Prophets and Kings
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 17: The Call of Elisha
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Elisha possessed both the capabilities of a
leader among men and the meekness of one
who is ready to serve.
Illustration ©
Pacific Press Publ. Assoc. |
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God had bidden Elijah anoint another to be prophet in his
stead. "Elisha the son of Shaphat . . . shalt thou anoint to be
prophet in thy room" (1 Kings 19:16), He had said; and in obedience to the
command, Elijah went to find Elisha. As he journeyed northward, how changed was
the scene from what it had been only a short while before! Then the ground was
parched, the farming districts unworked, for neither dew nor rain had fallen
for three and a half years. Now on every hand vegetation was springing up as if
to redeem the time of drought and famine. {PK 217.1}
Elisha's father was a wealthy farmer, a man whose household
were among the number that in a time of almost universal apostasy had not bowed
the knee to Baal. Theirs was a home where God was honored and where allegiance
to the faith of ancient Israel was the rule of daily life. In such surroundings
the early years of Elisha were passed. In the quietude of country life, under
the teaching of God and [218] nature and the discipline of
useful work, he received the training in habits of simplicity and of obedience
to his parents and to God that helped to fit him for the high position he was
afterward to occupy. {PK
217.2}
The prophetic call came to Elisha while, with his father's
servants, he was plowing in the field. He had taken up the work that lay
nearest. He possessed both the capabilities of a leader among men and the
meekness of one who is ready to serve. Of a quiet and gentle spirit, he was
nevertheless energetic and steadfast. Integrity, fidelity, and the love and
fear of God were his, and in the humble round of daily toil he gained strength
of purpose and nobleness of character, constantly increasing in grace and
knowledge. While co-operating with his father in the home-life duties, he was
learning to co-operate with God. {PK 218.1}
By faithfulness in little things, Elisha was preparing for
weightier trusts. Day by day, through practical experience, he gained a fitness
for a broader, higher work. He learned to serve; and in learning this, he
learned also how to instruct and lead. The lesson is for all. None can know
what may be God's purpose in His discipline; but all may be certain that
faithfulness in little things is the evidence of fitness for greater
responsibilities. Every act of life is a revelation of character, and he only
who in small duties proves himself "a workman that needeth not to be
ashamed" can be honored by God with higher service. 2 Timothy 2:15. {PK 218.2}
He who feels that it is of no consequence how he performs
the smaller tasks proves himself unfit for a more honored position. He may
think himself fully competent to take up the larger duties; but God looks
deeper than the surface. [219] After test and trial, there is
written against him the sentence, "Thou art weighed in the balances, and
art found wanting." His unfaithfulness reacts upon himself. He fails of
gaining the grace, the power, the force of character, which is received through
unreserved surrender. {PK
218.3}
Because they are not connected with some directly religious
work, many feel that their lives are useless, that they are doing nothing for
the advancement of God's kingdom. If they could do some great thing how gladly
they would undertake it! But because they can serve only in little things, they
think themselves justified in doing nothing. In this they err. A man may be in
the active service of God while engaged in the ordinary, everyday duties—while
felling trees, clearing the ground, or following the plow. The mother who
trains her children for Christ is as truly working for God as is the minister
in the pulpit. {PK 219.1}
Many long for special talent with which to do a wonderful
work, while the duties lying close at hand, the performance of which would make
the life fragrant, are lost sight of. Let such ones take up the duties lying
directly in their pathway. Success depends not so much on talent as on energy
and willingness. It is not the possession of splendid talents that enables us
to render acceptable service, but the conscientious performance of daily duties,
the contented spirit, the unaffected, sincere interest in the welfare of
others. In the humblest lot true excellence may be found. The commonest tasks,
wrought with loving faithfulness, are beautiful in God's sight. {PK 219.2}
As Elijah, divinely directed in seeking a successor, passed
the field in which Elisha was plowing, he cast upon the [220] young
man's shoulders the mantle of consecration. During the famine the family of
Shaphat had become familiar with the work and mission of Elijah, and now the
Spirit of God impressed Elisha's heart as to the meaning of the prophet's act.
