JEHOSHAPHAT, (FOURTH) KING OF JUDAH, AHAZIAH AND
(JEHORAM) JORAM, (NINTH AND TENTH) KINGS OF ISRAEL.
The Joint Maritime Expedition to Ophir — Ahaziah's Reign and
Illness — The proposed Inquiry of Baal-zebub — The Divine
Message by Elijah — Attempts to Capture the Prophet, and
their
Result — Elijah appears before the King — Death of Ahaziah —
Accession of Joram — The Ascent of Elijah — Elisha takes
up his
Mantle.
(1 Kings 22:48-2 Kings 2:14; 2 Chronicles
20:35-27)
Jehoshaphat saw two sons of Ahab ascend the throne of
Israel. Of these
Ahaziah immediately succeeded Ahab. Of his brief reign,
which lasted two
years, only two events are known: the first connected
probably with the
beginning, the second with the close of it. We judge that
the attempted
maritime expedition in conjunction with Jehoshaphat took
place at the
beginning of Ahaziah's reign — first, because the fitting
out and the
destruction of that fleet, and then the proposal for another
expedition must
have occupied two summers, during which alone such
undertakings could
be attempted; secondly, because it seems unlikely that
Jehoshaphat would
have entered into any alliance with an Ahaziah, except at
the beginning of
his reign. There was that connected with the death of Ahab
which might
readily influence a weak character like Jehoshaphat to think
with
hopefulness of the son of his old ally, since his accession
had been marked
by such striking judgments. Even the circumstance that
Jezebel no longer
reigned might seem promising of good. And, in this respect,
it is significant
that, with the death of Ahab, the ministry of Elijah passed
into a more
public stage, and was followed by the even more prominent
activity of
Elisha.
We remember the notice (1 Kings 22:47) that "there was then
no king in
Edom." However we may account for this state of matters, it
was
favorable for the resumption of that maritime trade which
had brought
such wealth to Israel in the reign of King Solomon (1 Kings
9:26-28). And
there were not a few things in the time of Jehoshaphat that
might recall to
a Judaean the early part of Solomon's reign. Perhaps such
thoughts also
contributed to the idea of a joint expedition on the part of
Judah and Israel.
But it was a mode of re-union as crude and ill-conceived as
that which had
led to the alliance by marriage between the two dynasties,
the state visit of
Jehoshaphat to Ahab, and its political outcome in the
expedition against
Ramoth-Gilead. The story is briefly told in the book of
Kings (1 Kings
22:48, 49), and one part of it more circumstantially in the
Second Book of
Chronicles (20:35-37). In the Book of Kings two expeditions
are spoken of
— the one actually undertaken, the other only proposed.
Accordingly,
only the first of these is recorded in Chronicles. It
consisted of so-called
Tarshish ships, 1 which were to fetch gold from Ophir,
setting sail from the
harbor of Ezion-Geber, on the Red Sea, a port probably on
the coast of
South-eastern Arabia, although the exact locality is in
dispute. 2 The ill-
success of such an alliance with the wicked son of Ahab was
announced (2
Chronicles 20:37) by Eliezer, the son of Dodavah — a prophet
not
otherwise mentioned. His prediction was verified when the
allied fleet
either suffered shipwreck or was destroyed in a storm.
