Divine Omnipotence plus Grace equals
Sufficiency. 2 Kings 4:1-27
In chapter two there is the
anointing of Elisha’s ministry, the beginning of his
ministry, and as we go through these chapters from chapter two down through chapter
thirteen we will see a number of things occur in his ministry. These are things
that seem odd or unusual to us at times, and other things that just seem like
they are just historical narrative. If we are reading this and are not familiar
with the significance of these events it is very easy to think that this is
just something that happened all those years ago and it is hard to see how this
has real significance or relevance to us today. In Paul’s mind in 2 Timothy
3:16, 17 the focus is really more on the Old Testament—“All scripture is
profitable…” All Scripture has application for today and much of it is
important for us because it teaches us about the character of God, about His
person. As we see His dealings with Israel in the Old Testament they parallel His dealings with
us in the New Testament. There are differences, of course, because there are
differences of dispensation and as believers today we have different spiritual
assets than they had in the Old Testament. Also, much of what we see in the Old
Testament is designed to set up certain patterns. We see through these patterns
that are repeated over and over again, and then we see these patterns depicted
again in the New Testament, so we can learn many different things, many
different principles about God in those patterns.
What we see in 2 Kings chapter three is the transition from the ministry of Elijah
to Elisha. In many ways Elisha’s
ministry is very similar to Elijah’s but there are also some distinct and
important differences. Elijah had approximately six or seven miracles whereas Elisha has, depending on what we attribute a miracle to be,
how we define it, anywhere from fifteen to eighteen different miracles. There
is a difference in the orientation of Elijah’s ministry. He is mostly out of
the land, out of the spotlight. He is down by the brook Cherith
which is in the land but he is isolated there; then he is in Zarephath which is in the land of the Phoenicians; later he
will go down to Mount Horeb, and so he is mostly out
of the land and he has a ministry where he is directly confronting Ahab with
divine judgment because of idolatry. When we come to Elisha
the ministry is more oriented to restoration and the blessing and grace
provision of God. Elisha’s ministry is almost always
in the land of Israel
and therefore it is always oriented towards this ministry of blessing.
Another pattern to develop as
we go through this is the parallels between Elijah and Elisha
as a foreshadowing of the ministries of John the Baptist and Jesus. We are all
familiar with the fact that there is a clear scriptural pattern that is drawn
between Elijah in the Old Testament and John the Baptist. Elisha
is not isolated as Elijah was, he has around him a
community of believers, the sons of the prophets. He focuses more on blessing,
he has various miracles that are very similar to those that Jesus performs, and
in many ways Elisha’s ministry is
a forerunner and a pattern of what the Lord Jesus Christ would do when He came.
Elijah and Elisha stand at the center of the history of Israel, between Moses in approximately 1400 BC and the Lord
Jesus Christ who comes and whose ministry is approximately AD 30. As we
look at the ministries of Elijah and Elisha there is
this explosion of the miraculous that is distinct from the period before them.
There are a few miracles that occur between Moses and Elijah and there are a
few that occur after Elisha, but there is just this
explosion of miraculous activity during their two ministries and they stand at
a critical juncture in the history of Israel. So these two prophets have a unique and vital role
in the history of God’s revelation of Himself to Israel and to us. Elijah’s ministry ended in 2 Kings 2; Elisha’s ministry begins at that point and extends until
his death in 2 Kings 13. Together their ministries are to the northern kingdom
of Israel and they cover a period of approximately sixty years
during one of the most spiritually dark periods in the history of Israel, and one of the periods of political chaos as well as
economic depression. It is a time of increasing paganism where paganism
controlled the leadership of the nation and paganism controlled the culture of
the northern kingdom. During this time the believers in the northern kingdom
not only had to endure, along with everybody else, the economic judgment of God
on the northern kingdom, but they also had to handle the pressure of living in
a pagan culture that constantly sought to push them and force them to conform
to the pagan worship of the Baals and the Asherim. Beyond that there was the political pressure of
persecution where there was Jezebel’s hit squads going out trying to identify
the believers and then executing them. So it is a time of both divine
discipline of having the endure plus the external
pressures from the pagan culture as well as persecution.
