Living in the Face of Paganism; 1 Kings 16:34-17:1
As we look at Elijah one of
the key things we need to remember is what the New Testament says in relation
to Elijah, that he was a man with a nature like ours. There is such a tendency for
us as human beings to get involved in some kind of hero worship where we put
spiritual leaders, whether they are pastors or Old Testament prophets or key
leaders of any kind, on some form of pedestal and we forget that we are all
sinners and that we all have various trends, failings, flaws in our sin
natures, and that none of us are able to do anything apart from the grace of
God. What makes the difference is their mental attitude toward God and their
willingness to radically and completely trust God in the midst of the most
difficult situations. We see them fail when they get their eyes off the Lord,
just as we do, and that is encouraging for us because we may not be able to
pull off the miracles that Elijah did when he was on Mount Carmel (because we are
in a different dispensation and have a different role) but the principles that
energised his spiritual life are the same ones that energise ours. The focus in
James 5 is on his prayer which really isn’t emphasised that much in 1 Kings 17.
If we are just reading through 1 Kings we may not realise just how critical
prayer was to what Elijah is doing in the chapters related to his life.
We should remember that he is
man with a nature like ours, so he is susceptible to all of the same trends of
his sin nature that we are—fear, anxiety, worry, mental attitude sins of
self-reliance, trying to make things work on our own apart from God—and God has
to take him through various testing situations and circumstances in order to
teach him and prepare him for where He is taking him down the road in his
ministry. 1 Kings 18 happened because of events in 1 Kings 17. Secondly, Elijah
lived in a time that is amazingly parallel to our own time period and so we can
see principles and pull out some principles on how we should live in the midst
of not only a pagan culture, a pagan worldview, and a culture that surrounded
him that was antagonistic to God, but one that was radically antagonistic. As
we will see in 1 Kings 18 Jezebel has killed a number of prophets and other believers
and so there is a high level of persecution against believers to the point of
costing them their lives.
A verse that is often
overlooked is 1 Kings 16:34 NASB “In his days Hiel
the Bethelite built Jericho; he laid its foundations with the {loss of} Abiram his firstborn, and set up its gates with the {loss
of} his youngest son Segub, according to the word of
the LORD, which He spoke by Joshua the son of Nun.” When Hiel
started the project to rebuild Jericho God took the life of his firstborn, as
God had indicated back in Joshua 6:26, and when he completed the project his
youngest son’s life was taken. This reveals something about Hiel’s
mentality that is characteristic of the era. He is so concerned about success
and completing his project that that the life of his sons are not relevant,
they don’t matter to him, he is more concerned about his success than his own
sons. It also says something about his attitude toward God, that he really
didn’t think this is something that God did. He is ignorant of God’s Word
perhaps, ignorant of the curse from Joshua, although curses like that tend not
to go away. People remember these things and Heil was probably not completely
ignorant of it but he doesn’t care. What we see in this verse and in the
context at the end of chapter 16 is a real window into the culture of 9th
century BC Israel in the northern kingdom and its apostasy, and there
are a number of parallels between this whole era and our own.
- Fools live in a fantasy world and make policy
based on fallacy. Scripture says that the fool has said in his heart there
is no God, and throughout much of Scripture there is the contrast between
wisdom and foolishness; the life of the wise and the life of the fool.
Wisdom in Scripture is skilful living, how a creature lives skilfully
before God so that he creates in his life that which has real beauty and
glorifies the creator. In contrast to that there is the fool. The fool is
the person who builds his life on completely false assumptions. Jesus
talks about the man who builds his house on shifting sand. This is the
same idea that a person builds his life, his thinking, his values and
whole approach to life on completely fallacious assumptions. The verse
that says the fool says there is no God is also saying something more
profound, and that is that the person who operates his life as if there is
no God is a fool. When people operate on a non-biblical foundation and are
not operating on divine viewpoint but human viewpoint, then they are
constructing a fantasy view of reality. They are not dealing with life as
God has made it and it is but they are going top deal with creation on the
basis of their own ideas. This is what is brought out in Romans chapter
one which talks about man in negative volition rejecting God, and so he
worships the creation rather than the creator. Professing himself to be
wise he becomes a fool. There is a lot of technical achievement but the
bottom line is that God is rejected and so even though men may make a lot
of good decisions and accomplish things and do them well, but both the
believer and the unbeliever are living in God’s world and can only create
their own fantasies for so long until they bump their head on the ceiling
of reality. When there is a culture of people who have rejected God they
are going to put something in His place. The absence of God always creates
a vacuum and a vacuum sucks in whatever is around that
appeals to the desires of the unbeliever. Unbelievers always have
to have some sort of origin story; everybody has to know where they came
from. Who am I? What am I? Is there a God? These are basic questions
people ask as they begin to grow up. Those who deny that there is a God
and reject the biblical God and the biblical story of creation have to
have a substitute. They can’t just lives as if there is no answer to the
question and so they have to generate some kind of answer. That is
foundational to all thought, unless one is radically and irrationally
inconsistent—which a lot pf people are, they just don’t want to think
things through and try to connect the dots. This is typical of any kind of
human viewpoint.
