Chapter 13
A MAN OF GOD UNSANCTIFIED
"So he
went back with him, and did eat bread in his house, and drank water" (1
Kings
13:19).
The Bible
is the world's greatest textbook on morals. It often teaches by
personal incidents
and story illustrations. The most important truths are sometimes
wrapped up in a narrative that
would delight a child, or interest a sage.
We have
here a long chapter detailing the experiences of God trying to reach the
conscience of a king and a nation, and His failure to do it because of
the religious short-coming of
two preachers, who ought to have been better men. It is enough to move
the clerical profession at
least to serious self-examination.
I. WE ARE
INTRODUCED TO AN UNNAMED "MAN OF GOD."
Is not
that name enough to give personal distinction to any man? It is like
the title God gave
to Abraham, "And he was called the friend of God." "But thou, Israel
art the seed of Abraham my
friend." So God called the great lawgiver "my servant Moses;" and
called "Daniel beloved of the
Lord." God has splendid titles for His very own.
Who is "a
man of God"?
1. He is
one of the regenerated. A man who of choice and full purpose of heart
is living in
deliberate and persistent rebellion against God would not hold the
glorious title, "a man of God."
2. This
"man of God" at least was commissioned by the Almighty to perform an
unpleasant
and dangerous task. "And, behold, there came a man of God out of Judah
by the word of Jehovah
unto Bethel: and Jeroboam was standing by the altar to burn incense.
And he cried against the altar
by the word of Jehovah, and said, O altar, altar, thus saith Jehovah;
Behold, a son shall be born
unto the house of David, Josiah by name; and upon thee shall he
sacrifice the priests of the
high-places that burn incense upon thee, and men's bones shall they
burn upon thee. And he gave a
sign the same day, saying, This is the sign which Jehovah hath spoken:
Behold, the altar shall be
rent, and the ashes that are upon it shall be poured out.
"And it
came to pass, when the king heard the saying of the man of God,
Jeroboam put forth
his hand from the altar, saying, Lay hold on him. And his hand, which
he put forth against him,
dried up, so that he could not draw it back again to him. The altar
also rent, and the ashes poured
out, from the altar, according to the sign which the man of God had
given by the word of Jehovah.
And the king said to the man of God, Entreat now the favor of Jehovah
thy God, and pray for me,
that my hand be restored to me again. And the man of God entreated
Jehovah, and the king's hand
was restored him again, and became as it was before" (R. V.) .
After all this no one could
make Jeroboam believe that this was not a real "man of God,"
for
3. God used him and heard
his prayers, put a prophecy in his mouth, and brought it to pass,
and punished the idolatrous king who thought to do him violence.
Jehovah says, "Touch not mine
anointed, and do my prophets no harm."
4. He is sixteen times in
this chapter called "the man of God," and God used him as if he
owned him, body and soul. St. Paul, said of God, "Whose I am, and whom
I serve." There can be
no doubt about such a character.
5. He proved himself to be
"the man of God" because he was unbribable. The humbled king
offered him a reward if he would come back and refresh himself in his
palace. But he replied, "If
thou wilt give me half thy house, I will not go with thee, neither will
I eat bread nor drink water in
this place: for so was it charged me by the word of Jehovah, saying,
Thou shalt eat no bread, nor
drink water, neither return by the way that thou camest. So he went
another way" (R. V.). A true
"man of God" is not to be bribed by high offices, nor big pulpits, or
large salaries, or any royal
honors that this old world can offer. He sets his face like a flint
against all sin.
II. "Now THERE DWELT AN OLD
PROPHET IN BETHEL."
This one is called "a man of
God." He was probably backslidden, and had compromised
under the influence of Jeroboam, and God would not use him. More than
likely, also, he was
jealous because God had sent clear to Judah to find a man who would
deal faithfully with the
wicked king.
When he heard from his son
what "the man of God" had said and done, he followed after
him to meet him and entertain him. He found "the man of God" sitting
under an oak, and invited him
to his home; but he received the same answer that was given to the
king. "I may not return with
thee, for it was said to me by the word of Jehovah," etc. And the old
backslidden prophet said unto
him, "I also am a prophet as thou art; and an angel spake unto me by
the word of Jehovah, saying,
Bring him back with thee into thy house, that he may eat bread and
drink water. But he lied unto
him. SO he went back with him, and did eat bread in his house, and
drank water." Verses 18-19 R.
V.
III. HERE COMES THE TRAGEDY
OF A NOBLE LIFE.
"The man of God" trusted and
honored and used by Jehovah, who could not be bribed or
coaxed to be untrue to God, is deceived by a miserable lie in the mouth
of a backslidden preacher.
Oh, the devices of Satan!
We have trained
eight hundred students to preach holiness. Some of the brightest of
them,
with the richest experience, and a dear witness of the Holy Spirit to
sanctification, and a success in
preaching holiness that was more than human, have met some backslidden
church official who told
them there was nothing in the doctrine of sanctification, and invited
them to .go back and eat and
drink with the old crowd in the backslidden land. In absolute
opposition to the clear testimony of
God, they believed the devil's lie, and went.
That deceived,
disobedient prophet was no more truly slain by the lion, than those
precious
young men have been slain as to their marked power and usefulness. They
indeed have their
reward in big pulpits and large salaries in backslidden Bethel; but the
unction and glory of their
work has departed and "Ichabod" is written across their lives.
To deny and go
back on God's witness to a personal experience, is fearfully like the
sin of
blaspheming against the Holy Ghost which hath never forgiveness.
IV. NOTE THE
FAR-REACHING CONSEQUENCES OF DISOBEDIENCE FROM
TRUSTING TO A LIE AND A LIAR.
1. It was fatal
to the noble man of God himself. It cost him his life, even if it did
not cost
him his eternal salvation.
2. It resulted
in the final ruin of Jeroboam, and of his dynasty. We may well believe
that the
fearful warning of "the man of God," and the withering of his arm, and
its restoration in answer to
prayer, made a profound impressions on the king's wicked heart. It must
have moved him mightily
to repentance and reformation. But then "the man of God" himself was
slain by the lion for
disobedience, "after these things," says the holy record, "Jeroboam
returned not from his evil way"
(R. V.) but pushed on in wickedness until he and his house, and nation
were destroyed from the
face of the earth.
V. NOTE THE
SUPREME IMPORTANCE OF LITTLE THINGS.
1. "The man of
God" was overtaken by the lying prophet, "sitting under an oak." If he
had
not been acting so leisurely, but had hurried along to the completion
of God's business, he would
not have been overtaken, and all would have been changed.
2. It seems a
"peccadillo" to sneering critics what a man eats, or when, or where, or
what
road he takes. But God thinks differently. It made a profound
difference to Eve and Adam and "the
man of God," what and where they ate and drank. With some, God tells
us, "not even to eat."
3. It seems to
many, a matter of indifference whether we receive the Holy Spirit or
not. But
we may well believe, if "the man of God had been filled with the Spirit
he would not have
believed the devil's lie in Opposition to the expressed command of God.
And, doubtless, if the old
prophet had been sanctified, he would not have been a backslidden liar,
guilty of the death of "the
man of God," Jeroboam and his nations might have been saved, and God
more glorified.