The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Reliance - Miracle, Cave, Revelation
Episode Date: June 22, 2025God bless the Menking Family!!...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ahab told Jezebel all that Elijah had done, also how he had executed all the prophets
with the sword.
Then Jezebel sent a messenger to Elijah saying, So let the gods do to me, and more also, if
I do not make your life as the life of one of them by tomorrow about this time.
And when he saw that, he arose and ran for his life, and went to Beersheba, which belongs
to Judah, and left his servant there. But
he himself went a day's journey into the wilderness and came and sat down under a broom tree and he
prayed that he might die and said, It is enough. Now, Lord, take my life, for I am no better than
my father's. Then as he lay and slept under a broom-tree, suddenly an angel touched him, and said to him,
Arise and eat. Then he looked, and there by his head was a cake baked on coals and a jar of water.
So he ate and drank and lay down again. Then the angel of the Lord came back the second time,
and touched him, and said, Arise and eat, because the journey is too great for you.
So he arose, and ate and and drank and went in the strength
of that food 40 days and 40 nights as far as Horeb,
the mountain of God.
And there he went into a cave and spent the night
in that place.
And behold, the word of the Lord came to him.
And he said to him, what are you doing here, Elijah?
So he said, I have been very zealous
for the Lord God of hosts.
For the children of Israel have forsaken your covenant, torn down your altars, and killed your prophets with the sword.
I alone am left, and they seek to take my life.
Lord, we thank you for your word.
We thank you for your mercy, for your protection, and for sustaining God, us through your scripture
and by your Holy Spirit, that you would
equip us to stand firm in the day in which you have called us to live. God, you
have spoken over our lives that we are yours, that we have become members of
your family, born again and saved by the precious blood of Jesus.
Thank you, Jesus, for the cross.
Thank you for your mercy and your grace and your love.
We declare that you are holy and worthy and righteous and true
and faithful above all things, in all things, through all things
and for all things.
God, we love you and we
bless your holy name. Holy Spirit, fill us, lead us, and yield our wills to yours.
God, as we seek to accomplish what you would have us to do in this generation,
open our eyes, Lord, and show us, Holy Spirit, what we need to see.
God, this is a pivotal time, a critical time, where your people must understand who they
are, who they are in you, and what they are to do in every situation, in every circumstance.
And Lord, I don't have the word for them specifically,
but you do.
God, you know exactly what they need to hear.
You know exactly who needs to hear
what we are speaking right now.
So God, I pray that you would arrange and architect things
so that everyone who needs to hear this message is able to hear it.
God, we declare that you are sovereign over all things
and at all times and that there is nothing impossible
for you.
Lord, I pray that you would protect your people,
that you would lift up your people,
that you would continue to establish your people
in your victorious ways,
that love would be demonstrated,
that life would be shown forth,
and that your supernatural power
would be evident in everything that we do.
God, we bless you and pray that you would help us
to understand what you are speaking to us
in this generation from this story to understand what you are speaking to us in this generation
from this story.
God, you are good.
Help us to meditate on your word and on your law
and on who you are and your mighty salvation
together and with you.
We love you, Lord.
We bless you.
In Jesus' name, amen.
The full context of this narrative that I read from 1 Kings
chapter 19 goes back to Elijah overcoming the prophets of Baal. There is
the whole imbroglio with all of these different kings in Israel and Judah and the back
and forth and the war and the cycle of betrayal and rebellion and repentance
and dynastical changes and words of prophecy being spoken that come to pass
and there's an endless field of study that could be deployed towards
these topics.
But there's a pattern here about this intermezzo, this moment where Elijah escapes, has doubts,
is fed and nourished and then goes in strength and then receives a mighty
revelation from God about what is to come in the future and who is going to
come after him and to follow his anointing. Of course this is the prophet
Elisha who asks for a double anointing and receives it in terms of the
supernatural miracles that he is
said to have performed in scripture. But in the meantime, Elijah has this wild
swing where he goes into a place where he's praying that the Lord would take
his life and then he has to be spiritually nourished
and physically nourished so that he would go
to where he is going to encounter God next.
