Tag Archives: elisha

Devotional for March 27, 2025 | Thursday: Total Obedience to the End

Joshua 6:1-27 This week’s lessons teach us how Israel was going to achieve their victory over Jericho, and what things God wants from us as well.

Theme

Total Obedience to the End

There’s a third step in the preparation of the people for their victory, though it overlaps the one I’ve just given. First of all, be silent. Second of all, obey. But thirdly, obey in all things to the very end. I call this “total obedience to the very end.” This third point is important because obedience that is not total and to the end is not true obedience. It’s really disobedience. And we have to emphasize this because of our tendency to start out well at the beginning. We really do obey, and we want to follow God. But we don’t do it to the end. And so, we miss the blessing. We have to stress that because God does not operate on our timetable. Now, we Americans have tight timetables, and we keep moving it up all the time. And if God doesn’t operate on our timetable, well, God better watch out because He’s going to miss what we’re doing. That’s the way we think. And yet, we have to learn that God moves when God will move. And we have to wait for Him. And to do that, we have to keep obeying until He moves.

Now, that was the case with the people. As you read this story carefully, you sense that Joshua did not tell the people exactly what was happening. God told Joshua exactly what was to happen, but when Joshua gave his commands to the people, he did not give the whole thing. Apparently, Joshua told the people what they were to do one day at a time. After they had carried out Joshua’s instructions, they came back to camp. And absolutely nothing had happened. The walls of the city were still there. The people had not surrendered, and so far as they could tell, they were no closer to a victory over that city of Jericho than they had been 24 hours earlier. Perhaps they said to themselves, “Well, alright. It didn’t work today. We’ll see what Joshua has in store tomorrow.”

The next day the command was precisely the same. The people did as Joshua said, but absolutely nothing happened. This same thing went on the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth days. And they came to the seventh day, and once again Joshua gave the people their instructions. But this time it was different: he told them to encircle the city seven times. But after they had done that, still nothing happened. Then at the end of the seventh time around the city, the command was given, “Now, it’s the time to shout.” The priests blew the horns, the people shouted and, well, you know how that particular story ended.

This story reminds us of another story in the Old Testament, one that also concerned a military leader. Naaman was a Syrian general. He had carried off some captives, one of whom proved quite helpful to him as the story unfolds. We discover that although Naaman was a conquering general, he was also a leper, for which there was no known cure. Naturally, it was a matter of great distress in the kingdom. And one of these slaves who had been carried off from Israel was a young girl who was a servant to Naaman’s wife. And she said to her mistress, “If Naaman, the master, were in Israel, there’s a prophet there, Elisha, who could cure him.” So, the wife went to her husband and said, “This girl here says that there’s a prophet in Israel who can cure people.” And Naaman said, “Well, nobody here is achieving anything in terms of my cure. It’s a desperate situation.” Naaman then went to the king and asked to go to Israel to see if Elisha could heal him.

When Naaman got to Israel he inquired of the king, but the king was frightened because he thought that this would provoke a quarrel with their Syrian enemy. The king told Naaman where Elisha was, but Elisha could not receive Naaman. So the prophet sent him a message: “Go wash in the Jordan River seven times, and then you’ll be cured.” Now, we know that Naaman didn’t like that. He didn’t like being rebuffed, and he didn’t like the directions. Naaman thought that Elisha would come out, wave his hands over him, touch his leprosy, and heal him. But instead, Elisha told him to go wash in the river. Why does he have to wash in a muddy river in Israel when there is perfectly good water in Damascus?

Although he did not like what Elisha told him, one of his servants said, “You know, I’ve never seen anyone cured by bathing in a muddy river either, but it is worth a try. You’ve come a long way. If the prophet had told you to do some great feat, you’d go do it, while this is just a little thing. Why don’t you try it?”

So Naaman went into the river. But when he came out, he was still not cured. However, the servant reminded Naaman that Elisha told him to do it seven times. Even as he kept going into the river each time, the spot was not looking any better. It was only after he came out of the water the seventh time, in utter, total obedience to the command of the prophet, that he was cured. 

That’s what we have to learn to do with God; we need to be faithful in our obedience to the very end.  We know that it’s not so hard to start out obeying God. You know there are things you’ve been told you should do, and so you start out doing them. But God sometimes tests us in our obedience, and when that happens, what is hard is persevering in your obedience. I look at that situation, and I find myself asking why God does it that way. Why if it’s so hard does God do that with us? Well certainly it trains us in character. But I think maybe it does something else.