Jehoshaphat took
the warning. When Ahaziah invited him to undertake a second
expedition,
in which (as seems implied in 1 Kings 22:49) Israelitish
mariners were to
take a leading part — perhaps because the former failure was
ascribed in
the north to the unskillfulness of the Judaeans — the
proposal was
declined. 3
The brief and inglorious reign of Ahaziah, the son and
successor of Ahab,
is said to have begun in the seventeenth year of
Jehoshaphat, king of
Judah, and to have lasted two years (1 Kings 22:51). There
is apparently
here a slight chronological difficulty (comp. 2 Kings 3:1),
which is,
however, explained by the circumstance that, according to a
well-known
Jewish principle, the years of reign were reckoned from the
month Nisan
— the Passover-month, with which the ecclesiastical year
began — so that
a reign which extended beyond that month, for however brief
a period,
would be computed as one of two years. Thus we conclude that
the reign
of Ahaziah in reality lasted little more than one year. The
one great
political event of that period is very briefly indicated,
although fraught
with grave consequences. From the opening words of 2 Kings —
which, as
a book, should not have been separated from 1 Kings
4 — we
learn that the
Moabites, who, since the time of David, had been tributary
(2 Samuel 8:2),
rebelled against Israel after the death of Ahab. It was
probably due to the
ill-health of Ahaziah that an attempt was not made to reduce
them to
obedience. For the king of Israel had fallen through "the
lattice," or
between the grating, probably that which protected the
opening of the
window, in the upper chamber. 5 In any case it seems
unlikely that the fall
was into the court beneath, but probably on to the covered
gallery which
ran round the court, like our modern verandahs. The
consequences of the
fall were most serious, although not immediately fatal. We
cannot fail to
recognize the paramount influence of the queen-mother
Jezebel, when we
find Ahaziah applying to the oracle of Baal-zebub in Ekron
to know
whether he would recover of his disease. Baal, "lord," was
the common
name given by the Canaanites, the Phoenicians, the Syrians (Aramaeans),
and Assyrians to their supreme deity. Markedly it is never
applied to God
in the Old Testament, or by believing Israelites. Among the
Canaanites (in
Palestine) and the Phoenicians the name was pronounced Ba'
al (originally
Ba'l); 6 in Aramaean it was Be' el; in Babylono-
Assyrian Bel (comp. Isaiah
46: 1; Jeremiah 50:2). The Baal-zebub, worshipped in Ekron
7 —
the
modern Akir 8 — and the most north-eastern of the five
cities of the
Philistines, E.N.E. from Jerusalem, was the Fly God,
9 who
was supposed
to send or to avert the plague of flies.
10 Like the great Apollos, who
similarly sent and removed diseases, he was also consulted
as an oracle.
We should be greatly mistaken if we were to regard the
proposed inquiry
on the part of Ahaziah as only a personal, or even as an
ordinary national
sin. The whole course of this history has taught us that the
reign of Ahab
formed a decisive epoch in the development of Israel. The
period between
the murder of Nadab, the son of Jeroboam, and the accession
of Omri, the
father of Ahab, was merely intermediate and preparatory, the
throne being
occupied by a succession of adventurers, whose rule was only
transitory.
With Omri, or rather with his son Ahab, a new period of firm
and stable
government began, and politically it was characterized by
reconciliation
and alliance with the neighboring kingdom of Judah, and with
such foreign
enterprises as have been noticed in the course of this
narrative. But even
more important was the religious crisis which marked the
reign of Ahab.
Although Jeroboam had separated himself and his people from
the
Divinely ordered service of Jehovah, as practiced in
Jerusalem, he had, at
least in profession, not renounced the national religion,
but only
worshipped the God of Israel under the symbol of the golden
calf, and in
places where worship was not lawful. But Ahab had introduced
the service
of Baal and of Astarte as the religion of the State. True,
this progress in
apostasy was in reality only the logical sequence of the sin
of Jeroboam,
and hence is frequently mentioned in connection with it in
the sacred
narrative. Nevertheless, the difference between the two is
marked, and
with Ahab began that apostasy which led to the final
destruction of the
northern kingdom, and to the trackless dispersion of the ten
tribes. In this
light we can understand such exceptional mission and
ministry as those of
Elijah and Elisha, such a scene as the call to decision on
Mount Carmel,
and such an event as that about to be related.
Viewed in this manner, the royal embassy sent to Ekron to
consult "the
fly god," was really a challenge to Jehovah, whose prophet
Elijah was in
the land, and as such it must bring sharpest punishment to
all involved in
it. It was fitting, so to speak, that, in contrast to the
messengers of the
earthly king, Jehovah should commission His angel,
11 and
through him bid
His prophet defeat the object of Ahaziah's mission. As
directed, Elijah
went to meet the king's messengers. His first words exposed
— not for the
sake of Ahaziah, but for that of Israel — the real character
of the act. Was
it because there was no God in Israel that they went to
inquire of the "fly
god" of Ekron? But the authority of Jehovah would be
vindicated. Guilty
messengers of an apostate king, they were to bring back to
him Jehovah's
sentence of death. Whether or not they recognized the stern
prophet of
Jehovah, the impression which his sudden, startling
appearance and his
words made on them was such that they at once returned to
Samaria, and
bore to the astonished king the message they had received.
