Randy Green's Blog - Posts Tagged "jezebel"
Keep Your Eye on the Ball – Part 1
Answer me, O Lord, answer me, that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again [1 Kings 18:37].
From the time my kids were born until they finished high school, I explained to them the importance of choosing our friends wisely. Since what we eat is what we are, so too who we hang with is who we are…or who we become. If we make friends with folks who have their head on straight and are succeeding in life, then we’ll likely keep our head on straight and be successful too.
Old King Cole, er, I mean old King Ahab of northern Israel needed to learn that lesson. Alas, but he didn’t, and the result was that all the Israelites paid the price right along with him. Let me tell you some of the story behind this.
When King Solomon died, the Lord gave ten tribes (i.e., the northern half of the Promised Land) to Jeroboam ben Nebat. The southern half of the Promised Land remained under David’s kingly progeny. The Davidic throne ruled the south (aka Judah), while Jeroboam ruled the north (aka Israel). The worship of the Lord was at the temple in Jerusalem, where the Davidic kings ruled.
For centuries until northern Israel went into exile in Assyria, the sins of Jeroboam plagued Israel. His primary sin was that he established two golden calves to serve as Israel’s gods, placing one in the north and the other in the south near Judah. Jeroboam didn’t want his subjects going to Jerusalem to worship, you see. He established idolatry pure and simple, and there is no surer way to get on the Lord’s bad side than to be an idolater.
What Jeroboam did is known in Scripture as the sin of Jeroboam. But that isn’t what our story is about, dear friends. Alas, but old King Ahab wasn’t content to worship Jeroboam’s golden calves. He went off to Phoenicia and married that no account Jezebel, princess of the Phoenician king. In Phoenicia they just loved to worship Baal, and Jezebel brought Baal worship with her to Israel.
This left Israel with two major false religions, and the Lord was none too thrilled by it all. This ushered in the second period of miracles in the Old Testament. Baal worship in Israel led to the Lord’s miracle-working prophets coming to town. The main two were Elijah and Elisha.
Oh, no. We’re out of time again. It’s time to pull into the rest area, savor some delectable spiritual quisine, and spend some time in wholesome conversation with the Lord. We’ll continue the journey to Mount Carmel tomorrow. See you then.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B005PJ761C
https://sites.google.com/site/heavenl...
From the time my kids were born until they finished high school, I explained to them the importance of choosing our friends wisely. Since what we eat is what we are, so too who we hang with is who we are…or who we become. If we make friends with folks who have their head on straight and are succeeding in life, then we’ll likely keep our head on straight and be successful too.
Old King Cole, er, I mean old King Ahab of northern Israel needed to learn that lesson. Alas, but he didn’t, and the result was that all the Israelites paid the price right along with him. Let me tell you some of the story behind this.
When King Solomon died, the Lord gave ten tribes (i.e., the northern half of the Promised Land) to Jeroboam ben Nebat. The southern half of the Promised Land remained under David’s kingly progeny. The Davidic throne ruled the south (aka Judah), while Jeroboam ruled the north (aka Israel). The worship of the Lord was at the temple in Jerusalem, where the Davidic kings ruled.
For centuries until northern Israel went into exile in Assyria, the sins of Jeroboam plagued Israel. His primary sin was that he established two golden calves to serve as Israel’s gods, placing one in the north and the other in the south near Judah. Jeroboam didn’t want his subjects going to Jerusalem to worship, you see. He established idolatry pure and simple, and there is no surer way to get on the Lord’s bad side than to be an idolater.
What Jeroboam did is known in Scripture as the sin of Jeroboam. But that isn’t what our story is about, dear friends. Alas, but old King Ahab wasn’t content to worship Jeroboam’s golden calves. He went off to Phoenicia and married that no account Jezebel, princess of the Phoenician king. In Phoenicia they just loved to worship Baal, and Jezebel brought Baal worship with her to Israel.
This left Israel with two major false religions, and the Lord was none too thrilled by it all. This ushered in the second period of miracles in the Old Testament. Baal worship in Israel led to the Lord’s miracle-working prophets coming to town. The main two were Elijah and Elisha.
Oh, no. We’re out of time again. It’s time to pull into the rest area, savor some delectable spiritual quisine, and spend some time in wholesome conversation with the Lord. We’ll continue the journey to Mount Carmel tomorrow. See you then.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B005PJ761C
https://sites.google.com/site/heavenl...
