Living in the Face of Adversity; 1 Kings
17:1
Pagans are becoming more and
more vocal in their opposition to Christianity and are doing what they can to
minimise, marginalise and limit the participation of Christians in anything in relation
to our nation. On the other hand so many have bought into an uninformed,
non-biblical, theologically anaemic religion that Jesus is coming back and it
is going to be in our generation, and so they have sort of given up and sit
back and sit on a hillside and watch the whole culture go to hell in a hand
basket and clap and rejoice because Jesus will come back and we won’t really
experience the collapse of the culture. That is as far from being a biblical
value as you can possibly get. Only a fool makes decisions in life or,
decisions in terms of national policy, based on an assumption that Jesus is
coming soon and we are the Rapture generation. We may not be; Jesus may not
come back for fifty or a hundred years, or two hundred years, three hundred years.
So we have to live our spiritual life in terms of accountability as if Jesus is
coming back tomorrow. But we have to work hard, get educated, plan for the
future, lay aside money for retirement, health care needs, etc., as if Jesus
isn’t coming back for a thousand years. That is the path of wisdom, because we
don’t know. That is the doctrine of imminency—the
Rapture is a signless event and no one knows the day
or the hour when Jesus is going to return for the church.
Elijah isn’t confined to just
the Old Testament. In Revelation 11 we are introduced to the two witnesses who
will come on the scene in the Tribulation period and what is said about the
ministry of those two witnesses who stand in opposition to the Antichrist is
that they call down fire from heaven and bring down plagues. The two things
they are said to do are typical of what Moses did in bringing on the plagues in
But what is Elijah going to do? Malachi 4:6 NASB
“He will restore the hearts of the fathers to {their} children and the hearts
of the children to their fathers…” And what exactly is being said here? This
idea of turning the hearts of the fathers to the children and the hearts of the
children to the fathers etc., indicates harmony being
restored to the remnant of believing Jews in the Tribulation period. This is
new covenant language. How is Elijah going to do this? How does his ministry
accomplish this? We get some illumination on this in Matthew 17:11 NASB
“And He answered and said, ‘Elijah is coming and will restore all things.” The
Greek word for “restore” is the verb apokathistemi
[a)pokaqisthmi]
and it has the idea of restoring or even re-establishing something. Are these
two prophets going to restore the Levitical sacrifices? If it is restoration
that means to put back in place something that hasn’t been in place. Does this
have to do with the sacrifices in the temple? Or, on the other hand, it would
be establishing new covenant sacrifices. The new covenant is not going to be
instigated until the return of Christ, so why would they be starting new
covenant sacrifices three and a half to seven years before Christ actually
comes back and instigates the new covenant? But then the response to that is, why would they go backward? If the Levitical sacrifices
ended with the cross why would they go back and instigate those? It is thought
that this doesn’t have anything to do with the sacrifices because the Greek
word apokathistemi is the LXX translation
of the Hebrew word shub
used in the Malachi 4:6 passage. Jesus is simply
quoting the LXX here from Malachi 4:5, 6. So what Malachi is saying
is that there is going to be this impact from Elijah’s ministry in terms of the
fathers turning to the children and the children to the fathers. The future tense that Jesus uses in Matthew
17 just simply states a future event. It is undefined future action. It could have
the implication that Elijah is coming first and will begin to restore things. That is probably the idea. Elijah is not
the one who is going to implement the whole process,
it is the Messiah when He returns. The role of Elijah, like the role of John the
Baptist, is simply to be the one who prepares the way and is the precursor for
that. But Jesus makes it clear that Elijah is still future to His time, and
this is about two thirds of the way through His public ministry. That means
this hasn’t occurred yet.
The second thing that we
see relating to this is Elijah parallels John the Baptist. The first thing we
see that brings this out is when Gabriel appears to Zechariah, the father of
John the Baptist, he defines the role of John the Baptist in this manner: Luke
1:17 NASB “It is he who will go {as a forerunner} before Him in the
spirit and power of Elijah, TO TURN THE
HEARTS OF THE FATHERS BACK TO THE CHILDREN,
and the disobedient to the attitude of the righteous, so as to make ready a
people prepared for the Lord.” That is right out of Malachi 4:5, 6. So from the
very beginning there is this connection between John the Baptist and Elijah.
