Two Wonderful
Manifestations of God's Presence with His Prophet: The
Interposition on behalf of "the Sons of the Prophets" by the
banks of Jordan, and that in the deliverance of Elisha at
Dothan — influence of Elisha' s Ministry — God, the
ever-present Help and Deliverer in times of Danger — The
Syrians led blinded into Samaria — The Conduct of the King
and of the Prophet.
(2 Kings 6:1-23.)
For a brief space the narrative turns again to the more
private and personal
ministry of Elisha. Or perhaps it may be more correct to say
that the
history which now follows is inserted in this connection,
immediately after
that of Gehazi, to show that as the unfaithful servant who
did not realize
the presence and help of Jehovah, received meet punishment,
so would
they who clung to the prophet in faith and with faithfulness
experience the
deliverance of God, and this, even in seemingly small
matters, and, if need
be, by extraordinary interposition. Thus the history of the
miraculously
restored ax would supplement and complement that of Gehazi'
s
punishment — both teaching substantially the same lessons:
only the one
in their negative, the other in their positive aspect.
We have repeatedly noticed that the ministry of Elisha had
its deep
influence upon Israel, despite the corruption in Church and
State. Perhaps
one of the most pleasing evidences of this appears in the
growing number
of "the sons of the prophets." On a previous occasion (2
Kings 4:43) we
found at Gilgal about one hundred assembled to listen to the
instruction of
Elisha. This would represent a large number in proportion to
the small and,
in parts, semi-heathen population of the northern kingdom —
especially
when we remember that there were similar communities at
Bethel and at
Jericho. It is probably among the latter that the present
narrative is laid,
and it shows that this community was so prosperous that
their meeting-
place 1 no longer sufficed for their growing numbers. It was
this which led
to the proposal of constructing another and larger place for
their use by the
banks of the Jordan. From the abundance of timber in the
district it would
be easy to provide accommodation sufficient for their simple
wants. And
the manner in which their proposal was worded (ver. 2) is
peculiarly and
graphically Eastern. Elisha not only assented to their
project, but at their
request consented to accompany and remain with them while
engaged in
their work. It need scarcely be said that this was not asked
in order that
the prophet might superintend their labors, but to have in
their midst the
loved master, whose very presence seemed to imply the Divine
blessing,
and whose words of instruction would secure it. In any case
the whole
narrative shows, on the one hand, the simplicity and
earnestness of their
faith, and, on the other, the poverty and humbleness of
their outward
circumstances.
Evidence of both was soon to appear. As they were engaged in
felling the
timber the ax-head of one of the workers became suddenly
detached and
fell into the water. His exclamation of distress addressed
to Elisha, with
this significant addition, that the ax had been "asked" or
"entreated for,"
constituted an appeal to the prophet. It is of comparatively
secondary
importance, whether it had been so asked as a gift, or as a
loan — though
the former seems to us the meaning of the word.
2 What
followed had best
be recorded in a rigorously literal translation of the
sacred text. "And the
man of God said: Where has it fallen? And he showed him the
place, and
he [Elisha] cut off wood [a stick, piece of a tree], and put
it in there [sent
it], and he caused the iron to flow" — on which, the man, as
directed by
the prophet, "put in ["sent," the same word as before] his
hand and took
it." The first, but also the most superficial, impression on
reading these
words is that they do not necessarily imply anything
miraculous.
Accordingly, both some of the Rabbis and certain modern
interpreters have
argued, either that the stick which had been cut off struck
right into the
hole of the ax-head and so brought it up, or else that the
stick thrust under
the ax had rendered it possible to drag it to land. But, to
speak plainly,
both these suggestions involve such manifest
impossibilities, as hardly to
require serious discussion. It is scarcely necessary to add
that every such
explanation is opposed equally to the wording and the spirit
of the sacred
text, which assuredly would not have recorded among the
marvelous
doings of the heaven-sent prophet a device, which, if it had
been possible,
could have been accomplished by any clever-handed person.
