Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
Eliseus
(ELISHA; Heb. lysh, God is salvation).
A Prophet of Israel. After learning, on Mount Horeb, that Eliseus, the son of
Saphat, had been selected by God as his successor in the prophetic office, Elias
set out to make known the Divine will. This he did by casting his mantle over
the shoulders of Eliseus, whom he found one of them that were ploughing with
twelve yoke of oxen
. Eliseus delayed only long enough to kill the yoke of oxen,
whose flesh he boiled with the very wood of his plough. After he had shared this
farewell repast with his father, mother, and friends, the newly chosen Prophet
followed Elias and ministered to him
. (1 Kings 19:8-21) He went with his
master from Galgal to Bethel, to Jericho, and thence to the eastern side of the
Jordan, the waters of which, touched by the mantle, divided, so as to permit
both to pass over on dry ground. Eliseus then beheld Elias in a fiery chariot
taken up by a whirlwind into heaven. By means of the mantle let fall from Elias,
Eliseus miraculously recrossed the Jordan, and so won from the prophets at
Jericho the recognition that the spirit of Elias hath rested upon Eliseus
. (2
Kings 2:1-15) He won the gratitude of the people of Jericho for healing with
salt its barren ground and its waters. Eliseus also knew how to strike with
salutary fear the adorers of the calf in Bethel, for forty-two little boys,
probably encouraged to mock the Prophet, on being cursed in the name of the Lord,
were torn by two bears out of the forest
. (2 Kings 2:19-24) Before he settled
in Samaria, the Prophet passed some time on Mount Carmel (2 Kings 2:25). When
the armies of Juda, and Israel, and Edom, then allied against Mesa, the Moabite
king, were being tortured by drought in the Idumæan desert, Eliseus consented to
intervene. His double prediction regarding relief from drought and victory over
the Moabites was fulfilled on the following morning. (2 Kings 3:4-24)
That Eliseus inherited the wonder-working power of Elias is shown throughout
the whole course of his life. To relieve the widow importuned by a hard creditor,
Eliseus so multiplied a little oil as to enable her, not only to pay her
indebtedness, but to provide for her family needs (2 Kings 4:1-7). To reward the
rich lady of Sunam for her hospitality, he obtained for her from God, at first
the birth of a son, and subsequently the resurrection of her child (2 Kings
4:8-37). To nourish the sons of the prophets pressed by famine, Eliseus changed
into wholesome food the pottage made from poisonous gourds (2 Kings 4:38-41). By
the cure of Naaman, who was afflicted with leprosy, Eliseus, little impressed by
the possessions of the Syrian general, whilst willing to free King Joram from
his perplexity, principally intended to show that there is a prophet in Israel
.
Naaman, at first reluctant, obeyed the Prophet, and washed seven times in the
Jordan. Finding his flesh restored like the flesh of a little child
, the
general was so impressed by this evidence of God's power, and by the
disinterestedness of His Prophet, as to express his deep conviction that there
is no other God in all the earth, but only in Israel
. (2 Kings 5:1-19) It is to
this Christ referred when He said: And there were many lepers in Israel in the
time of Eliseus the prophet: and none of them was cleansed but Naaman the Syrian
(Luke 4:27). In punishing the avarice of his servant Giezi (2 Kings 5:20-27), in
saving not once nor twice
King Joram from the ambuscades planned by Benadad (2
Kings 6:8-23), in ordering the ancients to shut the door against the messenger
of Israel's ungrateful king (2 Kings 6:25-32), in bewildering with a strange
blindness the soldiers of the Syrian king (2 Kings 6:13-23), in making the iron
swim to relieve from embarrassment a son of a prophet (2 Kings 6:1-7), in
confidently predicting the sudden flight of the enemy and the consequent
cessation of the famine (2 Kings 7:1-20), in unmasking the treachery of Hazael
(2 Kings 8:7-15), Eliseus proved himself the Divinely appointed Prophet of the
one true God, Whose knowledge and power he was privileged to share.
Mindful of the order given to Elias (1 Kings 19:16), Eliseus delegated a son
of one of the prophets to quietly anoint Jehu King of Israel, and to commission
him to cut off the house of Achab (2 Kings 9:1-10). The death of Joram, pierced
by an arrow from Jehu's bow, the ignominious end of Jezabel, the slaughter of
Achab's seventy sons, proved how faithfully executed was the Divine command (2
Kings 9:11-10:30). After predicting to Joas his victory over the Syrians at
Aphec, as well as three other subsequent victories, ever bold before kings, ever
kindly towards the lowly, Eliseus died, and they buried him
(2 Kings 13:14-20).
The very touch of his corpse served to resuscitate a dead man (2 Kings 13:20-21).
In his life he did great wonders, and in death he wrought miracles
(Ecclus.,
xlviii, 15).
MANGENOT in VIG., Dict. de la Bible (Paris, 1898), s. v. Elisée; STRACHAN in HAST., Dict. of the Bible (New York, 1898); FARRAR, Books of Kings (London, 1894); MEIGNAN, Les Prophètes d'Israel (Paris, 1892).
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