2 Kings 2:1-18 · Elijah Taken Up to Heaven
Into The Whirlwind
2 Kings 2:1-18
Sermon
by Robert Allen
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Certain events, no matter how long ago they happened, are forever etched in your mind. One such event that I shall always remember happened when I was in the third grade. It was late April, but it was not a beautiful spring day. Instead, it was a day marked by spring rains. It was a day that was dark and dreary. It was a day packed full of tornado warnings. Finally, late in the afternoon, the school bells rang at an unscheduled time. The teachers led all of the children into the hallways and told us to huddle against walls and cover our heads. A tornado was passing directly over the school building.

Fortunately, the tornado did not touch down around the school. The tornado passed over the school building and made its way toward Dallas. It touched down in Dallas and cut a mile wide path of destruction. The tornado destroyed buildings, homes, and anything in its path. In the few minutes the tornado was on the ground in Dallas, many people lost their lives.

Although I was very young, I vividly remember that event. I remember watching the news on television and being amazed at the destructive power of a tornado. I remember pieces of straw sticking through telephone poles. I remember watching people on television tell about the tornado destroying their homes or killing one of their loved ones.

There is one other thing I vividly remember. I remember one man on the news telling about driving his pickup when the tornado swept through and just picked the truck up off the ground. He told about spinning in circles. He told about seeing debris spinning around and knowing that he was in the middle of the whirlwind. He told about the fear he experienced until he and his pickup were deposited back on the ground couple of blocks down the road. He told about an experience which he said he would always remember.

And this was one of the reasons the writer of 2 Kings told about Elijah being taken up into the whirlwind. He wanted people to remember the spiritual importance of Elijah. The whole intent of this passage was to use symbolism, poetry, and imagination to stress the dramatic impact which the prophet Elijah made on the nation of Israel. No end to Elijah’s life could have been more in keeping with the man himself. For Elijah was a whirlwind himself. For Elijah was a whirlwind of activity and to be carried up by a whirlwind into the heavens was sheer drama as we come to the final episode in his life.

Today, I want to mention three things which are important about Elijah walking into the whirlwind.

I. Elijah Walked Into The Whirlwind With Courage.

Whenever you read the story of Elijah, you are reading the story of a man with extraordinary courage. Again and again, as he walks across the pages of the Old Testament, he is depicted as a man having the courage to face what was before him. When others traveled only in clan groupings because of wild animals, bandits, and other enemies, he went out alone into the wilderness. When others were too cowardly to speak out against the intimidating policies of one of the most powerful rulers of the Northern Kingdom of Israel -- a king named Ahab -- it was Elijah who dared to rock the boat and oppose the king. When Queen Jezebel was leading Israel to flirt with the materialistic god, Baal, it was Elijah who called for a theological showdown on Mount Carmel to determine which was the real God of Israel -- the God of Hebrews called Yahweh or the materialistic god called Baal. But Elijah never showed more courage than when he was in the wilderness and walked into the unknown whirlwind. Many people, facing the mystery of the unknown, beg others to stay close by. But, Elijah was not clingingly dependent on anyone. He courageously faced the unknown.

Every day we are facing the whirlwind of the unknown future. We don’t know what lies before us, but courage is a choice. We can choose to courageously face the whirlwind of the unknown and refuse to let fear take a grip on our lives.

A couple of months ago, I received a note from some people whom I had not heard from in more than 16 years. The writer said that her husband was a hospital patient. He had already been through by-pass surgery. But his heart was just not strong enough to keep him alive. His only hope of survival was a heart transplant.

I went by the hospital to see him and talk with him. I am so glad I decided to stop and see him. I will never forget the courage he displayed as he waited for a donor. He was facing a bleak future. He knew the odds of undergoing such a surgery. He knew of the problems which might lie ahead in the future. But, he was facing it all with courage and hope and determination.

After a few weeks of waiting in the intensive care unit, the word came that a donor was available. The surgery was successful and just recently I received another note saying that he was home and he was walking three miles a day.

This, I believe is the way we are called to live. We are always going to be facing the whirlwind of the unknown and we have a choice. We can choose to face the unknown future with fear and trepidation or, we can choose to face it with courage and hope.

Courage is always an option for people of faith. It is a viable option because we may not know what the future holds, but we know who holds the future.

II. Elijah Walked Into The Whirlwind, But He Left Behind His Mantle.

When Elijah walked out into the wilderness toward the whirlwind, Elisha was walking with him. He was tagging along to make a request and Elijah finally asked: “What shall I do for you before I am taken from you?”

Once the question was asked, Elisha knew what he wanted. He looked at Elijah and asked: “I pray you, let me inherit a double share of your spirit.”

This was not the request of a disciple who hoped to outstrip his master. It was an appeal to the Deuteronomic law that gave the eldest son a double portion of his father’s goods. Elisha was requesting that he be acknowledged as Elijah’s heir -- inheriting the power and influence of the prophetic office. And, when Elijah was taken up into the whirlwind, he left behind his mantle or his influence for Elisha.

