| Illustration and 
					Confirmation of Biblical History from the Assyrian Monuments 
					— The Deliverance of Syria through Naaman — Naaman 's 
					Leprosy and Journey to Samaria — Elisha 's Message to J oram 
					and to Naaman — Naaman 's Healing and Twofold Request — 
					Gehazi's Deceit and Conviction — Gehazi is struck with the 
					Leprosy of Naaman. 
					(2 Kings 5.) 
					     
					
					From the more private ministry of the prophet the Biblical 
					narrative next 
					passes to an account of his public activity. 
					1 Very 
					significantly, it was the 
					means of bringing Israel once more into direct contact with 
					their great 
					enemy, Syria — this time, not in war, but in peace. And the 
					bloodless 
					victory which was achieved might have taught king and people 
					how easily 
					the Lord could turn the hearts of their adversaries, and by 
					the 
					manifestation of His goodness make them fellow-believers and 
					fellow- 
					worshippers with Israel. In this respect, the present 
					history, as others in 
					this section, is specially prefigurative of New Testament 
					times. 
      
					As the narrative proceeds on the supposition of close 
					relations between 
					Israel and Syria — not otherwise mentioned in the Bible — 
					and involves, 
					at least indirectly, certain points of general interest, 
					this seems a fitting 
					opportunity for a brief summary of what recent discoveries 
					of ancient 
					monuments has taught us, not only confirmatory, but 
					illustrative and 
					explanatory of this period of Biblical history. 
					2 But in so 
					doing we must 
					keep some considerations in view by way of caution. For 
					first, our 
					knowledge of what may be called monumental history is as yet 
					initial and 
					fragmentary. Secondly, in any seeming discrepancy or 
					slight divergence in 
					details between the inscriptions on the monuments and the 
					records of 
					Jewish history, it seems neither reasonable nor safe to give 
					absolute 
					preference to the former. Jewish writers must have known 
					their own 
					history best, while, in their slight differences from the 
					records on the 
					monuments, we fail to discover any adequate motives on the 
					part of the 
					Jewish historians that could account for their falsifying 
					facts. And, we 
					need scarcely add, the same facts will assume different 
					aspects when 
					viewed from opposite sides. Again, it is admitted on all 
					hands that there 
					are manifest errors on the Assyrian monuments, and this on 
					points where 
					
					
					
					
					
					error is difficult, to account for. Thus, to mention one 
					instance — on the 
					Assyrian monuments, Jehu is designated as "the son of Omri," 
					and that by the very monarch to whom he is both represented 
					and described as bringing tribute. Further, we have to bear 
					in mind that our knowledge of Jewish history is also 
					fragmentary. The Old Testament does not profess to be a 
					handbook of Jewish history. It furnishes prophetic or sacred 
					history, which does not recount all events as they happened, 
					nor yet always in their exact succession of time, but 
					presents them in their bearing on the kingdom of God, of 
					which it tells the history. Hence it records or emphasizes 
					only that which is of importance in connection with it. 
					Lastly, we must remember that the chronology of the Bible is 
					in some parts involved in considerable difficulties, partly 
					for the reasons just stated, partly from the different modes 
					of calculating time, and partly also from errors of 
					transcription which would easily creep into the copying of 
					Hebrew numerals, which are marked by letters. Keeping in 
					view these cautions, the neglect of which has led to many 
					false inferences, we have no hesitation in saying, that 
					hitherto all modern historical discoveries have only tended 
					to confirm the Scripture narrative.      
					Turning to these extraneous sources for information on the 
					earlier history 
					of Judah and Israel under the Kings, we have here, first, 
					the Egyptian 
					monuments, especially those on the walls of the Temple of 
					Karnak, which 
					record the invasion of Judah and Jerusalem by Shishak, 
					described in 1 
					Kings 14:25, 26, and 2 Chronicles 12. Pictorial 
					representations of this 
					campaign are accompanied by mention of the very names of the 
					conquered 
					Jewish cities. 3 But with the death of Shishak, the power of 
					Egypt for a 
					time decayed. In its stead that of Assyria reasserted 
					itself. From that time 
					onwards its monuments more or less continuously cast light 
					on the history 
					of Israel. Just as in the Biblical narrative, so in the 
					Assyrian records of that 
					time, Syria occupies a most important place. It will be 
					remembered that 
					that country had recovered its independence in the reign of 
					Solomon, 
					having been wrested by Rezon from the sovereignty of Judah 
					(1 Kings 
					1 1:23-25). Thus far we perceive a general parallelism in 
					the outlines of this 
					history. But the Assyrian record leaves a strange impression 
					on the mind, 
					as we recall the importance of Omri, as having been the 
					second if not the 
					real founder of the Israelitish kingdom, the builder of its 
					capital, and the 
					monarch who gave its permanent direction alike to the 
					political and the 
					