It is as difficult to believe that the king did not guess,
as that his
messengers had not recognized him who had spoken such words.
The man
with the (black) hairy garment, girt about with a leathern
girdle, must have
been a figure familiar to the memory, or at least to the
imagination, of
every one in Israel, although it may not have suited these
messengers —
true Orientals in this also — to name him to the king, just
as by slightly
altering the words of the prophet 12 they now sought to cast
the whole
responsibility of the mission on Ahaziah. But when in answer
to the
king's further inquiry, 13 they gave him the well-known
description of the Tishbite, Ahaziah at once recognized the prophet, and
prepared such
measures as in his short-sightedness he supposed would meet
what he
regarded as the challenge of Elijah, or as would at least
enable him to
punish the daring prophet. We repeat, it was to be a
contest, and that a
public one, between the power of Israel's king and the might
of Jehovah.
The first measure of the king was to send to Elijah "a
captain of fifty with
his fifty." There cannot be any reasonable doubt that this
was with hostile
intent. This appears not only from the words of the angel in
verse 15, but
from the simple facts of the case. For what other reason
could Ahaziah
have sent a military detachment of fifty under a captain, if
not either to
defeat some hostile force and constrain obedience, or else
to execute some
hostile act? The latter is indeed the most probable view,
and it seems
implied in the reassuring words which the angel afterwards
spoke to Elijah
(v. 15).
The military expedition had no difficulty in finding the
prophet. He neither
boastfully challenged, nor yet did he fearfully shrink from
the approach of
the armed men, but awaited them in his well-known place of
abode on
Mount Carmel. There is in one sense an almost ludicrous, and
yet in
another a most majestic contrast between the fifty soldiers
and their
captain, and the one unarmed man whom they had come to
capture.
Presently this contrast was, so to speak, reversed when, in
answer to the
royal command to Elijah, as delivered by the captain, the
prophet appealed
to his King, and thus clearly stated the terms of the
challenge between the
two, whose commission the captain and he respectively bore.
"And if a
man of God I, 14 let fire come down from heaven." Terrible
as this answer
was, we can perceive its suitableness, nay, its necessity,
since it was to
decide, and that publicly and by way of judgment (and no
other decision
would have been suitable in a contest between man and God),
whose was
the power and the kingdom — and this at the great critical
epoch of
Israel's history. It is not necessary here to emphasize the
difference
between the Old and the New Testament — although rather in
mode of
manifestation than in substance — as we recall the warning
words of our
Lord, when two of His disciples would have commanded fire
from heaven
to consume those Samaritans who would not receive them (Luke
9:54).
The two cases are not in any sense parallel, as our previous
remarks must
have shown; nor can we suppose the possibility of any
parallel case in a
dispensation where "the kingdom of God cometh not with
observation"
(Luke 17:20), "but in demonstration of the Spirit and of
power" (1
Corinthians 2:4).
At the same time we must not overlook that the "captain and
his fifty" 15
were not merely unsympathetic instruments to carry out their
master's
behest, but, as the language seems to imply, shared his
spirit. Perhaps we
may conjecture that if Elijah had come with them, he would,
if unyielding,
never have reached Samaria alive (comp. ver. 15). This
hostile and at the
same time contemptuous spirit appears still more clearly
when, after the
destruction of the first captain and his fifty by fire from
heaven, not only a
second similar expedition was dispatched, but with language
even more
imperious: "Quickly come down!" It could not be otherwise
than that the
same fate would overtake the second as the first expedition.
The
significance, we had almost said the inward necessity, of
the judgment
consisted in this, that it was a public manifestation of
Jehovah as the living
and true God, even as the king's had been a public denial
thereof.
It seems not easy to understand how Ahaziah dispatched a
third — nay,
even how he had sent a second company.