This has a lot of application
for us as we go through these chapters because in a similar way in our nation
we are facing economic decline and possibly economic disaster. We need to
prepare for circumstances that indeed may be much worse than what is going on
right now. We have government policies that continue to devalue the dollar,
continue to multiply at an unbelievable rate the debt of the nation—a violation
of establishment principles—and we continue to have all manner of corruption,
both in the private sector as well as the public sector. We also see the
increasing pressure from a pagan culture around us to conform to the
relativistic secular ideals that are promoted through education, through the
media, through films, through television, through peer pressure; all of these
things are there and parents raising children today have a job that is a
thousand times more difficult than when they were growing up because the
country is much more overtly pagan than it was even twenty or thirty years ago.
So we have the pressure from a pagan relativistic, postmodern worldview where
multiculturalism and relativism has become so embedded within the thought
structure of the institutions of our nation that people in leadership can no
longer look accurately at the things that are going on; it may be politically
incorrect to do so.
There are a lot of parallels
between Elijah and Elisha and our own times and that
is why the doctrines that are covered in these chapters are critical for us,
and they all wrap around two or three major doctrines, but then within each
different episode, each different miracle that we see, we will identify certain
other important doctrines that we must also explore.
To get into this chapter we
must address four things. First we have to summarize what happens in these
chapters. We need to understand these events in light of the Mosaic covenant
themes of blessing and cursing. Only then can we properly interpret them and
not end up with just a bunch of interesting little stories and narratives.
Third, we also need to understand these events in light of what God is doing
specifically through the Elijah-Elisha ministries
during that time in history. Then we need to see these events in light of their
typology as they foreshadow key doctrines and events in the life of John the
Baptist and Jesus.
Starting at 2 Kings 2:13, 14 we will go through the sixteen miracles of Elisha. These miracles are not just done in order to
satisfy certain needs. That is a mistake that many people make when they come
to the miracles of Jesus. Every single miracle in the life of Jesus was for a
purpose—to teach people about God, His Word, and about His provision for us.
The same thing is true about the miracles and the ministries of Elijah and Elisha. The first miracle we see in the ministry of Elisha is the parting of the Jordan river as he comes back from the time when the transition
occurs between Elijah and Elisha and Elijah is taken
in the whirlwind to heaven. The key players in this first miracle are Elijah
who has just departed, Elisha,
and the sons of the prophets from Jericho. When Elijah was taken to heaven Elisha
tore his clothes indicating his grief. He takes up the mantle of Elijah which
was a symbol of his divine authority as a prophet and as he headed back and as
he crossed the Jordan he took the mantle of Elijah and put it in the water of the Jordan. The Jordan then split, God separated the waters, and he crossed
over the Jordan on dry land. This was to demonstrate that Elisha had the same power, the same Spirit of God upon him
that Elijah had had.
Notice, too, it was a water
miracle. As we go through these miracles we notice that most of them had to do
with water, oil, grain, and they almost all have something to do with life.
Why? Because God is continuing to demonstrate through these miracles that He, Yahweh the God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, is the sovereign God of the universe; He is the God of life, the one who
supplies that which is needed for life—water, oil, grain.
It is not Baal, the false god of the Phoenicians. God is demonstrating to the
nation through these miracles, just as He had done through Elijah, that Baal
and the Asherim are impotent and can’t do anything;
it is He who supplies all that is needed for life. So there is this contrast
being set up here between the death culture of the fertility religion and the
life that only God can provide. Remember that when Moses gave his parting
sermon, the book of Deuteronomy, he ended it by saying: “Choose you this day
death or life.” These are the options God sets before every single human being.
What we see in all of these sixteen miracles that occur in Elisha’s
ministry is this emphasis on life, that God gives life whereas the pagan
culture of the northern kingdom of Israel is a culture of death. We have to decide if we are
going to choose the path of obedience to God which leads to life or the path of
assimilation to the culture which is the path of death. 2 Kings 2:13, 14 shows that Elisha has the same power
of God, the life-giving Yahweh, and
he is going to be the new prophetic leader in the northern kingdom.
The second miracle that
occurs is in the same chapter, vv. 19-22, when he came to Jericho and the city came to him and said that the water was
bad. The water was bitter and the ground was barren, a picture of death, the judgment of God upon the land and upon the water. It is
death, and so they come to Elisha who puts salt in
the water and says, v. 21, “Thus says the LORD, ‘I have purified these waters; there shall not be
from there death or unfruitfulness any longer.’” Death and barrenness is the
result of sin and disobedience. Now there is going to be life, the water is now
purified. Again, this is a water miracle.