Published on February 17, 2012 22:36
•
Tags:
1-kings-18, ahab, baal, elijah, fire-from-heaven, jezebel, miracles
Keep Your Eye on the Ball – Part 2
Answer me, O Lord, answer me, that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again [1 Kings 18:37].
Old King Ahab, a wuss who hid behind Jezebel’s skirt, added Baal worship to the sins of Jeroboam, prompting the Lord to dispatch His miracle-working prophets to take on the prophets of Baal and Asherah. That’s where we left off yesterday. Sounds like a suitable place to continue today.
So the Lord afflicted Israel with a 3½ year drought to get the Israelites’ attention. At the conclusion He had Elijah challenge all 450 prophets of Baal and all 400 prophets of Asherah to a duel. This made the odds 850 to 1, fine odds indeed. But not to worry because Elijah was on the Lord’s side, and He’s omnipotent.
The 850 yokels, er, I mean prophets spent all morning dancing a jig and chanting their drivel to Baal, calling upon him to send fire from heaven and burn up their sacrifice to him. Not surprisingly nothing ever came of it. Elijah had a splendid time poking fun of them in the process.
Then Elijah set up an altar of seven stones, dug a big ditch around it, saturated his offering with water until the ditch overflowed, and proceeded to pray to the Lord to send fire from heaven and burn up the drenched sacrifice he was presenting to the Lord. Straightway fire came down from heaven and devoured not only the animal, but also the water and the stones!
Here’s the point, dear people. We cited a portion of Elijah’s prayer at the start of this study. He called on the Lord to perform a mighty miracle, and the Lord did. What we want to center our attention on is the stated reason why Elijah wanted the Lord to perform this miracle. The reason was this: that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again.
The purpose of miracles is not to impress us and keep us coming back for more. Nor is it to tickle our fancy and leave us feeling happy. And it is certainly not to draw attention to the miracle worker. The purpose is to point people to the one true God, that they may turn from their sins and give their hearts to Him.
In today’s religious climate there are churches and denominations which emphasize miracles as a necessary part of the Church. The more time people spend around suchlike folks, the more they ogle the supposed miracles and the self-styled miracle workers. The attention does not go to the Lord Jesus but to man.
Let’s wise up and be mature men and women of God. Let’s seek the God of miracles, not the miracles of God. Give us the Person of Jesus Christ and it suffices. He is the Bread of Life, our all in all.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B005PJ761C
https://sites.google.com/site/heavenl...
Old King Ahab, a wuss who hid behind Jezebel’s skirt, added Baal worship to the sins of Jeroboam, prompting the Lord to dispatch His miracle-working prophets to take on the prophets of Baal and Asherah. That’s where we left off yesterday. Sounds like a suitable place to continue today.
So the Lord afflicted Israel with a 3½ year drought to get the Israelites’ attention. At the conclusion He had Elijah challenge all 450 prophets of Baal and all 400 prophets of Asherah to a duel. This made the odds 850 to 1, fine odds indeed. But not to worry because Elijah was on the Lord’s side, and He’s omnipotent.
The 850 yokels, er, I mean prophets spent all morning dancing a jig and chanting their drivel to Baal, calling upon him to send fire from heaven and burn up their sacrifice to him. Not surprisingly nothing ever came of it. Elijah had a splendid time poking fun of them in the process.
Then Elijah set up an altar of seven stones, dug a big ditch around it, saturated his offering with water until the ditch overflowed, and proceeded to pray to the Lord to send fire from heaven and burn up the drenched sacrifice he was presenting to the Lord. Straightway fire came down from heaven and devoured not only the animal, but also the water and the stones!
Here’s the point, dear people. We cited a portion of Elijah’s prayer at the start of this study. He called on the Lord to perform a mighty miracle, and the Lord did. What we want to center our attention on is the stated reason why Elijah wanted the Lord to perform this miracle. The reason was this: that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again.
The purpose of miracles is not to impress us and keep us coming back for more. Nor is it to tickle our fancy and leave us feeling happy. And it is certainly not to draw attention to the miracle worker. The purpose is to point people to the one true God, that they may turn from their sins and give their hearts to Him.
In today’s religious climate there are churches and denominations which emphasize miracles as a necessary part of the Church. The more time people spend around suchlike folks, the more they ogle the supposed miracles and the self-styled miracle workers. The attention does not go to the Lord Jesus but to man.
Let’s wise up and be mature men and women of God. Let’s seek the God of miracles, not the miracles of God. Give us the Person of Jesus Christ and it suffices. He is the Bread of Life, our all in all.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B005PJ761C
https://sites.google.com/site/heavenl...
