Intro
The local, evening news tells us of two shootings in a large city.  We listen 
with half an ear to the first report.  It involves a street corner, a drug deal 
gone badly, a gun, and a dead body.  Later, another reporter tells us about a 
mother in her kitchen, her daughters at the table doing homework, and a bullet 
fired from a gun from a moving car.  No one was the target.  That was just a 
random bullet from a random drive-by shooting that killed one of her daughters. 

Our emotions are different with the second news report.  For the first murder, 
we think, “Play with big-time evil and you die by big-time evil.”  The first 
murder was a man reaping what he sowed.  But the second murder makes us sad and 
angry.  The mother was playing by the rules, working hard, and trying to do 
what was right.  This is unfair and unjust.  Didn’t all the mother’s struggles 
to live right count for anything? 

Main Body
How can we trust a God who lets something like that happen?  This isn’t just a 
theoretical prospect.  Such downturns in life happen all the time, if not to 
you then to someone else, just like what happened in our Old-Testament reading 
for today. 

With idolatry running rampant in Israel under King Ahab, the Lord announced 
through Prophet Elijah that, until further notice, no rain would fall from the 
sky.  And as the drought continued, the Lord sent Elijah to the region of 
Sidon.  

It was in Sidon where God told Elijah to go to the home of a widow.  When 
Elijah first met her, he asked her for food and drink.  She told him that she 
was down to her last supplies: A smidgen of flour and a dash of oil.  After 
making one more meal for herself and her son, she planned to die of starvation. 
 She considered herself as good as dead. 

Yet, when Elijah spoke the Lord’s word of promise to her, she had faith (that 
was last week’s Old-Testament reading).  She made Elijah a loaf of bread, and 
she still had a little flour and oil left.  For days stretching into weeks 
stretching into months, just enough flour and oil remained for another 
meal---just as the Lord had said. 

This woman took Elijah in.  She provided him lodging in her home.  Elijah lived 
through the rest of the drought in the company of this woman and her son.  No 
doubt, he proclaimed to her the Lord God of Israel.  

For her part, the widow was taking care of God’s prophet--and life was going 
well.  She and her son were not thirsty or hungry.  The jar of flour was never 
empty.  The jug of oil never became dry.  You might say that this widow was 
going with the program, playing by the rules as Elijah had given them to her. 

Then one day her son died.  Suddenly, it didn’t look so good to have the Lord’s 
prophet nearby.  This God was now costing her.  In her grief, she lashed out at 
Elijah, “What do you have against me, man of God?  Did you come to me to 
confront me with my sin and kill my son” (1 Kings 17:18).  Have you ever felt 
that way toward God?

New converts to Christ often find their first few months or years in the faith 
relatively easy and trouble-free.  But, in time, the Lord sends them more 
difficult challenges to handle.  As we mature in the Lord, we soon realize, all 
the more, the depth of our sin.  When the Apostle Paul realized this, he said, 
“Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners--and I am the worst of them!” 
(1 Timothy 1:15).  The widow in our Old-Testament reading was also feeling the 
depth of her sin.  

We don’t know if one individual sin bothered the widow or if it was the 
cumulative weight of all her wrongdoings.  It’s hard to tell.  But this much is 
sure: She knew the Lord must punish sin, and she assumed that her son’s death 
was God punishing her.  How could she trust such a God?  If anything, she 
wanted to run away from Him. 

We cannot deny that God lets terrible events take place in this world.  And 
often, we have no idea why except that our sin (that is, the sin of mankind) is 
behind it.  

Here’s what Luther wrote speaking about trying to understand all the “whys” of 
evil in this fallen world.  “God must therefore be left to himself in his own 
majesty, for in this regard, we have nothing to do with him. . . . God hidden 
in his majesty neither deplores nor takes away death but works life, death, and 
all in all” (LW 33:139-40).  Let the world sneer or roll its eyes as it will.  
For, no matter what, God is still in charge and we are still answerable to Him. 

