![]() |
| Copyright © 2001 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
|
P.O.
Box 53055 |
| June 13, 2001 |
|
|
|
MOUNTAINTOP LOYALTY: THE ELIJAH
EXPERIENCE #13
RUNNING FROM THE QUEEN It's got to be one of the most unusual marriages in the world, and it illustrates beyond my comprehension the old phrase "strange bedfellows." A political couple, James Carville and Mary Matalin — who sit for sure in opposite corners on CNN's Crossfire — are actually married to each other. Back in 1992, Carville helped put an Arkansas governor named Bill Clinton in the White House, while his soon-to-be-wife was working right across the fence as the political director for the George Bush, Senior, reelection campaign. They had to pretty much put the romantic relationship on hold for most of the year, and it was obvious from the start that one of the two was really going to get their feelings hurt on Election Night.
And Mary Matalin just absolutely crashed and burned.
She went back to her hotel room, which was a total mess, and fell into
bed, her heart breaking. The phone rang, James Carville was on the other
end, and she exploded with every mean, nasty word she could think of to
call him. She had worked so hard, she had given her very best effort,
a thousand percent, and to have come away with nothing but a bitter defeat
. . . it was more than she could bear. One year later, she stunned the
world by marrying the Serpenthead, and became Mrs. James Carville, but
that was one agonizing November night, 1992. He had come so incredibly close to bringing all of Israel
back to God. But after a brutal, exhausting political campaign that ran
longer than some of our U.S. races for the White House, one wicked, scheming
woman had ruined everything. Ahab had almost made a recommitment to God.
The worship of Baal had almost been wiped out. But with one stroke of
the pen Queen Jezebel had reignited the controversy. Baal was dead, but
Baal-worship was alive and well. Heaven's God had triumphed on Mount Carmel,
but it looked like Jezebel's kingdom was still firmly in control. "In spite of Elijah's great triumph in the trial on Mount Carmel and the dramatic demonstration that Elijah's God is the Lord of heaven and earth and the source of Israel's blessings, Jezebel is undaunted. Hers is no empty threat" — remember, she sent Elijah a note promising to kill him — "and Ahab has shown that he is either unwilling or unable to restrain her. So Elijah knows that one of the main sources of Jezebel's present apostasy is still spewing out its poison and that his own life is in danger." After running a hundred miles through the sand to save
himself, poor Elijah had to be thinking to himself: "What does a
guy have to do?" And perhaps that was his problem: he thought the
saving of Israel WAS his problem . . . and not God's problem. Listen, friend, it's sobering just how blind we become when we're loyal to a false god, whether it's made out of stone or made out of VISA card plastic. We saw a line in the Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary, which talks about the mountain of evidence — no pun intended — that was presented to Jezebel from the peak of Carmel. She had to know that Baal-worship was an evil shame, an false, empty shell of a religion. It was so obvious. But the Bible commentators are accurate when they tell us this: "A hearing of truth simply hardens where it does not save." The victory of Jehovah should have melted her heart;
instead it hardened it. It should have opened her mind; instead she resolutely
closed her eyes to the evidence and to the truth. It was a case of "Don't
bother me with the facts, Elijah; my mind's made up." [Elijah] had hoped that the glorious victory on Carmel would break the spell of Jezebel upon the king. When the prophet was informed of the queen's stubborn resistance to the new appeal for reformation, it was more than he could bear. He was unprepared for the cool, calculated, determined hatred of this wicked queen." And so we have this former champion of God huddled
under a tree, sobbing and sighing: "I give up. God, get someone else
to run your mission trips; I'm a failure at it." "Elijah did not do right in forsaking his post of duty. His work was not yet over. The battle had only begun. Had he stayed courageously by, and had he sent back a message to the queen reminding her that the God who had given him victory over the prophets of Baal would not forsake him now, he would have found angels ready to protect his life." That's true, isn't it? "God's judgments in signal fashion would have fallen upon Jezebel, a tremendous impression would have been made, and a mighty reformation would have swept over the land." And this tag line really hurts: "By fleeing for his life Elijah played into the hands of the enemy. The flight to Beersheba went far toward nullifying the victory on Carmel." Well, listening friend, there but for the grace of
God . . . And you know, I really think this Bible story is included to
give me hope and you hope. I mean, this is Elijah the great prophet! And
he ran in abject fear. He got discouraged and turned away from the job
God wanted him to do. He left a task halfway finished and found a tree
to hide behind. And yet God wasn't done with him yet. God sent him an
angel to bring the comfort of food and an encouraging word. "If, under trying circumstances," the author writes, "men of spiritual power, pressed beyond measure, become discouraged and desponding; if at times they see nothing desirable in life, that they should choose it, this is nothing strange or new. Let all such remember that one of the mightiest of the prophets fled for his life before the rage of an infuriated woman. . . . But it was when hope was gone, and his lifework seemed threatened with defeat, that he learned one of the most precious lessons of his life. In the hour of his greatest weakness he learned the need and the possibility of trusting God under circumstances the most forbidding." It's good to know that even when you turn tail and run a hundred miles out into the desolate desert, you find a friendly, forgiving God behind the nearest sand dune. |