Then there is another little
event. There are three of these judgment curses in this section and because they
do involve the action of God’s power and are not just things that circumstantially
happen. It is still something that indicates a miracle, something of divine
intervention that has occurred. As we have seen, when Elisha
left Jericho he went up to Bethel and there were the bunch of juvenile
delinquents that came out—obviously a large number because not all of them were
mauled by the bears, just 42—to ridicule Elisha
because they don’t respect his authority and that he has the authority of
Elijah. Elisha pronounces a curse on them, v. 24, and
two female bears maul them. That is a sign of judgment, that disobedience to
God brings death and judgment; in contrast these other miracles emphasize
obedience to God who brings life and blessing. That is the third miracle.
The fourth miracle in chapter
three is the defeat of Moab. In that event Elisha is
sought out for his counsel because as they circled around the southern part of
the Dead Sea and all of the dried up
desert area they ran out of water. The waters came down and filled the
trenches. Water comes at the command of God. He provides the water, and not
only that, when the Moabite army arose the next morning and looked at the
Israelite army and because of the refraction of the light to the water it
appeared to be blood. This was a miracle that God provided so
that it looked like blood and cause them to think the three kings had
fallen out with each other, the armies had slaughtered each other, and now they
are going to take advantage of the situation, charge in and destroy the
Israelites. But they are taken by surprise because God has deceived them, and
they get slaughtered by the armies of Judah, Israel and Edom. God had provided a life for the armies of Israel but He did not give them a total victory because it
was not His will for them to take possession of Moab.
In chapter four is the fifth
miracle, the oil provided for the widow. The key people here are Elisha, the woman’s dead husband who is one of the sons of
the prophets and a faithful believer, his widow, his two children and their
creditor. The husband was a faithful believer but he had some debts and now the
creditor is coming to put pressure on the widow to pay up. If she didn’t pay up
the children would be made slaves. The widow is destitute and has absolutely
nothing except one jar of oil. She comes to Elisha as
the representative of God to provide a solution to her problem. Elisha tells her to gather all her containers, every one
she could find, put them in her house, close the door, and then to start filling those containers with the
oil from the pot that she had. She began to do that. God, of course,
miraculously multiplied the oil and she filled up every single container until
there were no more containers that could be found. Elisha
then told her to sell off enough for her to pay the debt and to keep the
remainder in order to provide for the finances of her family. This was a miracle
from God showing once again that God’s grace is sufficient. He can solve the
problems; His resources are infinite. The emphasis is on blessing for those who
are trusting in God, and that there is life in the land even when the people of
God are surrounded by judgment on the rank paganism that is there. There is
this life versus death theme: life from God and death in paganism.
The next episode in chapter
four describes the Shunamite woman, vv. 8-37. Briefly,
the key people here are Elisha, his servant Gehazi, the Shunamite woman, her
husband and her son. At the beginning we see this woman who lives in the Jezreel Valley and who sees Elisha coming
back and forth before her house on a periodic basis and so she tells her
husband that they should honor the prophet of God. 2 Kings 4:10 NASB
“Please, let us make a little walled upper chamber and let us set a bed for him
there, and a table and a chair and a lampstand; and
it shall be, when he comes to us, {that} he can turn in there.” In return for
this and for her devotion to God and her grace orientation Elisha
told her that in about a year she would have a child. She and her husband are
older, like Abraham and Sarah, and it is not possible for them to have
children. Again this depicts God giving life where there is death. God is the
source of life. And so the child is born and lives for some years and then
suddenly becomes ill and dies. Now the woman reacts and becomes somewhat angry
and bitter towards Elisha.
2 Kin 4:27, 28 NASB “When she came to the man of God
to the hill, she caught hold of his feet. And Gehazi
came near to push her away; but the man of God said, ‘Let her alone, for her
soul is troubled within her; and the LORD has hidden it from me and has not told me.’ Then she
said, ‘Did I ask for a son from my lord? Did I not say, ‘Do not deceive me’?’” So
Elisha sends Gehazi to heal
the child but that doesn’t work and so Elisha comes
and lies down upon the child, prays to God, and the
child then is brought back to life, vv. 34, 35. Again, this emphasizes that God
is the solution to our problems, His grace is magnificent and sufficient, and
He has the power and the ability to solve all of our problems. That was the sixth
miracle.
The seventh is the
poisoned pot, 4:38-41. During the
same famine that was going on all of this time the prophet comes to Gilgal where he sees the sons of the prophets. So the key
players are Elisha and the sons of the prophets. They
are sitting there and to make a meal they go out into the fields to get vegetables
to put into the stew, along with some gourds from a wild vine which poisons the
stew. They cry out to Elisha that there is death ion
the pot. He puts some flour into the pot and says to serve it to the people so
that they may eat, so now it is going to provide for many. It is like the
feeding of the five thousand that we see in Jesus’ ministry. Again God’s grace
is sufficient, it is through trusting in God that
there is life rather than death.