Now, I wanna zoom in here on what the angel of the Lord
who was sent to minister to Elijah says.
Now, what did Elijah say?
And this is sort of the classic piece
of sermon approach here when it comes to prayer.
Elijah says, it is enough.
Now, Lord, take my life, for I'm no better than my father.
So Elijah is praying here that he might die.
Scripture is unambiguous about that in the middle of verse four. And instead of answering that prayer, the
Lord sends his angel to bring food. There is a cake baked on coals and a jar of
water. So we have some form of bread, some form of water. And so God did not answer the prayer directly or literally.
And as many of us would admit,
it is probably a good thing
that God does not answer every single prayer
that we have in a literal way.
It's the subject of many jokes when people have wishes
and they wish for things, there's a misinterpretation,
it's not what they meant, et cetera, et cetera.
This isn't a input-output kind of machine.
We're dealing with a genuine living being,
the God of the universe, who understands what we want
and understands what we need even before we say it
or acknowledge the needs ourselves.
And lo and behold, he is well able to put us
in the positions where our needs can be met.
But in a season, before this comes through,
Elijah isn't having his needs met.
He has this depth of desire, and it's hard to read between the lines all the way
in terms of what brings about this fear on the back of the mighty miracle that he had performed.
I can only imagine that we certainly wouldn't ourselves want to be arrogant and say, well,
if I were in that position, I wouldn't have run that position I wouldn't have run away I wouldn't have been concerned
I would have looked around and said God you just won this victory that was
nothing to you it didn't deplete any of your power so now I'm gonna win a
victory against the next set of people who are coming against not me but you
like that to defame your name and to put down the glory of your great name.
I would like to say that I would have done something like that in that situation.
However, it would be extraordinarily lacking in humility to say, oh yes, for sure I could
have gone back there and behaved in a different way.
And notice that just because something good
has happened in the past,
or just because something has just happened that's good,
it doesn't mean that that will have the kind of staying power
that is going to keep us through all calamities
or all challenges or all threats.
Just because something went right yesterday,
that doesn't necessarily allow us to stand firm today.
And here I'm talking in more general terms
about the day-to-day affairs of life.
I mean, hopefully, prayerfully, God willing,
most of us don't go around getting into
violent confrontations with prophets
and then receiving threats from the rulers of the nation
on our own life.
It's never a dull moment here for Elijah.
But what we should understand is that that kind of pattern,
that kind of threat, it is so real and so human.
If the Bible were interested in portraying its prophets
as superhuman or unnatural or over the top powerful
in any kind of exaggerated or hyperbolic way,
then what is this doing in there
if this is just a human creation meant to propagandize
in favor of the prophets?
It's a very unusual piece of the text,
but it shows how when you win a victory,
when a victory is won for you, if we're being more precise,
that doesn't mean that the strength of that victory
is automatically going to last forever.
You can imagine after that kind of defeat,
the enemy is gonna be looking for any possible way
to throw Elijah off because such a mighty victory
has been won and in a very direct kind of fashion.
So we should all be advised
in the broadest possible terms
that if we have Christianity in our families,
and our parents and grandparents, other things like that,
that does not automatically transfer to us.
Our parents and our families, when we were children, that does not automatically transfer to us.
Our parents and our families when we were children had a responsibility from the Lord,
provided they were believers,
to raise us up in the way that we should go.
And that can be more or less successful
depending on who you are and where you come from
and what that relationship is like.
But we have the same
kind of responsibility.
And even when there's a win, I think we see this more clearly with kids in one way, shape
or form.
There's a tendency that they have for bringing out deep truths in their own actions.
And consider the following scenario.
One of your children has just had an amazing day.
They got an award at school, they came home super smiley,
they ate their food well, they're feeling good,
they're healthy, big win.
Big wins all around.
They're smiling from ear to ear.
They tell you, I loved today. I had such a wonderful day.