To him it was the signal that God had called him to be the successor of Elijah.
{PK 219.3}
"And he left the oxen, and ran after Elijah, and said,
Let me, I pray thee, kiss my father and my mother, and then I will follow
thee." "Go back again," was Elijah's answer, "for what have
I done to thee?" This was not a repulse, but a test of faith. Elisha must
count the cost—decide for himself to accept or reject the call. If
his desires clung to his home and its advantages, he was at liberty to remain
there. But Elisha understood the meaning of the call. He knew it was from God,
and he did not hesitate to obey. Not for any worldly advantage would he forgo
the opportunity of becoming God's messenger or sacrifice the privilege of
association with His servant. He "took a yoke of oxen, and slew them, and
boiled their flesh with the instruments of the oxen, and gave unto the people,
and they did eat. Then he arose, and went after Elijah, and ministered unto
him." 1 Kings 19:20, 21. Without hesitation he left a home where he was
beloved, to attend the prophet in his uncertain life. {PK 220.1}
Had Elisha asked Elijah what was expected of him,—what
would be his work,—he would have been answered: God knows; He will
make it known to you. If you wait upon the Lord, He will answer your every
question. You may come with me if you have evidence that God has called you.
Know for yourself that God stands back of me, and [221] that
it is His voice you hear. If you can count everything but dross that you may
win the favor of God, come. {PK
220.2}
Similar to the call that came to Elisha was the answer given
by Christ to the young ruler who asked Him the question, "What good thing
shall I do, that I may have eternal life?" "If thou wilt be
perfect," Christ replied, "go and sell that thou hast, and give to
the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come and follow Me."
Matthew 19:16, 21. {PK
221.1}
Elisha accepted the call to service, casting no backward
glance at the pleasures and comforts he was leaving. The young ruler, when he
heard the Saviour's words, "went away sorrowful: for he had great
possessions." Verse 22. He was not willing to make the sacrifice. His love
for his possessions was greater than his love for God. By his refusal to
renounce all for Christ, he proved himself unworthy of a place in the Master's
service. {PK 221.2}
The call to place all on the altar of service comes to each
one. We are not all asked to serve as Elisha served, nor are we all bidden to
sell everything we have; but God asks us to give His service the first place in
our lives, to allow no day to pass without doing something to advance His work
in the earth. He does not expect from all the same kind of service. One may be
called to ministry in a foreign land; another may be asked to give of his means
for the support of gospel work. God accepts the offering of each. It is the
consecration of the life and all its interests, that is necessary. Those who make
this consecration will hear and obey the call of Heaven. [222] {PK 221.3}
To everyone who becomes a partaker of His grace, the Lord
appoints a work for others. Individually we are to stand in our lot, saying,
"Here am I; send me." Whether a man be a minister of the Word or a
physician, whether he be merchant or farmer, professional man or mechanic, the
responsibility rests upon him. It is his work to reveal to others the gospel of
their salvation. Every enterprise in which he engages should be a means to this
end. {PK 222.1}
It was no great work that was at first required of Elisha;
commonplace duties still constituted his discipline. He is spoken of as pouring
water on the hands of Elijah, his master. He was willing to do anything that
the Lord directed, and at every step he learned lessons of humility and
service. As the prophet's personal attendant, he continued to prove faithful in
little things, while with daily strengthening purpose he devoted himself to the
mission appointed him by God. {PK 222.2}
Elisha's life after uniting with Elijah was not without
temptations. Trials he had in abundance; but in every emergency he relied on
God. He was tempted to think of the home that he had left, but to this
temptation he gave no heed. Having put his hand to the plow, he was resolved
not to turn back, and through test and trial he proved true to his trust. {PK 222.3}
Ministry comprehends far more than preaching the word. It
means training young men as Elijah trained Elisha, taking them from their ordinary
duties, and giving them responsibilities to bear in God's work—small
responsibilities at first, and larger ones as they gain strength and
experience. There are in the ministry men of faith and prayer, men who can [223]