A
lot of people just functionally reject God. They have a smorgasbord view of
religion. This is born out more and more by various surveys that are made today
where people just want to have a cafeteria style religion where they go through
and pick this out of Buddhism, this out of Hinduism, and this out of Islam, and
this out of secular humanism, and this out of Christianity and blend it and mix
it up and come up with their own little religious system. They just don’t think
that these things need to be thought out an integrated with one another. They
live in a fantasy world, but the trouble with living in a fantasy world is that
reality always seems to rear its ugly head at some point when something
happens. This is what happened with Hiel when he
generated in the northern kingdom of Israel a fantasy view related to the existence of Yahweh. It started with the revisionism
that was promoted by the government. As Hiel begins
to rebuild Jericho he is willing to completely reject the
prophesy that Joshua had made. Joshua 6:26 NASB “Then Joshua made them take
an oath at that time, saying, ‘Cursed before the LORD is the man who rises up and
builds this city Jericho; with {the loss of} his firstborn he shall lay its
foundation, and with {the loss of} his youngest son he shall set up its gates’.”
That is literally and precisely
fulfilled in the episode with Hiel. But it is not
just a matter of prophesy being stated and fulfilled as mush as it tells us
about the foolishness and the fantasy view of reality that characterises not
only Hiel but the whole culture in the northern
kingdom. They have rejected the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob as a real
entity who interacts with creation and holds mankind accountable for the
decisions they make, and that as the creator He has established within the framework
of creation certain standards, certain realities, that when we violate these
built-in social laws, economic laws, physical laws, that the result is going to
be catastrophic. Within this open universe in which we live God intervenes, and
when we get to a point of negative volition beyond a certain point God
intervenes and brings about judgment and certain consequences. What we see with
this one individual, and the reason he is brought into this, is that it gives
us a picture of this whole culture in the northern kingdom that Elijah has to
deal with and that he will be confronting in the next few chapters. They don’t
believe that Yahweh is really there;
they don’t believe that Yahweh really
intervenes in life, and they don’t believe that Yahweh is really relevant to day-to-day decisions. That is the
essence of being a fool. What has happened in numerous cultures down through
the centuries is that when God is removed and we start operating on a false
foundation of thought sooner or later the decisions begin to accumulate and
things begin to fall apart. We see this in our culture today.
This
affects not only economics but it also affects the ethics. All law ultimately
is going to be built on some sort of ethical foundation and if you have a
system that is based on relativism, upon a god that is just a super-sized human
who is always fighting, violent, at war with other gods and involved in all
sorts of promiscuous sexual activity, then this is going to be imitated in the
culture. This is exactly what we have seen in the northern kingdom.
- Life is not as important The
same thing characterised the thinking of the Jews and the religious Jewish
leaders in Israel at the time of Christ. They are coming at it
from the opposite side, not from an atheistic side per se but from a
religious, legalistic side. But in the episode recorded in the Gospels
about the Gadarene demoniac, when He cast the
demons out and into the pigs (unclean animals according to the Mosaic Law)
in a Gentile area, the people were more concerned about what happened to
the pigs than the individual who had just been delivered. This also happens
in a pagan culture and we have the same kinds of things happening today—abortion
(which is not murder but that does not mean it is the right approach to
solving unwanted pregnancies), infanticide, and then that bleeds over into
euthanasia. This develops a very utilitarian view of life that a person’s value
is not only the fact that they are created in the image and likeness of
God, and therefore life itself has value and should be protected, but life
only has value in terms of how somebody can contribute to society and if
they become more of a hindrance than a help then they are no longer wanted.
We see this reflected in Hiel’s attitude that he
has by removing God from the scene as not being really involved in
day-to-day things, and maybe He didn’t really exist, but for him life wasn’t
important and he has a very callous view towards the loss of life of his
two sons.
- Success and the worship of material prosperity becomes foremost with the people. That is an outgrowth
in the whole fertility religion cult system. Baal and the Asherah were the gods and goddesses who would provide agricultural
fertility and prosperity so that if one was to properly placate or
propitiate the gods through various sacrifices, including the sacrifice of
infants, then this would motivate the gods to provide success and
prosperity. This is reflected in Hiel’s attitude
because he wants to rebuild the city, he wants it
to be a city of commerce, a city where he could make himself wealthy at
the expense of his two sons. Nothing was more important to him than that
material success and prosperity. We see the same thing in America today.
- The
results of religious decisions ultimately impact policy decisions. These religious decisions shift first to the golden
calf and Baalism were decisions that impacted
the policy of Ahab and Jezebel, and this in turn brought about judgment
from God on the nation in terms of the various stages of the divine
institutions. This is why He is bringing drought on the nation and
economic collapse. It in the midst of that economic collapse that we see
Elijah learning his lessons that related to his spiritual advance. We see
that the decisions that are made on the basis of fantasy then become
institutionalised in terms of various policies. For example, today we have
an origin theory that has been developed from Darwin on, on the theory of evolution,
that is considered to be fact. It is functional reality for the
vast majority of Americans. Evolutionary theory is the framework for the
modern environmentalist movement which really has more affinity with
paganism than anything else and an inherent hostility to human beings.
