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The Cherith experience
Colin Smith
The word of the Lord came to him, ‘Depart from here and turn
eastward and hide yourself by the brook Cherith.’ (1 Kings 17:2)
This is astonishing: Elijah must
have done a double take… “What? We just launched the ministry and now
you say ‘Go hide yourself.’”
This man has been preparing himself for ministry. He
has given himself to studying the Word (Deuteronomy 11) and to prayer (James 5). His ministry is on the launch pad and God says “Go
hide yourself!”
The Cherith experience
This man has a passion for the
glory of God. He is the brightest light in the darkest place at the
hardest time. He has the courage to walk into the palace of Ahab and speak
the word of God to his face. Nobody else has the courage to do that, and
then God says, “Go hide yourself.”
I would have struggled with this, if I’d been Eli, and
you would have too.
After the great ministry launch
in the palace I would have said, “This is the moment to go on a national
preaching tour. Let’s bring the message of Deuteronomy 11 to every person
in the nation.”
“Let’s show the covenant people
of God that He says, ‘If you turn to idols there will be no rain,’ and let’s
call people to repentance. Now get out the map and let’s decide where we
will begin.”
And then God says, “Go hide
yourself by the brook Cherith.”
The Cherith experience comes to every Christian at
some point in their journey. Cherith is where God closes the door to the
thing you most want to do.
I’m going to describe the Cherith experience so that
you can recognize it in your own life.
The outline today is very simple: Here’s what God was
doing for Elijah at Cherith and what God will do at Cherith for you.
God Hid Him
“Depart from here and turn
eastward and hide yourself by the brook Cherith.” (1 Kings 17:3)
Why did God hide Elijah? Was it protection?
Maybe, but God was able to protect Elijah when he
marched into Ahab’s palace. God protected him on Mount Carmel in the
presence of all the prophets of Baal. So, God did not need to send Elijah
to Cherith to protect him.
Was it a judgment on the people? Undoubtedly,
yes. One way that God judges a nation is that He withdraws His teachers of
the Word of God. God hides his servants and there is a famine of the Word.
What God was doing in
Elijah
Cherith is the place where God withholds what you
wanted most. Cherith is the place where God closes the door on what you wanted
to do for Him.
Elijah prepares himself for ministry at huge personal
cost and then finds that he does not have the opportunity to pursue it. He
is a prophet. His whole calling is about bringing the word of God to the people
of God.
But there are no people in Cherith. There is no
platform for the work he wants to do, no opportunity for him to pursue his
calling.
For the next three years Elijah ministers to a
congregation of just two people. One is a widow and the other is her
son. What is all this about?
You go to college and train for a particular career,
but the door does not open for you. All this preparation and where is the
opportunity?
You say “I have the skills. I
have the training. But there doesn’t seem to be a place I can use them. The
door is not open for me.”
Friend, welcome to Cherith.
God can take you to Cherith by removing you from a
position. God can take you to Cherith through a prolonged sickness that
limits what you are able to do.
Cherith is the place where God hides you and holds
back what you most want to do.
As a boy, I remember visiting a town in the south of
England on a family vacation. We visited a church there that I thought was
the most marvelous place on earth.
Their pastor was a hero of
mine. The singing was an inspiration. The gallery was packed with
young people. I thought, “If I ever got to be the pastor of this church
it would be my greatest dream.”
Karen and I began ministry at a church of 150 people
in North London. The church grew and the leadership began to talk about a
new building. We had been there eight years — a very respectable time for
a young pastor in their first pastorate.
One night the elders said, “If
we do this, we will need stability of leadership.”
And they said to me in an elder
meeting, “Are you prepared to commit tonight to staying here for another
five years?”
They probably shouldn’t have done
that, but they did and I said, “Yes, I’m all in.”
The following day the phone rang
in our home. It was the chairman of a search committee from the church I
had dreamed about as a boy, “Colin, we’ve never met, but we’re looking to
appoint a new senior pastor,” he said, “and we want to know if you would
be a candidate.”
I said, “I would love to do that, but I can’t.”
