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<h3> CHAPTER 4. Jehoram Succeeds Jehoshaphat; How Joram, His Namesake, King Of Israel, Fought With The Syrians; And What Wonders Were Done By The Prophet Elisha. </h3>
<p>1. Jehoshapat had a good number of children; but he appointed his eldest
son Jehoram to be his successor, who had the same name with his mother's
brother, that was king of Israel, and the son of Ahab. Now when the king
of Israel was come out of the land of Moab to Samaria, he had with him
Elisha the prophet, whose acts I have a mind to go over particularly, for
they were illustrious, and worthy to be related, as we have them set down
in the sacred books.</p>
<p>2. For they say that the widow of Obadiah <SPAN href="#link9note-7"
name="link9noteref-7" id="link9noteref-7"><small>7</small></SPAN> Ahab's
steward, came to him, and said, that he was not ignorant how her husband
had preserved the prophets that were to be slain by Jezebel, the wife of
Ahab; for she said that he hid a hundred of them, and had borrowed money
for their maintenance, and that, after her husband's death, she and her
children were carried away to be made slaves by the creditors; and she
desired of him to have mercy upon her on account of what her husband did,
and afford her some assistance. And when he asked her what she had in the
house, she said, "Nothing but a very small quantity of oil in a cruse." So
the prophet bid her go away, and borrow a great many empty vessels of her
neighbors, and when she had shut her chamber door, to pour the oil into
them all; for that God would fill them full. And when the woman had done
what she was commanded to do, and bade her children bring every one of the
vessels, and all were filled, and not one left empty, she came to the
prophet, and told him that they were all full; upon which he advised her
to go away, and sell the oil, and pay the creditors what was owing them,
for that there would be some surplus of the price of the oil, which she
might make use of for the maintenance of her children. And thus did Elisha
discharge the woman's debts, and free her from the vexation of her
creditors.</p>
<p>3. Elisha also sent a hasty message to Joram, <SPAN href="#link9note-8"
name="link9noteref-8" id="link9noteref-8"><small>8</small></SPAN> and
exhorted him to take care of that place, for that therein were some
Syrians lying in ambush to kill him. So the king did as the prophet
exhorted him, and avoided his going a hunting. And when Benhadad missed of
the success of his lying in ambush, he was wroth with his own servants, as
if they had betrayed his ambushment to Joram; and he sent for them, and
said they were the betrayers of his secret counsels; and he threatened
that he would put them to death, since such their practice was evident,
because he had intrusted this secret to none but them, and yet it was made
known to his enemy. And one that was present said that he should not
mistake himself, nor suspect that they had discovered to his enemy his
sending men to kill him, but that he ought to know that it was Elisha the
prophet who discovered all to him, and laid open all his counsels. So he
gave order that they should send some to learn in what city Elisha dwelt.
Accordingly those that were sent brought word that he was in Dothan;
wherefore Benhadad sent to that city a great army, with horses and
chariots, to take Elisha: so they encompassed the city round about by
night, and kept him therein confined; but when the prophet's servant in
the morning perceived this, and that his enemies sought to take Elisha, he
came running, and crying out after a disordered manner to him, and told
him of it; but he encouraged him, and bid him not be afraid, and to
despise the enemy, and trust in the assistance of God, and was himself
without fear; and he besought God to make manifest to his servant his
power and presence, so far as was possible, in order to the inspiring him
with hope and courage. Accordingly God heard the prayer of the prophet,
and made the servant see a multitude of chariots and horses encompassing
Elisha, till he laid aside his fear, and his courage revived at the sight
of what he supposed was come to their assistance. After this Elisha did
further entreat God, that he would dim the eyes of their enemies, and cast
a mist before them, whereby they might not discern him. When this was
done, he went into the midst of his enemies, and asked them who it was
that they came to seek; and when they replied, "The prophet Elisha," he
promised he would deliver him to them, if they would follow him to the
city where he was. So these men were so darkened by God in their sight and
in their mind, that they followed him very diligently; and when Elisha had
brought them to Samaria, he ordered Joram the king to shut the gates, and
to place his own army round about them; and prayed to God to clear the
eyes of these their enemies, and take the mist from before them.
