1 Kings, xvii, 4. And Ahab
called Obadiah, which was the governor of his house.
(Now Obadiah feared the Lord greatly: for it
was so, when Jezebel cut off the prophets of the Lord,
that Obadiah took an hundred prophets, and hid them
by fifty in a cave, and fed them with bread and water.)
This is the first and last time throughout
the Bible, that we find this Obadiah mentioned.
We find the same name elsewhere, but not the same
person. It is a common Jewish name, Obadiah,
and means, I believe, the servant of the Lord.
All we know of the man is contained
in this chapter. We do not read what became
of him afterwards. He vanishes out of the story
as quickly as he came into it, and, as we go on through
the chapter and read of that grand judgment at Carmel
between Elijah and the priests of Baal, and the fire
of God which came down from heaven, to shew that the
Lord was God, we forget Obadiah, and care to hear of
him no more.
And yet Obadiah was a great man in
his day. He was, it seems, King Ahab’s
vizier, or prime minister; the second man in the country
after the king; and a prime minister in those eastern
kingdoms had, and has now, far greater power than
he has in a free country like this. Yes, Obadiah
was a great man in his day, I doubt not; and people
bowed before him when he went out, and looked up to
him, in that lawless country, for life or death, for
ruin or prosperity. Their money, and their land,
their very lives might depend on his taking a liking
toward them, or a spite against them. And he
had wealth, no doubt, and his fair and great house
there among the beautiful hills of Samaria, ceiled
with cedar and painted with vermilion, with its olive
groves and vineyards, and rich gardens full of gay
flowers and sweet spices, figs and peaches, and pomegranates,
and all the lovely vegetation which makes those Eastern
gardens like Paradise itself. And he had his
great household of slaves, men-servants and maidservants,
guards and footmen, singing men and singing women perhaps
a hundred souls and more eating and drinking in his
house day by day for many a year. A great man;
full of wealth, and pomp, and power. We know
that it must have been so, because we know well in
what luxury those great men in the East lived.
But where is it now?
Where is it now? Vanished and
forgotten. Be not thou afraid, though one be
made rich, or if the glory of his house be increased.
For he shall carry nothing away with him when he dieth;
neither shall his pomp follow him.
See of all Obadiah’s
wealth and glory, the Bible does not say one word.
It is actually not worth mentioning. People
admired Obadiah, I doubt not, while he was alive;
envied him too, tried to thrust him out of his place,
slander him to King Ahab, drive him out of favour,
and step into his place, that they might enjoy his
wealth and his power instead of him. The fine
outside of Obadiah was what they saw, and coveted,
and envied as we are tempted now to say
in our hearts, ’Ah, if I was rich like that
man. Ah, if I could buy what I liked, go where
I liked, do what I liked, like that great Lord!’
and yet, that is but the outside, the shell, the gay
clothing, not the persons themselves. The day
must come, when they must put off all that; when nothing
shall remain but themselves; and they themselves,
naked as they were born, shall appear before the judgment-seat
of God.
And did Obadiah, then, carry away
nothing with him when he died? Yes; and yet again,
No. His wealth and his power he left behind
him: but one thing he took with him into the
grave, better than all wealth and power; and he keeps
it now, and will keep it for ever; and that is, a
good, and just, and merciful action concerning
which it is written, ’Blessed are the dead which
die in the Lord; for they rest from their labours,
and their works do follow them.’ Yes,
though a man’s wealth will not follow him beyond
the grave, his works will; and so Obadiah’s
one good deed has followed him. ’He feared
the Lord greatly, and when Jezebel cut off the prophets
of the Lord, Obadiah took a hundred prophets, and
hid them by fifty in a cave, and fed them with bread
and water.’
That has followed Obadiah; for by
it we know him, now two thousand years and more after
his death, here in a distant land of the name of which
he never heard. By that good deed he lives.
He lives in the pages of the Holy Bible; he lives
in our minds and memories; and more than all, by that
good deed he lives for ever in God’s sight;
he is rewarded for it, and the happier for it, doubt
it not, at this very moment, and will be the happier
for it for ever.
