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Elijah Taken In A Whirlwind.
2 KINGS
2:1-11.--SEPT. 11.--
Golden
Text:--"He was not, for God took him."-- Gen. 5:24.
THE words, "When the Lord would
take up Elijah," suggest that Elijah had a specially protected life--that
it was not subject to the power of his enemies--that he was wholly under divine
control. And this is true also of the antitypical Elijah class of this Gospel
age. It was true, we remember, of the great Head of this class, Jesus in the
flesh. The scribes and Pharisees made many attempts at his life before the
successful one, but could not harm him previously because "his hour was
not yet come." So with every member of his body in the flesh, every member
of the Elijah class--not even a hair of their heads could fall without divine
notice and permission. These are not to esteem that any of their affairs are
accidental, for being fully consecrated to the Lord and fully accepted by him,
all of their affairs, great and small, are under divine supervision--their
health or sickness, their rights or privileges, their joys or sorrows.
We are not in this wishing to
intimate fatalism, but rather a divine supervision. If trials and disciplines
and corrections, either of poverty or sorrow or ill health, be necessary for
the correction of these they will surely have them; and some or all of these
may [R3416 : page 251] come to them even though not
as chastisements, but as lessons of experience necessary for their development
for places in the Kingdom or for their usefulness in the Lord's service in the
present time--as was the case with our Lord. Those who are of the Elijah class,
fully consecrated to the Lord, will be glad to have this divine supervision of
their affairs and will rejoice in it. This, however, would not mean that they
may not and should not do whatever would appeal to them as being wise and
reasonable for the maintenance of their health or its recovery, for the
satisfying of their hunger or thirst, or for the betterment of their temporal
interests. But while using what to them may appear to be reasonable means, [R3416
: page 252] they will consider that these also are all in the hands of the
Lord, and, if successful, that they are his provision, to be accepted with
thankfulness; while, if unsuccessful, they will be willing to accept the
results without murmuring--with full assurance of faith that God is able to
make all things work together for their good.
AT
THE SCHOOLS OF THE PROPHETS.
Elijah and Elisha were at Gilgal,
one of the cities at which was located a "school of the prophets,"
where piously inclined young men sought instruction respecting the divine Law
under the supervision of those who were recognized as prophets, and with a view
to become doctors or expounders of the Law of God in the various cities in
which they lived. Elijah and Elisha had been at this place for some time, and
now Elijah proposed a journey, suggesting that Elisha go not with him. The
latter, however, would not forsake the older prophet, whom he styled his
master, and toward whom he performed the duties of a body-servant. So they went
together to Bethel,
at which was located another "school of the prophets." We are not
told how long was the stay at Bethel, nor what the prophets did or said at the
school, but we do know that the pupils, known as the sons of the prophets, came
privately to Elisha and in confidential whispers asked him if he was aware that
the Lord was about to take from him his master Elijah.
Elisha's answer was that he did know
it, but did not wish to discuss the matter. Evidently he was filled with sorrow
at the thought of the loss he was about to sustain, for everything indicates
that during the ten years or more that he had been Elijah's servant and
co-laborer in the prophetic office, a deep personal attachment had sprung up
between the two men, who in some respects were very dissimilar. Again Elijah
suggested that Elisha should tarry while he would go on to the city of Jericho; but again, with
strong vociferations of his earnestness, Elisha declined to leave his master. When
they arrived at Jericho Elisha had a similar experience, the sons of the
prophets again asking him whether or not he had heard of the Lord's intention
to take up the prophet, and again he refused to discuss the matter. For the
third time Elijah suggested to him that he tarry while he would go farther
under the Lord's direction, not to a city but to the river Jordan, but
Elisha would not tarry and they went on.
These visits to the schools of the
prophets before Elijah was taken away doubtless had a beneficial effect upon
these students of the Lord's Word, who well knew the aged prophet and his
allegiance to God and God's power manifested through him. This last visit would
be impressed upon their minds and go with them to the various cities of Israel in due
time. Meanwhile the revelation which had been made to them, that God intended
to take Elijah by a whirlwind, would prepare them for this final miracle and
attestation of him as a servant of the Almighty. Apparently the prophets of
this last school, fifty in number, while modestly refraining from following
with Elijah and Elisha, nevertheless were deeply interested in the event they
knew was about to take place. They went to a prominent point near Jericho, high above the river Jordan and overlooking it, and
there witnessed what transpired. In the distance they beheld Elijah take off
his mantle and roll it into the form of a club, and therewith smite the waters
of the river Jordan, dividing them so that the two passed over as the
Israelites had previously done by the miracle which the Lord wrought through
Joshua at very nearly the same point. On the prophets went, up the steep
hillside beyond Jordan--quite
possible Mount Nebo, where Moses died.--Deut.
