Verse 1
1 Kings 17:1. And Elijah the
Tishbite, &c. — So bad was the
character, both of the
Israelites and their princes, as
represented in the foregoing
chapter, that one would have
expected God should have cast
off a people that had so cast
him off; but as an evidence to
the contrary, never was Israel
so blessed with a good prophet
as when it was so plagued with a
bad king. Never was a king so
bold to sin as Ahab, never was a
prophet so bold to reprove and
threaten as Elijah, whose story
begins in this chapter, and is
full of wonders. Scarce any part
of the Old Testament history
shines brighter than this,
concerning the spirit and power
of Elias; he only, of all the
prophets, had the honour of
Enoch, the first prophet, to be
translated that he should not
see death; and the honour of
Moses, the great prophet, to
attend our Saviour in his
transfiguration. Other prophets
prophesied and wrote, he
prophesied and acted, but wrote
nothing; and his actings cast
more lustre on his name than
their writings on theirs.
Now this most eminent of the
prophets under the Old Testament
dispensation, is here brought in
like Melchisedec, the most
eminent of the priests, without
any mention of his father or
mother, or the beginning of his
days, like a man dropped down
from the clouds. All that we
learn concerning his origin or
country is that he was a
Tishbite, and of the inhabitants
of Gilead. Probably he had dwelt
at Thishbe or Thesbeh, a town or
region on the other side Jordan,
either of the tribe of Gad, or
that half tribe of Manasseh
which inhabited Gilead, but
whether he was a native of
either of those tribes is
uncertain. He was doubtless
raised up by God’s special
providence, to be a witness for
him in this most degenerate time
and state of things, that by his
zeal, and courage, and miracles,
he might give some check to
their various and abominable
idolatries, and some
encouragement and reviving to
that small number of the Lord’s
prophets and people who yet
remained in Israel. And the
obscurity of his parentage and
birth was no prejudice to his
eminent usefulness. “We need not
inquire,” says Henry, “whence
men are, but what they are: if
it be a good thing, no matter
though it come out of Nazareth.”
Elijah seems to have been
naturally of a rough spirit, and
certainly he was called to rough
services. But, as his name
signifies, My God Jehovah is he;
he that sends me, and will own
me, and bear me out; so his
faith and confidence in God
supported and carried him
through all his arduous labours,
and the violent persecutions to
which he was exposed.
He said unto Ahab — Having
doubtless admonished him of his
sin and danger before, he now,
upon his obstinacy in his wicked
courses, proceeds to declare and
execute the judgment of God upon
him; As the Lord God of Israel
liveth, &c. — I swear by the God
of Israel, who is the only true
and living God; whereas the gods
whom thou hast joined with him,
or preferred before him, are
dead and senseless idols; before
whom I stand — Whose minister I
am, not only in general, but
especially in this threatening,
which I now deliver in his name
and authority; There shall not
be dew nor rain — This was a
prediction, but was seconded
with his prayer that God would
verily it, James 5:17. And this
prayer was truly charitable;
that by this sharp affliction,
God’s honour, and the truth of
his word, (which was now so
horribly and universally
contemned,) might be vindicated;
and the Israelites (whom
impunity had hardened in their
idolatry) might be awakened to
see their own wickedness, and
the necessity of returning to
the true religion. These years —
That is, these following years,
which were three and a half;
Luke 4:25; James 5:17. My word —
Until I shall declare that this
judgment shall cease, and shall
pray to God for the removal of
it.
Verse 3-4
1 Kings 17:3-4. Hide thyself by
the brook Cherith — A brook, no
doubt, well known to Elijah:
both it and the valley through
which it runs, are near the
river Jordan; but whether on the
east or west side, is not so
well agreed. By sending him to
this remote and retired place,
where he was to lie concealed,
so that neither friends nor foes
might know where he was, God
rescued him from the fury of
Ahab and Jezebel, who, he knew,
would seek to destroy him. That
Ahab did not seize him
immediately upon hearing the
forementioned prediction and
warning, must be ascribed to
God’s overruling providence. I
have commanded the ravens to
feed thee — Or, I shall command;
that is, effectually move them
by instincts, which shall be as
forcible with them, as a law or
command is to men. God is said
to command both brute creatures
and senseless things, when he
causeth them to do what he
intends to effect by them. The
ravens being birds of prey, and
very voracious, were more likely
to rob the prophet than to bring
him food; but God’s command
suspended their natural
instinct, and made them act
contrary to it. They are said to
be unnatural to, and to neglect
their young ones; yet, when God
pleaseth, they shall feed his
prophet. God could have sent
angels to minister to him; but
he chose winged messengers of
another kind, to show that he
can serve his own purposes as
effectually by the meanest as by
the mightiest creatures; and to
give Elijah such a proof of his
power and care in providing for
him, as should effectually teach
him to trust in God in those
many and great difficulties to
which he was to be exposed: and
the more unfit instruments the
ravens seemed to be, the more
was his almighty power
magnified, who controlled their
natural inclinations while he
employed them; and the greater
encouragement was given to his
prophet to rely on that power,
thus engaged for him in his
greatest straits and dangers.
