Works of Arthur Pink: Pink, Arthur - Gleanings From Elisha: 08-Fifth Miracle - A Pot of Oil

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Works of Arthur Pink: Pink, Arthur - Gleanings From Elisha: 08-Fifth Miracle - A Pot of Oil



TOPIC: Pink, Arthur - Gleanings From Elisha (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 08-Fifth Miracle - A Pot of Oil

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FIFTH MIRACLE-A POT OF OIL



Chapter 8





IN CREATION we are surrounded with both that which is useful and that

which is ornamental. The earth produces a wealth of lovely flowers as

well as grain and vegetables for our diet. The Creator has graciously

provided things which charm our eyes and ears as well as supply our

bodies with food and raiment. The same feature marks God's Word. The

Scriptures contain something more than doctrine and precept: there are

wonderful types which display the wisdom of their Author and delight

those who are able to trace the merging of the shadow into the substance,

and there are mysterious prophecies which demonstrate the foreknowledge

of their giver, and minister pleasure to those granted the privilege of

beholding their fulfillment. These types and prophecies form part of the

internal evidence which the Bible furnishes of its divine inspiration,

for they give proof of a wisdom which immeasurably transcends that of the

wisest of mortals. Nevertheless one has to turn unto the doctrinal and

preceptive portions of Holy Writ in order to learn the way of salvation

and the nature of that walk which is pleasing to God.



In our earlier writings we devoted considerable attention to the types

and prophecies, but for the last decade, we have concentrated chiefly

upon the practical side of the truth. Observation taught us that many of

those who were keenly interested in a Bible reading on some part of the

tabernacle or an attempt to explain some of the predictions of Daniel,

appeared quite bored when we preached upon Christian duty or deportment;

yet they certainly needed the latter for they were quite deficient

therein. A glorious sunset is an exquisite sight, but it would supply no

nourishment to one that was starving. The perfumes of a garden may

delight the senses, but they would be a poor substitute for a good

breakfast to a growing child. Only after the soul has fed upon the

doctrine of Scripture and put into practice its precepts is it ready to

enjoy the beauties of the types and explanations of the mysteries of

prophecy.



This change of emphasis in our writings has lost us hundreds of readers.

Yet if we could relive the past fifteen years, we would follow the same

course. The solemn days through which we are passing demand, as never

before, that first things be put first. There are plenty of writers who

cater to those who read for intellectual entertainment; our longing is to

minister to those who yearn for a closer walk with God. What would be

thought of a farmer who in the spring wasted his time in the woods

listening to the music of the feathered songsters, while his fields were

allowed to remain unplowed and unsown? Would it not be equally wrong if

we dwelt almost entirely on the typical significance of the miracles of

Elisha, while ignoring the simpler and practical lessons they contain for

our hearts and lives? Balance is needed here as everywhere, and if we

devote more space than usual on this occasion to the spiritual meaning of

the miracle before us (and similarly in the "Dagon" articles), it will

not be because we have made or shall make a practice of so doing.



First, the Connection of the Miracle



Great service had Elisha done in the foregoing chapter for the three

kings: to his prayers and prophecies they owed their lives and triumphs.

One would have expected that the next chapter should have told us what

honors and what dignities were conferred on Elisha for this: that he

should have been immediately preferred at court, and made prime-minister

of state; that Jehoshaphat should have taken him home with him and

advanced him in the kingdom. No, the wise man delivered the army, but no

man remembered the wise man (Ecc_9:15). Or, if he had preferment

offered him, he declined it: he preferred the honor of doing good in the

schools of the prophets, before that of being great in the courts of

kings. God magnified him and that sufficed him: magnified him indeed, for

we have him here employed in working no less than five miracles (Henry).



He who has, by grace, the heart of a true servant of Christ, would not,

if he could, exchange places with the monarch on his throne or the

millionaire with all his luxuries.



Second, the Beneficiary of the Miracle



"Now there cried a certain woman of the wives of the sons of the prophets

unto Elisha, saying, Thy servant my husband is dead; and thou knowest

that thy servant did fear the LORD: and the creditor is come to take unto

him my two sons to be bondmen" (2Ki_4:1). The one for whom this

miracle was wrought was a woman, "the weaker vessel" (1Pe_3:7). She

was a widow, a figure of desolation: "how doth the city sit solitary,

that was full of people! how is she become as a widow!" (Lam_1:1).

