We sing a word of praise for an unnamed Israelite heroine, a teenager (maybe 
even younger) who had been captured in the vicissitudes of war with Syria and 
made a slave girl to serve the wife of the great Naaman, a Syrian general of 
war. We will simply call her “Slave-girl.”

 

Slave-girl might have given up to bitter thoughts of hatred and revenge for her 
captors. Israelites were never supposed to be slaves to anybody! They had come 
out of slavery in Egypt, supposed now to be free forever. The very word 
“Israelite” had come to mean “Free-person.”

 

But now things had turned against them, because of the rebellious sins of the 
people in the kingdom of Judah, and our Slave-girl is a captive. 

 

She could easily have given in to nationalistic pride gone sour, and yielded 
her heart to hatred-thoughts of her new war masters.

 

But this girl was an “Israelite-indeed,” in that in her heart she believed that 
she was “free in the Lord,” no matter what happened to her politically. This 
indicated on her part some understanding of the Israelite doctrine of 
righteousness by faith. “Faith” gives you the enjoyment of freedom and every 
blessing even though just now you have to wait for them.

 

Her story is in 2 Kings 5:1-14.

 

Her slave-master was a general in the Syrian army, a man up at the top. But 
there was one problem: he was a leper.

 

 Our “little maid” was bereft of thoughts of hatred and revenge; instead she 
knew what we call “the love of Christ” (which should fill every Israelite 
heart).

 

Her job was to be a slave-girl to Naaman’s wife, probably a high-class matron 
having everything a woman’s heart could desire. Someone overheard a 
conversation and went and told the big boss, the king of Syria, that the girl 
had said, “Would God my lord were with the prophet that is in Samaria! for he 
would recover him of his leprosy”!

 

He forthwith wrote a letter to the king of Israel and sent a servant with loads 
of money and fine clothing, saying, “Please heal my servant, General Naaman.”

 

The king was distraught and “rent his clothes” in despair.

 

Elisha, “the man of God ... heard [the news]” and sent word for the king to 
bring the man to him. The innocent little girl was to become very highly 
honored! We can’t say that her faith was “childish,” for it was in fact very 
mature, very real.

 

Elisha didn’t even get up to go to the door to meet Naaman’s servants, but told 
them to tell Naaman to go immerse himself and “wash” in the Jordan “seven 
times” and he would be healed.

 

Naaman was outraged; wash in the filthy river Jordan? “I have nice clear rivers 
in Syria—I will wash there!” and he left in a rage, still a leper and headed 
for being one forever.

 

His servants had some common sense and reasoned with him, for they were 
impressed that Israel was indeed God’s people. The great Naaman humbled himself 
to obey the “Spirit of Prophecy,” and was healed.




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