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Thursday, June 25, 2026

Elisha's Servant - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

Irredeemable
Naaman the Leper
The Servant Girl
Naaman's Wife
The King of Syria
The King of Israel
Elisha
Elisha's Servant

Elisha’s Servant

Let’s talk more about this unnamed prophet. Many of my favorite characters in the Bible are unnamed. There is a man born blind, a little boy who shared a small lunch, a thief on a cross, a woman caught in adultery…there are many more, but you get the point: to be anonymous does not mean you are unfaithful. Heaven knows who they are, and if no one else knows who this prophet is, Naaman certainly does.

Christianity in the last century has somehow morphed into a spotlight of celebrity pastors and musicians. Conferences have predictable casts, libraries are dominated by names everyone recognizes, people aren’t called by their preacher’s name very often anymore, but they still love the cliques.

Despite this celebrity culture, God still loves to use the unknown and unnamed, as Charles Spurgeon’s grandfather said,

Here comes my grandson! He may preach the gospel better than I can, but he cannot preach a better gospel; can you, Charles?

Dear reader, whether you are world renowned or hardly known, know that God knows your name and your ministry. Consider the most famous faithful preacher you know, and consider that you both have the same promises from God, one of which says, “fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand” (Isaiah 41:10).

The world needs Jesus, and you have the words of eternal life. A few weeks before writing this chapter I found myself approaching a group who were mid-drug deal. It was after a parade and I was excited to share Christ with everyone I could find, bolstered by some wonderful conversations earlier in the day. I didn’t realize that it was a drug deal until I was already committed, and they were obviously incredulous that I would approach them. Fortunately, it turned out to be a good discussion, and afterwards I thanked God for the opportunity to be the preacher who shared Christ with them.

A Faithful Delivery

As the prophet answers the door, he simply and concisely delivers the message. It’s short, “Go and wash in the Jordan seven times, and your flesh shall be restored, and you shall be clean” (2 Kings 5:10). I say prophet because a prophet is anyone who speaks for God. A true prophet will accurately deliver the message, a false prophet will either fabricate the message or modify it. Our prophet delivers this faithfully simple, yet exceedingly humbling, message.

It requires Naaman to obey a servant rather than a recognized prophet rather than God. It calls him to humble himself by dipping himself in a foreign river before a foreign God. It requires him to believe a one sentence promise that he has traveled over a hundred miles to hear. If you put yourself in Naaman’s shoes (or skin), it’s quite unbelievable.

Here our prophet has a temptation to expound upon the message. He could explain the cleansing principles of running water (Leviticus 15:13), he could have waxed eloquent and told of all of the miracles that Elisha had been performing, he could have made additional promises to Naaman, and he could have just kept talking and talking. He could have proved the proverb, “When words are many, transgression is not lacking,” but he chose the second half, “but whoever restrains his lips is prudent!” (Proverbs 10:19). He faithfully delivers the one-line promise.

Consider Jonah who likewise preached a one-line sermonette. He was sent to call out against Nineveh, and call out against Nineveh he did. Arguably it’s the worst sermon in the Bible, meant to only appease God and to do nothing for the condemned Ninevites. Jonah doesn’t mention God, he doesn’t mention repentance, it’s a hopeless message because he only delivers the bare minimum.

And still, God brings about the single largest revival ever recorded from any sermon. If we’re honest we’d say that sermon was hardly a faithfully delivered message. But God can draw a straight line with a crooked stick. What will he do if you seek to faithfully exposit his Word to the world?

Offend the Audience

The Bible tells us in multiple places that we are ambassadors for Christ. An ambassador’s faithfulness is not measured by the response of the audience. The ambassador’s faithfulness is measured by his accuracy to the king’s message. Our prophet made Naaman mad, but his job was not to make Naaman happy, it was to be an ambassador for Elisha. George Whitefield would remind us, “It is a poor sermon that gives no offense; that neither makes the hearer displeased with himself nor with the preacher.”

I once had a friend who sought to preach expositionaly through the book of Romans to a fledgling church. I asked him later how it went and he said that once he got to chapter nine, he decided to preach on something else, because his church was not ready to hear it. How could they not be ready after hearing the previous eight chapters? More so, I met his church once at a potluck and truly they were not mature in Christ, and a few short months later my friend was caught in a scandal that cost him his church and his family, and at the time of this writing he’s working full-time at a grocery store. Unfortunately, the conclusion was that his sermons were meant to tickle ears, not to change lives.

The next time you preach and come across something that is sure to offend, let it offend. God heals up wounds which he himself opens (Isaiah 30:26). A surgeon uses a very sharp scalpel to inflict a very serious wound in order to access and repair an even more serious malady. So must we trust what God says of his Word, “it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall succeed in the thing for which I sent it” (Isaiah 55:11). The life you save may be your own (1 Timothy 4:16).

The best way to keep God’s Word from accomplishing its purposes is to not preach it! I sat through the worst sermon I had ever heard, either before or since; the text was Romans 10:17, that “faith comes by hearing and hearing through the Word of Christ.” How could you mess that up? Somehow the preacher ended up speaking for thirty-five minutes not on the passage, but on how God is appearing to Muslims in dreams and leading them to Christ. He didn’t say it quite this clearly, but the entire message could be summed up as, “We don’t need to evangelize Muslims, God is doing it for us.”

Afterwards one of my young disciples–who had sat through the same sermon–looked at me and asked what I thought. Zeal got ahold of me and we went to meet the preacher, I intended to be tactful, but what I ended up saying was, “You’d do better to just start reading at Romans 1:1 and read for thirty-five minutes, then pray and sit down.”

There is a real danger in preaching to say things we want to say which are not the things that the king wants us to say. Beloved, when you say things the king didn’t intend for you to say, you risk losing your status as ambassador. In some countries you could be executed for committing treason. God has had false prophets stoned and others roasted in the fire.

Consider the next time you seek to expound on an idea, seek to help people to understand, and to give the sense (Nehemiah 8:7–8), that your goal is for your king to say amen, regardless of what the audience thinks. We want them to understand, yes, but they don’t have to like it. “For we are not, like so many, peddlers of God's word, but as men of sincerity, as commissioned by God, in the sight of God we speak in Christ” (2 Corinthians 2:17).