					
					
					
					
					religious history of Israel. For the common designation for 
					the land of 
					Israel is "the land of Omri," "the land Omri," or "the land 
					of the house of 
					Omri." We regard it as a further indication of the political 
					importance 
					attached to that king when Jehu is designated as "the son of 
					Omri." This 
					could not have been from ignorance of the actual history, 
					since the name of 
					Ahab occurs on the monuments of Assyria, although (if 
					correctly read) in a 
					connection which does not quite agree with our ordinary 
					chronology. 
      
					Further illustration comes to us from the Assyrian 
					monuments, both of 
					certain phases in the Biblical history of Ahab, and of the 
					explanatory 
					words with which the account of Naaman's healing is 
					introduced: 
      
					"Now Naaman, captain of the host of the king of Syria, 
      was a great man with his master, and honorable, because by him 
      Jehovah had given deliverance unto Syria" (2 Kings 5:1). 
      
					Each of these statements requires some further explanation. 
					As regards the 
					history of Ahab, we note incidentally that the name 
					Ethbaal (Kings 
					16:31) as that of a Sidonian king, occurs also on the 
					Assyrian monuments, 
					just as does Sarepta (1 Kings 17:9, 10), as being a 
					Phoenician town, situate 
					between Tyre and Sidon. But of greatest interest is it to 
					learn from these 
					monuments the political motives which prompted the strange 
					and sudden 
					alliance proposed by Ahab to Ben-hadad (a name amply 
					confirmed by the 
					monuments), after the battle of Aphek (1 Kings 20:26-34). In 
					passing we 
					may notice that in a fragmentary inscription of Asarhaddon, 
					this Aphek, 
					situated east of the lake of Galilee, and a little aside 
					from the great road 
					between Damascus and Samaria, is named as the border-city of 
					Samaria. 
					Similarly, the mention of thirty-two kings allied with Ben-hadad 
					in his 
					campaign against Israel (1 Kings 20: 1), is so far borne out 
					by the Assyrian 
					monuments, that in the campaigns of Assyria against Syria 
					Ben-hadad is 
					always described as fighting in conjunction with a number of 
					allied Syrian 
					princes. 4 From these inscriptions we also learn that the 
					growing power of 
					Assyria threatened to overwhelm — as it afterwards did — 
					both Syria and 
					the smaller principalities connected with it. A politician 
					like Ahab must 
					have felt the danger threatening his kingdom of Samaria from 
					the advancing 
					power of Assyria. If Ben-hadad had endeavored to strengthen 
					himself by 
					the subjugation of Samaria, Ahab, in the hour of his 
					triumph, desired, by 
					an alliance with the now humbled Ben-hadad, to place Syria 
					as a kind of 
					
					
					
					
					
					bulwark between himself and the king of Assyria. This 
					explains the motive 
					of Ahab, who had no real trust in the might and deliverance 
					of Jehovah, but 
					looked to political combinations for safety, in allowing to 
					go out of his 
					hand the man whom Jehovah "appointed to utter destruction" 
					(1 Kings 
					20:42). 
      
					Another circumstance connected with the treaty of Aphek, not 
					recorded in 
					the Bible, and only known from the Assyrian monuments, casts 
					light on 
					this prophetic announcement of judgment to Ahab: "Therefore 
					thy life 
					shall be for his life, and thy people for his people." From 
					the monuments 
					we learn, in illustration of the alliance between Ben-hadad 
					and Ahab, and 
					of the punishment threatened upon it, that in the battle of 
					Karkar, or 
					Aroer, in which the Assyrian monarch Shalmaneser II. so 
					completely 
					defeated Syria, the forces of Ahab, to the number of not 
					fewer than 2000 
					chariots and 10,000 men, had fought on the side of Ben-hadad. 
					As we read 
					of 14,000 or, in another inscription, 5 of 20,500 of the 
					allies as having been 
					slain in this battle, 6 we perceive the fulfillment of the 
					Divine threatening 
					upon that alliance (1 Kings 20:42). At the same time we may 
					also learn 
					that many things mentioned in Scripture which, with our 
					present means of 
					knowledge, seem strange and inexplicable, may become plain, 
					and be fully 
					confirmed, by further information derived from independent 
					sources. 
      
