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Friday, June 26, 2026

Jesus - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

 

Jesus

If we only learn one thing from Naaman’s story it’s that our need is far greater than men’s ability to fix.

If our greatest need is food, we just need to work harder in agriculture and farming. If our greatest need is education and knowledge, then off to school we go. If it’s an earthly enemy, we only need advanced tactics and weapons. If it’s money, we just need the right career, or investment strategy, or rich friend. But there are certain needs on this earth that have long been incurable apart from God, and one that will remain so.

Leprosy and Sin

Leprosy was incurable until the 1940s. In the Old Testament you can count healed lepers on two fingers, and those were the very specific and clearly supernatural cases of Miriam and Naaman.

Leprosy is the perfect symbol for sin, it doesn’t kill immediately, it is not even the cause of death, it just helps you to descend deeper and deeper into pain and despair. The thief comes only to steal, kill, and destroy (John 10:10). The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23). When sin is fully grown it brings forth death (James 1:15). The steps of temptation lead down to death and hell (Proverbs 5:5).

Not only will leprosy eventually lead to your demise, it is also highly contagious. It estranges you from people, and if and when you share it with your loved ones it will curse them as well. The author of Hebrews warns, “See to it…that no ‘root of bitterness’ springs up and causes trouble, and by it many become defiled…” (Hebrews 12:15). God “will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children and the children's children, to the third and the fourth generation” (Exodus 34:7). Sin has defiled everything and everyone. Sin came into the world through one man, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned (Romans 5:12).

Leprosy is a vivid illustration of our spiritual need. Consider yourself before you knew Christ. If you’re reading this and don’t know Christ, especially pay attention to this next paragraph.

While your body may have looked intact, what did your soul look like? Truth be told, your heart and mine was and is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked; compared to my heart a leper could win a beauty pageant. Can you think of anyone you hurt deeply? My life before Christ was littered with people I tore down and/or buttressed in their idolatry. I remember one girl in high school specifically I bullied to the point of tears. I can think of many other people that I encouraged to sin. I can think of friends who died far too young and I wonder why I didn’t care enough to reach out. The swath of destruction in my path before meeting the Lord Jesus Christ is horrendous and I proved the proverb, “in their paths are ruin and misery” (Romans 3:16, Isaiah 59:7).

Like leprosy, sin also destroys relationships. Jesus promised, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God” (Matthew 5:9). A leper, if he cares about his friends, is going to keep a vast distance from them to safeguard them. No more handshakes, no hugs, no pats on the back, no more handholding.

Because of the impurity of the heart, the sinner becomes a peacebreaker. Because of the impurity of the skin, the leper loses human connection. And the ultimate relationship that suffers is with God. Jesus also said, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” (Matthew 5:8). This is mirroring the language from Psalm 24, as well as other verses, and it reminds us that heaven is holy, pure, undefiled, unstained, and perfect.

Imagine for a moment that the angels guarding the way to the tree of life were to let a leper through the gates. What would happen to heaven? Within days, if not moments, it wouldn’t be heaven any longer, it would be just like earth. No, it would be worse because of the distance it had fallen. Remember Penelope Judd from Shai Linne’s song? The angel bars the way when she approaches the door,

A huge angel answered, looked her up and down,
She knew something was wrong because he had a big frown,
‘Can I help you ma’am?’ ‘Yes, I’m here for the party!
I have invitation!’ He said, ‘I’m so sorry!
There’s no way that I can let you through these doors,
the King won’t let anyone dirty up His floors.’

How would you feel if you destroyed heaven? How would you feel if you were a leper and you knew that your carelessness had led to someone else contracting the disease? How much worse would you feel if you knew your example or inaction had led someone to hell for eternity?

Pain and Conviction

“Feel” might not be the right word, beloved, because what Hansen’s disease does is attack your nervous system. Often the damage you see done to a leper’s body is self-imposed, they cut themselves and don’t realize it, so no bandage was applied. They picked up a blazing hot pot from an oven with bare hands. They scratched their nose too hard and too often. They didn’t feel anything, but the damage was done. Dr. Paul Brand, world renowned leprosy physician said, “I cannot think of a better gift I could give my leprosy patients than pain.”

One of the great gifts God has given us is the gift of shame: of “feeling” and understanding that we are guilty and in need of forgiveness. Naaman had sought a cure for his skin condition, but in so doing he found what he really needed: a cure for his soul condition. Naaman’s leprosy ended up being the greatest thing that ever happened to him–eclipsed only by when his leprosy was healed and he met the living God. Jesus sent his promised Holy Spirit to convict us of sin, righteousness, and judgment (John 16:7–11).

What a joy when the Spirit shows us our need, because Jesus tells us, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners” (Mark 2:17). John Newton put it this way,

‘Twas grace that taught my heart to fear,
and grace my fears relieved.
How precious did that grace appear,
the hour I first believed.

Apart from God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit, do you see the despair that a leper would feel? Hopeless, alone, shameful, destitute, forsaken by God and afflicted: irredeemable.

Hope and Healing from Heaven

But then the God of heaven chose to send his only begotten Son into the world. He prepared a body for him to wear–nothing majestic or noteworthy–and Jesus dwelt among us and faced our infirmities and understood our suffering.

And he touched lepers. He touched lepers regularly and on purpose. The bacteria that causes leprosy doesn’t care if you touch a leper on accident or on purpose, it is highly contagious and just cares about that opportunity for transfer.

Haggai backed the priests into a conundrum by asking if a holy garment could make food clean that was carried in it. The answer is obviously not. But what if that garment has been on or touched a dead body and food is carried in it? Then the food is obviously defiled (see Haggai 2:10–14). I wouldn’t want to eat it, and obviously neither would you, and God certainly wouldn’t accept it as holy. Men can defile everything, but they cannot make anything holy or acceptable.

But Jesus is about to turn that principle upside down, proving that he’s not just a good man, he is the holy God. When Moses approached the burning bush, God’s presence had made even the dirt holy (Exodus 3:4–5). When Isaiah’s unclean lips were touched by a coal from God’s altar, his lips were sanctified (Isaiah 6:6–7). And in the New Creation every cooking vessel will be just as holy as if it were set-apart solely for temple use (Zechariah 14:21).

Jesus remains holy, innocent, unstained, separated from sinners, and exalted above the heavens (Hebrews 7:26), despite touching lepers regularly and on purpose. When a woman with an incurable bleeding disorder touched him, he was not diminished though something magnificent happened, “Someone touched me, for I perceive that power has gone out from me.” His holiness and his power were infinite, and his ability to heal, redeem, and restore were likewise. The woman was healed in body and soul and Jesus was not defiled in the least (Luke 8:43–48).

