NINTH CENTURY B.C.
Evil days fell upon the Israelites
after the death of Solomon. In the first place
their country was rent by political divisions, disorders,
and civil wars. Ten of the tribes, or three quarters
of the population, revolted from Rehoboam, Solomon’s
son and successor, and took for their king Jeroboam, a
valiant man, who had been living for several years
at the court of Shishak, king of Egypt, exiled by
Solomon for his too great ambition. Jeroboam
had been an industrious, active-minded, strong-natured
youth, whom Solomon had promoted and made much of.
The prophet Ahijah had privately foretold to him that,
on account of the idolâtries tolerated by Solomon,
ten of the tribes should be rent away from, the royal
house and given to him. The Lord promised him
the kingdom of Israel, and (if he would be loyal to
the faith) the establishment of a dynasty, “a
sure house.” Jeroboam made choice of Shechem
for his capital; and from political reasons, for
fear that the people should, according to their custom,
go up to Jerusalem to worship at the great festivals
of the nation, and perhaps return to their allegiance
to the house of David, while perhaps also to compromise
with their already corrupted and unspiritualized religious
sense, he made two golden calves and set
them up for religious worship: one in Bethel,
at the southern end of the kingdom; the other in Dan,
at the far north.
It does not appear that the people
of Israel as yet ignored Jehovah as God; but they
worshipped him in the form of the same Egyptian symbol
that Aaron had set up in the wilderness, a
grave offence, although not an utter apostasy.
Moreover, this was the act of the king rather than
of the priests or his own subjects.
Stanley makes a significant comment
on this act of the new king, which the sacred narrative
refers to as “the sin of Jeroboam, the son of
Nebat, who made Israel to sin.” He says:
“The Golden Image was doubtless intended as
a likeness of the One True God. But the mere fact
of setting up such a likeness broke down the sacred
awe which had hitherto marked the Divine Presence,
and accustomed the minds of the Israelites to the
very sin against which the new form was intended to
be a safeguard. From worshipping God under a
false and unauthorized form they gradually learned
to worship other gods altogether.... ’The
sin of Jeroboam, the son of Nebat,’ is the sin
again and again repeated in the policy half-worldly,
half-religious which has prevailed through
large tracts of ecclesiastical history.... For
the sake of supporting the faith of the multitude,
lest they should fall away to rival sects, ... false
arguments have been used in support of religious truths,
false miracles promulgated or tolerated, false readings
in the sacred text defended. And so the faith
of mankind has been undermined by the very means intended
to preserve it.”
For priests, Jeroboam selected the
lowest of the people, whoever could be
induced to offer idolatrous sacrifices in the high
places, since the old priests and Levites
remained with the tribe of Judah at Jerusalem.
These abominations and political rivalries
caused incessant war between the two kingdoms for
several reigns. The northern kingdom, including
the great tribe of Ephraim or Joseph, was the richest,
most fertile, and most powerful; but the southern
kingdom was the most strongly fortified. And
yet even in the fifth year of the reign of Rehoboam,
the king of Egypt, probably incited by Jeroboam, invaded
Judah with an immense army, including sixty thousand
cavalry and twelve hundred chariots, and invested
Jerusalem. The city escaped capture only by submitting
to the most humiliating conditions. The vast
wealth which was stored in the Temple, the
famous gold shields which David had taken from the
Syrians, and those also made by Solomon for his body-guard,
together with the treasures of the royal palace, became
spoil for the Egyptians. This disaster happened
when Solomon had been dead but five years. The
solitary tribe left to his son, despoiled by Egypt
and overrun by other enemies, became of but little
account politically for several generations, although
it still possessed the Temple and was proud of its
traditions. After this great humiliation, the
proud king of Judah, it seems, became a better man;
and his descendants for a hundred years were, on the
whole, worthy sovereigns, and did good in the sight
of the Lord.
Political interest now centres in
the larger kingdom, called Israel. Judah for
a time passes out of sight, but is gradually enriched
under the reigns of virtuous princes, who preserved
the worship of the true God at Jerusalem. Nations,
like individuals, seldom grow in real strength except
in adversity. The prosperity of Solomon undermined
his throne. The little kingdom of Judah lasted
one hundred and fifty years after the ten tribes were
carried into captivity.
Yet what remained of power and wealth
among the Jews after the rebellion under Jeroboam,
was to be found in the northern kingdom. It was
still exceedingly fertile, and was well watered.
It was “a land of brooks of water, of fountains,
of barley and wheat, of vines and fig-trees, of olives
and honey.” It boasted of numerous fortified
cities, and had a population as dense as that in Belgium
at the present time. The nobles were powerful
and warlike; while the army was well organized, and
included chariots and horses. The monarchy was
purely military, and was surrounded by powerful nations,
whom it was necessary to conciliate. Among these
were the Phoenicians on the west, and the Syrians on
the north. From the first the army was the great
power of the state, its chief being more powerful
than Joab was in the undivided kingdom of David.
He stood next after the king, and was the channel of
royal favor.
The history of the northern kingdom
which has come down to us is very meagre. From
Jeroboam to Ahab a period of sixty-six years there
were six kings, three of whom were assassinated.
There was a succession of usurpers, who destroyed
all the members of the preceding reigning family.
They were all idolaters, violent and bloodthirsty men,
whom the army had raised to the throne. No one
of them was marked by signal ability, unless it were
Omri, who built the city of Samaria on a high hill,
and so strongly fortified it that it remained the capital
until the fall of the kingdom. He also made a
close alliance with Tyre, the great centre of commerce
in that age, and one of the wealthiest cities of antiquity.
To cement this political alliance, Omri married his
son Ahab the heir-apparent to the throne to
a daughter of the Tyrian king, afterward so infamous
as a religious fanatic and persecutor, under the name
of Jezebel, one of the worst women in history.
On the accession of Ahab, nine hundred
and nineteen years before Christ, the kingdom of Israel
was rapidly tending to idolatry. Jeroboam had
set up golden calves chiefly for a political end,
but Ahab built a temple to Baal, the sun-god, the
chief divinity of the Phoenicians, and erected an
altar therein for pagan sacrifices, thus abjuring Jehovah
as the Supreme and only God. The established
religion was now idolatry in its worst form; it was
simply the worship of the powers of Nature, under the
auspices of a foreign woman stained with every vice,
who controlled her husband. For Ahab himself
was bad enough, but he was not the wickedest of the
monarchs of Israel, nor was he insignificant as a man.
It was his misfortune to be completely under the influence
of his Phoenician bride, as many stronger men than
he have been enslaved by women before and since his
day. Ahab, bad as he was, was brave in battle,
patriotic in his aims, and magnificent in his tastes.