- Those who stand up for absolutes and objective
truth will be demonised, marginalised and criminalised. They are made to be
the enemy, and there is more open hostility today that is vocalised in the
press, vocalised by various individuals in society, and Christianity is
blamed for so many things. The more conservative and biblical one is the
more he is demonised. Dispensationalists become demonised by a certain
segment of evangelicals because they see our support for Israel to be one of the real stumbling blocks to America having peaceful relations with Muslim countries,
etc.
So there was the persecution
of opponents. Jezebel had hundreds of believers killed because of their refusal
to bow the knee to Baal. This is the culture and the situation into which Elijah
is going to come. 1 Kings 17:1 NASB “Now Elijah the Tishbite, who was of the settlers of Gilead,
said to Ahab, ‘As the LORD, the God of Israel lives, before whom I stand, surely there shall be
neither dew nor rain these years, except by my word’.” This is the first time
we hear about Elijah. Nobody has ever heard of him before, he hasn’t been mentioned
previously in the Scriptures; he just suddenly and dramatically appears before
the king of the northern kingdom who is a somewhat powerful king. He fits his
name [My God is Yahweh] because he is
going to demonstrate the reality of Yahweh
over against the fantasies of Baalism which is simply
being used by Ahab and Jezebel to have power and control over the people. There
is nothing in the text that says God told Elijah to do this but we can
extrapolate from what happens from this point on that he doesn’t make a move
anywhere in the narrative apart from God telling him what to do. See verses 2, 8,
18:1, etc. The phrase “As the LORD, the God of Israel lives” is a very important phrase
because he is emphasising the fact that the God of Israel is a living God as
opposed to the idols of Baal and Asherah that are
made of wood or stone or metal. The God of Israel is a living God and both a
personal God and an infinite God and He is involved in
the affairs of men. So he is not simply saying something that is a stock phrase,
something that would give a little more impetus to what he is saying; he is
making a strong statement about the fact that he represents the living, true
God of Israel and that this God intervenes in the affairs of men. Ahab has been
violating God’s Word and because of that God is going to initiate judgment
against the northern kingdom.
God is a living God and He is
a personal God; we can know Him and we can have a relationship with Him. That
relationship comes only through faith in Jesus Christ. After we trust Christ as
saviour and we are saved the next step is for us to learn the Word so that we
can know God. Jesus told Philip in a very important dialogue in John 14 that if
he had seen Him he had seen the Father: “Have I been so long with you, and
{yet} you have not come to know Me, Philip?” In other words, you are saved but
you don’t know me. Knowledge of Jesus, knowledge of God, is the result of years
of Bible study, growth, prayer and developing that relationship with God. Paul
said this is part of our goal as believers, Philippians 3:10 NASB “that
I may know Him and the power of His resurrection…” We come to know God only
through the process of studying His Word. Resurrection is through the power of
the Holy Spirit, it is the Holy Spirit who is the empowerment for the Christian
life. The Christian life is a supernatural way of life and we can only live it
on the basis of the Word of God and the Spirit of God—walking by the Spirit,
the filling of the Spirit, then we can experience the power that raised Jesus
from the dead in our own spiritual lives. This principle is also true in the
Old Testament. Daniel 11:32
NASB “…but the people who know their God will display strength and
take action.” Those who don’t know God are weak and the culture falls apart. 2
Chronicles 16:9 “For the eyes of the LORD move to and fro throughout the earth that He may
strongly support those whose heart is completely His…” As we want to know God
He is the one who provides us with the strength and the power to live the
Christian life. It is God who is the real strength and power in Elijah’s life.
“…before whom I stand…” Elijah
recognises that he is the representative of God and that his mission is
divinely ordained and divinely established, it doesn’t matter what Ahab says at
all. For him the presence of God is more real than the presence of Ahab. We
never get anywhere in the Christian life until we realise that the truth of God’s
Word has to be more real to us than our experience, more real to us than any of
the adversities that we face, the problems that we see; we have to see that God
has a plan for us, that His plan is perfect and wherever that plan takes us God
is going to sustain us and provide for us. That is exactly what Elijah was
doing.
The other aspect of this has
to do with Elijah’s mission. As a prophet he was representing God to the
nation, and he is going to challenge the nation with their lack of obedience to
God and the fact that they had violated the Mosaic covenant. This then
expressed in the past phrase: “…surely there shall be neither dew nor rain
these years, except by my word.” He recognises his authority but it doesn’t
come from within Elijah, he is not just making this up, it comes from the Word
of God—Leviticus 26:18-20, where God had expressed that one of the ways He
would punish the nation was to bring a drought. Cf. Deuteronomy 11:16, 17. Of
course, this would bring about a tremendous economic collapse in an
agricultural society.