Published on February 18, 2012 23:01
•
Tags:
1-kings-18, ahab, baal, elijah, fire-from-heaven, jezebel, miracles
Keep Your Eye on the Ball – Part 1
Answer me, O Lord, answer me, that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again [1 Kings 18:37].
From the time my kids were born until they finished high school, I explained to them the importance of choosing our friends wisely. Since what we eat is what we are, so too who we hang with is who we are…or who we become. If we make friends with folks who have their head on straight and are succeeding in life, then we’ll likely keep our head on straight and be successful too.
Old King Cole, er, I mean old King Ahab of northern Israel needed to learn that lesson. Alas, but he didn’t, and the result was that all the Israelites paid the price right along with him. Let me tell you some of the story behind this.
When King Solomon died, the Lord gave ten tribes (i.e., the northern half of the Promised Land) to Jeroboam ben Nebat. The southern half of the Promised Land remained under David’s kingly progeny. The Davidic throne ruled the south (aka Judah), while Jeroboam ruled the north (aka Israel). The worship of the Lord was at the temple in Jerusalem, where the Davidic kings ruled.
For centuries until northern Israel went into exile in Assyria, the sins of Jeroboam plagued Israel. His primary sin was that he established two golden calves to serve as Israel’s gods, placing one in the north and the other in the south near Judah. Jeroboam didn’t want his subjects going to Jerusalem to worship, you see. He established idolatry pure and simple, and there is no surer way to get on the Lord’s bad side than to be an idolater.
What Jeroboam did is known in Scripture as the sin of Jeroboam. But that isn’t what our story is about, dear friends. Alas, but old King Ahab wasn’t content to worship Jeroboam’s golden calves. He went off to Phoenicia and married that no account Jezebel, princess of the Phoenician king. In Phoenicia they just loved to worship Baal, and Jezebel brought Baal worship with her to Israel.
This left Israel with two major false religions, and the Lord was none too thrilled by it all. This ushered in the second period of miracles in the Old Testament. Baal worship in Israel led to the Lord’s miracle-working prophets coming to town. The main two were Elijah and Elisha.
Oh, no. We’re out of time again. It’s time to pull into the rest area, savor some delectable spiritual cuisine, and spend some time in wholesome conversation with the Lord. We’ll continue the journey to Mount Carmel tomorrow. See you then.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B...
From the time my kids were born until they finished high school, I explained to them the importance of choosing our friends wisely. Since what we eat is what we are, so too who we hang with is who we are…or who we become. If we make friends with folks who have their head on straight and are succeeding in life, then we’ll likely keep our head on straight and be successful too.
Old King Cole, er, I mean old King Ahab of northern Israel needed to learn that lesson. Alas, but he didn’t, and the result was that all the Israelites paid the price right along with him. Let me tell you some of the story behind this.
When King Solomon died, the Lord gave ten tribes (i.e., the northern half of the Promised Land) to Jeroboam ben Nebat. The southern half of the Promised Land remained under David’s kingly progeny. The Davidic throne ruled the south (aka Judah), while Jeroboam ruled the north (aka Israel). The worship of the Lord was at the temple in Jerusalem, where the Davidic kings ruled.
For centuries until northern Israel went into exile in Assyria, the sins of Jeroboam plagued Israel. His primary sin was that he established two golden calves to serve as Israel’s gods, placing one in the north and the other in the south near Judah. Jeroboam didn’t want his subjects going to Jerusalem to worship, you see. He established idolatry pure and simple, and there is no surer way to get on the Lord’s bad side than to be an idolater.
What Jeroboam did is known in Scripture as the sin of Jeroboam. But that isn’t what our story is about, dear friends. Alas, but old King Ahab wasn’t content to worship Jeroboam’s golden calves. He went off to Phoenicia and married that no account Jezebel, princess of the Phoenician king. In Phoenicia they just loved to worship Baal, and Jezebel brought Baal worship with her to Israel.
This left Israel with two major false religions, and the Lord was none too thrilled by it all. This ushered in the second period of miracles in the Old Testament. Baal worship in Israel led to the Lord’s miracle-working prophets coming to town. The main two were Elijah and Elisha.
Oh, no. We’re out of time again. It’s time to pull into the rest area, savor some delectable spiritual cuisine, and spend some time in wholesome conversation with the Lord. We’ll continue the journey to Mount Carmel tomorrow. See you then.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B...