Our prophet could have ended this story right here, all he needed to do was refuse to deliver the message, or he could have changed it in the distance between Elisha and Naaman, or he could have hidden it in his own words, or he could have seen the fortune that Naaman had brought and said, “Give me some of that and I’ll wave my hand over the leper and you’ll be healed!” or “This message comes with a price.”

But he didn’t, he faithfully delivered the message, and hence the story continues.

Previous - Elisha                    Naaman's Servants (Incoming)

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Elisha - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

Irredeemable
Naaman the Leper
The Servant Girl
Naaman's Wife
The King of Syria
The King of Israel
Elisha
Elisha's Servants

Elisha

And now we meet the hero of this story. Or do we? Elisha was in the same precarious position as Jehoram. He was not God either, and in himself he had no power to kill or make alive. But beloved, there had to be that temptation in his life, to think that he had achieved some sort of power. After all, he was well on his way to performing twice as many miracles as Elijah, and to this day, other than Jesus, he holds the record for number of miracles performed in a single lifetime.

Jump forward to Acts 19:13–18 and meet the seven sons of Sceva who thought the name of Jesus was a good-luck charm that gave them power over demons. Severely trounced and deprived of their clothing they learned that they had no power in themselves to do anything.

Elisha knew that the power was not in himself as the servant of God, else he might end up with a savior complex, thinking himself to be far more important or useful than he was. This temptation is alive and well in our day. Have you ever thought that you were the catalyst for church growth or the only one who could lead a ministry or lead someone to Christ? Jesus told us that if we didn’t speak, the rocks would cry out. Consider the next time you’re tempted to think you’re somebody; you could be out-preached by a rock. Beloved, I try to live my life in such a way as to never be out-preached by a rock; I pray that God allows me to open my mouth to proclaim his excellency boldly and often. But God does not need it to be so, he does not need me, and he does not need you. There is no rhetorical lilt, no specific formula, not a single sinner’s prayer that can save sinners from their sin. Our hope is in Jesus, mighty to save, and this is why we endeavor to know nothing except Christ and him crucified, to pray that we will decrease so that he may increase. Elisha knew this fact well and sets himself up wonderfully to remind us who the true hero in this story is.

Faithful in the Small Things

When we meet Elisha in this story he’s running a prophet’s school. Today we’d call it a seminary, a place where the seeds of faith can grow. There is great value in making disciples and training them to obey everything that the Lord has commanded. Just as Elijah had discipled Elisha, so does Elisha always have a servant or servants with him.

He is not sitting around waiting for miracle seekers to knock on his door; he is busy doing the Lord’s work, always ministering, always preaching. Long before Jesus said it, he was trying to prove it, “Blessed is that servant whom his master will find so doing (serving) when he comes” (Matthew 24:46).

Know the Needs of the Nation

As Elisha is working, he has his ear to the pulse of the nation. He hears that King Jehoram has torn his clothes and is in despair at what is perceived as an imminent war with Syria. Here is a bit of literary license, I don’t believe Elisha had any idea what God was going to do, only that God was going to do something. Elisha was walking by faith at this point, knowing that if God had called a Syrian general to seek the blessings of the one true God, that God would not refuse him.

In drug and alcohol ministry we love lots of verses, but probably none so much as these two:

All that the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever comes to me I will never cast out. ~ John 6:37

and

Consequently, he is able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him, since he always lives to make intercession for them. ~ Hebrews 7:25[1]

Elisha wouldn’t have known those verses verbatim, but he knew the sentiment and he knew who God was. So, he called to have Naaman sent to him, knowing that God would in no wise cast him out.

Faithfulness without Fanfare

Naaman shows up and Elisha shows us that his spiritual gift is not hospitality. He doesn’t fling open the doors, there is no red carpet, he doesn’t have a meal prepared, it seems exactly the wrong way to greet a general, whether friend or foe. A few days later in Samaria he does throw a feast for his enemies.

But right now, Naaman is standing outside the door of Elisha’s house. Later we’ll see his anger, but I wonder if it didn’t start as he stewed on the step of what was supposed to be his salvation. This was all by design, Elisha knew full well that God is no respecter of persons, he doesn’t regard the general as any more important than the servant’s son, he doesn’t love the Israelite more than the Syrian, the healthy is in just as much need of God’s grace and healing as the sick. Remember, we have all fallen short of the glory of God, or as S. M. Lockridge would say, “Naaman – He was a leper, every individual without Christ is a leper.”

So Naaman waits, what if no one had answered the door? What if Elisha had decided, “God’s promises and blessings belong only to Israel.” Or “I am come only to the lost sheep of Israel.” Or “Naaman’s sins have come up before him and it is too late. I’m not going to waste my time.”

These are all real possibilities. The story could have ended here.

Entrust Others with the Truth

But Naaman waits, until someone does answer the door. But it’s not Elisha; it’s one of his servants. Elisha doesn’t abandon Naaman, but he doesn’t want him thinking that the power is in the prophet.

There is a small shadow of the New Testament church in this story, as Jesus told us, “As the Father has sent me, even so I am sending you” (John 20:21). Elisha uses this opportunity as a teaching moment for this young man, he makes him an apostle (a sent one) to deliver a message to a lost and dying man. Reader, when was the last time you sent someone to deliver the lifesaving message of Jesus? I hope it was recently, but if it wasn’t, I hope that it will be soon.

Elisha is a pivotal part of this story, but no more than the others we have looked at. He seems central, but we’re going to see that there is someone far more central. We’ll leave Elisha for a moment, but we’ll explore the rest of his part in this story in subsequent chapters.


[1] In drug and alcohol addiction ministry it resonates to say “he saves to the guttermost.”

Previous - The King of Israel                    Next - Elisha's Servant

The King of Israel - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

Irredeemable
Naaman the Leper
The Servant Girl
Naaman's Wife
The King of Syria
The King of Israel

The King of Israel

Jehoram, the king of Israel,[1] is utterly unfamiliar with the workings of God in his kingdom. Perhaps this could be forgiven him if he and his army hadn’t just been saved from dying of dehydration in the wilderness of Edom by the intercession of Elisha the prophet. As though a massive spring of water in the desert weren’t easy enough for God, he went further to save Jehoram, his army, and his allies from the hand of the Moabites. Which is more difficult? To save a man from leprosy or an army out of the hand of the enemy into whom the Lord has given them?

