Biblical
Bad-Asses: Elijah
By Doug
Giles
“Now Elijah the
Tishbite, who was of the settlers of Gilead, said to Ahab, “As the LORD, the
God of Israel lives, before whom I stand, surely there shall be neither dew nor
rain these years, except by my word.” – 1Kings 17:1
Because of the systematic
emasculation of the American Church, and I’ll toss Western Europe into that
insult as well, it’s become hard to square the words “biblical” and “bad-ass”
without some hipster Christian spitting out his skinny milk, no foam, latte and
crying “Foul!” And I mean crying. As in weeping.
The Bible, however, is
filled with men and women who were absolutely, in the most holy sense of the
word, stonking bad-asses.
Indeed, the Bible is
chocked full of bad-asses but because we’ve been told to read the scripture
through rose-colored, Hello-Kitty glasses, versus just taking these tales
straight, as I do my whiskey, we miss the badassedness of Holy Writ’s heroes.
That’s what I am here
for. To help you appreciate what these humans did for God and man that required
a testicular fortitude that borders on the brink of extinction within our dandy
church culture.
As you probably gathered
from the title of my column and the cited scripture above, Elijah’s gonna be
this column’s focus.
Lets unpack the first
mention of Elijah and see what we can glean from this cat.
The first thing I’d like
to point out is that Elijah was a Tishbite. Most Jews and Christians are
familiar with Elijah. However, there was a time, thousands of years ago when he
confronted wicked rulers, that no one knew squat about him. He was a “nobody”
from an obscure tribe. A Tishbite? Who the heck are they? If you Google
Tishbite in the Bible you ain’t gonna find much. When Elijah launched out no
one knew who he was, they weren’t impressed with him and they did not listen to
his rebukes. But you know what? That didn’t stop him from stomping some
backside.
Elijah’s a badass in that he
didn’t need all the crap most Christians think they need before they start
kicking ass for the Lord.
Check it out. Elijah
didn’t have a prophetic blog. He didn’t graduate with honors from Schlomo’s
School of The Prophets. He didn’t have a Facebook fan page with 3,000 followers
cheerleading him on. He wasn’t popular on Twitter. His family wasn’t famous and
the tribe he hailed from wasn’t totes magotes. But, that didn’t hold him down
because, you see, Elijah wasn’t looking to be accepted and earn a living being
a professional prophet. Oh, no. He was looking to kick some ass.
Secondly, Elijah’s
calling was to confront corrupt leaders. His work was not to start orphanages.
He didn’t feed the poor. He didn’t have a leprosy outreach. He didn’t start an
effort to save abused camels. He was not a life coach with a Christian flare.
He was not a hip and cool prophet. He didn’t seek to be a positive,
motivational speaker trying to subtly blend God’s message into the corrupt
culture by getting a hair cut like Ahab, dressing like the backslidden
Israelites and going to formal state dinners.
Screw that noise. That was not
Elijah. His job: filet corrupt leaders who were leading his country astray.
In summation, my dear
wannabe badasses, here’s the walkways from today’s Bible study regarding
Elijah.
First off. Don’t bemoan that no one knows you, or you hail from a
goofy place that isn’t a wow city. If something needs to be done and you’re the
one to do it, then pony up, play the man and get it done. What you have in
badassery will make up for what you may lack in credentials to the “experts”
who demand such accolades before they show one respect.
Lastly, never compare whether or not what you do is legit based
upon what others are doing. Elijah’s call was not to sing kum-ba-yah. His work
was to pronounce judgment on Jezebel and her jacked up ilk. If Elijah had done
anything else, like dog rescues, or marital counseling, or hospital visitations
he would have been in direct disobedience to the call of God. No,
Elijah’s a badass because he stayed focused and did something that all the
other prophets were scared to do, namely confront wicked rulers.
Would to God we had some
Elijah’s doing that today both to the Left and the Right. Elijah was different because he
had an attitude, and this attitude was a threat to all that was evil.
He was a hazard to cultural constructs that would keep him and those he loved
dumb and down and beholden to shady leaders. Elijah was not a dutiful and
domesticated ecclesiastical cow of the politically and culturally correct
constructs. Oh, heck no. Elijah was a bad-ass.
What about you?
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