The Bible Recap - Day 183 (2 Kings 1-) - Year 4
Episode Date: July 2, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Article: Did Enoch and ...Elijah Escape Death and Go to Heaven? - Sign up to receive the Trinity PDF SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Second Kings opens by recounting Moab's rebellion against God and the people of Judah, and
we'll come back to this when we get to chapter 3 in a few minutes.
Meanwhile in the Northern Kingdom of Israel, their king falls through a roof and is injured. He wants to know if he's going to recover. So he asks his people to seek
answers from a false god, but all is a boob. You may recognize that name, but maybe you
didn't know this is where it came from. And you may also recognize the name's meaning.
It translates to, Lord of the Flies. But the one true God is privy to all that's happening,
so he sends the angel of the Lord
to give Elijah an assignment.
Elijah needs to rebuke the King's servant for seeking out guidance from a false God,
and let them know their King Ahaziah will die.
Ahaziah is not happy with Elijah's message, of course, so he sends 50 people to threaten
him.
But when they get there, Elijah pulls out his trademark moves of calling down
fire from heaven and consumes them. Ahaziah must think it's a fluke because he sends a second and
then a third set of people to confront Elijah. By the third set, the captain is nervous because
now 100 people are toast. The first two captains were pretty demanding of Elijah, but the third
captain is more cautious and respectful, and he tries to talk reasonably with Elijah. Elijah lets him know that God's word is firm. Ahaziah will die.
After Ahaziah dies, his younger brother Jehorim becomes the new King of Israel.
And this is worth noting, the King of Judah at this time is also named Jehorim.
Some Bible translations try to help with this confusion by referring to the King of Israel as Joram instead, so you may not have to deal with this confusion at all depending which translation
you're using.
Speaking of potentially confusing names, Chapter 2 recounts how Elisha takes over as Elijah's
successor.
As a refresher, it might help to remember that J comes before S in the alphabet, just
like Elijah comes before Elijah.
Everybody knows Elijah is about to be taken away.
Elijah knows it, Elijah knows it,
and all the prophets around them know it.
Elijah refuses to leave him alone.
He is not looking forward to Elijah's departure,
even though that means he'll be getting a promotion.
Elijah basically says,
what do you want me to give you in my will?
And Elijah answers with something that is impossible
for Elijah himself to give, only God could give it.
He wants a double portion of the spirit that Elijah has.
This is reminiscent of how the firstborn son
usually gets twice the inheritance of the other sons.
But here Elijah's apprentice doesn't want twice the livestock
or twice the land, he wants twice the God saturation.
This is an incredibly wise request.
Elijah says, that one's not up to me, but we'll ask God and see what he does.
And then we do see what God does, and it's wild.
He sends a cherry to fire down from heaven, a holy uber, if you will, to pick up Elijah.
Fire from heaven has always been Elijah's signature move.
But it has always been Elijah's signature move, but it has always been empowered
by God.
It's not like some kind of power or skill Elijah can pull out as a party trick whenever
he wants.
And what I love about this is that it's not just a sign of Elijah's agency, but it's
also a sign of the relationship between God and Elijah.
Fierre from Heaven is their inside joke, so to speak.
The Fierre chariot takes them up into the heavens,
and this is really interesting here because this culture has no notion of bodies going up to the heavens.
Bodies go down to shiel, the grave, so this really throws them off.
A bunch of people go to see if they can find him or his body, but he's vanished, taken by God.
And I want to be careful not to say anything that scripture doesn't say at this point.
This particular passage gives us no indication that Elijah dies at this point.
Usually when people die, the text will say something like,
he slept with his fathers or something like that. But all it tells us about Elijah is that he was
taken away. We'll link to a short article about this in today's show notes in case you want to
read more. Elisha sees all this happening, which is the sign that God is answering his request with a yes.
Then Elisha's first three miracles signify his position as Elijah's replacement. First,
he parts the water, just like Elijah did a few verses earlier and like Moses and Joshua have
done in the past. Then he speaks life to the waters of Jericho, and he speaks death to the boys who
mocked him. Before you think Elisha is being too harsh with the boys, these people are living in
a place of idle worship, rebelling against Yahweh, so God's covenant with Israel would put them
under the death penalty anyway. And they seem to be telling Elisha God's prophet that they want him dead.
