grand decisive
trial between God
and Baal, which was so soon to take place. And still the
weary days crept
on as before; the sun rose and sank on a cloudless sky over
an arid land;
and there was no sign of change, nor hope of relief. It was
summer. Jezebel
had left the palace of Samaria, and was in her delicious
cool summer-
residence at Jezreel, to which more full reference will be
made in the sequel
(comp. 1 Kings 18:45, 46; and the inference from 1 Kings
21:2). But Ahab
was still in Samaria, busy with cares, caused by the state
of the land. This
temporary absence of Jezebel explains not only Ahab's
conduct, but how
he went to meet Elijah, attempted no violence, and even
appeared in
person on Mount Carmel. So great was the strait even in
Samaria itself,
that the king was in danger of losing every horse and mule,
whether for the
public or his own service. To discover if any fodder were
left in the
country, the king and Obadiah were each to make careful
survey of part of
the land. Obadiah had not proceeded far on his mission, when
the sight
least expected — perhaps least desired — presented itself to
his view. It
was none other than Elijah, who had been Divinely directed
to leave
Sarepta and meet Ahab. As there is not anything in Holy
Scripture
without meaning and teaching, we may here mark, that, when
this is
assigned by the Lord as the reason for Elijah's mission: "I
will send rain
upon the ground" (1 Kings 18:1), it is intended to teach
that, although it
was Jehovah Himself (and not Elijah, as the Rabbis imagine)
who held "the
keys of the rain," yet He would not do anything except
through His
chosen messenger.
Obadiah could have no difficulty in immediately recognizing
Elijah, even if
he had not, as seems most likely, met him before. With
lowliest reverence
he saluted the prophet, and then received command to
announce his
presence to Ahab. But timid and only partially enlightened,
although God-
fearing, as Obadiah was, this was no welcome message to him.
Ahab had
so long and so systematically sought for Elijah, that
Obadiah could only
imagine the prophet had been miraculously removed from
shelter to
shelter, just in time to save him from being detected by the
messengers of
Ahab. In point of fact, we know that such was not the case;
but those who
have lost the habit of seeing God in the ordinary Providence
of everyday
life — as is the case with all who are conformed to the
world — are too
often in the habit of looking for things strange, or for
miracles, and thus
become at the same time superstitious and unbelieving. What
— so argued
Obadiah — if, after he had intimated Elijah's presence to
the king, the
prophet were once more miraculously removed? Would he not
have to pay
with his life for Elijah's escape; would not suspicious Ahab
or
bloodthirsty Jezebel wreak their vengeance on him as an
abettor of the
prophet? Most groundless fears these, as all which are
prompted by the
faint-heartedness of partially enlightened piety; and so
Elijah hastened to
assure him, not, as it seems to us, without a touch of
pitying reproof.
The meeting which followed between the king of Israel and
the
representative of Jehovah was characteristic of each. It is
a mistake to
suppose, as interpreters generally do, that the words with
which Ahab
accosted Elijah, "Art thou the one
2 who troubleth Israel?"
were intended to
frighten the prophet by a display of authority. Even Ahab
could not have
imagined that such would be their effect. It seems rather
like an appeal. See
what thou hast done; and what now? In truth, a man such as
Ahab must
have felt it difficult to know how to address the prophet.
But Elijah was
not, even momentarily, to be drawn into a personal
controversy. With a
sharp reproof, which pointed out that it was not he but the
sin of Ahab
and of his house which had brought trouble upon Israel, he
directed the
king to gather unto Mount Carmel the representatives of all
Israel, as well
as the 450 prophets of Baal and the 400 prophets of Astarte
who enjoyed
the special favor of the queen.
Putting aside for the moment the thought of the overruling
guidance of God
in the matter, it is not difficult to understand why Ahab
complied with
Elijah's direction. Naturally he could not have anticipated
what turn
matters would take. Certain it was that the land was in a
terrible strait
from which, if any one, Elijah alone could deliver it.
Should he provoke
him to fresh judgments by a refusal? What was there to fear
from one
unarmed man in presence of a hostile assembly? If Elijah
could remove the
curse, it was worth any temporary concession; if he refused
or failed, the
controversy with him would be easily settled, and that with
popular
approbation. Besides these, there may have been other
secondary reasons
for Ahab's compliance. As we have noticed, Jezebel was not
then in
Samaria; and Ahab may have felt that secret misgiving which
is often the
outcome of superstition rather than of partial belief.
Lastly, he may at the
moment have been under the influence of the overawing power
of Elijah. It
could scarcely have been otherwise in the circumstances.
