THE MINISTRY OF ELISHA AS THE
PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE LIVING GOD IN ISRAEL
The Prophet's Widow and her
Miraculous Deliverance — The Shunammite and Elisha — The
God-given Child — His Death and Restoration to Life — Elisha
at Gilgal with the "Sons of the Prophets" — "Death in the
Pot" and Removal of the Harm — The Man from Baal-Shalisha —
God's Sufficient and Unfailing Provision for His own.
(2 Kings 4)
There is something grand and truly characteristic of
"prophetic history"
when the Biblical narrative abruptly turns from the
expedition against
Moab, which, although so simply told, was of such deep and
lasting
political importance, to tell what reads like a summary of
the prophetic
activity of Elisha. It shows, on the one hand, how all
events are regarded
from the Divine point of view, while on the other hand, it
helps us to
understand the real meaning and purpose of the miraculous
element in the
ministry of Elisha, as designed to recall Israel to a
realizing sense of the
presence and power of Jehovah, and by such religious revival
to avert
imminent national judgment. Accidentally we obtain in the
course of the
narrative, interesting side-glimpses into private and public
life in Israel,
which generally confirm our confidence in the historic truth
of what is
related.
At the outset we may say that the impression which this
history as a
whole makes on us, is that it seems transferred or perhaps
rather
summarized, from some special narrative or work descriptive
of the
activity of Elisha. The incidents do not seem arranged in
their strict
chronological succession, but grouped according to their
internal
connection, so that an account of the more private activity
of the prophet,
as regards individuals, families, and communities, is
followed by that of his
public activity, in its bearing on Israel and Syria. Again,
it is reasonable to
suppose that all which is here recorded had not occurred
exclusively during
the reign of Joram, which lasted only twelve years (2 Kings
3:1). For as
Elisha died during the reign of Joash (2 Kings 13: 14), his
ministry must
have extended over four reigns, and lasted altogether about
fifty-five or
fifty-seven years. Hence there would be a blank of
forty-five years in the
narrative if all that is recorded of Elisha had taken place
in the time of
Joram. But the deepest lesson which the life and ministry of
Elisha were
intended to teach was to set forth, as against the dark
background of
coming judgment upon Israel's apostasy, the tender care, the
sufficient
provision, the ever-present help which the Lord would extend
to His own
servants and people.
The first narrative 1 in this biographical sketch — as for
want of better
name we may term it — has somewhat inaptly been compared
with the
account of Elijah's miraculous provision for the widow of Sarepta (1 Kings
17:9-16). On carefully comparing the two narratives, they
will be seen to
differ in every detail, except this, that in both instances
the recipient of the
benefit was a widow. But besides, the great object and
meaning of the
miracle at Sarepta was to be a prefigurement of the mercy
and help to be
extended to the Gentile world, with all of warning and
teaching to Israel
which this implied. Its counterpart, in the history of
Elisha, would be the
healing of Naaman, rather than this narrative of Divine help
granted to the
impoverished widow of one of the sons of the prophets.
Josephus and some of the Rabbis have suggested that this
widow had been
the wife of that Obadiah who had provided shelter and food
for the
persecuted prophets in the reign of Ahab (1 Kings 18). But
here also the
only point of similarity between the two narratives is that
the widow of
the prophet pleads, in the words of Obadiah (1 Kings 18:12),
that her
husband "did fear Jehovah." The narrative bears that on the
death of her
husband, who had been one of the sons of the prophets, and
(what is even
more important) apparently well known to Elisha as one that
feared
Jehovah, the creditor had come to take her two sons as
bondsmen. We
know not through what adverse circumstances the family had
been so far
reduced; but we can readily believe that in those days
faithfulness to
Jehovah might lead to outward reverses, not to prosperity.
And when he
was removed who had been the support of his family by that
daily labor,
which evidently was not regarded as incompatible with his
vocation as one
of the "sons of the prophets," then "the creditor" seized on
the sons of the
widow. In so doing he availed himself of his legal right in
the matter
(Leviticus 25:39; comp. Matthew 18:25),
2 although his
action was
unjustifiably harsh and selfish. If in these circumstances
the prophet had
not given heed to the appeal of the widow, it would have
implied either
that he was not the living medium between God and His
people, which he
professed, or else that Jehovah was not the living and the
true God in the
sense in which Elisha had preached Him. With reverence be it
said, the
appeal to the prophet could no more have remained unanswered
than a cry
for help addressed to Christ in the days of His flesh.
