
Home > Today's Christian > Build Your Faith > Wisdom
 Today's Christian, May/June 2002
The Jesus We Never Got
If movie makers had been alive in Elijah's day, he would have been cast in the role of Jesus.
by Philip Yancey
I once attended a Jewish Passover meal. Noting an empty chair, I asked, "Are we expecting another guest?"
"No, by tradition we set a place for Elijah," came the reply. For the Jews, Elijah represents a longing for a type of messiah they never got. For many Christians, too, Elijah represents what we think we want in a messiah. Who among us does not harbor a secret desire for God to act now as in Elijah's day?
Elijah lived in the wilderness, wore the skins of animals, and emerged from hiding to make lightning raids on a pagan empire. When John the Baptist appeared centuries later, for many Jews (including Jesus), John brought Elijah vividly to mind.
Observers wondered for a time if Jesus himself might be Elijah reincarnate, but he soon disabused them of that notion. Jesus simply did not fit the Elijah mold.
The Old Testament's Terminator
Elijah solved problems. Ravens fed Elijah in the desert, and he became a popular houseguest by providing a widow an endless supply of oil and flour. When the widow's son died, Elijah promptly resurrected him. Some of these miracles prefigured Jesus' own, but with an important difference: Jesus' miracles benefited others but not himself. He fed 5,000, yet went hungry in the wilderness. The source of Living Water died with the words "I thirst" on his lips.
Nobody messed with Elijah. Children love hearing stories about Elijah because, frankly, they have a Terminator aspect to them. This scraggly desert prophet strolled into Samaria and took on a thousand false prophets in their fancy white robes. He blasted the king for seizing a commoner's vineyard. When soldiers came to arrest him, fire dropped from heaven to incinerate them.
The contrast with Jesus could hardly be greater. "For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him," Jesus said. His disciples earned Jesus' rebuke by calling for fire on unrepentant cities. When the powers strung him up like a common criminal, he had only these words for his tormentors: "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing."
Elijah gave absolute proof. Is there a biblical scene more theatrically staged than Elijah's confrontation on Mount Carmel with the prophets of Baal? It was quite a day: after disposing of the 850 pagan priests, Elijah ended a three-year drought and bested a chariot in a 17-mile race. In great contrast, Jesus declined every opportunity to prove himself ("A wicked and adulterous generation looks for a miraculous sign," he said), resisted Satan's temptations toward a more dazzling style, did not call on rescuing angels, and died listening to the skeptics' taunts.
Elijah did not die. "Swing low, sweet chariot, comin' for to carry me home," the slaves used to sing, harking back to Elijah's dramatic departure. Those chariots of fire, fodder for spirituals and movie titles, furnished Elijah an escape route around death.
A prophet who did not die? Little wonder Jews anticipate his return. As for Jesus, yes, he surely died, an ignomonious death reserved mostly for slaves and insurrections. In a great irony, when he called out from the cross, "Eli, eli
," onlookers presumed he was calling for Elijah's help.
Our kind of prophet
I easily understand why the Jews value Elijah. He stands for what I want in a prophet, what I want in a God: someone to solve my problems, protect me, give me absolute proof, and offer an escape route around life's messiest problems.
Yet from Elijah I learn why God does not always act as we may want.
In the first place, Elijah's style did not achieve the desired results. Despite all the fireworks, his ministry accomplished little. Even the Mount Carmel scene made barely a dent in the nation's faith. The Bible shows again and again that spectacular miracles have minimal long-term effect on faith.
Elijah himself, who had just stared down 850 priests and an angry king, fled like a scared dog from the threats of Queen Jezebel. The God we think we want does not always produce the results we think we'll get.
In a tender scene following Elijah's flight from Jezebel, God revealed a different style. At Elijah's lowest point, God visited himpointedly, not in a powerful wind, earthquake, or fire; rather, in a gentle whisper. Instead of overwhelming Elijah with supernatural power, of which the prophet had seen plenty, God found a way to restore his confidence from the inside out.
I understand why Jews still leave a place for Elijah at the Passover table, for in some ways faith in Elijah is easier to understand than faith in Jesus.
"But I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself," said Jesus. He called on us to take up a cross, not a lightning bolt. And if this world is to be won for Christ it will probably be won by a gentle voice and self-sacrificing love, not by loud shouts and spectacle. Jesus' style, not Elijah's.
A Christian Reader original article.
Copyright © 2002 by the author or Christianity Today International/Today's Christian magazine (formerly Christian Reader). Click here for reprint information.
May/June 2002, Vol. 40, No. 3, Page 55
Browse More Today's Christian Home | People of Faith | Stories of Hope | Today's Culture Build Your Faith | Laughing Matters | Archives | Contact Us
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Try Today's Christian Woman Free!
 |
 |
|
 No credit card required. Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.
If you decide you want to keep Today's Christian Woman coming, honor your invoice for just $17.95 and receive five more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The trial issue is yours to keep, regardless.
Give Today's Christian Woman as a gift
Order a gift subscription!
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
|  |
 |