Naaman Is Cured (2KI 5:1-27)

[5:1] Naaman, the commander of the Syrian army, was highly respected and esteemed by the king of Syria, because through Naaman the Lord had given victory to the Syrian forces. He was a great soldier, but he suffered from a dreaded skin disease.

[5:2] In one of their raids against Israel, the Syrians had carried off a little Israelite girl, who became a servant of Naaman's wife.

[5:3] One day she said to her mistress, “I wish that my master could go to the prophet who lives in Samaria! He would cure him of his disease.”

[5:4] When Naaman heard of this, he went to the king and told him what the girl had said.

[5:5] The king said, “Go to the king of Israel and take this letter to him.” So Naaman set out, taking thirty thousand pieces of silver, six thousand pieces of gold, and ten changes of fine clothes.

[5:6] The letter that he took read: “This letter will introduce my officer Naaman. I want you to cure him of his disease.”

[5:7] When the king of Israel read the letter, he tore his clothes in dismay and exclaimed, “How can the king of Syria expect me to cure this man? Does he think that I am God, with the power of life and death? It's plain that he is trying to start a quarrel with me!”

[5:8] When the prophet Elisha heard what had happened, he sent word to the king: “Why are you so upset? Send the man to me, and I'll show him that there is a prophet in Israel!”

[5:9] So Naaman went with his horses and chariot and stopped at the entrance to Elisha's house.

[5:10] Elisha sent a servant out to tell him to go and wash himself seven times in the Jordan River, and he would be completely cured of his disease.

[5:11] But Naaman left in a rage, saying, “I thought that he would at least come out to me, pray to the Lord his God, wave his hand over the diseased spot, and cure me!

[5:12] Besides, aren't the rivers Abana and Pharpar, back in Damascus, better than any river in Israel? I could have washed in them and been cured!”

[5:13] His servants went up to him and said, “Sir, if the prophet had told you to do something difficult, you would have done it. Now why can't you just wash yourself, as he said, and be cured?”

[5:14] So Naaman went down to the Jordan, dipped himself in it seven times, as Elisha had instructed, and he was completely cured. His flesh became firm and healthy like that of a child.

[5:15] He returned to Elisha with all his men and said, “Now I know that there is no god but the God of Israel; so please, sir, accept a gift from me.”

[5:16] Elisha answered, “By the living Lord, whom I serve, I swear that I will not accept a gift.” Naaman insisted that he accept it, but he would not.

[5:17] So Naaman said, “If you won't accept my gift, then let me have two mule-loads of earth to take home with me, because from now on I will not offer sacrifices or burnt offerings to any god except the Lord.

[5:18] So I hope that the Lord will forgive me when I accompany my king to the temple of Rimmon, the god of Syria, and worship him. Surely the Lord will forgive me!”

[5:19] “Go in peace,” Elisha said. And Naaman left. He had gone only a short distance,

[5:20] when Elisha's servant Gehazi said to himself, “My master has let Naaman get away without paying a thing! He should have accepted what that Syrian offered him. By the living Lord I will run after him and get something from him.”

[5:21] So he set off after Naaman. When Naaman saw a man running after him, he got down from his chariot to meet him, and asked, “Is something wrong?”

[5:22] “No,” Gehazi answered. “But my master sent me to tell you that just now two members of the group of prophets in the hill country of Ephraim arrived, and he would like you to give them three thousand pieces of silver and two changes of fine clothes.”

[5:23] “Please take six thousand pieces of silver,” Naaman replied. He insisted on it, tied up the silver in two bags, gave them and two changes of fine clothes to two of his servants, and sent them on ahead of Gehazi.

[5:24] When they reached the hill where Elisha lived, Gehazi took the two bags and carried them into the house. Then he sent Naaman's servants back.

[5:25] He went back into the house, and Elisha asked him, “Where have you been?” “Oh, nowhere, sir,” he answered.

[5:26] But Elisha said, “Wasn't I there in spirit when the man got out of his chariot to meet you? This is no time to accept money and clothes, olive groves and vineyards, sheep and cattle, or servants!

[5:27] And now Naaman's disease will come upon you, and you and your descendants will have it forever!” When Gehazi left, he had the disease—his skin was as white as snow.

The Recovery of the Ax Head (2KI 6:1-7)

[6:1] One day the group of prophets that Elisha was in charge of complained to him, “The place where we live is too small!

[6:2] Give us permission to go to the Jordan and cut down some trees, so that we can build a place to live.” “All right,” Elisha answered.