They are both impossible, but with God nothing is impossible! Jehoram, despite the powerful lesson he had just received, failed to open his ears to the teaching of God and so when confronted with Naaman and his letter, he tears his clothes and laments and is sure that this is some sort of trap to start (or continue) the war with Syria!

Jehoram is a hindrance to this journey that Naaman is on, so maybe we should just stop here. But if we stop the story here, then Naaman dies in his leprosy, the little girl is a liar, his wife is full of vain confidence, and Ben-Hadad ventured for nothing.

The saying goes that God can draw a straight line with a crooked stick. There is more to Jehoram than meets the eyes, and he’s not just a bad example. We can learn several things from him.

An Honest Self-Assessment

The first is that he was willing to admit his own shortcomings. “Am I God, to kill and to make alive?” Jehoram didn’t learn as much from his father’s sins as he should have, but he did learn that he couldn’t control God or be God. King Ahab–Jehoram’s late father–had four hundred and fifty prophets of Baal and four hundred prophets of Asherah who thought they could bend the will of divinity to suit the will of men. If you know the story, you know those prophets of Baal were slaughtered on Mount Carmel by Elijah and the prophets of Asherah were pursued into hiding and slaughtered by Jehoshaphat, king of Judah.

Jehoram learned by observation that he couldn’t make divine promises or force God’s will to his own service. He didn’t dare to go find a prophet of Baal or Asherah and make promises to Naaman; he had learned those false gods were not covenantal gods and were awful at fulfilling their promises. After all, if an idol could have healed Naaman, he might as well have stayed in Damascus and sought help from the statue of Rimmon. I don’t think anyone would be surprised if we learned that Naaman had already tried that.

We can learn a lot from Jehoram when he admits his own shortcomings and doesn’t promise things he cannot deliver. This may sound instinctive, but there is real humility here; many kings in history have elevated themselves to some state of deity or at least a super-human position and/or title. It was not uncommon for Caesars to accept worship, Nebuchadnezzar declared “Is not this great Babylon, which I have built by my mighty power as a royal residence and for the glory of my majesty?” (Daniel 4:30). Indeed, less than two hundred years later the people of Israel are seeking salvation from the king of Assyria: “When Ephraim saw his sickness, and Judah his wound, then Ephraim went to Assyria, and sent to the great king. But he is not able to cure you or heal your wound” (Hosea 5:13). Perhaps the most recent example was when Douglas MacArthur was closing the chapter on World War Two and required Emperor Hirohito of Japan to explicitly renounce his claim to divinity and declare his humanity.

We declare today, “Jesus is Lord” in direct defiance to the earlier declaration, “Caesar is Lord.” We have to give King Jehoram some credit that he admitted he was not God and could not do the things of God. I know some god wannabes who could learn a thing or two from him.

I was privileged a few years ago to train medical missionaries to share the gospel. There was a moment where they jokingly said that the best doctors in the world come in two sorts: 1) those that think they are God and 2) those who know they are not God.

Those that think they are God use their talents and energy to learn and apply as much as they absolutely can, and those who know they are not God do likewise with the addition that they rely on God’s wisdom and power through prayer rather than trusting and hoping in themselves. Ironically, the outcome on earth can be the same: skillfully healed people. But their outcomes in heaven are exactly opposite. The person healed by a doctor who has deified himself will be tempted to put their trust in the doctor and thereby preclude their hope from being in the living God. Martin Lloyd-Jones, a doctor turned preacher, observed that medical healing merely prolonged physical life, allowing people to go right back to sinning, and that the true need was an eternal healing of the soul, to put their trust in God rather than a doctor.

For all of the ways that Jehoram failed, he did not set himself up as the savior of Naaman.

As a chaplain, I once had a young man approach me who knew I put a great emphasis on salvation. He was at the lowest point of his life–not knowing that an even lower point was on the horizon–when he came to me in great despair. His question shocked me, “Chaplain, will you save me?”

I desperately want everyone to be saved; in fact while writing this I’m deep into a fast for the salvation of multiple loved ones, but I am utterly incapable of saving anyone. To paraphrase Paul, I can plant and I can water, but it is God who gives the growth. This is why God is everything and I am nothing (1 Corinthians 3:6–9), why Christ must increase and I must decrease (John 3:30).

Not a Glory Seeker

Had Jehoram desired the glory there are multiple ways he could have lied and taken the glory in this story. Jehoram could have assumed the role of prophet and waved his hand over the spot and declared the leper to be healed!

When Naaman invariably was not healed, Jehoram could have played the prosperity preacher and declared that the problem was not God or Jehoram, the problem was that Naaman did not have enough faith to be healed! Or his offering of the wealth of Ben-Hadad was not enough; he needed to bring more to sow the seed of faith that would lead to his healing. Or Jehoram could have declared that hidden sin in Naaman’s life was keeping him from receiving healing. The horrendous fact accusing someone of “hidden sin” is that the prophet need not have any inclination of what the sin is, he only has to declare that it’s there!

Jehoram could have also promised all sorts of different cures, he could have gone to his local Pharmacist/Sorcerer and brought back a powder or a pill that claimed supernatural healing power. He could have called it an essential oil. He could have funded research into Hansen’s disease. He could have come up with a fanciful mud-bath or ritual cleansing or detox. He could have told Naaman he needed to eat more organic food and less dairy.

Would it have worked? No–but that’s beyond the point–giving false hope and generating superstition is as effective at turning sinners from the hope of the gospel as is claiming yourself to be the God who makes alive.

Jehoram could have also brokered the healing. There is a small chance that Elisha would have come if Jehoram had summoned him; and Jehoram should have known that Elisha was able to heal Naaman in the same way he had rescued Jehoram’s army in the desert by God’s intervention. If Jehoram had called Elisha and he had healed Naaman, then Jehoram could have claimed that he was a significant part in Naaman’s healing. Can you think of any priests or peddlers who claim that if you come through them that you can receive God’s blessings?

And we must not diminish the fact that kings are able to overstep their roles in the absence of a prophet. Earlier, Saul lost his kingdom for making a sacrifice in the stead of Samuel (1 Samuel 13:8–14). Later Uzziah would be struck by leprosy in the very act of thinking he could be a priest and a king (2 Chronicles 26:16–21).

