THRU THE BIBLE
EXPOSITION
The Books Of
Kings: The Kings Of Israel And Judah From Solomon To The Babylonian Captivity
II. The Divided
Kingdom, 1 Kings 12:1-22:53
R. God's Use Of
His "Remnant" To Encourage Us Amid Apostasy
(1 Kings 19:19-21)
Introduction: (To show the need . . . )
We believers in Christ can be
tempted to get discouraged over the ungodliness we face in today's world:
(1) At the national level,
"Republican Sen. Susan Collins, a key vote on President Donald Trump's
pick for the Supreme Court, said Sunday . . . 'I would not support a nominee
who demonstrated hostility to Roe v. Wade because that . . . would indicate an
activist agenda.'" (Hope Yen and Ken Thomas, "Collins would oppose
court pick with Roe v. Wade 'hostility,'" Republican-American, July
2, 2018, p. 3A) Activism? "Justice Harry Blackman, author of the
64-page document that came from the Roe v. Wade decision, said that objection
to abortion came mainly from two sources: the oath of Hippocrates and
Christianity. Since the oath
specifically forbids abortion, the Court wrestled with its influence but
concluded that, in the context of general opinion, 'ancient religions did not
bar abortion.' As for Christianity, it
was apparently dismissed by the court because of separation of church and
state. In effect, the Court omitted two
thousand years of Judeo-Christian influence and reached back into paganism to
find a basis for its moral judgment," -- that is activism! (The
Rebirth of America (DeMoss), 1986, p. 86)
It can tempt us to be discouraged.
(2) We face the temptation to feel discouraged
over news of spiritual decline among professing Christians, for "(n)umerous
studies . . . reveal that the lifestyles, values and . . . worldview of most of
those who attend 'evangelical churches' are no different from the world." (Brannon
Howse, Religious Trojan Horse, 2012, p. 430)
Need: So, we ask, "In view of the discouraging
apostasy we face, how does God direct that we be encouraged?!"
I.
We previously learned that Elijah had repeatedly
told God that he felt alone in his stand for Him amid Israel's great apostasy,
and that the Lord's enemies also wanted to kill him, 1 Kings 19:10, 14.
II.
However, the Lord had informed Elijah that He had
reserved for Himself 7,000 people in Israel who had not bowed the knee to Baal
nor kissed his image in false pagan worship, 1 Kings 19:18 NIV.
III.
God had also told Elijah to anoint Elisha as
prophet, so he knew Elisha would be part of God's remnant.
IV.
So, to be
ENCOURAGED, Elijah IMMEDIATELY sought
for Elisha that he might anoint him and enjoy his FELLOWSHIP, and THROUGH
Elisha, God led Elijah to an EDIFYING
GROUP of His REMNANT:
A.
Though
God had first told Elijah to anoint Hazael as king of Syria, then
Jehu as king of Israel and last Elisha as prophet (1 Kings 19:15-16),
Elijah left the anointing of Hazael and Jehu for Elisha later to perform (2
Kings 8:7-15; 9:1-10) and immediately
left Mount Sinai for Abel-Meholah to commission Elisha to be a prophet:
1.
The 1
Kings 19:19a phrase, misham,
"from there" indicates Elijah departed from Mount Sinai to go directly to Abel-Meholah for Elisha
where God said he lived, 1 Kings 19:16; Kittel, Bib. Heb., p. 547-548.
2.
Elijah thus
put God's assignment to anoint Elisha ahead of performing God's other anointing
assignments that he go far north to Damascus to anoint Hazael and to
Ramoth-Gilead to anoint Jehu, 1 Kings 19:15-16.
B.
Elijah's
reasons for commissioning
Elisha before addressing God's other anointing assignments was twofold:
1.
Negatively,
Hazael and Jehu were violent men, the reason for God's using them to destroy
Baalism in Israel, so anointing them would be emotionally draining, what Elisha
experienced when he later dealt with these men (2 Kings 8:7-15; 9:1-10). Elijah wanted to avoid such draining encounters
right after burnout.
2.
Positively,
news of a godly remnant sparked Elijah's motivation to anoint Elisha, for he wanted
to contact the man in the Lord's remnant who would replace him as prophet to enjoy
his fellowship and offset the loneliness and drain in ministry
that he had experienced and that he had voiced to God, 1 Kings 19:10, 14.
C.
When
Elijah met and commissioned Elisha to be the next prophet, Elijah would have
been greatly encouraged by the responsiveness of both Elisha and his associates
who were also of the godly remnant, 1 Kings 19:19-21:
1.
Elijah first
met Elisha has he was plowing with twelve yokes of oxen, eleven of them in
front of him where he could manage what his eleven servants did with their
yokes as he drove the twelfth yoke, v. 19a.
2.
This was
a huge endeavor as evidenced by the Hebrew text: the emphatic pronoun
"he" appears twice in verse 19a, first to describe Elisha's oversight of twelve yokes ahead
of him and second to indicate
that Elisha himself was simultaneously
occupied with plowing with his own yoke
of oxen!
3.
Elijah
did not wait for Elisha to cease his busy work, but he walked right up to him,
threw his mantle over Elisha to signify his call to the prophetic ministry and continued
walking past Elisha, 1 Kings 19:19b-20a.