They had a similar manner of dress. This is seen in 2 Kings 1:7, 8 where we
have a description of Elijah’s dress NASB “He said to them, ‘What
kind of man was he who came up to meet you and spoke these words to you?’ They
answered him, ‘{He was} a hairy man with a leather girdle bound about his
loins.’ And he said, ‘It is Elijah the Tishbite’.” Ahab
immediately recognised his unique style of dress that Elijah had. Matthew 3:4 NASB “Now John himself had a garment of
camel’s hair and a leather belt around his waist; and his food was locusts and
wild honey.” He had the same clothes that Elijah had so he is clearly identified
by his dress, by the fact that he is a loner out in the wilderness as Elijah
was; he was in the same pattern as Elijah. They had similar opposition from the
political powers and especially the women. For Elijah the opposition came from
Jezebel who had a price on his head and who hated Elijah with every ounce of
her being.
Application: If you are a
believer in the Lord Jesus Christ the very fact that you believe in God, in the
Bible and in the Lord Jesus Christ means that there are some people in this
world who are negative to the truth and negative to God who think that the greatest
thing that will ever happen in their life is to see you dead, just because your
very presence is an affront to their arrogance. And it doesn’t matter how nice you
are, how right you are, how sweet you are, how you express your beliefs or what
you say, those people hate you because your presence and your testimony,
without even saying anything, pricks their conscience because they are trying
to suppress the truth in unrighteousness and your very presence keeps getting
that truth to pop up and irritate them. They hate us, and it is irrational, it
is spiritual, and this is the mentality that is seen in the earth dwellers
during the Tribulation period. It is the kind of attitude that Jezebel had in
the time of Elijah, and Herodias, the wife of Phillip,
had it in for John the Baptist. She felt guilty. People who have real guilt and
know that they are guilty are going to just hate those whose very presence
reminds them of their guilt. Christians will always have that effect on some
people.
A third parallel we see
between Elijah and John the Baptist is that they both anoint their successors
in the
A fourth point of
comparison is Elisha is given empirical validation of
his role so that he sees the glory cloud coming down from heaven and the
departure of Elijah. In the same way there was empirical validation of Jesus at
the
Matt
In Matthew 11there is
another interesting interchange which occurs between John the Baptist and
Jesus. John is Jesus’ cousin, he has heard the story
of Jesus’ birth many times from his mother Elizabeth. But like all of us, when
things aren’t quite working out the way we expect them to we need a little
reconfirmation from somewhere to make sure we got it right and that we really
understood it. Matthew 11:2 NASB “Now when John, while
imprisoned, heard of the works of Christ, he sent {word} by his disciples
Then in Matthew 11:6ff
Jesus goes on to talk a little more about the ministry of John the Baptist. Matt
11:7 NASB “As these men were going {away,} Jesus began to speak to
the crowds about John, ‘What did you go out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken by the wind?
That raises questions.
Does that mean that in the end times there is going to be a literal return of
Elijah or just someone in the spirit of Elijah? We are not sure. But the “what
if” is related to human volition. If they had accepted Jesus as Messiah the
kingdom would have come in, John the Baptist would have fulfilled that role as
Elijah as Malachi had prophesied. But that didn’t happen, so that means there
is a yet future fulfilment on the Malachi passage which means either Elijah or
someone coming in the spirit of Elijah is going to fulfil that Malachi passage at
the time of the great and terrible day of the Lord. That puts us into
Revelation chapter eleven and the two witnesses. The point that we see here is
that if we are taking a stand for truth, a stand for God, we will be targeted. And
the more pagan the culture becomes around us the more we are not going to be
able to run and hide. They are going to come after everybody simply because
those who have rejected the truth cannot stand to have anybody present who
affirms truth.
We can take a lot of
instruction from Elijah because Elijah is confronting them, and God is
confronting them through Elijah. Everything that we are going to see in this
chapter and the following ones is God tweaking the nose of the pagans. God isn’t
politically correct and He isn’t going to just sit back and let it happen. He
is going to provide evidence of the guilt of the pagans and at the same time He
is providing that evidence He is also reaching out to prove who He is. As he
brings judgment against them he is also extending to them the offer of grace and
salvation. Elijah is dealing with the false system of Baal worship which was
ultimately a devotion to a false god, a false system of thinking that Baal
would provide prosperity, rain weather, and everything that would provide for
the prosperity of the crops. Everything that we see here is a polemic, a
challenge to the belief in Baal. That is important for us to understand because
we are so divorced from the culture and what is going on in the worship of Baal
that often we don’t understand how active God is in attacking the
presuppositions of the false religious systems around him. God is on the offensive
through the prophets and through the church, but it is how we engage that is
important. A lot of people want to get out there using wrong ways to engage so
we have to clarify that as we go through these studies.