There cannot
be any doubt in the mind of every impartial man that
Scripture here
intends to record a notable miracle. On the other hand,
there is nothing in
the sacred text which obliges us to believe that the iron
"did swim." In fact,
the Hebrew word is never used in that sense.
3 The impression
left on our
minds is that the iron which had sunk to the bottom was set
in motion,
made to float, probably, by some sudden rush of water.
Beyond this we
cannot go in our attempts to explain the manner in which
this miraculous
result may have been brought about.
But in another direction we can go much further. We recall
what has
previously been stated about the extraordinary character of
the mission of
Elijah and of Elisha, which accounts for a series of
miracles in their history,
unparalleled in the Old Testament, and, indeed, quite
exceptional, being
connected with what may be described as the decisive crisis
in the religious
history of the kingdom of Israel. If there was to be direct
Divine
interposition in order to recall Israel to their allegiance
to Jehovah, it is
evident that the religious state of the people, ripening for
a judgment which
history has shown to be irrevocable, would render necessary
means that
were extraordinary, even in the miraculous history of the
Old Testament.
And if the mission of the prophets was in itself an
extraordinary means,
chiefly necessitated by the condition of the people, these
means now
required to be intensified. Accordingly Elijah and Elisha
were to be
prophets of the prophets — if we may use the expression — in
order that
this great truth, which alone could have saved the people,
might be
presented in a concrete and most vivid manner; that Jehovah
was the living
and the true God, ever-present with His own, whether for
blessing or in
judgment. And this must be always kept in view when studying
this
history. Nay, is it not the great truth which should always
be present to
our minds, alike as the outcome of all history, the lesson
of our experience,
and the guide in our acting? 4
From this point of view much additional light is thrown on
this particular
event. Elisha, summoned to be among these poor,
simple-hearted workers
for God, could not have been deaf to their appeal, nor
appeared helpless in
presence of their felt need, however humble. Its very
humbleness was only
an additional reason for the Divine help. It would have been
a contradiction
in this special history, nay, in the history of Elisha
generally, who seemed
to embody the eternal presence of the living God among them.
And as the
man received back the lost ax-head — really to him a new
ax-head, now to
be used with a new ax-handle, it would teach him many
lessons, not the
least of them the constant care and provision of the God
Whose messenger
and representative the prophet was, and which extended as
far as our need,
however small and humble it might be.
Of this very truth, both Israel, as a nation, and their
enemies, were
presently to receive evidence, and that on a much larger
scale. And this
explains the next recorded event, without requiring us to
regard it as having
followed in strict chronological order on that just
commented upon. The
sacred text informs us that "the king of Syria was warring
against Israel"
— indicating rather a state of chronic warfare and marauding
expeditions,
such as are common in the East, than a regular campaign. In
his
consultation with his "servants" what place to occupy, there
seems to
have been a scheme to lay an ambush for the capture of the
king of Israel,
whether, as Josephus suggests (Ant. 9:4, 3), when Joram was
on a hunting
expedition, or else when he passed from one palace to
another. But each
time the prophet sent timely warning, and the king was wise
enough to
avoid the locality indicated, and, instead of passing that
way, to send and
obtain confirmation of what had been foretold him.
5 As this
happened
repeatedly, the king of Syria suspected a traitor among his
counselors,
probably the more readily, that information of the king of
Israel's
projected movements must in every case have come to the
Syrians from
some confederate at the Israelitish court.
This explains how one of the servants of Ben-hadad —
probably, one of
those by whom these secret communications were carried on —
could so
readily point out that the information was conveyed by
Elisha, whose
prophetic knowledge compassed the inmost secrets of Syria's
council-
chamber. 6 It also explains how the residence of Elisha
could be so readily
ascertained, and an expedition planned and hastily carried
out with the
view of making him a prisoner. We have no difficulty in
identifying the
Dothan which was now the temporary residence of Elisha, and
the object
of Ben-Hades' attack. The spot still bears the old
designation of Tell (hill)
Dothan. The "twin wells" which gave it that name, are north
and east of it.