					The battle of Karkar was not the only engagement in which 
					the forces of 
					Syria met, and were defeated by, those of Assyria. It was 
					fought in the 
					sixth year of the reign of Shalmaneser. Another successful 
					campaign is 
					chronicled as having been undertaken in the eleventh year of 
					the same 
					reign, when Shalmaneser records that for the ninth time he 
					crossed the 
					Euphrates; and yet another, in the fourteenth year of his 
					reign, when at the 
					head of 120,000 men he crossed the river at its high flood. 
					Two inferences 
					may, for our present purpose, be made from these notices. 
					The defeat of 
					Ahab's forces, when fighting in conjunction with Ben-hadad, 
					will account 
					for the cessation of the alliance entered into after the 
					battle of Aphek. 
					Again, the repeated defeat of Ben-hadad by Assyria will 
					explain how Ahab 
					took heart of grace, and in company with Jehoshaphat 
					undertook that fatal 
					expedition against Ramoth-Gilead (1 Kings 22), in which 
					literally the "life" 
					of Ahab went for that of him whom, from short-sighted 
					political motives, 
					he had spared (1 Kings 20:42). Lastly, these repeated wars 
					between 
					Assyria and Syria, of which the Assyrian monarch would 
					naturally only 
					
					
					
					
					
					record the successful engagements, help us to understand the 
					phrase by 
					which Naaman, captain 7 of the host of Syria, is introduced 
					as he "by 
					whom the Lord had given deliverance [perhaps "victory"] unto 
					Syria" 8 (2 
					Kings 5:1). 
      
					The expression just quoted seems to forbid the application 
					of the words to 
					the victory of Ben-hadad over Ahab, 9 although the Rabbis 
					imagine that the 
					fatal arrow by which Ahab was smitten came from the bow of Naaman. 
					Accordingly we cannot (as most commentators do) mark this 
					antithesis: 
					that the conqueror of Israel had to come to Israel for 
					healing. But the fact is 
					in itself sufficiently remarkable, especially when we think 
					of it in 
					connection with his disease, which would have placed even an 
					Israelite, so 
					to speak, outside the pale of Israel. In striking contrast 
					to the mention of 
					the strength and bravery of Naaman, and of his exalted 
					position, Scripture 
					abruptly, without pause or copula of conjunction, records 
					the fact: "a 
					leper." 10 We need not pause to consider the moral of this 
					contrast, with all 
					of teaching which it should convey to us. Quite another 
					lesson comes to us 
					from an opposite direction. For we also learn from this 
					history how, when 
					our need is greatest, help may be nearest, and that, in 
					proportion as we feel 
					the hopelessness of our case, God may prepare a way for our 
					deliverance. 
					It was certainly so in this instance. Once more we mark the 
					wonder- 
					working Providence of God, Who, without any abrupt or even 
					visibly 
					direct interference, brings about results which, if viewed 
					by themselves, 
					must seem absolutely miraculous. And this, by means which at 
					the time 
					may have appeared most unpromising. 
      
					It must have been a crushing sorrow that came upon that 
					Israelitish 
					household, when the Syrian bands carried from it the little 
					maiden whom 
					we find afterwards waiting on Naaman' s wife. Yet this was 
					the first link in 
					the chain of events which not only brought healing of body 
					and soul to the 
					Syrian captain, but anew proved alike to Jew and Gentile 
					that there was a 
					living God in Israel, who had placed there His accredited 
					representative. 
					Assuredly the most devoted affection could not have desired 
					for a child a 
					place of greater honor or usefulness than that which this 
					Jewish maiden 
					occupied in the household of the Syrian captain. What 
					follows is told with 
					utmost simplicity, and bears the impress of truth. For, it 
					was only natural 
					that this child should tell her mistress of the prophet in 
					Samaria, or express 
					the full confidence in his ability to recover her master of 
					his leprosy. 11 
					
					
					
					
					
					Similarly, it was only what we should have expected when her 
					mistress 
					repeated to her husband what the child had said, and perhaps 
					equally 
					natural on the part of Naaman to repeat this to his king, 
					12 
					alike to obtain 
					his leave for going to Samaria, and in such a manner as 
					would be most 
					likely to secure the desired result. 
      