32:49,50.
HARVEST
SIFTINGS TYPIFIED.
There has been considerable
speculation respecting this account of the three times and places at which
Elijah invited Elisha to part company with him: that Elijah was too modest to
desire many witnesses of the final manifestation of God's favor toward him, or
that he wished to spare Elisha the sadness of the later parting; but these
suggestions are not satisfactory to us. To our mind these were a feature of the
type whose antitype must be expected in this present time. As Elijah
represented the consecrated ones who will as overcomers constitute the body of
Christ and become participants with our Lord in the glories of the Kingdom in
the first resurrection, so apparently Elisha would represent a consecrated
class of this time, in some respects inferior. These will have an acquaintance
with the Elijah class, will minister to them in various ways, yet not be
identified with them as members of the same death-devoted company.
In harmony with this illustration or
type we shall expect that, as the present age draws to its close and the Elijah
class passes away entirely, there will come various siftings or testings to
this class of inferior consecration to separate them from the company and
fellowship of the Elijah class. Whoever will fall away in this sifting will
cease to belong to the Elisha class. Those who endure the siftings and testings
will thus maintain their position in the Elisha class, and some will thus
continue according to the type down to the very close of Elisha's experience,
and will then in consequence of this faithfulness receive a great blessing--a
double portion of the Elijah spirit.
As the two prophets went on Elijah
said to Elisha, [R3416 : page 252] Make request
what I shall give thee, as I go from thee shortly. Elisha's request for a
double portion of the spirit of Elijah is not to be understood as meaning twice
as much of God's power as Elijah possessed, for this would have constituted
Elisha a prophet of double the power of Elijah. Besides, how unreasonable a
request would it have been for him to make-- that Elijah should give more than
he himself possessed. We must understand him, therefore, to mean that if
Elijah's spirit or power would in any wise be remaining with any prophets in
the earth who would represent the Lord, that Elisha desired that he might have
twice as much as any other one--not selfishly, we may assume, but that he
appreciated Elijah's disposition and position as a servant of God, and desired
that as far as possible he might enter into a similar work of service. His
request was granted conditionally, but he was told that it would be dependent
upon his own watchfulness.
The lesson which we draw from this
request of Elisha and the conditions of its fulfilment is that the consecrated
class whom he represents in the end of this age will need to be on the alert if
they would discern the passing away of the Elijah class, and that only in
proportion as they do discern the completion of the Elijah class and its
passing into glory will they become the recipients of a proportionately large
measure of the spirit and zeal of the Elijah class. From the Scriptures we get
the thought that after the Elijah class shall have been completed, tested,
proven and glorified, there will still remain a period of time before the full
ending of the "present evil world" or dispensation--before the full
inauguration of the Millennial glories. During that period the class which we
believe Elisha represented--namely, a consecrated class, but lacking in some
measure the full spirit of devotion exhibited by the Elijah class--will be
quickened and energised by the change of dispensation and the evidences of the
fulfilling of the divine plan, so that thereafter they will be practically as
devoted and self-sacrificing and zealous every way as the Elijah class had
been.
The receiving by Elisha of power
from the departed Elijah seems to correspond in considerable measure to the
"foolish virgins" getting their oil and being able to trim their
lamps after the "wise virgins" have gone in to the wedding and the
door is shut. As the foolish virgins were not evil but good--"virgins"
--so Elisha was not an evil man but a good man and a prophet: as the foolish
virgins lacked something that the wise virgins possessed, so Elisha lacked
something of what Elijah possessed, and that lack, which was supplied to the foolish
virgins in the oil, is represented in Elisha's case in the mantle and blessing.