A similar conclusion would be reached if, somewhat
realistically, we were
to transport this history into our own days. If a widow
were, in like
circumstances, to seek guidance and comfort, she would be
pointed to the
living God, and to His sure promise of help in all straits.
But what is this
when translated into concrete fact other than the miracle
wrought at the
intercession, or, if you please, at the instance, though not
by the hands, of
Elisha? And may we not say that, as regards the result, the
same miracle is
still daily enacted, though not in the same manner as
regards the succession
of events? In truth, the two worlds of the seen and unseen
are not so wide
apart as some imagine. To many of us the answer to the "Give
us this day
our daily bread," comes directly from heaven, and more than
the daily
bread, or the like of it, is assured to us in the
realization of His daily and
indirect help. And if in this history all this was exhibited
in a concrete
manner, it was required in the circumstances of the time and
for the
purposes of the mission of Elisha, although its lesson is to
all time and to
all men.
We mark, that in order to put aside any idea of direct
agency in the matter
on the part of the prophet, the miraculous help was not sent
by the hands
of Elisha, but connected so far as possible with some
visible and ordinary
means. It is in this manner that we explain the question of
the prophet,
what the widow had in her house. And when she replied,
"Anointing oil," 3
the promised help was connected with the use of it as a
means. The widow
was directed to borrow empty vessels from all her neighbors,
then to shut
the door behind her and her sons, and to pour from what she
had into
those empty vessels, when the multiplying blessing of God
would fill
them. It would be difficult to imagine any symbol more full
of meaning and
instruction, alike in its general direction and in its
details. It showed that
God was a present help. His special blessing, given when
needed directly
and miraculously, would increase our scanty provision. Nor
can we be
mistaken in supposing that the direction to shut the door
behind her and
her sons was intended to enjoin not only reverent
acknowledgment, but
silent worship of God. And truly so ought we also, when
seeking help
from Him, ever to feel ourselves alone with Him, combining,
like her of
old, absolute trust in the promise of His Word with active
obedience to
His direction: doing what lies in us while praying; and
praying while doing
it. Lastly, it seems quite in accordance with what had
passed that when all
the borrowed vessels were full, and the oil had stayed, the
widow should,
before disposing of anything, have gone to the prophet for
his direction,
and, we may add, equally so that Elisha should have told her
first to pay
her creditor, and then to employ the rest towards the
sustenance of herself
and her sons.
The second narrative 4 in this series of "the acts" of the
prophet, transports
us to the quiet of the village of Shunem, and the retirement
of a pious
Israelitish home. We know Shunem from our former history,
5
but then it
was associated with battle or else with scenes far different
from those to
which we are about to be introduced. The modern Sulem is a
wretched
collection of mud-hovels. Except from its situation, it
scarcely recalls the
thriving, healthy, happy, agricultural village of old, as it
seemed to look in
sunny contentment over the rich plain of Esdraelon. It was
in close
contiguity to the summer palace of Jezreel, which was
perched on the hill
above, occupying a position equally beautiful and
commanding. And
despite its nearness to a corrupt court, there was quite
another moral
atmosphere about its homes. Shunem seems to have preserved
something
of the old Israelitish spirit, some of that purity,
earnestness,
impulsiveness, and we had almost said intenseness, which
even long
afterwards characterized Northern Palestine and the people
of Galilee. A
sturdy sense of independence (2 Kings 4:13), combined with
reverent
simplicity (verses 9, 10), warm home- affections (verses 16,
18, 20),
earnest religiousness, and an unwavering spiritual faith
(verses 23, 24, 28)
— such are the ideas which we have learned to associate with
Shunem.