We previously considered the saying, “I am not, but I know I AM.” I am not a healer, I am not a king, I am not a savior. I am glad I’m not a savior or a hope for anyone, but as a priest I can point people to the one who can save their souls. I’m just a nobody, trying to tell everybody, about somebody, who can save anybody.

If I could have saved that young man–mentioned earlier–who approached me, would I have? If I had, I would have cut him off from the true Saviour, I would have set myself upon a pedestal that I have no business being on, and I would diminish the joy I have in seeing my disciples walking in the truth. I am not the way, the truth, or the life, and if I think for a moment that I am any of those things, or that people can come to the Father through me, then I have set myself in a very precarious place because God will not share his glory with anyone.

Thank God that Jehoram left the door open for Jesus of Nazareth–the perfect prophet, priest, and king–to be the way, the truth, and the life, and to prove that no one comes to the Father except through him (John 14:6). Truly Pontius Pilate unwittingly did us a great service when he nailed “Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews” to the cross to identify the man who would die to bring us healing and reconciliation with God, and thus secure his title as our Lord, our Saviour, and the King of kings.

Not a Hindrance to Salvation

To this living God did Naaman need to go, and Jehoram did not stand in the way. We have to see that Jehoram was willing to “let him come to [Elisha], that he may know that there is a prophet in Israel” (2 Kings 5:8). Jehoram could have stood in the way of salvation by denouncing Elisha to Naaman, declaring him to be the troubler of Israel and Syria. Or Jehoram could have kept the message a secret so that Naaman would have returned to Syria dejected and doomed. Or Jehoram could have stated that God only saves Israelites and that a Syrian enemy was beyond redemption. Or he could have invoked the law, that leprosy had utterly cut Naaman off from any hope of every being healed.

Beloved, please see that Jehoram didn’t do any of that: he allowed Naaman to go to Elisha. If Jehoram had refused, would God would have gotten Naaman where he needed to go? Probably, but by the grace of God in their lives we don’t have to wonder about middle knowledge in this case, because Jehoram did the right thing.

Doing the right thing to get someone to hope may also seem intuitive, but as of the writing of this book there are about fifty countries that have standing laws forbidding non-Christians from seeking Christ. We’ll consider more about the prophet Jonah later, but for now consider that he’d rather flee than have any chance of bringing God’s salvation and blessings to his enemies. Consider even Peter had to be rebuked for adding to the grace of God’s salvation (Galatians 2:14).

Jehoram could have hindered Naaman in all sorts of ways at this point. But, for all of his failures, Jehoram did not stand in the way of Naaman seeking a cure.

Beloved, I hope you’ll never set yourself up as the savior or stand in the way of anyone’s salvation. Point to Jesus, declare “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29), make your message one of declaring that there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name given under heaven by which we must be saved (Acts 4:12)! Be like John the Baptist who confessed, and did not deny, but confessed, “I am Not the Christ” (John 1:20). Never consider that your writing or preaching or wisdom has more power than the Word of God to make people wise for salvation in Christ Jesus. There is great rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents and returns to the Father through the Son.

I have seen several evangelistic efforts reach fruition when someone other than myself has led a person to Christ after I had planted and watered and tilled and sweated and strove over seeds for weeks and months. It was exhausting, and yet someone else was privileged to lead them to Christ.

Initially I was bitter that I was not the mid-wife in the rebirthing process at the moment that the Spirit quickened a dead soul and transferred them from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of light. But in retrospect I rejoice that I was just a messenger and that my Living Saviour gets all of the glory for his saving work! Truly, he must increase and I must decrease.

Just a week before writing this chapter a new convert told me that I was the only one who could make God’s Word make sense to him. Heaven forbid! It is the Spirit who gives life, the flesh is no help at all! It is the Spirit who makes the Bible discernible to everyone to whom he chooses to reveal the truth. I hope he uses me to save many more lost souls, but I desperately hope that none of those sinners ever thinks I was anything special other than a faithful instrument in my master’s hand.

Declare with George Whitefield,

Let the name of Whitefield perish, but Christ be glorified. Let my name die everywhere, let even my friends forget me, if by that means the cause of the blessed Jesus may be promoted.

Declare with Jehoram,

I am not God, I cannot heal or make alive!

But dear one! You have this advantage over Jehoram:

You know the God who can!


[1] Not to be confused with Jehoram the king of Judah who reigned concurrently.

Previous - The King of Syria                                Next - Elisha

The King of Syria - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

Irredeemable
Naaman the Leper
The Servant Girl
Naaman's Wife
The King of Syria

The King of Syria

The king of Syria had been greatly blessed by Naaman, and therefore had a vested interest in his recovery. The world has a way of investing in people who can serve them until–when further service is impossible–they are thrown away. This king of Syria, later revealed to be Ben-Hadad,[1] is an enigma because he was clearly an enemy of Israel, but he had some sort of affinity towards the Living God (2 Kings 8:7–8) while actively doing evil (2 Kings 6:24–25) and worshipping false gods (2 Kings 5:18). If we learn one lesson from him before we look at anything else, he reminds us that people are complicated and God’s work is myriad and mysterious as he sends the rain on the just and the unjust.

Like many of the people prior to the gift of the Holy Spirit, Ben-Hadad’s spiritual state is not easily discerned, but of all of the enemy kings (save Nebuchadnezzar and Darius) faced by the Israelites and Jews, this enemy king is most to be emulated. Why?

Spend For Others

For one, he was happy to spend for others. Imagine with me for a moment that the cost to enter heaven were $1, and someone you loved dearly was only $1 short, would you pay for their eternal blessing? If you would–and I pray that you would–then we’ve set a precedent: people are worth spending for (Romans 9:3).

If you’d spend $1, then how about $10? $100? $11,700,000? More? Obviously the cost to enter heaven is perfection, so the analogy breaks down, and our sins are costly and we can’t even pay for our own sins, let alone for others (Psalm 49:5–9), but we can pay to get others closer to the one who can ransom them.

We could look at Romans 5:6–8 for an examination of spending for people we don’t love, but that’s not apt to this story because Ben-Hadad loved Naaman, and he was willing to pay for his healing. Ben-Hadad–as much as a pagan king can–loved Naaman and sought his highest and best usefulness. How does Ben-Hadad show us that? Not by his words, but by his actions (James 2:15–16). He put his money where his mouth was. Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. He showed us where his heart was by filling up what was lacking in Naaman’s ability to be redeemed.

