Long, long ago, the army of Assyria brought all of her forces to surround and capture Elisha, the prophet of God. During the night the Assyrian army surrounded the house of Elisha. When the servant of Elisha woke up, he looked around the hills and saw the enemy. He didn’t know what to do, but Elisha did. He prayed.
“And Elisha prayed, and said, LORD, I pray, open his eyes that he may see. Then the LORD opened the eyes of the young man, and he saw. –
2 Kings 6:17
In times of great stress, we all can suffer the problem of the young servant. We all can cry in fear instead of simply trusting God.
After Elisha’s prayer, the young servant saw, as the Scripture says, “The mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha.”
In other words, God’s help was already there, but he couldn’t see it.
The Servant wasn’t blind physically. He was blind spiritually. Elisha prayed that the servant would be able to see that God can handle anything.
Elisha wasn’t afraid of the army of men because he could see the army of God.
In this story we see the power of prayer. Elisha didn’t need time to reflect on his prayer. He didn’t need 7 days to build up to the prayer. He didn’t need two prayers. Elisha had lived his entire life talking to God, so that when he called on him, God answered immediately.
It is interesting to note that Elisha was not praying for deliverance. This was a prayer of accommodation. Elisha prayed for God to accommodate the young servant so that he could see that God’s help was already there. God didn’t have to do it and the outcome would have been there anyway.
It was a prayer for a young man who needed to open his eyes and see God’s blessings.
There are many people who can see the Sun and the moon and the stars but who cannot see God in them. They have eyes but are spiritually blind. Our world has millions who cannot see the goodness or the blessings of God. They are spiritually blind.
Maybe they need this prayer from Elisha.
Lonnie Davis