4.
Elisha
was stunned by Elijah's abrupt, wordless commissioning of him to be a
prophet as is evidenced in his having to run after Elijah to speak with him. Elisha had to adjust to the event's
significance, v. 20a.
5.
Nevertheless,
Elisha's response and
the response of his godly
associates to his call by Elijah would have greatly encouraged Elijah after his recent burnout experience back at
Mount Sinai, 1 Kings 19:20b-21:
a.
Recovering
from his initial shock, Elisha quickly heeded God's call to follow
Elijah, and thus ran after him to ask if he might kiss his father and mother
farewell prior to following Elijah, 1 Kings 19:20b.
b.
Elijah's
reply, "Go back again: for what have I done to thee?" is not a
critique of Elisha, but meant,
"What have I done to stop you?" (v. 20c; Bible Know. Com.,
O. T., p. 529) Elijah was trusting God's
Word that He had a godly remnant, that Elisha, one of that remnant, would heed
God's leading in his life.
c.
Elisha
certainly DID respond to God's call, too: he returned to his oxen,
butchered them and cooked them with the wooden plow instruments they had pulled
and served the meat to his family and friends in a farewell feast, 1 Kings
19:21a; Z. P. E. B., vol. Two, p. 521.
Elisha was considerate of his eleven servants who needed to keep their
oxen and plows to remain in their occupations, and he was considerate of his
family ties so as to produce this feast.
However, the oxen he had butchered and the plowing tools he had used to
cook them signified he was making an irreversible
commitment to God's call to be a prophet!
d.
Significantly,
Elisha's family and associates also ate the cooked oxen, indicating their
fellowship with Elisha and thus their consent
that he leave them for God's calling, 1 Kings 19:21b. Elisha's parents had given him his name that
meant, "Elohim is salvation" (Ibid., p. 290), for they revered the
Lord, so though they would be sad to see their son leave them, they ate of the
meal, giving their consent for their son to follow after Elijah, the prophet of
God who had led the nation Israel to confess the Lord at Mount Carmel!
e.
1 Kings
19:21c claims Elisha then rose and followed after Elijah, sacrificially giving up a secure
livelihood in a big farming operation to live hand-to-mouth by faith (ravens at
Cherith, widow at Zarephath), sacrificially
giving up closeness to family to follow a wandering outlaw of the court (of
Ahab and Jezebel) and sacrificially
giving up leading eleven other plowmen to serve as an apprentice to Elijah.
f.
1 Kings
19:21d adds that Elisha then "ministered" to Elijah, the verb, sharat, meaning to serve an
important person versus performing menial tasks (which is represented by the
verb 'abad, B. D. B., A
Heb. and Eng. Lex. of the O. T., p. 1058; H. A. W., Theol. Wrdbk. of the
O. T., 1980, v. II, p. 958) Elisha became
a spiritual helper to the embattled Elijah, encouraging him following his
burnout at Mount Sinai!
Lesson: When God told Elijah that He had 7,000
in Israel who had not worshiped Baal, and that he was to anoint Elisha, a man
of that remnant as prophet in his place, Elijah DIRECTLY left his
"burnout" site at Mount Sinai to find and commission Elisha, and the
SUPPORTIVE RESPONSE of God's godly remnant in Elisha and in his godly family
and associates provided GREAT ENCOURAGEMENT for the embattled Elijah!
Application: To offset the temptation to feel
discouraged over the apostasy we face today, may we (1) trust in Christ for
salvation, John 3:16. (2) May we then heed
God's lead to fellowship with His "remnant" for encouragement.
Conclusion: (To illustrate the message . . . )
Last Sunday, (1) three
believers (2) of various generations (3) from different families (4) opposite
my gender (5) at different times (6) independently of each other spoke to me (7)
about different topics we had taught that day:
(a) The first lady asked
about the "broom tree" mentioned in the sermon, wondering how we had learned
of it, and she added that she wants to learn a lot more about the Bible. She asked what I might suggest as good but also
affordable books to that end, so I recommended the Ryrie Study Bible and
The Bible Knowledge Commentary.
(b) The second lady
told me she had had an "Aha!" moment when in the sermon we mentioned
that after God's raw power displays of a wind, an earthquake and a fire, the
"still, small voice" Elijah heard in 1 Kings 19:12 represented the
voice of a prophet. We had explained
that God in Deuteronomy 18:15-19 had said He would replace using His Mount
Sinai power displays with speaking to His people by a prophet! She had heard many errant views on the "still,
small voice" Elijah had heard, so she was appreciative for our study that
had explained this truth.
(c) The third lady
asked about a Scripture passage I had mentioned in Sunday School that told of
God's protection of us as a Church that went beyond our efforts regarding
Church security. I replied that it was
Psalm 127!
Since the
circumstances of each lady's input varied widely from that of the
other two ladies, and yet each lady exhibited appreciation for our teaching,
their comments taken together left me highly motivated to start studying for this
sermon! I saw it all as God's use of these
ladies, who belonged to His "remnant," to encourage us in our
ministry!
May we trust in
Christ for salvation. May we fellowship
with God's "remnant" for encouragement.