To please his wife he added to his royal residences
a summer retreat called Jezreel, which was of great
beauty, and contained within its grounds an ivory palace
of great splendor. Amid its gardens and parks
and all the luxuries then known, the youthful monarch
with his queen and attendant nobles abandoned themselves
to pleasure and folly, as Oriental monarchs are wont
to do. It would seem that he was unusually licentious
in his habits, since he left seventy children, afterward
to be massacred.
The ascendency of a wicked woman over
this luxurious monarch has made her infamous.
She was an incarnation of pride, sensuality, and cruelty;
and with all her other vices she was a religious persecutor
who has had no equal. We may perhaps give to
her, as to many other tiger-like persecutors in the
cause of what they call their “religion,”
the meagre credit of conscientious devotion in their
cruelty; for she feasted at her own table at Jezreel
four hundred priests of Baal, besides four hundred
and fifty others at Samaria, while she erected two
great sanctuaries for the Phoenician deities, at which
the officiating priests were clad in splendid vestments.
The few remaining prophets of Jehovah in the kingdom
hid themselves in caves and deserts to escape the
murderous fury of the idolatrous queen. We infer
that she was distinguished for her beauty, and was
bewitching in her manners like Catherine de’
Medici, that Italian bigot whom her courtiers likened
both to Aurora and Venus. Jezebel, like the Florentine
princess, is an illustration of the wickedness which
is so often concealed by enchanting smiles, especially
when armed with power. The priests of Baal undoubtedly
regarded their great protectress as one of the most
fascinating women that ever adorned a royal palace,
and in the blaze of her beauty and the magnificence
of her bounty were blind to her innumerable sorceries
and the wild license of her life.
The fearful apostasy of Israel, which
had been increasing for sixty years under wicked kings,
had now reached a point which called for special divine
intervention. There were only seven thousand men
in the whole kingdom who had not bowed the knee to
Baal, and God sent a prophet, a prophet
such as had not appeared in Israel since Samuel; more
august, more terrible even than he; indeed, the most
unique and imposing character in Jewish history.
Almost nothing is known of the early
history of Elijah. The Bible simply speaks of
him as “the Tishbite,” one of
the inhabitants of Gilead, at the east of the Jordan.
He evidently was a man accustomed to a wild and solitary
life. His stature was large, and his features
were fierce and stern. His long hair flowed upon
his brawny shoulders, and he was clothed with a mantle
of sheepskin or hair-cloth, and carried in his hand
a rugged staff. He was probably unlearned, being
rude and rough in both manners and speech. His
first appearance was marked and extraordinary.
He suddenly and unannounced stood before Ahab, and
abruptly delivered his awful message. He was an
apparition calculated to strike with terror the boldest
of kings in that superstitious age. He makes
no set speech, he offers no apology, he disdains all
forms and ceremonies; he does not even render the
customary homage. He utters only a few words,
preceded by an oath: “As Jehovah the God
of Israel liveth, there shall not be dew nor rain
these years but according to my word.”
What arrogance before a king! Elijah, an utterly
unknown man, in a sheepskin mantle, apparently a peasant,
dares to utter a curse on the land without even deigning
to give a reason, although the conscience of Ahab
must have told him that he could not with impunity
introduce idolatry into Israel.
Elijah doubtless attacked the king
in the presence of his wife and court. To the
cynical and haughty queen, born in idolatry, he probably
seemed a madman of the desert, shaggy, unwashed,
fierce, repulsive. To the Israelitish king, however,
with better knowledge of the ways of God, the prophet
appeared armed with supernal powers, whom he both feared
and hated, and desired to put out of the way.
But Elijah mysteriously disappears from the royal
presence as suddenly as he had entered it, and no
one knows whither he has fled. He cannot be found.
The royal emissaries go into every land, but are utterly
baffled in their search. The whole power of the
realm was doubtless put forth to discover his retreat,
and had he been found, no mercy would have been shown
him; he would have been summarily executed, not only
as a prophet of the detested religion, but as one
who had insulted the royal station. He was forced
to flee and hide after delivering his unwelcome message.
And whither did the prophet fly?
He fled with the swiftness of a Bedouin, accustomed
to traverse barren rocks and scorching sands, to a
retired valley of one of the streams that emptied into
the Jordan near Samaria. Amid the clefts of the
rocks which marked the deep valley, did the man of
God hide himself from his furious and numerous persecutors.
He does not escape to his native deserts, where he
would most probably have been hunted like a wild beast,
but remains near the capital in which Ahab reigns,
in a deeply secluded spot, where he quenches his thirst
from the waters of the brook, and eats the food which
the ravens deposit amid the steep cliffs he knows
how to climb.
The bravest and most undaunted man
in Israel, shielded and protected by God, was probably
warned by the divine voice to make his escape, since
his life was needful to the execution of Providential
purposes. He was the only one of all the prophets
of his day who dared to give utterance to his convictions.
Some four or five hundred there were in the kingdom,
all believers in Jehovah; but all sought to please
the reigning power, or timidly concealed themselves.
They had been trained in the schools which Samuel
had established, and were probably teachers of the
people on theological subjects, and hence an antagonistic
force to idolatrous kings. Their great defect
in the time of Ahab was timidity. There was needed
some one who under all circumstances would be undaunted,
and would not hesitate to tell the truth even to the
king and queen, however unpleasant it might be.
So this rough, fierce, unlettered man of few words
was sent by God, armed with terrible powers.
It was now the rainy season, when
rain was confidently expected by the people throughout
Palestine. Yet strangely no rain fell, though
sixty inches were the usual quantity in the course
of the year. The streams from the mountains were
dried up; the land, long parched by the summer sun,
became like dust and ashes; the hills presented a blasted
and dreary desolation; the very trees were withered
and discolored. At last even the sheltered brook
failed from which Elijah drank, and it became necessary
for the man of God to seek another retreat. The
Lord therefore sent him to the last place in which
his enemies would naturally search for him, even to
a city of Phoenicia, where the worship of Baal was
the only religion of the land. As in his tattered
and strange apparel he approached Sarepta, or Zarephath,
a town between Tyre and Sidon, worn out with fatigue,
parched with thirst, and overcome with hunger, everything
around him being depressed and forlorn, the rivers
and brooks showing only beds of stone, the trees and
grass withered, the sky lurid, and of unnatural brightness
like that of brass, and the sun burning and scorching
every remnant of vegetation, he beheld a
woman issuing from the town to gather sticks, in order
to cook what she supposed would be her last meal.