And he immediately said, as any
evangelical Christian would, “Won’t you pray about it?”
“I can’t even say I’ll pray about
it. Last night I gave my word to these men. There would be no integrity if I
came and spoke with you.”
I put down the phone and said to
Karen, “You won’t believe the conversation that I just had.”
Everyone knows about the triumphs of Elijah’s ministry
on Mount Carmel, but here’s the principle: God will take you to Cherith before
He ever takes you to Carmel.
God’s hidden servants
You’ll find this all through the Scriptures in the
lives of God’s hidden servants: God hid Joseph in a prison before he came to
the palace.
He hid Moses in the desert for a third of his life
before he led the people out of Egypt.
God hid David in the mountains, running in and out of
caves from Saul, before he was recognized as king.
In the New Testament, God hid Paul for three years in
Arabia after his conversion, before he became a missionary.
And here, God hides Elijah at Cherith before his great
life contribution at Carmel.
Don’t count it a strange thing if God hides you.
Here’s the principle: When God chooses to hide you for a time, He is preparing
you for a greater purpose.
Last month I was able to visit the church I served in
London and to catch up with some wonderful people after 16 years.
One was a dear brother who has served the Lord
faithfully over many years — always there; always reliable; always steady.
Throughout the years that I was there, he was never
happy in his job. There was nothing wrong with the job. But it was not
fulfilling for him, because he had it in his heart to do something more.
About ten years ago, God opened a new door of
opportunity, and took the skills he’d honed over years in a dull and
uninspiring job, and used those same skills in an entirely different setting
that has brought him great joy.
We have kept in touch from time
to time, and when I saw him, I said, “Well, your life has changed since I
saw you last.”
He said, “Someone told me,
‘The second half of your life will be much more fruitful than the first,’ and
that is proving to be wonderfully true.”
Don’t be surprised if God hides you, and don’t be
discouraged when He does. We serve a God who hides his servants. And while
they are hidden He works in them, so
that later and with greater power He may work through them.
God Led Him
“The word of the Lord came to him
‘Depart from here and turn eastward and hide yourself by the brook Cherith
which is east of the Jordan…’ So he went and did according to the word of the
Lord.” (1 Kings 17:2,5)
God led him to Cherith, and then God led him out of
Cherith. It will be the same for you.
As a believer, you can have absolute confidence
through your entire life that God is leading you. The Lord is your
shepherd, and He is your shepherd even at Cherith.
One step at a time
God leads His people one step at a time — as we walk
in obedience. God does not normally lay out the long-term scenario.
When Elijah spoke to Ahab, he had no idea what the
next step would be. God made the next step clear as Elijah was faithful in
what God had already given him to do.
As you take a step of obedience, then God will show
you what to do next. That’s the importance of the link between verse 1 and
verse 2.
Verse 1 tells us about Elijah’s step of faith and
obedience. Then in verse 2 God tells him what to do next.
That same pattern runs throughout this story.
Verse 5 tells us about Elijah’s
obedience: “Elijah went and did according to the word of the Lord.”
Then in verse 8 God tells him
what to do next: “The word of the Lord came to him, ‘Arise and go to
Zarepath.’”
The principle of Christian
obedience
If God is not making your next step clear, perhaps it
could be that you have not finished what he has called you to do already.
Move forward with all that God has given you to do
now, and then trust Him to show you the next step at the right time. That’s the
principle of Christian obedience.
Planning is good. Every Christian leader should
have a plan. Every church should have a plan. Every business should
have a plan. Every parent should have a plan. But everyone knows what happens
to the best laid plans.
The poet Robert Burns wrote…
“The best laid schemes of mice
and men go oft awry,
And leave us nought but grief and
pain, for promised joy!”
Here’s how God puts it in Scripture:
“The heart of man plans his way, but
the Lord establishes his steps.” (Proverbs 16:9)
The heart of man plans his way — there’s nothing wrong
with that — but when my plans fail, I am to remember that it is the Lord who establishes
my steps.
Every leader wants to lead, but all leaders lead on
God’s timetable. God leads His people one step at a time. The guidance you
need will come as you move in faith and obedience.
