I'm afraid there is no recording this week; I have a new tablet and it came with its own integral recorder. Which didn't. I have now downloaded the one I'm used to, so I hope that next time I preach (not until August), the recording will work!
Well, poor old Elijah! Sounds as though he went properly through the
mill, doesn’t it? For a bit of context, this chapter is giving us
the aftermath of the great trial between Elijah and the prophets of
Baal. Now, back then, Baal was a rival god to Yahweh, our own God,
and a great many of the children of Israel had started to follow him,
encouraged by the Queen of the day, Jezebel, who seems to have been
dominant over the king, Ahab. Jezebel, it must be said, was not an
Israelite, but a Sidonian princess, who had been brought up to
worship Baal, and brought that worship with her. And many prophets
of God had been killed, although Obadiah, Ahab’s chief
administrator, had saved at least a hundred of them. Obadiah was a
devout follower of Yahweh, as God was known back then, despite
everything.
Elijah, you may remember, had declared a
severe drought over all the land because of the worship of Baal, but
finally it was time for a great showdown. He went to Ahab and told
him to bring all the prophets of Baal to Mount Carmel, and they would
build two altars, one to Baal and one to Yahweh, place a sacrifice on
each altar, and whichever god lit the sacrifice with fire from heaven
would be declared the god that Israel should worship. Elijah was so
confident that God was God that he ordered that altar to be drenched
in water, with water in a sort of moat round it. The Baalites went
first, and nothing happened. Elijah teased them that Baal must have
gone for a walk, or be on the loo, or something, and they worked
themselves up into a terrific frenzy and cut themselves and so on,
but nothing happened. And then Elijah prayed, and fire came down
from heaven and consumed the sacrifice, and the wood, and even the
water! Whereupon the people fell on their faces and said that God
was God. But Elijah had the prophets of Baal killed, which doesn’t
sound very Godly of him, but we mustn’t judge people who lived in
the Iron age by our own standards!
Anyway, Ahab goes home
that evening and tells Jezebel what has happened, and she is
absolutely incandescent with rage, and vows to kill Elijah within the
day. Elijah, hearing of this, runs away, and that’s where our
reading comes in. He’s obviously totally knackered and completely
out of cope, and he prays that he might die, and then he falls
asleep. An angel comes, bringing him food, and he eats and sleeps
again, and then he eats a last meal before heading off towards Mount
Horeb, a journey which it is said took him forty days and forty
nights – a foreshadowing of Jesus in the wilderness. I don’t
know whether it was actually forty days and forty nights, or whether
this is just code for “a long time”, and I don’t know whether
he was able to find anything to eat along the route, but whatever.
Anyway, he goes into a cave to spend the night, and God comes to him
and says “Elijah, why are you here?”
To which he
replies, “I have been very zealous for the Lord God
Almighty. The Israelites have rejected your covenant, torn down
your altars, and put your prophets to death with the sword. I
am the only one left, and now they are trying to kill me too.”
And God tells Elijah to go and stand outside to
experience the presence of the Lord. And we know what happened next:
there was a huge wind, but the Lord was not in the wind; a mighty
earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake; and a big fire,
but the Lord wasn’t in the fire, either. And then there was only
the sound of silence. And again God asked Elijah why he was there,
and again Elijah replies, self-pityingly, that he was the only one
left.
To which God says, more or less, that’s
bollocks! He tells Elijah to anoint new kings of Aram and Israel,
and to appoint Elisha as his successor, and between them they will
kill the followers of Baal, but there are at least seven thousand
people in Israel who haven’t ever worshipped Baal. Elijah is not
alone.
And, just to finish off the story, Elijah is
reassured, and goes and does what he has been told.
But
poor old Elijah! I feel very sorry for him – I’m sure you know
what it’s like to be absolutely exhausted and totally out of cope.
I know I do, and all one can really do is go to bed and sleep it off.
Things usually look brighter in the morning.
Only, in
this case, for Elijah, things still looked pretty grim. Yes, the
food the angel brought him helped, but the one thing he wanted was to
go to where he knew God would speak to him. And sure enough, when he
got to Mount Horeb, or Mount Sinai, which is probably another name
for it, there God was. But he didn’t get the reassurance and
praise he had hoped for. Instead it was “What are you doing here?”
Elijah had no business being on Mount Horeb; God wanted him back
home in Israel.