Jesus did not have to touch people to heal them, he could say the word and they would be restored, made whole, and cleansed. A military commander had recognized this when he saw the authority in Jesus but was sure he was not worthy for Jesus to enter his house, so he asked Jesus to heal his servant from a distance, which Jesus promptly did (Matthew 8:5–13). J. C. Ryle summarized this story with, “Christ’s Word is as good as His presence.”

If Jesus didn’t have to be in close proximity to lepers, and he certainly didn’t have to touch them, then why did he? Couldn’t he have just said the word from his throne in heaven? Remember, no one touched lepers, they had felt no embrace nor no human warmth because their condition had cut them off from human interaction.

Even when they had the understanding as the military commander from above, and knew Jesus just need to say a word, he still touched them (Matthew 8:2–4). There were strict guidelines for what a leper was supposed to do after cleansing, found in Leviticus 14:2–32, but it had lain dormant and unused for thirteen-hundred years. If anyone needed proof that Jesus was the Messiah, this should have been it, that healing for leprosy had arrived. The healing of lepers was sent as a sign to John the Baptist as evidence that Jesus was indeed the promised Messiah (Matthew 11:5). There is no evidence that this passage had ever been obeyed by any leper or priest prior to Jesus beginning his ministry.

The Healing of Body and Soul

If leprosy, the incurable disease, was being cured, what else could be cured? Cancer, HIV/AIDS, dementia, diabetes, rabies; certainly, all of these and more could be healed by Jesus. This is a light thing in the sight of the Lord.

There is one tragic twist we must consider, illustrated when, near the end of his worldly ministry, Jesus approached ten lepers in a village near Samaria and they begged him to heal them. After he healed them, they went off rejoicing, but only one returned to worship him (Luke 17:11–19).

Remember, Naaman sought the cure and found the Christ. It is more than possible to receive the cure and miss the Christ, as evidenced by these nine lepers. We’ve previously considered medical doctor D. Martin Lloyd-Jones who left medicine because he wanted to see people truly saved and transformed, and not merely healed to go back to a life of sin. The miracle of modern medicine is healing bodies left and right while doing nothing for the soul. HIV was a death sentence just thirty years ago, but now with the right treatment it’s just a major inconvenience. What a shame that the body can be healed and the soul left untouched.

So how do we get to the point of healing soul and body? It’s not in taking care of people’s worldly needs, though there is certainly a place for charity. Naaman needed nothing of material value, and if he did need something, he would not have asked the Israelites. God is in the practice of using all things for good to see his saints saved, he’s not willing that even a single one of them should perish, but that they would all come to repentance. God is using all things? All things. Even leprosy? Even leprosy. Remember,

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

The Great Exchange

I don’t often argue with Matthew Henry, but I have to make an exception: someone did switch places with Naaman.

Paul tells us, “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:21) and “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us…” (Galatians 3:13).

Peter tells us, “He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. By his wounds you have been healed” (1 Peter 2:24). And Isaiah drives the point home,

Surely he has borne our griefs
    and carried our sorrows;
yet we esteemed him stricken,
    smitten by God, and afflicted.
But he was pierced for our transgressions;
    he was crushed for our iniquities;
upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace,
    and with his wounds we are healed.
All we like sheep have gone astray;
    we have turned–every one–to his own way;
and the Lord has laid on him
    the iniquity of us all. ~ Isaiah 53:4–6

Jesus loved Naaman in this way, that he went to a Roman cross to be abandoned by God and men, to face the full consequences of sin and to pay the wages of sin, so that we can receive eternal life in him (Romans 6:23). Surely the thief comes only to steal, kill, and destroy, but Jesus came to give life and life abundantly (John 10:10). Horatius Bonar illustrates the great exchange this way,

Upon a life I did not live, upon a death I did not die, I stake my whole eternity.

For reasons that I cannot comprehend, God loved Naaman and chose to save him despite his sins and idolatry. I find it equally perplexing that only Naaman was healed of leprosy in the days of Elisha. God’s hand was not shortened, but like Gehazi they would not seek the cure or the God who heals.

Zechariah promised a day of mourning was coming and that “On that day there shall be a fountain opened for the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, to cleanse them from sin and uncleanness” (Zechariah 13:1). That day happened two thousand years ago, and that fountain is still open and cleansing today. Jesus doesn’t just cleanse the outside, he washes us in our inward parts, he makes our hearts new, he transforms our souls, he makes us new creations. He works in his greatest enemies, he worked in the Syrians, he worked in the Assyrians, he worked in the Babylonians, and chiefest of all, he works in you and I.

A leper was hopeless, but you can be a leper and know God intimately and have an expectation of eternal healing. A sinner is more hopeless, they are without God in the world and have no hope of redemption in themselves. Take a moment to consider the worst, most debased, most hopeless, most irredeemable sinner you know…maybe they’re looking at you in the mirror, and know that God is able to cleanse them, even them, from sin.

Now there are some incurable diseases, but sin is not one of them! ~ S. M. Lockridge

Washed in the Blood

Three days later Jesus defeated death, proving he had laid down his life so that he could take it back up again and open the gates of heaven to people who heretofore had been banned from entry.

In heaven there will be one man with scars, and it won’t be Naaman or Paul or Isaiah, it will be the one we call the “Lamb who was slain.” You’ll be able to see the nail pierced hands that are healing nations, the bruised heal that crushed the serpent’s head, the scar where his broken heart was revealed, and his head where the Lord of all was crowned with scorn. You’ll also be able to see his navel which proves he was and is fully God and fully man.

For the rest of us, who have a multitude of scars on earth, we must realize that it’s not just leprosy that’s banned from heaven: scabs, scars, deformities, all of these will keep a person out of heaven. If you think you haven’t been afflicted by the fall, just consider your bellybutton which proves you need a Saviour. Even if you somehow kept yourself entirely from sin, the effect of the curse of sin would be enough to bar you from the presence of God:

He shall not go through the veil or approach the altar, because he has a blemish, that he may not profane my sanctuaries, for I am the Lord who sanctifies them. ~ Leviticus 21:23

Heaven, the ultimate sanctuary of God, is closed to you. Even though Jesus has opened heaven’s gates, we have this continuing guarantee, “its gates will never be shut by day–and there will be no night there. They will bring into it the glory and the honor of the nations. But nothing unclean will ever enter it, nor anyone who does what is detestable or false” (Revelation 21:25–27)…But, if you’ll come to Jesus, you can partake in a wonderful promise, just one more reason to love the Lord Christ,

Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, so that he might present the church to himself in splendor, without spot or wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without blemish. ~ Ephesians 5:25–27

If your hope of sanctification is in a law, it is useless,

For on the one hand, a former commandment is set aside because of its weakness and uselessness (for the law made nothing perfect); but on the other hand, a better hope is introduced, through which we draw near to God. ~ Hebrews 7:18–19

There is one hope that saves, Christ in us, the hope of glory.

