| A PROPHETS
PRAYERS ANSWERED THIS story is about a wonderful man whose
name was Elijah. Elijah was a man who served God
as a prophet in Israel. All of Gods
prophets were his faithful servants. Elijah lived
very close to God, and God heard his prayers and
answered them. One reason God answered
Elijahs prayers was that he prayed for the
things which were pleasing to God.
Elijah lived at a time when
there was a very wicked king ruling over the
children of Israel. This made it a very hard time
for a prophet of God. It meant that he had to
tell the king he was wrong and try to make him do
right, and it was very seldom that a king liked
to be told he was wrong.
When Elijah first became a
prophet God asked him to tell the king that there
wouldnt be any rain for a long, long time.
Now the reason for this was that Ahab, who was
then king, was wicked. Because he followed the
advice of his wife, who was a wicked woman, he
had allowed the priests of the false god, Baal,
to establish idol worship among the children of
Israel. That was contrary to the law of God!
There was only the one true God whom they were to
worship, so it was very wrong for their king to
allow them to worship any other god.
So God sent Elijah to warn the
king, and to tell him that there would be no more
rain until the prophet said so. Now you can
imagine that Ahab was very angry with Elijah. The
good prophet had to run away and hide, or else he
would have been killed. But God took care of him.
God always takes care of those
who do what he wants them to do!
And how did God take care of
Elijah? Why, he told Elijah of a nice quiet place
by the side of a brook. The name of the brook was
Cherith. Probably it was in a cool sheltered
place in the woods where Elijah could hide. While
he remained there God took care of him in a most
unusual way. He sent ravens to Elijah night and
morning with a supply of food. Yes, these ravens
brought bread and meat to the prophet twice every
day. Of course he had all the water he needed
from the brook. Ravens, you know, are large black
birds. They are very much like our black crows.
We dont think crows are so nice, but if we
were very hungry and they brought us food we
would think differently, wouldnt we?
Of course ravens, or crows, or
any other kind of bird, wouldnt bring food
to boys and girls or to men and women unless God
caused them to do so. We dont know how God
directed those ravens to take food to Elijah. God
does many things which we do not understand. We
dont understand how he makes beautiful
flowers grow. We just know that he does. The
Bible tells us that God caused the ravens to
bring food to Elijah, so we know he did, because
we know that the Bible is true. And the ravens
kept right on bringing food to the prophet as
long is he stayed by the side of that brook.
But what do you suppose
happened after awhile? You may think those ravens
flew away and didnt come back. No, that
wasnt it. Why, that brook dried up so there
was no water in it! That was very serious, for no
one can live without water, and eating bread and
meat every day must have made the prophet very
thirsty, so he just had to have water.
The brook dried up because of
the weather. Just as Elijah had told the wicked
king Ahab, there was to be no more rain for a
long time. It is the rain that keeps brooks and
rivers flowing, and when there is no rain for a
long, long time, the water begins to get low in
brooks and rivers; and if the weather continues
without rain, finally they dry up entirely. Well,
that is what happened to the brook Cherith that
supplied water for Elijah.
And now what was Elijah to do?
Again God took care of him. God
told the prophet to move to another place. The
name of the place is very hard to pronounce, but
you can try to pronounce it if you wish. It was
Zarephath. God told the prophet that there he
would find a widow woman who would take care of
him. Elijah went where God asked him to go and
there he found the widow. The dry weather had
also caused a famine where this widow lived, and
she was nearly out of food. All she had was
enough flour to make one small cake, and a little
olive oil to mix with the flour.
But God was taking care of
Elijah and as long as he obeyed God, everything
was all right. It didnt seem like a very
nice thing for a man to do, but just the same
Elijah asked this poor woman for that very last
bit of food that she had. He did not do this
because he was selfish. No, he did it because he
was putting his trust in God. God told him that
this widow would take care of him, and Elijah was
sure that God was able to fulfill his promise.
The widow did as Elijah asked
her to do, and then what do you suppose occurred?
Why, that little supply of oil never ran out! The
widow kept the oil in a pitcher called a cruse,
and every time she used oil from the cruse, she
found more oil there to take its place.
Wasnt that wonderful! And it was the same
way with the flour. So day after day both the
widow and the prophet were supplied with food.
Now it really wasnt
difficult for God to supply flour and oil in that
way. You see, he Supplies all the flour and oil
and all the other food that the whole world eats.
Only he does it in a different way. He makes the
grain grow, and he makes the olives grow from
which we get the oil. We dont know how he
makes the grain and the olives grow. We just know
that he does. We dont know how God kept the
widows cruse supplied with oil, and why she
never ran out of flour during that long dry
spell.
This widow had a very dear son.