Published on February 17, 2013 22:01
•
Tags:
1-kings-18, ahab, baal, elijah, fire-from-heaven, jezebel, miracles
Keep Your Eye on the Ball – Part 2
Answer me, O Lord, answer me, that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again [1 Kings 18:37].
Old King Ahab, a wuss who hid behind Jezebel’s skirt, added Baal worship to the sins of Jeroboam, prompting the Lord to dispatch His miracle-working prophets to take on the prophets of Baal and Asherah. That’s where we left off yesterday. Sounds like a suitable place to continue today.
So the Lord afflicted Israel with a 3½ year drought to get the Israelites’ attention. At the conclusion He had Elijah challenge all 450 prophets of Baal and all 400 prophets of Asherah to a duel. This made the odds 850 to 1, fine odds indeed. But not to worry because Elijah was on the Lord’s side, and He’s omnipotent.
The 850 yokels, er, I mean prophets spent all morning dancing a jig and chanting their drivel to Baal, calling upon him to send fire from heaven and burn up their sacrifice to him. Not surprisingly nothing ever came of it. Elijah had a splendid time poking fun of them in the process.
Then Elijah set up an altar of seven stones, dug a big ditch around it, saturated his offering with water until the ditch overflowed, and proceeded to pray to the Lord to send fire from heaven and burn up the drenched sacrifice he was presenting to the Lord. Straightway fire came down from heaven and devoured not only the animal, but also the water and the stones!
Here’s the point, dear people. We cited a portion of Elijah’s prayer at the start of this study. He called on the Lord to perform a mighty miracle, and the Lord did. What we want to center our attention on is the stated reason why Elijah wanted the Lord to perform this miracle. The reason was this: that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again.
The purpose of miracles is not to impress us and keep us coming back for more. Nor is it to tickle our fancy and leave us feeling happy. And it is certainly not to draw attention to the miracle worker. The purpose is to point people to the one true God, that they may turn from their sins and give their hearts to Him.
In today’s religious climate there are churches and denominations which emphasize miracles as a necessary part of the Church. The more time people spend around suchlike folks, the more they ogle the supposed miracles and the self-styled miracle workers. The attention does not go to the Lord Jesus but to man.
Let’s wise up and be mature men and women of God. Let’s seek the God of miracles, not the miracles of God. Give us the Person of Jesus Christ and it suffices. He is the Bread of Life, our all in all.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B...
Old King Ahab, a wuss who hid behind Jezebel’s skirt, added Baal worship to the sins of Jeroboam, prompting the Lord to dispatch His miracle-working prophets to take on the prophets of Baal and Asherah. That’s where we left off yesterday. Sounds like a suitable place to continue today.
So the Lord afflicted Israel with a 3½ year drought to get the Israelites’ attention. At the conclusion He had Elijah challenge all 450 prophets of Baal and all 400 prophets of Asherah to a duel. This made the odds 850 to 1, fine odds indeed. But not to worry because Elijah was on the Lord’s side, and He’s omnipotent.
The 850 yokels, er, I mean prophets spent all morning dancing a jig and chanting their drivel to Baal, calling upon him to send fire from heaven and burn up their sacrifice to him. Not surprisingly nothing ever came of it. Elijah had a splendid time poking fun of them in the process.
Then Elijah set up an altar of seven stones, dug a big ditch around it, saturated his offering with water until the ditch overflowed, and proceeded to pray to the Lord to send fire from heaven and burn up the drenched sacrifice he was presenting to the Lord. Straightway fire came down from heaven and devoured not only the animal, but also the water and the stones!
Here’s the point, dear people. We cited a portion of Elijah’s prayer at the start of this study. He called on the Lord to perform a mighty miracle, and the Lord did. What we want to center our attention on is the stated reason why Elijah wanted the Lord to perform this miracle. The reason was this: that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again.
The purpose of miracles is not to impress us and keep us coming back for more. Nor is it to tickle our fancy and leave us feeling happy. And it is certainly not to draw attention to the miracle worker. The purpose is to point people to the one true God, that they may turn from their sins and give their hearts to Him.
In today’s religious climate there are churches and denominations which emphasize miracles as a necessary part of the Church. The more time people spend around suchlike folks, the more they ogle the supposed miracles and the self-styled miracle workers. The attention does not go to the Lord Jesus but to man.
Let’s wise up and be mature men and women of God. Let’s seek the God of miracles, not the miracles of God. Give us the Person of Jesus Christ and it suffices. He is the Bread of Life, our all in all.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B...