To this sad and discouraged woman, doubtless a worshipper
of Baal, the prophet thus spoke: “Fetch
me, I pray you, a little water in a vessel that I
may drink;” and as she turned sympathetically
to look upon him, he added, “Bring me, I pray
thee, a morsel of bread in thine hand.”
This was no small request to make
of a woman who was herself on the borders of starvation,
and of a pagan woman too. But there was a mysterious
affinity between these two suffering souls. A
common woman would not have appreciated the greatness
of the beggar and vagrant before her. Only a
discerning and sympathetic woman would have seen in
the tones of his voice, and in his lofty bearing, despite
all his rags and dirt, an unusual and marked character.
She probably belonged to a respectable class, reduced
to poverty by the famine, and her keen intelligence
recognized at once in the hungry and needy stranger
a superior person, even as the humble friar
of Palos saw in Columbus a nobleman by nature, when,
wearied and disappointed, he sought food and shelter.
She took the prophet by the hand, conducted him to
her home, gave him the best chamber in her house,
and in a strange devotion of generosity divided with
him the last remnant of her meal and oil.
It is probable that a lasting friendship
sprang up between the pagan woman and the solemn man
of God, such as bound together the no less austere
Jerome and his disciple Paula. For two or three
years the prophet dwelt in peace and safety in the
heathen town, protected by an admiring woman, for
his soul was great, if his body was emaciated and
his dress repulsive. In return for her hospitality
he miraculously caused her meal and oil to be daily
renewed; and more than this, he restored her only
son to life, when he had succumbed to a dangerous
illness, the first recorded instance of
such a miracle.
The German critics would probably
say that the boy was only seemingly dead, even as
they would deny the miracle of the meal and oil.
It is not my purpose to discuss this matter, but to
narrate the recorded incidents that filled the soul
of the woman of Sarepta with gratitude, with wonder,
and with boundless devotion. “Verily, I
say unto you,” said a greater than Elijah, “whosoever
shall give a cup of cold water in the name of a prophet,
shall in no way lose his reward.” Her reward
was immeasurably greater than she had dared to hope.
She received both spiritual and temporal blessings,
and doubtless became a convert to the true faith.
Tradition asserts that her boy, whom Elijah saved, whether
by natural or supernatural means, it is alike indifferent, became
in after years the prophet Jonah, who was sent to
Nineveh. In all great friendships the favors
are reciprocal. A noble-hearted woman was saved
from starvation, and the life of a great man was preserved
for future usefulness. Austerity and tenderness
met together and became a cord of love; and when the
land was perishing from famine, the favored members
of a retired household were shielded from harm, and
had all that was necessary for comfort.
Meanwhile the abnormal drought and
consequent famine continued. The northern kingdom
was reduced to despair. So dried up were the wells
and exhausted the cisterns and reservoirs that even
the king’s household began to suffer, and it
was feared that the horses of the royal stables would
perish. In this dire extremity the king himself
set forth from his palace to seek patches of vegetation
and pools of water in the valleys, while his prime
minister Obadiah a secret worshipper of
Jehovah was sent in an opposite direction
for a like purpose. On his way, in the almost
hopeless search for grass and water, Obadiah met Elijah,
who had been sent from his retreat once more to confront
Ahab, and this time to promise rain. As the most
diligent search had been made in every direction,
but in vain, to find Elijah, with a view to his destruction
as the man who “troubled Israel,” Obadiah
did not believe that the hunted prophet would voluntarily
put himself again in the power of an angry and hostile
tyrant. Yet the prime minister, having encountered
the prophet, was desirous that he should keep his
word to appear before the king, and promise to remove
the calamity which even in a pagan land was felt to
be a divine judgment. Elijah having reassured
him of his sincerity, the minister informed his master
that the man he sought to destroy was near at hand,
and demanded an interview. The wrathful and puzzled
king went out to meet the prophet, not to take vengeance,
but to secure relief from a sore calamity, for
Ahab reasoned that if Elijah had power, as the messenger
of Omnipotence, to send a drought, he also had the
power to remove it. Moreover, had he not said
that there should be neither rain nor dew but according
to his word? So Ahab addressed the prophet as
the author of national calamities, but without threats
or insults. “Art thou he who troubleth
Israel?” Elijah loftily, fearlessly, and reproachfully
replied: “I have not troubled Israel, but
thou and thy father’s house, in that thou hast
forsaken the commandments of Jehovah, and hast followed
Baalim.” He then assumes the haughty attitude
of a messenger of divine omnipotence, and orders the
king to assemble all his people, together with the
eight hundred and fifty priests of Baal, at Mount
Carmel, a beautiful hill sixteen hundred
feet high, near the Mediterranean, usually covered
with oaks and flowering shrubs and fragrant herbs.
He gives no reasons, he sternly commands;
and the king obeys, being evidently awed by the imperious
voice of the divine ambassador.
The representatives of the whole nation
are now assembled at Mount Carmel, with their idolatrous
priests. The prophet appears in their midst as
a preacher armed with irresistible power. He addresses
the people, who seemed to have no firm convictions,
but were swayed to and fro by changing circumstances,
being not yet hopelessly sunk into the idolatry of
their rulers. “How long,” cried the
preacher, with a loud voice and fierce aspect, “halt
ye between two opinions? If Jehovah be God, follow
him; but if Baal be God, then follow him.”
The undecided, crestfallen, intimidated people did
not answer a word.
Then Elijah stoops to argument.
He reminds the people, among whom probably were many
influential men, that he stood alone in opposition
to eight hundred and fifty idolatrous priests protected
by the king and queen. He proposes to test their
claims in comparison with his as ministers of the
true God. This seems reasonable, and the king
makes no objection. The test is to be supernatural,
even to bring down fire from heaven to consume the
sacrificial bullock on the altar. The priests
of Baal select their bullock, cut it in pieces, put
it on the wood, and invoke their supreme deity to
send fire to consume the sacrifice. With all
their arts and incantations and magical sorceries,
the fire does not descend. They then perform
their wild and fantastic dances, screaming aloud,
from early morn to noon, “O Baal, hear us!”
We do not read whether Ahab was present or not, but
if he were he must have quaked with blended sentiments
of curiosity and fear. His anxiety must have been
terrible. Elijah alone is calm; but he is also
stern. He mocks them with provoking irony, and
ridicules their want of success. His grim sarcasms
become more and more bitter. “Cry with a
loud voice!” said he, “yea, louder and
yet louder! for ye cry to a god; either he is talking,
or he is hunting, or he is on a journey, or peradventure
he sleepeth and must be awakened.” And
they cried aloud, and cut themselves, after their
manner, with knives and spears, till the blood gushed
out upon them.
