07 -- MOUNT CARMEL
The Mount of Contest, or the Mount
of Victory for God's folks, and the Mount of Defeat for
the devil's crowd. Well, dear reader, we have now to come to Mount
Carmel, the battle ground of
Elijah, where he met eight hundred and fifty false prophets of Baal in
the grove. Here one man met
not only a king and queen, eight hundred and fifty backslidden
preachers, but a whole nation of
God-forgetters, and defeated the whole crowd.
There was a hostile king and
queen backed up by eight hundred ad fifty preachers who
seemed to hate the very ground Elijah walked on. They had scoured the
woods and hills and
mountains and the caves; the holes of the earth had been searched for
this man, and they had sworn
eternal vengeance against him if they could find him, for "he was the
troubler of Israel." But bless
God, right in the midst of their hostility the old hero appeared on the
scene and challenged King
Ahab to gather all Israel together on Mount Carmel, and with all Israel
together, the four hundred
and fifty prophets of Baal and also four hundred prophets of the grove,
and they would have a
special meeting and prove their gods and see who was right and who was
wrong.
Of course they had to accept the
challenge, and now it is up to them to meet the hairy old
man, as they called him, and prove the great god, that they called
Baal. The king had accepted the
challenge. The false prophets all claimed that Baal was a god, and the
people did not know but
what he was. The old prophet Elijah said that Baal was no god and no
good, and that all Israel was
under a delusion of the devil, and when he talked in that way the
servants of Baal all boiled over
and sorry to say, they are still boiling.
And now, right in the face
of the greatest annual conference that ever met in Palestine, this
old holiness man came to the conference and put all the preachers to
one of the straightest tests that
was ever put to a set of men, and it was put in such a way that they
had to accept it. It was this:
"The God that answers by fire, let him be God; if it is Baal or if it
is the God of Israel, the one that
answers by fire, he is to be God. And all the people said, It is well
spoken." Of course they were
deceived by the prophets of Baal, and without doubt they thought that
Baal's preachers would be
able to get the fire and defeat the hairy old man who had given them so
much trouble. He preached
holiness and the other crowd preached worldliness, and the folks did
not want holiness and they
did not want worldliness, but they had something else before sundown.
"Now," said Elijah, "you are
many and I will give you the first test. Now go to work and
build you an altar and put your wood on it and then slay your bullock
and lay him on the wood and
put no fire on it or under it, and you call on your god and if he sends
fire and consumes the bullock,
Baal is to be the god. I will build an altar and put the wood on it and
I will slay the bullock and put
him on the wood and put no fire under it and I will call on the God of
Israel, and the God that
answers by fire he is to be the God." Now the test is on, and the king
is to watch the proceedings;
and not only the king, but the whole nation was watching with bated
breath to see how the thing
would come out.
It is to be the God of
Israel, or it is to be Baal, one or the other. Never did a man-made god
have any better chance than Baal had that day. And if Baal could not do
something on that great
occasion he was a flat failure, for they were there from all over the
country, and eight hundred and
fifty of Baal's strongest men were there. They were there from
Vanderbilt and from Harvard and
from Yale and from Columbia and from Stanford. All of their own nation,
and several from abroad
representing Oxford and Berlin and Edinburgh. The pomp and glory of
Baal never shone so bright
as on that great occasion.
One little, old man covered
with a camelskin cloak sat down to see the display of Baal and
to see the religious worship. Of course Baal never did anything on a
small scale. The king and
queen and their eight hundred and fifty Doctors of Divinity with a
nation at their command made
one of the most interesting crowds that a holiness man ever faced. The
only thing that saved him
was the fact that he had the blessing, and no make believe about it. If
he had been the least bit
shaky they would have backed him out. But oh my beloved! he never even
looked down his nose
one time. He sat by in a humble attitude, but it was not because he
feared Baal, for he knew that he
fought a winning battle. He watched them as the religious performance
went on. They had no idea
on earth that one man was more than a match for eight hundred and
fifty. The eight hundred and fifty
had everything on their side, but One, and that saved Elijah, for that
One was God. They had the
world and the flesh and the devil in as great pomp as you ever put your
two eyes on, but the thing
that they did not have was the very thing that Elijah did have, and
that was the God of Israel.
Amen.
The thing is beginning to
get interesting about this time of day, and the prayers are long and
loud and many, and they are coming thick and fast. They are up against
an awful proposition, and it
is, "O Baal, hear us! O Baal, it will never do for you to go back on us
at this trying time. Just look
yonder at that old hairy man with a smile all over his face. He is now
making fun of us and what
will he do, Baal, if you don't send fire? O Baal, you must send the
fire. The time will soon be over
for our test and the fire has not come yet, and we don't feel right
about it some how. We are a little
bit uneasy, and this old man is watching us, and he seems to be
perfectly contented. And now Baal,
if ever you did send fire you must send it now." And if Baal could have
said a word, he would
have whispered to them and said, "I never did send fire, and never
will, for when you made me
you left out the qualities that produce fire, that is life. No fire
without life." And as Baal was
man-made he did not propose to send fire.
The thing got so ridiculous that
at noon Elijah mocked them and said, "Baal is surely a god;
he must be asleep or he may be perusing, or peradventure he is in a
conversation and you must do
something to attract him." And then they went for Baal in a most
marvelous way. They drew their
knives and leaped up and down on their altars and cried, "O Baal, hear
us!" But the Bible says that
there was none to regard or to hear what was going on on the holy mount
called Carmel.
But the time came for the
evening sacrifice, and the man of God called all the people near
to him, and we read that he repaired the altar of the Lord that had
been thrown down. And he took
twelve stones to represent the twelve tribes of Israel, and he built
the altar to the Lord. He hewed
his wood and put it on the altar and then he slew his bullock and laid
him in order, and then he
went to work and had them dig a trench around the altar that would hold
twelve barrels of water,
and he had them pour twelve barrels of water over the sacrifice, and
soak it with water. Now these
false prophets knew that water would put out fire, and the old prophet
was not going to leave them
one excuse to hide behind. If he had not put on the water they would
have said that he had the fire
hid under the wood somewhere, but they all saw the sacrifice soaked in
water, and now while they
look on, the old servant of the Lord drops down on his knees and offers
up a short prayer to the
God of Israel, and to their surprise the fire fell, and all the people
shouted, "The Lord, he is God!
the Lord, he is God!"
Now the test is over, and
Eijah's God won out in the contest, and the old prophet had these
eight hundred and fifty false prophets put to death, for they were
impostors and deceivers.
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