THE POWER AND THE SPIRIT OF ELIJAH
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Kings 2: 1-15
10:50 a.m. 01-15-67
On
the radio and on television, you are sharing the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the message entitled The Power
and the Spirit of Elijah. If you would like to turn to the passage from
whence the message is preached, turn to 2 Kings, second chapter and these are
the words in the Bible—2 Kings, second chapter.
And it came to pass, when the LORD would take up
Elijah into heaven by a whirlwind that Elijah went with Elisha from Gilgal.
And Elijah said unto Elisha, Tarry here, I pray thee; for the LORD hath sent me
to Bethel. And Elisha said unto him, As the LORD liveth, and as thy soul
liveth, I will not leave thee. So they went down to Bethel.
And the sons of the prophets that were at Bethel came forth to Elisha, and said
unto him, Knowest thou that the LORD will take away thy master today? And he
said, Yea, I know it.
And Elijah said unto him, Elisha, tarry here, I pray thee; for the LORD hath
sent me to Jericho. And Elijah said, As the LORD liveth, and as thy soul
liveth, I will not leave thee. So they came to Jericho.
And the sons of the prophets that were at Jericho came to Elisha, and said unto
him, Knowest thou that the LORD will take away thy master today? And he
answered, Yea, I know it.
And Elijah said unto Elisha, Tarry, I pray thee, here; for the LORD hath sent
me to Jordan. And Elisha said, As the LORD liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I
will not leave thee. And they two went on.
And fifty men of the sons of the prophets went, and stood to view afar off: and
they two stood by Jordan.
And Elijah took his mantle, and wrapped it together, and smote the waters, and
they were divided hither and thither, so that they two went over on dry ground.
And it came to pass, when they were gone over, that Elijah said unto Elisha,
Ask what I shall do for thee, before I be taken away from thee. And Elisha
said, I pray thee, let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me.
And Elijah said, Thou hast asked an hard thing: nevertheless, if thou see me
when I am taken from thee, it shall be so unto thee; but if not, it shall not
be so.
And it came to pass, as they still went on, and talked, that, behold, there
appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, and parted them both asunder;
and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven.
And Elisha saw it.
He had his request, “Let a double portion, I pray thee, of thy spirit rest
upon me. And Elijah answered, If thou doest see me when I’m taken from thee,
it shall be so.”
And Elisha saw it, and he cried, My father, my
father, the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof. And Elisha saw Elijah
no more: and Elisha took hold of his own clothes, and rent them in two pieces.
He took up also the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and went back, and
stood by the bank of the Jordan;
And he took the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and smote the waters, and
said, Where is the LORD God of Elijah? When he also had smitten the waters,
they parted hither and thither: and Elisha went over.
And when the sons of the prophets which were to view at Jericho saw him, they
said, The spirit of Elijah doth rest on Elisha.
And the younger
man began his greater and prophetic ministry; the spirit and the power of
Elijah. Not in human story, nor in the sacred Word of God, has there ever
appeared a more colorful and majestic character than Elijah the Tishbite. He
was as rough and as rugged as the majestic mountains of Gilead from whence he
came. And so deep was the impression that Elijah made upon Israel that
thereafter, a prophet who presented himself as a prophet, always dressed like
Elijah—his uncut hair, his rough garments gathered around his loins with a
girdle, and ascetic in disposition and manner of life, and bold and
uncompromising and fearless in his delivery of the Word of God.
And yet, there is
a spiritual discernment in this young man Elisha that is so impressive and
inspired of God. For Elisha was able to see as few men have been and are;
Elisha was able to see that the power of God lay not in Elijah’s outward
appearance, his rugged dress, his ascetic disposition, his sudden appearances,
the bold astaccato by which he spoke. But Elisha was able to see
that the power of the older prophet lay in the Spirit of the Lord God upon
him. And the younger man was able to see that for him to mimic the outward
appearance of Elijah—to dress like him, have his hair uncut like him, to be ascetic
in nature like him, all of these things in manner and place of life—for the
younger prophet to mimic the outward appearance of Elijah would have been folly
and stupid. For Elisha was able to see the power of the man lay in the Spirit
of God upon him. So in the request, when Elijah said to Elisha, “Ask what I
shall do for thee before I be taken away from thee,” by inspiration, and by
penetrating discernment and understanding, the younger man said, “I pray thee
that a double portion of thy spirit fall upon me.”