Here were these people walking around the walls seven days and seven times on the seventh day. I don’t know what they were learning as they went around the walls, but I suspect that at least one thing they were learning is this: that city is never going to be taken by us unless God intervenes. You see, the first time around, you might have been looking for a weak place in the walls. The second time, you might have been looking for a door that somebody accidentally left open. But after you’d gone around that city 13 times, you would know that you were never going to get in unless God made the opening. Maybe that’s why God calls upon us to obey over such a long period of time, often in difficulty and certainly time and time again. It is so we will learn that if the victory is going to come, it’s going to come by God, who is in the business of knocking down walls and giving His people victories.

Study Questions

  1. Why does it seem that Joshua did not tell Israel from the beginning all of God’s plan for taking Jericho? What was that meant to teach them?
  2. From the lesson, what does Dr. Boice suggest is the reason why God calls us to persevere in obedience?

Application

Reflection: Can you think of a situation when God called you to persevere, and you were not sure you could make it through the trial? What sustained you along the way until God’s purposes were made clear?

For Further Study: Download for free and listen to James Boice’s message, “Our Spiritual Warfare.” (Discount will be applied at checkout.)

https://www.thinkandactbiblically.org/thursday-total-obedience-to-the-end/

Devotional for February 28, 2025 | Friday: God with Us Always

Over Jordan at Last

Joshua 3:1-17 This week’s lessons teach us about the character of God, as seen in the Ark of the Covenant which went before the Israelites through the Jordan.

Theme

God with Us Always

I think of something else that concerns this story, though it comes later in Israel’s history and you would think at first reading it had no relevance at all. You recall that in II Kings, right at the beginning, there’s a transition of authority between Elijah to Elisha, the one who was going to succeed him. Elisha was presumably a younger man than Elijah. Elijah, with Elisha following along beside, were led by God out into the desert. And they came to the Jordan River, this very Jordan that the people had crossed in our study. And after Elijah rolled up his cloak, he struck the water with it, and the water parted. Elijah then walked across on dry ground. He kept saying to Elisha, “Stay behind. The Lord’s calling me.” And Elisha wouldn’t do it because he knew what was coming. So Elisha kept following. Well finally they got out in a very remote area, and suddenly there were chariots of fire that swept down from heaven and carried Elijah up into heaven, leaving Elisha behind. Then the cloak of Elijah fell, and Elisha understood that it was the passing of authority to him and that he was now to be the prophet in Israel. And he picked it up and he made his way back out of the desert. As he came to the Jordan, he rolled up the cloak of Elijah and he struck the water as Elijah had done. And he said, “Where now is the Lord, the God of Elijah?” And the same God, the God of Elijah, who was also his God, parted the water. And he went across on dry ground, as Elijah had.

You can ask, “Where is the God of Moses—the God who operated so powerfully in Moses’ day, the God of miracles, the God of redemption, the God who brought His people out of slavery?” “Where is the God of Joshua, the God of conquest who led His people into the Promised Land?”  “Where is the God of Elijah?” “Where is the God of Elisha?” “Where is the God is Isaiah?” “Where is the God of any great character in the Old or New Testaments?” The answer is that the God of all these people is the same God to you. He does not change. That God who worked powerfully in the lives of His people in the past works powerfully in the lives of His people today. And it’s our privilege to follow that God as He goes before us to give us the victory that He has for us in our day.

Study Questions

  1. In the story of Elijah and Elisha, what did Elijah’s mantle symbolize?
  2. What was the purpose of the parting of the Jordan for Elisha as he made his way back?

Application

Prayer: How has the Lord worked powerfully in your life in the past?  How is He doing so now? Praise Him for His faithfulness, and determine to follow Him wholeheartedly.

For Further Study: Download for free and listen to Philip Ryken’s message, “No God But God.” (Discount will be applied at checkout.)

https://www.thinkandactbiblically.org/friday-god-with-us-always/

JANUARY 26 | The Humble Step of Faith

SCRIPTURE READING: 2 Kings 5
KEY VERSES: 1 Peter 5:5–6

You younger people, submit yourselves to your elders. Yes, all of you be submissive to one another, and be clothed with humility, for “God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble.” Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you in due time.

Sometimes great examples of faith come in small, unappealing packages. For Naaman, the leprous captain of the army of Syria, his moment of faith came when he dipped in dirty water far from home.
Naaman was insulted. After all the trouble it took to travel to a foreign country, the prophet he came to see did not greet him as a proper host should. Even worse, Elisha sent him orders by a lowly servant to wash in the Jordan.
Naaman was so outraged by Elisha’s supposed affront that he refused to perform the one act that would save him from his ravaging disease. Finally his servants came to talk him out of his pride. They asked him pointedly: “Had the prophet told you to do some great thing, would you not have done it? How much more then, when he says to you, ‘Wash and be clean’?” (2 Kings 5:13 NASB).
When Naaman paused to consider their words, he realized that his refusal to humble himself before God would cost his life. He hurried to obey Elisha’s instructions from the Lord, and his flesh was made whole.
Do you say yes to God in the little things? Are you content to follow His will when you do not receive any of the glory? No matter what the task, God always rewards the humble step of faith.

