The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 173: Confidence in God (2025)
Episode Date: June 22, 2025Fr. Mike talks about how we see both an abundance of faith, and a great lack of faith in our readings today. While the widow Elisha visits shows us a beautiful example of walking in faith, king Ahaz f...ails to repent as he falls deeper into sin. Today's readings are 2 Kings 4, 2 Chronicles 28, and Psalm 127. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/bibleinayear. Please note: The Bible contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Bible in a Year podcast,
where we encounter God's voice and live life through the lens of scripture.
The Bible in a Year podcast is brought to you by Ascension.
Using the Great Adventure Bible timeline, we'll read all the way from Genesis to Revelation,
discovering how the story of salvation unfolds and how we fit into that story today.
It is day 173.
We have three chapters.
We have 2 Kings, chapter 4.
We have 2 Chroniclesicles chapter 28 and Psalm
127 as I mentioned before a thousand times
We are when be 172 times the Bible translation that we are reading from is the revised standard version the second Catholic edition
I'm using the great adventure Bible from ascension
If you want to download your own Bible in a year reading plan
You can visit ascensionpress.com slash Bible in a year
And if you like to subscribe to this podcast, you can click on subscribe
to receive daily episodes.
As I said yesterday, I don't know if you caught this at the end of the commentary,
I guess we are, this is our last day in second Chronicles for roughly the next,
I don't know if I'm bad at math, maybe nine days.
We're taking little nine day hiatus because we're jumping into some prophets.
And we have Elijah the prophet and Elisha, the prophet who have not written anything that we know of,
but we're also going to the written prophets
because those written prophets have a word
and that word is a word of correction.
It is a word that is of warning
and it is a word that is calling the people of Israel
and the kingdom of Israel in the north
back to faithfulness, covenant faithfulness with God.
And we'll see what happens.
They may or may not listen.
Spoiler, they don't.
So we're gonna hear those prophets in the next nine days
and that's gonna be Hosea and Amos and Jonah and Micah.
Although Jonah didn't go to the prophets,
he didn't go to the north.
He went to a place called Nineveh,
which is a whole nother story.
I can't wait to get there, when we get there.
But today we are here on day 173
with 2 Kings chapter four, 2 Chronicles 28, and we are praying, Psalm
127.
Second Book of Kings, Chapter 4.
Elisha and the Widows Jar of Oil
Now the wife of one of the sons of the prophets cried to Elisha,
Your servant, my husband, is dead, and you know that your servant feared the Lord, but the creditor has come to take my two children to be his slaves.'
And Elisha said to her, What shall I do for you?
Tell me, what have you in the house?'
And she said, Your maid-servant has nothing in the house, except a jar of oil.
Then he said, Go outside, borrow vessels of all your neighbors, empty vessels, and not
too few.
Then go in, and shut the door upon yourself and your sons, and pour into all these vessels,
and when one is full, set it aside."
So she went from him and shut the door upon herself and her sons, and as she poured they
brought the vessels to her.
When the vessels were full, she said to her son, bring me another vessel, and he said
to her, there is not another.
Then the oil stopped flowing.
She came and told the man of God, and he said, Go, sell the oil and pay your debts, and you
and your sons can live on the rest.
Elisha and the Shunammite Couple
One day Elisha went on to Shunamm, where a wealthy woman lived who urged him to eat some
food.
So whenever he passed that way, he would turn in there to eat food.
And she said to her husband, Behold now, I perceive that this is a holy man of God who
is continually passing our way.
Let us make a small roof chamber with walls and put there for him a bed, a table, a chair,
and a lamp, so that whenever he comes to us, he can go in there.
One day he came there, and he turned into the chamber and rested there, and he said
to Gehazi his servant, Call this Shunammite.
When he had called her, she stood before him, and he said to him,
Say now to her, See, you have taken all this trouble for us. What is to be done for you?
Would you have a word spoken on your behalf to the king or to the commander of the army?
She answered, I dwell among my own people.
And he said, What then is to be done for her?
Gehazi answered, Well, she she has no son and her husband is old
He said call her and when he had called her she stood in the doorway and he said at this season
When the time comes round you shall embrace a son and she said no my lord
Oh man of God do not lie to your maid servant
But the woman conceived and she bore a son about that time the following spring, as Elisha
had said to her.
Elisha restores the Shunammite's son.
When the child had grown, he went out one day to his father among the reapers, and he
said to his father, Oh, my head, my head.