Then Elijah, when midday was past,
and the priests continued to call unto their god until
the time of the offering of the evening sacrifice,
and there was neither voice nor answer, assembled the
people around him, as he stood alone by the ruins
of an ancient altar. With his own hands he gathered
twelve stones, piled them together to represent the
twelve tribes, cut a bullock in pieces, laid it on
the wood, made a trench around the rude altar, which
he filled with water from an adjacent well, and then
offered up this prayer to the God of his fathers:
“O Jehovah, God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
hear me! and let all the people know that thou art
the God of Israel, and that I am thy servant, and that
I have done all these things at thy word. Hear
me, Jehovah, hear me! that this people may know that
thou, Jehovah, art God, and that thou hast turned
their hearts back again.” Then immediately
the fire of Jehovah fell and consumed the bullock
and the wood, even melted the very stones, and licked
up the water in the trench. And when the people
saw it, they fell on their faces, and cried aloud,
“Jehovah, he is the God! Jehovah, he is
the God!”
Elijah then commanded to take the
prophets of Baal, all of them, so that not even one
of them should escape. And they took them, by
the direction of Elijah, down the mountain side to
the brook Kishon, and slew them there. His triumph
was complete. He had asserted the majesty and
proved the power of Jehovah.
The prophet then turned to the king,
who seems to have been completely subjected by this
tremendous proof of the prophetic authority, and said:
“Get thee up, eat and drink, for there is the
sound of abundance of rain.” And Ahab ascended
the hill, to eat and drink with his nobles at the
sacrificial feast, a venerable symbol by
which, from the most primitive antiquity to our own
day, by so universal an impulse that it would seem
to be divinely imparted, every form of religion known
to man has sought to typify the human desire to commune
with Deity.
Elijah also went to the top of Carmel,
not to the symbolic feast, but in spirit and in truth
to commune with God, reverentially hiding his face
between his knees. He felt the approach of the
coming storm, even when the sky was clear, and not
a cloud was to be seen over the blue waters of the
Mediterranean. So he said to his servant:
“Go up now, and look toward the sea.”
And the servant went to still higher ground and looked,
and reported that nothing was to be seen. Six
times the order was impatiently repeated and obeyed;
but at the seventh time, the youthful servant as
some think, the very boy he had saved reported
a cloud in the distant horizon, no bigger seemingly
than a man’s hand. At once Elijah sent
word to Ahab to prepare for the coming tempest; and
both he and the king began to descend the hill, for
the clouds rapidly gathered in the heavens, and that
mighty wind arose which in Eastern countries precedes
a furious storm. With incredible rapidity the
tempest spread, and the king hastened for his life
to his chariot at the foot of the hill, to cross the
brook before it became a flood; and Elijah, remembering
that he was king, ran before his chariot more rapidly
than the Arab steeds. As the servant of Jehovah,
he performs his mission with dignity and without fear;
as a subject, he renders due respect to rank and power.
Ahab has now witnessed with his own
eyes the impotency of the prophets of Baal, and the
marvellous power of the messenger of Jehovah.
The desire of the nation was to be gratified; the
rains were falling, the cisterns and reservoirs were
filling, and the fields once more would soon rejoice
in their wonted beauty, and the famine would soon be
at an end. In view of the great deliverance,
and awe-stricken by the supernatural gifts of the
prophet, one would suppose that the king would have
taken Elijah to his confidence and loaded him with
favors, and been guided by his counsels. But,
no. He had been subjected to deep humiliation
before his own people; his religion had been brought
into contempt, and he was afraid of his cruel and
inexorable wife, who had incited him to debasing idolâtries.
So he hastens to his palace in Jezreel and acquaints
Jezebel of the wonderful things he had seen, and which
he could not prevent. She was transported with
fury and vengeance, and vowing a tremendous oath,
she sent a messenger to the prophet with these terrible
words: “As surely as thou art Elijah and
I am Jezebel, so may God do to me and more also, if
I make not thy life to-morrow, about this time, as
the life of one of them.” In her unbounded
rage she forgot all policy, for she should have struck
the blow without giving her enemy time to escape.
It may also be noted that she is no atheist, but believes
in God according to Phoenician notions. She reflects
that eight hundred and fifty of Baal’s prophets
had been slain, and that the nation might return to
their allegiance to the god of their fathers, who had
wrought the greatest calamity her proud heart could
endure. Unlike her husband, she knows no fear,
and is as unscrupulous as she is fanatical. Elijah,
she resolved, should surely die.
And how did the prophet receive her
message? He had not feared to encounter Ahab
and all the priests of Baal, yet he quailed before
the wrath of this terrible woman, this
incarnate fiend, who cared neither for Jehovah nor
his prophet. Even such a hero as Elijah felt that
he must now flee for his life, and, attended only
by his boy-servant, he did not halt until he had crossed
the kingdom of Judah, and reached the utmost southern
bounds of the Holy Land. At Beersheba he left
his faithful attendant, and sought refuge in the desert, the
ancient wilderness of Sinai, with its rocky wastes.
Under the shade of a solitary tree, exhausted and
faint, he lay down to die. “It is enough,
O Jehovah! now take away my life, for I am no better
than my fathers.” He had outstripped all
pursuers, and was apparently safe, yet he wished to
die. It was the reaction of a mighty excitement,
the lassitude produced by a rapid and weary flight.
He was physically exhausted, and with this exhaustion
came despondency. He was a strong man unnerved,
and his will succumbed to unspeakable weariness.
He lay down and slept, and when he awoke he was fed
and comforted by an angelic visitor, who commanded
him to arise and penetrate still farther into the
dreary wilderness. For forty days and nights
he journeyed, until he reached the awful solitudes
of Sinai and Horeb, and sought shelter in a cave.
Enclosed between granite rocks, he entered upon a
new crisis of his career.
It does not appear that the future
destinies of Samaria and Jerusalem were revealed to
Elijah, nor the fate of the surrounding nations, as
seen by Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Daniel. He was not
called to foretell the retribution which would surely
be inflicted on degenerate and idolatrous nations,
nor even to declare those impressive truths which should
instruct all future generations. He therefore
does not soar in his dreary solitude to those lofty
regions of thought which marked the meditations of
Moses. He is not a man of genius; he is no poet;
he has no eloquence or learning; he commits no precious
truths to writing for the instruction of distant generations.
He is a man of intensely earnest convictions, gifted
with extraordinary powers resulting from that peculiar
combination of physical and spiritual qualities known
as the prophetic temperament. The instruments
of the Divine Will on earth are selected with unerring
judgment. Elijah was sent by the Almighty to
deliver special messages of reproof and correction
to wicked rulers; he was a reformer. But his
character was august, his person was weird and remarkable,
his words were earnest and delivered with an indomitable
courage, a terrific force. He was just the man
to make a strong impression on a superstitious and
weak king; but he had done more than that, he
had roused a whole nation from their foul debasement,
and left them quaking in terror before their offended
Deity.