That day Carmel witnessed one of the grandest scenes in the
history of
Israel. Three such scenes on mountain-tops stand out before
the mind: the
first on Mount Sinai, when the Covenant was made by the
ministry of
Moses; the second on Mount Carmel, when the Covenant was
restored by
the ministry of Elijah; the third on "the Mount of
Transfiguration," when
Moses and Elijah bare worshipful witness to the Christ in
Whom and by
Whom the Covenant was completed, transfigured, and
transformed. In
each case the scene on the Mount formed the high point in
the life and
mission of the agent employed, from which henceforth there
was a
descent, save in the history of Christ, where the descent to
Gethsemane
was in reality the commencement of the ascent to the Right
Hand of God.
Moses died and was buried at the Hand of God, Elijah went up
with
chariot of fire; Jesus died on the cross. Yet whereas from
the mountain-top
Moses and Elijah really descended, so far as their work and
mission were
concerned, the seeming descent of Jesus was the real ascent
to the topmost
height of His work and glory.
No spot in Palestine is more beautiful, more bracing, or
healthful than
Carmel, "the Park-like." Up in the northwest, it juts as a
promontory into
the Mediterranean, rising to a height of five hundred feet.
Thence it
stretches about twelve miles to the s.s.e., rising into two
other peaks. The
first of these, about four miles from the promontory, is not
less than 1740
feet high. Still further to the south-east is a third peak,
1687 feet high, 3
which to this day bears the name of El-Mahrakah, or "place
of burning"
(sacrifice). This, there can scarcely be a doubt, was the
place of Elijah's
sacrifice. Let us try to realize the scene. On whichever
side the mountain
be ascended, the scene is one of unsurpassed beauty. The
rich red soil,
where not cultivated, is covered by a thick brushwood of
luxurious
evergreens. Not only flowering trees and delicious fragrant
herbs, but all
the flora of the North of Palestine seems gathered in this
favored spot. So
early as November, the crocus, narcissus, pink cistus, and
large daisy are in
bloom, and the hawthorn in bud. In spring, wild tulips, dark
red anemones,
pink phlox, cyclamen, purple stocks, marigolds, geranium,
and pink,
yellow, and white rock-roses make it bright with gay
coloring. For
numerous springs trickle along the foot of the mountain and
fertilize the
soil. Ascending to El-Mahrakah we catch glimpses of cliffs,
which in some
places descend sheer down to the plain. At last we reach a
plateau where
at the edge of a steep slope there is a perennial well,
filled with water even
in the driest season. Yet a little higher rises another
plateau of rich soil,
shaded by olives; and finally we reach the topmost peak, a
semi-isolated
knoll. This was the place of the two altars; that of Baal,
and that ruined
one of Jehovah restored by Elijah, and dating from before
the building of
the Temple, when such worship was lawful. On the plateau
beneath, under
the shade of the olives, full in view of the highest
altar-peak, were on the
one side Elijah, and on the other King Ahab, the priests of
Baal, and the
people. Yet a little lower was the well whence the water for
Elijah's
sacrifice was drawn. Some 1400 feet beneath, where the rapid
descent is
close to steep precipices and by sharp crags, rolls that
"ancient river"
Kishon, where the wild slaughter of the priests of Baal
formed the closing
scene in the drama of that day. But up on the topmost
altar-height what an
outlook! Westwards over Carmel and far to the sandhills
around Caesarea;
northwards, the Galilean hills, Lebanon and Hermon;
eastwards, across the
plain of Esdraelon, some six miles off, to Jezreel, —
further away, to
Shunem, Endor, Nain, Tabor, Nazareth, and even distant
Gilead. A theater
this truly befitting what was to be enacted on it.
Among those who on that day had gathered under the olives on
that shady
plateau just beneath the topmost peak, the four hundred
priests of Astarte
were not found. Whether they had shrunk from the encounter,
or had
deemed it inconsistent with the wishes of their spiritual
patroness, the
queen, to appear on such an occasion, certain it is that
they were not with
their four hundred and fifty colleagues of the priesthood of
Baal. These
must have been conspicuous amid king, courtiers, and the
motley gathering
from all parts of the land, by their white dresses and high
pointed caps.
Over against them, his upper garment of black camel-hair
girt with a
leathern girdle, stood the stern figure of the prophet; in
the foreground was
King Ahab. It was, indeed, a unique gathering, a wondrous
array of forces,
a day of tremendous import. To this Elijah had bidden king,
priests, and
people, and he left them not long in doubt of his object.