I wish every day could be like this day. And then the next day it's not. And it almost seems like
that good day vanished completely because of the demands of the day itself. And the same thing is happening here with Elijah. He wins a
mighty battle, but to a certain extent it's logical. In grand warfare, in
physical battle, in conflicts between militaries, for instance, just because you
win a battle doesn't mean that you can rest or take a break or let your
guard down. Thinking here most specifically about World War I when
people are fighting through the trenches, taking the next trench doesn't mean okay
this is going to be a permanent victory. Sometimes you get pushed out extremely
soon after that. But in our lives, we don't typically face all these dramatic situations,
and yet that pattern still continues.
If your child has a bad day the next day,
and they're disobedient, they're talking back,
they don't feel perfectly well,
that original day might just sort of vanish into thin air,
and so it's up to us to follow the
instruction that we have in Scripture from God to recall and to remember the
works of the Lord, to put ourselves back in that time of God's delivery of us and
God's healing of us and God's just making a way where there wasn't a way.
And we have to actively do this because we can see how easily the impact of those things
can slip away. And if we have, if we have as part of our spiritual disciplines, a prayer journal,
a general journal, a praise reports, other things like that, anything
that we've kept down, it's wise to revisit that every so often, every couple of months or so.
Because if you look back at the things that God has done, you'll see so many different things,
especially if you practice gratitude and writing down these things on a regular basis
as they come up.
It's very important to do this for the purposes of,
amongst other things, having an anchor in these kind of Elijah
times when he flees to the cave.
Wouldn't it be nice?
Wouldn't it be wonderful if the Lord brought to his
mind and encouraged him what had just happened, what had happened in prior
weeks and months and years? And so when God is active on our behalf and we see
it and we acknowledge it and we appreciate it and we worship Him for it
and we give Him praise and honor and we continue to seek his guidance.
Let us, brothers and sisters, not let that
immediately lead into a letting down of our guard
so that any minor nuance or annoyance or frustration
can get in our way and cause the entire positive impact
of what God has done in a particular situation
to evaporate into thin air and to be gone.
We need to be actively recalling these things.
It's much easier to begin to recall points of failure
and challenges and difficulties
and everything else of that nature.
And prayerfully, for brothers and sisters in Christ, I would hope and pray that you
are on your way to the point, or perhaps have arrived, that when those things get called
to mind, that now you're on the other side of them by the grace of God.
And you can point back and say, well, here's what happened but here's how God worked
through it. My faith was refined, I was honed, I was made more passionate, more
fruitful, more compassionate, more loving. I was equipped and given skill sets. I've
seen God now do things that I never thought I could see before.
And so when we reflect on those negatives,
I pray that they would be turned into a testimony
of glory and God's deliverance.
And that is ultimately what happens
when Elijah is visited by the angel of the lord and receives nourishment and then
supernaturally goes to Mount Horeb and then he receives this mighty revelation.
He gets that kind of direction and all of a sudden this cloud, this fog, this sort of
spirit over him lifts and is broken and he is back where he should have been in the first place.
So why the intermezzo? Why is it important for us to know this? Another second point,
rather than the macro, we're gonna zoom in. Now,
one thing to keep in mind is that as we read verses five through eight again,
see if you pick up what the common mind is that as we read verses five through eight again,
see if you pick up what the common criticism of Elijah
is here and why that might not be accurate.
I'll give you a hint. It has to do with the fact that he gets fed twice.
So let's read the passage again.
Then as he lay, he hears Elijah, and slept
under a broom tree. Suddenly an angel touched him and said to him, Arise and eat. Then he
looked and there by his head was a cake baked on coals and a jar of water. So he ate and
drank and lay down again. And the angel of the Lord came back the second time and touched
him and said, Arise and eat because the journey is too great for you. So he arose and ate and drank and he went in the strength of that food 40 days and 40
nights as far as Horeb the mountain of God.
Now it might appear to us that we could say something like, well, why on earth would Elijah
need to eat and drink multiple times? Was he just that hungry that he needed another portion?