The Holy Spirit–through Paul–said it better than I can:

Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I am filling up what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the church, of which I became a minister according to the stewardship from God that was given to me for you, to make the word of God fully known, the mystery hidden for ages and generations but now revealed to his saints. To them God chose to make known how great among the Gentiles are the riches of the glory of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory. Him we proclaim, warning everyone and teaching everyone with all wisdom, that we may present everyone mature in Christ. For this I toil, struggling with all his energy that he powerfully works within me.

Ben-Hadad wouldn’t have been so deep or eloquent or clear, but he knew he wanted Naaman healed and he knew he was willing to pay for it. It’s difficult to put an exact price tag on what Ben-Hadad was willing to spend, but we can get close enough to know it was a lot. He sent ten talents of silver, six thousand shekels of gold, and ten changes of clothing. A talent weighed about seventy-five pounds, a shekel was just less than half an ounce, and the clothing was certainly ornate and valuable. I don’t know we can accurately put a value on the clothing, but silver and gold have standard weights so we can be pretty accurate in our estimate that Ben-Hadad sent $900,000 worth of silver and $10,800,000 worth of gold.[2] Naaman was worth a lot to Ben-Hadad.

Now, I don’t want to give too much credit to this king, because surely he was hoping to receive some gain for his efforts, but we rejoice when the kingdom of heaven is furthered even for impure motives or selfish ambition (Philippians 1:15–18). The king–almost certainly without knowing it–was proving “I will most gladly spend and be spent for your souls” (2 Corinthians 12:15).

A Sense of Urgency

Next, we’ll see that Ben-Hadad not only funded the trip, he enhanced the urgency by saying “Go now!” He sends Naaman on his way right now, immediately; other translations say “By all means go!” and “Go to. Go!”

There is no time to wait, to try another cure, to pray about it, to see if he’ll recover naturally, to consider how God can heal such a man, nor even time to count the cost. The cost had already been counted, Naaman’s life is lost without a miracle.

It has been said that the devil’s favorite day is “tomorrow,” so I wonder if Ben-Hadad was tempted to yell “Today is the day of salvation! Stop talking and start seeking the cure!” When should someone flee to Jesus for salvation? Right now! If redemption is possible we want to move people in that direction as soon as we can!

If you tarry ‘till you’re better, you will never come at all. ~ Joseph Hart

There are two reasons to “Go!” quickly to Christ, first because you’re not promised tomorrow, and second because he’s worthy to be served as soon and as early and as long as possible. Whether you are old or young reading this, know that the best time to come to Christ was as soon as you could hear his voice, the second-best time to come is right now! The best time for Naaman to have sought the true and living God was when he found out there was a true and living God, the second-best time, according to the king of Syria, is now, “Go! Now!”

Love commands urgency; pleading, commanding, urging, pushing, begging, warning, compelling, imploring people to seek the Lord while he may be found. If you tarry ‘till you’re better, you will never come at all! What are you waiting for! Go! Now!

An Advocate

The king of Syria was not a perfect king nor a follower of the living God, yet he did do many things right. One of the greatest gifts God has given to men is someone to ally with, to plead our case, to be our intercessor, and to help us open doors we couldn’t open ourselves. Ben-Hadad proved this by being Naaman’s intercessor.

Imagine if Naaman had gone to Samaria of his own volition and approached the king of Israel stating, “I’m here because I heard there is a prophet in Israel who can heal me.” Imagine the whispers and the pointed fingers and the snarled lips. They know who he is, they recognize him, they have learned to fear him, and they have learned to hate him. Imagine the accusations, “You’re here as a spy!”, “You’re looking for more little girls to steal!”, “You’re here as an enemy of Israel!”, “You’re here to get stoned!”, and “Yeah! We’ll end your leprosy…by ending your life!”

Naaman needed a letter of introduction and a powerful ally. The king of Syria does not disappoint: he says, “I will send a letter to the king of Israel.” This letter becomes Naaman’s lifeblood, without it he would have been perceived as a spy, and his chances of receiving grace and help in his time of need would be greatly diminished.

Consider another letter written by the Apostle Paul and given to a man named Tychicus to carry to a far-off church (Colossians 4:7–9). This letter explicitly tells the church to welcome a man named Onesimus with open arms–and more so–it tells his owner, Philemon, to receive him back–not as a runaway slave–but as a brother (Philemon 1:15–16). During the entire journey from Rome, I imagine Onesimus would badger Tychicus to confirm that he still had the letter and that it was still safe.

The letter to Philemon, comprising so few words it is not even broken into chapters, was Onesimus’ entire hope. Without it–as a runaway slave–he legally could be executed as a warning to other slaves. Now, of course his hope was in the living Christ for his eternity, but his earthly hope was that God was using his friend Paul’s influence and network of Christian brothers to plead his case before his earthly master.

Some people would call this “the good-ole-boy club,” where “it’s not what you know, but who you know,” and they would say so disparagingly. Indeed, this system can be horribly abused when connections are based on partiality and cliques rather than merit and love. But, God’s church is built on networks and who you know. One of the first things I do when I move is contact that nearest Baptist association; God has blessed us abundantly through this networking, but the allies we have in our conventions, synods, associations, alliances, and churches is nothing compared to our greatest ally.

The wisest bumper sticker I ever read said, “I am not, but I know I Am!” The great I Am, if you know him, is pleading your case even as you’re reading this. His will is your sanctification, your highest and best usefulness, and his glory. Robert Murray M’Cheyne, who accomplished so much for Christ, knew that he was pleaded for continuously,

If I could hear Christ praying for me in the next room, I would not fear a million enemies. Yet distance makes no difference. He is praying for me.

And one of my favorite hymns puts it this way,

Before the throne of God above
I have a strong and perfect plea
a great high priest whose name is love
who always lives and pleads for me. 
~ Charitie Lees Smith

I love the question D. James Kennedy would use to open an evangelistic conversation, “If you died tonight and God said, ‘Why should I let you into heaven?’ how would you respond?” It’s a question that cuts right to the heart of the matter.

