The glorious message today is that God can overcome the effects of the Fall (whether it’s Skin disease, frustrated Work, or sin) and deliver us from slavery to curse by bringing us through the waters of the Jordan safely into the Promised Land! So Unbeliever here is the greatest message in the World – there is cleansing for prostitutes, thieves, liars, and the self-righteous – just fall on your knees and ask for mercy and he will plunge you through water! It doesn’t matter what you have done – right now we are just little servant messengers telling you there is a Prophet in Israel, and we are answering the question for you: what can wash away your sins? Your uncleanness? Nothing but the blood of Jesus! Believer there is a lot to respond to but fundamentally, but I want us to be like this servant girl. We are here for the good of the nations! Let’s point to Him in our work, our neighborhoods and the nations!
We just finished the biography of Elijah in 2 Kings 2. The larger than life prophet died – well, sort of. He was taken up into heaven in a blaze of glory, and he reappears in the New Testament. Nevertheless he is gone, but his ministry is not gone. It continues on, particularly through the life of his successor, Elisha. Elijah passed on the prophetic mantle to him. In the opening chapters of 2 Kings, the sons of the prophets affirmed Elisha’s ministry, and now Elisha will prove his ministry to king Jehoram and others in 2 Kings 3-4. From these chapters, we see how Elisha, like Elijah, was a God’s special agent, sent to speak truth and display God’s power.
We see the main point in this text are the questions, Is there a God in Israel? Who will they seek? In this passage we will see that the King, and mocking boys look elsewhere besides Yahweh. The answer is that there is one true God we should seek, and He continually provides Prophets and His Word to turn His people back to Him.
We live in a world of competing voices, and in one sense since the Garden onward human beings have been given a choice, hear and heed the Word of the Creator or heed the voice of our own desires or the voice of Satan. Ahab is a man who is often confronted with competing voices and given the chance of who he will listen to. Now we see the Conclusion of First Kings – not a great climax, basically a report of the decline and folly of the kingdoms. At the end of this narrative Israel needs a better King and Prophet. And so do we! This Prophet-King is Jesus, and He is the Word of God made flesh.
There are four characters in this story: Naboth, Ahab, Jezebel, and Elijah. We read of Ahab’s coveting and sulking, and of Jezebel’s manipulation and destruction. We meet Naboth, the faithful Israelite who models obedience to us. Here is Naboth living just outside the palace of this evil king! He has a little vineyard that he cherishes, which had been in his family for years. We finally have a rejuvenated Elijah appearing before Ahab, reminding him that you can hide nothing from God’s sight, and your sin will surely find you out (Num 32:23). You might assume this story has little relevance for modern readers. However, that assumption would be incorrect. This is not a story about grapes; it is a story about the (in)justice of man and the justice of God. We read about what it is like to suffer injustice, what it costs to do justice for the sake of the oppressed, how much we long for God’s justice, and how we can be made right with God the judge.