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a master, and the more happy that he knows it. Fain would Elijah shake him off at Gilgal; if not there, at Bethel; if not yet there, at Jericho. A private message, on which Elijah must go alone, is pretended from the Lord. Whether shall we say the prophet did this for the trial of the constant affection of his careful and diligent servant; or that it was concealed from Elijah, that his departure was revealed to Elisha. Perhaps he that knew of his own reception into heaven, did not know what witnesses would be allowed to that miraculous act; and now his humble modesty affected a silent and unnoted passage; even Elisha knew something that was hid from his master, now upon the threshold of heaven. No mere creature was ever made of the whole counsel of the Highest: some things have been disclosed to babes and novices, that have been closed up to the most wise and judicious. In natural speculations, the greater wit and deeper judgment still carry it; but in the revelations of God, the favour of his choice sways all, not the power of our apprehension. The master may both command and entreat his servant's stay, in vain. Elisha must be pardoned this holy and zealous disobedience. "As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee." His master may be withdrawn from him, he will not be withdrawn from his master. He knew that the blessing was at the parting; and if he had diligently attended all his life, and now slacked in the last act, he had lost the reward of his service. The evening praises the day, and the chief grace of the theatre is in the last scene. "Be faithful to the death, and I will give thee a crown of life."

That Elijah should be translated, and what day he should be translated, God would have no secret: the sons of the prophets at Bethel, at Jericho, both know it, and ask Elisha if he knew it not: "Knowest thou that the Lord will take away thy master from thy head this day?" and he answered, "Yea, I know it, hold ye your peace." How familiarly do these prophets

interknow one another! how kindly do they communicate their visions! Seldom ever was any knowledge given to keep, but to impart: the grace of this rich jewel is lost in concealment. The removal of an Elijah is so important a business, that it is not fit to be done without noise; many shall have their share in his loss; he must be missed on the sudden; it was meet, therefore, that the world should know his rapture should be divine and glorious. I do not find where the day of any natural death is notified to so many; by how much more wonder there was in this assumption, by so much more shall it be fore-revealed. It is enough for ordinary occurrents to be known by their event: supernatural things have need of premonition, that men's hearts may both be prepared for their receipt, and confirmed in their certainty. Thrice was Elisha entreated, thrice hath he denied, to stay behind his now departing master; on whom both his eyes and his thoughts are so fixed, that he cannot give allowance so much as to the interpellation of a question of his fellow prophets: together therefore are this wonderful pair come to the last stage of their separation, the banks of Jordan. Those that were not admitted to be attendants of the journey, yet will not be debarred from being spectators of so marvellous an issue. Fifty men of the sons of the prophets went and stood to view afar off; I marvel there were no more: how could any son of the prophets stay within the college walls that day, when he knew what was meant to Elijah? Perhaps, though they knew that to be the prophet's last day, yet they might think his disparation should be sudden and insensible; besides, they found how much he affected secrecy in this intended departure: yet the fifty prophets of Jericho will make proof of their eyes, and with much intention essay who shall have the last sight of Elijah. Miracles are not purposed to silence and obscurity: God will not work wonders without witnesses, since he doth them on purpose to win glory to his name;

his end were frustrate without their notice. Even so, O Saviour, when thou hadst raised thyself from the dead, thou wouldst be seen of more than five hundred brethren at once; and when thou wouldst raise up thy glorified body from earth into heaven, thou didst not ascend from some close valley, but from the Mount of Olives; not in the night, not alone, but in the clear day, in the view of many eyes, which were so fixed upon that point of thine heaven, that they could scarce be removed by the check of angels.