How God led Elijah
There is an important difference between the way God
led Elijah and the way God leads us. God spoke directly to Elijah. The
word of the Lord came to him. I understand that to mean that God spoke to
him with an audible voice.
God also spoke in an audible
voice at the baptism of Jesus, “You are my beloved Son…” (Luke 3:22), and at the Transfiguration: “This is my Son, my Chosen One…”
(Luke 9:35).
This is how God spoke to the
prophets, “The word of the Lord came to Elijah!” (1 Kings 17:2,8).
This is what it means to be a prophet of God. Prophets
received direct revelation from God, but that gift is not promised to us.
God could speak in an audible voice to any of us if He
chose, but this is not how God normally chooses to work.
God does not say “Go to this
college, take this job, marry this woman, join this church, or pursue this
career.”
You may wish that He did. After all, if you heard
an audible voice saying these things, you would know exactly what to do.
Don’t envy the prophets. God called the prophets
to do the hardest things at the highest cost. People stoned them for what
they did.
How does God lead us?
How can we discern what God wants us to do? Ask,
“What is the best that I can do for my God?” because that’s what you’re
here for — to live for His glory. Then read your heart and use your
judgment.
God’s guidance comes through a meshing of the desires
of your heart and the judgment of wisdom, as you pursue doing the best that you
can for the glory of God.
J. I. Packer, who is so helpful in demystifying the
guidance of God, says…
“When God has a particular career
in mind for a person, he bestows on that person an interest in that field of
expertise. When God plans for two people to marry he blends their hearts.
But God’s inclinings of the heart (as opposed to our own self-generated
ambitions and longings) are experienced only as meshing in with the judgments
of wisdom. Thus, interest in an unsuitable person as a life partner or a
ministry beyond one’s ability should be seen as temptation rather than a divine
call.”
The great calling of a Christian
believer is to walk in the way of wisdom. In Packer’s words, “The right
course is always to choose the wisest means to the noblest end.”
God has given you His Spirit, and when you need
direction, He will lead you by helping you to discern the wisest means to the
noblest ends.
God Fed Him
“‘You shall drink from the brook,
and I have commanded the ravens to feed you there…’ And the ravens brought him
bread and meat in the morning and bread and meat in the evening.” (1 Kings 17:4,6)
It was a miracle, comparable to God providing manna in
the desert. God provided all that Elijah needed.
Now, it was a brook and not a river — you might wish
that God would provide you a river and not a brook — and the food was not
exactly fine dining… But God sustained his servant through the drought. And
God will sustain you even at Cherith.
“Seek first the kingdom of God
and His righteousness and all these things will be added to you” (Matthew 6:33).
Don’t imagine that if you are living any only way you
please, that this is a promise to you.
The striking thing is that the birds that flew at the
command of God and provided the sustaining food for Elijah were ravens. That is
fascinating to me, because in the Old Testament laws the ravens were unclean
birds.
God gave laws about what His people could eat and what
they could not eat in the Old Testament, and ravens were definitely “off
limits.” The raven was described as “detestable” (Leviticus 11:16).
It is surprising that when God chooses to sustain a
servant, He chooses to use an unclean bird. Think about this: God sends
life-sustaining food, delivered by unclean birds.
You may have been fed by an
unclean bird
Maybe you were taught the Bible by a Sunday school
teacher or a pastor or a friend. You looked up to that person. You
saw them as a role model, as an example.
But some years later, you found out that they were not
who you thought they were.
Maybe they committed a great
crime. Maybe they abandoned the faith they once taught, and you were left
saying, “Wait a minute, what is all this about?”
You felt robbed. If that’s happened to you, it
will greatly help you to know God can deliver clean food, even through an
unclean bird.
Maybe the person who led you to
Christ then abandoned their faith in Jesus, and that leaves you saying, “What
about me? What does that mean for my faith?”
Jesus sent out the 12 apostles on a mission. All of
them were used by God. People would have come to faith in Christ through
each of their ministries. Imagine meeting with these people:
One says “I was led to faith by Peter.”
