"And
the Lord of the Lord came unto him, saying, Arise, get thee to Zarephath,
which belongeth to Zidon, and dwell there: behold, I have commanded
a widow woman there to sustain thee" (1 Kings 17:8,9).
Notice carefully the connection
between these two verses. The spiritual significance of this may be
the more apparent to the reader if we state it thus: our actions must
be regulated by the Word of God if our souls are to be nourished and
strengthened. That was one of the outstanding lessons taught Israel
in the wilderness: their food and refreshment could only be obtained
so long as they traveled in the path of obedience (Numbers 9:18-23 –
observe well the seven-fold "at the commandment of the Lord"
in that passage). God’s people of old were not allowed to have any plans
of their own: the Lord arranged everything for them – when they should
journey and when they should encamp. Had they refused to follow the
cloud there had been no manna for them.
Thus it was with Elijah,
for God has given the same rule unto His ministers as to them unto whom
they minister: they must practice what they preach, or woe be unto them.
The prophet was not allowed to have any will of his own, and to say
how long he should remain at Cherith or whether he should go from there.
The Word of Jehovah settled everything for him, and by obeying the same
he obtained sustenance. What searching and important truth is there
here for every Christian: the path of obedience is the only one of blessing
and enrichment. Ah, may we not discover at this very point the cause
of our leanness and the explanation of our unfruitfulness? Is it not
because we have been so self-willed that our soul is starved and our
faith weak? Is it not because there has been so little denying of self,
taking up the cross and following Christ, that we are so sickly and
joyless?
Nothing so ministers to
the health and joy of our souls as being in subjection to the will of
Him with whom we have to do. And the preacher must heed this principle,
too, as well as the ordinary Christian. The preacher must himself tread
the path of obedience if he would be used by the Holy One. How could
Elijah have afterwards said with so much assurance on mount Carmel,
"If the Lord be God, follow Him," if he had previously followed
a course of self-pleasing and insubordination? As we pointed out in
our last chapter, the correlative of "service" is obedience.
The two things are indissolubly joined together: as soon as I cease
to obey my Master, I am no longer His "servant." In this connection
let us not forget that one of the noblest titles of our King was "The
Servant of Jehovah." None of us can seek to realize a grander aim
than that which was the inspiration of His heart: "I come to do
Thy will, O My God."
But let it be frankly pointed
out that the path of obedience to God is far from being an easy one
to nature: it calls for the daily denying of self, and therefore it
can only be traversed as the eye is fixed steadily on the Lord and the
conscience is in subjection to His Word. It is true that in keeping
His commandments there is "great reward" (Psalms 19:11), for
the Lord will be no man’s debtor; nevertheless it calls for the setting
aside of carnal reason, and to take his place by Cherith and there be
fed by ravens — how could a proud intellect understand that? And now
he was bidden to journey to a far distant and heathen city, there to
be sustained by a desolate widow, who was herself on the point of starvation.
Ah, my reader, the path of faith is utterly opposed to what we call
"common sense," and if you suffer from the same spiritual
disease as this writer, then you often find it harder to crucify reason
than you do to repudiate the filthy rags of self-righteousness. "So
he arose and went to Zarephath. And when he came to the gate of the
city, behold, the widow woman was there gathering of sticks" (verse
10).
She was so poor that she
was without any fuel, or any servant to go and obtain a few sticks for
her. What encouragement could Elijah derive from appearances? None whatever:
instead, there was everything which was calculated to fill him with
doubts and fears if he was occupied with outward circumstances. "And
he called to her, and said, ‘Fetch me, I pray thee, a little water in
a vessel, that I may drink.’ And as she was going to fetch it, he called
to her, and said, ‘Bring me, I pray thee, a morsel of bread in thine
hand.’ And she said, ‘As the Lord thy God liveth, I have not a cake,
but a handful of meal in a barrel, and a little oil in a cruse: and,
behold, I am gathering two sticks, that I may go in and dress it for
me and my son, that we may eat it, and die’ " (verses 10-12): that
was what confronted the prophet when he arrived at his divinely appointed
destination! Put yourself in his place, dear reader, and would you not
have felt that such a prospect was a gloomy and disquieting one?