Jordan must be crossed by Elijah in his way to heaven; there must be a meet parallel betwixt the two great prophets, that shall meet Christ upon Tabor, Moses and Elias; both received visions on Horeb, to both God appeared there in fire, and other forms of terror: both were sent to kings, one to Pharaoh, the other to Ahab; both prepared miraculous tables; the one of quails and manna in the desert, the other of meal and oil in Sarepta; both opened heaven, the one for that nourishing dew, the other for those refreshing showers; both revenged idolatries with the sword, the one upon the worshippers of the golden calf, the other upon the four hundred Baalites; both quenched the drought of Israel, the one out of the rock, the other out of the cloud; both divided the waters, the one of the Red Sea, the other of Jordan; both of them are forewarned of their departure; both must be fetched away beyond Jordan; the body of Elijah is translated, the body of Moses is hid: what Moses doth by his rod, Elijah doth by his mantle; with that he smites the waters, and they, as fearing the divine power which wrought with the prophet, run away from him, and stand on heaps, leaving the dry channel for the passage of those awful feet: it is not long since he mulcted them with a general exsiccation; now he only bids them stand aside, and give way to his last walk, that he might with dry feet mount up into the celestial chariot.

The waters do not now first obey him; they know

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that mantle of old, which hath oft given laws to their falling, rising, standing; they are past over, and now, when Elijah finds himself treading on his last earth, he proffers a munificent boon to his faithful servant, Ask what I shall do for thee, before I am taken from thee;" I do not hear him say, Ask of me when I am gone; in my glorified condition, I shall be more able to bestead thee; but, ask before I go. We have a communion with the saints departed, not a commerce: when they are enabled to do more for us, they are less apt to be solicited by us: it is a safe suing where we are sure that we are heard. Had not Elijah received a peculiar instinct for this proffer, he had not been thus liberal; it were presumption to be bountiful on another's cost, without leave of the owner. The mercy of our good God allows his favourites not only to receive, but to give; not only to receive for themselves, but to convey blessings to others; what can that man want that is befriended of the faithful?

Elisha needs not go far to seek for a suit; it was in his heart, in his mouth. "Let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me." Every prophet must be a son to Elijah; but Elisha would be his heir, and craves the happy right of his primogeniture, the double share to his brethren. It was not wealth, nor safety, nor ease, nor honour, that Elisha cares for; the world lies open before him, he may take his choice, the rest he contemneth; nothing will serve him but a large measure of his master's spirit; no carnal thought was guilty of this sacred ambition. Affectation of eminence was too base a conceit to fall into that man of God. He saw that the times needed strong convictions, he saw that he could not otherwise wield the succession to such a master, therefore he sues for a double portion of spirit; the spirit of prophecy to foreknow, the spirit of power to work. We cannot be too covetous, too ambitious of spiritual gifts, such especially as may enable us to win most advantage to God in our vocations. Our wishes are the true touchstone of our

estate; such as we wish to be, we are. Worldly hearts affect earthly things; spiritual, divine. We cannot better know what we are indeed, than by what we would be.

Elijah acknowledges the difficulty, and promises the grant of so great a request, suspended yet upon the condition of Elisha's eye-sight. "If thou see me when I am taken from thee, it shall be so unto thee; but if not, it shall not be." What are the eyes to the furniture of the soul? What power is there in those vissive beams to draw down a double portion of Elijah's spirit? God doth not always look at efficacy and merit in the conditions of our actions, but at the freedom of his own appointments. The eye was only to be employed as the servant of the heart, that the desires might be so much more intended with the sight. Vehemence is the way to speed, both in earth and in heaven. If but the eyelids of Elisha fall, if his thoughts slacken, his hopes are dashed. There must be fixedness and vigilance in those that desire double graces.

Elijah was going on and talking, when the chariot of heaven came to fetch him; surely, had not that conference been needful and divine, it had given way to meditation, and Elijah had been taken up rather from his knees, than from his feet. There can be no better posture or state for the messenger of our dissolution to find us in, than in a diligent prosecution of our calling. The busy attendance of our holy vocation is no less pleasing to God, than an immediate devotion. Happy is the servant whom the master, when he come, shall find so doing.

Oh the singular glory of Elijah! what mortal creature ever had this honour, to be visibly fetched by the angels of God to his heaven? Every soul of the elect is attended and carried to blessedness by those invisible messengers; but what flesh and blood was ever graced with such a convoy? There are three bodily inhabitants of heaven, Enoch, Elijah, our Saviour

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