We have this as a sure and steadfast anchor of the soul, a hope that enters into the inner place behind the veil, where Jesus has gone as a forerunner on our behalf. ~ Hebrews 6:19–20

If you’re in a place where you can sing, then sing William Cowper’s magnificent hymn, There is a Fountain Filled With Blood (if not, just read),

There is a fountain filled with blood
Drawn from Immanuel's veins;
And sinners, plunged beneath that flood,
Lose all their guilty stains.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Gehazi - 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
Naaman's Servants
Naaman the Cleansed
Gehazi

Gehazi

As we near the end of this passage we have to talk about the tragic case of Gehazi. Gehazi is the Judas in this story.

Consider Judas Iscariot for just a moment: He spent three years as a disciple of Christ, he heard most of his sermons, he witnessed the miracles, he heard the promises, he ate at the same table, his feet were washed, and he went to hell anyways. What ultimately was his downfall? He had been pilfering from the money bag for some time (John 12:6) and his greed finally got the better of him (Matthew 26:15).

Before we delve into Gehazi’s story we have to read 1 Timothy 6:10:

The love of money is a root of all kinds of evils, it is through this craving that some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many pangs.

Consider warnings about greed, “The Pharisees, who were lovers of money, heard all of these things, and they ridiculed him” (Luke 16:14), “An overseer must…not be a lover of money” (1 Timothy 3:2–3), and “Understand this, that in the last days there will come times of difficulty. For people will be lovers of self, lovers of money…” (2 Timothy 3:1–2). Jesus said it best when he warned,

No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money. ~ Matthew 6:24

Gehazi is about to prove that a penny pressed to the eye can blot out all of creation, and can even blind us to the grace and love of God.

A Slow Fade

As we meet Gehazi, he is not yet a greedy, sneaky, lying malcontent. Beloved, if you get one point from this chapter, know this: that sin will lie in waiting, crouching at your door ready to devour you when it gets the chance. Just because you don’t have a serious temptation to run after money right now doesn’t mean that that there is not a deep-seated sin in your life that could.

It’s not just about money; it’s about faithfulness in every facet of the Christian life. Demas fell in love with the worldly pleasures at Thessalonica after faithfully serving with Paul, and he ran off, breaking all of our hearts.

Consider marriage, we all want to be faithful to our spouse, but every adultery case I’ve ever counseled was not a case of openly seeking out an adulterous relationship; it was a matter of unexpected opportunity.

Let me offer a frightening example: If I offered you a million dollars to work from sunrise to sunset every Sunday for the next year in a non-ministerial context, would you take it? If you know where I’m going with this, please reread the question and answer it afresh.

If you’d be willing to skip church for that money, to neglect the meeting together with God’s saints, to miss the opportunity to encourage them so long as it’s called today, then you very well could be the Gehazi in your own story. I don’t want that, and you don’t want that, so pay attention to where Gehazi went astray so you can keep to the narrow path.

The Warning Signs

When we meet Gehazi he is a faithful servant of Elisha delivering messages and helping to bless people, including the Shunamite woman who did so much to support Elisha’s ministry. Our first inclination that something is wrong is when the Shunamite falls at the feet of Elisha after her son has died and holds tightly to his feet; Gehazi promptly seeks to push her away, there is no compassion, no questioning, no prayer…but that’s not a dead giveaway to his sins, didn’t the disciples do the same?

And they were bringing children to him that he might touch them, and the disciples rebuked them. But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant…~ Matthew 19:13–15, Mark 10:13, Luke 18:15–17

Elisha likewise was indignant, “Leave her alone, for she is in bitter distress, and the Lord has hidden it from me and has not told me” (2 Kings 4:27). Gehazi’s heart began to show that maybe he was in ministry for something other than the joy of serving God and people.

Gehazi is sent ahead of Elisha to lay Elisha’s staff on the face of the child, but no resurrection occurs. Now, Gehazi can hardly be faulted, I can’t raise the dead either, but here is an important fact here that is easy to miss. Elisha was Elijah’s servant, and when Elijah was taken up, Elisha received a double-portion of the Spirit that rested on him. It could be assumed that Gehazi was in line to receive a double portion of the Spirit that was on Elisha. That would be quite a ministry and blessing! But alas, the student cannot rise above his teacher, but this requires full training (Luke 6:40).

In Gehazi’s failed miracle we see that something is already wrong, that some hindrance has already moved into his life and is holding him back. It’s subtle and if what happened with Naaman had not revealed Gehazi’s heart I wouldn’t mention it just from this example, but it reminds us that weight and sin can cling so closely to hinder the race that is set before us (Hebrews 12:1).

Now, we don’t want to be heresy hunters or throw out any wheat with the tares, so I would never have encouraged Elisha to fire Gehazi right there and then.

But I do want to point out that when we see failures in ministry or character that we should be calling our friends out. Two examples from my life grieve me deeply.

The first was a friend who asked me to baptize him. I thought I’d seen fruit in his life and so I agreed. He was enamored with the early church and discovered that in certain segments of the early church it was common for both baptizee and baptizer to fast before the baptism. I’m always up for a fast, so we agreed on a nice easy 30-hours. The afternoon of the baptism at the local lake I asked him how his fast had gone because mine had been rougher than I expected. He shrugged it off and nonchalantly said that he hadn’t fasted. Now, this may be a minor point but my conscience was troubled. However, because many of his family members had come, I succumbed to social pressure and baptized him. Or I should say I got him wet, because he has since run off to make shipwreck of his faith and family. In our last conversation he told me that I place too much emphasis on Jesus. Was it Leonard Ravenhill who said,

Many pastors criticize me for taking the Gospel so seriously. But do they really think that on Judgment Day, Christ will chastise me, saying, ‘Len, you took Me too seriously’?

Another friend preached a heartfelt message on how he had been on the brink of suicide and had come back. As he closed the sermon, I realized there had been no mention of Jesus or the gospel and barely any mention of God. After the sermon I approached him and said I was glad he was still with us, but that next time he needs to point the glory to Jesus and explain how someone in a similar situation could find hope. He, just like my other friend, shrugged it off. Unfortunately, he is now out chasing titles and social media followers and Jesus is still absent from his messages.

Now, I want to reiterate that we don’t expel someone for a mistake or lack of power or even a sin, and I won’t criticize Elisha, but I will criticize me: I should have been much more somber and prayerful in confronting those young men than I was.