As the Parable of the Virgins does
not go on to show what happened to the foolish virgins except that they failed
to enter into the marriage because the door was shut, so the Elisha picture
merely shows that Elisha did not accompany Elijah, but on receiving his
benediction and power he continued for a while the work that Elijah had been
doing. So it is our thought that during the great time of trouble there will be
a consecrated class who had not a sufficiency of zeal in self-sacrifice to be
counted of the Lord as members of the Elijah class or body of Christ, who
nevertheless will experience a great time of refreshing and become thoroughly
devoted after they realize that the Church has been glorified--after they begin
to see also the fulfilment of various Scriptures respecting Babylon. This
class, whom we understand to be represented in the Scriptures as the
"great company," whose number no man knows, who wash their robes and
make them white in the blood of the Lamb, and eventually come up to spirit
conditions, though not to be of the Royal Priesthood in the throne (Rev. 7:9-17)-- these are represented as recognizing by and by
that the little flock, the Bride class, the Elijah class, have [R3417 : page 253] passed beyond the vail and they are
shown to rejoice accordingly, saying, "Let us be glad and rejoice and give
glory to God, for the marriage of the Lamb is come and his wife hath made
herself ready!" This class in turn, though not worthy to be the Bride, the
wife, is invited to participate in the great marriage feast which is to take
place shortly after the glorification of the Church.--Rev.
19:7-9.
ELISHA,
IF A TYPE, A DOUBLE ONE.
We might here remark that although
we are treating Elisha as a part of the type as well as Elijah, yet there is
nothing in the Scriptures that positively intimates that this is the case--it
is a mere inference. In Elijah's case, as we have already pointed out in a
previous lesson, there is no doubt; beyond peradventure Elijah was a type of
the elect Church in the flesh. But if Elisha was a type, we believe that we are
justified in considering him a type of two classes. First, of the class already
suggested, who are with the Elijah class and who maintain relationship to the
close of Elijah's period and who then become partakers of his spirit. And this
type would seem to extend as far as Elisha's re-crossing the Jordan, smiting
it with the mantle of Elijah. If the crossing of Jordan into the land of Canaan
be taken to represent death, then the picture should be read as indicating that
this "great company" will all pass through death, which is just what
the Scriptures elsewhere seem clearly to show-- that in order to be on the
spirit plane at all it will be necessary for them to "all die as
men."
In this view of the matter we assume
that Elisha, [R3417 : page 254] after crossing the
Jordan and entering Canaan, would represent another, a different class, namely,
the earthly phase of the Kingdom--Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and all the
prophets, the beginning of the restitution class. Elisha's work after crossing
Jordan was restitution work in many respects, and in this particular would well
correspond to what we may expect of the earthly phase of the Kingdom after its
establishment --after the great time of trouble. But again we remind the reader
that the typical character of Elisha is not beyond question, as it is nowhere
affirmed in the Scriptures, but merely inferred by us because of his
association with Elijah.
CHARIOTS
OF FIRE AND HORSES OF FIRE.
The record is that Elijah and Elisha
were separated by chariots of fire, but that Elijah was taken up not by these
but by a whirlwind into heaven (margin). We might draw different inferences
from this, but feel safer to adhere closely to the wording of the text. The
fiery chariots and horses we infer to be a part of the type, and shall not be
at all surprised to find the fulfilment in severe persecutions which will come
upon the last members of the Elijah class--persecutions unto death possibly. If
this be the correct interpretation of the type there would be a special
significance attaching to Elisha's seeing the departure of Elijah. It would
seem to signify close personal friendship and loyalty between them down to the
very close, and that the effect of these fiery trials would be to energize
those who had previously been less energetic in the carrying out of their
consecration.
The whirlwind in the type should be
interpreted, in harmony with general Scripture usage, as signifying a fierce
trouble--a trouble, too, which would agitate the heavens or ecclesiastical
powers as an earthquake would represent disturbances of the social conditions. Thus
read in advance of the fulfilment the type seems to imply that the end of the
Elijah class will occur amidst great ecclesiastical commotions, accompanied by
fiery trials--thus we think probably the change will come to the last members
of the elect "body."
"HE
WAS NOT, FOR GOD TOOK HIM."