Oh blessed thought! that there is
something of which death cannot rob us! That
when we have to leave this pleasant world, wife and
child, home and business, and all that has grown up
round us here on earth, till it has become like a
part of ourselves, yet still we are not destitute.
We can turn round on death and say ’Though
I die, yet canst thou not take my righteousness from
me!’ Blessed thought! that we cannot do a good
deed, not even give a cup of cold water in Christ’s
name, but what it shall rise again, like a guardian
angel, to smooth our death-bed pillow, and make our
bed for us in our sickness, and follow us into the
next world, to bless us for ever and ever!
And blessed thought, too, that what
you do well and lovingly, for God’s sake, will
bless you here in this world before you die!
Yes, my friends, in the dark day of sorrow and loneliness,
and fear and perplexity, you will find old good deeds,
which you perhaps have forgotten, coming to look after
you, as it were, and help you in the hour of need.
Those whom you have helped, will help you in return:
and if they will not, God will; for he is not unrighteous,
to forget any work and labour of love, which you have
showed for his name’s sake, in ministering to
his saints. So found Obadiah in that sad day,
when he met Elijah.
For he was in evil case that day,
as were all souls, rich and poor, throughout that
hapless land. For three weary years, there had
been no drop of rain: the earth beneath their
feet had been like iron, and the heavens above them
brass; and Obadiah had found poverty, want, and misery,
come on him in the midst of all his riches: he
had seen his fair gardens wither, and his olives and
his vines burnt up with drought; his cattle
had perished on the hills, and his servants, too,
perhaps, in his house. Perhaps his children at
home were even then crying for food and water, and
crying in vain, in spite of all their father’s
greatness.
What was the use of wealth?
He could not eat gold, nor drink jewels. What
was the use of his power? He could not command
the smallest cloud to rise up off the sea, and pour
down one drop of water to quench their thirst.
Yes, Obadiah was in bitter misery that day, no doubt;
and all the more, because he felt that all was God’s
judgment on the people’s sins. They had
served Baalim and Ashtaroth, the sun and moon and
stars, and prayed to them for rain and fruitful seasons,
as if they were the rulers of the weather and the
soil, instead of serving the true God who made heaven
and earth, and all therein: and now God had
judged them: he had given his sentence
and verdict about that matter, and told them, by a
sign which could not be mistaken, that he, and not
the sun and moon, was master of the sky and the sea,
and the rain and the soil. They had prayed to
the sun and moon; and this was the fruit of their prayers
that their prayers had not been heard: but instead
of rain and plenty, was drought and barrenness; carcasses
of cattle scattered over the pastures every
village full of living skeletons, too weak to work
(though what use in working, when the ground would
yield no crop?) crawling about, their tongues
cleaving to the roof of their mouths, in vain searching
after a drop of water. Fearful and sickening
sights must Obadiah have seen that day, as he rode
wearily on upon his pitiful errand. And the
thought of what a pitiful errand he was going on,
and what a pitiful king he served, must have made
him all the more miserable; for, instead of turning
and repenting, and going back to the true God, which
was the plain and the only way of escaping out of
that misery, that wretched King Ahab seems to have
cared for nothing but his horses.