I still pray for their salvation and fruitfulness, and indeed I stopped to pray for both of them while writing this. Could many who were on the path of Gehazi and Judas be turned from their wicked ways before they fell? Indeed, and many are saved and that’s why their stories aren’t cautionary narratives in the Bible. The verse that won’t leave my mind is “Folly is bound up in the heart of a child, but the rod of discipline drives it far from him” (Proverbs 22:15).[1]

Sin Seizes the Opportunity

Now we get to the sad part of the story, Gehazi has seen the miracle of cleansing and he has witnessed Naaman transformed into a new man, but he has not rejoiced in either. What he has seen all too clearly is Elisha turning down millions of dollars worth of spoils. Doesn’t Elisha know what could be done for the seminary with that sort of money? Doesn’t Elisha see the opportunity he is squandering?

Consider these ethical dilemmas surrounding money: Imagine a person in your church won the lottery and wanted to tithe on their winnings, would you accept? What if a large casino wanted to donate a large sum of money to your ministry?

Both of these have really happened, and in the cases I’m aware of both were turned-down. Doesn’t that seem like such a waste? After all, money is fungible, it is not tied to the sins that earned it, is it? Both the lottery and casino prey on souls: they help to keep the poor in poverty and offer fleeting pleasure as a bait and switch for lasting sin and suffering. Probably the only place I agree with the Pharisees is when they wouldn’t accept the blood money back from Judas but instead used it to buy the cemetery he would be buried in. In the case of the casino, the ministry was a rescue mission and the director said, “I can’t accept their money, half of the people I serve are here because of them.”

But that’s not exactly what’s happening in Naaman’s story, is it? It’s similar, but different. Imagine if you could purchase healing and salvation. The earliest antichrist to invade the church is a man named Simon Magus, or Simon the Magician. He was a local hero in Samaria until Deacon Philip showed up. Both of them were doing mighty wonders, but only Philip had the Word of God, and the people paid attention to it and there was much joy (Acts 8:8).

Even Simon was baptized, but folly was still bound up in his heart, just like Gehazi’s. He was a man who previously liked to claim himself to be somebody great, and on a fateful day Peter and John arrived to lay hands on the new converts. Simon watched in absolute amazement as this incalculable gift was poured out on the new believers in Samaria.

His greed got ahold of him and he offered to buy this ability, begging, “Give me this power also, so that anyone on whom I lay my hands may receive the Holy Spirit” (Acts 8:19). Peter rebuked him sharply, and while there was worldly sorrow, an early Christian writer named Irenaeus tells that after Simon was rebuked by Peter, he applied himself not to repentance but to his dark arts, even to the point that “he is said to have been honoured with a statue [by Claudius Caesar], on account of his magical power.”

From Simon we have derived the word “simony” or the idea that you can buy salvation or sell blessings.[2] Had Elisha accepted even a penny then Naaman would have been in a position to tell the Syrians that he had purchased his healing.

Beloved, the second you pay for grace, it is no longer grace. If you have any reason to think that you can stand before Jesus in heaven and declare that you have earned your adoption, your forgiveness, your reconciliation, or your place in heaven, then you are in store for a painful awaking. The entire book of Galatians is written to this point that if you desire to earn your salvation by keeping the law, you are

obligated to keep the whole law. You are severed from Christ, you who would be justified by the law; you have fallen away from grace. For through the Spirit, by faith, we ourselves eagerly wait for the hope of righteousness. ~ Galatians 5:3–5

Therefore, it was not just an act of generosity that Elisha would not accept anything from Naaman’s hand, it was eternally important and theologically vital to declare that the grace and blessings of God are not earned by any amount of obedience or money or prayer or scripture reading or fasting or synagogue attendance or any such thing. Because of Elisha’s refusal to be compensated, Naaman would go home with a clear understanding that the Lord of all the earth was a God who gives abundantly out of his grace, freely and without expense.

Imagine for a moment that Elisha had accepted those millions of dollars? What message would that send to the world? Salvation is available, If you can afford it. Theologically it was imperative that Naaman not pay a cent towards his cleansing. Paul would later say that “to the one who works, his wages are not counted as a gift, but as a due” (Romans 4:4), and that if we work for it “grace would no longer be grace” (Romans 11:6).

But when Naaman left, the heart of Gehazi was bound up in his saddlebags. Gehazi was watching an immense fortune disappear into the distance and he couldn’t stand it. Notice, instead of considering if it was a sin, he justified himself by saying that Naaman had been spared of paying. Sin has a nasty way of making you think you deserve its fleeting pleasures. And so, he ran after Naaman, his feet struggling to catch up with his covetousness.

As he reaches Naaman he isn’t just covetous, he makes himself a liar: inventing a fanciful story that Elisha had sent him to provision two new prophets. Sin begets sin, and one sin rarely stays solitary. We know that Gehazi knew he was wrong because he hides the spoils in his own house. Always remember that what’s done in the darkness will be brought to the light, and that secrets have a way of making us feel ashamed, fearful, and guilty. If you have any temptation to hide what you’ve done, you ought not have done it. If you’re currently hiding something, bring it to the light as soon as possible so God doesn’t have to expose it!

Gehazi has one final sin to commit as he returns to Elisha, who–in wonderful emulation of God–doesn’t accuse, though he already knows the truth, he asks, “Where have you been, Gehazi?” And Gehazi, instead of confessing his sin, digs himself in deeper, “Your servant went nowhere.”

Elisha already knew the truth, so he pronounces the judgement: the leprosy of Naaman would find its way into Gehazi, and instantly his skin was like snow. Further, because leprosy is so contagious, the curse did not end at Gehazi, but it extended to his family as well.

This may seem unfair, but truth be told, what really happened was that Gehazi’s skin now matched his heart which had already been exposed. Diseased, sick, far from God, and festering in the effects of sin and selfishness. Because of their association with Adam first and Gehazi second, his followers and family were already defiled, now their skin would show what was in their hearts.

Hopeless in a Land of Hope

But there is hope for lepers, is there not? Indeed, there is, just as Naaman sought a cure and met the living God, so could Gehazi have gone and dipped in the Jordan seven times and humbled himself before the Lord, praying, seeking his face, turning from his wicked ways, and the Lord would have heard from heaven and healed the leper.

But for whatever reason, most likely pride and bitterness, Gehazi did not do any of that. Jesus tells us, “In the days of Elisha there were many lepers in Israel, and none of them was cleansed, but only Naaman the Syrian” (Luke 4:27).

Maybe someone didn’t exhort him in that direction or maybe he refused. It certainly wasn’t that God’s arm was shortened and he couldn’t cleanse Gehazi. Most likely it was because Gehazi’s eyes were still on the treasure, which by no accounts did he repent of or return. Spurgeon gives this warning of how an idol can blind us to salvation,

If, indeed, you do look at anything except Christ, it may be the Holy Spirit will never strive with you again, your conscience will become hardened, and you, being given up to your idols, will perish, utterly perish, under the sound of the gospel! Perish with the light of the gospel shining in your eyes, perish from the serpent bite while the brazen serpent is lifted high, perish from thirst when the water of life runs rippling at your feet, because you are not content to stoop down and take it as God presents it to you.

