|
The LORD Takes Elijah Away Not long before the LORD took Elijah up into heaven in a strong wind, Elijah and Elisha were leaving Gilgal.
Elijah said to Elisha, "The LORD wants me to go to Bethel, but you must stay here."
Elisha replied, "I swear by the living LORD and by your own life that I will stay with you no matter what!"
And he went with Elijah to Bethel.
A group of prophets who lived there asked Elisha, "Do you know that today the LORD is going to take away your master?"
"Yes, I do," Elisha answered. "But don't remind me of it."
Elijah then said, "Elisha, now the LORD wants me to go to Jericho, but you must stay here."
Elisha replied, "I swear by the living LORD and by your own life, that I will stay with you no matter what!"
And he went with Elijah to Jericho.
A group of prophets who lived there asked Elisha, "Do you know that today the LORD is going to take away your master?"
"Yes, I do," Elisha answered. "But don't remind me of it."
Elijah then said to Elisha, "Now the LORD wants me to go to the Jordan River, but you must stay here."
Elisha replied, "I swear by the living LORD and by your own life that I will never leave you!" So the two of them walked on together.
Fifty prophets followed Elijah and Elisha from Jericho, then stood at a distance and watched as the two men walked toward the river.
When they got there, Elijah took off his coat, then he rolled it up and struck the water with it. At once a path opened up through the river, and the two of them walked across on dry ground.
After they had reached the other side, Elijah said, "Elisha, the LORD will soon take me away. What can I do for you before that happens?"
Elisha answered, "Please give me twice as much of your power as you give the other prophets, so I can be the one who takes your place as their leader."
"It won't be easy," Elijah answered. "It can happen only if you see me as I am being taken away."
Elijah and Elisha were walking along and talking, when suddenly there appeared between them a flaming chariot pulled by fiery horses. Right away, a strong wind took Elijah up into heaven.
Elisha saw this and shouted, "Israel's cavalry and chariots have taken my master away!"
After Elijah had gone, Elisha tore his clothes in sorrow. Elijah's coat had fallen off, so Elisha picked it up and walked back to the Jordan River.
He struck the water with the coat and wondered, "Will the LORD perform miracles for me as he did for Elijah?"
As soon as Elisha did this, a dry path opened up through the water, and he walked across.
When the prophets from Jericho saw what happened, they said to each other, "Elisha now has Elijah's power."
They walked over to him, bowed down, and said, "There are fifty strong men here with us. Please let them go look for your master. Maybe the Spirit of the LORD carried him off to some mountain or valley."
"No," Elisha replied, "they won't find him."
They kept begging until he was embarrassed to say no. He finally agreed, and the prophets sent the men out. They looked three days for Elijah but never found him.
They returned to Jericho, and Elisha said, "I told you that you wouldn't find him." Elisha Makes the Water Pure at Jericho One day the people of Jericho said, "Elisha, you can see that our city is in a good spot. But the water from our spring is so bad that it even keeps our crops from growing."
He replied, "Put some salt in a new bowl and bring it to me."
They brought him the bowl of salt, and he carried it to the spring. He threw the salt into the water and said, "The LORD has made this water pure again. From now on you'll be able to grow crops, and no one will starve."
The water has been fine ever since, just as Elisha said. Some Boys Make Fun of Elisha Elisha left and headed toward Bethel. Along the way some boys started making fun of him by shouting, "Go away, baldy! Get out of here!"
Elisha turned around and stared at the boys. Then he cursed them in the name of the LORD. Right away two bears ran out of the woods and ripped to pieces forty-two of the boys.
Elisha went up to Mount Carmel, then returned to Samaria. Elisha Helps a Poor Widow One day the widow of one of the LORD's prophets said to Elisha, "You know that before my husband died, he was a follower of yours and a worshiper of the LORD. But he owed a man some money, and now that man is on his way to take my two sons as his slaves."
"Maybe there's something I can do to help," Elisha said. "What do you have in your house?"
"Sir, I have nothing but a small bottle of olive oil."
Elisha told her, "Ask your neighbors for their empty jars. And after you've borrowed as many as you can,
go home and shut the door behind you and your sons. Then begin filling the jars with oil and set each one aside as you fill it."
The woman left.
Later, when she and her sons were back inside their house, the two sons brought her the jars, and she began filling them.
At last, she said to one of her sons, "Bring me another jar."
"We don't have any more," he answered, and the oil stopped flowing from the small
bottle. After she told Elisha what had happened, he said, "Sell the oil and use part of the money to pay what you owe the man. You and your sons can live on what is left." Elisha Brings a Rich Woman's Son Back to Life Once, while Elisha was in the town of Shunem,
he met a rich woman who invited him to her home for dinner. After that, whenever he was in Shunem, he would have a meal there with her and her husband.
Some time later the woman said to her husband, "I'm sure the man who comes here so often is a prophet of God.