There are lots of ways to point that question to Jesus. Going back to Shai Linne’s song Penelope Judd, I love how he tells the story of a little girl who goes on a journey to meet the king. Penelope is from the land called “mud,” and she is wholly unfit to enter the palace. When she knocks on the door her only hope becomes the invitation she is carrying, which she quickly presents.

Likewise, in John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, the scroll becomes the most prized and important possession to meet the true king. In Bunyan’s story a man is cast from the very gates of heaven when it is discovered he does not have an invitation, which had been freely offered at the cross; his lack of a scroll reveals that he had not come by way of the cross.

Reader, do you have assurance of salvation purchased in the cross of Christ? Is he pleading your case ready to stand at the gates of heaven to welcome you in? Are you pleading the case of lost sinners continually before the throne of grace? Are you interceding before men for the help of Christ’s church? When a saint moves to a new city or church, as is common in our modern world, a letter of recommendation can be the difference between a thriving ministry in a new church and starting from scratch and wasting years earning trust. It grieves me that so many churches and pastors think these letters are just old-fashioned nonsense.

It was not nonsense to Naaman or Onesimus or John Bunyan or me. The church has a lot to learn from the king of Syria, and I pray you will learn that lesson well.

Because of the faithfulness of Ben-Hadad, Naaman now has this letter of introduction that is going to keep him safe, lead him to the right people, and hopefully cure his leprosy. In urgent obedience Naaman takes the letter straight to the king of Israel.


[1] The Bible probably refers to his title rather than his name, history tells us his name was likely Hadadezer.

[2] At the time of this writing.

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Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Naaman's Wife - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

Irredeemable
Naaman the Leper
The Servant Girl
Naaman's Wife

Naaman’s Wife

Naaman’s Wife gets only two verses and we don’t know much about her, but there is just enough here to know that she is worthy to be praised. Any military wife will tell you that being married to a soldier–especially a general–is a full-time and difficult job. Late nights, long trips, curt responses, necessary secrecy, constant worry; it takes a special kind of woman to be a good wife of a military man. Many years ago my dear wife took to telling me that dinner was “classified,” because so often I had to tell her I couldn’t disclose what I was working on at the office or why my constant trips were necessary.

Naaman’s wife was in a unique position when the servant girl told her that there was a prophet in Israel that could heal her husband.

Truth, No Matter the Source

First, Naaman’s wife had to have faith that the girl was telling the truth. Like many terminal diseases, hopelessness can breed despair that leads to desperation and ignoring reason. There is a whole healing-tourism movement where people will spend their life’s savings to seek their health or the health of a loved one by flying thousands of miles to a faith healer.

Naaman’s wife doesn’t exhibit this blind despair, but she is also faced with the conundrum of trusting this little girl. There was a lot at stake in believing there might be a remedy over a hundred miles away which was at least a journey of ten days round trip. Why did she believe the girl? Perhaps the girl’s conduct was impeccable, her service was unmatched, and her faith was a shining light to Naaman’s wife. Maybe she had told the stories of Elisha’s raising of the boy? What else could that little girl have trained her mistress to know about God?

Truly this little girl embodied the idea of the starry cluster long before Amy Carmichael coined that term, and long before Daniel wrote, “And those who are wise shall shine like the brightness of the sky above; and those who turn many to righteousness, like the stars forever and ever” (Daniel 12:3). Naaman’s wife listening to and believing the word of truth from this girl’s mouth made all the difference in this story.

How much truth is lost not because it’s not preached, but because it’s not heard? It’s not enough to hear the truth, you must believe it, and Naaman’s wife believed it, regardless that it came from a completely unexpected source.

The Titus-Two Woman

Titus chapter two tells the elder women to train the younger women; it has long been pointed out that this is not measured in age, but in maturity. The girl, though younger in age, was greater in maturity, and Naaman’s wife, though decades older than the girl, was newer in maturity. I continually praise that little girl for her faithfulness, and I praise Naaman’s wife for humbling herself to understand the Psalm,

O Lord, our Lord, how majestic is your name in all the earth. You have set your glory above the heavens. Out of the mouth of babies and infants you have established strength because of your foes, to still the enemy and the avenger. ~ Psalm 8:1–2

Naaman’s wife humbled herself to receive the Word of the Lord from a little girl and to see that God doesn’t measure character by what’s on the outside, but what’s on the inside. God thrives in the practice of saving through unlikely means. Hosea declared, “I will not save them by bow or by sword or by war or by horses or by horsemen” (Hosea 1:7). If Hosea was writing about this little girl, he might have added, “The Lord will save them by a little slave girl.”

Wife, Respect Your Husband

Naaman’s wife had to care enough about her husband to relay the message. If you’re a Christian reading this, you probably instantly think, “Well of course she would want the best for her husband!” If you instantly thought that, then you’re not to be faulted, and I’m sure it’s because you’re surrounded by godly examples of service and hope. But the whole world is not seeking the welfare of their neighbors. In the last six months I’ve heard three different homeless or addicted women say–unsolicited–if they could afford to hire a hitman against their husband or ex-husband, they would do it.

Consider how easy it would be for bitterness to take over this woman’s heart and for her to say, “Serves him right for always being gone! And another thing, who knows where he got this disease, may he suffer long and may it be a miserable death! He’s getting repaid for what he’s done to me for so many years!” Maybe she wondered if he had contracted this disease from a random Moabite or Amalekite girl. Our culture says, “What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.” Surely Naaman’s soldiers had similar sayings about their exploits. We know the truth is that what happens on escapades will be judged in eternity; actions have consequences.

Would you fault Naaman’s wife if she had held Naaman’s leprosy against him? What if Naaman denied her accusations? Easy, she just doesn’t believe him and responds like Job’s wife, “Do you still hold fast to your integrity?!” (Job 2:9). Bitterness can invent all sorts of sins and once you believe them, there is no way for the accused to defend themselves. How can you repent of something that you’ve only done in someone else’s imagination?

Naaman’s wife could have reduced her husband to a mere title: Leper! Labels strip away our humanity and have a terrible way of ostracizing us from one another. They blind us to seeing people as eternal souls meant to be loved and cherished, transforming them instead into perpetrators to be feared and enemies to be avoided. Naaman’s leprosy–which had already strained the marriage physically–could have easily divided them spiritually and emotionally.