					As heathens, and especially as Syrians, neither Naaman nor 
					Ben-hadad 
					would see anything strange in the possession of such magical 
					powers by a 
					prophet of Israel. Similarly, it was quite in accordance 
					with heathen 
					notions to expect that the king of Israel could obtain from 
					his own prophet 
					any result which he might desire. A heathen king was always 
					the religious 
					as well as the political chief of his people, and to command 
					the services 
					and obedience of his own prophet would seem almost a matter 
					of course. 
      
					It was for this reason that Ben-hadad furnished Naaman with 
					a letter to the 
					king of Israel. Hence also, imperious as the tone of the 
					letter seems, it 
					scarcely warranted the interpretation which the king of 
					Israel — probably 
					Joram — put upon it. What is reported of it in the sacred 
					text (2 King 5:6) 
					must, of necessity be regarded as only forming a part of the 
					letter, stating 
					its main object. On the other hand, we can quite understand 
					that, from the 
					Jewish point of view, Joram would speak of what he regarded 
					as a demand 
					that he himself should heal Naaman of his leprosy, as 
					equivalent to 
					requiring of him what God alone could do. His only it was to 
					kill or to 
					make alive (Deuteronomy 32:39; 1 Samuel 2:6), and leprosy 
					was 
					considered a living death (Numbers 12:12). As he 
					communicated this 
					strange behest to his attendants and advisers — presumably 
					not in the 
					presence of Naaman — it was not unnatural that Joram should 
					regard it as 
					a desire to find occasion of quarrel. The craven king of 
					Israel rent his 
					clothes, in token of deepest mourning — as if he had already 
					seen his own 
					and his people's destruction. 
      
					Some of the lessons suggested by the conduct of Joram may be 
					of practical 
					use. We mark first the cowardice of the man who gives way to 
					despair 
					before any danger has actually arisen. Yet there are not a 
					few who tremble 
					not before that which is real, but before fears which, after 
					all, prove wholly 
					groundless. It need scarcely be said how much good work, 
					whether on the 
					part of individuals or of the Church, has been hindered by 
					apprehensions 
					of this kind. The source of all lies, perhaps, not so much 
					in disbelief as in 
					
					
					
					
					
					non-belief, which is by far the commonest form of unbelief. 
					Joram knew 
					better and believed worse than the king of Syria — just as 
					is sometimes the 
					case with the children of God and the men of the world. He 
					knew, as the 
					Syrian did not, that God alone could give help; but he did 
					not look for 
					Divine help, as the Syrian, although in mistaken manner, had 
					done. He had 
					religion, but it stood him in no good stead; it was laid 
					aside precisely when 
					it was needed. He did not call to mind that there was a 
					prophet in Israel, 
					but in helpless terror rent his clothes. So we also, instead 
					of immediately 
					and almost instinctively resorting to God, too often forget 
					Him till every 
					other means has been exhausted, when we apply to Him rather 
					from 
					despair than from faith. 
      
					Reverently speaking, it would have been impossible for 
					Elisha as "the man 
					of God" to have been silent on this occasion. His message of 
					reproof to the 
					king: "Wherefore hast thou rent thy clothes?" and of 
					confidence: "Let him 
					come now to me, and he shall know that there is a prophet in 
					Israel," is not 
					one of self-assertion, but of assertion of God. It was a 
					testimony and, let 
					us add, a test alike for Israel and for the heathen world 
					13 
					of the presence of 
					the living and true God. Yet while viewing it in this 
					grander application, we 
					ought not to forget what confirmation it gave to the simple 
					faith of that 
					"little one" in the service of Naaman's wife. For God's 
					dealings are most 
					wide-reaching: they extend up to heaven, and yet embrace 
					also the poorest 
					of His people upon earth. 
					