And the very physique of this population seems to have
corresponded
with this moral healthiness. Apparently Shunem was not only
the home of
wealthy men, but also of fair women, such as of the
beautiful Abishag,
King David's maiden wife (1 Kings 1:3), or the lovely
Shulamite 6 who
ravished Solomon's heart (Cant. 6:13, etc.), and of the Shunammite of our
present narrative.
We infer that at this time Elisha had been frequently
passing between
Samaria 7 and what was probably his ordinary place of abode
on Carmel.
The direct road from the one to the other place does not
lead by Shunem,
which lies somewhat farther to the east, at the
south-western slope of
"little Hermon," and on the opposite side of Esdraelon from
Carmel, at a
distance of about fifteen or twenty miles across the plain.
But it so
happened that on a certain occasion Elisha, "passed over
[thus literally] to
Shunem." According to good Israelitish custom, hospitality
would be
offered to him; but it was only what was becoming that such
should have
been extended to the prophet by the mistress of what seems
to have been
the "great" house 8 at Shunem. We infer that Elisha was at
first unwilling to
accept the invitation to the "great" house. Probably there
were few such in
the land where the prophet could have felt himself at home.
But when he
yielded to the urgent yet modest importunity of the
Shunammite, he must
soon have perceived that this was not only a pleasant place
of rest on the
journey, but one to which he might safely resort for
refreshment of body
and mind. We are too apt to apply our modern habits of
thought and
expression to the relationships of ancient times. Yet this
may here be
pointed out, that the manner in which the Shunammite marked
Elisha as a
"holy" man of God, indicates enlightened piety; the care
with which she
received him, affectionate regard; the provision which she
made for his
absolute privacy, unselfishness and reverence; and the
circumstance (later
alluded to) of her attendance on Elisha' s religious
instruction (v. 23), a
certain spiritual relationship between them. And so it came
that, after this
first visit, "as oft" as Elisha "passed across" the plain of
Esdraelon, "he
turned aside" [and this also literally, since Shunem was not
in the direct
road] to enjoy the hospitality of the pious mistress of the
"great" house at
Shunem.
But the frequency of his visits, so far from inducing
familiarity, only led to
increased reverence on the part of the Shunammite. Her
observation had
led her to regard Elisha as not only far different from
those who at that
period may sometimes have passed as prophets, but even from
ordinary
sons of the prophets — even as a man of God distinguished by
holiness.
All this she urged on her husband as she proposed to make
provision not
only for his more proper entertainment, but for his complete
privacy. In
Palestine an outside stair led up from the road to the roof
of the house, so
that it was not necessary to pass through the interior of a
dwelling. Part of
the roof of the house she would now surround with walls, so
making an
"upper chamber" of it. This would give to the prophet at all
times
undisturbed, and, if he wished it, unobserved access to, and
egress from,
his lodging. This was indeed thoughtful, unselfish, and
withal, respectful
kindness and hospitality. The chamber thus provided, as well
as the
scanty furnishing of it, may seem to our modern notions very
simple. Yet
it implied the surrender by the family of the part of the
house most
appreciated in the East, while the furniture, however scanty
according to
our ideas, included not only more but better than was
ordinarily found in
the very simple sleeping apartments of Orientals.
9
Evidently the object
was to provide for a prolonged stay on the part of the
prophet, and for his
complete privacy, and, as appears from the context (v. 13),
it included not
only the prophet, but also his servant.
There was such delicacy about all this "trouble" with which
the
Shunammite had been "troubled"
10 for him and his servant,
that Elisha,
who had at first been reluctant to accept any hospitality,
now regularly
availed himself of the provision for his comfort and
retirement. It was only
natural that he should have thought of some return to his
hostess.
Accordingly on one occasion he directed his servant Gehazi,
11 whom we
here meet for the first time, to inquire of the Shunammite
what service he
could render to her. The suggestion: "Is there [ought] to be
spoken for thee
[is there occasion for it] to the king or the captain of the
host?" indicates a
somewhat insecure state of things, as well as a somewhat
despotic order in
the State when "the captain of the host" stands ominously
near to the
king. At the same time it also implies the existence of
better relations
between the monarch and the prophet, and so confirms the
view formerly
expressed that the ministry of Elijah and Elisha, attested
at almost every
stage by direct Divine manifestations, tended at least to
arrest the progress
of apostasy in Israel.