Accordingly, when they were freed from the obscurity they had been in,
they saw themselves in the midst of their enemies; and as the Syrians were
strangely amazed and distressed, as was but reasonable, at an action so
Divine and surprising, and as king Joram asked the prophet if he would
give him leave to shoot at them, Elisha forbade him so to do; and said,
that "it is just to kill those that are taken in battle, but that these
men had done the country no harm, but, without knowing it, were come
thither by the Divine Power:"—so that his counsel was to treat them
in a hospitable manner at his table, and then send them away without
hurting them. <SPAN href="#link9note-9" name="link9noteref-9" id="link9noteref-9"><small>9</small></SPAN> Wherefore Joram obeyed the
prophet; and when he had feasted the Syrians in a splendid and magnificent
manner, he let them go to Benhadad their king.</p>
<p>4. Now when these men were come back, and had showed Benhadad how strange
an accident had befallen them, and what an appearance and power they had
experienced of the God of Israel, he wondered at it, as also at that
prophet with whom God was so evidently present; so he determined to make
no more secret attempts upon the king of Israel, out of fear of Elisha,
but resolved to make open war with them, as supposing he could be too hard
for his enemies by the multitude of his army and power. So he made an
expedition with a great army against Joram, who, not thinking himself a
match for him, shut himself up in Samaria, and depended on the strength of
its walls; but Benhadad supposed he should take the city, if not by his
engines of war, yet that he should overcome the Samaritans by famine, and
the want of necessaries, and brought his army upon them, and besieged the
city; and the plenty of necessaries was brought so low with Joram, that
from the extremity of want an ass's head was sold in Samaria for fourscore
pieces of silver, and the Hebrews bought a sextary of dore's dung, instead
of salt, for five pieces of silver. Now Joram was in fear lest somebody
should betray the city to the enemy, by reason of the famine, and went
every day round the walls and the guards to see whether any such were
concealed among them; and by being thus seen, and taking such care, he
deprived them of the opportunity of contriving any such thing; and if they
had a mind to do it, he, by this means, prevented them: but upon a certain
woman's crying out, "Have pity on me, my lord," while he thought that she
was about to ask for somewhat to eat, he imprecated God's curse upon her,
and said he had neither thrashing-floor nor wine-press, whence he might
give her any thing at her petition. Upon which she said she did not desire
his aid in any such thing, nor trouble him about food, but desired that he
would do her justice as to another woman. And when he bade her say on, and
let him know what she desired, she said she had made an agreement with the
other woman who was her neighbor and her friend, that because the famine
and want was intolerable, they should kill their children, each of them
having a son of their own, "and we will live upon them ourselves for two
days, the one day upon one son, and the other day upon the other; and,"
said she, "I have killed my son the first day, and we lived upon my son
yesterday; but this other woman will not do the same thing, but hath
broken her agreement, and hath hid her son." This story mightily grieved
Joram when he heard it; so he rent his garment, and cried out with a loud
voice, and conceived great wrath against Elisha the prophet, and set
himself eagerly to have him slain, because he did not pray to God to
provide them some exit and way of escape out of the miseries with which
they were surrounded; and sent one away immediately to cut off his head,
who made haste to kill the prophet. But Elisha was not unacquainted with
the wrath of the king against him; for as he sat in his house by himself,
with none but his disciples about him, he told them that Joram, <SPAN href="#link9note-10" name="link9noteref-10" id="link9noteref-10"><small>10</small></SPAN>
who was the son of a murderer, had sent one to take away his head; "but,"
said he, "when he that is commanded to do this comes, take care that you
do not let him come in, but press the door against him, and hold him fast
there, for the king himself will follow him, and come to me, having
altered his mind." Accordingly, they did as they were bidden, when he that
was sent by the king to kill Elisha came. But Joram repented of his wrath
against the prophet; and for fear he that was commanded to kill him should
have done it before he came, he made haste to hinder his slaughter, and to
save the prophet: and when he came to him, he accused him that he did not