If we are fortunate, we’ll be confronted with a choice when we are caught in sin. Consider Peter and Judas; both men had betrayed Jesus appallingly, both thought they were lost for eternity. If you read about Peter after his betrayal, I am sure he thought he was the son of perdition. Similarly, if you read about Judas, there is genuine sorrow for his actions, but his sorrow does not lead him to seek Jesus, it leads him to seek the priests and to end his suffering in any way possible.

O how I wish one of those priests had said to Judas, “You know I can’t help you! Why don’t you go ask your Messiah who you spent the last three years with and see if he won’t put some of his forgiveness to work in you?” I’m saddened by how many people think that God cut Judas off from salvation: the story is clear that Judas cut himself off from hope when he committed suicide. What a different story it would be if just one person had reminded Judas of the gospel he had heard so many times and rejected.

How the story of Gehazi would have been different if someone had reminded him of Naaman’s healing and exhorted him to go and do likewise. If you were Gehazi’s friend, wouldn’t you say something like, “Hey, I’m going swimming in the Jordan and I’m going to pray and seek the Lord, want to come with me?” Or maybe a friend like Amrah to pick him upexposing themselves to the disease in the processand carry him to the bank of the Jordan and throw him in...repeatedly? I say fairly often, “If I could shake you and make you obey the gospel, you’d better believe you’d be getting shaken right now.” If I could cleanse Gehazi by throwing him into the river, he’d better plug his nose.

Beloved, do you have friends like Gehazi and Judas who have rejected Christ and are on their way to a hopeless and Christless eternity? Won’t you remind them of the cleansing power? Is it too late for them? So long as their hearts are beating, their lungs are breathing, and their brain is waving, it’s not too late. Maybe this line from William Cowper’s hymn There is a Fountain will speak new life into your evangelistic zeal:

Dear dying Lamb, Thy precious blood
Shall never lose its power,
’Till all the ransomed church of God
Be saved, to sin no more,
Be saved, to sin no more,
’Till all the ransomed church of God,
Be saved, to sin no more.

God is Still Working

We meet Gehazi one more time a few chapters later. Some commentators think that chapter eight happened before chapter five, but while some authors like John Mark use asynchronous storytelling in his gospel account, the author of First and Second Samuel, Kings, and Chronicles does not make a habit of it. Plus, chapter eight happens seven years after chapter four, so it’s very hard to say this was before Gehazi had been cursed with leprosy.

There is a wonderful story in chapter four lepers who started to hide spoils, but then come to their senses and bless the whole city of Samaria. Some would want to force Gehazi into this story, but I believe he would be named if he were there, and I believe his repentance would be made much of.

But in chapter eight we meet Gehazi speaking to Jehoram about the miracles of Elisha. Now, Jehoram has had much time to acquaint himself with these miracles and should have sought Elisha personally to hear of his work many years hence. But Jehoram is still rejecting Elishah. As the quote goes, “The best time to plant a tree was twenty years ago, the second best to plant a tree is today.”

Likewise, “The best time to seek the Lord is when you first learned to listen, the second-best time to seek the Lord is today!” Jehoram is seeking from a distance, hearing about the works of God through an unlikely source. The law did not forbid conversation with lepers, only being in close proximity to them. How it was that Gehazi gained an audience with the king is not stated, but he is there at the exact right moment when the Shunamite woman from chapter four seeks the king to regain her property which somehow had been lost. Gehazi is able to vouch for her and sway the king to have all of her property restored.

In the redemption of that woman’s property, Gehazi gets another reminder that God redeems the irredeemable. Yet there is still no indication of his repentance, and definitely no indication of his restoration.

I have an affinity for Gehazi, because in a lot of ways he is me. Worldly pleasures catch my eye constantly, the love of money is rooted deep in my heart, sin is constantly crouching at the door, and salvation is so close I can touch it.

I am a collector and connoisseur of testimonies and I know how God has quickened dead souls to life, I have seen him redeem the irredeemable, I have seen him restore marriages that had already ended in divorce, and I have seen him “restore the years that the locusts have eaten” in dozens if not hundreds of ways.

And so had Gehazi. By the grace of God, the difference between him and I is that I have sought this miracle working God to work in my life, to cleanse me in the inner places, and to restore my soul. But I can sing with absolutely no deceit,

Prone to wander, Lord I feel it,
Prone to leave the God I love;
Here’s my heart, Lord, take and seal it,
Seal it for thy courts above. 
~ Robert Robinson

I cannot fathom the pride and bitterness that could keep a person from so great a salvation, but Gehazi helps me to understand. I know that without God’s grace that I would make Gehazi astonished at my obstinance. There is no use in praying for the dead, but I sincerely hope that Gehazi sought the Lord before he stepped into judgment.

There but for the grace of God go I.

~ John Bradford

Hope was at hand, the question is: Did he reach out and take hold of it? Beloved, have you? Whatever happened to Gehazi, he is your warning take hold of the cure while it may be found. Be more like Peter and less like Judas as you seek the blessings of God.


[1] I’m not advocating the beating of disciples, only discipling them with as much fervency as is required.

[2] Interesting Fact: The heresy Simony is why followers of Menno Simons have opted to be called Mennonites, not Simonites.

Previous - Naaman the Cleansed                         Next - Jesus

Naaman the Cleansed - 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
Naaman's Servants
Naaman the Cleansed

Naaman the Cleansed

We’ve already said a lot about Naaman, all of which can be summed up that he was as great as the world could make him but the basest slave in Syria would not change places with him. We’ve seen that he is in great need, and that he’s a great man and he knows it. He has desperately been seeking a cure from leprosy, but heretofore there is no indication that he has sought salvation or a reprieve from sin or to know the living God.

Seven instruments in the hand of God have gotten him to where he is now. A slave girl, his wife, his king, the King of Israel, Elisha, Elisha’s servant, and his servants. Yet he is still without hope and without God in the world, but he has received a great promise from heaven. Naaman could have cut himself off from hope at this exact moment. He could have hardened his heart and refused. But in a beautiful act of submission he obeys this gospel, the gospel that God is near to the brokenhearted and saves us when we believe on him.

So, to the Jordan we go. Muddy, murky, slow. Nothing medicinally appealing. No waterfalls. No grandeur. Just a promise of cleansing.

Just a promise of cleansing!

Into the water Naaman goes, and he dunks once…and nothing. Still as leprous as ever. No sign of improvement, no feeling of hope, no lights nor doves from heaven. The temptation to give up must have been intense.

