Is there Biblical evidence that Elijah understood and preached the grace of 
God, that is, righteousness by faith? Or was he stern, hard, lacking 
compassion? We know this:
1. God sent him (1 Kings 17; 18), and "God is love" (1 John 4:8).

2. His message was preeminently reconciliation of alienated hearts in home and 
national life (Mal. 4:5, 6). That took "grace unlimited."

3. His prayer on Mt. Carmel was calm, simple, heart-felt, gracious.

4. The people's "heart" was "turned ... back again" (1 Kings 18:37).

5. What did it was God's acceptance of the blood sacrifice that clearly 
prefigured Christ's sacrifice on His cross (vs. 33). It's not too much to say: 
Elijah preached to the nation a great sermon on the cross that day.

6. The people responded, believed, humbled their hearts before this divine 
revelation of the abounding grace and forgiveness of God. But the priests of 
Baal hardened their hearts against it; in hopeless rejection, they would 
crucify Christ a thousand times over. This demonstration was in miniature the 
judgment at the end of the millennium (Rev. 20:11-15). To execute the priests 
of Baal was the people's choice, their unanimous will. It was clear: their sin 
was the unpardonable one.

7. The fruit of Elijah's ministry? Genuine reformation and revival. And God 
translated him! (2 Kings 2:11). Pretty good evidence of grace.

--Robert J. Wieland

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