This is very
noticeable to me because of what I see among our preachers, and what I read in
the story of their lives. Every powerful preacher, every moving preacher has
his own very distinct personality; all of them do, every one that has ever
lived has. Most of them have little old personal peculiarities and eccentricities.
And when the young preacher looks at a powerful man of God he is greatly
impressed with those little peculiarities and eccentricities. And he’ll go off
and copy them inevitably.
For example there
was a great preacher, a powerful preacher by the name of Len Broughton. And in
the days of Broughton’s greatest glory, he wore long hair, long hair, and a
long coat. And from one side of our Baptist Zion unto the other, you would
find ministers, preachers, with long hair and long coats. John A. Broadus
was our greatest scholar, student of the Word of God, the professor of
Greek in the Louisville Seminary. And in the last century, John A. Broadus who
was so much a leader among our people, John A. Broadus had studied so
much and pored over books so much that he developed a stoop in his stature and
pulpit stance. And from one side of the convention to the other, there were
preachers who when they stood up in the pulpit they all stooped over to preach,
just like John A. Broadus.
One of the most
eloquent men of all time and certainly the most eloquent preacher that the
continent of North America has ever produced in his eloquence was T. De Witt
Talmage. And T. De Witt Talmage had a manner of breaking up his words,
breaking up his sentences. He spoke in broken sentences and from one side of
this continent to the other, there were preachers who when they spoke, they
spoke in those same broken sentences like T. De Witt Talmage.
And almost in your
generation, there was a very colorful and famous evangelist by the name of
Billy Sunday, and he did not break up sentences but he broke up chairs in the
pulpit. And all over the whole English-speaking world there were preachers who
broke chairs in the pulpit imitating Billy Sunday.
And of
course—especially sensitive to you—would be the countless numbers, the
countless numbers, of young preachers who sought to imitate and to mimic the stentorian,
majestic voice of George W. Truett. Why, you could stand outside most any
convention hall and listen to the preacher as he preached and half of them
would be up there trying to say those words in that whole roundedness, that pathos
of tone that so beautifully and so marvelously characterized the preaching of
George W. Truett, but it was such a sorry imitation in those who tried to mimic
it.
I have just chosen
these instances, which you might see how easy it is to fall into the impression
that the power of a man lies in something that you can see or observe, in the
manner that he speaks, or the way that he dresses, or the asceticism or
non-asceticism of his life. These things are outward; and it is my firm and
studied judgment that they have nothing at all to do with the power of the man
of God. How he dresses, how he cuts his hair, or any other thing of his personality
or eccentricity that characterizes him.
The power that
lies in the man, the power that lies in the church, the power that lies in the
service, the power that lies in the denomination, the power that lies in the
thrust, the power that lies in the missionary enterprise is inevitably and
always the power of the presence of the Spirit of God. It is God that makes
the difference; it is God. So I say that when Elisha answered the question of
Elijah, “Ask what I shall do for thee before I be taken away from thee,” the
younger prophet was inspired from Heaven when he said, “Oh I pray thee, I pray
thee that a double portion of thy spirit fall upon me.”
Now in the few
minutes that I have, may I speak of that double portion of God’s Spirit upon us?
First, God’s Spirit upon us in a divine enabling, enabling. It is almost
unbelievable what God can do with an ordinary man, a plain, unostentatious,
sometimes untrained, ordinary man. Nor is this a speculative persuasion on my
part, I have seen it, read it, large on the page of the Word of God. And I
have seen it no less in my ministry working among our people. In the Word of
God, how many, how very many, how almost all, many will you find God’s servants
are plain ordinary men. They are carpenters, they are tentmakers, they are
fishermen, they are tax gatherers, they are shepherds, they are herdsmen, but
God has lifted them up and exalted them with His divine presence with His
enablement from heaven.