Then the eighth miracle is
in the last few verses of the chapter which is the multiplying of the loaves
and the grain. 2 Kings 4:42-44 NASB “Now a man came from Baal-shalishah, and brought the man of God bread of the first
fruits, twenty loaves of barley and fresh ears of grain in his sack. And he
said, ‘Give {them} to the people that they may eat.’ His attendant said, ‘What,
will I set this before a hundred men?’ But he said, ‘Give {them} to the people
that they may eat, for thus says the LORD, ‘They shall eat and have
{some} left over.’’ So he set {it} before them, and they ate and had {some}
left over, according to the word of the LORD.” Again, God is the source of life, His grace is
abundant and free, and there is death apart from God.
In chapter five we have
the healing of Naaman, a Gentile, showing that God’s
blessing isn’t just limited to Israel. Elisha hears about what
has happened and he comes and tells Naaman to go wash
in the Jordan seven times and he would be healed. The man thinks
this is silly and stupid at first, gets mad at Elisha
and prepares to go home but his servant comes and tells him to simmer down and
trust in God. Naaman does and he washes in the Jordan seven times and is healed. He returns to Elisha and praises God. 2 Kings 5:15 NASB “When
he returned to the man of God with all his company, and came and stood before
him, he said, ‘Behold now, I know that there is no God in all the earth, but in
Israel; so please take a present from your servant now’.” He tries to give a
gift but Elisha won’t take anything.
The tenth miracle is the floating
axe head. Elisha makes the axe head float as the
workers are preparing a place down by the Jordan. The axe head that they have borrowed flies off the
handle and sinks in the water and Elisha throws a
stick in the water so that the iron will float. Again, these miracles confirm
who Elisha is. If they had lost the borrowed axe head
there would have been some penalty and it again shows that God’s grace is
sufficient, He handles all of our problems.
The eleventh miracle deals
with what we might call the divine espionage. The Syrians are constantly in
battle with the northern kingdom of Israel. The king of Syria keeps getting outwitted by the king of Israel who seems to know his every move. He begins to blame
those in his periphery that they are selling out to the enemy, that there is a
spy among them. They say no it is just this prophet Elisha
who knows your every move because God tells him. You
can’t avoid the omniscience of God. The king of Syria is now really angry with Elisha
so he sends his whole army after Elisha. Elisha is down in a small village in Israel with Gehazi. Gehazi goes out in the morning and sees that the city is
surrounded by this army. They have a capture order for Elisha,
so Gehazi comes back panicky. Elisha
prays to God the he will open his eyes, pull back the curtain, as it were,
between physical, material earth so that Gehazi can
see the myriads of angels which stands between Elisha
and the Syrian army—recognizing that the battle is the Lord’s, it is not out
battle, and that we need to trust in Him and He is the one who gives us the
victory.
The next episode is when
they capture a couple of the Syrians and rather than kill them or put them in
prison the king of Israel asks Elisha what he should
do with them. Elisha says not to kill them but to put
water and food before them that they may eat and drink and go to their master. In
other words, deal with them in grace and kindness, give them that which promotes
life rather than death, and the result is that they go
home and this particular action by the Syrians against them is shut down.
Then in verse 24 there is
another military action against the northern kingdom. 2 Kings 6:25 NASB
“There was a great famine in Samaria; and behold, they besieged it, until a donkey’s head
was sold for eighty {shekels} of silver, and a fourth of a kab
of dove’s dung for five {shekels} of silver.” That is a lot for just a donkey’s
head to cook and make soup. That would be like two or three month’s wages just
top make a donkey head soup. The circumstances were really tough. Not only that
but there is another situation where one woman comes who had entered into a
bargain with a neighbor lady and said, We are starving
to death. We will cook your son for dinner today and cook mine for dinner
tomorrow. The neighbor lady killed her son but when it came time for the first
lady’s turn she wouldn’t give up her son. It was really tough in the northern
kingdom under divine discipline. The king went to Elisha
wanting to know what the solution would be. God was going to provide the
answer. This is the thirteenth episode.