The answer of the Shunammite to Gehazi:
12 "I dwell among my
own
people," manifests not only a true Israelitish spirit of
frank independence,
but reflects a favorable light on that district, which (as
all other parts of the
country) would be primarily under the rule of its own
eldership. What
followed is most pictorially set forth. To the question of
Elisha, what
there was to be done for her, Gehazi, who certainly had keen
worldly
insight, replied: "Surely, she has no son, and her husband
is old." It was
only a suggestion, and in this respect also characteristic
of Gehazi. But
now, when it was not to be a favor asked of man, but
wondrous mercy to
be granted by God, Elisha spake to the Shunammite not
through Gehazi
but directly, 13 giving her the promise of what under the
Old Testament
was regarded as bringing far deeper than merely a mother's
joy. And there
is about her answer such air of genuineness, a mingling of
hope with a not
daring to expect, and withal such absence of any legendary
embellishment,
that we can almost imagine ourselves hearing her speak it,
as she
respectfully stands within the shadow of the door.
It was as Elisha had said, and the Shunammite became the
joyous mother
of a son. Since then years had passed, during which we have
no record of
Elisha' s continued visits to the "great" house, now
gladdened by the voice
of a child. Perhaps he no longer, or at least, not so often,
passed by; more
probably Scripture, after its wont, is silent on that which
is purely
personal in the history. But the child had passed through
five of the stages
which Jewish affection, watching with special fondness the
opening life,
has successively marked by no less than nine designations.
14 They are so
interesting that we shall here put them down. The yeled
("born," "babe"
15 )
had successively become a yonek, or suckling, and an
olel, who, no longer
satisfied with only this nourishment, asks for bread,
16
then a gamel, or
weaned one, and next a taph, one who clings to his
mother. And he had
passed through this stage also, and was just entering on the
stage
designated by elem, becoming firm and strong. It was
the time of harvest,
and the child was going out to his father to the reapers,
when the hot
Eastern sun struck his head. At his cry of pain the father
bade one of the
servants carry the child back to his mother. All that long
morning she
pressed his aching head to her bosom, till when the mid-day
sun shot
down its arrows he lay still and dead in her arms. Not a cry
of lament
escaped that brave mother to tell them in the house of the
terrible
desolation that had swept over it. Her resolve was taken
with the rapidity
and unfailing certitude that comes of faith. To Elisha, or
rather to Elisha' s
God! He had given; He could restore the child. In any case
she would go
with her complaint, not to man, but to the God of almighty
help, and not
rest satisfied with anything unless it came directly from
Him.
It was quite in accordance with all this, and very
significant, that in silence
she carried her dead child to the prophet's chamber, and
there laid him on
the bed. Here let him rest, as it were, in keeping of the
prophet's God,
whose promise had first brought him, till, if ever, the
prophet's God
would again waken him. And so, like the prophet's widow when
she
received the Divine help, she shut the door. For, what had
man to do with
it? her appeal lay directly to God. But she must have been a
strong as well
as a good woman, strong also in faith, when she could so
well keep her
feelings under control that her husband had not even
suspicion of aught
amiss when she preferred the unusual request that one of the
servants and
one of the beasts of burden should be sent back from the
field, that she
might at once resort to the man of God. For it was neither
New Moon nor
Sabbath, when, as we are led to infer, the prophet was wont
to give
religious instruction, and people gathered around him, and
perhaps came to
Carmel from a considerable distance.
17 With a deprecating
"Peace" — as it
were, Pray let it be so — she waved aside the inquiry of the
busy man.
And, once her home behind her, she fully gave herself to
what was before
her. It was no longer a weak woman on whom the greatest
earthly sorrow
had descended, but one strong, resolute, bent on a great
purpose, and
wholly self-forgetful. As she had herself, no doubt for
speed, seen to the
saddling of the ass (v. 24), so she now bade the servant:
"drive on, 18 go;
delay me not in my riding [hinder me not, keep me not back],
unless I bid
thee."
