Worship Helps for Epiphany 4
Artwork: The prophet
Elisha and the widow of Sarepta
Artist: Bernardo
Strozzi
Date: 1640
Worship Theme: Was Jesus’ earthly ministry was a huge numerical
success? Hardly. After his ascension, 120 believers gathered in Jerusalem (Acts
1:15). He was not the type of Savior many expected. He was not flashy enough.
He did not offer instant gratification. He said his followers would suffer. As
a result, people in Jesus’ time and today often refuse to follow him.
Old Testament: 1 Kings 17:7-16
7After some time the stream dried up
because there had been no rain in the land. 8Then the word of the Lord came to him: 9“Get up!
Go to Zarephath, which belongs to Sidon, and live there. I have commanded a
woman there, a widow, to provide for you.”
10So he got up and went to Zarephath.
He came to the city gate, and there he saw a widow gathering sticks. He called
to her and said, “Please give me a little water in a jar, so that I can have
something to drink.”
11When she went to get it, he called
to her, “Please bring me a piece of bread.”
12She said, “As surely as the Lord your God lives, I have no food
except a handful of flour in a jar and a little olive oil in a pitcher. See, I
am gathering a couple of sticks so that I can go and prepare it for myself and
my son, so that we can eat it and then die.”
13Elijah said to her, “Do not be
afraid. Go and do just as you said. But first make a small loaf of bread for me
from the flour and bring it out to me. Then go and make another for you and
your son. 14For this is what the Lord,
the God of Israel, says. The jar of flour will not run out and the pitcher of
oil will not become empty until the day the Lord
sends rain to water the surface of the ground.”
15So she went and did exactly as
Elijah said. He and she, as well as her household, were able to eat for many
days. 16The jar of flour did not run out, and the pitcher of oil did
not become empty, just as the Lord
had said through Elijah.
1. Where was Elijah
to go?
2. What did the
widow tell Elijah when he asked her for a piece of bread?
3. What happened
when Elijah told the widow not to be afraid, but to make bread first for him,
then for herself and her son?
Epistle: Romans
10:18–11:6
18But I ask, did they not hear? Of
course, they certainly did. The sound of their voice went out to all the earth,
and their words to the farthest parts of the world. 19Yet I ask, did
Israel not understand? First, Moses says: I will make you jealous of those who
are not a nation; I will make you angry with a nation that does not understand.
20And Isaiah also boldly says: I was found by those who were not
looking for me; I became well known to those who were not asking for me. 21But
about Israel he says: All day long I stretched out my hands to a people who
disobey and oppose me.
11:1So I say, did God reject his people?
Absolutely not! For I myself am an Israelite, a descendant of Abraham from the
tribe of Benjamin. 2God did not reject his people whom he
foreknew—or don’t you know what Scripture says about Elijah, how he was
pleading with God against Israel: 3“Lord, they have killed your
prophets and torn down your altars. I am the only one left, and they are trying
to take my life.” 4But what did God’s answer tell him? “I have
reserved for myself seven thousand men who have not bowed the knee to Baal.”
5So in the same way at the present time
there is a remnant chosen by grace. 6Now if it is by grace, then it
is not the result of works—otherwise grace would no longer be grace.
4. Did first-century
Jews commonly disbelieve the gospel of Christ because God did not want to save
them?
5. Did God reject
his people completely? (See 11:1.)
6. As in Elijah’s
day, in what manner did God choose to save anyone? (See 11:5‒6.)
Gospel: Luke 4:20–32
20He rolled up the scroll, gave it
back to the attendant, and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were
fastened on him. 21He began to tell them, “Today, this Scripture is
fulfilled in your hearing.”
22They all spoke well of him and were
impressed by the words of grace that came from his mouth. And they kept saying,
“Isn’t this Joseph’s son?”
23He told them, “Certainly you will
quote this proverb to me, ‘Physician, heal yourself!’ Do here in your hometown
everything we heard you did in Capernaum.” 24And he said, “Amen I
tell you: No prophet is accepted in his hometown. 25But truly I tell
you: There were many widows in Israel in the days of Elijah, when the sky was
shut for three years and six months, while a great famine came over all the
land. 26Elijah was not sent to any of them, but to a widow of
Zarephath, in Sidon. 27And there were many lepers in Israel in the
time of Elisha the prophet, yet not one of them was healed except Naaman the
Syrian.”
