Revived
I
Kings 17: 8-24
Elijah was one of the great prophets of Israel. He ranks
right up there with Moses and Samuel as one of the leaders of true,
uncompromising worship of God. Like
Isaiah and later John the Baptist, he stood out in a crowd. Messengers to King
Ahaziah described Elijah as a hairy man who wore a leather girdle. He didn’t
dress conventionally and he didn’t act conventionally. And if you were Ahab or
Jezebel, he was the most foul, “in your face”, bully of a prophet that one
could conjure up. His confrontation with King Ahab and the prophets of Baal is
the stuff of legend.
At
the time of Elijah, it was almost nine hundred years before the coming of
Christ. Ahab took the throne of Israel. He was the seventh in a long line of
weak or bad kings and he was the worst yet. It was still about a century and a
half before the fall of the Northern Kingdom. Ahab married Jezebel, the
daughter of a priest of Baal from the province of Sidon. Jezebel was an avid Baal worshiper, and it was
this stage onto which a rugged individual from the little town of Tishbe was
thrust upon the stage of Israel’s history. His name was Elijah. King Ahab called him the troubler of Israel.
Tishbe is a town about which we know practically nothing.
Elijah is the only character in the Bible who is cited as being from Tishbe. It
was in upper Galilee near the area we know as Gilead on the west side of the
Jordan River. What all that means to us is that Elijah was a country boy. He came from a no name town and he had no
family tree. If you’ve done much reading in the Old Testament, you know that is
unusual. In fact, even the word Tishbe
means sojourner or stranger. So here is a stranger from a strange town. There
is nothing to prepare us for this classic confrontation between the country boy
from Tishbe and the King sitting on the throne in Jerusalem and married to the
daughter of a Baal priest.
Elijah’s ministry as God’s prophet was astounding. For
instance, Elijah is one of only two people in the Bible who did not die, Enoch
being the other. But before God came and gathered Elijah to heaven in a chariot
of fire, before Elijah called upon the 450 prophets of Baal to compete with God
at Mt. Carmel, even before Elijah stood in the presence of King Ahab, totally
vulnerable, squared off against Ahab, calling him not only the real troubler of Israel, but also the
king who abandoned the Lord’s commandments… before all that confrontation and
witness… Elijah had some testing to do. And that is the subject of today’s
story.
Have you ever had your faith tested? Of course you have,
even if nothing comes immediately to mind. Maybe you have had financial
setbacks, personal or family health problems, experienced disloyalty from
someone close. Maybe you have gotten far enough from who you thought you were
that you have doubted your faith or even God himself. If you have been in some
of those valleys and you are sitting here, then you have survived a test of
faith. Maybe it was your fallen nature that you had to overcome. Maybe it was
Satan picking you out of the crowd and deciding to tempt you in exactly the
right way at exactly the right time. Or
maybe, it was God. Maybe it was God loving you enough to harden you for the
battles ahead.
Certainly in our story
today from I Kings, we find not one, but arguably two, ordinary people called
upon to exhibit extraordinary faith.
After Elijah announces the coming of a drought to King Ahab,
he is forced to flee for his own safety. For a while, he lives by a brook and is
fed by ravens, but the brook dries up. Then God sends Elijah to a town named
Zarephath. It wasn’t that far of a journey, but what an insane destination! The
town was in Sidon, the home of Queen Jezebel and the epicenter of Baal worship.
It was almost like hiding in plain view. Here was this character so oddly
dressed that he stood out like a sore thumb and living in the belly of the
whale which wanted to eat him. To make things even more incredible, he was sent
to the home of a widow who was so poor, she was literally down to her last
meal.
Elijah first asked her for water, then for bread. Her response? I have
just enough for one more tiny meal for me and my son. I’m gathering enough
sticks to make a fire and cook it, and then we can die of starvation. This is
the plight of the woman that God selected to help Elijah. She has nothing! Bear in mind that this woman was not
even Jewish. She lived in Sidon, a Baal-worshipping community, although
apparently she thought that Elijah just might be a man of God.
