Things That I Used To Do

You have come to me to bring my iniquity to remembrance and to put my son to death!  1 Kings 17:18  NASB

Iniquity – This word, translated “iniquity,” is one of the principal words for sin and evil found in the Old Testament (awon in Hebrew).  This word carries the idea of something twisted, something especially perverse.  In addition, it incorporates the thought of the punishment that goes along with the sin.  While we see the evil act as a separate event from its consequences, this word views both the act and the consequence as parts of the same thing.  One automatically and inevitably follows the other.

The widow of Zarephath shouts at Elijah.  “Why have you done this to me, you holy man of God?”  She has been providing Elijah with housing for two years during a great drought, and now her son dies.  Is this the way that God repays her obedience?  Is God visiting punishment upon her for her past twisted deeds?  Is she to be stripped of what she loves simply because she is not from Israel?

I often wonder if I am any different than this widow.  I remember many occasions when I echoed her desperate cry.  “Is this the way you’re going to treat me, God?  Are you going to punish me now for all twisted acts of my past?  Are you taking away something that I love to get even with me over things I used to do?”  When life suddenly turns sour after years of obedience, don’t we often cry out in the same way as this poor widow?  She acknowledges that her life used to be filled with twisted sins.  She admits that she deserves punishment.  But she has been faithful for a long time now.  Does God wait until just the right moment to strike us down once again?

If you read this story in 1 Kings 17, you will see that Elijah does not answer this question.  He doesn’t say a word about her accusation.  He just takes her son and brings him back to life through the power of God.  He knows that no amount of religious debate will have any effect.  He knows that if this widow is to have her confidence in God restored, something impossible must happen – her son must live.  What she treasured most in her life of poverty must be restored to her.  There is only one demonstration that counts – God must show His compassion!

The amazing grace of this story is that the widow never asked to have her son restored.  It was Elijah who knew what she needed.  She never prayed, never petitioned and never pleaded.  It was Elijah who did the praying.  He interceded for her – and God responded to his intercession.  Where are the Elijah’s of intercession today?  Where are the ones who take action on God’s behalf simply because someone else needs to see God’s compassion?  Are you the widow or the intercessor?

And in case you want to know just how Elijah knew the widow’s son must be revived, go read Exodus 34:6-7 where you will see how awon is connected to the very nature of God.

Topical Index: intercessor, awon, iniquity, 1 Kings 17:18, Exodus 34:7

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Michael

Exodus 34:7

I just received an email from the daughter of my old friends Michele and David

Inviting me to see an exhibition of her artwork, which is really more my “cup of tea”

Than telecommunication switches and the networking industry

Vanessa’s artwork always makes me think of of the following movie called Pi

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FcN2i9GKsFQ&list=LPyT6S-yd9mdo&index=3&feature=plcp

The movie Pi makes the following points:

– “The Torah is a sequence of numbers”

– “Hebrew is all math”

At Cisco I worked on networks; Layer 3 routers, which connect switches to the internet and

At Foundry I worked on Layer 4-7 “Server Iron” switches, which connect the internet to a server

On Old Ironsides Drive in Santa Clara across the street from my 1st job in Silicon Valley at Rolm

The first time I saw Pi I was living alone many years ago and working at ROLM Systems

And the movie actually scared me

Because the hero, who sees numbers everywhere

Was clearly out of his mind 🙂

Amanda Youngblood

I looked up the verses in Exodus and had a question. The translation says”and will by no means clear the guilty.” But when I use the Blue Letter Bible to look this up, I see that it says “and it will be cleaned or cleared” which seems the opposite of the translation. What am I missing? Because in the context of that verse it’s a pretty huge difference.

Amanda Youngblood

Wow! That’s a lot of info for one small word!

I guess my question lies more in why they changed it from God pouring out and cleaning the guilty to not clearing the guilty? Or is it that by pouring out the guilty God is not clearing them? Is there a negative in the original Hebrew? I couldn’t find it using the BLB, but I also don’t really read Hebrew at all (sadly).

It just seems like a lot to shift from cleaning the guilty to not clearing us.

And now I will go an retread the TWOT text in case I missed it…

Amanda Youngblood

I meant and reread, not an retread… Stupid auto correct.

Judi Baldwin

Hey Amanda,
You might want to take the day off from work today so you can spend it reading, studying and trying to figure out Skip’s professorial answer to your question! 🙂 🙂

Michael and Arnella Stanley

Yikes! Now I know the difference between a scholar and “layman”. After reading Skip’s almost 1,500 word scholarly  response I just wanted to “lay” down and take a nap- and it’s only 9 am. Plus, I still am not sure what the answer was—A or B. I’m glad we aren’t going to be tested on this material to determine our place in the Kingdom. As it is, my “test” results thus far haven’t been good; as they have little to do with head knowledge, but rather obedience. In school I always hoped the teacher would grade on a curve, but often there was one student who aced the exam ruining my chance at a better (unearned) grade. In this case it is Messiah who got it all right and instead of skewing the curve He gives us the answers and tells us to take the test again… and again… and again… until we get it right. So while I may never be a scholar like Skip, (and others on this site)  I still must  pass His testings by learning to apply Torah to my life and applying myself to Life. Shalom, Michael 

Amanda Youngblood

LOL! Good thing I’m off for the week!

Brian

Skip,

You wrote:

“The amazing grace of this story is that the widow never asked to have her son restored. It was Elijah who knew what she needed. She never prayed, never petitioned and never pleaded. It was Elijah who did the praying. He interceded for her – and God responded to his intercession. Where are the Elijah’s of intercession today? Where are the ones who take action on God’s behalf simply because someone else needs to see God’s compassion? Are you the widow or the intercessor?”

Provoking insight and great questions.

Shalom

Ida Blom

Can someone help me out – why is Exodus 34:6,7 so different from Ezekiel 18:19, 20?