But the phase of exaltation and potent
energy had passed for the time, and we now see him
faint and despondent, yet, with the sure instinct of
mighty spiritual natures, seeking recuperation in solitary
companionship with the all-present Spirit.
We do not know how long Elijah remained
in his dismal cavern, long enough, however,
to recover his physical energies and his moral courage.
As he wanders to and fro amid the hoary rocks and impenetrable
solitudes of Horeb, he seeks to commune with God.
He listens for some manifestation of the deity; he
is ready to do His bidding. He hears the sound
of a rushing hurricane; but God is not in the wind.
The mountain then is shaken by a fearful earthquake;
but Jehovah is not in the earthquake. Again the
mountain seems to flash with fire; but the signs he
seeks are not in the fire. At last, after the
uproar of contending physical forces had died away,
in the profound silence of the solitude he hears the
whisper of a still small voice in gentle accents; and
by this voice in the soul Jehovah speaks: “What
doest thou here, Elijah?” Was this voice reproachful?
Had the prophet been told to flee? Had he acted
with the courage of a man sure of divine protection?
Had he not been faint-hearted when he wished to die?
How does he reply to the mysterious voice? He
justifies himself. But strengthened, comforted,
uplifted by the exaltation of the consciousness of
God’s presence, Elijah feels his resilient powers
again upspringing. His courage returns; his perceptions
grow sharp again; the inspiration of a new line of
action opens up to him. He hears the word of the
Lord: “Go, return on thy way to the wilderness
of Damascus; and when thou comest, anoint Hazael to
be king over Syria, and Jehu the son of Nimshi to be
king over Israel, and Elisha the son of Shaphat to
be prophet in thy room. And it shall come to
pass that him who escapeth the sword of Hazael shall
Jehu destroy, and him that escapeth the sword of Jehu
shall Elisha slay. Yet I have left me seven thousand
in Israel, who have not bowed the knee unto Baal.”
Elijah still knows that his life is
in peril, but is ready, nevertheless, to obey his
master’s call. He is not designated as the
power to effect the great revolution which should root
out idolatry and destroy the house of Omri; but Jehu,
an unscrupulous yet jealous warrior, was to found
a new dynasty, and the king of Syria was to punish
and afflict the ten tribes, and Elisha was to be the
mouth-piece of the Almighty in the court of kings.
It would appear that Elijah did not himself anoint
either the general of Benhadad or of Ahab as future
kings, instruments of punishment on idolatrous
Israel, but on Elisha did his mantle fall.
Elisha was the son of a farmer, and,
according to Ewald, when Elijah selected him for his
companion and servant, had just been ploughing his
twelve yoke of land (not of oxen), and was at work
on the twelfth and last. Passing by the place,
Elijah, without stopping, took off his shaggy mantle
of skins, and cast it upon Elisha. The young man,
who doubtless was familiar with the appearance of
the great prophet, recognized and accepted this significant
call, and without remonstrance, even as others in
later days devoted themselves to a greater Prophet,
“left all and followed” the one who had
chosen him. He became Elijah’s constant
companion and pupil and ministrant, until the great
man’s departure. He belonged to “the
sons of the prophets,” among whom Elijah sojourned
in his latter days, a community of young
men, for the most part poor, and compelled to combine
manual labor with theological studies. Very few
of these prophets seem to have been favored with especial
gifts or messages from God, in the sense that Samuel
and Elijah were. They were teachers and preachers
rather than prophets, performing duties not dissimilar
to those of Franciscan friars in the Middle Ages.
They were ascetics like the monks, abstaining from
wine and luxuries, as Samson and the Nazarites and
Rechabites did. Religious asceticism goes back
to a period that we cannot trace.
After Elijah had gone from the scenes
of his earthly labors, Elisha became a man of the
city, and had a house in Samaria. His dress was
that of ordinary life, and he was bland in manners.
His nature, unlike that of Elijah, was gentle and
affectionate. He became a man of great influence,
and was the friend of three kings. Jehoshaphat
consulted him in war; Joram sought his advice, and
Benhadad in sickness sent to him to be healed, for
he exercised miraculous powers. He cured Naaman
of leprosy and performed many wonderful deeds, chiefly
beneficent in character.
Elisha took no part in the revolutions
of the palace, but he anointed Jehu to be king over
Israel, and predicted to Hazael his future elevation.
His chief business was as president of a school of
the prophets. His career as prophet lasted fifty-five
years. He lived to a good old age, and when he
died, was buried with great pomp as a man of rank,
in favor with the court, for it was through him that
Jehu subsequently reigned. During the life of
Elijah, however, Elisha was his companion and coadjutor.
More is said in Jewish history of Elisha than of Elijah,
though the former was not so lofty and original a character
as the latter. We are told that though Elisha
inherited the mantle of his master, he received only
two-thirds of his master’s spirit. But he
was regarded as a great prophet for over fifty years,
even beyond the limits of Israel. Unlike Elijah,
Elisha preferred the companionship of men rather than
life in a desert. He fixed his residence in Samaria,
and was highly honored and revered by all classes;
he exercised a great influence on the king of Israel,
and carried on the work which Elijah began. He
was statesman as well as prophet, and the trusted adviser
of the king; but his distinguished career did not
begin till after Elijah had ascended to heaven.
After the consecration of Elisha there
is nothing said about Elijah for some years, during
which Ahab was involved in war with Benhadad, king
of Damascus. After that unfortunate contest it
would seem that Ahab had resigned himself to pleasure,
and amused himself with his gardens at Jezreel.
During this time Elijah had probably lived in retirement;
but was again summoned to declare the judgment of
God on Ahab for a most atrocious murder.
In his desire to improve his grounds
Ahab cast his eyes on a fertile vineyard belonging
to a distinguished and wealthy citizen named Naboth,
which had been in the possession of his family even
since the conquest. The king at first offered
a large price for this vineyard, which he wished to
convert into a garden of flowers, but Naboth refused
to sell it for any price. “God forbid,”
said he, with religious scruples blended with the
pride of ancestry, “that I should give to thee
the inheritance of my fathers.” Powerful
and despotic as was the king, he knew he could not
obtain this coveted vineyard except by gross injustice
and an act of violence, which even he dared not commit.
It would be an open violation of the Jewish Constitution.
