| Siege of Samaria by 
					the Syrians — Terrible Straits and Tragedy in the City — The 
					King sends to slay Elisha, but arrests his Messenger — 
					Announced Deliverance and Judgment on the Unbelieving "Lord" 
					— The Discovery by the Four Lepers — Flight of the Syrians — 
					Relief of Samaria — The Unbelieving Trodden to Death in the 
					Gate. (2 Kings 
					6:24-7:20.) 
					     
					
					The sacred narrative now resumes the record of public events 
					in Israel, 
					although still in close connection with the ministry of 
					Elisha, which at this 
					crisis appears the primal factor in the history of the 
					northern kingdom. 
					Remembering that it is written from the prophetic 
					standpoint, we do not 
					here look for a strictly chronological arrangement of 
					events, but rather 
					expect to find them grouped according to the one grand idea 
					which 
					underlies this history. 
      
					It is impossible to determine what time may have intervened 
					between the 
					attempts and the expedition described in the last chapter 
					and the open 
					warfare against Samaria, the incidents of which we are about 
					to relate. 
					According to Josephus (Ant. 9:4, 4), it followed immediately 
					— the 
					narrative of those who had returned from Samaria having 
					convinced Ben-hadad that any secret attempts upon the king of Israel were 
					hopeless, and 
					determined him to resort to open warfare, for which he 
					deemed his army 
					sufficient. 1 However that may be, he was soon to experience 
					how vain 
					were all such attempts when God was in defense of His 
					people. And here 
					the question naturally arises why such Divine interpositions 
					should have 
					been made on behalf of Israel. The answer is not difficult, 
					and it will throw 
					light upon the course of this history. Evidently, it was a 
					period of 
					comparative indecision, before the final attitude of the 
					nation towards 
					Jehovah was taken, and with it the ultimate fate of Israel 
					decided. Active 
					hostility to the prophet as God's representative and to the 
					worship of 
					Jehovah had ceased, and there were even tokens for good and 
					of seeming 
					return to the Lord . But, as events soon showed, there was 
					not any real 
					repentance, and what to a superficial observer might seem 
					the beginning of 
					a calm was only a lull before the storm. This interval of 
					indecision, or 
					token of pending decision, must be taken into account. The 
					presence of the 
					
					
					
					
					
					prophet in Israel meant the final call of God to Israel, and 
					the possibility 
					of national repentance and forgiveness. Every special 
					interposition, such as 
					those we have described, was an emphatic attestation of 
					Elisha's mission, 
					and hence of his message; and every deliverance indicated 
					how truly and 
					easily God could help and deliver His people, if only that 
					were in them 
					towards which the presence of the prophet pointed. And the 
					more minute 
					and apparently unimportant the occasions for such 
					interposition and 
					deliverance were, the more strikingly would all this appear. 
					It is with such 
					thoughts in our minds that we must study the history of the 
					siege and 
					miraculous relief of Samaria. 
      
