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The Backstory:

Elijah the prophet had gone to King Ahab, Israel’s most wicked king, to declare a drought. There would
be no rain, not even dew, because of Israel’s evil idolatry until Elijah declared it over.

As Israel went into extreme drought, God tucked Elijah safely away from the murderous Ahab. God first
sent Elijah to a stream where God had ravens make a daily bread delivery. But when even the stream
dried up, God sent Elijah to a widow in the gentile village of Zarephath.

The Widow of Zarephath:

When Elijah arrived at the Zarephath city gates, he spotted a young widow gathering sticks. The only
problem? This widow had no bread. In fact, she was gathering sticks to make a last meal for herself and
her son, and then die.

You can almost hear the despair in this single mom’s words as she told Elijah she had “only a handful of
flour in a jar and a little olive oil in a jug. I am gathering a few sticks to take home and make a meal for
myself and my son, that we may eat it – and die.” (1 Kings 17:12)

She was at the end of her hope. While the text doesn’t say, I imagine her head hanging low and warm
tears brushing her cheeks as she described her plight.

Elijah answered: “Do not be afraid.” He instructed her to make a small loaf for him first and afterward,
some for herself and her son with this promise from God: the flour jar would not become empty nor the
oil jug run dry until the day the Lord sent rain again.

The widow did as Elijah said. And afterward? Her flour jar never became empty and her oil jar never ran
dry just as God had promised. In fact, the widow, her family and Elijah had food through the entire
multi-year drought.

Three Lessons When You Need Hope

1. DOUBT INTO CERTAINTY

There is no lack in God – but there are tests of faith.


You know, God owns the cattle on a thousand hills and he could have hand-delivered one to this
woman. But instead, he asks her to trust and obey. She had to give the last of what she has to the
prophet of God with a promise that God wouldn’t let her flour and oil run out until the drought was
over.

God wanted more than to simply meet this woman’s needs. He wanted this unbeliever in a gentile
country to know that he was the one true God. God was more interested in feeding her soul than
feeding her stomach.

When she trusted God with everything she had, God provided everything she needed.

And of course, God was faithful to his promise as he only can be. For three years, every time she
reached into that jar of flour, there was enough. Every time she made cakes of oil and flour for Elijah
there was enough. When her growing boy was hungry, there was enough. Until God brought rain again,
God provided for Elijah, this woman and her son when she trusted God with everything she had.

2. DESPAIR INTO HOPE

There is no hopelessness in God.

Our circumstances never tell the whole story. They tell only what we see but the eternal God is our
refuge and always, always, always underneath are his everlasting arms.

You may be facing big unknowns. You may be at the end of your own ability and you may not see the
way through your circumstances.

But the end of your hope is the middle of God’s story.

If it seems crazy that God provided for Elijah through ravens, it’s just as far-fetched that God provided
for Elijah through a gentile, and not only a gentile but a woman, and not only that but a widow!

As a gentile widow living outside of Israel, she was outside the protections of Jewish law and would have
been among the most poor and needy. She was a single mom who found herself at the end of her
supplies and the end of her ability to provide, reasoning her only choice was to make a last meal, eat it
and die.

But God resources are unlimited and his timing is perfect. We may not see a way through, but we are
never hopeless in God.

3. DROUGHT TO OVERFLOW

There is no lack in God.

I imagine this widow watching her flour and oil dwindle for weeks. She had one more handful of flour
and perhaps if she knocked every last bit from the container’s sides, and left the oil jar to hang upside
down, she’d get just enough to make one last cake

Before she ever reached the place of need, God knew how he would meet it.

Her flour was getting low, but God knew Elijah would come.

Her oil is running thin, but God knew Elijah would come.

She heads out to gather sticks for a last meal, but God knew Elijah would come.

Right now, in your desperate need, God knows how he’s going to meet it. In fact, God knows how he will
meet needs you have even come to.

God will provide guidance as you need it.

God will provide wisdom as you need it.

God will provide comfort as you need it.

God will provide for you financially as you need it.

God will provide grace to sustain as you need it.

God will provide for each circumstance as you need it.

God wants the same for us.


Maybe you wouldn’t have chosen to write your life story this way. Maybe, like me, you find yourself a
young widow and single mom. Maybe you’ve found yourself at the end of hope and in deep need. God
WILL meet your need – he promises us that. But he wants more for you. God wants you to have hope
beyond this life. He wants to feed your soul as the one true God.

There is no hopelessness in God. And while there are tests of faith, there is no lack in God either. The
same God who provided for Elijah and the widow of Zarephath in extreme drought and desperation, is
the same God who is faithful to us as well, if we will but trust and obey.

When You Need Hope: Elijah and the Widow of Zarephath

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