Naaman has surely been duped, made a fool of, misled, humiliated. After all, leprosy is irredeemable and Naaman is doomed. Surely Satan screams in his ear that this is all foolish. I imagine the temptation to stomp out of that river must have increased with every dunk. The prize is not for the one who starts the race, but to the one who wins the race. So Naaman continues to trust God.

He dunks again, and no result. A third time, nothing. Nothing. Nothing.

Seven Steps to Cleansing

God is working in the repeated dunks. It’s not God needs seven steps to cleanse leprosy, it’s that God is working in Naaman’s heart.

S. M. Lockridge, preaching on Naaman, draws a line to salvation that is seven steps long. I’ve bolded his words, the rest is my commentary:

The first dunk is a willingness to consider that Christ is king and is mighty to save; not believing it yet, but at least considering.

The second dunk is humility, recognizing that you cannot save yourself, and you need a better savior than what you can do for yourself.

The third dunk is belief, realizing that Jesus is who he says he is, the King of kings and the Lord of lords, the suffering servant, the one who died but yet lives, the one who is able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to him in faith.

The fourth dunk is faith, believing that Jesus is who he says he is and his great friendship and healing can be applied to your life, if you’ll only place your hope in him.

The fifth dunk is trust, not just believing in Jesus or hoping in him, but relying on him. When we are weak, then God’s power is displayed in us as his grace is sufficient; trust is declaring, “Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me… For when I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Corinthians 12:9–10).

The sixth dunk is repentance, turning from trusting in yourself to trusting in God. We’ll see in a few pages that Naaman will renounce his false god to worship the Living God. Naaman has already turned from his anger to humble himself in the Jordan River. It’s not enough to turn from sin, we must turn towards the Saviour who is able to make us clean.

The seventh dunk is obedience. Consider this: Naaman could have gone home to Syria without ever visiting the Jordan river all the while loudly declaring, “If I’ll just go dunk seven times in the Jordan I’ll be healed!” No matter how ecstatic he was, no matter how much he believed the promise, it still had to be acted upon. It has been said that it is possible to miss heaven by twelve inches.[1] Naaman could have believed God’s promises, but the transformation occurred not when Naaman believed it was possible, but when he submitted himself wholly to the Lord.

Beloved, take a moment to reenact Naaman’s dunking seven times. I’m sure you’ll be shocked at how long and embarrassing it feels. There is nothing exalting in this act, it feels repetitive, and after six times it feels futile, like it’s an absolute farce. I’m sure the first dunk was the hardest, but after the first, I’d bet the seventh felt like just wasting his time.

Full Atonement, Can it Be?

But he was not wasting his time. Naaman came out of that water as good as new. His leprosy was washed away and his skin was like a baby’s.

If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come. ~ 2 Corinthians 5:17

Lew Wallace in his masterful work, Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ, does an excruciating and lengthy look at the horrors of leprosy and how it isolates people from their friends and family and robs them of hope. Near the end of the book (spoiler alert), a dear friend, Amrah, of one leprous woman[2] learns that Christ is actively healing lepers. Up to this point they have spoken at great distances and Amrah, who is healthy, has delivered food that is keeping this hopeless woman alive.

Upon learning of Christ, Amrah rushes in rapturous excitement to her leprous friend and embraces her with true love and affection; surely a death sentence if Christ were not in the story. She urgently explains the hope that has been born within her, Christ in her the hope of glory. Together they rush off to find him. They learn that he has left Bethany and is on his way to Jerusalem. Wallace, in expert writing, introduces us to the fact that there are two main roadways from Bethany to Jerusalem, so in desperation, walking by faith and not by sight, they choose a path. By providence or their good fortune, they encounter first a disciple, then a throng which turned violent at them because leprosy was still a fearful ailment, but then over the rise Jesus of Nazareth appears. As he promises healing, she believes. For a few moments nothing happens but joy and expectation.

As the healing of the woman (and her daughter) commences, Wallace takes poetic license to describe the event; this may be accurate, or the actual healing of lepers may be much better, but regardless it brought tears to my eyes at my first reading and even now in writing this. O soul, meditate on the newfound hope and life that was poured out on that (fictional) day, then consider how many actual souls have been healed of leprosy and far worse,

There was first in the hearts of the lepers a freshening of the blood; then it flowed faster and stronger, thrilling their wasted bodies with an infinitely sweet sense of painless healing. Each felt the scourge going from her; their strength revived; they were returning to be themselves. Directly, as if to make the purification complete, from body to spirit the quickening ran, exalting them to a very fervor of ecstasy. The power possessing them to this good end was most nearly that of a draught of swift and happy effect; yet it was unlike and superior in that its healing and cleansing were absolute, and not merely a delicious consciousness while in progress, but the planting, growing, and maturing all at once of a recollection so singular and so holy that the simple thought of it should be of itself ever after a formless yet perfect thanksgiving.

And so Naaman emerged from his seventh dip. A new man, cleansed outwardly but much more importantly inwardly. And how do we know? Because of how he responded.

The Free Gift of God is Eternal Life

Naaman got what he was looking for, and more. Truly God is able to do more abundantly than we can ask or imagine. At this point Naaman could have just gone home, after all, his leprosy was gone. But he chooses to visit Elisha. And this time Elisha meets with him face to face. No cost was required and no payment was set, but out of an abundance of gratitude in his heart Naaman is ready to pay for his newfound salvation.

When Elisha refuses, Naaman insists, proving the proverb, “Buy truth, and do not sell it…” (Proverbs 23:23), and showing that knowing God and finding the treasure of Christ is worth giving up all you own. Beloved, learn from these men, that to know Christ and to know him better is worth all of your earthly wealth, and all that you have obtained should be freely given to enrich others with the soul saving knowledge of Christ Jesus. After all, isn’t his Bible written to make you wise for salvation in Christ Jesus? We’ll speak more about the payment for salvation when we delve the tragic tale of Gehazi.

Remember the Deeds of the Lord

Naaman, seeing that he cannot buy salvation, asks for two muleloads of Israelite soil. First let’s state that this dirt is utterly worthless, especially only two muleloads, so it wasn’t for monetary reasons. Scholars are mixed on what this dirt means, so I’m going to confidently assert my beliefs. Naaman had to travel to Israel to find a cure and declared, “Behold, I know that there is no God in all the earth but in Israel!” (2 Kings 5:15). In so doing he did not yet have a firm grasp that the Lord is the God of all creation, in some way he must have equated that God lived and was constrained to Israel. I surely hope that he had a conversation with that little servant girl when he got home and she declared that God had been with her in Syria just as he had been with him in Israel. But, in bringing home that dirt he was bringing a sort of ebenezer as a reminder that he was not just healed, he was healed by the only God in all the earth.