The father said to his servant, Carry him to his mother.
And when he had lifted him and brought him to his mother, the child sat on her lap till
noon and then he died.
And she went up and laid him on the bed of the man of God and shut the door upon him
and went out.
Then she called to her husband and said, Send me one of the servants and one of the donkeys,
that I may quickly go to the man of God and come back again.
And he said,
Why will you go to him today? It is neither new moon nor Sabbath.
She said, It will be well.
Then she saddled the donkey and said to her servant,
Urge the beast on, do not slacken the pace for me unless I tell you.
So she set out and came to the man of God at Mount Carmel.
When the man of God saw her coming, he said to Gehazi, his servant,
Look, yonder is the Shunammite. Run at once to meet her and say to her, Is it well with you? Is it
well with your husband? Is it well with the child? And she answered, It is well. And when she came to
the mountain, to the man of God, she caught hold of his feet, and Gehazi came to thrust her away.
But the man of God said, Let her alone, for she is in bitter distress, and the Lord has hidden it from me, and has not told me.
Then she said, Did I ask my Lord for a son? Did I not say, Do not deceive me? He said
to Gehazi, Gird up your loins, and take my staff in your hand, and go. If you meet anyone,
do not salute him, and if anyone salutes you,
do not reply, and lay my staff upon the face of the child."
Then the mother of the child said,
"'As the Lord lives, and as you yourself live, I will not leave you.'
So he arose and followed her. Gahazi went on ahead and laid the staff upon the face
of the child, but there was no sound or sign of life. Therefore he returned to meet him and told him,
The child has not awakened. When Elisha came into the house, he saw the child lying dead on his bed,
so he went in and shut the door upon the two of them and prayed to the Lord. Then he went up and
lay upon the child, putting his mouth upon his mouth, his eyes upon his eyes, and his hands upon
his hands. And as he stretched himself upon him, the
flesh of the child became warm. Then he got up again and walked once back and forth in
the house and went up and stretched himself upon him. The child sneezed seven times and
the child opened his eyes. Then he summoned Ghaazi and said, Call this Shunammite. So
he called her. And when she came to him, he said, Take up your son. She came, and fell at his feet,
bowing to the ground. Then she took up her son, and went out.
Elisha purifies the pot of potage. And Elisha came again to Gilgal, when there was a famine
in the land. And as the sons of the prophets were sitting before him, he said to his servant,
Put on the great pot, and boil potage for the sons of the prophets.
One of them went out into the field to gather herbs, and found a wild vine, and gathered
from it his lap full of wild gourds, and came and cut them up into the pot of potage, not
knowing what they were.
And they poured out for the men to eat.
But while they were eating of the potage, they cried out, O man of God, there is death
in the pot!
And they could not eat it.
He said, Then bring meal.
And he threw it into the pot and said, Pour out for the men that they may eat.
And there was no harm in the pot.
Elisha feeds a hundred men.
A man came from Baal-Shalisha, bringing the man of God bread of the first fruits, twenty
loaves of barley, and fresh ears of grain in his sack. And Elisha said, Give to the men that they may eat.
But his servant said, How am I to set this before a hundred men?
So he repeated, Give them to the men that they may eat.
For thus says the Lord, They shall eat and have some left.
So he said it before them, And they ate and had some left,
According to the word of the
Lord.
The Second Book of Chronicles, Chapter 28, Ahaz's Reign over Judah
Ahaz was twenty years old when he began to reign, and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem.
And he did not do what was right in the eyes of the Lord like his father David, but walked in the ways of the kings of Israel.
He even made molten images for the Baals, and he burned incense in the valley of the son of Hinnon, and burned his sons as an offering,
according to the abominable practices of the nations whom the Lord drove out before the sons of Israel.
And he sacrificed and burned incense on the high places and on the hills and under every green tree.
Syria and Israel defeat Judah.
Therefore the Lord his God gave him into the hand of the king of Syria who defeated him and took captive a great number of his people and brought them to Damascus.
He was also given into the hand of the king of Israel who defeated him with great slaughter.
king of Israel who defeated him with great slaughter. For Pekah the son of Amalia slew 120,000 in Judah in one day, all of them men of valor,
because they had forsaken the Lord the God of their fathers.
And Zikri, a mighty man of Ephraim, slew Maasei, the king's son, and Azrikam, the commander
of the palace, and El-Kanaah, the next in authority to the king.