He went he went back for seconds here so to speak and from my perspective we we know what
happens in the end but it's a it's a bit of a curious thing like is Elijah being lazy? Is he still fearful? Is he taking his
time to work his courage back up after abandoning the mission field that he had
been put in and succumbing to fear? It could very well be that he continued to
be out of sorts and not ready for this, but I think the charge of laziness
against Elijah is also unwarranted. Just like I think the charge of us being
stupefied that he would end up in this cave in the first place is
unwarranted because we might very well end up in the same place ourselves. We should be appropriately humble.
You know, think about the miracles that Elijah performed.
We shouldn't just immediately jump to the conclusion that he's
being unfaithful or all over the place or lazy in this
particular case.
So I don't think that's what's going on but ask yourself,
was Elijah obedient to the call of the angel of the Lord?
Well what does the angel say to him in verse five?
This is the first angel, arise and eat.
Did he do that?
He did.
The first angel didn't say, arise and eat
and go find this person and recruit them.
Go to Horeb where you're going to receive
a mighty word
from God. That's not what he got at first. He got the command to arise and eat. Now
I suppose we could then get into a more technical linguistic discussion of to
what extent hermeneutically as we interpret the Bible as we look at it how much can we
say that there may be other commands or other instructions given by the angel
that simply aren't recorded because they're individualized not part of the
narrative. Again this goes to how the books of the Bible are constructed how
they are preserved the ultimate narrative source of these things,
et cetera, et cetera.
So I am perfectly willing,
more subjective and functional
and technologically savvy and other approaches aside
from a hermeneutic perspective,
I'm perfectly content to simply say
that the command that Elijah was given started
and stopped at arise and eat so he was being obedient I think it's legitimate
for us to say he's not being lazy the command that he was given was arise and
eat and he arose and ate and drank and then he lay down again so it can appear
like oh he's having he's having some snacks and then he lay down again. So it can appear like, oh, he's having some snacks
and then he's gonna take another nap.
But I don't think that's what's going on.
I would like to imagine if the angel of the Lord
touched him and said,
arise and eat and be strengthened and go,
then that's what would have happened.
But there wasn't that follow-up command.
And so the angel of the Lord came back the second time,
this is the second visit,
touched him again and amended the instruction,
amended the command.
The second time, this in verse seven,
the angel of the Lord says,
"'Arise and eat because the journey is too great for you.'"
Now, here is where we might say,
well, how does Elijah know
which way to go? And I think, brothers and sisters, we should be content to say there is an
angel of the Lord who's appeared to him. There is supernatural efficacy all over this man's life and all over this situation. And so even if we say the angel may be
needing to specify what the journey is,
that knowledge could also be imparted to Elijah directly,
just similarly as the revelation that is going to come
is. It comes from God. It's given to Elijah.
So he may have this information in a means
and through which we don't have access to. So again, leaving aside all of the different
components of the parsing and this, that, and the other thing and the precision, note
that I think it's reasonable as a read to say that Elijah wasn't being lazy
He was just following the instruction to arise and eat and then there's a follow-up
Instruction more arising more eating
Because the journey is too great for you. So why does he need that?
Why does he need to arise and eat? Well, because he's receiving physical sustenance, but also
Spiritual sustenance. He's learning to rely on the Lord.
He's learning that even in this dark place
where he is praying for his life to be ended,
that the Lord will answer him
and that the Lord will guide him concretely,
that the Lord will be faithful to fulfill his promises
because we don't have to make the journey in our own strength.
If you look at what is ahead, if you look at where
you've been, maybe you feel like Elijah.
In the past there have been some wonderful things.
Maybe you've even won some major victories in your life
and for the sake of the Lord and for the sake of his kingdom
and you knew, proved positive, that the Holy Spirit
was pleased with these things, that this is pleasing to God.
And then all of a sudden a word comes about the Middle East, about the economy, about
your job, about your family's health, about your health, about any number of different
things and we run to the cave.
And when God finds us and sees us in that condition, God himself ministers to us.