[6:3] One of them urged him to go with them; he agreed,

[6:4] and they set out together. When they arrived at the Jordan, they began to work.

[6:5] As one of them was cutting down a tree, suddenly his iron ax head fell in the water. “What shall I do, sir?” he exclaimed to Elisha. “It was a borrowed ax!”

[6:6] “Where did it fall?” Elisha asked. The man showed him the place, and Elisha cut off a stick, threw it in the water, and made the ax head float.

[6:7] “Take it out,” he ordered, and the man reached down and picked it up.

The Syrian Army Is Defeated (2KI 6:8-23)

[6:8] The king of Syria was at war with Israel. He consulted his officers and chose a place to set up his camp.

[6:9] But Elisha sent word to the king of Israel, warning him not to go near that place, because the Syrians were waiting in ambush there.

[6:10] So the king of Israel warned the people who lived in that place, and they were on guard. This happened several times.

[6:11] The Syrian king became greatly upset over this; he called in his officers and asked them, “Which one of you is on the side of the king of Israel?”

[6:12] One of them answered, “No one is, Your Majesty. The prophet Elisha tells the king of Israel what you say even in the privacy of your own room.”

[6:13] “Find out where he is,” the king ordered, “and I will capture him.” When he was told that Elisha was in Dothan,

[6:14] he sent a large force there with horses and chariots. They reached the town at night and surrounded it.

[6:15] Early the next morning Elisha's servant got up, went out of the house, and saw the Syrian troops with their horses and chariots surrounding the town. He went back to Elisha and exclaimed, “We are doomed, sir! What shall we do?”

[6:16] “Don't be afraid,” Elisha answered. “We have more on our side than they have on theirs.”

[6:17] Then he prayed, “O Lord, open his eyes and let him see!” The Lord answered his prayer, and Elisha's servant looked up and saw the hillside covered with horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha.

[6:18] When the Syrians attacked, Elisha prayed, “O Lord, strike these men blind!” The Lord answered his prayer and struck them blind.

[6:19] Then Elisha went to them and said, “You are on the wrong road; this is not the town you are looking for. Follow me, and I will lead you to the man you are after.” And he led them to Samaria.

[6:20] As soon as they had entered the city, Elisha prayed, “Open their eyes, Lord, and let them see.” The Lord answered his prayer; he restored their sight, and they saw that they were inside Samaria.

[6:21] When the king of Israel saw the Syrians, he asked Elisha, “Shall I kill them, sir? Shall I kill them?”

[6:22] “No,” he answered. “Not even soldiers you had captured in combat would you put to death. Give them something to eat and drink, and let them return to their king.”

[6:23] So the king of Israel provided a great feast for them; and after they had eaten and drunk, he sent them back to the king of Syria. From then on the Syrians stopped raiding the land of Israel.

The Siege of Samaria (2KI 6:24-7:2)

[6:24] Some time later King Benhadad of Syria led his entire army against Israel and laid siege to the city of Samaria.

[6:25] As a result of the siege the food shortage in the city was so severe that a donkey's head cost eighty pieces of silver, and half a pound of dove's dung cost five pieces of silver.

[6:26] The king of Israel was walking by on the city wall when a woman cried out, “Help me, Your Majesty!”

[6:27] He replied, “If the Lord won't help you, what help can I provide? Do I have any wheat or wine?

[6:28] What's your trouble?” She answered, “The other day this woman here suggested that we eat my child, and then eat her child the next day.

[6:29] So we cooked my son and ate him. The next day I told her that we would eat her son, but she had hidden him!”

[6:30] Hearing this, the king tore his clothes in dismay, and the people who were close to the wall could see that he was wearing sackcloth under his clothes.

[6:31] He exclaimed, “May God strike me dead if Elisha is not beheaded before the day is over!”

[6:32] And he sent a messenger to get Elisha. Meanwhile Elisha was at home with some elders who were visiting him. Before the king's messenger arrived, Elisha said to the elders, “That murderer is sending someone to kill me! Now, when he gets here, shut the door and don't let him come in. The king himself will be right behind him.”

[6:33] He had hardly finished saying this, when the king arrived and said, “It's the Lord who has brought this trouble on us! Why should I wait any longer for him to do something?”

[7:1] Elisha answered, “Listen to what the Lord says! By this time tomorrow you will be able to buy in Samaria ten pounds of the best wheat or twenty pounds of barley for one piece of silver.”

[7:2] The personal attendant of the king said to Elisha, “That can't happen—not even if the Lord himself were to send grain at once!” “You will see it happen, but you won't get to eat any of the food,” Elisha replied.