Our Golden Text relates to Enoch,
but is not inappropriately applied by the Lesson Committee to Elijah, for what
was true of one was apparently true of the other also. Enoch, the faithful
prophet of old, whose only prophecy recorded is his announcement of the second
coming of the Lord to execute righteousness in the earth and to convince the
gainsayers (Jude 14,15), suddenly disappeared from amongst men, and the
inspired record is that he was not found because God had taken him; and so
likewise Elijah, having served his mission, disappeared from amongst men for
God took him. True, the sons of the prophets suggested to Elisha afterward that
perhaps the Spirit of the Lord, which had taken him up, would drop him down to
some other portion of the world, but there is nothing to confirm such a
supposition. "He was not found, for God took him."
The question arises, Where did God
take these two prophets of old? and there is no answer to the question. True,
in Elijah's case it is stated that the whirlwind took him up into heaven, but
the word heaven here is used to represent the sky, the circumambient air, and
has no reference whatever to the heaven which is God's dwelling place. That
neither of these prophets went to the latter place we have the very best
evidence in our Lord's words, "No man has ascended into heaven save he
which came down from heaven, even the Son of man."--John
3:13.
We can only conjecture respecting these two prophets, and our conjecture
is that they were not only taken away in order that their disappearance from
the earth might be typical, but that possibly the Lord has taken them to some
other suitable habitation, perhaps some other world, that in due time he might bring
them back to earth and possibly thereby impress upon mankind some lessons which
could not otherwise be so forcefully taught. For instance, he might thereby
give the lesson of his abundant ability to fulfil any and every promise ever
made to mankind. We have no thought, however, that Elijah has ever yet returned
to this earth--we have no thought that he was present on the Mount of
Transfiguration with the Lord and the apostles as already shown; we accept the
Lord's testimony respecting the spectacle on the Mount--that it was a vision
merely.--See our issue of April 1, 1904.
"DEATH
PASSED UPON ALL MEN."
Some may be inclined to argue that
Enoch and Elijah must have died, because the penalty of death was against them
as well as against all the other members of our race, and because the Apostle
reiterates this penalty, saying, "By one man's disobedience sin entered
the world and death by sin, and so death passed upon all for all are
sinners." (Rom. 5:12.) We reply that nothing in our
view, in our judgment, is in discord with this sentiment of the Apostle. The
death sentence passed against Enoch and against Elijah as well as against the
remainder of Adam's children, and wherever they are they must still be under
that death sentence; they cannot be released from it until the full close of
the antitypical atonement day--which will close synchronously with this Gospel
age, which is its antitype. Wherever these two venerable prophets may be they
are not perfected [R3417 : page 255] because, as
the Apostle points out (Heb. 11:38,40), God has provided for
us--the Gospel Church, the body of Christ,--some better thing than he provided
for any of the ancient worthies, and they without us shall not be made perfect.
We are confident, therefore, that Enoch and Elijah, wherever they may be, are
not yet made perfect--they have not yet escaped from the bondage of corruption.
They are still under the sentence of death and will be until that
"curse" shall be lifted in the dawn of the new dispensation.
From the divine standpoint every one
is dead who is either under the sentence or whose life to any extent has been
impaired as a result of the curse. The whole world in this sense of the word is
dead, and Enoch or Elijah can only be thought of or spoken of as alive from the
standpoint of faith, even as we speak of ourselves who are accepted of the Lord
as members of the body of Christ and as having passed from death unto
life--namely, by faith, by hope. As we speak of ourselves and each other as
alive toward God through faith in Christ, so we may speak of Enoch and Elijah
as alive through the merit of the great sacrifice at Calvary,
of which they shall partake actually in due time, becoming actually alive and
being made actually perfect.
"CHANGED
IN A MOMENT, IN THE TWINKLING OF AN EYE."
As for the change of the Church, the
Elijah class in the flesh--precursors or forerunners thus of the anointed body
in the Spirit--the change of these members at this time the Scriptures clearly
indicate to be one which the world will not recognize. As the Scriptures
declare, although we are sons of God, sons of the Highest, nevertheless we must
die like men-- we must go down like the great Prince, Jesus, into death, and
must be raised to the newness of life, to spirit conditions, to the divine
nature. The Apostle assures us that those living in the end of this age, during
the parousia of the Son of man, will not need to sleep--to tarry in the death
condition--for the moment of their death will be the moment of their change to
glory, honor and immortality, the divine nature.
W.T. R-3415 b : page 251 – 1904 r.