say, "That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we
have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled,
of the Word of life; . . . that which we have seen and heard declare
we unto you." 1 John 1:1-3. Young, inexperienced workers should be trained
by actual labor in connection with these experienced servants of God. Thus they
will learn how to bear burdens. {PK 222.4}
Those who undertake this training of young workers are doing
noble service. The Lord Himself co-operates with their efforts. And the young
men to whom the word of consecration has been spoken, whose privilege it is to
be brought into close association with earnest, godly workers, should make the
most of their opportunity. God has honored them by choosing them for His service
and by placing them where they can gain greater fitness for it, and they should
be humble, faithful, obedient, and willing to sacrifice. If they submit to
God's discipline, carrying out His directions and choosing His servants as
their counselors, they will develop into righteous, high-principled, steadfast
men, whom God can entrust with responsibilities. {PK 223.1}
As the gospel is proclaimed in its purity, men will be
called from the plow and from the common commercial business vocations that
largely occupy the mind and will be educated in connection with men of
experience. As they learn to labor effectively, they will proclaim the truth
with power. Through most wonderful workings of divine providence, mountains of
difficulty will be removed and cast into the sea. The message that means so
much to the dwellers upon the earth will be heard and understood. Men will [224]
know what is truth. Onward and still onward the work will advance until the
whole earth shall have been warned, and then shall the end come. {PK 223.2}
For several years after the call of Elisha, Elijah and
Elisha labored together, the younger man daily gaining greater preparedness for
his work. Elijah had been God's instrument for the overthrow of gigantic evils.
The idolatry which, supported by Ahab and the heathen Jezebel, had seduced the
nation, had been given a decided check. Baal's prophets had been slain. The
whole people of Israel had been deeply stirred, and many were returning to the
worship of God. As Elijah's successor, Elisha, by careful, patient instruction,
must endeavor to guide Israel in safe paths. His association with Elijah, the
greatest prophet since the days of Moses, prepared him for the work that he was
soon to take up alone. {PK
224.1}
During these years of united ministry, Elijah from time to
time was called upon to meet flagrant evils with stern rebuke. When wicked Ahab
seized Naboth's vineyard, it was the voice of Elijah that prophesied his doom
and the doom of all his house. And when Ahaziah, after the death of his father
Ahab, turned from the living God to Baal-zebub, the god of Ekron, it was
Elijah's voice that was heard once more in earnest protest. {PK 224.2}
The schools of the prophets, established by Samuel, had
fallen into decay during the years of Israel's apostasy. Elijah re-established
these schools, making provision for young men to gain an education that would
lead them to magnify the law and make it honorable. Three of these schools, one
at Gilgal, one at Bethel, and one at Jericho, are mentioned [225]
in the record. Just before Elijah was taken to heaven, he and Elisha visited
these centers of training. The lessons that the prophet of God had given them
on former visits, he now repeated. Especially did he instruct them concerning
their high privilege of loyally maintaining their allegiance to the God of
heaven. He also impressed upon their minds the importance of letting simplicity
mark every feature of their education. Only in this way could they receive the
mold of heaven and go forth to work in the ways of the Lord. {PK 224.3}
The heart of Elijah was cheered as he saw what was being
accomplished by means of these schools. The work of reformation was not
complete, but he could see throughout the kingdom a verification of the word of
the Lord, "Yet I have left Me seven thousand in Israel, all the knees
which have not bowed unto Baal." 1 Kings 19:18. {PK 225.1}
As Elisha accompanied the prophet on his round of service
from school to school, his faith and resolution were once more tested. At
Gilgal, and again at Bethel and Jericho, he was invited by the prophet to turn
back. "Tarry here, I pray thee," Elijah said; "for the Lord hath
sent me to Bethel." But in his early labor of guiding the plow, Elisha had
learned not to fail or to become discouraged, and now that he had set his hand
to the plow in another line of duty he would not be diverted from his purpose.