By the laws of Moses the lands of the Israelites,
from the conquest, were inalienable. Even if they
were sold for debt, after fifty years they would return
to the family. The pride of ownership in real
estate was one of the peculiarities of the Hebrews
until after their final dispersion. After the
fall of Jerusalem by Titus, personal property came
to be more valued than real estate, and the Jews became
the money lenders and the bankers of the world.
They might be oppressed and robbed, but they could
hide away their treasures. A scrap of paper,
they soon discovered, was enough to transfer in safety
the largest sums. A Jew had only to give a letter
of credit on another Jewish house, and a king could
find ready money, if he gave sufficient security,
for any enterprise. Thus rare jewels pledged for
gold accumulated among the Hebrew merchants at an
early date.
Ahab, disappointed in not being able
without a crime to get possession of Naboth’s
vineyard, abandoned himself to melancholy. In
his deep chagrin he laid himself down on his bed,
turned his face to the wall, and refused to eat.
This seems strange to us, since he had more than enough,
and there was no check on his ordinary pleasures.
But covetous men never are satisfied. Ahab was
miserable with all his possessions so long as Naboth
was resolved to retain his paternal acres. It
seems that it did not occur even to this unprincipled
king that he could get possession of the coveted vineyard
if he resorted to craft and violence.
But his clever and unscrupulous wife
came to his assistance. In her active brain she
devised the means of success. She saw only the
end; she cared nothing for the means. It is probable,
indeed, that Jezebel hankered even more than Ahab
for a garden of flowers. Yet even she dared not
openly seize the vineyard. Such an outrage might
have caused a rebellion; it would, at least, have
created a great scandal and injured her popularity,
of which this artful woman was as tenacious as the
Jew was of his property. Moreover, Naboth was
a very influential and wealthy citizen, and had friends
to support him. How could she remove the grievous
eye-sore? She pondered and consulted the doctors
of the law, as Henry VIII. made use of Cranmer when
he wished to marry Anne Boleyn. They told her
that if it could be proved that any one, however high
his rank, had blasphemed God and the king, he could
legally be executed, and that his property would revert
to the Crown. So she suborned false witnesses,
who swore at the trial of Naboth, already seized for
high treason, that he had blasphemed God and the king.
Sentence, according to law, was passed upon the innocent
man, and according to law he was stoned to death,
and the vineyard according to law became the property
of the Crown. Jezebel, who had managed the whole
affair, did not undertake the prosecution in her own
name; as a woman, she had not the legal power.
So she stole the king’s ring, and sealed the
indictment with the royal seal.
Thus by force and fraud under skilful
technicalities, and by usurpation of the royal authority,
the crime was consummated, and had the sanction of
the law. Oh, what crimes have been perpetrated
in every age and country under cover of the law!
The Holy Inquisition was according to law; the early
Christian persécutions were according to
law; usurpers and murderers have reigned according
to law; the Quakers were put in prison, and witches
were burned according to law. Slavery was sustained
by legal enactments; the rum shops are all under the
protection of the law. There is scarcely a public
scandal and wrong in any civilized country which the
law does not somehow countenance or sustain. All
public robbers appeal to legal technicalities.
How could city officials steal princely revenues,
how could lawyers collect exorbitant fees, if it were
not for the law? Neither Ahab nor Jezebel would
have ventured to seize Naboth’s vineyard except
under legal pretences; false witnesses swore to a
lie, and the law condemned the accused. Ahab in
this instance was not as bad as his wife. He
may not even have known by what diabolical craft the
vineyard became his.
But such crimes, striking at the root
of justice, cry to heaven for vengeance. On Ahab
as king rested the responsibility, and he as well as
his more guilty partner was made to pay the penalty.
God in his providence avenged the death of Naboth.
The whole affair was widely known. As Naboth’s
reputed offence was unusual, and the gravest known
to the Jewish laws, there was so great a sensation
that a fast was proclaimed. The false trial and
murderous execution were accomplished “before
all the people.” But this very ostentation
of legal form made the outrage notorious. It
reached the ears of Elijah. The prophet’s
keen sense of right detected such an outrageous combination
of hypocrisy, covetousness, fraud, usurpation, cruelty,
robbery, and murder, that he once more heard the Divine
voice which summoned him from his retirement and sent
him to the court with an awful message. Suddenly,
unannounced and unexpected, the man of God appeared
before the king in his newly acquired possession,
surrounded by his gardeners and artificers, and accompanied
by two of his officers, Bidkar, and Jehu
the son of Nimshi, destined to be both
instrument and witness of the retribution. With
unwonted austerity, without preface or waste of words,
Elijah broke forth: “Thus saith Jehovah!” how
the monarch must have quaked at this awful name:
“In the place where dogs licked the blood of
Naboth, shall dogs also lick thine, even thine.”
The conscience-stricken, affrighted monarch could
only say, “Hast thou found me, oh mine enemy!”
And terrible was the response: “Yes, I
have found thee! and because thou hast sold thyself
to work evil in the sight of the Lord, behold, I will
take away thy posterity, and will make thy house like
the house of Jeroboam, who made Israel to sin.
And as to thy wife also, saith Jehovah, the dogs shall
eat Jezebel by the wall of Jezreel. Him that
dieth of Ahab in the city shall the dogs eat, and him
that dieth in the field shall the fowls of the air
eat.”
When and where, in the annals of the
great, has such a dreadful imprecation been uttered?
It was more awful than the doom pronounced on Belshazzar.
The blood of Ahab and his wife was to be licked up
by dogs, their dynasty to be overthrown, and their
whole house destroyed. This dire punishment was
inflicted probably not only on account of the crime
pertaining to Naboth, but for a whole life devoted
to idolatry. The sentence was not to be executed
immediately, possibly a time was given
for repentance; but it would surely be inflicted at
last. This Ahab knew better than any man in his
kingdom. He was thrown into the depths of the
most abject despair. He rent his clothes; he put
ashes on his head and sackcloth on his flesh, and
refused to eat or drink. He repented after the
fashion of criminals, and humbled himself, as Nebuchadnezzar
did, before the Most High God. God in mercy delayed,
but did not annul, the punishment Ahab lived long
enough to fight the king of Syria successfully, so
that for three years there was peace in Israel.
But Ramoth in Gilead, belonging to the northern kingdom,
remained in the hands of the Syrians.
In the mean time Jehoshaphat, king
of Judah, whose son Jehoram had married Athaliah,
daughter of Ahab, and who was therefore in friendly
social and political relations with Ahab, came to visit
him. They naturally talked about the war, and
lamented the fall of Ramoth-Gilead. Ahab proposed
a united expedition to recover it, to which Jehoshaphat
was consenting; but before embarking in an offensive
war against a powerful state, the two monarchs consulted
the prophets. It is not to be supposed that they
were the priests of Baal, but ordinary prophets who
wished to please. False prophets and false friends
are very much alike, they give advice according
to the inclinations and wishes of those who consult
them. They are afraid of incurring displeasure,
knowing well that no one likes to have his plans opposed
by candid advisers. Therefore they all gave their
voices for war, foretelling a grand success.