					Ben-hadad was once more laying siege to Samaria (comp. 1 
					Kings 20). And 
					to such straits was the city reduced that not only 
					levitically unclean but 
					the most repulsive kind of meat fetched a price which in 
					ordinary times 
					would have been extravagant for the most abundant supply of 
					daintiest 
					food, while the coarsest material for cooking it sold at a 
					proportionally 
					high rate. It must have been from want of provender for them 
					that such 
					beasts of burden as asses, so common and useful in the East, 
					were killed. 
					Even their number must have been terribly diminished (Comp. 
					2 Kings 
					7:13) when an ass's head would sell for eighty pieces of 
					silver (variously 
					computed at from 5 pounds to 8 pounds), and a "cab 
					2 of 
					doves' dung" 3 — 
					used when dried as material for firing — for five pieces of 
					silver (computed 
					at from 6/ to 10/ 4 ). If such were the straits to which the 
					wealthier were 
					reduced, we can imagine the sufferings of the poor. But only 
					the evidence 
					of those who themselves were actors in it could have made 
					any one believe 
					in the possibility of such a tragedy as that to the tale of 
					which King Joram 
					was to listen. While making the round of the broad city wall 
					(the glacis), 
					probably to encourage as well as to inspect the defenders of 
					the city, and 
					to observe the movements of the enemy, he was arrested by 
					the cry for 
					help of a frenzied woman. Probably too much accustomed to 
					the state of 
					famine and misery, the king uttered an ejaculation, 
					indicative not only of 
					the general distress prevailing in the city, but of his own 
					state of mind. His 
					words seem to imply that he felt Jehovah alone could give 
					help, 5 perhaps 
					that he had some dim expectation of it, but that the Lord 
					withheld from 
					sending it for some reason for which neither king nor people 
					were to 
					blame. As we view it in the light of his after-conduct 
					(comp. vv. 31-33), 
					King Joram connected the straits of Samaria with the prophet 
					Elisha, — 
					
					
					
					
					either they were due to his direct agency, or else to his 
					failure to make 
					intercession for Israel. Such ignorance of the spiritual 
					aspect of God's 
					dealings, even when they are recognized, together with an 
					unhumbled state 
					of heart, unwillingness to return to God, and the ascription 
					of the evils 
					befalling us to the opposite of their true cause, are only 
					too common in 
					that sorrow which Holy Scripture characterizes as "of the 
					world," and 
					working "death." 
      
					The horrible story which the woman told to the king was that 
					she and 
					another had made the agreement that each of them was 
					successively to kill 
					her son for a meal in which they two were to share; that the 
					one had 
					fulfilled her part of the bargain, but that, after partaking 
					of the dreadful 
					feast, the other had hidden her son. Whether or not the 
					feelings of 
					motherhood had thus tardily asserted themselves in the 
					second mother, or 
					whether, in the avarice of her hunger, she wished to reserve 
					for herself 
					alone the unnatural meal, matters not for our present 
					purpose. But we 
					recall that such horrors had been in warning foretold in 
					connection with 
					Israel's apostasy (Leviticus 26:29; Deuteronomy 28:53); that 
					they seem to 
					have been enacted during the siege of Jerusalem by 
					Nebuchadnezzar 
					(Lamentations 4:10); and lastly, that we have historical 
					evidence of their 
					occurrence during the last siege of Jerusalem by Titus (Jos.
					War, 6., 3, 4). 
					Even if it had not reminded the king of the predicted Divine 
					curse, such a 
					tale could not have fallen on his ear, especially in 
					existing circumstances, 
					without exciting the deepest and strongest feelings. The 
					story itself was 
					sufficiently harrowing; but that a mother should, even in 
					the madness of 
					self-reproach, make public appeal to the king, that her 
					neighbor should be 
					kept to her part of the compact, revealed a state of matters 
					and of public 
					feeling which called for that universal mourning which the 
					king, as head of 
					the state, inaugurated, when almost instinctively "he rent 
					his clothes." And 
					so, too often, they that will not mourn for sin have to 
					mourn for its 
					consequences. 
      
					But as the people watched their king as, with rent clothes, 
					he passed on 
					his way, they took notice that he wore other token of 
					mourning — that 
					"he had sackcloth within upon his flesh." And yet, strange 
					as it may seem, 
					there is not any inconsistency between this and what 
					immediately follows 
					in the sacred narrative. There is no reason to doubt his 
					outward penitence, 
					of which this was the token — perhaps, alas, the main part. 
					Nor do we 
					
					
					