What did he do with it? Matthew Henry thinks he built an altar, others think he made a garden to watch grow with his faith. Whatever he did with it, dear reader, you know that your God is in the heavens, he does whatever he pleases, and he has given you a load of heaven to keep in your life.

Here we have no lasting city, we seek the city that is to come. This is why David could say, “Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life” (Psalm 23:6). Our prayer and our lives should be all about, “Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth, as it is in heaven” (Matthew 6:10). For truly a time has come where we don’t have to travel to Jerusalem or Samaria to worship God, for we worship in spirit and in truth (John 4:21–24).

Eternal Life is Knowing God

But Naaman had a conundrum, he was going home to his king who was still actively worshipping the false god named Rimmon. Naaman already knows that he himself will never again sacrifice to any God but the Lord, but he knows he has a job to do in supporting his master.

He begs forgiveness from Elisha for this act and Elisha grants it to him. This is a hard part of the story because only a few centuries later Israelites in Babylon would be persecuted for refusing to bow to the idols erected in that land. And later still Christians throughout the Roman Empire would face the test of offering incense to Caesar.

The temptation is to say, “Bow, because you can pray to the true God in front of a pagan statue,” and “It’s just incense, just don’t believe Caesar is Lord.” But in both cases that great cloud of witnesses would not submit, and many lost their lives while gaining eternity.

So, while I whole-heartedly believe that Naaman is worshipping the Lord in heaven, I believe this section of scripture is descriptive rather than prescriptive.

If you’re forced into a pagan temple, know that even there you can find mercy and grace if you seek the Lord, but beloved, I don’t think we should ever go there willingly, and I would never encourage feigning false worship, even if you’re worshipping the true God in your heart. When antichrist is revealed and the mark of the beast becomes a test of faith, the Christian should adamantly oppose this pretender who sets himself up against every god and object of worship (2 Thessalonians 2:3–4), no matter what it costs (Revelation 13:10).

Naaman’s Legacy

We’re not done with Naaman yet, there is a legacy to explore. Just a few weeks after this story, the Syrians sent a raiding party into Israel (2 Kings 6), and Elisha saw the whole host of the armies of heaven ready to destroy the Syrian band. Instead of destruction, the Syrians received mercy when they were struck blind and led into Samaria.

King Jehoram panicked and asked Elisha if he should execute these prisoners of war, and instead Elisha commanded a great show of grace, a feast for the captured army. They were then released to return to Syria, perhaps in some way Jehoram remembered when he was about to perish in the wilderness and God spared him. Is that why he spared the Syrians?

I wish I could say that after their story and Naaman’s there were no more hostilities between Syria and Israel, but that’s not how it happened. But something did start to happen. First, when Ben-Hadad was sick he was glad to see Elisha visit him; surely there had to have been some connection.

Then, we can’t say for sure, but Syria and Assyria had a complicated history, they are not one and the same, but there is some intermingling. I’ll wait for heaven for a sure answer, but I can’t help but wonder if Jonah’s revival in Nineveh some hundred years later wasn’t in some way predicated by hearing of God’s power and mercy towards Israel’s enemies. Nearly a millennia later the early church found a great foothold in Damascus and Antioch; how many hearts were prepared by hearing of God’s power towards Syrians who seemingly should have no part nor lot with the God of Syria’s enemy? How many early Christians were baptized in Abana and Pharpar?

As a Baptist I love baptism, but not to the point that I think a baptism in the Jordan is more holy or valuable than a water trough baptism; but beloved, if I had the choice, I would have loved to have been baptized in Abana…or maybe a Siberian lake…or maybe the Ganges…or maybe the Limmat…or maybe the Chattahoochee…On second thought, every baptism is special in declaring Christ’s ability to save!

Baptism does not wash away sin. If you get baptized without saving faith in Jesus Christ, you just go down a dry sinner and come up a wet sinner. Salvation is not by the water of the baptistry; salvation is by the blood of Jesus Christ. ~ Adrian Rogers

Each believer’s baptism declares the story of Christ’s power to save. It’s not about the water! It’s about the Christ who writes his love on human hearts washed in his blood. Every one of those stories includes other instruments that God used to save souls and publish his peace to the world.

So while we don’t know exactly how Naaman prepared Syria to follow Christ, I have little doubt that he did. If by some profound twist of fate he had no impact on Syria, I know that Christians throughout the last two thousand years have been deeply impacted by his story. Our goal is not to be remembered, but to ensure that Christ is known.

In AD 1707 a pastor named Richard Davis said to a young man of nine,

If you know Christ well, it is no matter though you are ignorant of many other things; if you are ignorant of Christ other knowledge will avail but little.

The memory of Richard Davis has been almost completely lost to history, but that young man, John Gill, never forgot that advice.

He went on to become one of the most prolific Baptist authors in history who discipled James Hervey, Augustus Toplady, John Rippon, William Carey, Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield, JC Philpot, and Charles Spurgeon, among innumerable others, including myself.

Likewise, Charles Spurgeon was converted by an unnamed preacher during a blizzard when the regular pastor was snowed out.

Augustine’s mother Monica prayed for him continuously, especially in the years he had outright rejected Christ; she was overjoyed when he repented of his sins and put his trust in Christ.  While we know relatively little about her, we know that Augustine is still shaping the world today through his writings and example. We would not have his legacy without Monica.

Go thy ways and God bless thee, for it is not possible that the son of these tears should perish. ~ Ambrose to Monica

Max Lucado points out that the thief on the cross probably knew that Jesus was the claimed Messiah because of the simple sign that Pontius Pilate had ordered to be nailed over his head, “Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews” (Luke 23:38–43). Beloved, you never know what God will do if you plant a seed in someone’s heart, tell them the story, or proclaim the excellencies of Christ; it very well may bring forth fruit a hundredfold.

I don’t know what God did with Naaman’s conversion afterwards, but I’m sure it was something powerful, and I’m excited to hear all about it in heaven, and I’m excited to hear your story as well!


[1] The average distance between the head and the heart.

[2] In the book she is never named, in the movie her name is Miriam.

Previous - Naaman's Servants                                 Next - Gehazi

Naaman's Servants - 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
Naaman's Servants
Naaman the Cleansed

Naaman’s Servants

How long does it take to become a prophet? Do you have to finish a four-year bachelor’s degree and a three-year seminary degree? Consider the man born blind, he had known about Jesus for maybe six hours and already he’s declaring to the Pharisees, “Jesus is a prophet” (John 9:17), “One thing I do know, that though I was blind, now I see” (John 9:25), and he ends by giving an invitation, “Do you also want to become his disciples?” (John 9:27); in the end he’s cast out of their sight. A prophet in six hours or less.