This, however, may be said for
the choice of ravens for this
work; that, as they are solitary
birds, and delight to live about
brooks of water, so are they
accustomed to seek out for
provisions, and to carry them to
the places of their abode; on
which account they were nor
improper creatures for God to
employ upon his service. To
suppose, as some have done, that
the ravens, being unclean birds,
(Leviticus 11:15,) would defile
and render unclean the food they
brought, is to mistake the
meaning of the law in that case.
The flesh of unclean animals was
not to be eaten by the
Israelites; but their touch,
while living, communicated no
ceremonial uncleanness either to
food or any thing else: for
asses and camels were also
unclean, and yet the Jews
constantly used them for
carrying provisions, as well as
for other purposes.
Verse 6
1 Kings 17:6. The ravens brought
him bread and flesh in the
morning, &c. — “We need not
inquire where they procured the
bread and flesh, or how the food
was prepared; he who commanded
them to feed his servant had ten
thousand ways of enabling them
to fulfil his word: thus Elijah
was sufficiently provided for,
when numbers were starving; and
the consolations of the Lord
would render him contented with
his solitude and sustenance.” —
Scott.
Verse 7
1 Kings 17:7. After a while —
Hebrew, at the end of the days;
that is, of a year, as that
phrase is often used. The brook
dried up — For want of rain, and
God so ordering it for the
punishment of those Israelites
who lived near it, and had
hitherto been refreshed by it;
and for the exercise of Elijah’s
faith, and to teach him still to
depend on God alone, and not on
any natural means for support
and preservation.
Verse 9
1 Kings 17:9. Arise, get thee to
Zarephath — A city between Tyre
and Sidon, called Sarepta by St.
Luke 4:26, and others. Which
belongeth to Zidon — To the
jurisdiction of that city, which
was inhabited by Gentiles. And
God’s providing for his prophet,
first, by an unclean bird, and
then by a Gentile, whom the Jews
esteemed unclean, was a presage
of the calling of the Gentiles,
and rejection of the Jews. So
Elijah was the first prophet of
the Gentiles. Commanded a widow
woman — That is, appointed or
provided; for that she had as
yet received no revelation or
command of God about it, appears
from 1 Kings 17:12.
Verses 10-12
1 Kings 17:10-12. Behold, the
widow woman was gathering sticks
— He knew, by some secret divine
intimations, that this was the
woman that was to sustain him.
Fetch me, I pray thee, a little
water — Water, in consequence of
the long drought, was doubtless
scarce there as well as in the
land of Israel; yet, being a
pious woman, and therefore ready
to succour a stranger in
distress, she readily goes to
fetch it. He called and said,
Bring me, I pray thee, a morsel
of bread in thy hand — This he
probably said chiefly to try
her, and to make way for what
follows. She said, As the Lord
thy God liveth — By this she
discovers, that though she was a
Gentile, yet she owned the God
of Israel as the true God. I am
gathering two sticks — A few
sticks, that number being often
used indefinitely for any small
number. That we may eat it and
die — For having no more
provision, we must needs perish
with hunger. Although the famine
was chiefly in the land of
Israel, yet the effects of it
were felt in Tyre and Sidon,
which were supported by the corn
of that land. But what a poor
supporter was this widow likely
to be! who had no fuel, but what
she gathered in the streets, and
nothing to live upon herself,
but a handful of meal and a
little oil! To her Elijah is
sent, that he might live upon
Providence, as much as he had
done when the ravens fed him.
Verse 13-14
1 Kings 17:13-14. Make me
thereof a little cake first —
This he requires as a trial of
her faith, charity, and
obedience, which he knew God
would graciously and plentifully
reward; and so this would be a
great example to encourage
others to the practice of the
same graces. Thus saith the Lord
God of Israel — In whom I
perceive thou trustest. The
barrel of meal — The meal of the
barrel. So the cruise of oil is
put for the oil of the cruise.
