You
don’t hear many sermons from I Kings these days, but you will today. I Kings begins the history of Israel as a
monarchy beginning with the anointing of Samuel and ends with the fall of kings
with the Babylonian captivity. In many
ways it is a retrospective history, it looks back and explains the roots of
Israel’s exile, but it also looks forward to a future with hope.
The
story of Elijah begins in I Kings 17.
Ahab has been named king. He
marries Jezebel and they begin to serve Baal and Asherah and “did more to
provoke the Lord, the God of Israel, to anger him than did all the kings of
Israel before him” (I Kings 16:33).
Elijah orders a drought on the land and is led by God to a brook where
he is fed by ravens. Then he is led to
the widow of Zarephath’s home where she is about to die of hunger, but she
makes Elijah bread from the little flour and a jar of oil she had. That flour and oil did not run dry throughout
the years of drought. In I Kings 18
Elijah encounters King Ahab on Mount Carmel with 450 prophets of Baal and 400
prophets of Asherah. He ordered that two
bulls be brought and put on two separate piles of unlit wood. He told the prophets of Baal to pray for
their god to light the wood. After
several hours he taunts them. They
prayed and danced and slashed themselves but nothing happens.
Then
Elijah repairs an altar to the Lord which was in ruins. He takes twelve stones, one from each tribe
of Israel and puts them around it. Then
he places the wood in and ordered it to be drenched with water three
times. After praying the “fire of the
Lord fell.” The people proclaim the Lord
God and killed the prophets of Baal.
Jezebel then vowed to kill Elijah and he ran as far south as he could
go. He slumped under a broom tree and
asked God to take him. There he was fed by angels and then journeys to Horeb,
the mountain of God and spent the night in a cave.
In that
cave on the holy mountain God tells Elijah that he will encounter his presence
and he did. We will talk about
encountering the presence of God today, even as sometimes it comes not in the
“grand” or “awesome” moments of life, but in the presence of simple Peace.
May the
God of Peace bless you this season. May
we each take time to listen for the “still small voice,” the “gentle whisper,”
“the sound of sheer silence” that is God in our midst. There is a lot of noise,
a lot of conflict, claims, posturing, lies, deceit, and wrongdoing. Yet the voice of God may be heard even this
Advent. Listen. Expect.
Be aware. Rejoice!
Blessings,
Pastor Tim
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