					In accordance with the direction of the king, Naaman now 
					betook himself 
					"with his horses and his chariot" to the humble dwelling of 
					Elisha, which, 
					as we infer from verse 3, was in Samaria. Greater or more 
					instructive 
					contrast could scarcely be imagined. We know that Naaman had 
					come to 
					Samaria not only armed with a royal letter, almost imperious 
					in its tone, 
					and at the head of a great retinue, but bringing with him, 
					as princely gifts 
					for his expected healing, a sum of not less than ten talents 
					of silver 
					(computed at from 3000 pounds to about 3750 pounds), and six 
					thousand 
					pieces of gold (computed at from about 7500 pounds to about 
					9000 
					pounds), together with "ten changes of raiment," that is, of 
					those festive 
					suits which were so costly and so much valued in the East. 
					Between this 
					display and pomp and the humble waiting outside the lowly 
					home of the 
					prophet there was sufficient contrast. But it was 
					unspeakably intensified 
					when the prophet, without even seeing the Syrian captain, 
					sent him this 
					
					
					
					
					
					message: "Go and wash in Jordan seven times, and thy flesh 
					shall come 
					again to thee, 14 and thou shalt be clean." We may at once 
					say that the 
					conduct of Elisha was not prompted by fear of defilement by 
					leprosy, nor 
					by a desire to mark the more clearly the miracle about to be 
					performed, 
					least of all by spiritual pride. 15 The spiritual pride of a 
					Jew would have 
					found other expression, and, in general, those who cherish 
					spiritual pride 
					are scarcely proof against such visits as this of Naaman. We 
					cannot doubt 
					that the bearing of Elisha was Divinely directed. One has 
					said that it was 
					dictated by the inner state of Naaman, as evinced by the 
					manner in which 
					he received the prophet's direction (ver. 11). Perhaps we 
					should add (with 
					another old writer), that Elisha would thus teach Naaman 
					that neither his 
					pomp nor his wealth was the cause of his healing, and also 
					that help did 
					not come from the prophet, as if such power were inherent in 
					the prophet. 
					The latter, indeed, would seem of chief importance in the 
					teaching required 
					by a heathen. 
      
					We can readily perceive how alike the manner and the matter 
					of Elisha' s 
					direction would stir the indignation of Naaman. As Syria's 
					captain he 
					would naturally expect a different reception from the 
					Israelitish prophet, 
					and as a heathen, that Elisha would have used some magical 
					means, such as 
					to "move his hand up and down over the place," 
					16 calling 
					the while upon 
					the name of Jehovah 17 his God, and so heal him of his 
					leprosy. And Naaman spoke both as a heathen and as a Syrian when he 
					contemptuously 
					compared the limpid waters of "Abana and Pharpar," 
					18 a 
					which 
					transformed the wilderness around Damascus into a very 
					paradise of 
					beauty and riches, with the turbid flood of Jordan, if, 
					indeed, healing were 
					to be obtained by such means. "So he turned, and went away 
					in a rage." 
      
					The reasoning by which Naaman had so nearly deprived himself 
					of a 
					benefit which would be to him as life from the dead, is 
					substantially the 
					same as that which leads so many to turn from the one remedy 
					to which 
					God directs them. The simple command of the Gospel to "Wash, 
					and be 
					clean," like the words of the prophet which had prefigured 
					it, is still to the 
					Jews a stumbling-block, and to the Greeks foolishness. The 
					difficulty felt 
					by Naaman is the same as that of so many in our days: the 
					need of 
					humiliation, and of faith in a remedy which seems so 
					inadequate to the end. 
					If washing be required, let it be in the Abana and Pharpar 
					of our own 
					waters, not in the turbid stream of Israel! But it is ever 
					this humiliation of 
					
					
					
					
					
					heart and simple faith in God's provision which are required 
					for our 
					healing. 
      
					"Except ye be converted, and become as little children, 
      ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew 18:3). 
      
					And so Naaman had to learn it. It was well that the relation 
					between 
					himself and his servants was so simple and affectionate ("my 
					father"), that 
					they could address him in terms of respectful expostulation, 
					and so turn 
					him from his rash purpose. For, often those around can see 
					the true bearing 
					of things far better than we. At the same time, we may also 
					learn from the 
					relation between Naaman and his servants how the faithful 
					performance of 
					ordinary duties may prepare the way for the reception of a 
					higher 
					blessing. 19 
      