Father God, make me content to follow Your will, even when I do not receive any glory. No matter how small or great the task, let me step forth in humble faith.

Stanley, C. F. (1999). On holy ground (p. 27). Thomas Nelson Publishers.

Your Bucket List? | Thoughts about God

He picked up the cloak that had fallen from Elijah and went back and stood on the bank of the Jordan. Then he took the cloak that had fallen from him and struck the water with it. “Where now is the LORD, the God of Elijah?” he asked. When he struck the water, it divided to the right and to the left, and he crossed over. The company of the prophets from Jericho, who were watching, said, “The spirit of Elijah is resting on Elisha.” And they went to meet him and bowed to the ground before him.”
2 Kings 2:13-16

The Bucket List‘ opened at theaters across the country this past week. It’s a movie about two older men who are diagnosed with a terminal illness and decide before they ‘kick the bucket‘ to do all the things they ever wanted to do before departing planet earth. According to The Associated Press, the ‘kick off box office take‘ was just under twenty million dollars and moved it to the number one spot at weekend box offices.

A life-threatening illness, even with a good long term prognosis, can cause people to focus on the future in a different perspective, but they are not likely to escape from the hospital and go on a juvenile joy ride. The point of the movie is that when faced with eminent death these two characters, played by Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson, look inward to themselves to satisfy all of their personal desires and to have the personal experiences they always wanted to have, before it is too late. It is all about them.

Contrast that with the last day of Elijah found in 2 Kings 2. When both Elijah and Elisha knew that it would be Elijah’s last day on earth, they made the most of it to create a legacy, to pass the mantle of leadership for the sake of those left behind. They took a tour and the elder showed the younger the ropes, so to speak. They focused not on worldly pleasure, but rather on a Godly legacy.

At the end of the day. Elijah was taken up and Elisha carried on and when he parted the water, the prophets said ‘The spirit of Elijah is resting on Elisha‘.

The movie actually ends on a spiritual note. After skydiving, racing, traveling and a host of other things, both characters come home and their lives and relationships are significantly changed for the good, as they focus on what really matters in life. I walked out with tears in my eyes and a warm feeling in my heart. I resolved to re-think my ‘bucket list’ to make sure my priorities are correct.

What is your ‘bucket list‘.  After all, we are all terminal. Before you depart, is it your goal to have all the fun you can, or to leave a Godly heritage and a spiritual legacy in your family, your community and your church? Who, or what, matters most to you in life? What has God called you to do in the limited amount of time you have to do it?   Maybe it is time to re-think your ‘bucket list.’
(a thought on life from John Grant)

By John Grant
used by permission

John Grant is a former Florida State Senator and is a practicing attorney. He is an active writer and frequent speaker.  He can be reached by e-mail at John.Grant@johngrant.net

FURTHER READING

The post Your Bucket List? can be found at Thoughts about God.

October 3 | God’s Provision

Scripture reading: 2 Kings 6:8–23

Key verse: Psalm 27:1

The Lord is my light and my salvation;

Whom shall I fear?

The Lord is the strength of my life;

Of whom shall I be afraid?

Do you remember looking through a microscope for the first time? Your eyes were opened to a teeming world of protozoan life. You had to look at the droplet in a new and different way to perceive another dimension of the physical world.

Elisha’s servant had to learn to look at their circumstances in a new way. Things looked bad for them on the surface. The king of Syria and his men were angry with Elisha because they knew God told Elisha their attack strategies in advance; and of course, Elisha told their plans to the king of Israel.

It’s no surprise that the Syrians wanted to do away with Elisha. So one night, the king of Syria sent horses and chariots and an army to surround the city where Elisha was staying. At first sight, Elisha’s attendant went outside and saw the army circled to attack.

He ran to Elisha and cried, “Alas, my master! What shall we do?” But Elisha wasn’t panicked. He said, “Do not fear, for those who are with us are more than those who are with them” (2 Kings 6:15–16). The attendant must have been mightily confused. The only people he saw were the ones with weapons pointed at them.

Then Elisha prayed for God to open his eyes, and the attendant saw an angelic host with horses and chariots of fire surrounding them. God had already arranged for their protection, but the attendant had to learn to see His provision.

Father, I thank You that You have already arranged for my protection. Open my eyes to Your provision.1


1  Stanley, C. F. (2000). Into His presence (p. 290). Thomas Nelson Publishers.