I wonder why God chose that moment to show
the wind, earthquake and fire to Elijah, but only spoke to him in the
silence. And then to say again “Why are you here?”
I
think it’s important, often to wait on God in silence. In my early
Christian life, I had no real idea how to pray – all that was
modelled was the public prayer meeting, with the earnest Evangelicals
going “Oh Lord, we really pray that you will just….”, and it
wasn’t until I was many years into my Christian life that I
discovered that there were other ways of praying, and that talking to
– or perhaps more accurately, talking at – God was not the only
way to pray. I’m sure you’ve found this for yourselves, but I do
want to remind you that prayer is often, if not mostly, a matter of
waiting on God in silence, of stilling your mind, of opening
yourself. Some people like to use a mantra – “Jesus, son of God,
have mercy on me, a sinner”, for instance; others like to use a
rosary, perhaps using the “Saviour of the World” prayer. Still
others use conscious relaxation methods. And it is while listening
to the sound of silence that God speaks.
Don’t get me
wrong; of course there is a place for prayer in words, as in the
public prayer meeting, as in the liturgy. You can pray to God in
your own words, and that, I suspect, is what most of us do, but of
course there are loads of other prayers one can use, dating right
back to the beginning of Christianity! Or even before – many
people find praying the Psalms works for them, or perhaps a hymn.
There’s no right or wrong way to pray; there’s no one way is
right for everybody, and most of us will pray differently at
different times! What matters is the contact with God, not the way
you do it.
For Elijah, at that moment, it was running to
Mount Horeb, where he knew God
would speak to him. And indeed God did, but not in the way he
expected. Instead of the – I was going to say hugs, but you know
what I mean, that Elijah wanted and expected, it was pointed out to
him that God doesn’t always deal in the spectacular, that Elijah
still had work to do, and that there were at least seven thousand
other people in the land who hadn’t and would not, bow to Baal!
Poor old Elijah!
But as God never calls without enabling, I am sure Elijah received
the reassurance and recovery he needed to enable him to go back and
do as he’d been told. Elijah
might have done the wrong thing in running away, but he was not sent
back in his own strength. He was reassured that he wasn’t the only
one, even though it felt like it. He was told to anoint two new
kings, and eventually they would replace the current weak ones; and
above all he was told to anoint his successor, Elisha. From now on,
he would have someone shadowing him and helping him.
I
think that’s a really good model for us, isn’t it? When we have
gone wrong, as Elijah went wrong, God speaks to us – not normally
in a spectacular way, but in the silence of our hearts – and
reassures us, and heals us, and enables us to go right again.
I
don’t, incidentally, think that Elijah had depression – that’s
a very nasty illness, and I’m sure God wouldn’t have been so
bracing with him, although
I’m equally sure God would have healed him. But Elijah was
exhausted and out of cope, and had lapsed into self-pity – all too
easily done. But he knew the right thing to do, to go to God, even
if he went about it the wrong way.
And that’s the same
for us, isn’t it. Always, always, go to God. Sometimes we don’t
want to; sometimes we feel too ashamed to show our faces before God.
But we know that when we do, God will act – God will heal us,
forgive us, and enable us to get up and go on.
The man
who Jesus healed in our Gospel story was rather similar. We don’t
know, from this distance, what had gone wrong for him, but it sounds
like the worst kind of mental illness, and he felt he had a whole
army of demons inside him. So he asked Jesus, firstly to leave him
alone, and when that obviously wasn’t going to happen, to send his
demons into the herd of swine that was grazing in the neighbourhood.
And when this had happened, he was healed, and was able to get
dressed and sit, clothed and in his right mind, at Jesus’
feet.
Sometimes, when we are too ashamed to go to God, or
hindered by other reasons, it’s God who will come in search of us,
as Jesus came to the man in the graveyard.
They
are both odd stories in today’s readings,
but I think what they spell out is God’s love and care for us,
whoever we are. We may have trouble approaching God, but God is
always looking out for us! Remember the father in Jesus’ story,
who saw his estranged son coming and ran to meet him? That’s what
God is like and it’s what I want to leave with you this morning!
Poor old Elijah! But God healed him and helped him and
sent him forth. As he will do with us. Elijah was not alone –
there were over seven thousand others. And we are not alone – we
have our church families to love and support us. Amen.
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