The prophet Oded intercedes.
The men of Israel took captive two hundred thousand of their kinsfolk, women, sons and
daughters.
They also took much spoil from them and brought the spoil to Samaria.
But a prophet of the Lord was there, whose name was Oded.
And he went out to meet the army that came to Samaria and said to them, Behold, because
the Lord, the God of your fathers, was angry with Judah, he gave them into your hand.
But you have slain them in a rage which has reached up to heaven.
And now you intend to subjugate the people of Judah and Jerusalem, male and female, as
your slaves.
Have you not sins of your own against the Lord your God?
Now hear me, and send back the captives from your kinsfolk whom you have taken, for the
fierce wrath of the Lord is upon you.
Certain chiefs, also of the men of Ephraim, Azariah the son of Johanan, Barakiah the son
of Mishilomath, Jehesukayah the son of Shalom, and Amasa the son of Hadlai, stood up against
those who were coming from the war, and said to them, You shall not bring the captives
in here, for you propose to bring upon us guilt against the Lord in addition to our present sins and guilt.
For our guilt is already great, and there is fierce wrath against Israel."
So the armed men left the captives and the spoil before the princes and all the assembly.
And the men who had been mentioned by name rose and took the captives, and with the spoil they clothed all that were naked among them,
they clothed them, gave them sandals, provided them with food and drink, and anointed them.
And carrying all the feeble among them on donkeys, they brought them to their kinsfolk
at Jericho, the city of palm trees.
Then they returned to Samaria.
At that time King Ahaz sent to the king of Assyria for help, for the Edomites had again
invaded and defeated Judah and carried away captives.
And the Philistines had made raids on the cities in the Shephalah and the Negev of Judah,
and had taken Bet Shemesh, Ayahshu-lan, Gediroth, Soka with its villages, Timnah with its villages,
and Gimzo with its villages, and they settled there. For the Lord brought Judah low because
of Ahaz king of Israel, for he had dealt wantonly in Judah and had been faithless to the Lord.
So Tilgoth Pilnaser the king of Assyria came against him and afflicted him instead of strengthening him
for Ahaz took from the house of the Lord and the house of the king and of the princes and gave tribute to the
king of Assyria, but it did not help him.
Apostasy and death of Ahaz. In the time of his distress,
he became yet more faithless to the Lord, this same King Ahaz.
For he sacrificed to the gods of Damascus, which had defeated him and said,
Because the gods of the kings of Syria helped them, I will sacrifice to them that they may help me.
But they were the ruin of him and of all Israel.
that they may help me. But they were the ruin of him and of all Israel.
And Ahaz gathered together the vessels of the house of God, and cut in pieces the vessels
of the house of God.
And he shut up the doors of the house of the Lord, and he made himself altars in every
corner of Jerusalem.
In every city of Judah he made high places to burn incense to other gods, provoking to
anger the Lord, the God of his fathers.
Now, the rest of his acts and all his ways,
from first to last, behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Judah and Israel.
And Ahaz slept with his fathers, and they buried him in the city in Jerusalem. For they did not
bring him into the tombs of the kings of Israel. And Hezekiah his son reigned in his stead.
And Zacchaeus his son reigned in his stead. Psalm 127 God's Blessings in the Home
A Song of Ascents of Solomon
Unless the Lord builds the house, those who build it labor in vain.
Unless the Lord watches over the city, the watchman stays awake in vain.
It is in vain that you rise up early and go late to rest, eating the bread of anxious
toil, for he gives to his beloved sleep.
Behold, sons are a heritage from the Lord, the fruit of the womb a reward.
Like arrows in the hand of a warrior are the sons of one's youth.
Happy is the man who has his quiver full of them. He shall not be put to shame when he speaks with his enemies in the gate."
Father in heaven, we praise you and we give you glory.
We know that you are the one who accomplishes all that we do.
In fact, we remember your words, the words of Jesus Christ, the only beloved Son of God,
the words of Jesus that are without me
You can do nothing and so we ask that you please help us
Help us to remain as branches on the vine help us to remain not far from you
But rooted so closely to you that we get all of our life all of our power all of our strength all of our wisdom all
Of our everything from you that we can bear fruit and fruit that will last fruit that is for your glory
and for the salvation of this world that you love and died for so god please help us to never be
separated from you help us to never be alienated from you help us to always be faithful and when
we are faithless bring us back to you in jesus name we pray amen in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit amen so going back in reverse
again we have second Chronicles then we're gonna go to second Kings second
Chronicles we have Ahaz and Ahaz is not a good king if you want to say I don't
want if you want to rank all the bad Kings Ahaz is maybe I don't know it could
be up for debate I wonder if Ahaz is the worst king of Judah.
