ELISHA THE PROPHET
Return to Jericho —
Acknowledgment by the Sons of the Prophets — Healing of the
Waters of Jericho — Judgment on the Young Men at Bethel —
Settlement in Samaria.
(2 Kings 2: 15-25)
The history which now follows reads almost like a chronicle
of Elisha.
More correctly it may be described as the prophetic history
of that period.
With the removal of Elijah, Elisha had begun his ministry,
the test of its
reality having been the parting of the waters of Jordan. The
next three
incidents must be considered as preparatory to his prophetic
activity; the
first, as regarded his public acknowledgment by the sons of
the prophets
(2 Kings 2:15-18); the second and third that by the people,
when Elisha
publicly appeared as the instrument of God — in the one
case, for mercy
(vv. 19-22), in the other, for judgment (vv. 23, 24). Having
thus
established his authority, Elisha immediately afterwards
assumed the place
of God's representative in the affairs of Israel.
1. As we look more closely into it, a special significance
attached to each
of the three preliminary events just referred to. In the
first it was seen that
Elisha occupied precisely the same position of superiority
as Elijah over
the ordinary "sons of the prophets," as also the folly of
their attempted
interference in his work. Henceforth they would be
unquestioning,
obedient instruments of his behests, and this was the
rightful position alike
for them and as regarded the work of Elisha. According to
our modern
notions the circumstances may seem strange, but they are in
agreement
with the condition of the times and with the degree of
spiritual
understanding possessed even by the sons of the prophets. As
Elisha
returned alone, the "sons of the prophets," judging that the
spirit of Elijah
rested upon him, perhaps because they had watched as the
waters of
Jordan parted when he smote them — went to meet the prophet
and to do
him homage. And yet they began by urging a strange request —
perhaps
because notions such as they expressed were popularly
entertained (as by
Obadiah, 1 Kings 18: 12) in regard to the influence of the
Spirit on the
prophets generally, or it may be only on the great prophet
of fire. Or
perhaps they imagined that Elijah might be in a trance or
dead in some
valley or on some mountain-height; or it may have been only
from morbid
curiosity to learn something more of what had happened. In
any case their
proposal marked an entire lack of spiritual understanding
and sympathy.
There were fifty strong men among them, capable of enduring
any fatigue,
and equal to any work or burden. Might these not go to
search whether
peradventure the Spirit of Jehovah had not uplifted and then
cast Elijah
into some remote corner of that desolate and rocky region
near Jericho? 1
To men who entertained such notions, it would have been
impossible to
communicate even what Elisha had witnessed, still less its
predicted
import to himself. Accordingly he contented himself with a
simple
negative to their request. And this should have taught them
what was the
first duty as well as qualification alike of a prophet and
of the sons of the
prophet: simple, unquestioning obedience. But, like many of
us, in the
process of our personal sanctification, they had to learn it
by painful
experience. Their insistence at last made him "ashamed,"
2
since it might
seem as if he felt less concern for his master than they,
and he yielded to
their importunity. When after three days' unavailing search
they returned
to Jericho, he reminded them of his first refusal — although
for reasons
which need not be repeated, he did not even then communicate
to them
what he had witnessed. But ever afterwards a spirit of
willing submission
to Elisha prevailed among the sons of the prophets.
2. The next requisite seemed to make such public
manifestation of his
prophetic authority as would secure for his message the
faith and
submission of the people. Besides, this was necessary in the
contest with
Baal, whose worship, if it had been finally established,
would, so to speak,
have denationalized Israel, even as it ultimately led to
that banishment
which has not yet been recalled. It was of absolute
importance that the
presence of Jehovah should appear, as it were, in a concrete
form, through
a living representative, who should be quick to bring
blessing or judgment,
and so to demonstrate what he proclaimed, in the only manner
which the
men of that time could understand. This may also in part
explain why the
mission of Elijah and Elisha differed in so many respects
from that of the
other prophets. And, as we farther consider it, we have
evidence that it
accomplished its purpose. We remember how once and again
Ahab himself
was arrested through the influence of Elijah. At first the
reign of Ahaziah
had seemed a return to the worst days of Ahab. But Elijah's
announcement
of his doom, together with the symbolic judgment on those
two captains
of fifty who had gone to capture the prophet, had had their
effect.
Although Joram "wrought evil in the sight of Jehovah," it
was "not like his
father, and like his mother;" and we are expressly told that
"he removed
the pillar of Baal which his father had made" (2 Kings 3:2).
This does not
mean that he either destroyed the Temple of Baal, or even
that pillar —
perhaps we should rather call it a column or block. Probably
all that was
done was to remove this great memorial-pillar of Baal from
the public
position which it had occupied in the square, or in front,
or in the gardens,
of the palace, or else before the Temple of Baal, and to
place it within the
precincts of the latter (2 Kings 10:27). But even this
implied that the
worship of Baal was no longer the national religion —
although the
alternative was only between it and the worship instituted
by Jeroboam.
