CLOSE OF ELISHA'S PUBLIC MINISTRY:
THE BEGINNING OF JUDGMENT
The Shunammite on her
Return from Philistia restored to her Property — Elisha's
Visit to Damascus — The Embassy of Hazael — Prediction of
Future Judgment through him — The Murder of Ben-hadad and
Accession of Hazael.
(2 Kings 8:1-15.)
The two narratives which follow that of the siege of Samaria
may be
characterized as in some sense supplementary to it. On the
one hand, they
mark the relations between Elisha and Joram; and on the
other, those
between the prophet and Syria. They also close what seems
the more
personal account of Elisha's activity. After that we have
only an account
of his death and burial (chap. 13.), drawn, as we suppose,
from the same
"memoirs" to which the whole of this series is due; the
reference to
Elisha's activity in the anointing of Jehu (chap. 9.)
forming part of the
more general history. Accordingly we again remind ourselves
that what is
about to be described must not be regarded as following in
strict
chronological succession what had preceded, but rather as in
internal
connection with it.
The first narrative introduces once more the Shunammite and
her heaven-
given, heaven restored son, although in circumstances far
different from
those in which we first knew them. Indirectly we learn and
mark that the
relations between the prophet and the family of Shunem had
not ceased
with the restoration of the child to life, although Holy
Scripture has not
preserved any record of such intercourse. And this also is
instructive as
regards Bible history. Further, we mark the affectionate
interest of Elisha,
and his care for the outward well-being of this family.
Among the other
dealings of God with Israel we learn that He "called for a
famine" — a
most emphatic expression (comp. Psalms 105:16; Haggai 1:11).
This
dearth was to last for seven out of the twelve years of
Joram' s reign.
Before its commencement the prophet "had spoken" to the
Shunammite,
warning her to betake herself to any place outside the land
of Israel where
she might be able to secure a temporary home; and "the woman
had arisen
and done 1 after the saying of the man of God." Although we
have evidence
that this famine pressed severely on the people (comp.
4:38), yet the
advice of the prophet must have been determined by special
circumstances. From the absence of any reference to him, it
is probable
that the Shunammite had lost her husband, and with him her
mainstay in
times of trouble and difficulty.
We are told that she went to the land of the Philistines
probably as
that nearest to her home, and at the same time least likely
to suffer, both
on account of its fertility and its easy communication with
grain producing
Egypt. When the predicted seven years of famine ended, the
woman who,
as the original expressly marks, had only gone "to sojourn
as a stranger,"
returned to her home at Shunem. But here her faith, which
had led her so
literally to obey the words of the prophet, was to receive a
rude shock.
"Her house," to which so many loving and sacred memories
attached, and
"her land" — her own and her child's property — were
occupied by
strangers.
We remember the proud feeling of independence with which she
had on a
former occasion declined Elisha' s offer to speak for her to
the king (2
Kings 4:13), since she dwelt among her own people. But since
then, and in
the troubles connected with famine and Syrian invasion,
times had sadly
changed. And in the circumstances it seems scarcely less
indicative of the
Shunammite' s independence of character, that she now
appealed directly
to the king, not for favor, but for justice. It was surely
in the good
providing of God, Who ordereth all things wisely and well,
that the
Shunammite addressed her appeal to the king just as he was
talking with
Gehazi, and the latter at his request was telling all the
great things that
Elisha had done. But we cannot infer from this conversation
that their
meeting occurred before the healing of Naaman, after which
Gehazi was
smitten with life-long leprosy, since, although lepers were
banished from
the cities, all intercourse with them was not prohibited,
especially under
such peculiar circumstances. On the other hand, it was
evidently the
period when the authority of the prophet with the king was
at its highest,
and hence either after the capture of the Syrians in Samaria
(2 Kings 6:21),
or, as we think, after the fulfillment of Elisha' s
prediction of the relief of
Samaria, and the death of the disbelieving "lord." This
would best accord
with the present narrative. In any case, the appearance of
the woman with
her son during Gehazi's conversation would not only confirm
its truth, but
naturally augment the interest of the king in her complaint.
And so he
immediately ordered not only the restoration of her
property, but a return,
probably from the royal treasury, of the value of the
produce of the land
during the previous years. But to us and to all time this
history is chiefly
interesting as showing how the obedience of faith will,
despite trials or
appearances to the contrary, be met by the faithful care of
the God of
promise — and still further, how God will not allow the day
of His people
to set in trouble, but cause the light to break forth at
eventide.
The second narrative in this history shows how the name and
work of
Elisha were known, not only in Israel, but beyond it, even
in hostile Syria.