First, he turned to
the people with these words, which must have alike shown
them their real
condition and appealed to their judgment: "How long halt ye"
(pass ye
from one to the other 4 ) "as to the two opinions"
(divisions, parties 5 )? If
Jehovah be the Elohim — go after Him; but if the Baal, go
after him! To an
appeal so trenchantly true there could in the then condition
of the public
mind be no answer. Their very appearance on Mount Carmel was
an
attestation of this mental passing to and fro on the part of
Israel —
irrational, unsatisfactory, and self-condemnatory
(Deuteronomy 6:4, etc.).
But the question of Elijah also formed a most apt
preparation for what
was to follow. The two divided opinions were now to be
brought to the
test of truth; the two parties to measure their strength.
Let Israel see and
decide!
In the breathless silence that ensued upon this challenge
Elijah now stood
forward, and pointing to the white-robed crowd of priests
over against
him, he recalled to king and people that he and he only
remained — that is,
in active office and open profession 6 — a prophet of
Jehovah. Single-
handed, therefore, he would go to the contest, if contest of
power it were
against that multitude. Power! They worshipped as God the
powers of
nature:7 let them then make trial on whose side the powers
which are in
nature were arrayed. Let this be the test: the priests of
Baal on their side,
and he on his, would each choose a bullock and prepare it
for sacrifice, but
not kindle the fire beneath, "and it shall be the Elohim who
shall answer by
fire, He is the Elohim." A shout of universal assent greeted
the proposal.
In the circumstances it would be of the greatest practical
importance that
the futility of Baal- worship should be exhibited in the
fullest manner. This
explains the details of all that follows. Besides, after a
whole day's vain
appliance of every resource of their superstition, the
grandeur of Jehovah's
majestic interposition would also make the deeper
impression. But
although from Elijah's point of view it was important that
the priests of
Baal should first offer their sacrifice, the proposition was
one to which no
objection could be taken, since Elijah not only gave them
the choice of the
sacrificial animal, but they were many as against one. Nor
could they
complain so far as regarded the test proposed by Elijah,
since their Baal
was also the god of fire, the very Sun-god.
8
Now commenced a scene which baffles description. Ancient
writers have
left us accounts of the great Baal-festivals, and they
closely agree with the
narrative of the Bible, only furnishing further details.
First rose a
comparatively moderate, though already wild, cry to Baal;
followed by a
dance around the altar, beginning with a swinging motion to
and fro. 9 The
howl then became louder and louder, and the dance more
frantic. They
whirled round and round, ran wildly through each other's
ranks, always
keeping up a circular motion, the head low bent, so that
their long dishevelled hair swept the ground. Ordinarily the madness
now became
infectious, and the onlookers joined in the frenzied dance.
But Elijah knew
how to prevent this. It was noon — and for hours they had
kept up their
wild rites. With cutting taunts and bitter irony Elijah now
reminded them
that, since Baal was Elohim, the fault it must lie with
them. He might be
otherwise engaged, and they must cry louder. Stung to
madness, they
became more frantic than before, and what we know as the
second and
third acts in these feasts ensued. The wild howl passed into
piercing
demoniacal yells. In their madness the priests bit their
arms and cut
themselves with the two-edged swords which they carried and
with
lances. 10 As blood began to flow the frenzy reached its
highest pitch, when
first one, then others, commenced to "prophesy," moaned and
groaned,
then burst into rhapsodic cries, accusing themselves, or
speaking to Baal,
or uttering incoherent broken sentences. All the while they
beat themselves
with heavy scourges, loaded or armed with sharp points, and
cut
themselves with swords and lances — sometimes even mutilated
themselves — since the blood of the priests was supposed to
be specially
propitiatory with Baal.
Two more hours had this terrible scene lasted — and their
powers of
endurance must have been all but exhausted. The sun had long
passed its
meridian, and the time of the regular evening- sacrifice in
the Temple of
Jehovah at Jerusalem had come. From the accounts of
Temple-times left us
we know that the evening sacrifice was offered "between the
evenings," as
it was termed — that is, between the downgoing of the sun
and the
evening. 11 In point of fact the service commenced between
two and three
p.m. It must have been about the same time when Elijah began
the simple
yet solemn preparations for his sacrifice. Turning from the
frantic priests
to the astonished people, he bade them draw nigh. They must
gather
around him, not only in order to be convinced that no
deception was
practiced, but to take part with him, as it were, in the
service. And once
more Israel was to appear as the Israel of old in happier
times, undivided
in nationality as in allegiance to Jehovah. This was the
meaning of his
restoring the broken place of former pious worship by
rolling to it twelve
of the large pieces of rock that strewed the ground,
according to the
number of the tribes. And as he built the altar, he
consecrated it by prayer:
"in the name of Jehovah." Next, the soft crumbling
calcareous soil around
the altar was dug into a deep and wide trench. Then the
wood, and upon it
the pieces of the sacrifice were laid in due order. And now,
at the
prophet's bidding, willing hands filled the pitchers from
the well close
by. 12 Once, twice, thrice he poured the water over the
sacrifices, till it ran
down into the trench, which he also filled. This, as we
suppose, not
merely to show the more clearly that the fire, which
consumed the sacrifice
in such circumstances, was sent from heaven, but also for
symbolic
reasons, as if to indicate that Israel's penitent confession
was poured upon
the offering.
