Then Jezebel sent a messenger to Elijah, saying, So may the gods do to me and more also, if I do not make your life as the life of one of them by this time tomorrow. Then he was afraid, and he arose and ran for his life and came to Beersheba, which belongs to Judah, and left his servant there. – 1 Kings 19:2-3
Here is how the King James and some other versions translate
verse 3: “And when he saw that, he arose, and went for his life ….” Elijah became fearful because he saw Jezebel’s threat. Elijah became fearful because he stopped
looking at the Lord and turned his attention to human thinking. Certainly, it was proper for him to take
Jezebel seriously. She was, after all, quite evil, fully capable of murder (1 Kings 21:1-19) and other vile crimes. There is no question that, given the
opportunity, she would have had Elijah slain.
The prophet had, we recall, experienced a great victory over
apostasy in his challenge to the prophets of the false god Baal up on Mount
Carmel. The drought that had devastated
Israel for three and a half years had been broken through Elijah’s intercession, for ... [t]he effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much. He was, or should have been, flying high, at
the top of his game.
I hear there was a football game yesterday. It didn’t involve the Chiefs, Cowboys or
Cardinals (I only root, apparently, for teams that start with ‘C’), so I don’t
know who won. But I do know that the
losing team is talking about next year, saying they will be back while
lamenting lost chances and missed opportunities. What they won’t do (since it wasn’t the
Raiders) is attack the winning team in the parking lot with saps and brass
knuckles.
This is the difference between football and the devil. The devil does not let you savor your
victory. He does not take time
outs. He pays no attention to the
calendar or the clock and he does not recognize when the game is over. Often we are most vulnerable to attacks of
various kinds, to threats as well as seductions, when we have met and overcome
a challenge in life. I mean, we've beaten back the Orcs. We're supposed to be able to cruise for a while. That’s the way it
works in the commercials and the movies.
Miller Time! Happily Ever After!
Elijah could call down fire from heaven as he had done up on
Carmel. He had been fearless and
invincible in confronting wickedness. He
thought, no doubt, that great revival would follow his victory over the
idolaters. He might have expected
Jezebel and Ahab to be cowed, even repentant, for he had demonstrated to all of
Israel the fallaciousness of Jezebel’s god.
It may have been that, given the nation’s renewed devotion to the LORD,
Jezebel threatened because she did not dare to actually attack the man of God
at that time. We don’t know. Elijah didn’t know.
He knew she hated him.
He knew that allowing her to kill him would dishearten the people. He suddenly felt like a failure. The only thing he knew for certain is that he
had to get away, but he could not get away from himself. There was no place to hide from his
depression and frustration or from the voices in his head. Maybe God's plan was for Jezebel to try and kill Elijah, for them to have a showdown at high noon, and for Elijah to take the witch out with a bolt of lightning. Whatever it was Elijah couldn't do it because he was too scared and too tired and too hopeless, so he ran.
Of course this is more than history, but we’re apt to forget
that the prophets and leaders depicted in the Bible were not superheroes. James says, Elijah was a man with a nature like ours … (James 5:17). Like us, he was imperfect and sometimes he
messed up. I think it would not be
unreasonable in this instance to conclude that Elijah failed.
So, God said, Hey, man, after all you’ve seen Me do, you
give up? Well, guess what, buddy, I am
done with you.
Wait, that’s not quite how it went, is it? No, God was merciful to Elijah, understanding
that he had been pushed to his limits by the stress and strain of the
confrontation on the mountain. He sent
an angel to the prophet to give him sleep and food. He met Elijah at Sinai and gave him a new
mission. In the end, He took Elijah up
to heaven without allowing him to go the way of the grave.
Beware but also be encouraged: For he
knows our frame; he remembers that we are dust (Psalms 103:14).
4 comments:
Thanks, Mush. I really needed that.
One of my ongoing prayers is, "Lord, if you don't meet me in my ignorance and stupidity, where will you meet me?"
Blessings
"Wait, that’s not quite how it went, is it? No, God was merciful to Elijah, understanding that he had been pushed to his limits by the stress and strain of the confrontation on the mountain. He sent an angel to the prophet to give him sleep and food. He met Elijah at Sinai and gave him a new mission. In the end, He took Elijah up to heaven without allowing him to go the way of the grave.
Beware but also be encouraged: For he knows our frame; he remembers that we are dust (Psalms 103:14)."
Thanks be to God he knows our failings, and he also knows when we have been through the wringer.
Times like that it's a relief to get some sleep, food...and a new mission.
Thank you all.
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