I’m
thinking about a story concerning the prophet Elijah, recorded in 1 Kings
19.4-8:
But
he himself went a day’s journey into the wilderness, and came and sat down
under a solitary broom tree. He asked that he might die: ‘It is enough; now, O
Lord , take away my life, for I am no better than my ancestors.’ Then he lay
down under the broom tree and fell asleep. Suddenly an angel touched him and
said to him, ‘Get up and eat.’ He looked, and there at his head was a cake
baked on hot stones, and a jar of water. He ate and drank, and lay down again.
The angel of the Lord came a second time, touched him, and said, ‘Get up and
eat, otherwise the journey will be too much for you.’ He got up, and ate and
drank; then he went in the strength of that food for forty days and forty
nights to Horeb the mount of God.
Ancient
Hebrew has far fewer words than modern English, and so the same word can have
multiple meanings. Also, language conveys our understanding of the world, and
ancient Hebrew works at both a literal/material and metaphorical/spiritual
level.
Elijah
‘went a day’s journey into the wilderness.’ Let’s break that down.
The
word for wilderness/desert is, at root, also the word for mouth/speech. This is
both fascinating and unsurprising, as the wilderness is the place where God
speaks, or, more accurately, where humans speak with God.
The
word for journey is also the word for Way, as in a way of life, which is worked
out through conversation – which is also the same word.
The
word for day is also the word for daily.
So,
at a literal/material level, Elijah ‘went a day’s journey into the wilderness.’
And at a metaphorical/spiritual level, it is Elijah’s practice to be in daily
conversation with God. We would call that prayer.
Now,
some would argue that we work out which of the possible meanings a word should
be given by the context. But I would argue that where a word can be
understood in more than one way, it should be understood in more than
one way. Because the context for the spiritual is always material, and
the material is always spiritual. They belong together.
So,
I would take it at face value that Elijah, whose practice it was to be in daily
conversation with God, took a walk into the wilderness. And there he sat down
under a broom tree.
Now,
the broom tree also appears in Job chapter 30 and Psalm 120. For Job it is a
symbol of those expelled by society, which Job applies to himself to say he
feels rejected by God. Psalm 120 links the wood of the broom tree, which was
prized for how well it burned, with a peacemaker dwelling amongst those who
hate peace. This is where Elijah chooses to sit down, to stop walking on the
way, to end his conversation. He has had enough.
God
sends a messenger, an ambassador, who comes to Elijah as he sleeps, breaks off
some branches from the broom tree, heats some flat stones on them, and bakes
flat bread on the stones. (I love cake, but it is a misleading translation.)
That is to say, God answers Elijah (who was not asking a question or seeking a
continuation of their conversation) with food and drink. Again, I would take
this at both a material and a spiritual level. Sustenance for body and soul.
Elijah
awoke, ate and drank, and lay down again to sleep. Later, the ambassador
returns, wakes him again, provides him with more food and water, and tells him
that he needs to eat and drink if he is to have the strength [this word also
means chamaeleon; weird, huh?] that he needs to undergo the journey ahead of
him. That journey takes him to Horeb, the mountain of the Lord.
Horeb
means Desolate. God waits for us in the place of our desolation. In the place
where nothing else can console us. God waits for us, and, moreover, sustains us
on the conversation that will bring us to that place, to confront ourselves,
stripped of all the many outer layers with which we have tried to blend in, to
mask ourselves [chamaeleon].
Now,
before you decide that this is just my neurodivergent special interest, I
happened to have a conversation with someone today, who has had more than
enough of an impossible situation, and who is being sustained by a daily
discipline of prayer alone. And I suspect that they are not the only person who
can relate to Elijah today. So, I share this, in case it is the cake someone
needs in this moment.
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