The place itself — about twelve miles north of Samaria, and
a little to the
south-west of Engannim — stands on a green hill, or enclosed
upland
basin, 7 overlooking (to the north) one of the richest
pasture-lands, the
oblong plain of Dothan. Here Joseph' s brethren could find
sufficient
sustenance for their flocks when they had exhausted for a
time the wider
plain of Shechem (Genesis 37:17). Just below it, to the
south, is the great
caravan-route from Gilead to Sharon, and thence to Egypt,
where those
Midianites passed to whom Joseph was sold by his brethren.
Dothan is
surrounded by an amphitheater of hills; but northwards it
looks out over
the plain towards those defiles through which the Syrian
host advanced
that was to capture Elisha.
So far from being surprised at the array of "horses, and
chariots, and a
strong power," 8 which Ben-hadad dispatched on this
expedition, we feel
that it is thoroughly in accordance with the heathen notions
of power. In
the course of this narrative we have repeatedly met
instances of this, and
even the proposal to send fifty strong men for the rescue of
Elijah (2 Kings
2:16) may be regarded as representing the influence of
similar ideas in
Israel. Besides, it might have been that the people would
rise in defense of
their prophet. Elisha knew all these preparations on the
part of Ben-hadad;
knew also, that during the night the city had been
surrounded by the
Syrians, so that, to the eye of man, there seemed no way of
escape. But he
rested quietly, for he also knew that "He that keepeth
Israel neither
slumbers nor sleeps." Nay, does it not seem as if the
language of Psalms
121 quite specially described his experience, and as if he
had been looking
up to those "mountains" from whence his help was to come?
And is it not
often so in the experience of God's people, as if the
wording of the Psalms
were almost literally portraying alike what they feel and
hope, and what
happens to them?
It was early morning, and the servant of the prophet — not
Gehazi now,
but perhaps one of "the sons of the prophets" — went forth,
it may be to
make preparation for the return of his master
9 from Dothan
to his
permanent home at Samaria (2 Kings 6:32). This would throw
light on the
language which Elisha afterwards held to the Syrians (2
Kings 6:19). But
when Elisha' s servant saw the town surrounded by the Syrian
host, his
heart failed him, and he turned to his master with the
despairing inquiry
what they were to do. If our previous suggestion that they
had intended
leaving Dothan that morning be well founded, it is not
necessary to
suppose that the servant knew the expedition to have been
especially
destined against Elisha; but he would naturally feel that
not only was their
projected journey now impossible, but that his master and
himself were in
imminent danger from which there seemed no possibility of
escape. What
follows is both historically and symbolically of deepest
importance. In
answer to the prayer of Elisha the eyes of the young man
were opened,
and he beheld the height which overlooked Dothan — or else
that on which
it stood — full of horses and chariots of fire. Truly had
Elisha said: "Fear
not, for more they with us than they with them." It was not
only the
Divine answer to the Syrian challenge, and the manifestation
of the Divine
triumphant supremacy over the power of the enemy, but the
revelation of
the ever-present, watchful help of Him Whose angel "encampeth
round
about them that fear Him, and delivereth them" (Psalms 34:7;
55:18;
91:11). But although the vision was vouchsafed to the
prophet's servant
when his "eyes" were "opened" (Genesis 21:19; Numbers 22:31)
— that
is, a sight of objects granted him, which, in our present
state, is
preternatural — we regard it as none the less real. And
this, though the
appearance of "fire," which was the well-known symbol of the
Divine
manifestation (Exodus 24:17; 2 Kings 2:11; Psalms 1:3;
Isaiah 29:6;
Ezekiel 1 :4, 27), and even the form of "chariots and
horses" might be the
human mode of presentation familiar to the Jewish mind
(comp. also
Psalms 104:3; Isaiah 66:15; Habakkuk 3:8). But we entertain
no doubt of
the real and constant, though by us unseen, presence of
those angel-hosts,
which alike the Old and the New Testament teach us to
believe are the
messengers of God's behests and ministering spirits to His
saints. And
this adds both solemnity and comfort to all our doing.