pray to God for their deliverance from the miseries they now lay under,
but saw them so sadly destroyed by them. Hereupon Elisha promised, that
the very next day, at the very same hour in which the king came to him,
they should have great plenty of food, and that two seahs of barley should
be sold in the market for a shekel, and a seah of fine flour should be
sold for a shekel. This prediction made Joram, and those that were
present, very joyful, for they did not scruple believing what the prophet
said, on account of the experience they had of the truth of his former
predictions; and the expectation of plenty made the want they were in that
day, with the uneasiness that accompanied it, appear a light thing to
them: but the captain of the third band, who was a friend of the king, and
on whose hand the king leaned, said, "Thou talkest of incredible things, O
prophet! for as it is impossible for God to pour down torrents of barley,
or fine flour, out of heaven, so is it impossible that what thou sayest
should come to pass." To which the prophet made this reply," Thou shalt
see these things come to pass, but thou shalt not be in the least a
partaker of them."</p>
<p>5. Now what Elisha had thus foretold came to pass in the manner following:
There was a law at Samaria <SPAN href="#link9note-11" name="link9noteref-11" id="link9noteref-11"><small>11</small></SPAN> that those that had the
leprosy, and whose bodies were not cleansed from it, should abide without
the city: and there were four men that on this account abode before the
gates, while nobody gave them any food, by reason of the extremity of the
famine; and as they were prohibited from entering into the city by the
law, and they considered that if they were permitted to enter, they should
miserably perish by the famine; as also, that if they staid where they
were, they should suffer in the same manner,—they resolved to
deliver themselves up to the enemy, that in case they should spare them,
they should live; but if they should be killed, that would be an easy
death. So when they had confirmed this their resolution, they came by
night to the enemy's camp. Now God had begun to affright and disturb the
Syrians, and to bring the noise of chariots and armor to their ears, as
though an army were coming upon them, and had made them suspect that it
was coming nearer and nearer to them In short, they were in such a dread
of this army, that they left their tents, and ran together to Benhadad,
and said that Joram the king of Israel had hired for auxiliaries both the
king of Egypt and the king of the Islands, and led them against them for
they heard the noise of them as they were coming. And Benhadad believed
what they said [for there came the same noise to his ears as well as it
did to theirs]; so they fell into a mighty disorder and tumult, and left
their horses and beasts in their camp, with immense riches also, and
betook themselves to flight. And those lepers who had departed from
Samaria, and were gone to the camp of the Syrians, of whom we made mention
a little before, when they were in the camp, saw nothing but great
quietness and silence: accordingly they entered into it, and went hastily
into one of their tents; and when they saw nobody there, they eat and
drank, and carried garments, and a great quantity of gold, and hid it out
of the camp; after which they went into another tent, and carried off what
was in it, as they did at the former, and this did they for several times,
without the least interruption from any body. So they gathered thereby
that the enemies were departed; whereupon they reproached themselves that
they did not inform Joram and the citizens of it. So they came to the
walls of Samaria, and called aloud to the watchmen, and told them in what
state the enemies were, as did these tell the king's guards, by whose
means Joram came to know of it; who then sent for his friends, and the
captains of his host, and said to them, that he suspected that this
departure of the king of Syria was by way of ambush and treachery, and
that, "out of despair of ruining you by famine, when you imagine them to
be fled away, you may come out of the city to spoil their camp, and he may
then fall upon you on a sudden, and may both kill you, and take the city
without fighting; whence it is that I exhort you to guard the city
carefully, and by no means to go out of it, or proudly to despise your
enemies, as though they were really gone away." And when a certain person
said that he did very well and wisely to admit such a suspicion, but that
he still advised him to send a couple of horsemen to search all the
country as far as Jordan, that "if they were seized by an ambush of the
enemy, they might be a security to your army, that they may not go out as