But Elijah "conferred
not with flesh and blood," and therefore he was not discouraged
by what looked so unpromising a situation. Instead, his heart was sustained
by the immutable Word of Him that cannot lie. Elijah’s confidence rested
not in favourable circumstances or "a goodly outlook," but
in the faithfulness of the living God; and therefore his faith needed
no assistance from the things around him. Appearances might be dark
and dismal, but the eye of faith could pierce the black clouds and see
above them the smiling countenance of his provider. Elijah’s God was
the Almighty, with whom all things are possible. "I have commanded
a widow woman there to sustain thee": that was what his heart was
resting on. What is yours resting on? Are you being kept in peace in
this ever-changing scene? Have you made one of His sure promises your
own? "Trust in the Lord, and do good; so shalt thou dwell in the
land, and verily thou shalt be fed" (Psalms 37:3). "God is
our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore will
not we fear, though the earth be removed" (Psalms 46:1, 2).
But let us return to the
outward circumstances which confronted Elijah upon his approach to Zarephath.
"When he came to the gate of the city, behold, the widow woman
was there gathering of sticks. God had told His servant to go there
and had promised a widow should sustain him, but what her name was,
whereabout was her house, and how he was to distinguish her from others,
he was not informed. He trusted God to give him further light when he
arrived there; nor was he disappointed. He was speedily relieved of
any suspense as to the identical person who was to befriend him. Apparently
this meeting was quite casual, for there was no appointment between
them. "Behold (ponder and admire) the widow woman was there";
see how the Lord in His providence overrules all events, so that this
particular woman should be at the gate at the very time the prophet
arrived!
Behold! here she comes
forth as if on purpose to meet him: yet he did not know her, nor she
him. It has all the appearance of being accidental, and yet it was decreed
and arranged by God so as to make good His word to the prophet. Ah,
my reader, there is no event in this world, however great or however
small, which happens by chance. "O Lord, I know that the way of
man is not in himself: it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps"
(Jeremiah 10:23). How blessed to be assured that "the steps of
a good man are ordered by the Lord" (Psalms 37:23). It is sheer
unbelief which disconnects the ordinary things of life from God. All
our circumstances and experiences are directed by the Lord, for "of
Him and through Him, and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory for
ever. amen" (Romans 11:36). Cultivate the holy habit of seeing
the hand of God in everything that happens to you.
"When he came to the
gate of the city, behold, the widow woman was there." How this
illustrates once more a principle to which we have frequently called
the attention of the reader, namely, that when God works He always works
at both ends of the line. If Jacob sends his sons down into Egypt seeking
food in time of famine, Joseph is moved to give it unto them. If Israel’s
spies enter Jericho, there is a Rahab raised up to shelter them. If
Mordecai is begging the Lord to come to the deliverance of His threatened
people, King Ahasuerus is rendered sleepless, made to search the state
records and befriend Mordecai and his fellows. If the Ethiopian eunuch
is desirous of an understanding of God’s Word, Philip is sent to expound
it to him. If Cornelius is praying for an opening up of the Gospel,
Peter is charged to preach it to him. Elijah had received no intimation
as to where this widow resided, but divine providence timed her steps
so that she encountered him at the entrance to the city. What encouragements
to faith are these!
Here, then, was the widow:
but how was Elijah to know she was the one whom God had ordained should
befriend him? Well he must try her, as the servant of Abraham did Rebekah
when he was sent to fetch a wife for Isaac: Eliezer prayed that the
damsel to whom he should say, "Let down thy pitcher," and
she should answer, "Drink, and I will give thy camels drink also;
let the same be she whom Thou hast appointed for Isaac" (Genesis
24). Rebekah came forth and fulfilled these conditions. So here: Elijah
tests this woman to see if she is kind and benevolent: "Fetch me,
I pray thee, a little water in a vessel, that I may drink." Just
as Eliezer considered that only one possessed of kindness would be a
fit companion for his master’s son, so Elijah was convinced that only
a liberal-minded person would be likely to sustain him in a time of
famine and drought.