16 Some have seen in
it the
petulance of a sick man, or else of an Eastern despot, who
would not
brook being thwarted. Probably in some manner he imputed the
failure to
the bearing of the captains. And on the third occasion, the
tone of the
commander of the expedition was certainly different from
that of his
predecessors, although not in the direction which the king
would have
wished. It would almost seem as if the third captain had
gone up alone —
without his fifty (v. 13). In contrast to the imperious
language of the other
two, he approached the representative of God with lowliest
gesture of a
suppliant, 17 while his words of entreaty that his life and
that of his men
should be spared 18 indicated that, so far from attempting a
conflict, he
fully owned the power of Jehovah. Accordingly the prophet
was directed
to go with him, as he had nothing to fear from him.
19
Arrived in the
presence of the king, Elijah neither softened nor retracted
anything in his
former message. Ahaziah had appealed to the "fly-god" of
Ekron, and he
would experience, and all Israel would learn, the vanity and
folly of such
trust. "So he died according to the word of Jehovah which
Elijah had
spoken."
Ahaziah did not leave a son. He was succeeded by his brother
Jehoram, 20
or Joram, as we shall prefer to call him, to distinguish him
from the king of
Judah of the same name. Before entering on the history of
his reign we
must consider, however briefly, the history of Elijah and of
Elisha, which
is so closely intertwined with that of Israel.
21 The record
opens with the
narrative of Elijah's translation — and this not merely as
introductory to
Elisha' s ministry, but as forming, especially at that
crisis, an integral part
of such a "prophetic" history of Israel as that before us.
The
circumstances attending the removal of Elijah are as unique
as those
connected with the first appearance and mission of the
prophet. We mark
in both the same suddenness, the same miraculousness, the
same symbolic
meaning. Evidently the event was intended to stand forth in
the sky of
Israel as a fiery sign not only for that period, but for all
that were to
follow. And that this history was so understood of old,
appears even from
this opening sentence in what we cannot help regarding as a
very
unspiritual, or at least inadequate, sketch of Elijah's
ministry in the
apocryphal book of Jesus the Son of Sirach (Ecclesiasticus
48:1): "Then
stood up Elias the prophet as fire, and his word burned like
a lamp." But
while we feel that the circumstances attending his
translation were in strict
accordance with the symbolical aspect of all that is
recorded in Scripture of
his life and mission, we must beware of regarding these
circumstances as
representing merely symbols without outward reality in
historic fact. Here
the narrative will best speak for itself.
The rule of Ahaziah had closed with the judgment of the Lord
pronounced
through Elijah, and another reign not less wicked — that of
Joram 22 — had
begun when the summons to glory came to the prophet of fire.
This latter
was known, not only to Elijah himself, and to Elisha, but
even to "the sons
of the prophets." We do not suppose that Elisha, or still
less "the sons of
the prophets," knew that "Jehovah would cause Elijah to
ascend in a
storm-wind to heaven" — nay, perhaps Elijah himself may not
have been
aware of the special circumstances that would attend his
removal. But the
text (vers. 3, 5, 9) clearly shows that the immediate
departure of Elijah was
expected, while the language also implies that some
extraordinary
phenomenon was to be connected with it. At the same time we
are not
warranted to infer, either that there had been a special
Divine revelation to
inform all of the impending removal of Elijah, nor, on the
other hand, that
Elijah had gone on that day to each of the places where "the
sons of the
prophets" dwelt in common, in order to inform and prepare
them for what
was to happen. 23
As Holy Scripture tells it, the day began by Elijah and
Elisha leaving Gilgal
— not the place of that name between the Jordan and Jericho,
so sacred in
Jewish history (Joshua 4:19; 5:10), but another previously
referred to
(Deuteronomy 11:30) as the great trysting-place for the
final consecration
of the tribes after their entrance into the land of promise.
We remember
that Saul had gathered Israel there before the great defeat
of the Philistines,
when by his rash presumption the king of Israel had shown
his moral
unfitness for the kingdom (1 Samuel 13:12-15).
24 The town lay
in the
mountains to the south-west of Shiloh, within the territory
of Ephraim.
The site is now occupied by the modern village Filjilieh.