Love Confronts and Wounds

Naaman’s servants are going to do him one better. Naaman responds as you’d expect to Elisha’s messenger: with anger. The Authorized Version says he was “wroth,” the ESV says he was angry, and we see him storming away in a rage. He was sure that some great miracle would occur and his leprosy would be gone in an instant. After all, hadn’t he done everything right? He’d come with a great treasure, he’d obeyed Elisha to come to him, he had Earned this. Think on that for a long hard moment. Naaman has not yet relied on grace, humility, or mercy; he is still walking firmly in his own power. He wanted a grand show, some sort of magic trick, with Elisha waving his hand over him and declaring him to be clean. God does not share his glory, and a lot of glory sharing would have taken place if Elisha or Naaman could have earned his favor.

Further, Naaman is furious that he is called to wash in that nasty, old, silty, murky, slow Jordan river. Aren’t there better rivers in Syria? War torn today, it was not always so; the Abana and the Pharpar were beautiful destination spots with clear water and surging waterfalls. King David mentions the mountain range that Abana and Pharpar flow from and compares it to the beauty of Christian unity (Psalm 133:1–3). The Sons of Korah mention the roaring waterfalls of those mountains (Psalm 42:6–7).

 If you could earn your salvation by visiting a river, then to stand under the cascades of the Abana would have been the surest way to do it.

William Carey, missionary to Serampore India, spent seven years before seeing his first Indian, Krishna Pal, come to Christ. When he baptized Krishna Pal in the Hooghly River an orderly mob of Hindus, Muslims, and tribalists observed the proceedings. Some in attendance believed they finally understood Christianity, “They worship the river, just like we do!” The power is not in the river. The Abana, the Pharpar, the Hooghly, the Ganges, and the Jordan are just flowing collection points for rain and snowmelt. The power has always been in the God who is able to wash whiter than snow. We don’t ask, “Are you washed in the Jordan?” We ask, “Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?”

Enter Naaman’s servants. They are in a much more powerful position than you may realize. As advisors to Naaman they are well versed in his power and personality. They expected some grand miracle as much as he, and we would not fault them at all if they felt indignation in seeing their master slighted. They may well have asked, “What sign do you do, that we may see and believe? What work do you perform?” (compare John 6:30).

They could have responded to Naaman with something like, “You’re right! That so-called prophet doesn’t know who he’s dealing with! He couldn’t even come to the door?! Let’s go kick it in and drag him out into the street and execute him!” The story would have ended there: Elisha dead, Naaman forever a leper and the Lord of Life still alien to him and his servants. That’s not farfetched, look at 1 Chronicles 19:1–19 (specifically verse 3) and see a set of servants who led their king into a war that cost thousands of lives, and while it’s not stated, it probably cost each individually their lives and eternities.

There are a lot of great “but” statements in the Bible, so don’t miss this one, “But his servants came near” (2 Kings 5:13). There is no indication that they were in any danger, but we have to always consider that a person driven to their wits end may lash out in unexpected ways. I appreciate these servant’s willingness to pursue their master in his anger and distress; it shows a lot of courage. Maybe they went after him out of concern for his wellbeing, not wanting him to exacerbate his leprosy with stress as there are not many illnesses that can’t be made worse by stress or worry.

Maybe they are just on a mission for his health and happiness. In drug and alcohol ministry we find that many people resonate with the statement,

Outside of Christianity people only want something from you, or you’re in the way of what they want.

 It rocks the eternal state of many when they realize,

In Christianity people don’t want to be served, but to serve, and to love you because Christ loves you.

It could be argued that these servants only want Naaman healed to preserve their position and guarantee their future employment. There isn’t much job security in being a general’s assistant if the general dies.

But I think they’ve been transformed by the message before Naaman; they don’t just go after him, they are about to speak further truth into his life, for, “Faithful are the wounds of a friend; profuse are the kisses of an enemy” (Proverbs 27:6). They aren’t looking to flatter Naaman by encouraging him in his anger, they’re about confront him in his response. If Naaman was angry before, they may very well be setting him up to fly into a violent rage. But love hopes and endures all things (1 Corinthians 13:7), so they know what they have to do.

Exhort One Another

I don’t think it’s just incidental that there is more than one servant. There is great wisdom in Jesus sending out his disciples in twos. There is accountability, companionship, and most importantly in this case, encouragement. I remember open-air preaching with a dear brother in Atlanta. As it was my turn I froze and couldn’t get the first word out. My beloved friend called from behind me, “Don’t you care that these people are perishing?” That was all I need to open my mouth, “I am here to speak to you about your soul!” On another occasion I had the opportunity to encourage that same brother with a Keith Green quote, “Do you see, do you see? All these people sinking down! Don’t you care, don’t you care? Are you gonna let them drown?”

A faithful friend in ministry is worth his weight in gold. Do you have anyone in your life that you can pray for like Paul prayed for Philemon, “I have derived much joy and comfort from your love, my brother, because the hearts of the saints have been refreshed through you” (Philemon 7). It doesn’t tell us which servant speaks, maybe they speak together, or maybe one is just there to encourage the other. But speak they do.

Put the Bible to Work

How many Bible verses do you have memorized verbatim? How many do you know the gist of? How many Bible verses do you need to know to be effective in ministry? Naaman’s servants knew one Bible verse, indeed we may say that their entire Bible at this moment was one verse long.

And they quote it with power, “Has he actually said to you, ‘Wash, and be clean’?” (2 Kings 5:13, quoting 2 Kings 5:10)! They appeal to his pride, that if some great thing had been commanded, something that would have lifted him up and earned him his cleansing, he would have done it in a heartbeat. But I think these servants have begun to see that God opposes the proud while exalting the humble. When I taught Middle Schoolers (11–13 years old), I loved to explain grace this way,

When we get to heaven and someone, maybe an angel, comes up to us and asks, ‘how did you get in here?’, if your inclination is to bow up and declare that you’re here because you’re awesome, or faithful, or any such thing, then you’ve missed the point. But the real answer to that question is to humbly answer, ‘I shouldn’t be here, but for the love of my Saviour who loved me and sought me and bought me and to him belongs all of the honor, power, and glory!’

Imagine the story Naaman could have boasted in if he had done some great thing to earn his cleansing? He could have been exceedingly proud, cleansed of leprosy, and devoid of hope.

Psalm 147:6 would not be nullified just because Naaman was no longer leprous, “The Lord lifts up the humble; he casts the wicked to the ground.” Naaman would have been in more trouble had he grounds of boasting; he needed humility and his servants helped to get him there.

These faithful and loving servants confront him and point him towards humility, recognizing that the greatness of the promise came from God, not from Naaman.

May we all have such friends in our lives who will stand between us and destruction. Are you that friend? How can your words be used to save a soul?

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