					
					
					require to suppose, as has been suggested, either that he 
					had put on 
					sackcloth in obedience to a general command of Elisha, or 
					else that his 
					anger against the prophet was due to the advice of the 
					latter that Samaria 
					should hold out in expectation of Divine deliverance, and 
					that he (the king) 
					had put on sackcloth in the belief that thereby he would 
					secure the 
					promised help. For similar conduct may still be witnessed as 
					regards its 
					spirit, although the outward form of it may be different. A 
					man 
					experiences the bitter consequences of his sinful ways, and 
					he makes 
					sincere, though only outward, repentance of them. But the 
					evils 
					consequent upon his past do not cease; perhaps, on the 
					contrary, almost 
					seem to increase, and he turns not within himself, for 
					humiliation, but 
					without, to what he supposes to be the causes of his 
					misfortunes, perhaps 
					often those very things which are intended ultimately to 
					bring spiritual 
					blessing to him. The sudden outburst of the king's anger 
					against Elisha 
					indicates that he somehow connected the present misery of 
					Samaria with 
					the prophet; and the similarity of his rash vow of Elisha' s 
					death with that 
					of his mother Jezebel in regard to Elijah (1 Kings 19:2) 
					would lead to the 
					inference that Joram imagined there was a kind of hereditary 
					quarrel 
					between the prophets and his house. This, although he had 
					but lately 
					experienced personal deliverances through Elisha (2 Kings 
					6:9, 10). 
					Perhaps, indeed, we may hazard the suggestion that one of 
					the reasons for 
					them may have been to show that the controversy was not with 
					the 
					members of the house of Ahab as such, but with them as alike 
					the cause 
					and the representatives of Israel's apostasy. 
      
					But the king's mood was fitful. The command to slay Elisha 
					was 
					immediately succeeded by another resolve, whether springing 
					from fear or 
					from better motives. He hastily followed the messenger whom 
					he had sent, 
					in order to arrest the execution of the sentence on which he 
					had gone. 
					Meanwhile the prophet himself had been in his house with the 
					elders of 
					the city — we can scarcely doubt, making very different 
					application of the 
					state of matters in Samaria than the king had done. We do 
					not wonder that 
					all that was happening should have been Divinely 
					communicated to Elisha, 
					nor yet that he should have described in such language the 
					purposed 
					judicial murder by Joram as characteristic of the son of 
					Ahab and Jezebel. 
					Plain and fearless as the words were, they would also remind 
					the elders of 
					the pending judgment against the house of Ahab. By direction 
					of the 
					
					
					
					
					prophet they who were with him now prevented the entrance of 
					the king's 
					messenger, who was so soon to be followed by the monarch 
					himself. The 
					words (ver. 33): 
      
					"And he said, Behold this the evil is from Jehovah, 
      why should I wait [hope] any longer?" 
      
					were spoken by the king as he entered the presence of 
					Elisha. They are 
					characteristic of his state of mind. It was perhaps for this 
					reason that the 
					prophet apparently gave no heed of any kind to them. They 
					only served 
					to bring into more startling contrast the abrupt 
					announcement which the 
					prophet was commissioned to make. Alike in itself and in the
					
					circumstances of the city, it seemed to imply not only a 
					miracle but an 
					absolute impossibility. Yet the message was not only 
					definite but 
					solemnly introduced as "the word of Jehovah." It was to this 
					effect, that 
					about that time on the morrow, a seah (about a peck and a 
					half of fine flour 
					would be sold in the gate of Samaria, where the public 
					market was held, for 
					a shekel (about 2s. 7d.), and two seahs (about 
					three pecks) of barley for 
					the same price. 
      