Now remember that Ahaz not only does it say
that Ahaz turns away from the Lord,
but he gets even further.
He makes molten images for the Baals,
he burned incense in the valley of the son of Hinnom,
and also he burned his sons as an offering, child sacrifice.
He offered up his own child in false worship. So not only did he turn away from the Lord, but in turning away from the Lord,
he gave to false gods the lives of his own children.
And so Ahaz is not, not good.
And yet Ahaz is needing to continue to lead the people and he doesn't.
He gets, he goes to war, Syria and Israel team up and they defeat Judah. In fact,
Syria and Israel inflict such a devastating blow on Judah that it says that the Pekah son of
Ramalias slew 120,000 men and Judah in one day. All of them, all of them brave men of valor and
even the king's son and the commander of the palace and next in authority to the king and yet god still
God still is fighting for his people
Why because the men of israel took captive
200,000 of their kinsfolk women sons and daughters and bring them back to samaria and a man of god a prophet
Oded he intercedes and says you know, listen, you're not going to enslave
You're not going to enslave your kinsfolk
And so some people they were certain chiefs of the men of Ephraim right?
Ephraim is another word for Israel as a Raya is one of them there are a Kaya is another one
Jehoshua another one a masa stood up and they said no you should not bring captives not from Judah
Not from Judah here to our place
And so they sent them back home and actually in fact they even cared for them and send them back home
Which is a good sign from the people of Israel, but they were still also, also still faithless.
Gosh, it's a lot of battles against Ahaz
because Ahaz has turned against the Lord.
He's wandered very, very far from him.
And even in that time of distress,
remember that the pattern is that you're in that time
of distress and you turn to the Lord,
you realize what have I done?
Oh my gosh, I repent and come back to him.
And it says in verse 22 of chapter 28 it says in the time of his distress
he became even more faithless to the Lord this same King Ahaz and yeah so he
has ends up dying we're gonna see he has again of course because as we know these
stories are repeated and and we're gonna get some more details on the life of a
has and who is trying to speak into his life,
trying to speak into his world,
and call him back to the faithfulness of the Lord.
And yet we know the end of the story,
he dies faithless to the Lord.
Now at the same time,
that's a really remarkable kind of a way to think of it.
We know the rest of the story.
For example, Elijah in 2 Kings chapter four,
we have miracles happening,
where Elijah and the widow, remember with Elijah,
there was a widow of Zarephath and she had a son,
one young son, and they were going to run out of flour
and run out of oil and die.
And here in Elijah multiplied that
and they didn't run out of oil,
they didn't run out of flour until the drought was over,
until the famine was over.
Here is Elisha with a widow, but she has two sons.
And what happens, she has this incredible replenishment
of oil because she was gonna have to sell her sons
to be slaves, sell her children to be slaves.
But Elisha had this basically remarkable,
I don't wanna say, well, miracle, yeah,
miracle-producing oil vessel that gather all of the containers that could possibly contain oil and just keep pouring them out, keep pouring them out.
And there's an element here where when we know the end of the story, we would think, oh my gosh, get as many containers as possible.
But here's this woman who doesn't know the end of the story yet.
And this is the ducky.
This is this walking in faith.
And when we know the end of the story, would say oh my gosh as many containers as possible
But here she is thinking I have one little bit of oil left. I don't need a bunch of containers
But when we walk with that trust and that confidence in God when we know how the story ends
We wish we we wish we would have had the faith
That we have at the end at the beginning. Does that make sense?
So often I think about this,
I've thought about this story so many times,
and think, well, if it's me, I would, yeah, okay,
Elijah says to do this, he's a man of God,
I get it, I'm desperate, so I'll make an effort.
But if I had known that you can sell this oil,
pay off your debts, and then live on the rest,
it would be gangbusters, right?
It would be like nonstop looking for containers
to pour oil into that I could sell later on.
And that's the thing is like so often,
when it comes to the Lord, we don't,
when it comes to life, obviously,
we don't know the end of the story
until the story's ended.
And yet if I had walked with the faith
that was asked of me,
I think that I would have walked a little more joyfully.