But God is not answerable to us.  Did you notice that Elijah didn’t apologize 
for God or try to explain His ways to her?  Elijah knew that the only answer to 
God is God.  We can have nothing to do with God in His own majesty.  However, 
as Luther wrote, “We [do] have something to do with [God] insofar as he is 
clothed and set forth in his Word, through which he offers himself to us” (LW 
33:139) 

Elijah took the dead boy into his room, laid the body on his bed, and prayed 
that God would let this child live once more.  Three times, the prophet 
stretched himself on the body as he prayed that life come back into it.  

Solomon wrote in Ecclesiastes, “The spirit returns to God who gave it” 
(Ecclesiastes 12:7).  But Elijah also knew that this same God could give it 
back--if He wanted to do that.  God had not previously done so on the pages of 
Scripture, but Elijah was praying for Him to do it anyway.  

Elijah asked God to give the widow life in the sadness of death and comfort in 
her fear and anguish.  Elijah wanted God to assure her of His love and 
salvation even amid her many doubts.  No amount of explaining could have been 
better than the moment when the prophet went downstairs--not carrying her dead 
son, a corpse--but with his arm around a living child.  Elijah told the widow, 
“Your son lives” (1 Kings 17:23)! 

This event becomes a little Old-Testament “Easter.”  The son was dead, but then 
he lived.  So we find that the widow’s son rising from the dead points forward 
to Christ rising from the dead.  However, unlike Jesus, the widow’s son 
eventually died again in this world.  

Indeed, God did much better with His own Son.  After Jesus rose from the dead, 
He died no more.  Jesus still lives!  And in His Son, God also punished sin.  
He punished it fully when He laid it all on the back of Christ.  Yet, through 
His Spirit, God raised Jesus from the dead and now “death no longer has mastery 
over him” (Romans 6:9).  

How can you trust the Lord?  How so?  Because you also live!  Baptized into 
Him, “you have been raised with Christ” (Colossians 3:1) as you go through this 
world.  In the end, the God who raised the Lord “will also raise [you] up by 
his power” (1 Corinthians 6:14).  You live now, and you will live to all 
eternity!

God the Father has planted this new life in you by giving you the life-creating 
Word of Life, Jesus Christ.  So, here is a sure and definite Word of God for 
you, as sure as Christ’s resurrection is sure and true: God forgives you.  He 
is not angry with you.  He is not stringing you along, only to spring some 
punishment for sin on you when you least expect it.  

The Lord God of the universe forgives you of all your sins; after all, Jesus 
nailed them to His cross and left them there when He rose from the dead.  With 
this forgiveness comes assurance, comfort, and life, all through God’s powerful 
Word.  How can you trust this Lord?  It’s because you live!

The widow told Elijah, “Now I know that you are a man of God and that the word 
of the LORD in your mouth is truth” (1 Kings 17:24).  In faith, she had 
received God’s assurance, comfort, and life through Elijah.  She was alive. 

You and I also live.  We live by faith.  When tragedy strikes, don’t get stuck 
in the mire about how unfair it may be.  Don’t tell yourself that you were 
playing by the rules, or wrack your brain trying to figure out how you slipped 
up.  Even more, don’t run away from God.  Instead, run to the God who has 
clothed Himself in His Word.  Run to the Lord who is more than able and 
ever-so-willing to take care of His people. 

Like the widow, this Lord has given you new birth in the one, true faith 
through His Word.  He has kept you in His keeping every step along life’s way.  
Whatever happens in this world, God stands ready to keep giving you life, now 
and forever, through the Son He raised from the dead, in the Holy Spirit.  

Conclusion
After all, salvation is not simply a one-time event.  Every week, Jesus keeps 
coming to you in Word and Sacrament to enliven and strengthen you in the faith. 
 And God is faithful.  He will keep you even in death. 

As a poet in the 1800s said:

No longer must the mourners weep, nor call departed Christians dead; for death 
is hallowed into sleep, and every grave becomes a bed.  Now once more, Eden's 
door open stands to mortal eyes; for Christ hath risen, and men shall rise!  
Now at last, old things past, hope and joy and peace begin; for Christ hath 
won, and man shall win!  [John Mason Neale]

That’s the God you have.  Jesus Christ lives.  And because of Him, so do you.  
Amen. 


--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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