Why don't we build him a small room on the flat roof of our house? We can put a bed, a table and chair, and an oil lamp in it. Then whenever he comes, he can stay with us."
The next time Elisha was in Shunem, he stopped at their house and went up to his room to rest.
He said to his servant Gehazi, "This woman has been very helpful. Have her come up here to the roof for a moment."
She came, and Elisha told Gehazi to say to her, "You've gone to a lot of trouble for us, and we want to help you. Is there something we can request the king or army commander to do?"
The woman answered, "With my relatives nearby, I have everything I need."
"Then what can we do for her?" Elisha asked Gehazi.
Gehazi replied, "I do know that her husband is old, and that she doesn't have a son."
"Ask her to come here again," Elisha told his servant. He called for her, and she came and stood in the doorway of Elisha's room.
Elisha said to her, "Next year at this time, you'll be holding your own baby son in your arms."
"You're a man of God," the woman replied. "Please don't lie to me."
But a few months later, the woman got pregnant. She gave birth to a son, just as Elisha had promised.
One day while the boy was still young, he was out in the fields with his father, where the workers were harvesting the crops.
Suddenly he shouted, "My head hurts. It hurts a lot!"
"Carry him back to his mother," the father said to his servant. The servant picked up the boy and carried him to his mother. The boy lay on her lap all morning, and by noon he was dead.
She carried him upstairs to Elisha's room and laid him across the bed. Then she walked out and shut the door behind her.
The woman called to her husband, "I need to see the prophet. Let me use one of the donkeys. Send a servant along with me, and let me leave now, so I can get back quickly."
"Why do you need to see him today?" her husband asked. "It's not the Sabbath or time for the New Moon Festival."
"That's all right," she answered.
She saddled the donkey and said to her servant, "Let's go. And don't slow down unless I tell you to."
She left at once for Mount Carmel to talk with Elisha. When Elisha saw her coming, he said, "Gehazi, look! It's the woman from Shunem.
Run and meet her. And ask her if everything is all right with her and her family."
"Everything is fine," she answered Gehazi.
But as soon as she got to the top of the mountain, she went over and grabbed Elisha by the feet.
Gehazi started toward her to push her away, when Elisha said, "Leave her alone! Don't you see how sad she is? But the LORD hasn't told me why."
The woman said, "Sir, I begged you not to get my hopes up, and I didn't even ask you for a son."
"Gehazi, get ready and go to her house," Elisha said. "Take along my walking stick, and when you get there, lay it on the boy's face. Don't stop to talk to anyone, even if they try to talk to you."
But the boy's mother said to Elisha, "I swear by the living LORD and by your own life that I won't leave without you."
So Elisha got up and went with them.
Gehazi ran on ahead and laid Elisha's walking stick on the boy's face, but the boy didn't move or make a sound. Gehazi ran back to Elisha and said, "The boy didn't wake up."
Elisha arrived at the woman's house and went straight to his room, where he saw the boy's body on his bed.
He walked in, shut the door, and prayed to the LORD. Then he got on the bed and stretched out over the dead body, with his mouth on the boy's mouth, his eyes on his eyes, and his hand on his hands. As he lay there, the boy's body became warm.
Elisha got up and walked back and forth in the room, then he went back and leaned over the boy's body. The boy sneezed seven times and opened his eyes.
Elisha called out to Gehazi, "Have the boy's mother come here." Gehazi did, and when she was at the door, Elisha said, "You can take your son."
She came in and bowed down at Elisha's feet. Then she picked up her son and left. Elisha Makes Some Stew Taste Better Later, Elisha went back to Gilgal, where there was almost nothing to eat, because the crops had failed. One day while the prophets who lived there were meeting with Elisha, he said to his servant, "Fix a big pot of stew for these prophets."
One of them went out into the woods to gather some herbs. He found a wild vine and picked as much of its fruit as he could carry, but he didn't know that the fruit was very sour. When he got back, he cut up the fruit and put it in the stew.
The stew was served, and when the prophets started eating it, they shouted, "Elisha, this stew tastes terrible! We can't eat it."
"Bring me some flour," Elisha said. He sprinkled the flour in the stew and said, "Now serve it to them." And the stew tasted fine. Elisha Feeds One Hundred People A man from the town of Baal-Shalishah
brought Elisha some freshly cut grain and twenty loaves of bread made from the first barley that was harvested. Elisha said, "Give it to the people so they can eat."
"There's not enough here for a hundred people," his servant said.
"Just give it to them," Elisha replied. "The LORD has promised there will be more than enough."
So the servant served the bread and grain to the people. They ate and still had some left over, just as the LORD had promised. Elisha Heals Naaman Naaman was the commander of the Syrian army. The LORD had helped him and his troops defeat their enemies, so the king of Syria respected Naaman very much. Naaman was a brave soldier, but he had leprosy.