Contrast the proud boast of corrupt Babylon: "I sit a queen, and am no

widow, and shall see no sorrow" (Rev_18:7). Not only was she bereft of

her husband but she was left destitute, in debt and without the means of

paying it. A more pitiable and woeful object could scarcely be conceived.

In her sad plight she went to the servant of Jehovah and told him her

dire situation. Her husband may have died while Elisha was absent with

the kings in their expedition against the Moabites, and thus he was

unacquainted with her troubles.



Third, the Urgency of the Miracle



The situation confronting this poor widow was indeed a drastic one. Her

human provider and protector had been removed by the hand of death. She

had been left in debt and had not the wherewithal to pay it, a burden

that would weigh heavily on a conscientious soul. And now she was in

immediate danger of having her two sons seized and taken from her by the

creditor to serve as bondmen to him. Observe that in the opening words of

2 Kings 4 it is not said, "Now there came a certain woman of the wives of

the sons of the prophets unto Elisha" but "there cried a certain woman,"

which indicates the pressure of her grief and the earnestness of her

appeal to the prophet. Sometimes God permits His people to be brought

very low in their circumstances; nor is this always by way of

chastisement or because of their folly. We do not think that such was her

case. The Lord is pleased to bring some to the end of their own resources

that His delivering hand may be more plainly seen acting on their behalf.



One of the outstanding characteristics of the regenerate is that they are

given honest hearts (Luk_8:15). Therefore is it their careful endeavor

to "provide things honest in the sight of all men" and to "owe no man

anything" (Rom_12:17, 13:8). They are careful to live within their

income and not to order an article unless they can pay for it. It is

because so many hypocrites under the cloak of a Christian profession have

been so dishonest in financial matters and so unscrupulous in trade, that

reproach has so often been brought upon the churches. Yet, in certain

exceptional cases, even the most thrifty and upright may run into debt.

It was so with her. The deceased husband of this widow was a man who "did

fear the LORD" (2Ki_4:1); nevertheless he left his widow in such

destitution that she was unable to meet the claims of her creditor. There

has been considerable speculation by the commentators as to the cause of

this unhappy situation, most of which this writer finds himself quite

unable to approve. What then is his own explanation?



In seeking the answer to the above question three things need to be borne

in mind. First, as we pointed out in our introduction to this study, a

prophet was an abnormality; that is, there was no place for him, no need

of him in the religious life of Israel during ordinary times. It was only

in seasons of serious declension or apostasy that he appeared on the

scene. Thus, no stated maintenance was provided for him, as it was for

the priests and Levites under the law. Consequently the prophet was

dependent upon the gifts of the pious or the productions of his own

manual labors. Judging from the brief records of Scripture, one gathers

the impression that most of them enjoyed little more than the barest

necessities of life.



Second, for many years past Ahab and Jezebel had been in power, and not

only were the pious persecuted but the prophets went in danger of their

lives (1Ki_18:4).



Third, it seems likely to us that this particular prophet obtained his

subsistence from the oil obtained from an olive grove, and that probably

there had been a failure of the crop during the past year or two-note how

readily the widow obtained from her "neighbors" not a few "empty vessels."



"And Elisha said unto her, what shall I do for thee?" Possibly the

prophet was himself momentarily nonplussed, conscious of his own

helplessness. Possibly his question was designed to emphasize the gravity

of the situation. "It is beyond my power to extricate you." More likely

it was to make her look above him. "I too am only human." Or again, it

may have been to test her. "Are you willing to follow my instructions?"

Instead of waiting for her reply, the prophet at once asked a second

question, "Tell me, what hast thou in the house?" (2Ki_4:2). Perhaps

this was intended to press upon the widow the seriousness of her problem,

for the prophet must have known that she possessed little or nothing, or

why should she have sought him? Or, in the light of her answer, its force

may have been an admonition not to despise small mercies. Her "not

anything, save a pot of oil" reminds of Andrew's "but what are they among

so many" (Joh_6:9). Ah, do not we often reason similarly!



Fourth, the Test of the Miracle



"Then he said, Go, borrow thee vessels abroad of all thy neighbors, even

empty vessels; borrow not a few"

(2Ki_4:3). It was a test both of her faith and her obedience. To

carnal reason it would appear that the prophet was only mocking her, for

of what possible service could a lot of empty vessels be to her? But if

her trust was in the Lord, then she would be willing to submit herself to

and comply with His word through His servant.