The sun must have been declining towards the west, when,
after that ride
of fifteen or twenty miles, she was nearing Carmel. From a
bluff of the
mountain the prophet had been watching the rider speeding in
such haste
across the plain, and recognized the Shunammite. Although
not Divinely
informed, and therefore not Divinely assured of a happy
issue, he must
have known that only some great trouble to herself, her
husband, or her
child, would have brought her on that afternoon and in such
manner. And
so he sent Gehazi to meet her with an inquiry meant to
reassure her, at
least so far as his own interest and sympathy were
concerned. But all the
more that she so understood it, would she be neither
detained by Gehazi,
nor could she have opened her heart to him. Indeed, to have
attempted
telling her sorrow or her need to any man would have been to
unfit her, in
every sense, for telling it to the prophet. At sight of
Elisha the strong
woman for the first time gave way. She had reached the goal,
and now in an
agony of passion she threw herself at his feet and laid hold
on them, as if
in her despair she could not let him go without helping her.
It was, as in
Jacob's wrestling with the Angel, the mode of agonizing
prayer suited to
Old Testament times, when God and His help, and, indeed,
most spiritual
realities were presented in a concrete manner. From a
spurious zeal for his
master's honor, from false notions of what became, or did
not become —
the consequences of his utter want of spiritual insight and
sympathy —
Gehazi would have thrust her away. So would the multitude
have silenced
blind Bartimaeus, and even the disciples sent away the
importunate
Syrophenician woman (Matthew 15:23); and so do we in our
mistaken
notions of what is becoming or unbecoming too often hinder
souls from
personal contact with our Lord . But Elisha would not suffer
Gehazi, for
he knew that her soul was in anguish, although as God had
not made him
to know its cause, he was ignorant of what its issue would
be.
It is this, we feel persuaded, which explains much in the
conduct of Elisha
— such as his first mission of Gehazi, which otherwise would
seem
strange, if not unintelligible. But surely never was Elisha
more humbled
than on the eve of the greatest miracle wrought by his
hands; never did the
poverty of his humanity, as merely an instrument in the hand
of God,
appear in more clear light than by the side of the help
which Jehovah was
about to send. And Elisha himself gave vent to these
feelings when he
spoke with such sorrow of Jehovah having hidden it from him,
and not
revealed it. 19 But this we may say, that never was legend
so constructed.
To every thoughtful reader such purely human traits of felt
weakness and
of ignorance not only of the future, but of the present and
the past, must
carry instructive conviction of the truth of this narrative,
full of the
miraculous though it be.
The first words which the Shunammite spoke to Elisha
revealed the state
of the case. They were not an entreaty of help; they
contained not even a
suggestion of it. And yet they were the strongest appeal
that could have
been made, since they laid hold on the faithfulness of God
to His word and
promise. The commission of the prophet to Gehazi to hasten
on and lay
Elisha' s staff upon the face of the dead child seems at
first difficult to
understand. It is quite true that this was not an ordinary
staff, but, as it
were, the symbol of prophetic authority and rule, with all
that this
implied, like the staff of Moses (comp. here Exodus 4:17;
17:5, 9;
Numbers 20:8, 9). But it is impossible to believe that
Elisha expected
either that the staff would restore life to the dead, or
that Gehazi would be
able to perform such a miracle; or, on the other hand, that
Elisha acted
under misapprehension, as Nathan had spoken to David when
still
uninstructed as to the will of God (2 Samuel 7:3, etc.); or
else that the
prophet could have imagined that the child was not really
dead. Nor can
we accept the suggestion sometimes made that Elisha had full
well known
Gehazi would not succeed, but had still sent him, in order
to show —
either to Gehazi, or to the Shunammite, or to Israel
generally — that
miracles were not magic, and that neither a Gehazi nor even
a prophet's
staff could produce them. It is difficult to use moderate
language in
rejecting suggestions which imply that Elisha had purposely
employed
what he knew to be useless measures in order to teach some
abstract
lesson, or that he could have done so at a moment of such
agony and
suspense. Kindred views in regard to God's dealings with us
when under
severe affliction are, indeed, too often entertained by
Christians. They
should give place to more enlightened conceptions of the
character of God,
and to a more simple and childlike faith in Him, Who
afflicteth not
willingly, but for our profit.
