In Isolation & Crisis, God Is at Work

[Listen to an audio version here].

When we are alone and isolated, it’s easy to miss the amazing things that God is doing. In the midst of crisis, it’s easy only to see the crisis and miss the things that God is doing under, with, and around it. The story of Elijah and Obadiah in 1 Kings 18 reminds us that in times of isolation and times of crisis, God is at work. Here is the story of 1 Kings 18 from the perspective of Elijah and then from the standpoint of Obadiah and back to Elijah again.

Elijah Returns

Elijah had been in relative isolation for a long time. Our text tells us it was three years. He had spent the first few months of the drought crisis in the total isolation of the Kerith Ravine and the next couple years in the foreign town of Zarephath cared for by a widow.

Finally, after three years, he returned to his homeland to speak to King Ahab. King Ahab and his wife Queen Jezebel had led the people of God to turn from the Lord to the false god Baal. But the Lord had not left His people. He confronted them and called them back to Himself by withholding rain. This was the crisis of a severe drought.

The devastation was real. As Elijah entered Israel, he would have seen the barren land from three years without rain. As he headed toward Samaria, he came across Obadiah, the palace administrator. And who better could he have met for his encouragement than Obadiah? Continue reading “In Isolation & Crisis, God Is at Work”

The Challenge of Isolation & Insecurity

[Listen to an audio version here].

According to ancient records, King Ahab did a good job in building the Israelite economy. He also made strategic alliances, evidenced by his marriage to Jezebel, that brought security to Israel’s borders.

The problem with Ahab was that he did not serve the Lord. In fact, he was worse than the bad Israelite kings who came before him. The previous kings had worshiped the Lord, Jehovah, but in a wrong way, through a golden calf. Ahab worshiped the gods of the nations around them, Baal and Asherah, the fertility gods of the Canaanites.

Enter Elijah

God had promised that if His people turned away to other gods, He would call them back to Himself through judgments and through messengers or prophets. At this low point in the life of Israel, God called one of the greatest of those messengers into public service. His name was Elijah.

People looked back on Elijah with a veneration equal only to that given to Moses. They looked for another Elijah to come in their time of need. He was from the hill country on the east bank of the Jordan, a sort of highlander or mountain man. During his labors, God did amazing things. This is captured wonderfully in the song, “The Days of Elijah.”

In spite of these amazing things, the story of Elijah is remarkably human, just as Moses’ is. It conveys the fears, challenges, exhilaration, doubts, loneliness, and difficulties Elijah faced in doing such momentous work. In a time of crisis, Elijah’s ministry offers us many lessons for how God takes care of us in the ups and downs in life in general and the more wild swings of a time of great anxiety. Continue reading “The Challenge of Isolation & Insecurity”