But one prophet, more honest and bold perhaps
more gifted than the rest, Micaiah by name,
took a different view of the matter. He was constrained
to speak his honest convictions, and prophesied evil,
and was thrown into prison for his honesty and boldness.
Nevertheless Ahab in his heart was
afraid, and had sad forebodings. Knowing his
peril, and alarmed at the words of a true prophet,
he disguised himself for the battle; but a chance
arrow, shot at a venture, penetrated through the joints
of his armor, and he was mortally wounded. His
blood ran from his wound into the chariot, and when
the chariot was washed in the pool of Samaria, after
Ahab had expired, the dogs licked up his blood, as
Elijah had predicted.
The death of Ahab put an end to the
fighting; nor was Jehoshaphat injured, although he
wore his royal robes. The Syrian general had given
orders to slay only the king of Israel. At one
time, however, the king of Judah was in great peril,
being mistaken for Ahab; but when his pursuers discovered
their mistake, they turned from the pursuit.
It seems that Jezebel survived her
husband fourteen years, and virtually ruled the kingdom,
for she was a woman of ability. She exercised
the same influence over her son Ahaziah that she had
over her husband, so that the son like the father
served Baal and made Israel to sin.
To this young king was Elijah also
sent. Ahaziah had been seriously injured by an
accidental fall from his upper chamber, through the
lattice, to the court yard below. He sent to the
priests of Baal, to inquire whether he should recover
or not. But Elijah by command of God had intercepted
the king’s messengers, and suddenly appearing
before them, as was his custom, confronted them with
these words: “Is there no God in Israel,
that ye go to inquire of Baalzebub, the God of Ekron?
Now, therefore, say unto the king, Thou shalt not come
down from the bed on which thou art gone up, but shalt
surely die.” On their return to Ahaziah,
without delivering their message to the god of the
Phoenicians or Philistines, the king said: “Why
are ye now turned back?” They repeated the words
of the strange man who had turned them back; and the
king said: “What manner of man was he who
came up to meet you?” They answered, “He
was a hairy man, and girt with a girdle of leather
around his loins.” The king cried, “It
is Elijah the Tishbite.” Again his enemy
had found him!
Whereupon Ahaziah sent a band of fifty
chosen soldiers to arrest the prophet, who had retired
to the top of a steep and rugged hill, probably Carmel.
The captain of the troop approached, and commanded
him in the name of the king to come down, addressing
him as the man of God. “If I am a man of
God,” said Elijah, “let fire come down
from heaven and consume thee and thy fifty.”
The fire came down and consumed them. Again the
king sent another band of fifty with their captain,
who met with the same fate. Again the king sent
another band of fifty men, the captain of which came
and fell on his knees before Elijah and besought him,
saying, “O man of God! I pray thee let my
life and the lives of these fifty thy servants be
precious in thy sight.” And the angel of
the Lord said unto Elijah, “Go down with him;
be not afraid of him.” And he arose and
went with the soldiers to the king, repeating to him
the words he had sent before, that he should not recover,
but should surely die.
So Ahaziah died, as Elijah prophesied,
and Jehoram (or Joram) reigned in his stead, a
brother of the late king, who did not personally worship
Baal, but who allowed the queen-mother to continue
to protect idolatry. The war which had been begun
by Ahab against the Syrians still continued, to recover
Ramoth-Gilead, and the stronghold was finally taken
by the united efforts of Judah and Israel; but Joram
was wounded, and returned to Jezreel to be cured.
With the advent of Elijah a reaction
against idolatry had set in. The people were
awed by his terrible power, and also by the influence
of Elisha, on whom his mantle fell. It does not
appear that the people had utterly abandoned the religion
of their fathers, for they had not hesitated to slay
the eight hundred and fifty priests of Baal at the
command of Elijah. The introduction of idolatry
had been the work of princes, chiefly through the
influence of Jezebel; and as the establishment of
a false religion still continued to be the policy of
the court, the prophets now favored the revolution
which should overturn the house of Ahab, and exterminate
it root and branch. The instrument of the Almighty
who was selected for this work was Jehu, one of the
prominent generals of the army; and his task was made
comparatively easy from the popular disaffection.
That a woman, a foreigner, a pagan, and a female demon
should control the government during two reigns was
intolerable. Only a spark was needed to kindle
a general revolt, and restore the religion of Jehovah.
This was the appearance of a young
prophet at Ramoth-Gilead, whom Elisha had sent with
an important message. Forcing his way to the house
where Jehu and his brother officers were sitting in
council, he called Jehu apart, led him to an innermost
chamber of the house, took out a small horn of sacred
oil, and poured it on Jehu’s head, telling him
that God had anointed him king to cut off the whole
house of Ahab, and destroy idolatry. On his return
to the room where the generals were sitting, Jehu
communicated to them the message he had received.
As the discontent of the nation had spread to the
army, it was regarded as a favorable time to revolt
from Joram, who lay sick at Jezreel. The army,
following the chief officers, at once hailed Jehu
as king. It was supremely necessary that no time
should be lost, and that the news of the rebellion
should not reach the king until Jehu himself should
appear with a portion of the army. Jehu was just
the man for such an occasion, rapid in
his movements, unscrupulous, yet zealous to uphold
the law of Moses. So mounting his chariot, and
taking with him a detachment of his most reliable
troops, he furiously drove toward Jezreel, turning
everybody back on the road. It was a drive of
about fifty miles. When within six miles of Jezreel
the sentinels on the towers of the walls noticed an
unusual cloud of dust, and a rider was at once despatched
to know the meaning of the approach of chariots and
horses. The rider, as he approached, was ordered
to fall back in the rear of Jehu’s force.
Another rider was sent, with the same result.
But Joram, discovering that the one who drove so rapidly
must be his own impetuous captain of the host, and
suspecting no treachery from him, ordered out his
own chariot to meet Jehu, accompanied by his uncle
Ahaziah, king of Judah. He expected stirring news
from the army, and was eager to learn it. He
supposed that Hazael, then king of Damascus, who had
murdered Benhadad, had proposed peace. So as he
approached Jehu the frightful irony of
fate halting him for the interview in the very vineyard
of Naboth he cried out, “Is it peace,
Jehu?” “Peace!” replied Jehu; “what
peace can be made so long as Jezebel bears rule?”