Verse 15
1 Kings 17:15. She did according
to the saying of Elijah — Giving
glory to the God of Israel, by
believing his prophet. O woman,
great was thy faith! One has not
found the like, no not in
Israel. All things considered,
it exceeded that of the widow,
who, when she had but two mites,
cast them into the treasury. She
took the prophet’s word that she
should not lose by it, but it
should be repaid with interest.
“Those that can venture upon the
promise of God,” says Henry,
“will make no difficulty of
exposing and emptying themselves
in his service, and giving him
his dues out of a little, and
giving him his part first. They
that deal with God, must deal on
trust; seek first the kingdom of
God, and then other things shall
be added. Surely,” adds he, “the
increase of this widow’s faith
to such a degree as to enable
her thus to deny herself, and to
depend upon the divine promise,
was as great a miracle in the
kingdom of grace, as the
increase of her oil was in the
kingdom of providence. Happy
they that can thus, against
hope, believe and obey in hope.”
She and her house did eat many
days — A long time, even above
two years before the following
event about her son happened,
and the rest of the time of the
famine. See how the reward
answered the service! She
generously made one cake for the
prophet, and was repaid with
many for herself and son! What
is laid out in charity, is set
out to the best interest, upon
the best security. One poor
meal’s meat this poor widow gave
the prophet, and in recompense
of it she and her son did eat
many days, and probably some of
her kindred too, here included
in the term her house, an
expression which would hardly
have been used of her one son.
Verse 16
1 Kings 17:16. The barrel of
meal wasted not, &c. — But as
much as they took out for their
daily use, was immediately
supplied by the almighty power
of God. “Never did corn or olive
so increase in growing,” says
Bishop Hall, “as these did in
using.” They multiplied,
observe, not in the hoarding,
but in the spending. For there
is that scattereth, and yet
increaseth. When God blesseth a
little, it will go a great way,
even beyond expectation; as on
the contrary, though there be
abundance, if he blow upon it,
it comes to little, Haggai 1:9;
Haggai 2:19.
Verse 17
1 Kings 17:17. There was no
breath left in him — No soul or
life, as the Hebrew word here
used properly signifies. For,
says Buxtorf, “The Hebrews by
נשׁמה, neshama, understand the
rational and immortal soul,
whence they are wont to swear by
it: and he quotes Aben Ezra as
an authority for rendering the
word, anima, sed humana tantum;
the soul, but only the human.
The expression, however, here
only means that he died, as is
manifest from the following
verses. This was a terrible and
unexpected stroke to this widow,
and, no doubt, was sent for the
further trial of her faith and
patience. She had received a
great prophet into her house,
was employed to sustain him, and
had reason to think that surely
the Lord would do her good; yet
now she loses her son. We must
not think it strange if we meet
with very sharp afflictions,
even when we are in the way of
duty, and of eminent service to
God: nay, and when we have the
clearest manifestations of God’s
favour and good-will toward us,
even then we should prepare for
the rebukes of his providence;
our mountain never stands so
strong but it may be moved, and
therefore, in this world, we
ought always to rejoice with
trembling.
Verse 18
1 Kings 17:18. She said, What
have I to do with thee, O thou
man of God? — Wherein have I
injured or offended thee, or
been wanting in my duty? Or, why
didst thou come to sojourn in my
house, if this be the fruit of
it? They are the words of a
troubled mind. How unconcernedly
had she spoken of her own and
her son’s death, when she
expected to die for want, (1
Kings 17:12,) That we may eat it
and die; yet now her son dies,
and not so miserably as by
famine, and she is extremely
disturbed at it. We may speak
slightly of an affliction at a
distance, but when it toucheth
us, we are troubled, Job 4:5.
Art thou come to call my sin to
remembrance? — That thou
mightest severely observe my
sins, and by thy prayers bring
down God’s just judgment upon me
for them, as thou hast, for the
like cause, brought down this
famine upon the nation? She may
mean, either, 1st, Her own
remembrance; that she should by
this dreadful judgment be
brought to the knowledge and
remembrance of her sins which
had procured it: or, rather, 2d,
God’s remembrance; for God is
often said in Scripture to
remember sins when he punishes
them, and to forget them when he
spares the sinner, 2 Samuel
16:10. Has God taken occasion
from thy abiding in my house,
and my not making the
improvement I ought to have made
by thee, to punish this and my
former sins by suddenly cutting
off my son? And have I, instead
of the comfort and blessing I
expected, met with a severe
chastisement and curse?