And now a solemn silence fell on the assembly. The sun was
going down, a
globe of fire, behind Carmel, and covered it with purple
glow. It was the
time of the evening sacrifice. But Jehovah, not Elijah,
would do the miracle;
the Hand of the living God Himself must be stretched out.
Once more it
was prayer which moved that Hand. Such prayer was not heard
before —
so calm, so earnest, so majestic, so assured, so strong.
Elijah appeared in it
as only the servant of Jehovah, and all that he had
previously done as only
at His Word: but Jehovah was the covenant-God, the God of
Abraham, of
Isaac, and of Israel, manifesting Himself as of old as the
Living and True,
as Elohim in Israel: the conversion of Israel to Him as
their God being the
great object sought for. 13
He had said it, and, as when first the Tabernacle was
consecrated
(Leviticus 9:24), or as when King Solomon (1 Chronicles
21:26; 2
Chronicles 7:1) brought the first offering in the Temple
which he had
reared to Jehovah, so now the fire of Jehovah leaped from
heaven,
consumed the sacrifice and the wood, enwrapped and burnt up
the
limestone rocks of which the altar was constructed, and with
burning
tongue licked up even the water that was in the trench. One
moment of
solemn silence, when all who had seen it fell in
awe-stricken worship on
their faces; then a shout which seemed to rend the very air,
and found its
echo far and wide in the glens and clefts of Carmel:
"Jehovah, He the
Elohim! Jehovah, He the Elohim!"
And so Israel was once more converted unto God. And now, in
accordance
with the Divine command in the Law (Deuteronomy 13:13; 17:2,
etc.),
stern judgment must be executed on the idolaters and
seducers, the idol-
priests. The victory that day must be complete; the
renunciation of Baal-
worship beyond recall. Not one of the priests of Baal must
escape. Down
the steep mountain sides they hurried them, cast them over
precipices,
those fourteen hundred feet to the river Kishon, which was
reddened with
their blood. 14 But up on the mountain-top lingered King
Ahab, astonished,
speechless, himself for the time a convert to Jehovah. He
also was to share
in the sacrifice; he was to eat the sacrificial meal. But it
must be in haste,
for already Elijah heard the sighing and low moaning of the
wind in the
forest of Carmel. Himself took no part in the feast. He had
other bread to
eat whereof they wot not. He had climbed the topmost height
of Carmel
out of sight of the king. None had accompanied him save his
servant,
whom tradition declares to have been that son of the widow
of Sarepta
who had been miraculously restored to life. Most fitting
minister, indeed,
he would have been in that hour. Once more it was agonizing
prayer — not
once, but seven times repeated. 15 At each break in it the
faithful attendant
climbed the highest knoll, and looked earnestly and
anxiously over the
broad expanse of the sea, there full in view. At last it had
come — a cloud,
as yet not bigger than a man's hand. But when God begins to
hear prayer,
He will hear it abundantly; when He gives the blessing, it
will be without
stint. Ahab must be up, and quick in his chariot, or the
rain, which will
descend in floods, will clog the hard ground, so that his
chariot would find
it difficult to traverse the six miles across the plain to
the palace of Jezreel.
And now as the foot of the mountain was reached, the heaven
was black
with clouds, the wind moaned fitfully, and the rain came in
torrents. But
the power of Jehovah 16 was upon the Tishbite. He girded up
his loins and
ran before the chariot of Ahab. On such a day he hesitated
not to act as
outrunner to the convert-king; nay, he would himself be the
harbinger of
the news to Jezreel. Up to the entrance of Jezreel he
heralded them; to the
very gate of Jezebel's palace he went before them, like the
warning voice
of God, ere Ahab again encountered his tempter. But there
the two must
part company, and the king of Israel must henceforth decide
for himself to
whom he will cleave, whether to Jehovah or to the god of
Jezebel.
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