Notice that the Lord didn't send a different prophet
to come get him.
The Lord went right there and dispatched an angel
to bring about communication and to bring about a message,
arise and eat.
Now, maybe if Elijah had the opportunity and he wasn't
so tired apparently he could have asked well what is this for like what's going
on he could have gathered some additional information that might have
been helpful but we don't have that in our text so we don't want to super
impose it we don't want to run an isogenic process where we're
reading things into the text, but we should be reading what actually is in
the test because the angel of the Lord comes back and says arise and eat. So same
command as at first. So we're gonna repeat that and it's because the journey
is too great for you. Now again this doesn't seem like a perfectly clear, direct A to Z type of plan, but that
is the way that life works.
It's a little bit more messy than we might imagine.
Things devolve into greater and greater entropy and disorder. And we have to work really hard to inoculate ourselves
against that downward inertia.
And we need to understand
that the journey is too great for us.
Because if not, we're gonna embark on it
with insufficient tools, insufficient expertise,
insufficient ability to make an impact.
And that should be our focus. How can I make an impact? Elijah did turn inward
and recognize that he was in a fearful state, but he also has his ministry to
think about. He has the victory that he just won to recollect and even in light of that he is being
obedient but he's stuck in the cave and now he has the call. There's a
journey for him just as there's a journey for us and I dare say brothers
and sisters we would be misrepresenting ourselves and the real world if we said
that no the journey isn't too great for us,
then we haven't fully accomplished a perspective
where we understand more of what God's journey
for us actually is.
Because if we had a bigger picture there,
and we understood what the journey actually consisted of,
then it would be very easy for us to say that the journey actually consisted of, then it would be
very easy for us to say that the journey is too great for us because we would see
the full measure of the dependence on God that we are going to need in order
to walk these things out. But the good news is at the end of this, whether you
think that Elijah was just being obedient or was being stubborn and lazy
or maybe just overwhelmed by the fact that there's an angel of the Lord there. Whether you look at him sort of sideways because
he went from this mighty victory into this place of weakness and asking to be removed,
but in any event when he received that nourishment, when he obeyed that word to arise and eat, and he
received the motivation and the understanding as to why he needed to do these things, verse
eight says he arose and ate and drank and he went in the strength of that food 40 days
and 40 nights as far as whore of the mount of God.
And to me, that's amazing and incredible that the Lord is so merciful and so righteous and so true
and had called Elijah for this time and needed him for this purpose that the Lord simply
equipped him, moved on, allowed him to be in this cave, met him where he was, pulled
him out, reminded him of the impossibility of the journey
in his own strength, and gave him exactly what he needed
to supernaturally conduct this journey.
And Elijah says, I alone am left.
He has been very zealous.
So his heart is not healed just because he received
physical nourishment.
His fear is not totally gone, even though he just went in the strength of that food 40 days and 40 nights.
He goes as far to that as to answer the question, what are you doing here, Elijah? Hearing directly from God, he launches into a complaint.
He launches into a complaint. He says, I have done all of these great things, but now I am afraid.
I alone am left and they seek to take my life.
Now again, are we really going to go in for saying Elijah here has the wrong attitude
because he's taking credit for these things as opposed to giving glory to God. I mean I'm not going to parse that. It's certainly not my place to
exegete and pass judgment one way or the other on Elijah, famous, wonderful, man of
faith, mighty prophet of God. I think this is just the way that we talk. I mean this is just the way that we
talk to God in these situations. When we are fearful, when we are complaining, when
we're upset in many ways, we are not necessarily the most careful with our
words and you know when pressed, if properly structured in terms of a
conversation, we might make some concessions here
for the sake of actual technical literal accuracy. And, you know, Elijah may feel like he alone is
left, but he may have a probabilistic sense that that's not true. So either way, we have this tendency ourselves and so Elijah goes from miracle to
cave to revelation all the while complaining and seeking
to be separated basically doing everything that he can to give
up but God won't let him and God nourishes him and reminds him that
the journey that he is on is more involved, more powerful, more great, more
difficult than he is able to sustain. But do you know what? That is a good thing
because that means that the journey is too important for us to take into our own hands.