					So it came to pass that instead of returning "in a rage" to 
					Damascus, a 
					leper, Naaman went down to Jordan. And as, obedient to "the 
					saying of 
					the man of God," he "dipped himself seven times in Jordan," 
					"his flesh 
					came again like unto the flesh of a little child, and he was 
					clean." We can 
					scarcely be mistaken in regarding the number seven as 
					symbolic of the 
					covenant (comp. also 1 Kings 18:43), and as also implying a 
					trial of faith, 
					since presumably the healing did not come till after the 
					seventh washing. 
					And now it appeared, by the effect produced, that Elisha had 
					throughout 
					sought the restoration not only of bodily health, but also 
					the spiritual 
					recovery of Naaman. Although not so bidden by the prophet, 
					yet 
					following the promptings of a renewed heart, like the 
					grateful Samaritan in 
					the Gospel (Luke 17:15), he returned to Elisha, and made 
					such full 
					acknowledgment of God — both negatively and positively — 
					that it might 
					have been said of it at that time: "I have not found so 
					great faith, no, not in 
					Israel" (Matthew 8: 10). 20 And he also showed, in such 
					manner as he could, 
					the evangelical fruits of gratitude, and of a new life 
					direction. Of the first he 
					gave evidence in his desire to offer a gift; 
					21 of the 
					second, in his request for 
					"two mules' burden of earth." This, for the purpose of 
					constructing an 
					altar to Jehovah, as we infer from the expression of his 
					resolve henceforth 
					only to bring offerings unto the Lord . 
      
					Only very brief explanation seems necessary of Elisha' s 
					refusal to accept 
					any gift from Naaman. For the prophets seem not unfrequently 
					to have 
					accepted such offerings (1 Samuel 9:7, 8; 1 Kings 14:3), and 
					Elisha himself 
					
					
					
					
					
					had only lately done so (2 Kings 4:42). But in the present 
					instance it was 
					of the utmost importance to show — in contradistinction to 
					heathen 
					soothsayers — that, as the prophet of God did not work 
					miracles in his 
					own power, nor by his own will, so he did it not for reward, 
					and that the 
					gift of God could not be purchased with money. Indeed, we 
					can scarcely 
					exaggerate the impression which the refusal of Elisha must 
					have made both 
					on the followers of Naaman and generally in Israel. One of 
					the Fathers has 
					here marked in the prophet's conduct the same principle 
					which underlay 
					the direction of our Lord when He sent out His disciples 
					with this 
					injunction: "Freely ye have received, freely give" (Matthew 
					10:8). Nor 
					could Elisha be in doubt about the other request of Naaman. 
					If in making 
					his altar of earth according to the Divine direction 
					22 
					(Exodus 20:24), he 
					wished to use that of the land of Israel, it could not have 
					been with the 
					thought that the God of Israel could only be worshipped on Israelitish soil. 
					Any idea of Jehovah as a national Deity, bound to the soil 
					of Israel, would 
					have been in contradiction to his expressed conviction that 
					there was "no 
					God in all the earth but in Israel:" no national deities, 
					but the One living 
					and true God, Whose knowledge and manifestation were only in 
					Israel. 
					Nor would Elisha have given his sanction to what rested on 
					so serious a 
					mistake. But we can easily understand the feelings which 
					prompted a 
					desire to rear an Israelitish altar, not only in loving 
					remembrance 23 of the 
					benefit received, but as congruous to the worship of Israel, 
					to which his 
					new faith had led him. It would be an outward expression of 
					his inward 
					faith, and would at the same time constantly proclaim 
					throughout Syria 
					that there was no other God than He of Israel, and no other 
					worship than 
					His. 
      
					And yet wider thoughts come to us. The Old Testament 
					dispensation 
					seems to enlarge as it has touch of the heathen world: it 
					seems to break 
					through its temporary bounds; it becomes universal in its 
					application, and 
					in its wide-hearted toleration loses its exclusiveness. Thus 
					this incident 
					also is prefigurative of New Testament times. For the 
					implied sanction of 
					Naaman' s sacrifices — though probably only burnt and 
					thank-offerings, 24 
					— seems to carry us beyond the preparatory dispensation. On 
					the other 
					hand, it is evidence of this toleration when Elisha does not 
					return a 
					negative answer to the plea of Naaman — in which, however, 
					an important 
					alteration in the reading should be noted: "When my master 
					goeth into the 
					
					
					
					
					house of Rimmon 25 to bow down there, and he leaneth on my 
					hand, and I 
					bow down in the house of Rimmon when he 
					26 boweth down in the 
					house 
					of Rimmon — oh, let Jehovah forgive thy servant in this 
					matter." It will be 
					noticed that according to this reading a sharp distinction 
					is drawn — even 
					although the terms used are the same — between the "bowing 
					down" of 
					Naaman, simply because his royal master leant on his arm, 
					and the 
					"bowing down" of the king of Syria for the purpose of 
					worship. The very 
					mention of this scruple by Naaman proved not only the 
					tenderness of his 
					enlightened conscience, but that he was not in any danger of 
					conformity to 
					heathen worship. And so, without specially entering on the 
					matter, Elisha 
					could bid him "go in peace." 
					27 
      