Take for example
Amos. Oh, if I had my life to live over again I’d be Amos Criswell, were it on
one of those programs. It’s too late now for me to start, but for a long time
I had my full name printed here. Wallie Amos Criswell, what an unspeakable
name, but that’s what I was born into. So they asked me, “Why did you change
that?”—I see they’ve changed it back. —“Why did you change that?” “Well,” I
said, “I was gonna start off Wallie Amos Criswell, then after a little while I
was gonna have it W. Amos Criswell. Then I was gonna have it Amos Criswell,” ‘cause
when I was preaching through the Bible and came across that prophet and studied
him, I just fell in reverent awe at the ministry of that man of God.
Well who was he?
He was a shepherd, he was a herdsman and he lived in the southern part of Judea. But God spoke to him and when you see Amos appearing, he is in Bethel, in the
capital city of Jeroboam II, one of Israel’s greatest kings, but an idolater.
And Amos comes
from Tekoa in southern Judea. And he stands before the golden altar and before
the golden calves of the King Jeroboam and he denounces the idolatry and the
wickedness of the people of northern Israel. And while he is preaching there
appears before Amos in confrontation the chaplain of the king himself. His
name is Amaziah and he says to Amos, “Shut your mouth and leave this place for
this is the king’s court and this is the king’s chapel and you have no right to
speak here.” And do you remember what Amos replied? Amos said, “It is true.
I am no prophet, neither am I a prophet’s son. I was an herdsman and a
gatherer of sycamore fruit. And the Lord God took me from following the flock
and said unto me, ‘Go prophesy unto my people Israel.’” [Amos 7:12-15]. “The
lion hath roared, who will not fear? The Lord God has spoken, who can but prophesy?”
[Amos 3:8]
That’s what I’m
talking about, plain ordinary men touched by the power of God. Think of the
many poor fishermen in the days of Peter, James, and John, and God touched
their souls. Think of the many tax gatherers in the days of Matthew, and God
touched his heart. Think of the uncounted thousands of Hellenists,
Greek-speaking Jews, scattered over the whole Greco-Roman world, and God
touched the heart of Stephen and of Philip.
Think of the
thousands of the tinkers in the days of John Bunyan. A tinker is a man who
welds, who mends a pot or a pan. Think of the thousands of tinkers in the days
of John Bunyan and he saw visions of God. Think of the thousands of poor shoe
cobblers in the days of William Carey, and he would sit at his last cobbling
shoes with an open Bible on one side and with a map of the world on the other,
and God touched his heart. Plain, ordinary people whom God hath poured out
upon the double portions of His Spirit.
Some of our finest
Sunday school teachers, some of our best leaders, some of our most God blessed
people are some of the humblest workmen in our congregation. It is God that
makes the difference. “Ask,” said Elijah, “what I shall do for thee,” and
Elisha said, “I pray thee that a double portion of thy spirit fall upon me.” I
speak now in the second place of the Spirit of God falling upon us in divine
worship, in the sanctuary of the Lord, in the house of the faithful, in the
gathering of the church. Forever and forever, the convocation of God’s people
is lifted out of the ordinary, the terrestrial, the mundane into the realm of
the heavenly, the celestial, the supernatural, because of the presence of God
among us.
Matthew 18:20, “[For] where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst
of them.” Two or three—look around you, there are some thousands of us here in
this holy place this morning and Jesus, God is here. God’s name is name,
singular. God’s name is Father, Son, Holy Spirit; these three are one. There
is one God, we know Him as Father, we know Him as Savior, we know Him as
comforter and keeper of our souls—and that great God is here.
“Well, how is He
here, Pastor?” Sometimes I fall into speculative thinking, like a little boy.
Jesus is here, where is He? Is He there; does He stand here? Do I push my
hand through Him; is He standing there—perchance here? Do I push my hand
through Him as He stands here? How is it that He’s here? He’s here in two
special ways; one, He is here in my heart—the Holy Spirit of Jesus, the divine
presence poured out in the world—Jesus is here in my heart. He is in your
heart, Jesus is present in these souls of His people.
But there is also
another, over and beyond, that I cannot delineate in language. There is a
theology of this, a teaching of this, a revelation of this in the Word of God
that I cannot encompass in language. It is so infinite and beyond us that we
cannot delineate it or circumscribe it by syllable and sentence. But there is
another way that God is here in the assembling of His people. In the
convocation of His saints, Jesus is present in an unusual, and a glorious, and
a powerful way.