Published on February 18, 2013 22:54
•
Tags:
1-kings-18, ahab, baal, elijah, fire-from-heaven, jezebel, miracles
Keep Your Eye on the Ball – Part 1
Answer me, O Lord, answer me, that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again [1 Kings 18:37].
From the time my kids were born until they finished high school, I explained to them the importance of choosing our friends wisely. Since what we eat is what we are, so too who we hang with is who we are…or who we become. If we make friends with folks who have their head on straight and are succeeding in life, then we’ll likely keep our head on straight and be successful too.
Old King Cole, er, I mean old King Ahab of northern Israel needed to learn that lesson. Alas, but he didn’t, and the result was that all the Israelites paid the price right along with him. Let me tell you some of the story behind this.
When King Solomon died, the Lord gave ten tribes (i.e., the northern half of the Promised Land) to Jeroboam ben Nebat. The southern half of the Promised Land remained under David’s kingly progeny. The Davidic throne ruled the south (aka Judah), while Jeroboam ruled the north (aka Israel). The worship of the Lord was at the temple in Jerusalem, where the Davidic kings ruled.
For centuries until northern Israel went into exile in Assyria, the sins of Jeroboam plagued Israel. His primary sin was that he established two golden calves to serve as Israel’s gods, placing one in the north and the other in the south near Judah. Jeroboam didn’t want his subjects going to Jerusalem to worship, you see. He established idolatry pure and simple, and there is no surer way to get on the Lord’s bad side than to be an idolater.
What Jeroboam did is known in Scripture as the sin of Jeroboam. But that isn’t what our story is about, dear friends. Alas, but old King Ahab wasn’t content to worship Jeroboam’s golden calves. He went off to Phoenicia and married that no account Jezebel, princess of the Phoenician king. In Phoenicia they just loved to worship Baal, and Jezebel brought Baal worship with her to Israel.
This left Israel with two major false religions, and the Lord was none too thrilled by it all. This ushered in the second period of miracles in the Old Testament. Baal worship in Israel led to the Lord’s miracle-working prophets coming to town. The main two were Elijah and Elisha.
Oh, no. We’re out of time again. It’s time to pull into the rest area, savor some delectable spiritual cuisine, and spend some time in wholesome conversation with the Lord. We’ll continue the journey to Mount Carmel tomorrow. See you then.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B...
From the time my kids were born until they finished high school, I explained to them the importance of choosing our friends wisely. Since what we eat is what we are, so too who we hang with is who we are…or who we become. If we make friends with folks who have their head on straight and are succeeding in life, then we’ll likely keep our head on straight and be successful too.
Old King Cole, er, I mean old King Ahab of northern Israel needed to learn that lesson. Alas, but he didn’t, and the result was that all the Israelites paid the price right along with him. Let me tell you some of the story behind this.
When King Solomon died, the Lord gave ten tribes (i.e., the northern half of the Promised Land) to Jeroboam ben Nebat. The southern half of the Promised Land remained under David’s kingly progeny. The Davidic throne ruled the south (aka Judah), while Jeroboam ruled the north (aka Israel). The worship of the Lord was at the temple in Jerusalem, where the Davidic kings ruled.
For centuries until northern Israel went into exile in Assyria, the sins of Jeroboam plagued Israel. His primary sin was that he established two golden calves to serve as Israel’s gods, placing one in the north and the other in the south near Judah. Jeroboam didn’t want his subjects going to Jerusalem to worship, you see. He established idolatry pure and simple, and there is no surer way to get on the Lord’s bad side than to be an idolater.
What Jeroboam did is known in Scripture as the sin of Jeroboam. But that isn’t what our story is about, dear friends. Alas, but old King Ahab wasn’t content to worship Jeroboam’s golden calves. He went off to Phoenicia and married that no account Jezebel, princess of the Phoenician king. In Phoenicia they just loved to worship Baal, and Jezebel brought Baal worship with her to Israel.
This left Israel with two major false religions, and the Lord was none too thrilled by it all. This ushered in the second period of miracles in the Old Testament. Baal worship in Israel led to the Lord’s miracle-working prophets coming to town. The main two were Elijah and Elisha.
Oh, no. We’re out of time again. It’s time to pull into the rest area, savor some delectable spiritual cuisine, and spend some time in wholesome conversation with the Lord. We’ll continue the journey to Mount Carmel tomorrow. See you then.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B...

Published on February 21, 2014 22:15
•
Tags:
1-kings-18, ahab, baal, elijah, fire-from-heaven, jezebel, miracles
Keep Your Eye on the Ball – Part 2
Answer me, O Lord, answer me, that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again [1 Kings 18:37].