A walk of eight or
nine miles due south would bring them "down" to the
lower-lying Bethel,
whither, as Elijah said, God had sent him. Alike Gilgal and
Bethel were
seats of the sons of the prophets, and the two are also
conjoined as centers
of idolatry in prophetic denunciation (Hosea 4:15; Amos 4:4;
5:5).
Perhaps on that very ground the two were chosen for the
residence of the
prophets. The motive which induced Elijah to ask Elisha to
leave him has
been variously explained. We cannot persuade ourselves that
it was from
humility, or else because he doubted whether the company of
Elisha was
in accordance with the will of God — since in either case he
would not
have yielded to the mere importunity of his disciple. As in
analogous
cases, we regard it rather (Ruth 1:8, 11, 12; Luke 9:57-62;
John 21:15-17),
as a means of testing fidelity. There are occasions when all
seems to
indicate that modest and obedient retirement from the scene
of prominent
action and witness, perhaps even from the dangers that may
be connected
with it, is our duty. But he who would do work for the Lord
must not
stand afar off, but be determined and bold in taking his
place, nor must he
be deterred from abiding at his post by what may seem
cross-Providences.
Again, we cannot help feeling that the visit of Elijah to
the schools of the
prophets at Gilgal, Bethel, and Jericho, must have been
intended as a test
to them; while at the same time it was somehow connected
with his
approaching departure. This the sons of the prophets
evidently perceived,
in what manner we know not. But any formal leave-taking
would seem
entirely incongruous with Elijah's whole bearing —
especially on that day;
and it is inconsistent with the question to Elisha:" Knowest
thou that
Jehovah will take away thy master from thy head today?" The
word
"today" may, indeed, be taken in a more general sense, as
equivalent to "at
this time," 25 but even so the question would have had no
meaning if Elijah
had come to say "farewell." At each of these places, when
Elijah and
Elisha left it in company — in Gilgal, Bethel, and Jericho —
the testing
suggestion that Elisha should tarry behind, was repeated; on
each occasion
it was answered by the determined assertion that he would
not leave his
master. On each occasion also Elisha was met by the same
question of
those whose morbid curiosity, rather than intelligent
interest, had been
stirred, and on each he answered 26 in manner to show how
little inward
sympathy there was between him and those who would have
intruded
themselves into the sanctuary of his soul. At last fifty of
their number
followed to view afar off — not to see how the two would
cross the
Jordan, but to observe what should happen. It need scarcely
be added that,
as in all similar attempts to see the Divine, they could not
succeed in their
purpose.
And now the two had gone down the bank of the Jordan, and
stood by the
edge of its waters. Elijah took off his loose upper garment,
the symbol of
his prophetic office, and wrapping it together as if to make
it a staff
(comp. Exodus 14:16), smote with it the waters. And lo, as
when the Ark
of God had preceded Israel (Joshua 4:23), the waters
divided, and they
passed over dry shod. Surely there could not have been more
apt teaching
for Elisha and for all future times, that the power of
wonder-working
rested not with the prophet individually, but was attached
to his office, of
which this rough raiment was the badge. The same truth was
conveyed by
what passed on the other side. There the reward — or,
perhaps we should
rather say, the result of his spiritual perseverance awaited
Elisha. But
although Elijah asked him to say what he should do for him
before their
parting, it was not his to grant the request. No one would
imagine that
Elisha' s entreaty for a double measure of his master's
spirit was prompted
by the desire that his ministry should greatly surpass that
of Elijah,
although even in that case it would not be warrantable to
attribute such a
wish to anything like ambition. "Earnestly covet the best
gifts," is a sound
and spiritual principle; and Elisha might, without any
thought of himself,
seek a double portion of his master's spirit, in view of the
great work
before him. But perhaps it may be safer, although we make no
assertion on
the point, to think here of the right of the firstborn, to
whom the law
assigned a twofold portion (Deuteronomy 21:17). In that case
Elisha
would, in asking a double portion of his spirit, have
intended to entreat the
right of succession. And with this the reply of Elijah
accords. Elisha had
asked a hard thing, which it was not in any man's power to
grant. But
Elijah could give him a sign by which to know whether God
designated and
would qualify him to be his successor. If he saw it all,
when Elijah was
taken from him, then — but only then — would it be as he had
asked.