He was just a young boy. One day that dear boy
became very ill, and he died. His mother was
heartbroken. At first she blamed it on Elijah,
but of course Elijah had nothing to do with the
boys becoming ill and dying. But Elijah did
something about it after the boy died. He carried
that youngster upstairs in the widows
house, laid him down on the bed, exercised his
arms, forced air into his lungs, and the boy came
to life again. Wasnt that grand? Of course,
it was really God who restored the boy to life.
Elijah couldnt do that all by himself.
But we can imagine how happy
that mother was to have her boy alive again. I
like to think about that wonderful experience,
for you know the Bible tells us that the time is
coining when all who have died will be brought
back to life again. All the boys and girls, and
the grown-up folks as well, who have died are to
be given life and they will be back home again
with their families. That is something really
worth knowing, isnt it? The power of God
will do this. We know that God has power to do
anything and everything he has promised to do.
Yes, we know that his promises will come true!
That is what the Bible tells us, and we know that
the Bible is true.
It had now been three years
since it had rained in the land of Israel, and
the people were becoming quite worried. It was
then that God told Elijah to go and show himself
to King Ahab. He did this, and Ahab, of course,
was very angry with the prophet, because he
blamed him for the lack of rain. But Elijah made
it plain to the king that the cause of all the
dry weather was his own wickedness in allowing
his wife to introduce the worship of the false
god, Baal.
Then the prophet told the king
what should be done. By this time the king was so
worried that he was willing to do anything that
Elijah suggested. You see, God did not keep it
from raining just to make the people suffer, but
to cause them to stop worshiping false gods.
So this is what Elijah told
them to do: all the people were to be invited to
assemble on a mountain called Carmel. The priests
of the false god Baal were invited to come up
onto the mountain also. There were four hundred
and fifty of these priests, but Elijah was the
only prophet of the true God. Thousands and
thousands of the people traveled up Mount Carmel
as Elijah had suggested. If you were ever up on a
high mountain you know what a sight that must
have been to look down over the Mountainside into
the valley below and watch that great multitude
of people slowly making their way over the rocky,
dusty trails as they moved as near to Elijah as
they could get.
All day long they kept coining.
What a sight!
Meanwhile, Elijah was preparing
the people for a great demonstration to prove who
was the true God. First he told the priests of
Baal to prepare a sacrifice to their god, and
then call upon him to send fire from heaven to
burn the sacrifice. So they tried it, but there
was no answer to their prayer. They kept shouting
to Baal as loudly as they could all day long.
Elijah mocked them. He said, Cry a little
louder! suggesting that perhaps Baal
is asleep, or maybe he has gone on a
journey. I suppose Elijah enjoyed that
quite a bit, dont you?
Finally, as the evening drew
near and the people were nearly all gathered
where they could see and hear, Elijahs turn
came to show what the true God could and would
do. He had an altar built, and a sacrifice placed
upon it. He gave orders to dig a ditch all around
the altar and to fill the ditch with water. Then
he told his helpers to pour water over the
sacrifice and the altar. You see, he wanted the
people to be convinced that the God of Israel was
really the true God, the only living God with
power to take care of his people.
When everything was prepared to
the prophets satisfaction, he prayed to God
and asked him to accept the sacrifice of the
young bullock that was being offered to him, and
to show that he was accepting it by causing fire
to come down and burn it up.
Then followed a marvelous
display of Gods power. Flames of fire
appeared, burning, not only the bullock, but also
licking up the water that was in the ditch around
the altar. When the people saw this there arose a
great shout of rejoicing, proclaiming that
Israels God was the true God.
From then on things changed. To
complete the work of restoring the worship of the
true God in Israel, all the priests of Baal were
killed. A short time after that Elijah prayed
that it might rain in the land of Israel, and the
rain came.
Elijah had many more wonderful
experiences, and he continued to be a faithful
prophet of God. He came to the end of his life in
a very unusual way. When his work was finished he
was standing one day by the side of the Jordan
River, when suddenly there arose a mighty
whirlwind. Then Elijah saw a chariot of fire and
horses of fire, and the whirlwind lifted him up
from the earth, and he was seen no more.
Of course Elijah died. We know
that, but no one could find his body.
I am telling you how Elijah
died because some people think that he was taken
up into heaven to live with the angels, but that
is not so. We know this, because Jesus, years and
years afterward, said that no one had gone up
into heaven. We know that everything Jesus said
is true. So let us remember that Elijah died,
only that he died in a different way than most
people die.
Everybody has to die now, but
it wont be that way by and by. There is a
time coming when no one will need to die. That is
what the Bible says, and we know that the Bible
is true.
QUESTIONS
Who was the king of Israel
at the time the Prophet Elijahs prayers
were answered?
Why was there no rain in the
land of Israel for a long time?
How did God feed Elijah
while he lived alone by the side of a brook?
How did God answer
Elijahs prayer on a high mountain called
Carmel?
How did Elijah die?
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