Another says, “I was led to faith by John.”
Someone else seems rather
quiet. You know why. “What about you? Who led you to faith?”
“Well, actually it was Judas. I
don’t like to mention it.”
How God creates genuine faith
You say “Is that possible?
That someone could be led to genuine faith by someone who did not have it
themselves?”
Absolutely. God can create genuine faith through
the ministry of fake believers. It is the Gospel that saves, not the
person who speaks it.
You are saved by the power of the Gospel, not by the
integrity of the person who speaks it. You desperately need to know that, if
you find out that the person who led you to faith was an unclean bird.
You may ask, “Are you saying
that integrity doesn’t matter?”
Of course it matters! Lack of
integrity is the reason why Christ will say to many who served in ministries
and churches, “Depart from me I never knew you.”
But remember the work of these
people who Christ never knew: “Did we not prophesy in your name, and cast
out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?” (Matthew 7:22).
God can create genuine faith through the ministry of
fake believers.
This is a warning to the person
who says, “I am involved in ministry. God blesses what I do. God must be
pleased with me.”
Remember the ravens!
The fact that God is using you does not make you
clean!
Service is never a substitute
for holiness
Without holiness no one will see
the Lord. (Hebrews 12:14, NIV)
No one enters heaven because of service. Being in
ministry can never make you clean. Service is never a substitute for holiness. It
is possible to do good for the church and still be a raven.
If you’re resting on your involvement in ministry for
your standing before God, I urge you today to place your life under the blood
of Jesus Christ. That alone can make you clean.
No one is justified by service. Nobody is
justified by going on missions trips or by helping the poor.
There is only one way to be made clean before God, and
that is through the blood of Jesus Christ applied to your life, as you embrace
Him as your Lord and as your Savior.
The blood of Jesus is applied to the humble and the
penitent, not the self-confident or the self-righteous.
At Cherith We Learn to Live on God
I take that phrase from John Bunyan. His Cherith
came when he was thrown into prison. He was a pastor serving the Lord and he
had a family.
It was a time of persecution for believers like us in
England, and Bunyan was seized from his church and from his family and
incarcerated in the town of Bedford.
God took Bunyan out of public ministry and hid him in
the prison.
Out of that came the book “Pilgrim’s Progress.”
When Bunyan wrote about his
Cherith experience, he said that he learned “to live upon God who is
invisible.”
“God has put me in a place where
I can no longer live on my work.
I can no longer live on my family. I can no longer live on my friends.
I can no longer live on my pleasures. I can no longer live on my ministry.
I have to live on God, who is invisible.”
I can no longer live on my family. I can no longer live on my friends.
I can no longer live on my pleasures. I can no longer live on my ministry.
I have to live on God, who is invisible.”
That’s where Elijah was in Cherith.
To live on God who is invisible means to find what you need in God when there isn’t
anything or anyone else.
That’s what God does at Cherith.
When you come to the place where
God hides you, know this: If you will walk with Him in faith and obedience, He
will lead you and He will feed you. You will find Him faithful at Cherith,
and you will come out saying, “Even Cherith was in the purpose of God.”
Colin Smith is senior pastor of The Orchard Evangelical Free
Church, a thriving, multi-campus church located in the northwest suburbs of
Chicago, and president of Unlocking the Bible.
Born and raised in Edinburgh,
Scotland, he trained at the London School of Theology where he earned the
degrees of Bachelor of Theology and Master of Philosophy. Before coming to the
States in 1996, Colin served as senior pastor of the Enfield Evangelical Free
Church in London.
He is the author of several
books including Momentum: Pursuing God’s Blessings through the Beatitudes; Heaven,
How I Got Here: The Story of the Thief on the Cross; Jonah: Navigating a
God-Centered Life; The One Year Unlocking the Bible Devotional; 10
Keys for Unlocking the Bible; The 10 Greatest Struggles of Your
Life; as well as others. His preaching ministry is shared around the world
through Unlocking the Bible.
Colin and his wife Karen
reside in Arlington Heights, Ill., and have two married sons and five
granddaughters.
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