28All those who were in the synagogue
were filled with rage when they heard these things. 29They got up
and drove him out of the town. They led him to the brow of the hill on which
their town was built, in order to throw him off the cliff. 30But he
passed through the middle of them and went on his way.
31He went down to Capernaum, a town of Galilee,
and was teaching them on the Sabbath. 32They were amazed by his
teaching, because his message had authority.
7. When Jesus
claimed that he was the fulfillment of the Old Testament prophecies, what
question did the people raise?
8. What did Jesus
say that aroused the people’s anger?
Answers:
1. God told Elijah
to go at once to Zarephath of Sidon (well north of Israel). Evidently his prior
pronouncement of no rain made it necessary for him to leave Israel. Authorities
would likely have wanted to retaliate against Elijah. Starving people would
likely have hounded him for relief.
2. The widow told
Elijah she had only enough flour and bread to make a meal for herself and her
son. Then they would die.
3. The widow kept
having more and more oil and flour. We stagger at the miracle, but Alfred
Edersheim wisely points out: “It is difficult to know which most to wonder at:
Elijah’s calmness, consistency and readiness of faith, or the widow’s almost
incredible simplicity of trustfulness.”
4. No, God very
much wanted to save Jewish people, both in Isaiah’s day (about 700 B.C.) and
Paul’s day. All day long God held out his hands to them. (Picture it. Imagine
the physical weariness / agony.) But they stubbornly refused.
5. No, God did not
reject his people. Paul was as Jewish as could be. God had chosen to save Paul.
6. God chose ahead
of time to save sinners by grace alone. No human merit could figure in, or
grace is no longer grace.
7. The people of
Nazareth asked themselves, “Isn’t this Joseph’s son?” They had seen Jesus grow
up among them. They had a hard time seeing him as the promised Messiah.
8. Jesus said that
“no prophet is accepted in his home town.” He alluded to the prophets Elijah
and Elisha, who helped Gentile foreigners because God’s Old Testament people
were, for the most part, unwilling to listen to the prophets’ message. Jesus
would have much the same experience. “He came to that which was his own, but
his own did not receive him” (Jonn 1:10 ).
Jesus was usually rejected as Savior.
Putting your faith into action
Throughout my life
there will be times when I will have to depend on the proverb: “If it sounds
too good to be true, it probably is.” However, I will never have to follow that
proverb when it comes to my Lord and Savior. With him I can always be
confident. I can always be certain his good news is true.
The New Testament keeps and urges this office ‹of the Law›, as St.
Paul says, “The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness
and unrighteousness of men”. Also, “the
whole world may be accountable to God….No human being will be justified in His
sight.” And, Christ says, the Holy
Spirit will convict the world of sin.
This is God’s thunderbolt.
By the Law He strikes down both obvious sinners and false saints. He declares no one to be in the right, but
drives them all together to terror and despair.
Jeremiah says, “Is not My word like… a hammer that breaks the rock in
pieces?” This is not active contrition
or manufactured repentance. It is
passive contrition, true sorrow of heart, suffering, and the sensation of
death.
This is what true repentance means.
Here a person needs to hear something like this, “You are all of no
account, whether you are obvious sinners or saints ‹in your own opinions›. You have to become different from what you
are now. You have to act differently
than you are now acting, whether you are as great, wise, powerful, and holy as
you can be. Here no one is godly.”
To the Law, the New Testament immediately adds the consoling
promise of grace through the Gospel.
Christ declares, “Repent and believe in the gospel”. Become different, act differently, and
believe My promise. – Smalcald Articles, Part III, Article III, Repentance (paragraphs
1-4)
Refrain:
There
is a balm in Gilead to make the wounded whole;
There
is a balm in Gilead to heal the sin-sick soul.
1 Sometimes I feel discouraged And think my
work’s in vain,
But
then the Holy Spirit Revives my soul again.
Refrain
2 If you cannot preach like Peter, If you
cannot pray like Paul,
You
can tell the love of Jesus And say he died for all.
Refrain
Text:
African-American spiritual, abr.
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