This is a guest post by Paule Patterson.
Paule is the High School Student Coach at Real Life on the Palouse in Moscow, ID. He has three children and has been married to his best friend for over 10 years. He attempts to ask questions that are often glossed over and to challenge the most basic of assumptions, looking for the shades of grey and color beyond the black and whites.
Paule writes and hosts a podcast at Valid Ambiguity. You can also connect with him on Twitter: @dredzs
Note from Jeremy Myers: I am publishing several guest posts this summer as I take some time off to rest. I am also preparing for something HUGE this fall. Stay tuned! If you would like to write a Guest Post for RedeemingGod, begin by reading the Guest Blogger Guidelines.
Slunked under his tattered cloak on a bed of trampled dirt and granite, Elijah was exhausted by his forty-day trek to Horeb and his bout with depression. He was alone. His volcanic Mount Carmel showdown, his draught ending prayer session, and his Flash like outrunning of the chariot have all faded into the foggy clefts of his memory. He was alone. Everyone had failed. If a torrential inferno from the clouds and the relief from the long desperate draught were not enough to turn the hearts of Israel back to their God, what was the point?
Elijah wants to die.
Then the word of the Lord rattled through the cave, “What are you doing here, Elijah?” (1 Kings 19:9).
Elijah scrambled to his feet. What kind of question was this? Was it not the Lord who sent his angel to strengthen Elijah for this journey to the mount of God? Where else could Elijah go? He whimpers, “I have been very jealous for the Lord, the God of hosts. For the people of Israel have forsaken your covenant, thrown down your altars, and killed your prophets with the sword, and I, even I only, am left, and they seek my life, to take it away.” The word of the Lord again shakes the loose debris of the cave’s ceiling, “Go out and stand on the mount before the Lord.” The Lord was about to appear.
Only Moses had experienced such a thing. His face glared like the setting sun as a result. Would this be the reinforcements for Elijah’s isolation or the recognition for Elijah’s fiery dedication? As Elijah inches towards the mouth of the cave, a great wind barrages the mountain, shattering boulders. Yet, God was not in the wind.
Then an earthquake sifts the mountain as wheat. Yet, God was not in the earthquake.
Then a firestorm floods the mountain. Yet, God was not in the fire.
Then, as shards of rocks tumble down, the landslides relax and the ashes smolder, a quaint, almost silent, whisper advances the mountain. “What are you doing here, Elijah?” The same question as before? Apparently, Elijah had missed something and was not picking up on the not-so-subtle hints God was dropping; Elijah’s answer to this second question was the verbatim of the first. The people have all failed the Lord and only Elijah has remained faithful. The Lord, as if ignoring Elijah’s lamentation, instructs Elijah to make a couple of final appointments and then to go train Elisha as his replacement. Elijah was being retired.
What had Elijah missed?
To answer the question, compare this story with that of Moses’ mountain experiences which took place on Mount Horeb and Mount Sinai. These two mountains are closely related to each other in significance and there is debate on whether or not Sinai and Horeb is the same mountain. Moses had seen flames rain down on Mount Sinai, felt the quaking of the mountain (Exodus 19:18) and seen the ruach (wind) push up the seawaters so the people may escape on dry land (Exodus 15:8-10). Moses had felt the agony and rage of seeing God’s people over and over again forget and forsake their Savior and Lord.
Even as the soot sprinkled from Mount Sinai above, the people whom Moses was leading melted gold, fabricated a calf, and idiotically declared, “These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt!” (Exodus 32:8). After squashing the active rebellion, Moses hikes up the face of Horeb to beg the Lord to remain with His people. When the Lord promises to do so, Moses nonchalantly said to the Lord, “Please show me your glory.”
God put Moses in a cleft, like Elijah was in a cave, and covered Moses’ face as the Lord passed by, as Elijah covered his face when the whisper manifested.
During the idol worship, while the people “played,” the Lord was watching and relayed the events to Moses. God denounced these people to Moses, saying, “…Now therefore let me alone, that my wrath may burn hot against them and I may consume them, in order that I may make a great nation of you” (Exodus 32:9-10).
At this point, Moses and Elijah begin to diverge.
Moses mediated on behalf of the people. As their leader, he stepped up and pleaded for them. Moses had people behind him at the foot of the mountain. Moses had been training up Joshua and working with Aaron. Elijah had simply given up on the people. He was alone with no co-workers or disciples. Just when you might assume that Elijah’s isolation had been the people’s fault, the Lord informed Elijah that there were 7000 who had not bent their knee to or kissed Baal. Elijah had also forgotten the 100 other prophets hidden by Obadiah (1 Kings 18:3-4). When you might assume that there was none worthy of being Elijah’s disciple, the Lord speaks of Elisha. Elijah had been the lone wolf and the Lord was inviting him to consider that what he was missing was people. He had framed his world and his activity around himself. He was so caught up in what he could, in what he had to do, that he forgot God’s people. Even when they had failed, he missed the opportunity to plead for them. He had assumed that a little light show would be enough. He had not anticipated that the real work would be with people, for people, and in people.
In your life, your job, and your family, don’t isolate from the people around you. You cannot come to the mountain of God without bringing the people of God. The mountain top is for the leader to gain perspective so that he may rejoin God’s people who await at the base. That is where God is working.
Stacy Cardoza says
This is good!
Paule Patterson says
Thanks Stacy for your encouragement!
Nicholas Elder says
Jesus didn’t stay on the mountain top, he rejected the disciples idea of wanting to build a temple there. I wonder if Christ was commenting on our desire to stay, to build up, to feel secure.