We feel convinced that the explanation of Gehazi' s
commission must be
sought within the narrative itself. When Elisha dispatched
his servant with
his staff, it was with the intention that he should take his
master's place.
What afterwards determined him to go personally was the
expressed
resolve of the woman: "As Jehovah liveth, and as thy soul
liveth, I will not
leave thee [viz., behind; I will not go, nor yet go without
thee]. Then he
arose and went after her." All this seems in accordance with
what has been
previously stated. If, as Elisha expressed it with sorrow,
Jehovah had not
communicated to His servant what had happened in the house
of the
Shunammite, then the prophet was not only ignorant of the
final issue, but
left without any Divine commission in the matter. In these
circumstances
he would wait for such direction as might be indicated to
him in the course
of events. And he received it, clearly and unmistakably,
through the
expressed resolution of the Shunammite. Accordingly he
immediately
followed her. The previous mission of Gehazi may have been
tentative and
preparatory; and the laying of the prophet's staff on the
face of the child
perhaps symbolic of the arrestment of the progress of decay.
Nor can
there be difficulty in understanding the prophet's direction
to Gehazi not
to salute any one by the way, nor to return any salutation.
It was intended
not only to indicate the necessity of speed on what brooked
no delay, and
of avoiding any worldly distraction when on such an errand,
but also to
prevent all such publicity as to the matter in hand, as
would have been the
natural sequence of conversation, especially on the part of
one like Gehazi
(comp. here also Luke 10:4).
The narrative passes in silence over the long ride across
Esdraelon to
Shunem. Evening must have gathered on the deep blue summer
sky, when
the two at length neared the desolate home. Ere they came to
it, Gehazi
had met them with the report: "The lad is not awaked," — and
this also is
significant of Gehazi' s thoughts about the matter. He had
literally obeyed
his master's behest, and laid the staff upon the face of the
child, "but there
was neither voice nor attending [on the part of the dead
child]." But by
this time, we dare not doubt it, Elisha knew what he had to
do. Even if the
Lord had been silent to him, he had already received
sufficient direction
(comp. here Exodus 14:15). What follows in the narrative (v.
32) is chiefly
intended to set more clearly before us the reality of what
now took place.
Arrived in his chamber, the prophet shut the door upon
himself and the
dead child that lay on his bed. We have learned to
understand the meaning
of this act, which symbolically set forth being alone with
God. As regards
his prayer to Jehovah and the close personal contact with
the dead child,
Elisha followed, as from every point of view we would have
expected, the
example of his master, Elijah, when he recalled to life the
widow's son at
Sarepta 20 (1 Kings 17:17, 24). Differences in detail there
are between the
two narratives, such as will readily be noticed. But these
are best
accounted for by the difference both in the circumstances
and character and
mission of the two prophets. In any case they are not of
importance. But
alike the symbolism and the lessons of this history must be
apparent to
all.
First, as regards the Shunammite. We see in her a true and
faithful
Israelitish woman, who, in a time of general apostasy, owned
Jehovah alike
in her life and her home. Receiving a prophet, because of
Him Who had
sent him, because he was a holy man of God — and with
humility and
entire self-forgetfulness — she received a prophet's reward
in the gift most
precious to a Jewish mother, which she had not dared to hope
for, even
when announced to her. Then, when severely tried, she still
held fast to her
trust in the promise — strong even when weakest — once more
self-
forgetful, and following deepest spiritual impulse. And, in
the end, her
faith appears victorious — crowned by Divine mercy, and
shining out the
more brightly from its contrast to the felt weakness of the
prophet. As we
think of this, it seems as if a fuller light were shed on
the history of the
trials of an Abraham, an Isaac, or a Jacob; on the inner
life of those heroes
of faith to whom the Epistle to the Hebrews points us for
example and
learning (Hebrews 11), and on such Scripture-sayings as
these:
"Jehovah killeth, and maketh alive: He bringeth down to the
grave,
and bringeth up" (1 Samuel 2:6);
"Know that Jehovah hath set apart him that is godly for
Himself:
Jehovah will hear when I call unto Him" (Psalms 4:3);
or this:
"All the paths of Jehovah are mercy and truth unto such as
keep
His covenant and His testimonies" (Psalms 25:10).