"He called to her,
and said, ‘Fetch me, I pray thee, a little water in a vessel, that I
may drink.’ " Observe the gracious and respectful demeanour of
Elijah. The fact that he was a prophet of Jehovah did not warrant him
to treat this poor widow in a haughty and overbearing manner. Instead
of commanding, he said, "Pray thee." What a rebuke does that
contain for those who are proud and officious. Civility is due to every
one: "be courteous" (1 Peter 3:8), is one of the divine precepts
given to believers. And what a severe test it was to which Elijah submitted
this poor woman: to fetch him a drink of water! Yet she made no demur
nor did she demand a high price for what had become a costly luxury;
no, not even though Elijah was a complete stranger to her, belonging
to another race. Admire here the moving power of God, who can draw out
the human heart to acts of kindness unto His servants.
"And as she was going
to fetch it." Yes, she left off gathering sticks for herself, and
at the first request of this stranger started for the drink of water.
Let us learn to imitate her in this respect, and be always ready to
perform an act of kindness toward our fellow creatures. If we do not
have the wherewithal to give to the distressed, we should be the more
ready to work for them (Ephesians 4:28). A cup of cold water, though
it costs us nothing more than the trouble of fetching it, shall in no
wise lose its reward. "And as she was going to fetch it, he called
to her, and said, ‘Bring me, I pray thee, a morsel of bread in thine
hand’ " (verse 11). This the prophet requested in order to test
her still further — and what a test: to share her very last meal with
him — and also to pave the way for a further discourse with her.
"Bring me, I pray
thee, a morsel of bread in thine hand." What a selfish request
this seemed! How likely it was that human nature would resent such a
demand upon her slender resources. Yet in reality it was God that was
meeting with her in the hour of her deepest need. "Therefore will
the Lord wait, that He may be gracious unto you, and therefore will
He be exalted, that He may have mercy upon you: for the Lord is a God
of judgment: blessed are all they that wait for Him" (Isaiah 30:18).
But this widow must first be proved, as later another Gentile woman
was proved by the Lord incarnate (Matthew 15). God would indeed supply
all her need, but would she trust Him? So often He allows things to
get worse before there is any improvement. He "waits to be gracious."
Why? To bring us to the end of ourselves and of our resources, till
all seems lost and we are in despair: that we may more clearly discern
His delivering hand.
"And she said, ‘As
the Lord thy God liveth, I have not a cake, but a handful of meal in
a barrel, and a little oil in a cruse: and behold, I am gathering two
sticks, that I may go in and dress it for me and my son, that we may
eat it, and die’ " (verse 12). The effects of the terrible famine
and drought in Palestine were also felt in the adjacent countries. In
connection with "oil" being found in this widow’s possession
at Zarephath in Zidon, J. J. Blunt in his admirable work, Undesigned
Coincidences in the Old and New Testament, has a helpful chapter.
He points out that on the division of Canaan the district of Zidon fell
to the lot of Asher (Joshua 19:28). Then he turns the reader back to
Deuteronomy 33, reminding him that when Moses blessed the twelve tribes
he said, "Let Asher be blessed with children; let him be acceptable
to his brethren, and let him dip his foot in oil" (verse 24) —
indicating the fertility of that district and the character of its principal
product. Thus, after a long spell of famine, oil was most likely to
be found there. Hence by comparing Scripture with Scripture we see their
perfect harmony.
"Behold, I am gathering
two sticks that I may go in and dress it for me and my son, that we
may eat it, and die." Poor soul: reduced to the last extremity,
with nothing but a most painful death staring her in the face! Hers
was the language of carnal reason and not of faith, of unbelief and
not of confidence in the living God; yes, and quite natural in the circumstances.