They're telling Elisha to go up like Elijah had gone up.
They're adding insult to injury by pointing out his baldness because the cultural norm for
prophets is to leave their hair uncut and the law requires not cutting of their sideburns.
But Alisha might not have had any sideburns to cut. So these guys who are walking an idolatry
are harassing God's prophet for breaking either a social standard
or for breaking a law he wasn't breaking.
That's ironic.
Now let's get back to Moab's rebellion,
which the author mentioned briefly
at the start of today's reading
and then tells in further detail in chapter three.
Moab has rebelled against Israel,
and this may or may not be a reference
to what we read about yesterday
in Obediah's prophecy about Moab.
Israel and Judah team up to go to war with Moab, but they make a poor decision on what
route they should take because they used apple maps instead of Google maps or better yet
Yahweh.
They end up in the desert with no water and they finally decide to consult with Alisha.
But Alisha is like, who, me, you want to talk to me?
Don't you guys have your own pagan prophets back home?
Ask them.
But they beg him, and since he has a weak spot
for Jehoshaphat, one of the few good kings of Judah,
you relince and agrees to talk to them.
You request a little background music first.
This makes me think of the church services
where the guitarist is finger picking
through a chorus during the alter-call.
Then he says, here's the deal.
God's gonna bring you water, then you'll be refreshed,
then you'll go to feet Moab,
and when you win,
destroy everything on your way out of town.
They follow Alishas commands,
and as they're clearly winning the war,
the King of Moab panics
and makes an incredibly wicked plea to his God
by offering his son up as a burnt sacrifice
in hopes that it will bring them victory. Moab makes another strong push against Israel
with great wrath, the text says,
but Israel had already effectively won the battle,
so they retreat back home,
probably to avoid unnecessarily losing more men.
Chapter 4 is full of miracles a Lysha performs,
and I love that they're not all big things like national battles.
They're things as seemingly small as helping a widow provide for her family.
God not only provides enough to help her from having to sell her sons into slavery,
but also provides enough for them to live on afterward.
And not only does God use Alisha to provide for the poor,
but he also uses him to provide for the rich.
Alisha meets a wealthy family who offers to help him with whatever he needs.
The only thing the wife wants is a son.
An Elisha prophesies that she'll have one.
Awesome.
But then the son dies.
Not awesome.
She seeks out Elisha's help and here he performs his most dramatic miracle.
Raising the dead.
Double portion indeed. This woman responds first with praise before she
even goes to pick up her son. Elisha's final miracle in this chapter was purifying some
putrid stew and multiplying food during a famine. I love that God used him in such a wide array of
situations. What was your God shot today? Mine was just a little phrase in 317, where Alisha is prophesying to the kings about how
they'll defeat Moab.
He says, You shall not see wind or rain, but that streambed shall be filled with water.
God was going to provide in a way that was invisible to track.
They wouldn't be able to see any progress, just results.
This kind of thing is always such a trust building exercise when
we can't see how God is working, but we just have to believe that He is. God does some
of His best work in the dark. Just because it's dark, it doesn't mean that He doesn't have
victory in store when the lights come on. Who knows what He's up to. But even earthly
losses still add up to eternal victories in God's economy, so our hearts can
be at peace.
Regardless whether your next battle is a victory or a setback, he's where the joy is.
The Trinity is one of the most foundational truths of our faith.
It can be really confusing though, and if we aren't careful, we end up putting the three
persons of the Trinity in a blender and mixing them all up together as though they're the
same.
While God the Father, God the Son, and God the Spirit are one, and they are unified in their
will and purpose, they're also distinct in their roles.
We've built out a PDF that talks more about the roles of the persons of the Trinity, using
examples and scriptures, and we'd love to share that with you.
If you want to get this PDF for free, all you have to do is go to thebibelrecap.com forward
slash Trinity and submit your email address.
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