The last glimpse we have of the Shunammite in this narrative
is when
called by Elisha to receive back her living son, she bends
in lowly
reverence, and then silently retires (2 Kings 4:36, 37).
When next we meet
her, it is in circumstances of trial almost as great as that
through which she
had formerly passed. Once more she proves true, trustful,
and brave; and
once more is her faith crowned by mercy and deliverance.
Secondly, we think of the symbolical and typical teaching of
this history. 21
The Rabbis discuss the question, whether the dead child of
the Shunammite could have Levitically defiled those who touched
him. This
Pharisaic scruple deserves record for the significant answer
it elicits: "The
dead defileth, but the living does not defile." To us all
this includes a
meaning deeper than they could attach to it. The story
speaks to us of
Him through Whom "death is swallowed up in victory." As we
think of
Him Who, as God Incarnate, and as the Sent of the Father, is
to us the
Representative and the Prophet of God in a unique sense, we
recall that it
was not, as by Elijah or Elisha, through prayer and personal
contact, but
by the Word of His power that He raised the dead (Mark
5:39-42; Luke
7:13-15; John 1 1:43, 44). And beyond this we remember that
"the hour....
now is, when the dead shall hear the Voice of the Son of
God: and they
that hear shall live"; and that "whosoever liveth and
believeth" in Christ
"shall never die" (John 5:25; 11:26).
Lastly, as regards the supernatural in this history, we
fully admit that, as
previously indicated, the history of Elijah and Elisha
marks, so to speak,
the high-point in the miraculous attestation of the mission
of the prophets.
But, by the side of it, there are so many elements of purely
human
interest, so many indications of human weakness, and so many
details
which would not have found a place in a legendary account
(such as the
fruitless mission of Gehazi), while, on the other hand,
there is such
unadorned simplicity about the whole narrative, and so much
spiritual and
typical teaching in it as to carry home almost instinctive
conviction of the
truth and reality of what is recorded.
Yet another, we might almost call it twofold, narrative
taken from the
history of Elisha' s more private ministry claims our
attention (2 Kings
4:38-44). It is instructive, as confirming the view that
this whole section
about Elisha' s ministry is taken from a special work on the
subject, that
the scene is now laid at a considerable interval from the
previous history,
and at a time of famine (v. 38), which is only long
afterwards described in
connection with Elisha' s prophecy (2 Kings 8:1). The
prophet is once
more at Gilgal — not that near Jericho, but another Gilgal,
close to Ebal
and Gerizim, south-west of Shilo, and situated on a
commanding plateau,
3,000 feet above the sea. Here a community of "the sons of
the prophets"
seems to have been settled (comp. 2 Kings 2:1). It is
impossible to say
whether Elisha was in the habit of visiting these
settlements occasionally
or at regular intervals, or else had come on purpose to
share the poverty of
the community at a time of exceptional distress. The former
seems,
however, the more likely, since we are told of "the sons of
the prophets
sitting before him," which, according to well-known Hebrew
usage, means
that Elisha was giving them instruction (comp. 2 Kings 6:1;
Ezekiel 8:1;
14:1; 33:31; Zechariah 3:8; Acts 22:3).