if they suspected nothing, nor undergo the like misfortune; and," said he,
"those horsemen may be numbered among those that have died by the famine,
supposing they be caught and destroyed by the enemy." So the king was
pleased with this opinion, and sent such as might search out the truth,
who performed their journey over a road that was without any enemies, but
found it full of provisions, and of weapons, that they had therefore
thrown away, and left behind them, in order to their being light and
expeditious in their flight. When the king heard this, he sent out the
multitude to take the spoils of the camp; which gains of theirs were not
of things of small value, but they took a great quantity of gold, and a
great quantity of silver, and flocks of all kinds of cattle. They also
possessed themselves of [so many] ten thousand measures of wheat and
barley, as they never in the least dreamed of; and were not only freed
from their former miseries, but had such plenty, that two seahs of barley
were bought for a shekel, and a seah of fine flour for a shekel, according
to the prophecy of Elisha. Now a seah is equal to an Italian modius and a
half. The captain of the third band was the only man that received no
benefit by this plenty; for as he was appointed by the king to oversee the
gate, that lm might prevent the too great crowd of the multitude, and they
might not endanger one another to perish, by treading on one another in
the press, he suffered himself in that very way, and died in that very
manner, as Elisha had foretold such his death, when he alone of them all
disbelieved what he said concerning that plenty of provisions which they
should soon have.</p>
<p>6. Hereupon, when Benhadad, the king of Syria, had escaped to Damascus,
and understood that it was God himself that cast all his army into this
fear and disorder, and that it did not arise from the invasion of enemies,
he was mightily cast down at his having God so greatly for his enemy, and
fell into a distemper. Now it happened that Elisha the prophet, at that
time, was gone out of his own country to Damascus, of which Berthadad was
informed: he sent Hazael, the most faithful of all his servants, to meet
him, and to carry him presents, and bade him inquire of him about his
distemper, and whether he should escape the danger that it threatened. So
Hazael came to Elisha with forty camels, that carried the best and most
precious fruits that the country of Damascus afforded, as well as those
which the king's palace supplied. He saluted him kindly, and said that he
was sent to him by king Berthadad, and brought presents with him, in order
to inquire concerning his distemper, whether he should recover from it or
not. Whereupon the prophet bid him tell the king no melancholy news; but
still he said he would die. So the king's servant was troubled to hear it;
and Elisha wept also, and his tears ran down plenteously at his foresight
of what miseries his people would undergo after the death of Berthadad.
And when Hazael asked him what was the occasion of this confusion he was
in, he said that he wept out of his commiseration for the multitude of the
Israelites, and what terrible miseries they will suffer by thee; "for thou
wilt slay the strongest of them, and wilt burn their strongest cities, and
wilt destroy their children, and dash them against the stones, and wilt
rip up their women with child." And when Hazael said, "How can it be that
I should have power enough to do such things?" the prophet replied, that
God had informed him that he should be king of Syria. So when Hazael was
come to Benhadad, he told him good news concerning his distemper <SPAN href="#link9note-12" name="link9noteref-12" id="link9noteref-12"><small>12</small></SPAN>
but on the next day he spread a wet cloth, in the nature of a net, over
him, and strangled him, and took his dominion. He was an active man, and
had the good-will of the Syrians, and of the people of Damascus, to a
great degree; by whom both Benhadad himself, and Hazael, who ruled after
him, are honored to this day as gods, by reason of their benefactions, and
their building them temples by which they adorned the city of the
Damascenes. They also every day do with great pomp pay their worship to
these kings, <SPAN href="#link9note-13" name="link9noteref-13" id="link9noteref-13"><small>13</small></SPAN> and value themselves upon their
antiquity; nor do they know that these kings are much later than they
imagine, and that they are not yet eleven hundred years old. Now when
Joram, the king of Israel, heard that Berthadad was dead, he recovered out
of the terror and dread he had been in on his account, and was very glad
to live in peace.</p>
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