One day while the Syrian troops were raiding Israel, they captured a girl, and she became a servant of Naaman's wife.
Some time later the girl said, "If your husband Naaman would go to the prophet in Samaria, he would be cured of his leprosy."
When Naaman told the king what the girl had said, the king replied, "Go ahead! I will give you a letter to take to the king of Israel."
Naaman left and took along seven hundred fifty pounds of silver, one hundred fifty pounds of gold, and ten new outfits.
He also carried the letter to the king of Israel. It said, "I am sending my servant Naaman to you. Would you cure him of his leprosy?"
When the king of Israel read the letter, he tore his clothes in fear and shouted, "That Syrian king believes I can cure this man of leprosy! Does he think I'm God with power over life and death? He must be trying to pick a fight with me."
As soon as Elisha the prophet heard what had happened, he sent the Israelite king this message: "Why are you so afraid? Send the man to me, so that he will know there is a prophet in Israel."
Naaman left with his horses and chariots and stopped at the door of Elisha's house.
Elisha sent someone outside to say to him, "Go wash seven times in the Jordan River. Then you'll be completely cured."
But Naaman stormed off, grumbling, "Why couldn't he come out and talk to me? I thought for sure he would stand in front of me and pray to the LORD his God, then wave his hand over my skin and cure me.
What about the Abana River or the Pharpar River? Those rivers in Damascus are just as good as any river in Israel. I could have washed in them and been cured."
His servants went over to him and said, "Sir, if the prophet had told you to do something difficult, you would have done it. So why don't you do what he said? Go wash and be cured."
Naaman walked down to the Jordan; he waded out into the water and stooped down in it seven times, just as Elisha had told him. Right away, he was cured, and his skin became as smooth as a child's.
Naaman and his officials went back to Elisha. Naaman stood in front of him and announced, "Now I know that the God of Israel is the only God in the whole world. Sir, would you please accept a gift from me?"
"I am a servant of the living LORD," Elisha answered, "and I swear that I will not take anything from you."
Naaman kept begging, but Elisha kept refusing. Finally Naaman said, "If you won't accept a gift, then please let me take home as much soil as two mules can pull in a wagon. Sir, from now on I will offer sacrifices only to the LORD.
But I pray that the LORD will forgive me when I go into the temple of the god Rimmon and bow down there with the king of Syria."
"Go on home, and don't worry about that," Elisha replied. Then Naaman left. Elisha Places a Curse on Gehazi After Naaman had gone only a short distance,
Gehazi said to himself, "Elisha let that Syrian off too easy. He should have taken Naaman's gift. I swear by the living LORD that I will talk to Naaman myself and get something from him."
So he hurried after Naaman. When Naaman saw Gehazi running after him, he got out of his chariot to meet him. Naaman asked, "Is everything all right?"
"Yes," Gehazi answered.
"But my master has sent me to tell you about two young prophets from the hills of Ephraim. They came asking for help, and now Elisha wants to know if you would give them about seventy-five pounds of silver and some new clothes?"
"Sure," Naaman replied. "But why don't you take twice that amount of silver?"
He convinced Gehazi to take it all, then put the silver in two bags. He handed the bags and the clothes to his two servants, and they carried them for Gehazi.
When they reached the hill where Gehazi lived, he took the bags from the servants and placed them in his house, then sent the men away. After they had gone,
Gehazi went in and stood in front of Elisha, who asked, "Gehazi, where have you been?" "Nowhere, sir," Gehazi answered.
Elisha asked, "Don't you know that my spirit was there when Naaman got out of his chariot to talk with you? Gehazi, you have no right to accept money or clothes, olive orchards or vineyards, sheep or cattle, or servants.
Because of what you've done, Naaman's leprosy will now be on you and your descendants forever!"
Suddenly, Gehazi's skin became white with leprosy, and he left. Elisha Makes an Ax Head Float One day the prophets said to Elisha, "The place where we meet with you is too small.
Why don't we build a new meeting place near the Jordan River? Each of us could get some wood, then we could build it."
"That's a good idea," Elisha replied, "get started."
"Aren't you going with us?" one of the prophets asked.
"Yes, I'll go," Elisha answered, and he left with them.
They went to the Jordan River and began chopping down trees. While one of the prophets was working, his ax head fell off and dropped into the water. "Oh!" he shouted. "Sir, I borrowed this ax."
"Where did it fall in?" Elisha asked. The prophet pointed to the place, and Elisha cut a stick and threw it into the water at that spot. The ax head floated to the top of the water.
Now get it," Elisha told him. And the prophet reached in and grabbed it. Elisha Stops an Invasion of the Syrian Army Time after time, when the king of Syria was at war against the Israelites, he met with his officers and announced, "I've decided where we will set up camp."