In an instant the king understood the ominous words
of his general, turned back his chariot, and fled
toward his palace, crying, “There is treachery,
O Ahaziah!” An arrow from Jehu pierced the monarch
in the back, and he sank dead in his chariot.
Ahaziah also was mortally wounded by another arrow
from Jehu, but he succeeded in reaching Megiddo, where
he died. Jehu spoke to Bidkar, his captain, and
recalling the dread prophecy of Elijah, commanded
the body of Ahab’s son to be cast out into the
dearly-bought field of Naboth.
In the mean time, Jezebel from her
palace window at Jezreel had seen the murder of her
son. She was then sixty years of age. The
first thing she did was to paint her eyelids, and
put on her most attractive apparel, to appear as beautiful
as possible, with the hope doubtless of attracting
Jehu, as Cleopatra, after the death of Antony,
sought to win Augustus. Will a flattered woman,
once beautiful, ever admit that her charms have passed
away? But if the painted and bedizened queen anticipated
her fate, she determined to die as she had lived, without
fear, imperious, and disdainful. So from her
open window she tauntingly accosted Jehu as he approached:
“What came of Zimri, who murdered his master
as thou hast done?” “Are there any on
my side?” was the only reply he deigned to make,
as he looked up to a window of the palace, which was
a part of the wall of the city. Two or three
eunuchs, looking out from behind her, answered the
summons, for the wicked and haughty queen had no real
friends. “Throw her down!” ordered
Jehu; and in a moment the blood from her mangled body
splashed upon the walls and upon the horses. In
another instant the wheels of the chariot passed over
her lifeless remains. Jehu would have permitted
a decent burial, “for,” said he, “she
is a king’s daughter;” but before her
mangled corpse could be collected, in the general
confusion, the dogs of the city had devoured all that
remained of her but the skull, the feet, and hands.
So perished the most infamous woman
that ever wore a royal diadem, as had been predicted.
With her also perished the seventy sons of Ahab, all
indeed that survived of the royal house of Omri.
And the work of destruction did not end until the
courtiers of the late king and all connected with
them, even the palace priests, were killed. Then
followed the massacre of the other priests of Baal,
the destruction of the idolatrous temples, and the
restoration of the worship of Jehovah, not only at
Samaria, but at Jerusalem, for the revolution extended
far and wide on the death of Ahaziah as of Joram.
Athaliah, the daughter of Jezebel, who reigned over
Judah, also perished in those revolutionary times.
It is not to be supposed that the
relentless and savage Jehu was altogether moved by
a zeal for Jehovah in these revolting slaughters.
He was an ambitious and successful rebel; but like
all notable forces, he may be regarded as an instrument
of Providence, whose ways are “mysterious,”
because men are not large enough and wise enough to
trace effects to their causes under His immutable
laws. Jehu was a necessary consequence of Ahab
and Jezebel. Jehovah, as the national deity of
the Jews, was the natural and necessary rallying cry
of the revolt against Phoenician idolatry and foulness.
The missionary sermons of those crude days were preached
with the sword and the strong arm. God’s
revelations of himself and his purposes to man have
always been through men, and by His laws the medium
always colors the light which it transmits. The
splendor of the noonday sun cannot shine clearly through
rough, imperfect glass; and so the conceptions of
Deity and of the divine will, as delivered by the
prophets, in every case show the nature of the man
receiving and delivering the inspired message.
And yet, through all the turmoil of those times, and
the startling contrast between the conceptions presented
by the “Jehovah” of Elijah and the “Father”
of Jesus, the one grand central truth which the seed
of Abraham were chosen to conserve stands out distinctly
from first to last, the unity and purity
of God. However obscured by human passions and
interests, that principle always retained a vital
hold upon some if only a “remnant” of
the Hebrew race.
The influence of Elijah, then, acting
personally through him and his successor Elisha, had
caused the extermination of the worship of Baal.
But the golden calves still remained; and there was
no improvement in the political affairs of the kingdom.
It was steadily declining as a political power, whether
on account of the degeneracy which succeeded prosperity,
or the warlike enterprises of the empires and states
which were hostile equally to Judah and Israel.
Jehu was forced to pay tribute to Assyria to secure
protection against Syria; and after his death Israel
was reduced to the lowest depression by Hazael, and
had not the power of Syria soon after been broken
by Assyria, the northern kingdom would have been utterly
destroyed.
It was not given to Elijah to foresee
the future calamities of the Jews, or to declare them,
as Isaiah and Jeremiah did. It was his mission,
and also Elisha’s, to destroy the worship of
Baal and punish the apostate kings who had introduced
it. He was the messenger and instrument of Jehovah
to remove idolatry, not to predict the future destiny
of his nation. He is to be viewed, like Elisha,
as a reformer, as a man of action, armed with supernatural
gifts to awe kings and influence the people, rather
than as a seer or a poet, or even as a writer to instruct
future generations. His mission seems to have
ended shortly after he had thrown his mantle on a
man more accomplished than himself in knowledge of
the world. But his last days are associated with
unspeakable grandeur as well as pathetic interest.
Elijah seems to have known that the
day of his departure was at hand. So, departing
from Gilgal in company with his beloved companion,
he proceeded toward Bethel. As he approached
the city he besought Elisha to leave him alone; but
Elisha refused to part with the master whom he both
loved and revered. Onward they proceeded from
Bethel to Jericho, and from Jericho to the Jordan.
It was a mournful journey to Elisha, for he knew as
well as the sons of the prophets at Jericho that he
and his master, and friend more than master, were
to part for the last time on earth. The waters
of the Jordan happened to be swollen, and the two
prophets, and the fifty sons of the prophets their
pupils, who came to say farewell could
not pass over. But the sacred narrative tells
us that Elijah, wrapping his mantle together like
a staff, smote the waters, so that they were divided,
and the two passed over to the eastern bank, in view
of the disciples. In loving intercourse Elijah
promises to give to his companion as token of his love
whatever Elisha may choose. Elisha asks simply
for a double portion of his master’s spirit,
which Elijah grants in case Elisha shall see him distinctly
when taken away.
“And it came to pass, as they
still went on and talked, that behold there appeared
a chariot of fire and horses of fire, which parted
them both asunder. And Elijah went up by a whirlwind
into heaven. And Elisha saw it, and he cried,
’My father, my father! the chariot of Israel,
and the horsemen thereof !’” Thou
art the chariot of Israel; thou hast been its horsemen!
And then there fell from Elijah, as he vanished from
human sight, the mantle by which he had been so well
known; and it became the sign of that fulness of divine
favor which was given to his successor in his arduous
labors to restore the worship of Jehovah, “and
to prepare the way for Him in whom all prophecy is
fulfilled.”