Elijah promises the woman that she will be rewarded and she decides to
trust him. But hey, what has she got to lose? She’s down to her last meal
anyway. So she does as Elijah asks and she is rewarded with food that doesn’t
run out. Elijah has passed his first test by going to the lion’s den to hide
from the lion, and the woman by offering up all that she has to a stranger.
Each has passed a test of faith. Each is strengthened for what lies ahead.
Now comes the real test. The widow’s son is taken ill, deathly ill. The
writer of Kings says that there was no
breath left in him. The widow interprets this as payback from God for her
past sins. And Elijah suddenly becomes everyman, from a dispirited Job to a
doubting Thomas to a scared Simon Peter to you and me. He is crying out to God, What are you doing!
And Why!
That sort of thing happens to every Christian. We read the Bible. We come
to church. We say our prayers. We try to live right. Things are getting along
ok and then out of nowhere, we are slammed. We are in the pit and we are
fighting for our spiritual lives. Why me, is the question that invariably forms
on our lips.
One commentary I consulted said that Elijah had great confidence that God
would perform another miracle. I don’t read it that way. I think Elijah was
confused and probably angry. He cried out to God. He asked “have you brought calamity upon this widow
with who I sojourn by killing her son?” Elijah is arguing with God,
clueless as to why this is happening. But in spite of his anger and doubt, he
stretched himself out across the limp body of that child and cried out again.
Three times he did this, crying out for God to let life come into the boy
again.
And God answered. “And the life of
the child came into him again, and he revived.” Not only did the widow
witness the one true God in action and have her faith rewarded, but so did
Elijah. Elijah, just like us, wanted God to come through, but when he did all
that he thought he was supposed to do and bad things happened anyway, Elijah
was forced to cry out to God in faith.
There was literally nothing else that Elijah could do but cry out to
God. And he passed God’s test, because that’s exactly what he did, not once,
but until God acknowledged him. Three times or thirty times, they are the same.
We cry out to God in faith. And life
comes into us again. We are revived.
There is a true story told by one of the first evangelists to Russia in
the days before the Berlin Wall came down. Freedom to worship was still against
the law. Christians would meet secretly, usually in one another’s homes. One
such group was gathered one evening when suddenly the door was thrown open
violently. Three Russian soldiers burst in brandishing their rifles. One of
them bellowed out that anyone who wasn’t a Christian could leave, but that
anyone there to worship God must stay. After a tense moment, many of those
gathered filed out. Only a few remained. One soldier closed the door and locked
it. Then the three soldiers put away their rifles and sat down. They too were
Christians. They explained that they only wanted to worship with true believers. Those remaining there
that evening had passed a test of faith that would not be forgotten.
Like those brave Russian citizens, both the widow of Zarephath and Elijah
had a test of faith to pass for God. That was God’s purpose all along. It
wasn’t about the widow’s sins. It was about her faith getting legs. It was the
same for Elijah. He too had to let go and let God. No matter how high we go,
how far we travel, there may still come that time when God will test us, not to
hurt us but to make us strong.
The thing is, constantly walking with God day in and day out is much
harder than being martyred for the cause. Seldom will our testing be so clean
as a matter of life and death. More often, it comes in the form of bending the
rules or looking the other way. It may come in the profound silence of
overlooking ugliness or sin in the name of not getting involved. It could be in
the refusal to dirty our hands with someone obnoxious or loud. In each of those
small tests lies the way to God…or the way to hell. Each time we let our
Christian principles be compromised, we lose a little more of that precious
commodity we call life. We lose our Christian witness and become the walking
dead of God’s people.
But each time we stand up, lend a hand, say no…cry out to the Lord, it is
then that our life comes back into us
again. We practice our faith a step at a time, a day at a time. We learn to
trust, even if we have to be tested to absorb God’s lesson. It is then that we
have not only breath, but voice. It is then…that we too, are…revived!
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