This, after what we have already learned, cannot surprise
us. Although
there is not any express statement to that effect, we cannot
but connect
the journey of Elisha "towards Damascus,"
2 with the
commission formerly
given to Elijah to anoint Hazael king over Syria (1 Kings
19: 15). This may
help us to understand that the Word of God has a wider than
the barely
literal application which so often tends to perplex the
superficial reader. It
also shows that its fulfillment may be delayed, and when
made, come in
other manner than was expected; and, lastly, that the
prophets may for
many years have borne about the painful secret of some
trouble to come
— forbearing to take any part till the moment for action, or
rather for their
obedience, was indicated to them from above.
It was, surely, not an accidental circumstance that when
Elisha arrived in
Syria Ben-hadad was on that sick-bed from which his
treacherous servant
intended he should never rise. For the prophet was not to
come until all
was ready and prepared for the deed by which Hazael would
ascend the
throne of Syria, that while in its sequences necessarily
connected with the
judgments foretold upon Israel, yet no part of the incentive
to the crime
could be imputed to the agency of the Divine messenger.
Evidently, if
Hazael had not intended to murder his master, and to pretend
that he had
died of his disease, the words of Elisha would have had no
meaning, nor
could they have suggested to him his crime.
On hearing of the near approach of the great prophet of
Israel, Ben-hadad
charged Hazael, probably his vizier or chief general, to
meet Elisha, and
inquire through him of Jehovah, whether he would recover
from his
sickness. After the manner of the time, Hazael went to meet
the prophet
with a present. We are not to understand that those forty
camels which
bore "of every good thing of Damascus," were literally fully
laden. This
magnifying of a present by distributing and laying it on a
great many
bearers or beasts of burden, is characteristic of the East,
and is not
uncommonly witnessed in our own days. Hazael delivered his
master's
message with unblushing hypocrisy. But Elisha had read his
purpose, and
replied in language which, while it unmasked, could never
have suggested
his murderous scheme: "Go, say to him, [viz. as thou
intendest to do]
Thou shalt surely live; howbeit Jehovah has shown me that he
shall surely
die." And as we recall the hypocritical words by which
Hazael had tried to
disguise his purpose and deceive the prophet, we feel that
this was the
most fitting answer to his pretended humility and care.
Yet this was only the beginning of what Elisha had to say to
Hazael. "And
he [Elisha] steadied his face, and set it till he [Hazael]
was ashamed," when
reading not only his inmost thoughts, but his future history
also, the
prophet burst into weeping. When Hazael inquired as to the
reason of his
tears, Elisha told the terrible cruelties which he knew the
Syrian would
perpetrate upon Israel. The mock humility of Hazel's answer:
"But what
is thy servant, the dog, that he should do this great
thing?" reveals at least
the spirit in which he contemplated such deeds against
Israel. If Hazael had
still thought to deceive Elisha, the announcement that God
had shown to
his prophet Hazael as king of Syria, must have convinced him
that disguise
was useless. Little more requires to be told. Hazael
returned to his master,
and gave him the lying assurance of recovery, as Elisha had
foretold. Then
as in his sore sickness Ben-hadad lay prostrate and
helpless, Hazael laid
upon his face a coverlet which had been soaked and made
heavy with
water. And so Ben-hadad died, and his murderer, whose crime
remained
probably unknown, ascended the throne.
The accession of Hazael was only part of the burden of
judgment upon
Israel which had been announced to Elijah. The other part
was the
usurpation of the throne of Israel by Jehu. With this
twofold accession
began the decay of the northern kingdom of Israel. Presently
we shall read
(10:32). "In those days Jehovah began to cut Israel short;
and Hazael
smote them in all the coasts of Israel," — a smiting which
included the loss
of the entire territory east of the Jordan. And we believe
that it was to
declare, perhaps to warn of, this judgment upon Israel, that
Elisha was
sent to Damascus, and made to have this interview with
Hazael.
For Divine judgment cannot be arrested, though it may be
deferred, and
what Israel had sown when on the morrow of the decisive
contest on
Carmel it cast out Elijah, that would it reap, when,
notwithstanding all
mercies shown, the son of Ahab and Jezebel could order,
though he dared
not carry out, the execution of Elisha. They would have none
of His
prophets, however clearly their mission was attested of God;
nay, rather,
they would have none of that God Whose prophets Elijah and
Elisha had
been. And yet in faithfulness God would reveal the coming
judgment to
His servants, and through them to Israel.
But quite a peculiar feeling comes over us in these far-off
islands of the
West, when now, thousands of years after these events, we
stand before
the black obelisk on which this part of the history of
ancient Assyria is
recorded, 3 and there read the names of Ben-hadad and of
Hazael of
Damascus — the former in connection with "Ahab of Jezreel,"
who was at
one time his ally against Assyria; the latter, as humbly
offering rich tribute
to the king of Assyria, as also does Jehu, who is styled
"the son of Omri"
(the founder of the dynasty succeeding that of Omri). And
here these
histories commingle, and the records of the one will be
found to throw
welcome light upon those of the other.
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