May I illustrate?
In preaching through the Revelation—oh, how again it was impressed upon my soul!—the
figure of the resurrected and glorified Lord Jesus walking among His churches.
While the seven lampstands, He said, are the seven churches—and they are seven
because the number represents completeness—all of His churches. And when John
looked upon those seven lampstands, he saw in their midst, one like unto the
Son of God, His face, His countenance shined above the brightness and the
brilliance of the midday sun. His feet were as they burned like burnished
brass in a furnace. His voice was as the sound of many waters and John saw Him
walking in the midst of His churches.
There is a sense,
there is a way, there is a theology that I cannot express in which, when God’s
people gather together as a church, that in power and in glory, our Lord is in
our midst. That’s why we have a church. There are powers of influence. There
are barbed thrusts from Heaven that we never experience except in the
convocation of God’s people. The Lord is here. Doubly so, Master, doubly so.
“Ask what I shall do for thee before I be taken from thee,” and Elisha said, “I
pray thee that a double portion of thy spirit fall upon us.” Lord doubly to
feel Thy presence, doubly to be moved and sensitive to thy Spirit. Doubly Lord
to be near, doubly welcome, doubly precious. Let a double portion of God’s
Spirit rest upon us.
And the third, and
briefly, let a double portion of thy Spirit fall upon us. The divine
enablement working with us, powerfully—the divine presence, the breath and
Spirit of God in the service. And a third, a double portion of thy Spirit fall
upon us Lord in our heavy and difficult assignment. There is not anything that
does not hinder and impede the witness and the testimony of God’s servants.
It is difficult
and more difficult. It is hard and growing harder. We come to the First Church in Dallas and we look at these vast throngs and we think and say, “O Lord,
surely the millennium is coming.” This is the most exceptional church I know
of. And for us, as for all, it is increasingly difficult to get men to Jesus.
To win men to Christ is difficult. It is increasingly difficult on our mission
fields. It is increasingly difficult in our great cities. And it becomes
increasingly difficult in our own community of Dallas.
How do you win men
to Jesus? How do you get men to the Lord? Lord that a double portion of thy
Spirit might rest upon us; that God will bless our efforts, our witness, in the
school, in the office, in the merchandizing establishment, in the days of the
workweek. God bless our testimonies spoken and unspoken, silent and expressed,
lived by pattern, pled by word of mouth, God bless our witness.
Stir
me, stir me, Lord! I care not how,
But
stir my heart in passion for the world;
Stir
me to give, to go, but most of all to pray;
Stir,
till thy blood-red banner be unfurled
O'er
lands that still in deepest darkness lie,
O'er
homes where no cross is lifted high.
Stir
me, O stir me, Lord! Thy heart was stirred
By
love's intensest fire, till Thou didst give
Thine
only Son, Thy best-beloved One,
Even
to the dreadful cross, that I might live;
Stir
me Lord to give myself so back to Thee
That
Thou canst give Thyself again through me.
[“Stir Me!” – Bessie Porter Head]
“Ask what shall I
do for thee before I be taken from thee,” and Elisha prayed, “O God, O Lord,
let a double portion of the Spirit of Elijah fall upon me, rest upon me.” Do
it Lord, do it upon me; do it upon our people. Do it upon this church; do it
upon our blessed denomination. Baptize us Lord anew; afresh from heaven, fill
us with the Holy Ghost of glory—Lord do it again; do it again.
And while we sing
this appeal, if God presses the invitation to give your heart to Jesus, if God
calls for you answer with your life—do it. “I take the Lord as my Savior and
here I come, here I stand. We’re putting our letters and our lives in the
church, pastor, and here we come.” However God shall say, shall speak, shall
press the appeal, make it this morning, make it now. On the first note of the
first stanza when you stand up, stand up coming. In the balcony round there’ll
be time to spare. If we were to close the invitation while you were coming,
there’d be some of us stay here all day and all night—stay here just for you.
Do it now, giving your life and trust to Jesus, or putting your life in the
fellowship of this dear church—come, come now, do it now, while we stand and
while we sing.