Let’s Start With What You’ve Got!

by Admin ~ June 1st, 2010

Our thoughts are centred on Proverbs 11. 24. There are those who generously scatter abroad and yet increase more. Others withhold more than is due, but it tends only to poverty.
Our subject is a clear Biblical principle designed to encourage each one of us. For example, in conversation with Moses God said “What’s in your hand?” Moses replied: “A rod.” God responded, ‘”We’ll start with that.” The rod of Moses became the rod of God performing signs of judgement against ten gods of Egypt.  Exodus 4. 2. On one occasion in His public ministry Christ instructed His disciples to bring to Him a boy’s lunch. Jesus started with that and went on to satisfy 5000 men beside women and children. Matthew 14. 17-18.
Our story today centres on a widow living in the Gentile town of Zarephath. The widow told the prophet Elijah: “I have a handful of flour and a little oil in a cruise.” The prophet responded: “We’ll start with that.” Speaking personally, some years ago all I could offer God was a decade or more of burn out and its after effects. God started with what I had, and I went on to pioneer and build a Church in a deprived area of the city of Norwich. Is Christ asking us to identify what resources we have in our lives? When we respond, Christ will encourage us with the words: ‘”We’ll start with that.”
King Ahab began his reign over Israel in BC 918. He remained king for 22 years. He married a heathen Gentile queen, who plunged the nation of Israel into idol worship big time. When the Jews refused to listen to the words of warning from Jehovah through the prophets, God acted against the nation in a painful way – a drought that lasted 42 months causing an economic crisis and famine which also affected surrounding nations. Ahab the king blamed Elijah the prophet for the crisis, and Elijah had to go into hiding for his own safety. God directed the prophet to the brook Cherith, then over the border to the Gentile town of Zarephath, the ruins of which have been discovered on the coast of Lebanon. Elijah’s hidden years proves that if we remain in the Will of God we shall be protected and provided for.
In hiding for over three years, God was using the time to prepare the prophet to be the main player in a national spiritual revival that would take place in public on Mount Carmel accompanied with fire!
Quote: Failing to prepare is preparing to fail.’  Preparation is important to God, and should be for us. Jehovah spent eighty years preparing Moses for leadership that lasted forty years!
At the launch of His public ministry in the town where He had been brought up – Nazareth – Jesus referred to the widow of Zarephath in His remarks. Luke 4. 25-26. In doing so, Christ confirmed the reality of this widow’s story. However, He upset His hearers when He complemented a Gentile widow’s faith in the face of the doubt that existed among the Jewish widows at the time! Christ was simply confirming that the Good News of Jesus Christ is for the “Whosoever.” Paul the apostle confirms that principle: ‘Christ has made peace between Jews and Gentiles by making us all one family. Breaking down the wall of contempt that used to separate us.’ Jew and Gentile organically joined to each other and to Christ!
1 Kings 17. 9. God directed Elijah to go to Zarephath, to a widow who would look after him for the duration of the drought. This widow was a pagan Gentile living in a foreign country that worshipped idols.
She was a nameless widow with an only son, and subject to sorrow, loneliness and poverty. Because of her reduced circumstancs, she and her son faced certain premature death. One of her final tasks was to prepare a final meal for herself and her son and then the cupboard would be bare.
At this point a complete male stranger walks into her life asking her to prepare a meal for him FIRST! 1 Corinthians 1. 28-29. ‘God chose the lowly things of this World to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of this World to shame the strong, so that no one may boast before Him.’  This widow, this nobody in the eyes of the World was chosen by God to play a key role in the Spiritual revival of the nation of the Jews. Quote: Attention to little things is a great thing. (John Chrysostom)
1 Kings 17. 10 and 13. “Bring me a little water in a vessel that I may drink.Make me a little cake first and bring it to me.” said the prophet to the woman. This request challenged the widow to an unselfish lifestyle, putting Elijah before herself and her son. Her obedience helped her to overcome the first law of human nature -self preservation. Her future well being was now placed in God’s hands!
Quote: ‘Live for self, you’ll live in vain. Live for Christ, you’ll live again.’
The prophet gave the widow a promise on which to base her faith, her unselfishness and her obedience: 1 Kings 17. 14. ‘For thus says the Lord, the jar of meal shall not waste away, or the bottle of oil fail until the day the Lord sends rain on the Earth.’ Your Bible and mine is full of exceeding great and precious promises, designed to ignite our trust in God. Use them!
1 Kings 17. 16. ‘The jar of meal was not empty, nor did the pot of oil fail.’ The same God who fed and watered a nation of over two million people for forty years as they journeyed to the Promised Land, was well able to supply this family for over two years!  God has great resources at His disposal. God taught this family living in Zarephath to live one day at a time which reminds us of the words: ‘Give us this day our daily bread.’
Because the widow didn’t hoard what she had, but gave it away, she received God’s abundant supply. She discovered that God is no man’s debtor. The widow’s pioneering steps of faith without a role model to follow, not only satisfied her family but went on to cheat death itself! Quote: ‘The first great gift we can pass on to others, is a good example.’ (Thomas Morell)
In closing let us remind ourselves of the wise words of Solomon: ‘There are those who generously scatter abroad and yet increase more. Others withhold more than is due, but it tends only to poverty.’
Proverbs 11. 24.  Let us go and do likewise.

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