The Syrian Army Leaves (2KI 7:3-20)

[7:3] Four men who were suffering from a dreaded skin disease were outside the gates of Samaria, and they said to each other, “Why should we wait here until we die?

[7:4] It's no use going into the city, because we would starve to death in there; but if we stay here, we'll die also. So let's go to the Syrian camp; the worst they can do is kill us, but maybe they will spare our lives.”

[7:5] So, as it began to get dark, they went to the Syrian camp, but when they reached it, no one was there.

[7:6] The Lord had made the Syrians hear what sounded like the advance of a large army with horses and chariots, and the Syrians thought that the king of Israel had hired Hittite and Egyptian kings and their armies to attack them.

[7:7] So that evening the Syrians had fled for their lives, abandoning their tents, horses, and donkeys, and leaving the camp just as it was.

[7:8] When the four men reached the edge of the camp, they went into a tent, ate and drank what was there, grabbed the silver, gold, and clothing they found, and went off and hid them; then they returned, entered another tent, and did the same thing.

[7:9] But then they said to each other, “We shouldn't be doing this! We have good news, and we shouldn't keep it to ourselves. If we wait until morning to tell it, we are sure to be punished. Let's go right now and tell the king's officers!”

[7:10] So they left the Syrian camp, went back to Samaria, and called out to the guards at the gates: “We went to the Syrian camp and didn't see or hear anybody; the horses and donkeys have not been untied, and the tents are just as the Syrians left them.”

[7:11] The guards announced the news, and it was reported in the palace.

[7:12] It was still night, but the king got out of bed and said to his officials, “I'll tell you what the Syrians are planning! They know about the famine here, so they have left their camp to go and hide in the countryside. They think that we will leave the city to find food, and then they will take us alive and capture the city.”

[7:13] One of his officials said, “The people here in the city are doomed anyway, like those that have already died. So let's send some men with five of the horses that are left, so that we can find out what has happened.”

[7:14] They chose some men, and the king sent them in two chariots with instructions to go and find out what had happened to the Syrian army.

[7:15] The men went as far as the Jordan, and all along the road they saw the clothes and equipment that the Syrians had abandoned as they fled. Then they returned and reported to the king.

[7:16] The people of Samaria rushed out and looted the Syrian camp. And as the Lord had said, ten pounds of the best wheat or twenty pounds of barley were sold for one piece of silver.

[7:17] It so happened that the king of Israel had put the city gate under the command of the officer who was his personal attendant. The officer was trampled to death there by the people and died, as Elisha had predicted when the king went to see him.

[7:18] Elisha had told the king that by that time the following day ten pounds of the best wheat or twenty pounds of barley would be sold in Samaria for one piece of silver,

[7:19] to which the officer had answered, “That can't happen—not even if the Lord himself were to send grain at once!” And Elisha had replied, “You will see it happen, but you won't get to eat any of the food.”

[7:20] And that is just what happened to him—he died, trampled to death by the people at the city gate.

The Woman from Shunem Returns (2KI 8:1-6)

[8:1] Now Elisha had told the woman who lived in Shunem, whose son he had brought back to life, that the Lord was sending a famine on the land, which would last for seven years, and that she should leave with her family and go and live somewhere else.

[8:2] She had followed his instructions and had gone with her family to live in Philistia for the seven years.

[8:3] At the end of the seven years she returned to Israel and went to the king to ask that her house and her land be restored to her.

[8:4] She found the king talking with Gehazi, Elisha's servant; the king wanted to know about Elisha's miracles.

[8:5] While Gehazi was telling the king how Elisha had brought a dead person back to life, the woman made her appeal to the king. Gehazi said to him, “Your Majesty, here is the woman and here is her son whom Elisha brought back to life!”

[8:6] In answer to the king's question, she confirmed Gehazi's story, and so the king called an official and told him to give back to her everything that was hers, including the value of all the crops that her fields had produced during the seven years she had been away.

Elisha and King Benhadad of Syria (2KI 8:7-15)

[8:7] Elisha went to Damascus at a time when King Benhadad of Syria was sick. When the king was told that Elisha was there,

[8:8] he said to Hazael, one of his officials, “Take a gift to the prophet and ask him to consult the Lord to find out whether or not I am going to get well.”

[8:9] So Hazael loaded forty camels with all kinds of the finest products of Damascus and went to Elisha. When Hazael met him, he said, “Your servant King Benhadad has sent me to ask you whether or not he will recover from his sickness.”

[8:10] Elisha answered, “The Lord has revealed to me that he will die; but go to him and tell him that he will recover.”