As yet she knew nothing of that word to Elijah, "Behold, I have
commanded a widow woman there to sustain thee" (verse 9). No, she
thought the end had come. Ah, my reader, how much better is God than
our fears. The unbelieving Hebrews imagined they would starve in the
wilderness, but they did not. David once said in his heart," I
shall now perish one day by the hand of Saul" (1 Samuel 27:1),
but he did not. The apostles thought they would drown in the stormy
sea, but they did not.
"Were half
the breath in sorrow spent
To Heaven in
supplication sent,
Our cheerful
song would oftener be
Hear what the
Lord hath done for me."
"And she said, ‘As
the Lord thy God liveth, I have not a cake, but an handful of meal in
a barrel, and a little oil in a cruse; and, behold, I am gathering two
sticks, that I may go in and dress it for me and my son, that we may
eat it, and die’ " (verse 12). To natural sight, to human reason,
it seemed impossible that she could sustain anyone. In abject poverty,
the end of her provisions was now in sight. And her eyes were not on
God (any more than ours are till the Spirit works within us!) but upon
the barrel, and it was now failing her; consequently there was nothing
before her mind except death. Unbelief and death are inseparably joined
together. This widow’s confidence lay in the barrel and the cruse, and
beyond them she saw no hope. As yet her soul knew nothing of the blessedness
of communion with Him to whom alone belong the issues from death (Psalms
68:20). She was not yet able "against hope to believe in hope"
(Romans 4:18). Alas, what a poor tottering thing is that hope which
rests on nothing better than a barrel of meal.
How prone we all are to
lean on something just as paltry as a barrel of meal ! And just so long
as we do so our expectations can only be scanty and evanescent. Yet,
on the other hand, let us remember that the smallest measure of meal
in the hand of God is to faith as sufficient and effectual as "the
cattle upon a thousand hills." But alas, how rarely is faith in
healthy exercise. Only too often we are like the disciples when, in
the presence of the hungry multitude, they exclaimed, "There is
a lad here, which hath five barley loaves, and two small fishes: but
what are they among so many?" (John 6:9) — that is the language
of unbelief, of carnal reason. Faith is not occupied with difficulties,
but with Him with whom all things are possible. Faith is not occupied
with circumstances, but with the God of circumstances. Thus it was with
Elijah as we shall see when we contemplate the immediate sequel.
And what a test of Elijah’s
faith was now supplied by those doleful words of the poor widow. Consider
the situation which now confronted his eyes. A widow and her son starving:
a few sticks, a handful of meal, and a little oil between them and death.
Nevertheless God had said to him, "I have commanded a widow woman
there to sustain thee." How many would exclaim, "How deeply
mysterious, what a trying experience for the prophet ! Why, he needed
to help her rather than become a burden upon her." Ah, but like
Abraham before him, "he staggered not at the promise of God through
unbelief, but was strong in faith." He knew that the Possessor
of heaven and earth had decreed she should sustain him, and even though
there had been no meal or oil at all, that had in no wise dampened his
spirits or deterred him. O my reader, if you know anything experimentally
of the goodness, the power and faithfulness of God, let your confidence
in Him remain unshaken, no matter what appearances may be.
"He who
hath helped three hitherto,
Will help thee
all thy journey through;
And give thee
daily cause to raise
New Ebenezers
to His praise."
"Behold, I am gathering
two sticks that I may go in and dress it for me and my son, that we
may eat it, and die." Let it be duly noted that this woman did
not fail to discharge her responsibility. Up to the very end she was
industrious, making used of the means to hand. Instead of giving way
to utter despair, sitting down and wringing her hands, she was busily
occupied, gathering sticks for what she fully believed would be her
last meal. This is not an unimportant detail, but one which we need
to take to heart. Idleness is never justified, least of all in an emergency:
nay, the more desperate the situation the greater the need for us to
bestir ourselves. To give way to dejection never accomplishes any good.
Discharge your responsibility to the very end, even though it be in
preparing for your final meal. Richly was the widow repaid for her industry.
It was while she was in the path of duty (household duty!), that God,
through His servant, met with and blessed her.
Reference:
The Life of Elijah,
A.W. Pink - chapter 7.
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