In view of this heavenly guard there could be no hesitation
on the part of
Elisha and his servant in carrying out what we have supposed
to have been
their original intention of returning to Samaria. And so the
two went down
to the Syrian host. 10 At the prayer of Elisha they were
smitten, not with
blindness but with blinding, so that, in the words of the
Rabbis, 11 "they
saw, but they knew not." 12 It was not, therefore, "a lawful
stratagem" 13 on
his part, but literally true, when Elisha said to the
Syrians who were about
to make their way into Dothan: "This is not the way, and
this is not the
city; come after me, and I will bring you to the man whom
you are
seeking." For Elisha was then on his way to his home at
Samaria, nor could
he who had just pointed his servant to the heavenly defense
around them
have been tempted to tell a lie in order to escape the
threatened danger. His
object was to show the Syrians that the God Whose prophet he
was could
not be contended with in such manner as they thought, nor
His purposes
frustrated. And not the Syrians only, but Israel also, would
have practical
proof that He was the living God when Elisha brought his
blinded pursuers
as his willing captives into Samaria.
It must have been a wonderful sight, alike to Syrians and
Israelites, when,
in answer to the prophet's prayer, the Lord once more
"opened the eyes
of the enemy," and they found themselves in the midst of
Samaria. We can
only indulge in conjecture, how, perhaps, Elisha had hurried
on with the
swiftest; how the watchman on the tower would have announced
the
approach of the strange band; how, although no marauding
expedition
would have been expected to make a raid upon Samaria, yet
the royal
troops would have mustered under the command of the king
himself —
and perhaps, as Josephus puts it, in his somewhat
rationalistic account of
the event, have surrounded the Syrians at the prophet's
bidding; and,
lastly, what terrible surprise followed when they discovered
where they
were. It is more important to mark how once more all acted
in character.
With an eagerness 14 and a spiritual dullness characteristic
of him, Joram
would fain have slaughtered these captives of the Lord . And
with
characteristic uprightness and large-hearted generosity, the
prophet almost
indignantly rebuked the spurious zeal and courage of the
king: "Thou shalt
not smite! Them whom thou hast made captives with thy sword
and thy
bow thou smitest." 15 It would have been unmanly to have
done otherwise;
Jehovah had not brought these blinded men there as His own
captives to
give the king of Israel an easy and a cruel triumph; nay,
the whole moral
purpose of this event, its very character, would have been
changed, if the
proposal of Joram had been carried out. And it was right
royal treatment
on the part of the Heavenly Conqueror's ambassador, when, at
his bidding,
they gave them a great meal, and then dismissed them to
their master, to
report how Jehovah made captives of the captors of His
representative,
and how He entertained and released His captives.
And what is right is also wise. We do not wonder to read
that after this
marauding bands of Syrians no longer made incursions into
the land. But to
us all there are many lessons here: not only of the unseen,
but certain
presence of our God and of His help; of rebuke to our
groundless fears,
and encouragement to go forward; but also as concerning the
enemies of the
people of God and our dealing with them. How often when they
have
surrounded Dothan, and deemed themselves certain of
achieving their
purpose, have they seemed blinded, and found themselves in
the midst of
Samaria. How many times have arguments and measures, which
were
thought certain of success against the truth or the people
of God, ended in
quite the opposite result. And lastly, should we not learn
to deal with
those whom not our own power, but God, has made helpless
captives, not
as if they were our personal enemies, but generously, while
faithfully,
although in meekness, instructing those who oppose
themselves, if God
peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging
of the truth
(2 Timothy 2:25)? For, as harsh or self-asserting bearing on
the part of
those who may defend the truth of God would tend to injure
that cause,
probably more than anything else, so assuredly would it be
palpably and
painfully incongruous. And yet — the Lord reigneth, and He
will take
care of His own work.
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