There may be a little treasure of truth buried in the story of Elijah that 
illustrates the kindness and compassion of the Lord. The faithful but lonely 
prophet has been directed to seek shelter in the home of the widow of Zarepath. 
He appreciates her hospitality and her faith. But a terrible sickness suddenly 
takes the life of her young son (1 Kings 17:17, 18).
At first Elijah has brought sunshine and gladness into her widowed life. But 
now the bereaved mother imagines that the man of God has ministered this grief 
to her in that his holy presence in her home has brought all her sins into 
memory and judgment. (Evidently she has had a checkered past--well, who 
hasn't!) She wails in her anguish, "Have you come to me to bring my sin to 
remembrance, and to kill my son?" (vs. 18).

Elijah takes it personally; he knows he is hated in Israel and Phoenicia, 
everybody everywhere blames him for this famine. Now it seems that God has 
humiliated him by bringing this bereavement on this widow. When he takes the 
dead son from her, he doesn't pray a quiet, unimpassioned prayer as he did 
later on Carmel; he agonizes his distress. "He cried out to the Lord, 'O Lord 
my God, have You also brought tragedy on the widow with whom I lodge, by 
killing her son?'" (vs. 20). A prayer from a broken heart!

In mercy, the Lord answered his prayer of distress and resurrected the child.

Do you suppose that the Lord granted this precious interlude blessing as a way 
to strengthen the faith of Elijah when he stood alone and friendless before the 
king, the priests of Baal, and the multitude, on Mt. Carmel? He remembers: the 
Lord has honored his prayer by raising a dead child to life. Wouldn't that 
recent memory nerve his spirit and encourage him? Since he had been hidden from 
the murderous hatred of Israel, no one on Carmel knew of this recent happening 
in Sidon; Elijah shared this little secret with the Lord. That should be enough 
to fortify his faith: yes, the fire will fall!

--Robert J. Wieland

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