Old King Ahab, a wuss who hid behind Jezebel’s skirt, added Baal worship to the sins of Jeroboam, prompting the Lord to dispatch His miracle-working prophets to take on the prophets of Baal and Asherah. That’s where we left off yesterday. Sounds like a suitable place to continue today.
So the Lord afflicted Israel with a 3½ year drought to get the Israelites’ attention. At the conclusion He had Elijah challenge all 450 prophets of Baal and all 400 prophets of Asherah to a duel. This made the odds 850 to 1, fine odds indeed. But not to worry because Elijah was on the Lord’s side, and He’s omnipotent.
The 850 yokels, er, I mean prophets spent all morning dancing a jig and chanting their drivel to Baal, calling upon him to send fire from heaven and burn up their sacrifice to him. Not surprisingly nothing ever came of it. Elijah had a splendid time poking fun of them in the process.
Then Elijah set up an altar of seven stones, dug a big ditch around it, saturated his offering with water until the ditch overflowed, and proceeded to pray to the Lord to send fire from heaven and burn up the drenched sacrifice he was presenting to the Lord. Straightway fire came down from heaven and devoured not only the animal, but also the water and the stones!
Here’s the point, dear people. We cited a portion of Elijah’s prayer at the start of this study. He called on the Lord to perform a mighty miracle, and the Lord did. What we want to center our attention on is the stated reason why Elijah wanted the Lord to perform this miracle. The reason was this: that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again.
The purpose of miracles is not to impress us and keep us coming back for more. Nor is it to tickle our fancy and leave us feeling happy. And it is certainly not to draw attention to the miracle worker. The purpose is to point people to the one true God, that they may turn from their sins and give their hearts to Him.
In today’s religious climate there are churches and denominations which emphasize miracles as a necessary part of the Church. The more time people spend around suchlike folks, the more they ogle the supposed miracles and the self-styled miracle workers. The attention does not go to the Lord Jesus but to man.
Let’s wise up and be mature men and women of God. Let’s seek the God of miracles, not the miracles of God. Give us the Person of Jesus Christ and it suffices. He is the Bread of Life, our all in all.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B...
Old King Ahab, a wuss who hid behind Jezebel’s skirt, added Baal worship to the sins of Jeroboam, prompting the Lord to dispatch His miracle-working prophets to take on the prophets of Baal and Asherah. That’s where we left off yesterday. Sounds like a suitable place to continue today.
So the Lord afflicted Israel with a 3½ year drought to get the Israelites’ attention. At the conclusion He had Elijah challenge all 450 prophets of Baal and all 400 prophets of Asherah to a duel. This made the odds 850 to 1, fine odds indeed. But not to worry because Elijah was on the Lord’s side, and He’s omnipotent.
The 850 yokels, er, I mean prophets spent all morning dancing a jig and chanting their drivel to Baal, calling upon him to send fire from heaven and burn up their sacrifice to him. Not surprisingly nothing ever came of it. Elijah had a splendid time poking fun of them in the process.
Then Elijah set up an altar of seven stones, dug a big ditch around it, saturated his offering with water until the ditch overflowed, and proceeded to pray to the Lord to send fire from heaven and burn up the drenched sacrifice he was presenting to the Lord. Straightway fire came down from heaven and devoured not only the animal, but also the water and the stones!
Here’s the point, dear people. We cited a portion of Elijah’s prayer at the start of this study. He called on the Lord to perform a mighty miracle, and the Lord did. What we want to center our attention on is the stated reason why Elijah wanted the Lord to perform this miracle. The reason was this: that this people may know that You, O Lord, are God, and that You have turned their heart back again.
The purpose of miracles is not to impress us and keep us coming back for more. Nor is it to tickle our fancy and leave us feeling happy. And it is certainly not to draw attention to the miracle worker. The purpose is to point people to the one true God, that they may turn from their sins and give their hearts to Him.
In today’s religious climate there are churches and denominations which emphasize miracles as a necessary part of the Church. The more time people spend around suchlike folks, the more they ogle the supposed miracles and the self-styled miracle workers. The attention does not go to the Lord Jesus but to man.
Let’s wise up and be mature men and women of God. Let’s seek the God of miracles, not the miracles of God. Give us the Person of Jesus Christ and it suffices. He is the Bread of Life, our all in all.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Exodus: Volume 2 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B...

Published on February 22, 2014 22:27
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Tags:
1-kings-18, ahab, baal, elijah, fire-from-heaven, jezebel, miracles