From this general estimate of the public influence exercised
by the
prophet, we turn to consider more fully the first miracle by
which he
established his prophetic authority — very significantly in
an act of
blessing. The men of Jericho interceded with Elisha —
probably through
their representatives — on behalf of their city. Every one
might see how
pleasant was its site: the very Paradise of Palestine, its
rich soil basking
under a tropical sun, yet shaded by palm, mulberry, and
fig-trees, while
the air was refreshed by perennial springs of bright water,
and perfumed
by the precious balsam-plants, the scent of which the wind
would
sometimes carry as far as out to sea. But all this
luxuriance was marred by
the character of the water. At a distance of about a mile
from the ancient
site of Jericho (not from the modern village which
represents the ancient
town), "there is a large and beautiful fountain of sweet and
pleasant
water," 3 the so-called Ain-es-Sultan. From its situation
this must have
furnished the water-supply for ancient Jericho, and hence
have been the
spring which Elisha healed, of which there is this farther
confirmation that
the other springs in the neighborhood are to this day mostly
brackish. To
this character of the water the inhabitants ascribed, and as
it appears not
without reason, the circumstance of the frequent
miscarriages which alike
diminished the population and the flocks.
4 Remembering the
symbolic
import of the mission of Elisha, as before explained, we
should expect the
prophet to give heed to so humble a complaint — for such it
was, rather
than a request. The means used were in accordance with the
symbolic
character of all else. The healing of the waters, although
performed through
the prophet, was the direct act of Jehovah (v. 21).
Accordingly, as
everything connected with the service of the Lord, the cruse
to be used
must be "new" (Numbers 19:2), dedicated to God alone. And
the direct
means of the "healing" was "salt," borne in this new cruse.
Salt was added
to everything offered, as being the emblem of incorruption,
and hence of
purification. And so they went up to the very spring of the
waters, and
there, not as of himself, but in the name of the Lord,
Elisha "healed" the
waters by a symbolic action, resembling that of Moses of old
(Exodus
15:25).
Many lessons of deep significance are suggested by this
miracle: most
notably, how the salt borne in the new cruse when applied to
the spring of
the waters healed them — hence-forth, completely, and for
ever; and again,
how in the healing three things were combined — the use of
means (in
themselves ineffectual), the word of the prophet, and the
power of
Jehovah. But most of all, does it help us to realize how God
is a present
help in time of trouble — if only we seek Him in the manner
which He
appoints.
3. Yet another attestation of Elisha' s prophetic authority
was needed. This
time not in blessing, but in judgment — stern, quick,
unrelenting. Those
who despised his commission, or rather defied the power that
was behind
it, must learn in terrible experience its reality. And that
this judgment at
the beginning of Elisha' s ministry was so understood,
appears from this
circumstance that his ministry never afterwards seems to
have encountered
active opposition.
Once more the prophet was pursuing his lonely way where last
he had
walked in company with his master. For it will be
remembered, that the
last station at which Elijah and Elisha tarried on their way
to Jericho and
the Jordan was Bethel. And this also is significant. As
regards Elisha,
because it must have called up most solemn thoughts,
especially now
when he was entering upon his work; and not less so as
regarded the
Bethelites who had last seen Elisha in company with Elijah
just before his
ascent. It did recall to them the last appearance among them
of the two,
but only to make mockery of the event connected with it. But
this was to
scoff alike at the dead and at the living prophet, and also
at the great power
of Jehovah. Thus it was really open defiance of God, all the
more
inexcusable that it was entirely unprovoked, and that it
offended against
the law of man almost as much as against that of God. For it
was not only
a breach of hospitality, but it discarded that reverence for
authority
specially of a religious kind, which has at all times been a
characteristic
feature in Eastern life.
Slowly had Elisha ascended those 3000 feet which lead up
from the low
plain of Jericho to the highlands where Bethel lies.
5 He
was climbing the
last height — probably up the defile of Wady Suweinit, where
the hills
above still bear marks of the extensive forest that once
covered them —
when he encountered a band of "young men," who, as the text
seems to
imply, had gone forth to meet him. They were not "little
children"
(according to our A.v.), but young men, as we infer from the
use of the
same expression in the case of Solomon (1 Kings 3:7), when
he was about
twenty years old, and the application of a similar, even
stronger,
designation to the youthful advisers of Rehoboam.
6 And
their presence
there meant a deliberate purpose. We have no means of
ascertaining how
they may have learned the approach of Elisha, or come to
know that the
great prophet, whom the fifty strong men had sought in vain,
had "gone
up," even although they may have attached to this only the
vaguest
notions. But as the taunt, "Baldhead," was undoubtedly a
term of
reproach, in whatever sense they may have used it,
7 so the
cry "Go up, go
up!" with which they followed him, seems to us a mocking
allusion to the
ascent of Elijah. 8
In the spirit that prompted the words of Moses and Aaron
(Exodus 16:6-
8), and of Peter (Acts 5:3, 4), not, we feel assured, in
that of personal
revenge, Elisha turned round and pronounced on them that
doom which
soon afterwards 9 overtook them in a manner so strange that
it seems to
have been specially intended to attract public attention.
10
For although the
exceeding danger from bears, especially when irritated, is
frequently
referred to in Scripture, 11 and the large number
(forty-two) slain, not eaten,
by the two she-bears, indicates how many youths had combined
to go
forth for the purpose of mocking Elisha, yet so extensive a
calamity from
such a cause was so unusual and must have spread such wide
mourning as
to draw universal attention to the ministry of Elisha.
We can scarcely suppose that Elisha tarried in Bethel. In
pursuance of his
object publicly to declare himself the successor of Elijah,
he passed on to
Mount Carmel, where Elijah had been during the latter part
of his ministry,
and thence returned to Samaria to be in readiness for his
work.
|