We do not read that he tried to save
one of his wretched people alive. All his cry
was, ’Go into the land, to all fountains of
water and all brooks; perhaps we shall find grass enough
to save the horses and mules alive: that we
lose not all the beasts.’ The horses were
what he cared for more than the human beings, as many
of those bad kings of Israel did. Moses had
expressly commanded them not to multiply horses to
themselves; but they persisted always in doing so,
nevertheless. And why? Because they wanted
horses to mount their guards; to keep up a strong
force of cavalry and chariots, in order to oppress
the poor country people, whom they had brought down
to slavery, from having been free yeomen, as they were
in the days of Moses and Joshua. And what hope
could he have for his wretched country? The
people shewed no signs of coming to their senses;
the king still less. His wicked Queen Jezebel
was as devoted as ever to her idols; the false prophets
of Baal were four hundred and fifty men, and the prophets
of the groves (where the stars were worshipped) four
hundred; and these cheats contrived (as such false
teachers generally do) to take good care of themselves,
and to eat at Jezebel’s table, while all the
rest of the people were perishing. What could
be before the country, and him, too, but utter starvation,
and hopeless ruin? And all this while his life
was in the hands of a weak and capricious tyrant, who
might murder him any moment, and of a wicked and spiteful
queen, who certainly would murder him, if she found
out that he had helped and saved the prophets of the
Lord. Who so miserable as he? But on that
day, Obadiah found that his alms and prayers had gone
up before God, and were safe with God, and not to
be forgotten for ever. When he fell on his face
before Elijah, in fear for his life, he found that
he was safe in God’s hands; that God would not
betray him or forsake him. Elijah promised him,
with a solemn oath, that he would keep his word with
him; he kept it, and before many days were past, Obadiah
had an answer to all his prayers, and a relief from
all his fears; and the Lord sent a gracious rain on
his inheritance, and refreshed it when it was weary.
Yes, my friends, though well-doing seems for a while
not to profit you, persevere: in due time you
shall reap, if you faint not. Though the Lord
sometimes waits to be gracious, he only waits, he
does not forget; and it is to be gracious that
he waits, not ungracious. Cast, therefore, thy
bread upon the waters, and thou shall find it after
many days. Give a portion to seven, and also
to eight, for thou knowest not what evil shall be
upon the earth. Do thy diligence to give of what
thou hast; for so gatherest thou thyself in the day
of necessity, in which, with what measure you have
measured to others, God will measure to you again.
This is true, for the Scripture says
so; this must be true, for reason and conscience the
voice of God within us tell us that God
is just; that God must be true, though every man be
a liar. ‘Hear,’ says our Lord, ’what
the unjust judge says: And shall not God
(the just judge), avenge his own elect, who cry day
and night to him, though he bear long with them?’
Yes, my friends, God’s promise stands sure,
now and for ever. ’Trust in the Lord, and
do good; so shalt thou dwell in the land, and verily
thou shalt be fed.’
But now comes in a doubt and
it ought to come in What are our works
at best? What have we which is fit to offer to
God? Full of selfishness, vanity, self-conceit,
the best of them; and not half done either.
What have we ever done right, but what we might have
done more rightly, and done more of it, also?
Bad in quality our good works are, and bad in quantity,
too. How shall we have courage to carry them
in our hand to that God who charges his very angels
with folly; and the very heavens are not clean in his
sight?
Too true, if we had to offer our own
works to God. But, thanks be to his holy name,
we have not to offer them ourselves; for there is
one who offers them for us Jesus Christ
the Lord. He it is who takes these imperfect,
clumsy works of ours, all soiled and stained with
our sin and selfishness, and washes them clean in his
most precious blood, which was shed to take away the
sin of the world: he it is who, in some wonderful
and unspeakable way, cleanses our works from sin,
by the merit of his death and sufferings, so that
nothing may be left in them but what is the fruit of
God’s own spirit; and that God may see in them
only the good which he himself put into them, and
not the stains and soils which they get from our foolish
and sinful hearts.
Oh, my friends, bear this in mind.
Whensoever you do a thing which you know to be right
and good, instead of priding yourself on it, as if
the good in it came from you, offer it up to the Lord
Jesus Christ, and to your Heavenly Father, from whom
all good things come, and say, ’Oh Lord, the
good in this is thine, and not mine; the bad in it
is mine, and not thine. I thank thee for having
made me do right, for without thy help I should have
done nothing but wrong; for mine is the laziness,
and the weakness, and the selfishness, and the self-conceit;
and thine is the kingdom, for thou rulest all things;
and the power, for thou doest all things; and the glory,
for thou doest all things well, for ever and ever.
Amen.’