I think I would have walked a little more boldly,
maybe more confidently with more courage.
Now, one last story in 2 Kings 4.
We have the Shunammite couple.
And remember, Elijah did great things.
Elijah doing incredible things,
and Jesus does even more than all of these.
But two quick notes if we have enough time to do this.
I have Elisha and the Shinoite woman,
and this woman and her husband,
here's the man of God who passes by,
and they give him a meal,
and so she at one point says,
you know what, let's give him a place to stay.
Let's build a little room on the roof
that when he passes by, he can rest here.
And that's just super nice, super hospitable, really great.
But at one point, Eli, Elisha asks the question, what is she lacking in?
And she basically says, I don't have a son and my husband's old.
And so, um, Elisha says, well, this year, next time, next time,
this year you'll have a son.
And she says, you know, don't play with my heart.
Like don't toy with my emotions.
Don't get my hopes up because I've come to a place
where I realize this is all I've got,
it's all I ever will have, don't play with me.
And Elisha says, no, no, no, listen,
this is what's gonna happen.
So she has a son and her heart gets big, right?
Her heart bounds in joy because here is this child
that she had longed for and now the child's been given
and then what happens?
When the child had grown, he was out one day with his father among the Reapers
They were out working in the field and he's like I had a headache and so we'll bring him into his mom
She holds on to him by noon that day
He's dead and there's that sense that here she is saying okay listen
Why did you have to bring me this person this this being this son of mine?
For me to give my heart to him only to have him die and this is gosh
Isn't this the cry of so many of our hearts when that happens to us?
Say God why in the world would you give me these people in my life?
Only to have them walk away only to have them be taken away only to have this thing and why would you give me such?
great incredible blessings only to have it come to an end at some point or
even like this Shinoite woman,
because I know there are moms and dads
who are praying with us and listening to this Bible in the air
and this is your story.
Like God, why would you give us this child
only to have this child be taken away from us?
Why would you let us get pregnant
only to have us lose the pregnancy?
Why would you get our hopes up only to dash those hopes?
And remember, if only we had
Faith at the beginning of the story that we have at the end of the story
Only if we had the trust and confidence in God at the beginning of the story
That we will have one day when we know how the story ends
because we know that here's a God our God is God of living and the dead and
All those people that we've loved and all those wounds that we've experienced, they
are not for nothing.
None of them is for nothing.
In this case, the case of the Shunammite woman, her son is restored to her.
Remember Elisha has a double portion of Elisha's spirit.
Elisha was able to raise the dead.
Here's Elisha who's able to raise the dead after the child has been dead and cold
They've been dead for a long time
Jesus ultimately not only is gonna raise the little girl from the dead even though she was only dead for a short time
The the the son of the widow of Nain who's on his way to being buried but also
Lazarus who had been dead and in the tomb for he'd been dead for four days and in the tomb
So Jesus blows them all out of the water and what does tomb. So Jesus blows them all out of the water.
And what does he do when he blows them all out
of the water?
He reveals to us that death is not the end.
And yet death does break our hearts.
And so today, one of the things we're gonna ask
is that all of us who have hearts that can pray,
all of us that have hearts that maybe they have been broken,
maybe they have been wounded,
maybe they have been torn apart because of loss
We're gonna as this community
We're gonna be praying this day for all of those who whose hearts have been broken whose hearts have been torn apart because of loss
That haven't yet recovered that haven't yet been able to say okay Lord. I can see at the end of the story
I can see your goodness. I can see your providence. I can see how you're going to use this to ultimately, for good, I don't know how,
but that's where we come in,
that's where the rest of us come in.
Because right now you might be in a place
where you're too weak to be able to pray like that.
Maybe you're in a place right now
where you're too broken to be able to pray like that,
you're too grieved to be able to pray like that.
And so what we're gonna do is we're gonna pray for you.
We're gonna lift you up.
Because if we only knew the end of the story,
how we lived the middle of the story
would be dramatically changed.
If only we knew the end of the story,
how we live today might be dramatically changed.
We do know the end.
In the end, Christ will make all things right.
The one who could raise the dead
will raise what is dead in you and in me and restore all things.
He will make all things new. So brothers and sisters,
those of us who have been through loss, have been through pain,
and trust the Lord, we are praying now for our brothers and sisters who are in the midst of loss, in the midst of pain,
in the midst of trial. We're praying for them now.
Please pray for me. I am praying for you.
My name's Father Mike, and I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