[8:11] Then Elisha stared at him with a horrified look on his face until Hazael became ill at ease. Suddenly Elisha burst into tears.

[8:12] “Why are you crying, sir?” Hazael asked. “Because I know the horrible things you will do against the people of Israel,” Elisha answered. “You will set their fortresses on fire, slaughter their finest young men, batter their children to death, and rip open their pregnant women.”

[8:13] “How could I ever be that powerful?” Hazael asked. “I'm a nobody!” “The Lord has shown me that you will be king of Syria,” Elisha replied.

[8:14] Hazael went back to Benhadad, who asked him, “What did Elisha say?” “He told me that you would certainly get well,” Hazael answered.

[8:15] But on the following day Hazael took a blanket, soaked it in water, and smothered the king. And Hazael succeeded Benhadad as king of Syria.

King Jehoram of Judah (2KI 8:16-24)

[8:16] In the fifth year of the reign of Joram son of Ahab as king of Israel, Jehoram son of Jehoshaphat became king of Judah

[8:17] at the age of thirty-two, and he ruled in Jerusalem for eight years.

[8:18] His wife was Ahab's daughter, and like the family of Ahab he followed the evil ways of the kings of Israel. He sinned against the Lord,

[8:19] but the Lord was not willing to destroy Judah, because he had promised his servant David that his descendants would always continue to rule.

[8:20] During Jehoram's reign Edom revolted against Judah and became an independent kingdom.

[8:21] So Jehoram set out with all his chariots to Zair, where the Edomite army surrounded them. During the night he and his chariot commanders managed to break out and escape, and his soldiers scattered to their homes.

[8:22] Edom has been independent of Judah ever since. During this same period the city of Libnah also revolted.

[8:23] Everything else that Jehoram did is recorded in The History of the Kings of Judah.

[8:24] Jehoram died and was buried in the royal tombs in David's City, and his son Ahaziah succeeded him as king.

King Ahaziah of Judah (2KI 8:25-29)

[8:25] In the twelfth year of the reign of Joram son of Ahab as king of Israel, Ahaziah son of Jehoram became king of Judah

[8:26] at the age of twenty-two, and he ruled in Jerusalem for one year. His mother was Athaliah, the daughter of King Ahab and granddaughter of King Omri of Israel.

[8:27] Since Ahaziah was related to King Ahab by marriage, he sinned against the Lord, just as Ahab's family did.

[8:28] King Ahaziah joined King Joram of Israel in a war against King Hazael of Syria. The armies clashed at Ramoth in Gilead, and Joram was wounded in battle.

[8:29] He returned to the city of Jezreel to recover from his wounds, and Ahaziah went there to visit him.

Jehu Is Anointed King of Israel (2KI 9:1-13)

[9:1] Meanwhile the prophet Elisha called one of the young prophets and said to him, “Get ready and go to Ramoth in Gilead. Take this jar of olive oil with you,

[9:2] and when you get there look for Jehu, the son of Jehoshaphat and grandson of Nimshi. Take him to a private room away from his companions,

[9:3] pour this olive oil on his head, and say, ‘The Lord proclaims that he anoints you king of Israel.’ Then leave there as fast as you can.”

[9:4] So the young prophet went to Ramoth,

[9:5] where he found the army officers in a conference. He said, “Sir, I have a message for you.” Jehu asked, “Which one of us are you speaking to?” “To you, sir,” he replied.

[9:6] Then the two of them went indoors, and the young prophet poured the olive oil on Jehu's head and said to him, “The Lord, the God of Israel, proclaims: ‘I anoint you king of my people Israel.

[9:7] You are to kill your master the king, that son of Ahab, so that I may punish Jezebel for murdering my prophets and my other servants.

[9:8] All of Ahab's family and descendants are to die; I will get rid of every male in his family, young and old alike.

[9:9] I will treat his family as I did the families of King Jeroboam of Israel and of King Baasha of Israel.

[9:10] Jezebel will not be buried; her body will be eaten by dogs in the territory of Jezreel.’” After saying this, the young prophet left the room and fled.

[9:11] Jehu went back to his fellow officers, who asked him, “Is everything all right? What did that crazy fellow want with you?” “You know what he wanted,” Jehu answered.

[9:12] “No we don't!” they replied. “Tell us what he said!” “He told me that the Lord proclaims: ‘I anoint you king of Israel.’”

[9:13] At once Jehu's fellow officers spread their cloaks at the top of the steps for Jehu to stand on, blew trumpets, and shouted, “Jehu is king!”