She could have proved these verses,

It is better to live in a corner of the housetop than in a house shared with a quarrelsome wife. ~ Proverbs 21:9, 25:24

A continual dripping on a rainy day and a quarrelsome wife are alike; to restrain her is to restrain the wind or to grasp oil in one’s right hand. ~ Proverbs 27:15–16

She who brings shame is like rottenness in his bones. ~Proverbs 12:4

It is better to live in a desert land than with a quarrelsome and fretful woman. ~ Proverbs 21:19

But, by the grace of God, she did not prove those verses. Whether Naaman had contacted the disease accidentally or through sin he needed his wife to respond in a loving and God-honoring way.

I bet we’d have another adage if this story had gone differently,

It is better to die of leprosy than be married to a woman scorned.

Instead, she proved herself to be an excellent wife, and I would posit that she has become the “crown of her husband” (Proverbs 12:4), as she could have ended this story right here by remaining silent in her bitterness, and in so doing she would have defiled many.

Maybe she was discipled by this little girl on how to love her husband well and seek his highest and best usefulness? Maybe the girl had shared Proverbs 31:12, “She does him good, and not harm, all the days of her life.” We will have to wait until we get to heaven to learn the answer to this question, but I wonder if Naaman’s wife wasn’t led to trust the Living God first in this family, and subsequently sought the salvation of her husband?

Would she have said amen to 1 Peter 3:1?

Wives, be subject to your own husbands, so that even if some do not obey the word, they may be won without a word by the conduct of their wives, when they see your respectful and pure conduct.

Had she begun to learn the lesson to be a friend to her husband[1] blessing him with her prayers and seeking his highest and best usefulness? Had she grasped the power of a submissive wife as described by Titus 2:5? How do you know, o wife, whether you will save your husband (1 Corinthians 7:16)?

Wives have striven against their husbands from the beginning (Genesis 3:16). They don’t naturally want to put “obey” in their wedding vows. They kick against the goads of winning their husbands without a word. And the husband of the contentious wife may wonder why the Holy Spirit needed to come to convict him when he has his wife ready and willing to show him every wrong he has ever committed.

The more I read the passage the more I am convinced that the little Israelite girl had done far more to bless more people than just Naaman, as Naaman was blessed by a helpful and fruitful wife long before he sought Elisha who pointed him to God. But these were not the only helpers on Naaman’s journey towards redemption.


[1] The word here is philoandros, not a sacrificial love but the affectionate caring love of a friend. See Titus 2:4.

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Naaman's Servant Girl - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

Irredeemable
Naaman the Leper
The Servant Girl
Naaman's Wife

The Servant Girl

Living in a very difficult situation was a little girl who had been kidnapped from Israel. The Bible is clear that she’s not just a girl, she’s a “little” girl, meaning that she is probably younger than ten. Having four little girls I am crushed to think of how her father and mother must have felt having lost her. We know the evil of the world and what often happens to slave girls; it was no different in Naaman’s day, and they must have worried themselves sick.

She was probably scared, angry, hopeless, distraught, and homesick for some or most or all of the time. But she had been raised in the fear and the admonition of the Lord.

She didn’t know it yet, but in the midst of her absolutely impossible situation, she was about to be used by God to start one of the most amazing redemption stories in all of history.

One of my happiest days was when my little six-year-old girl stood before a church business meeting to open us in our devotion and flawlessly quoted,

I have been crucified with Christ, it is no longer I who live but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me. ~ Galatians 2:20

I would hope that if my daughter were in such a hopeless situation, she would set her hope in her God and be a blessing to her captors. Heaven forbid that I ever have to find out, but undoubtedly some families and some children will find out.

Reasons to Keep Quiet

This little girl and her family did have to find out. She was serving Naaman’s wife and heard (and/or smelled) of his plight. If she were living in bitterness and hatred towards the Syrians, and especially towards the man who led the raid into her homeland and carried her off, she could have sealed Naaman’s fate. How easy it would have been for her to scream out, “Serves him right! I hope he dies a long painful agonizing horrendous death and burns in hell for what he has done to me and to my family and to all of Israel!”

Or she could have kept her mouth shut. The blessing of God could have been safely buried in her heart and no one would have been the wiser. John Calvin declared,

If the gospel be not preached, Christ is, as it were, buried.

She would not have known about Jonah since Jonah was still years from being born and had not yet refused to bring the blessing of God to the Ninevites. But her story could have been similar, this little girl could have said, “I would rather die than see Naaman healed or helped! The promises of God belong only to Israel and I will not share them with anyone, especially not him!”

She could have kept quiet in respect for pluralism. She could have seen them worshipping Rimmon and thought that their god worked for them and who was she to challenge? Who was she to tell the Syrians that their god was a product of their imagination at best and a manifestation of the devil at worst?

Or she could have opted to freeze in fear. What gave her the authority to speak? Would you be worried about being punished for bringing up the God of Israel in the midst of his enemies?

God’s Redemptive Work in Suffering

How often is the worst thing that can happen to you the best thing that can happen for Christ’s kingdom? I certainly do not wish for anyone to be kidnapped or imprisoned or held against their will, but nevertheless, I do want God’s will to be done on earth as it is in heaven.

We can look at Hadassah (also known as Esther) and Mordecai for a similar story of a girl who was thrust into the opportunity to seek the welfare of an enemy nation. She took her life in her hands to seize the opportunity she had been given (Esther 4:14–16). Another question to ask in heaven, “Was Hadassah bolstered and emboldened by this little girl in Naaman’s house? Would we have the book of Esther without this little girl’s faithfulness and example?” I imagine Hadassah had known about this little girl from the time she could understand the story.

We could also look at Joseph who spent years in prison before God used the evil that had been meant against him to save many (Genesis 50:20).

Or we could look at Richard Wurmbrand who was thrown into a Romanian prison for standing against the Communist Party and defying the churches that said communism could be reconciled with the doctrines of Christ. Wurmbrand led several prisoners and at least one guard to Christ while in prison, and summarized his time this way,

It was strictly forbidden to preach to other prisoners. It was understood that whoever was caught doing this received a severe beating. A number of us decided to pay the price for the privilege of preaching, so we accepted their terms. It was a deal; we preached and they beat us. We were happy preaching. They were happy beating us, so everyone was happy.