While the idea of Elijah leaving behind his mantle or influence for Elisha is symbolic, it is a fact of life that everyone of us does leave some type of influence behind us. You have an influence on other people. You can no more keep from exerting an influence with your life than you can keep from casting a shadow on a sunny day. You cannot throw a stone into a pond without causing ripples that spread out in widening circles until they touch the distant shore. And you cannot live in this world without causing ripples of influence that widen out and touch the lives of others.

Once while we were in New Orleans, we leased a condo for the week while I attended the meetings of the Jurisdictional Conference. Our condo was a couple of miles from the site of the conference and every morning I would catch the bus and ride downtown. One morning a woman got on the bus and rode for a little ways. As the bus went by a certain street, this woman yelled at the bus driver, “Hey, you didn’t turn on that street!”

“No, ma’am,” the driver said. “This bus doesn’t turn until we get to Canal Street.”

The woman was obviously irritated and she let loose with a string of unrepeatable words. She demanded that the bus stop and let her off. Everyone on the bus seemed to be embarrassed by this woman and her profanity. Everyone was very quiet.

As the woman stepped off the bus onto the sidewalk, the bus driver said, “Madam, you left something behind.”

She turned and asked, “What is it?” The bus driver smiled and said, “Madam, you left behind a very bad impression.” Then, he closed the door and drove away.

As we go through life, we are always leaving behind an impression. As we go through life, we are always having an influence which touches others. As we go through life, we are always having an effect upon others. It is a fact of life that we can’t live without touching others with our lives. Our lives can heal or hurt others. Our lives can encourage or discourage others. Our lives can be a positive influence or negative influence upon others. We cannot escape the fact that our lives will have an influence upon others. The only choice we have is the kind of influence or impression we leave behind.

What kind of influence are you leaving behind?

III. Elijah Walked Into The Whirlwind And Was Carried Into The Heavens.

As you read the story of Elijah here in 2 Kings, I want to point out a common mistake. Many people have mistakenly believed that the text said that Elijah was carried into heaven on a chariot of fire. However, when you look at the text closely, you will see that it says: “And Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven.”

The whirlwind throughout the Bible, is often associated with the coming of God. Therefore, the essential message of this text is that God came for Elijah. He was not abandoned, he was not forsaken, he was not forgotten. God came for Elijah and God will come for you and me. John Powell, professor of theology at Loyola University in Chicago, told of one of his students named Tommy. Tommy was a problem. Tommy was the “atheist-in-residence.” Tommy was the one student always ready to debate the reality of God. At the end of the semester, when Tommy turned in his final exam, he asked in a cynical tone, “Dr. Powell, do you think I will ever find God?”

Dr. Powell said emphatically, “No!”

Tommy seemed a little surprised and started to leave. He had gone about five feet when Dr. Powell added, “Tommy, I don’t think you will ever find God, but I am absolutely certain that he will find you.”

Tommy just shrugged and walked on out. He graduated and several months later came the report that Tommy had developed terminal cancer. Shortly before he died, he came back to see Dr. Powell. His body was badly wasted, but his eyes were bright and firm. “It could be worse,” Tommy said.

“How?” asked Dr. Powell.

Tommy explained: “Well, like being 50 and having no values or ideals, like being 50 and thinking that booze and making out are the real biggies in life. But what I really came to see you about is something you said to me on the last day of class. You said, ‘I’m absolutely certain God will find you.’ When the doctors told me I had a malignancy, then I got serious about locating God. I really banged bloody fists against the bronze doors of heaven. But God did not come.

“I decided to spend what time I had left doing something more profitable. I didn’t want to leave this world without telling those I love that I loved them. So, I began with the hardest one: my Dad. He was reading the newspaper when I approached him.

“ ‘Dad…’

“ ‘Yes, what?’ he asked without lowering the paper.

“ ‘Dad, I want to talk to you.’

“The newspaper came down three slow inches. ‘What is it?’

“ ‘Dad, I love you. I just wanted you to know that.’ ”

The newspaper fluttered to the floor and two things happened that Tommy could not remember ever happening before. He saw his father’s face covered with tears and his father got up and went over to hug him. They sat and talked until dawn even though his father had to be at work the next morning.

Tommy said, “I was only sorry about one thing: that I had waited so long. Here I was in the shadow of death, and I was just beginning to open up to the people I had actually been close to.

“Then, one day, I turned around and God was there. He didn’t come to me when I pleaded with him. But the important thing is that he found me.”

And this is the promise which we have whenever we march into the whirlwind of life. God will not permit us to face the whirlwinds alone. God will not forsake us. God will not abandon us. God came for Elijah. God came for Tommy. And God will come for you and me.

Prayer: Our Father, help us to be aware of your love for us in Jesus Christ. Amen.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, INTO THE WHIRLWIND, by Robert Allen