We must, whether it's raising our families,
making key decisions for our households,
trying to be breadwinners, making precautionary provisions
for future contingencies, anything that we do,
anything that we do, we have to do it in confidence
and in obedience to the call of God.
And so many get swept up and caught up in headlines
and different emotions that we will even forget
the many mighty victories that happened recently
even on our behalf.
You know, what would it say about us if we encountered a situation where praise God someone gets
healed of their cancer, of cancer, gets put into remission by the power of the Holy Spirit
stupefying the doctors.
The very next day that doesn't prevent fear from re-entering.
It doesn't prevent bitterness from re-entering. It doesn't prevent bitterness
from continuing this swell. In fact, you can make an argument that once one of
those blockages is removed spiritually, unless we are very diligent about our
prayer and about our devotion and about our focus on spiritual warfare, that
these other things may use it as an opportunity to try and to try and poke through to try and undermine us. I wonder what was
whispering in Elijah's ear when he prayed that he wants to die
because that prayer was not fully inspired by the Lord. It
wasn't the right apprehension of the situation. Elijah was a wonderful man of God. And again, I'm not making
any of these comments about this passage to cast aspersions
on him. What I'm trying to do is I'm trying to call out that
this mighty man of God who we rightfully look up to as an
incredible prophet went through a period where in between a miracle and a revelation,
in between a victory and just a powerful pronouncement over his life from God directly, in between
these two points he went into a cave and wanted everything to be done with.
He was over it to put it mildly.
And so we have to understand that this is something
that can happen in ourselves.
We have to learn how to celebrate the victories better.
We have to remember the good things.
We have to think on things that are pure and holy
and righteous.
We have to remind ourselves to avoid falling into this fear
and intimidation and anxiety and everything else like that.
And we have to understand that it's the Lord
who's going to nourish us.
So let's be obedient.
Let's receive that nourishment from the Lord.
If you figure that you are right now in a cave season,
maybe you're in the initial victory season. from the Lord. If you figure that you are right now in a cave season, maybe
you're in the initial victory season. Watch out for the tendency that would
shove you into going into a cave. Maybe you're in the cave right now. Arise and
eat. The journey is too great for you. Strengthen yourself. Allow the Lord to
lift you up and encourage you. And maybe you're at that place of the next revelation. Well, cherish it with all your heart. Cherish that guidance, that
leading, and the incredible boost it can give you to know that the Holy Spirit is
leading you, is leading your family. There is nothing more secure than
being in His will, even if that takes you to places that are
extremely challenging in terms of your faith. So Lord, we thank you for this time.
We thank you for this example of your mighty servant Elijah. He is so wonderful and such an example to us about the triumph of faith, the battles that go
on, how to understand them, how to see victories in this time.
And I pray, Lord, that you would bless our hands.
Bless the work of our hands, God. God, help us as we go forth and seek your will and earnestly desire to follow
you and to be obedient. Help our hearts to do that, Lord. Only you, only you have
the power, the grace, the authority, and the love to establish us the way
that we are intended to be established. God, you are good and your mercy endures forever.
And I pray that you would particularly bless
each and every person listening,
that you would guide them, that you would lead them,
that you would nourish them,
that you would show them what the call is on their lives
at this time, that you would lead them step by step,
moment by moment, Holy Spirit,
that nothing would slip them step by step, moment by moment, Holy Spirit, that nothing
would slip through the cracks, that nothing would ever prosper against your people.
God raise us up so that we can go from miracle to revelation.
Help us to stay out of those caves.
And if we find ourselves in one and maybe someone is right now Lord
Help us call us to arise and to eat and to go forth
Send us back into a place where we can be effective for you again Or for the first time use our lives to bear fruit in this generation
Jesus we honor you we praise you, and we declare
that you are worthy of it all, all power, all glory, all honor, forever and ever. In
Jesus name, amen.