					Such abundance as this would imply could not have been 
					expected even in 
					the most fruitful seasons. The words must have come with 
					such surprise 
					upon all, that only absolute faith in the prophet, or rather 
					in the presence 
					of Jehovah with him, could have secured credence for them. 
					And is it not 
					always so, whenever any real need of ours is brought face to 
					face with a 
					promise of God, — and are we not always tempted, in the 
					weakness of 
					our faith, either to minimize and rationalize God's 
					promises, or else not to 
					realize nor lay hold on them? Thus every promise is a 
					twofold test: of His 
					faithfulness — although only if we believe; and of our 
					faith. And in that 
					assembly there was at least one who did not hesitate to 
					speak out his 
					disbelief, even though the announcement had been solemnly 
					made in the 
					name of Jehovah, by one who had previously often earned a 
					claim to 
					credence, however incredible his predictions might have 
					seemed. But this is 
					the very test of faith — that the past never seems to afford 
					a quite 
					sufficient basis for it, but that it must always stretch 
					beyond our former 
					experience, just because it is always a present act, the 
					outcome of a 
					present life. And apart from the sneer which it conveyed, 
					there was 
					certainly reason in the retort of the adjutant, 
					6 on whose 
					hand the king 
					
					
					
					
					
					leaned: (Comp. 2 Kings 5:18) "If Jehovah made windows in 
					heaven, would 
					this thing be?" 7 But it needed not the direct sending of 
					corn through 
					windows made in the heavens. To the lessons of God's 
					faithfulness to His 
					promise there was now to be added, as counterpart, another 
					of His 
					faithfulness as regarded the threatened judgments upon 
					unbelief. The 
					officer who had disbelieved the announcement should see but 
					not share in 
					the good of its fulfillment. 
      
					As we transport ourselves into the circumstances, it must 
					have been 
					impossible to imagine any fulfillment of the prediction 
					without the most 
					direct Divine interposition. And yet it was only because 
					they were 
					ignorant of what would evolve that any miracle, in the sense 
					in which we 
					use that expression, seemed necessary. As they were so soon 
					to learn, and 
					as we understand it, all happened in the orderly and 
					reasonable succession 
					of events. But the miracle lies in the Divinely arranged 
					concurrence of 
					natural events, with a definite view to a Divine and 
					pre-arranged purpose. 
					And so — if we would only learn it — miracles are such, 
					because we view 
					God's doings from earth, and in the light of the present and 
					the seen; 
					miracles are the sudden manifestation of the ever-present 
					rule of God; and, 
					if we had but eyes to see and ears to hear, we are still and 
					ever surrounded 
					by miracles. 
      
					The means employed in the promised deliverance were as 
					unexpected and 
					strange as the deliverance itself. There were four lepers 
					8 
					who, according to 
					the law (Leviticus 13:46; Numbers 5:2), were kept outside 
					the city, at the 
					entrance to the gate. In the straits to which Samaria was 
					reduced, they 
					could no longer expect even the scantiest provision which 
					charity within 
					the city might supply, or careful search without its walls 
					might discover. 
					In the alternative of certain starvation if they remained 
					where they were, or 
					possible death if they fell into the hands of the Syrians, 
					they naturally 
					chose the latter. As the twilight deepened into gloom, they 
					started to carry 
					out their purpose. As we understand it, they made a long 
					circuit to 
					approach the Syrian camp at its "uttermost part," 
					9 that is, 
					the part 
					furthest from Samaria. This would naturally be their best 
					policy, as they 
					would neither be observed from the city, nor by those in the 
					camp of the 
					enemy, who, as nearest to Samaria, might be expected to be 
					most on the 
					watch, while at the same time it might enable the lepers to 
					present 
					themselves as if they were not connected with the 
					beleaguered. And this 
					
					
					
					
					