He would not be parted from his master, so long as opportunity remained for
gaining a further fitting up for service. Unknown to Elijah, the revelation
that he was to be translated had been made known to his disciples in the
schools of the prophets, and in particular to Elisha. And now the tried servant
of the man of God kept close beside him. As [226] often
as the invitation to turn back was given, his answer was, "As the Lord
liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee." {PK 225.2}
"And they two went on. . . . And they two
stood by Jordan. And Elijah took his mantle, and wrapped it together, and smote
the waters, and they were divided hither and thither, so that they two went
over on dry ground. And it came to pass, when they were gone over, that Elijah
said unto Elisha, Ask what I shall do for thee, before I be taken away from
thee." {PK 226.1}
Elisha asked not for worldly honor, or for a high place
among the great men of earth. That which he craved was a large measure of the
Spirit that God had bestowed so freely upon the one about to be honored with
translation. [227] He knew that nothing but the
Spirit which had rested upon Elijah could fit him to fill the place in Israel
to which God had called him, and so he asked, "I pray thee, let a double
portion of thy Spirit be upon me." {PK 226.2}
In response to this request, Elijah said, "Thou hast
asked a hard thing: nevertheless, if thou see me when I am taken from thee, it
shall be so unto thee; but if not, it shall not be so. And it came to pass, as
they still went on, and talked, that, behold, there appeared a chariot of fire,
and horses of fire, and parted them both asunder; and Elijah went up by a
whirlwind into heaven." See 2 Kings 2:1-11. {PK 227.1}
Elijah was a type of the saints who will be living on the
earth at the time of the second advent of Christ and who will be "changed,
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump," without
tasting of death. 1 Corinthians 15:51, 52. It was as a representative of those
who shall be thus translated that Elijah, near the close of Christ's earthly
ministry, was permitted to stand with Moses by the side of the Saviour on the
mount of transfiguration. In these glorified ones, the disciples saw in
miniature a representation of the kingdom of the redeemed. They beheld Jesus
clothed with the light of heaven; they heard the "voice out of the
cloud" (Luke 9:35), acknowledging Him as the Son of God; they saw Moses,
representing those who will be raised from the dead at the time of the second
advent; and there also stood Elijah, representing those who at the close of
earth's history will be changed from mortal to immortal and be translated to
heaven without seeing death. [228] {PK 227.2}
In the desert, in loneliness and discouragement, Elijah had
said that he had had enough of life and had prayed that he might die. But the
Lord in His mercy had not taken him at his word. There was yet a great work for
Elijah to do; and when his work was done, he was not to perish in
discouragement and solitude. Not for him the descent into the tomb, but the
ascent with God's angels to the presence of His glory. {PK 228.1}
"And Elisha saw it, and he cried, My father, my father,
the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof. And he saw him no more: and he
took hold of his own clothes, and rent them in two pieces. He took up also the
mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and went back, and stood by the bank of
Jordan; and he took the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and smote the
waters, and said, Where is the Lord God of Elijah? and when he also had smitten
the waters, they parted hither and thither: and Elisha went over. And when the
sons of the prophets which were to view at Jericho saw him, they said, The
Spirit of Elijah doth rest on Elisha. And they came to meet him, and bowed
themselves to the ground before him." 2 Kings 2:12-15. {PK 228.2}
When the Lord in His providence sees fit to remove from His
work those to whom He has given wisdom, He helps and strengthens their
successors, if they will look to Him for aid and will walk in His ways. They
may be even wiser than their predecessors; for they may profit by their
experience and learn wisdom from their mistakes. {PK 228.3}
Henceforth Elisha stood in Elijah's place. He who had been
faithful in that which was least was to prove himself faithful also in much. {PK 228.4}
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"The Healing of the Waters"
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