Or look at Richard Allen who was a slave owned by Stokley Sturgis. After Allen became a Christian, he witnessed to Sturgis and invited Methodist preachers to preach to all on the plantation. Through all of the evils of slavery, Allen was able to lead Sturgis to Christ and both will be brothers for all of eternity.

Light in the Darkness

This little girl only gets three verses in all the Bible, but she very well may be my favorite prophet. If you were to go outside and light a candle at noon, no one would be able to tell that it was lit unless you pointed it out. But if you wait until midnight on a moonless night, that single candle would illuminate its surroundings and be visible for miles.

Paul, in a similar circumstance would say,

“I want you to know, brothers, that what has happened to me has really served to advance the gospel, so that it has become known throughout the whole imperial guard and to all the rest that my imprisonment is for Christ. And most of the brothers, having become confident in the Lord by my imprisonment, are much more bold to speak the word without fear.” ~ Philippians 1:12–14

Sometimes the worst thing that can happen to you is the best thing that can happen to you. The first church where I ever served on staff was filled with wonderful saints, scholars, and evangelists. But then our pastor was given a severe cancer prognosis. He was told by his doctor to go home and get his affairs in order because he had six months to live. When he resigned as pastor the church imploded because of a lot of reasons, not least of which the elders had quietly asked a fraudulent counselor–who had contributed to eight divorces and married the wife from the eighth–to leave the church and then they had discreetly covered it all up. As hundreds of faithful Christians left that church they were welcomed into many fledgling and struggling churches in the area. To this day I am sure that the church universal was strengthened because God shut that one church down instead of leaving it to thrive as the only faithful local church in the area. The pastor, now sixteen years later, is still alive and thriving and pointing people to Christ at a different church, despite him having a non-fatal heart attack during the writing of this book.

The little girl from this story was not where she wanted to be, not where she would have chosen to be, not where she prayed to be, but she was where God was using her for his glory, her good, and the salvation of many. I wish we knew more of her story after this event, but that is another question to ask in glory.

Point to the Healer

But dear reader, notice this: she doesn’t overstep her authority. She could have said, “What he needs to do is go plunge himself in the Jordan seven times, or maybe he could try the Abana or Pharpar.” Instead, she points him to someone she knows can help.

And how does she know about Elisha? I imagine after he raised a little boy from the dead that everyone–especially the boys and girls who were friends with him and other Jewish children roughly his same age–knew all about that story. John tells us that the church will overcome by the blood of the Lamb and the power of their testimony (Revelation 12:11). Let this little girl be a lesson to you to preach the Word and tell the story of how God has worked in your life and the lives of your fellow believers.

Dear reader, are you where you want to be? Are you where God wants you to be? You may be setting the stage and being used in the hand of your Saviour to be the means for someone else’s salvation. Would you trade that for comfort? I should hope not. Will you complain in your captivity? Or will you believe and act on,

Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances, for this is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus. Do not quench the Spirit. ~ 1 Thessalonians 5:16–19

Declare with Charles Haddon Spurgeon, “I have learned to kiss the wave that throws me on the rock of ages!”

Don’t get out preached by a little girl in a hopeless situation. You have a fuller picture of who Jesus is than she did, but you can’t have a fuller hope.


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Naaman the Leper - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

Irredeemable
Naaman the Leper
The Servant Girl
Naaman's Wife

Naaman the Leper

Naaman was one of the most important people in Damascus, Syria.[1] He was a trusted and valuable advisor to the king, and he served as the commander of the army of Syria. The Bible has a surprising number of good things to say about him: he was great, held in high favor, selected by God to give victory to Syria, and a mighty man of valor. We could reasonably guess that in his youth, he was quite handsome. He was the Ulysses S. Grant of his day. Men admired him, soldiers would die for him, women counted him their savior, children pretended to be him.

In fact, his name means “pleasant, delightful, agreeable, sweet” and surely for all of the praise the Bible lauds upon him, he was Naaman indeed. But like Naomi (same root word), his sweetness had turned to bitterness when he contracted a fatal and debilitating disease called leprosy. We cannot be sure that his leprosy was the Hansen’s disease we refer to as leprosy today that is so awful, but while some scholars for decades said it could not be Hansen’s disease, more recent evidence exists that Hansen’s disease is a definite possibility. Whichever the actual diagnosis, the disease was serious and more than an inconvenience. Granted, many diseases could be leprosy, some temporary, some painful, some disgusting, some deadly; we will soon see that his king was willing to spend millions of dollars to seek to redeem and prolong Naaman’s life. He didn’t just have a rash, he was likely to die from this disease, and soon.

Leprosy–with any diagnosis–is contagious. It means you cannot sleep in the camp with your soldiers, in bed with your wife or in the house with your family, you cannot attend meetings with your king, and if you are following the biblical laws, you are very careful to keep everyone away from you. Loneliness, discouragement, and despair are sure to follow. And while Naaman was cut off from the living God by distance, tribe, and sin, he would also be excluded from being in the presence of God by his leprosy (2 Chronicles 26:21, Numbers 5:2, Leviticus 13:46).

While treatable since the mid-1900s, Hansen’s disease was incurable in Naaman’s day. It was a death sentence, and not only a death sentence, an agonizing and ghastly way to waste away. It was and is such a horrible disease that death would become a release, so long as it is not accompanied by hell.

Paul Washer emphasizes the horrid nature of leprosy and what it turns men into,

Have you ever been around lepers?

I have. A full blown, untreated case of the worst kind of leprosy is one of the most horrid things you could ever imagine. A body of wounds and sores and pus and blood and body fluid. You would smell a leper before you even walked into this hall if one was standing behind this pulpit.

Naaman had gained the whole world and yet was living in a hopeless situation. He was in imminent danger of losing everything. His body was failing him, his social capital was depleting by the minute, and he was a worshipper of a false god Rimmon (also known as Baal or ‘Adad/Hadad) who could not heal his body, let alone his soul.

Naaman was as great as the world could make him, and yet the basest slave in Syria would not change skins with him. ~ Matthew Henry

If I was going to use one word to describe Naaman, it would be irredeemable. He was without hope, without God in the world, and without anyone to tell him about the God who works miracles. But God.


[1] Aram is an alternate name for Syria, depending on your translation it may use either. I will exclusively use Syria for continuity throughout this book.

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