Paule Patterson says
Nicholas, there are some great parallels between the Transfiguration and Moses’ and Elijah’s mountain experiences. It’s no coincidence that both Moses and Elijah appear with Jesus. The lessons then that the Gospel writer’s are alluding to are great. One of them is what you said, that we always have to go back down from the mountain. I plan on writing a follow-up piece to this specifically on what the Gospel’s are doing with the Transfiguration and what they want their audience to learn. Thanks for the comment!
Craig Giddens says
I’m not sure his disciples wanted to build temple there. What they said was “let us make here three tabernacles; one for thee, and one for Moses, and one for Elias”. In the context a tabernacle just is a temporary habitation.
Paule Patterson says
Craig,
Indeed. Peter’s choice of “tabernacles” rather than “temple” is an intriguing decision. It begs the question, “Why did Peter assume that this was the logical response?”
Ron Hoffman says
Enjoyed the lesson. It made me think on how we often try to limit God to what He has done before and send our prayers with such focus rather than listening to what God wants.
Paule Patterson says
Ron,
Good point. God has always been trying to teach His people who to hear His voice. It is on His very words that we are to live.
Johnny Farina says
Jeremy, I wish I could talk to you. Especially about your review of “Stop Asking Jesus into your Life”. You made sense. I’m getting confused reading it and other books.
Craig Giddens says
“You made sense. I’m getting confused reading it and other books.”
If it made sense why are you getting confused?
Redeeming God says
Confused about what?
Johnny Farina says
Redeeming God the conflicting messages I am getting from reading several different books…..that all make sense when they disagree with each other…..I am not a new Christian, I have been preaching for many years……I am beginning to doubt I have been preaching the Gospel ‘correctly’ lately and that is disturbing to me……I am reading books that I guess you could call ‘free grace theology’ and “Lordship Salvation’…..God is not the author of confusion, but I am certainly feeling confused…..this must be of Satan….
Craig Giddens says
The Gospel.
1 Corinthians 15
1. Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye stand;
2. By which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain.
3. For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures;
4. And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures:
Salvation is believing the Gospel
Ephesians 1
13. In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise
Ephesians 2
8. For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:
9. Not of works, lest any man should boast.
Faith says
I’m not an expert, but I believe that the uncomfortable confusion you are experiencing is not Satanic, but it’s the Holy Spirit guiding you to a different place. It’s happened to me several times.
Faith says
I liked your post, never thought about Elijah that way before. Very interesting and a good message, thank you.
Paule Patterson says
Faith,
Thank you for the encouraging words. This lesson has helped me so I am thankful to hear when it blesses others as well. Blessings!
Jan says
I don’t know any people “of God.” When people aren’t “of God” it’s best to avoid them unless God speaks DIRECTLY to you and makes you there leader. LOL! I mean I can see them fill the church buildings everywhere on Sunday for an hour or so, but they are not a part of my every day. I know of 12 step programs where people are encouraged to seek Him, particularly around the eleventh step. Few get there from what I’ve experienced. I have felt like Elijah. The Lord knows, I too, have despaired and desired that He take my life. I learned to not “be suicidal” but to identify with Elijah in his exhaustion, frustration, sadness and isolation. I’ve also run from the wicked -plenty. However, I DO KNOW there ARE people of GOD!
Now I would like to change the subject, but just to be directed to the appropriate source for clarity and sanity, comments and opinions, from the free thinking beleivers. I am looking forward to following Jeremy and his guests in the hopes of gaining a firmer foundation regarding the theory of atonement since there are at least 5. As someone who came to a knowledge of Christ through music, I was forever changed by the whole cosmic battle in the heavenlies, particularly from the music of Carman like The Champion and Sunday’s On The Way. I get sideways (dangerously sideways) 🙂 when I have thoughts regarding the atonement theory that says God came in the flesh to allow Himself to be punished so severely by allowing mere men to extensively and so inhumanely abuse Him and then subject Him to a torturous death on a cross because WE all needed to be punished for our sins and He wanted to “take” our punishment, sparing us all of an eternity separated from Him in Hell. Tell me something’s missing. Tell me Satan did not have some sort of control. TELL ME SATAN STILL DOES NOT HAVE SOME SORT OF CONTROL He IS, afterall, the god of this world!!!! Tell me many are preaching a gospel AFRAID to acknowledge THE DEVIL as an ongoing and formidable foe. Is there anyone who thinks as I do that Satan’s part in LIFE is understated. I know R.C. Sproul stated something to the effect that it was an abomination, or an anathema, or preposterous, or BLASPHEMY to credit the devil with great power such that God has His hands full. R.C. also states the Jesus NEVER WENT TO HELL! Also, at pseudipigrapha.com there are many books not in the Bible that contain writings I find to be of great value. What a treasure chest. The Ascension of Isaiah is awesome. How familiar are you all with these impressive writings? Their veracity may be questionable but who can box God in? I find them very similar to the Bible and find that they have corroborating writings plus much more. Sure, some writings go a little off and I run into some pretty weird stuff, but all in all, I believe they are worth the reading. How ’bout you all?
Jan says
“their” God LOL!!! sorry grammar police 🙂
Carolyn says
Shalom ❤️ Excellent article!! Thank you!! I find it very interesting that many prophets met with and fellowshiped with Yah on mountains..
Here, we see prophets are human too.. They suffered from depression and lik ailments like we do today..
Michelle Trevino says
Never thought of Elijah in that light before. They each had their unique job function within the same gifting; Elijah more to Kings and Elisha to the common people. Elijah seems dog tired to me and a bit depressed and lonely; “I only am left.” I sure do get it. This could be a timely metaphor for how the Body of Christ feels. We need a refreshing spirit of revival, the Elisha double portion anointing. 🙂 Come Lord Yeshua!
Dana Stearns says
Really liked your post here, Paule. Many times I had pondered Elijah’s conversation with God here and also his position as related to Moses. Had never considered this perspective, though. Thanks for sharing your Spirit-led thoughts.