Verse 19-20
1 Kings 17:19-20. Give me thy
son — Into my arms. He took him
out of her bosom — By which it
appears he was but a little
child. And carried him up into a
loft — A private place, where he
might more freely and fully pour
out his soul to God, and use
such gestures and methods as his
heart inclined him to use,
without any offence or
observation. And laid him upon
his own bed — So that it was the
room where he lodged, though
near the top of the house. And
he cried unto the Lord — And, in
his prayer, humbly reasons with
God concerning the death of the
child, using most powerful
arguments. Thou art the Lord,
that canst revive the child; and
my God, and therefore wilt not
deny me. She is a widow, add not
affliction to the afflicted;
deprive her not of the support
and staff of her age: she hath
given me kind entertainment: let
her not fare the worse for her
kindness to a prophet, whereby
wicked men will take occasion to
reproach both her and religion.
Verse 21
1 Kings 17:21. He stretched
himself upon the child three
times — Not as if he thought
this could contribute any warmth
or life to the child; but partly
to express, and withal to
increase, his grief for the
child’s death, and his desire of
its reviving; that thereby his
prayers might be more fervent,
and consequently more prevalent
with God: and partly to give a
sign of what God would do by his
power, and what he doth by his
grace in the raising of souls
dead in sin to a spiritual life:
the Holy Ghost comes upon them,
and the power of the Highest
overshadows them, and puts life
into them. Let this child’s soul
come into him again — By this
way of speaking, Elijah
expressed his certainty that the
child’s soul had left his body,
and that he was properly dead.
And he asks, not that he might
be recovered from a fainting
fit, swoon, or trance; but
reanimated by the departed soul,
and raised from the dead. This
certainly was a great and most
extraordinary request, and such
as there is every reason to
think had never been asked of
God before by any human
creature. Certainly he had no
precedent to plead for
requesting such a thing, much
less did he know of an instance
of any mortal’s resurrection
having taken place in answer to
any one’s prayers or otherwise.
Nevertheless, he was encouraged
and induced to make this
request, partly by his zeal for
God’s honour, which he judged
was concerned in it, and would
be eclipsed, if the child of
this widow remained in death;
partly by the experience which
he had of his prevailing power
with God in prayer; and partly
by a divine influence, moving
him to desire the child’s
restoration to life.
Verse 22
1 Kings 17:22. The soul of the
child came into him again — The
reader will easily observe, that
this phraseology of the sacred
historian, like that of the
prophet in the former verse,
(and they both spoke by
inspiration of God,) plainly
signifies the distinction
between the rational soul and
earthly body to be as real as
that between the house and its
inhabitant, and supposes the
existence of the former in a
state of separation from the
body, and consequently its
immortality: and, probably, as
Grotius thinks, God might design
by this miracle to give an
evidence hereof for the
encouragement of his suffering
people. And he revived — As by
an extraordinary and
supernatural stroke of
affliction, God had taken away
the child’s life for the trial
of the faith, both of the
prophet and the woman; so, to
strengthen the faith of both, as
well as for the vindication of
the true religion, and the
manifestation of his own glory
in opposition to idols, in that
most dark and degenerate age, he
restored the child to life, and
thereby answered the prayer
which he himself had inspired.
Verse 23-24
1 Kings 17:23-24. Elijah said,
See, thy son liveth — And see
the power of prayer, and the
power of him that hears and
answers prayer, that kills and
makes alive. The woman said, Now
by this I know that thou art a
man of God — Though she believed
it before, and termed him a man
of God, (1 Kings 17:18,) which
she might well do, having been a
daily witness of the miraculous
increase of the meal and oil;
yet, when she saw he did not
cure her sick child, but
suffered him to grow worse, and
die, she began to doubt of it:
but upon seeing her son revive,
her faith revived with him, and
was mightily confirmed. For,
through the joy of having him
restored to her again, this
latter miracle appeared to her
much greater than the former.
The word of the Lord in thy
mouth is truth — The God whom
thou professest to believe in,
is the only true God; and the
doctrine and religion which thou
teachest, is the only true
religion; and therefore
henceforth I wholly renounce the
worship of idols. |