					But there was yet another and a sad sequel to this history. 
					We have 
					already had repeated occasion to notice the essential 
					difference in spirit 
					between the prophet and his servant. It now appeared in such 
					manner as, 
					if left unpunished, to have marred the work of Elisha. It 
					seems difficult to 
					understand how, with full knowledge of the great work just 
					wrought, and 
					of all that had passed, Gehazi could have taken up a 
					position so different 
					from that of his master. But, alas, there have been too many 
					similar 
					instances to make it appear quite strange. The character of 
					Gehazi was in 
					every respect the exact opposite of Elisha' s. He was 
					covetous, selfish, and 
					narrow-minded. There is a striking contrast between the "As 
					Jehovah 
					liveth," with which Elisha prefaced his persistent refusal 
					to receive aught 
					of Naaman (ver. 16), and the same phrase in the mouth of 
					Gehazi, as he 
					resolved to "take somewhat" of "this Syrian" (ver. 20). To 
					Gehazi it 
					seemed that his master "had spared this Syrian" very 
					needlessly and very 
					foolishly, "in not receiving at his hands that which he 
					brought." He could 
					not see in what had passed anything higher than a 
					transaction between man 
					and man. It had been an act of romantic generosity, an 
					unpractical display 
					of mistaken principle, where every consideration — even 
					nationality and 
					religion — pointed in the other direction. At any rate, 
					there was no reason 
					why he should not act differently. 
      
					Naaman had pursued his journey a little distance, when he 
					saw the servant 
					of the prophet hastening after him. Showing to the servant 
					honor similar to 
					that which he would have paid to his master, the Syrian 
					captain descended 
					from his chariot to meet him. In answer to Naaman' s anxious 
					inquiry, 
					Gehazi pretended a message from Elisha to the effect that 
					two of the sons 
					
					
					
					
					
					of the prophets had just come to him from Mount Ephraim, on 
					which both 
					Bethel and Gilgal were situated, and that he requested for 
					them a talent of 
					silver and two changes of garments. Probably we are to 
					understand that 
					these imaginary "sons of the prophets" were represented as 
					having come 
					in name of their respective communities, to crave help from 
					Elisha. This 
					would explain why Naaman should have urged Gehazi to "be 
					pleased" — 
					to "consent" — to take two talents (each from 300 pounds to 
					375 
					pounds). But for the hardening effect of sin, especially of 
					lying and 
					covetousness, Gehazi must have been touched by the evident 
					simplicity of 
					Naaman, and by that respectful courtesy which now would not 
					allow the 
					servant of the prophet, who had come on such a charitable 
					errand, to be 
					burdened with carrying the silver, but detailed two of his 
					attendants for the 
					purpose. Gehazi allowed them to come as far as "the hill," 
					28 and then 
					dismissed them, to prevent possible detection. Having 
					secreted the money 
					in the house, Gehazi made his appearance before his master. 
					To what he 
					might have felt as a searching inquiry, "Whence, Gehazi?" he 
					replied by a 
					bold denial of having been absent from the house. Evidently 
					Gehazi did not 
					realize that the Jehovah Whom he had erst invoked, and 
					before Whom 
					Elisha stood, was the living and the true God. Taking up the 
					very words of 
					Gehazi, "Thy servant did not go," Elisha put it, "Did not my 
					heart go?" 29 
					and then set before him the whole scene as it had been 
					present to his 
					inward spiritual vision. Then, setting forth the incongruity 
					of such mean 
					lying and self-seeking on such an occasion — when the glory 
					of God 
					should have been the sole thought and aim of a true 
					Israelite, he 
					pronounced upon him what must be felt a sentence of meet 
					retribution. 
					The Syrian had become an Israelite in heart and spirit, and 
					he was healed of 
					his leprosy in Israel's waters. The Israelite had become 
					heathen in heart 
					and spirit, and he and his were struck with the leprosy of 
					the Syrian, 
					whose money he had coveted for himself and his family. What 
					each had 
					sown, that did he reap. And this also was not only for just 
					judgment, but 
					for a testimony to God and to His servant. 
					30 
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