Verse 1
A Widow Comes to Elisha
The history of the widow’s oil and the history of the three kings in the previous chapter are both about debtors. Mesha had to pay tribute and the woman also has to pay a debt. The difference is that the king of Moab could pay, but did not want, while the woman wants, but she can’t, because she is poor.
The previous history is about three people, three kings, namely the king of Israel, Jehoram, the king of Judah, Jehoshaphat, and the king of Edom. This history is also about three people, namely the widow and her two sons. There is despair in both histories. The kings threaten to die due to lack of water and therefore appeal to the man of God. Then Elisha appears and helps. The woman calls on him and he comes and helps. Both histories end with a son. In the first one a son is killed, in the second there is life for two sons.
In the first history the man of God orders to dig trenches, empty trenches. This required a lot of hard work. In the second the woman has to collect empty vessels. This also requires hard work. In both histories what is empty is filled, but with a different content. The trenches are filled with water, the vessels are filled with oil.
Water is a picture of the Word of God. This is how it is applied in the previous chapter. However, water is also a symbol of the Spirit of God, just like oil. Water and oil as a picture of the Holy Spirit we see in the “streams of living water” (John 7:39) and in the “an anointing from the Holy One” (1 John 2:20). Water and oil represent different aspects of the work of the Spirit. How the Spirit works we see for example in the Gospel of Luke where we meet people filled with the Spirit: John, Elizabeth, Zacharias, Simeon (cf. Ephesians 5:18).
A widow comes with her need to Elisha for a solution of her need. She reminds Elisha to her husband as someone he knew. She testifies of him that he knew him as faithful and obedient to the Word of God. His wife and children followed him in it. The man feared God.
A widow is a needy person (cf. James 1:27), someone who is dependent on the LORD. The woman tells him her situation. Elisha does not contest the creditor’s right. In the person of the woman it is about a believer who is in miserable circumstances. She is a picture of a believer under the law. The law leads the spiritual life to slavery.
This is about the righteousness of the flesh, the claims of the law, the slavery of the flesh. The sons are threatened to be made slaves. In Acts 15 we read about an attempt to subject the believers to the law and how the apostles react to it (Acts 15:1-Obadiah :; see also the letter to the Galatians). The law is opposed to the freedom of the Spirit.