2 Kings 7:1 NASB
Then Elisha said, “Listen to the word of the LORD; thus says
the LORD, ‘Tomorrow about this time a measure of fine flour will be {sold} for
a shekel, and two measures of barley for a shekel, in the gate of Samaria.’” In other words, there is going to be abundance
tomorrow. What happens during the night is similar to what happens to the king
of Assyria later on. Suddenly there is panic in the camp of the Syrian
army and they all flee leaving everything behind—all of their food and
provisions—as they run back to Syria because they thought they heard the rumblings of an
army. A couple of lepers who are out begging by the gate of the city decide
they are going to die if they stay there and if they go into the city they are
going to be killed, so they decide to surrender to the Syrians and maybe we can
get food from them. They are the ones who discover the empty camp. Again, a wonderful example of God providing escape for Israel; life rather than death. God is the source, His grace
is more than sufficient.
Then we come to another
episode with the Shunamite woman. This is the
fourteenth miracle where her land is restored to her. Elisha
tells her to leave Israel during this time of famine and she lived among the
Philistines for seven years. When she returned she found that all of her land
and property had been confiscated and she went to the king. When the king found
out who she was and that Elisha
had raised her son from the dead, so he restores all of her land to her.
The fifteenth miracle
involves the episode with Hazael in the latter part
of chapter eight, vv. 7-15. Ben-hadad is about to die
so he sends his second in command, Hazael, to seek
out Elisha to find out if he is really going to die. Hazael goes to meet Elisha and Elisha says, You are going to be
the next king, and he begins to weep. He is weeping because God has revealed to
Elisha that Hazael is going
to terribly persecute the northern kingdom, attack them, and hundreds will be
killed in the violence and famine that will come because of Hazael.
Hazel returns and tells Ben-hadad that he is going to
live and then killed him.
The last miracle is after Elisha dies in chapter thirteen. A man who is dead is
thrown in to the grave with him and because of Elisha’s
dead bones there a miracle occurs and the man comes back to life. Once again,
God gives life where there is death.
What is taught in all of
this is the doctrine of grace. Notice the emphasis on providing the resources
of life—rain, water, oil. God’s grace is more than sufficient. He is the source
of life.
Deuteronomy 30:15 NASB
“See, I have set before you today life and prosperity, and death and adversity;
[16] in that I command you today to love the LORD your God, to walk in His
ways and to keep His commandments and His statutes and His judgments, that you
may live and multiply, and that the LORD your God may bless you in the land where you are entering
to possess it.” What is the key to life and good? It is following the Lord. [17]
“But if your heart turns away and you will not obey, but are drawn away and
worship other gods and serve them, [18] I declare to you today
that you shall surely perish. You will not prolong {your} days in the land
where you are crossing the Jordan to enter and possess it. [19] I call heaven and earth
to witness against you today, that I have set before you life and death, the
blessing and the curse. So choose life in order that you may live, you and your
descendants, [20] by loving the LORD your God, by obeying His
voice, and by holding fast to Him; for this is your life and the length of your
days, that you may live in the land which the LORD swore to your fathers, to
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to give them.”
What was happening with
Elijah and Elisha was the outworking of that
principle. Elisha is demonstrating through all of these
miracles, these visual training aids, that God is the source of life. He is
still the source of life. This is the background for understanding the key message
we will come across in the first three chapters of the Gospel of John.
John 3:16 NASB “For God so
loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in
Him shall not perish, but have eternal life.” The choice is death
or life; our way or God’s way. [17] “For God did not send the Son into the
world to judge the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.
[18] He who believes in Him is not judged; he who does not believe has been
judged already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten
Son of God. [19] This is the judgment, that the Light has come
into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the Light, for their
deeds were evil. [20] John 3:20 For everyone who does [practices]
evil hates the Light, and does not come to the Light for fear that his deeds
will be exposed. [21] But he who practices the truth comes to the
Light, so that his deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God.”
John 3:36 NASB “He who believes in the Son has
eternal life; but he who does not obey the Son will not see life, but the wrath
of God abides on him.” The message is clear from Genesis to Revelation: choose
life or choose death. The path of life is to obey God. The path to life is only
through the Lord Jesus Christ, both in terms of salvation and then in terms of
living out the Christian life. Those who fail in disobedience follow the path
of death, judgment and discipline. The only way to survive, whatever the
circumstances may be, is to recognize the sufficiency of God’s grace. He will
provide the answer for everything; He can give from His abundant resources all that is necessary for life today just as he
did in the Old Testament. It might not be as overtly miraculous but He will
still sustain us.