While thus engaged the prophet directed that the usual
humble meal should
be prepared for the wants of his hearers. Even although it
was a time of
famine, yet the fare provided was so poor — and this, so far
as the text
informs us, not merely exceptionally, owing to the dearth —
that our
former impressions, derived from the straitened
circumstances of the
prophet's widow (4:1, 2), are fully confirmed. In truth,
"the sons of the
prophets" seem not only to have supported themselves by
manual labor,
but to have lived in the humblest manner. This willing
submission to
poverty and want from devotion to their work reflects the
most favorable
light on the institution to which they belonged. In the
present instance one
of their number was sent to gather "green esculents"
22 to
be seethed for
pottage in the great pot in which their common meals were
prepared. By
some misadventure the person so sent brought among other
herbage a very
noxious fruit — probably the wild, or so-called "squirting"
cucumber, 23
which he had mistaken for the ordinary cucumber, one of the
most
common and favorite articles of food in the East. The
dangerous error was
discovered after the meal had begun. An appeal to Elisha as
the "man of
God" brought speedy help. The symbolic meaning of casting
"meal" into
the pot was, that this was the ordinary and healthy food by
which that
which had been bitter and dangerous was now to be changed
into palatable
and nourishing diet. While the help Divinely brought by the
prophet as the
"man of God" was miraculous, it had, as we readily perceive,
also a
symbolic significance, the more so, that "the sons of the
prophets" had, as
disciples, been learning from Elisha. And thus did it become
true in every
sense: "Pour out for the people, that they may eat. And
there was no harm
in the pot."
Closely connected with this is the next event recorded. If
the former
showed how easily God could remove from the provision of His
people
that which was hurtful by the addition of that which in
itself is nutritious
and wholesome, the next event affords another instance how
readily He
can send unexpected provision to supply the wants of His
servants. The
lesson which it teaches is as old as that of Isaac's reaping
an hundredfold
of what he had sowed in Gerar at a time of famine (Genesis
26:12), and as
true to all time, and to all God's servants, as it had been
to the patriarch. In
the present case, much needed help in their straits came to
Elisha and to
his companions from Baal-Shalisha, or Beth-Shalisha. We
remember the
district as connected with the history of Saul (1 Samuel
9:4): "the land of
Shalisha," perhaps the "three valleys" land. It lay north of
Lydda, in the
plain of Sharon, and was not far distant from that Gilgal
which we have
described, and the location of which it confirms.
24
We know that the Lord directed the first-fruits to be given
to the Priests
and Levites (Numbers 18:13; Deuteronomy 18:4). This
ordinance could
not any longer be obeyed in the kingdom of Israel, since the
Aaronic
priesthood, for whose support it was destined, was not in
office there. But
the pious in Israel, to whom such contributions were not
merely matter of
obligation nor only of law, but who willingly offered to
Jehovah, in
acknowledgment of His sovereignty and proprietary over the
land, knew
to observe the spirit, if they could no longer obey the
letter, of the law.
Accordingly this unnamed man from Baal-Shalisha brought, as
is expressly
stated, to the "man of God" "bread of the first-fruits,
twenty loaves of
barley and bruised ears of corn 25 in his sack."
26
The provision supplied by the piety of this unnamed giver
Elisha would,
in the same spirit of devotion, have shared with those
around him. But
such conduct ill accorded with the spirit of Elisha' s
servant. Indeed, it may
have been that this history was recorded to mark the
character of Gehazi.
In any case it was not in him at a time of dearth to dismiss
the cares of the
morrow by unselfish care for others. He would scarcely
venture to state
his views explicitly, but, adopting the more prudent course,
contented
himself with pointing out the apparent insufficiency of such
provision for
so large a company. It might, according to the pious
intention of the donor,
have supplied for some time the wants of the prophet, but to
set it "before
an hundred men" — probably a round number for the whole
community
— was to lose the real good that might be obtained, without
an equivalent
benefit to others. It needed the direct command of Elisha to
secure his
obedience. But Elisha did more. For the teaching not only of
Gehazi, but of
all, he added the promise, of which, indeed, this unexpected
provision was
an earnest, that, scanty as it might seem, this provision
would not only
suffice, but that there should be left over from it. And
this, as we
understand it, in the widest sense of constant and
sufficient supply for all
the wants of God's servants. For although this narrative is
generally, and
in a sense correctly, regarded as prefiguring the miraculous
multiplication
of the scanty provision with which our Lord fed the
multitude (Matthew
14:19-21; John 6:9-13), yet the text does not here indicate
any such
miraculous increase of the food. But it does most
emphatically indicate
that Elisha was truly the prophet and servant of Jehovah;
that his trust in
his God was absolute and unwavering; and that, true to His
promise, the
Lord will always provide for His servants who look up unto
Him. And
this is the final lesson of this history to all time and to
all men.
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