Are not His thoughts and ways ever the opposite of ours? Was it not so

when He overthrew the Midianites? What a word was that to Gideon: "The

people that are with thee are too many for me to give the Midianites into

their hands, lest Israel vaunt themselves against me, saying, Mine own

hand hath saved me" (Jdg_7:2). And in consequence, his army was reduced

from over twenty-two thousand to a mere three hundred (Jdg_7:3-7); and

when that little company went forth, it was with trumpets and "empty

pitchers" and lamps inside the pitchers in their hands (Jdg_7:16)! Ah,

my reader, we have to come before the Lord as "empty vessels"-emptied of

our self-sufficiency-if we are to experience His wonder-working power.



Fifth, the Requirement of the Miracle



"And when thou art come in, thou shalt shut the door upon thee and upon

thy sons, and shalt pour out into all those vessels, and thou shalt set

aside that which is full" (2Ki_4:4). This was to avoid ostentation.

Her neighbors were not in on the secret, nor should they be permitted to

witness the Lord's gracious dealings with her. It reminds us of Christ's

raising of the daughter of Jairus: when He arrived at the house it was

filled with a skeptical and scoffing company, and the Savior "put them

all out" (Mar_5:40) before He went in and performed the miracle. The

same principle stands today in connection with the operations of divine

grace. The world is totally ignorant of this mystery-God's filling of

empty vessels: "the Spirit of truth; whom the world cannot receive,

because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him" (Joh_14:17). Yes, she

must shut the door, so "that in retirement she and her sons might the

more leisurely ponder and adore the goodness of the Lord" (Scott).



Sixth, the Means of the Miracle



This was the "pot of oil" which appeared to be so utterly inadequate to

meet the demands of the widow's creditor. It was so in itself, but under

the blessing of God it proved amply sufficient. The five barley loaves

and the two small fishes (Joh_6:9) seemed quite useless for feeding a

vast multitude, but in the hands of the Lord they furnished "as much as

they would," and even "when they were filled" there remained a surplus of

twelve baskets full. Ah, it is the little things which God is pleased to

use. A pebble from the brook when slung by faith is sufficient to

overthrow the Philistine giant. A "little cloud" was enough to produce "a

great rain" (1Ki_18:44-45). A "little child" was employed by Christ

to teach His disciples humility (Mat_18:2). A "little strength"

supplied by the Spirit enables us to keep Christ's Word and not deny his

name (Rev_3:8). Oh, to be "little" in our own sight (1Sa_15:17). It

is blessed to see that this widow did not despise the means, but promptly

obeyed the prophet's instructions, her faith laying hold of the

clearly-implied promise in "all those vessels" (2Ki_4:4).



Seventh, the Significance of the Miracle



In this miracle we have a most blessed, striking, and remarkable, typical

picture of the grand truth of redemption, a subject which is, we fear,

rather hazy in the minds even of many Christians. The gospel is preached

so superficially today, its varied glories are so lost in

generalizations, that few have more than the vaguest idea of its

component parts. Redemption is now commonly confused with atonement; the

two are quite distinct, one being an effect of the other. The sacrifice

which Christ offered unto divine holiness and justice was "that he might

bring us to God" (1Pe_3:18)-a comprehensive expression covering the

whole of our salvation, both in the removal of all hindrances and in the

bestowal of all requisites. In order to bring us to God it was necessary

that all enmity between us and God should be removed-that is

reconciliation; that the guilt of our transgressions should be

cancelled-that is remission of sins; that we should be delivered from all

bondage-that is redemption; that we should be made, both experimentally

and legally, righteous-that is regeneration and justification.



Redemption, then is one of the grand effects or results of the atonement,

the satisfaction which Christ rendered unto the law. God's elect are

debtors to the law, for they have broken it; and they are prisoners to

His justice, for they are "by nature the children of wrath, even as

others" (Eph_2:3). And our deliverance (or "salvation") is not a mere

emancipation when adequate compensation has been made. No, while it is

true our redemption is of grace and affected by sovereign power, yet it

is so because a ransom is offered, a price paid, in every way equivalent

to the discharge secured. In the words, "I will ransom them from the

power of the grave; I will redeem them from death" (Heb_13:14) we are

taught that the latter is the consequence of the former. Ransom is the

paying of the price required. Redemption is the setting free of those

ransomed, and this deliverance is by the exercise of divine power. "Not

accepting deliverance" (Heb_11:35); the Greek word "deliverance" here is

commonly rendered "redemption"; they refused to accept it from their

afflictions on the dishonorable terms (apostasy) demanded by their

persecutors.