Viewing Elisha' s request in that light, we can have no
difficulty in
understanding this reply. And in general, spiritual
perception is ever the
condition of spiritual work. We do not suppose that if all
the fifty sons of
the prophets, who had followed afar off, had gathered
around, they would
have perceived any of the circumstances attending the
"taking away" of
Elijah, any more than the prophet's servant at Dothan saw
the heavenly
hosts that surrounded and defended Elisha (2 Kings 6:14-17),
till his eyes
had been miraculously opened; or than the companions of St.
Paul saw the
Person or heard the words of Him Who arrested the apostle on
the way to
Damascus.
And as we think of it, there was special fitness in the sign
given to Elisha.
It is not stated anywhere in Holy Scripture that Elijah
ascended in a fiery
chariot to which fiery horses were attached — but that this
miraculous
manifestation parted between them two, as it were,
enwrapping Elijah; and
that the prophet went up in a storm- wind (2 Kings 2: 1 1).
The fiery chariot
and the horses were the emblem of Jehovah of Hosts.
27 To
behold this
emblem was pledge of perceiving the manifestation of God,
unseen by the
world, and of being its herald and messenger, as Elijah had
been. Beyond
the fact that Elijah so went up to heaven,
28 and that the
symbolic
manifestation of Jehovah of Hosts was visible to Elisha —
Holy Scripture
does not tell us anything. And it seems both wiser and more
reverent not
to speculate further on questions connected with the removal
of Elijah, the
place whither, and in what state he was "translated." If we
put aside such
inquiries, since we possess not the means of pursuing them
to their
conclusions — there is nothing in the simple Scriptural
narrative, however
miraculous, which transcends the general sphere of the
miraculous, or that
would mark this as so exceptional an instance that the
ordinary principles
for viewing the miracles of Scripture would not apply to it.
And Elisha saw it. As if to render doubt of its symbolic
meaning
impossible, the mantle, which was the prophet's badge, had
fallen from
Elijah, and was left as an heirloom to his successor. His
first impulse was
to give way to his natural feelings, caused alike by his
bereavement and by
veneration for his departed master, "My father, my father!"
His next, to
realize the great lesson of faith, that, though the prophet
had departed, the
prophet's God for ever remained: "The chariot of Israel, and
the horsemen
thereof!" We would suggest that the words, "And he saw him
no more"
(ver. 12), imply that he gave one upward look where Elijah
had been
parted from him, and where the fiery glow had now died out
in the sky.
Then, in token of mourning, he rent his clothes in two
pieces, that is,
completely, from above downwards. But while thus lamenting
the loss of
his loved master, he immediately entered on the mission to
which he had
succeeded, and that with an energy of faith, combined with a
reverent
acknowledgment of the work of his predecessor, which ought
for all time
to serve as a lesson to the Church. Bereavement and sorrow
should not
make us forget, rather recall to us, that Jehovah our God
liveth; regret and a
sense of loss should not dull, rather quicken us for work,
in the name of
God. Nor yet should the feeling that we have a call to work,
dim our
remembrance of those who have gone before us. We are all
only servants
successively taking up and continuing the task of those who
have passed
into glory; but he is our Master, Whose is the work, and Who
liveth and
reigneth for ever.
And so Elisha took up the mantle that had fallen from
Elijah. It was not a
badge of distinction, but of work and of office. With this
mantle he
retraced his steps to the bank of Jordan. One upward glance:
"Where is
Jehovah, the God of Elijah — even He?"
29 spoken not in
doubt nor
hesitation, but, on the contrary, in assurance of his own
commission from
heaven, with all that it implied — and, as he smote the
waters with the
mantle of Elijah, they once more parted, and Elisha went
over.
So shall the waters of difficulty, nay, the cold flood of
death itself, part, if
we smite in faith with the heaven-given garment; so shall
the promise of
God ever stand sure, and God be true to His Word; and so may
we go
forward undauntedly, though humbly and prayerfully, to
whatever work
He gives us to do.
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