Each time, Elisha would send this warning to the king of Israel: "Don't go near there. That's where the Syrian troops have set up camp."
So the king would warn the Israelite troops in that place to be on guard.
The king of Syria was furious when he found out what was happening. He called in his officers and asked, "Which one of you has been telling the king of Israel our plans?"
"None of us, Your Majesty," one of them answered. "It's an Israelite named Elisha. He's a prophet, so he can tell his king everything--even what you say in your own room."
"Find out where he is!" the king ordered. "I'll send soldiers to bring him here."
They learned that Elisha was in the town of Dothan and reported it to the king.
He ordered his best troops to go there with horses and chariots. They marched out during the night and surrounded the town.
When Elisha's servant got up the next morning, he saw that Syrian troops had the town surrounded. "Sir, what are we going to do?" he asked.
"Don't be afraid," Elisha answered. "There are more troops on our side than on theirs."
Then he prayed, "LORD, please help him to see."
And the LORD let the servant see that the hill was covered with fiery horses and flaming chariots all around Elisha.
As the Syrian army came closer, Elisha prayed, "LORD, make those soldiers blind!" And the LORD blinded them with a bright light.
Elisha told the enemy troops, "You've taken the wrong road and are in the wrong town. Follow me. I'll lead you to the man you're looking for."
Elisha led them straight to the capital city of Samaria.
When all the soldiers were inside the city, Elisha prayed, "LORD, now let them see again." The LORD let them see that they were standing in the middle of Samaria.
The king of Israel saw them and asked Elisha, "Should I kill them, sir?"
"No!" Elisha answered. "You didn't capture these troops in battle, so you have no right to kill them. Instead, give them something to eat and drink and let them return to their leader."
The king ordered a huge meal to be prepared for Syria's army, and when they finished eating, he let them go. For a while, the Syrian troops stopped invading Israel's territory. King Benhadad of Syria Attacks Samaria Some time later, King Benhadad of Syria
called his entire army together, then they marched to Samaria and attacked.
They kept up the attack until there was nothing to eat in the city. In fact, a donkey's head cost about two pounds of silver, and a small bowl of pigeon droppings
cost about two ounces of silver. One day as the king of Israel was walking along the top of the city wall, a woman shouted to him, "Please, Your Majesty, help me!"
"Let the LORD help you!" the king said. "Do you think I have grain or wine to give you?"
Then he asked, "What's the matter anyway?"
The woman answered, "Another woman and I were so hungry that we agreed to eat our sons. She said if we ate my son one day, we could eat hers the next day.
So yesterday we cooked my son and ate him. But today when I went to her house to eat her son, she had hidden him."
The king tore off his clothes in sorrow, and since he was on top of the city wall, the people saw that he was wearing sackcloth underneath.
He said, "I pray that God will punish me terribly, if Elisha's head is still on his shoulders by this time tomorrow."
Then he sent a messenger to Elisha.
Elisha was home at the time, and the important leaders of Israel were meeting with him. Even before the king's messenger arrived, Elisha told the leaders, "That murderer
is sending someone to cut off my head. When you see him coming, shut the door and don't let him in. I'm sure the king himself will be right behind him."
Before Elisha finished talking, the messenger came up and said, "The LORD has made all these terrible things happen to us. Why should I think he will help us now?"
Elisha answered, "I have a message for you. The LORD promises that tomorrow here in Samaria, you will be able to buy a large sack of flour or two large sacks of barley for almost nothing."
The chief officer there with the king replied, "I don't believe it! Even if the LORD sent a rainstorm, it couldn't produce that much grain by tomorrow."
"You will see it happen, but you won't eat any of the food," Elisha warned him. Elisha the Prophet Dies Some time before the death of King Jehoash, Elisha the prophet was very sick and about to die. Jehoash went in and stood beside him, crying. He said, "Master, what will Israel's chariots and cavalry be able to do without you?"
"Grab a bow and some arrows," Elisha told him, "and hold them in your hand." Jehoash grabbed the bow and arrows and held them. Elisha placed his hand on the king's hand
and said, "Open the window facing east."
When it was open, Elisha shouted, "Now shoot!"
Jehoash shot an arrow and Elisha said, "That arrow is a sign that the LORD will help you completely defeat the Syrian army at Aphek."
Elisha said, "Pick up the arrows and hit the ground with them."
Jehoash grabbed the arrows and hit the ground three times, then stopped.
Elisha became angry at the king and exclaimed, "If you had struck it five or six times, you would completely wipe out the Syrians. Now you will defeat them only three times." Elisha died and was buried.
Every year in the spring, Moab's leaders sent raiding parties into Israel.
Once, while some Israelites were burying a man's body, they saw a group of Moabites. The Israelites quickly threw the body into Elisha's tomb and ran away. As soon as the man's body touched the bones of Elisha, the man came back to life and stood up. |