Redemption necessarily presupposes previous possession. It denotes the

restoration of something which has been lost, and returned by the paying

of a price. Hence we find Christ saying by the Spirit of prophecy, "I

restored that which I took not away" (Psa_69:4)! This was strikingly

illustrated in the history of Israel, who on the farther shores of the

Red Sea sang, "Thou in thy mercy hast led forth the people which thou

hast redeemed" (Exo_15:13). First, in the book of Genesis, we see the

descendants of Abraham sojourning in the land of Canaan. Later, we see

the chosen race in cruel servitude, in bondage to the Egyptians, groaning

amid the brick kilns, under the whip of their taskmasters. Then a ransom

was provided in the blood of the pascal lamb, following which, the Lord

by His mighty hand brought them out of serfdom and brought them into the

promised inheritance. That is a complete picture of redemption.



There are many who perceive that Christians were a people in bondage,

lost to God, but recovered and restored to Him; yet some fail to perceive

they belonged to the Lord before Christ freed them. The elect belonged to

Christ long before He shed His blood to ransom them, for they were chosen

in Him before the foundation of the world (Eph_1:4) and made over to Him

as the Father's love-gift (Joh_17:9). But they too fell and died in

Adam, and therefore did He come to seek and to save that which was lost.

Christ purchased the church of God with His own blood (Act_20:28) and

therefore does the Father say to Him, "By the blood of thy covenant I

have sent forth thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water" (Zech.

9:11). He has a legal right to them. There is no unavailing redemption:

all whom Christ purchased or ransomed shall be redeemed; that is,

delivered from captivity, set free from sin. Judicially they are so now,

experientially too in part (Joh_8:36), but perfectly so only when

glorified-hence the future aspect in Luk_21:28 and Rom_8:23.



Now observe how all the leading features of redemption are typically

brought out in 2 Kings 4.



1. The object of it is a widow. She had not always been thus. Formerly

she had been married to one who "feared the Lord," but death had severed

that happy bond and left her desolate and destitute-apt figure of God's

elect, originally in union with Him, and then through the fall alienated

from Him (Eph_4:18).



2. Her creditor was enforcing his demands. He had actually come to seize

her sons "to be bondmen." The Hebrew word rendered "creditor" in 2 Kings

4:1 signifies "one who exacts" what is justly due to him, and is so

translated in Job_11:6. It looks back to, "And if thy brother that

dwelleth by thee be waxen poor, and be sold unto thee; thou shalt not

compel him to serve as a bondservant: But as an hired servant, and as a

sojourner, he shall be with thee, and shall serve thee unto the year of

jubile" (Lev_25:39-40). Our Lord had reference to this practice in His

parable of Mat_18:23-25. Thus the "creditor" of 2Ki_4:1 who

showed no mercy to the poor widow is a figure of the stern and

unrelenting law.



3. The widow was quite unable to pay her creditor. So we are utterly

incompetent to satisfy the demands of the law or effect our own

redemption.



4. She, like us, could rely only on the mere favor of God. "Being

justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ

Jesus" (Rom_3:24). That is exactly what we should expect to find in this

miracle, for five is the number of grace (see Gen_43:34, 45:22; 1 Cor.

14:19). Note also the means used, the "oil" multiplied. Oil is a figure

of the superabounding grace of God (Psa_23:5; Isa_61:3).



5. Yet it was a grace that was wrought "through righteousness" (Rom.

5:21). It obtained the freedom of the widow's sons by meeting the full

due of her creditor.



6. Both aspects of redemption are seen here. First, the price: "Sell the

oil, and pay thy debt" (2Ki_4:7); Second, the power: the miraculous

supply of oil.



7. It was not a general and promiscuous redemption. It was a definite and

particular one. For a "widow" was the special object of God's notice

(Deu_24:19; Psa_68:5; Jam_1:27), and not a mere abstraction of

"freewillism."