					also allows sufficient time for the flight of the Syrians 
					having taken place 
					without being observed by the lepers, who probably had made 
					a wide 
					detour around the hills. For while they crept about the camp 
					there was a 
					strange movement within it. It is not necessary to suppose 
					that the 
					"noises of chariots," "of horses," and "of a great host," 
					which the Syrians 
					seemed to hear in the falling darkness, depended on a 
					supernaturally 
					caused illusion of their senses (comp. 2 Kings 6:19, 20); 
					nor yet that the 
					noise itself was supernaturally caused. Such noises are said 
					to be 
					occasionally heard in valleys shut in by mountains, and to 
					have been 
					popularly regarded as portending war. 
					10 The Syrians, at any 
					rate, thought 
					they heard the approach of relieving armies. Tribes from the 
					great Hittite 
					nation in the north, and bands, if not the armies of Egypt, 
					had been hired 
					against them by Joram, and were now simultaneously advancing 
					on them 
					from the north and the south. This would seem to explain how 
					Samaria had 
					held out amid such terrible straits. They had been looking 
					for this succor 
					all along. Terror peopled the night with the forms as well 
					as the sounds of 
					the dreaded host. We imagine that the panic began at the 
					extremity of the 
					camp. Presently they were in full flight, abandoning their 
					horses, their 
					asses, their tents, with all the provisions and treasures 
					which they 
					contained, and hastening to put Jordan between them and 
					their imaginary 
					pursuers. 
      
					When the four lepers reached the extremity of the Syrian 
					camp, the 
					fugitives were already far away. They listened, but heard 
					not a sound of 
					living men. Cautiously they looked into one tent, and 
					finding it deserted, 
					sat down to the untasted meal which lay spread, ate and 
					drank, and then 
					carried away, and hid what treasures they found. They 
					entered the next 
					tent, and found it similarly deserted. By the time they had 
					carried away 
					and hid its treasures also, it became quite evident to them 
					that, for some 
					unknown reason, the enemy had left the camp. It was, 
					however, not so 
					much the thought that this was a day of good tidings to 
					Samaria, in which 
					they must not hold their peace, as the fear that if they 
					tarried till the 
					morning without telling it, guilt would attach to them, that 
					induced them 
					hastily to communicate with the guard at the gate, who 
					instantly reported 
					the strange tidings. But so far from receiving the news as 
					an indication that 
					the prediction of Elisha was in the course of fulfillment, 
					the king does not 
					even seem to have remembered it. He would have treated the 
					report as a 
					
					
					
					
					
					device of the Syrians, to lure the people in the frenzy of 
					their hunger 
					outside the city gates. Foolish as the seeming wisdom of 
					Joram was, there 
					are only too many occasions in which neglect or 
					forgetfulness of God's 
					promise threatens to rob us of the liberty and blessing in 
					store for us. In 
					the present instance there were, happily, those among the 
					king's servants 
					who would put the matter to the test of experiment. From the 
					few 
					remaining troops, five 11 horsemen and two 
					12 chariots were 
					to be 
					dispatched to report on the real state of matters. 
      
					The rest is soon told. They found it as the lepers had 
					informed them. Not 
					only was the Syrian camp deserted, but all along the way to 
					Jordan the 
					track of the fugitives was marked by the garments and 
					vessels which they 
					had cast away in their haste to escape. And as the 
					messengers came back 
					with the tidings, the stream of people that had been pent up 
					in the city 
					gate poured forth. They "spoiled the tents of the Syrians." 
					Presently there 
					was abundance and more than that within Samaria. Once more 
					market was 
					held within the gate, where they sold for one shekel two 
					sacks of barley, or 
					else one sack of fine flour. And around those that sold and 
					bought surged 
					and swayed the populace. Presumably to keep order among 
					them, the king 
					had sent his own adjutant, the same "on whose hand" he had 
					"leaned" 
					when Elisha had made his prophetic announcement; the same 
					who had 
					sneered at its apparent impossibility. But it was in vain to 
					seek to stem 
					the torrent of the people. Whether accidentally or of 
					purpose they bore 
					down the king's adjutant, and trod him under foot in the 
					gate. "And he 
					died, as the man of God had said." 
      
					We mark at the close of this narrative the emphatic 
					repetition of the 
					circumstances connected with this event. For, assuredly, as 
					it was intended 
					to show the faithfulness of God in the fulfillment of His 
					promise for good, 
					so also that of the certain and marked punishment of 
					unbelief. And both 
					for the teaching of Israel, and, let us add, for that of all 
					men, and in all ages. 
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