Ad Fontes ← Search Library Verse Index

1 Kings 19:12

A Still Small VoiceTheme: God's Presence / GentlenessVerseImportance: Major
Sources
Reformed ConsensusGeneva Bible Notes (1599)John Trapp (1647)Matthew Poole (1685)John Gill (1748)Matthew Henry (1714)Jamieson-Fausset-BrownBarnes (1832)Cross-References (TSK)
Reformed Consensus
The "still small voice" (or "sound of gentle stillness," Hebrew *qol demamah daqah*) that confronted Elijah after the wind, earthquake, and fire reveals that God's most penetrating self-disclosure is not always attended by spectacular theophanic power, but by the quiet, authoritative Word — a pattern Calvin saw as God accommodating Himself to the weakness of His servant. Matthew Henry notes that the dramatic phenomena were not the vehicle of revelation but the preparation for it, stripping Elijah of any expectation that God works only through extraordinary means. This stands as a rebuke to those who despise the ordinary ministry of the Word and sacraments, seeking instead visible signs and wonders as the measure of divine presence. Reformed theologians have consistently drawn from this text the principle that the Spirit accompanies the preached Word in its gentle, interior application to the conscience — not in the sensationalism the fallen heart craves. Elijah's wrapping of his face in his mantle (v. 13) confirms that true encounter with God produces reverent awe, not spiritual presumption.
Geneva Bible Notes (1599)
And after the earthquake a fire; but the LORD was not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice.
John Trapp (1647)
And after the earthquake a fire; [but] the LORD [was] not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice. And after the fire a still small voice. — This was scintillatio Divinitatis, saith Tertullian, a small sparkle of the Deity, a sweet expression of God’s mind. And in this gentle and mild breath there was omnipotency; in the foregoing fierce representations there was but powerfulness. God’s saving revelation of himself, saith Mr Diodate here, is in the gospel only, which soundeth grace and comfort, and not in his terrible law. Hereby also is showed, saith another, that God hath sanctified a voice to be the ordinary mean of coming to his creature, mastering the strongholds of sin and Satan in us.
Matthew Poole (1685)
Wherein it is implied that God was present; which peradventure was to insinuate, that God would do his work in and for Israel in his own time, not by might or power, but by his own Spirit, Zechariah 4:6 , which moves with a powerful, but yet with a sweet and gentle gale.
John Gill (1748)
And after the earthquake a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire,.... As he was when he descended on this mount, and spake to Moses, Exodus 19:1 , the Targum, and so Jarchi, interpret all these appearances of angels, and not amiss; the wind, of an host of angels of wind; the earthquake, of an host of angels of commotion; the fire, of an host of angels of fire; see Psalm 104:4 , these ministers of the Lord went before him, to prepare the way of his glorious Majesty; which emblems may represent the power of God, the terribleness of his majesty, and the fury of his wrath, which he could display, if he would, to the destruction of his enemies; and could as easily destroy the idolatrous kingdom of Israel, which Elijah seems to be solicitous of, as the wind rent the mountains, and broke the rocks, and the earthquake shook the earth, and the fire consumed all in its way; but he chose not to do it now, but to use lenity, and show mercy, signified by the next emblem: and after the fire a still small voice: not rough, but gentle, more like whispering than roaring; something soft, easy, and musical; the Targum is, the voice of those that praise God in silence; and all this may be considered as showing the difference between the two dispensations of law and Gospel; the law is a voice of terrible words, and was given amidst a tempest of wind, thunder, and lightning, attended with an earthquake, Hebrews 12:18 , but the Gospel is a gentle voice of love, grace, and mercy, of peace, pardon, righteousness, and salvation by Christ; and may also point at the order and manner of the Lord's dealings with the souls of men, who usually by the law breaks the rocky hearts of men in pieces, shakes their consciences, and fills their minds with a sense of fiery wrath and indignation they deserve, and then speaks comfortably to them, speaks peace and pardon through the ministration of the Gospel by his Spirit; blessed are the people that hear this still, small, gentle voice, the joyful sound, Psalm 89:15 .
Matthew Henry (1714)
The question God put, What doest thou here, Elijah? is a reproof. It concerns us often to ask whether we are in our place, and in the way of our duty. Am I where I should be? whither God calls me, where my business lies, and where I may be useful? He complained of the people, and their obstinacy in sin; I only am left. Despair of success hinders many a good enterprise. Did Elijah come hither to meet with God? he shall find that God will meet him. The wind, and earthquake, and fire, did not make him cover his face, but the still voice did. Gracious souls are more affected by the tender mercies of the Lord, than by his terrors. The mild voice of Him who speaks from the cross, or the mercy-seat, is accompanied with peculiar power in taking possession of the heart.
Jamieson-Fausset-Brown
1Ki 19:4-18. He Is Comforted by an Angel. 4-18. went a day's journey into the wilderness—on the way from Beer-sheba to Horeb—a wide expanse of sand hills, covered with the retem (not juniper, but broom shrubs), whose tall and spreading branches, with their white leaves, afford a very cheering and refreshing shade. His gracious God did not lose sight of His fugitive servant, but watched over him, and, miraculously ministering to his wants, enabled him, in a better but not wholly right frame of mind, by virtue of that supernatural supply, to complete his contemplated journey. In the solitude of Sinai, God appeared to instruct him. "What doest thou here, Elijah?" was a searching question addressed to one who had been called to so arduous and urgent a mission as his. By an awful exhibition of divine power, he was made aware of the divine speaker who addressed him; his attention was arrested, his petulance was silenced, his heart was touched, and he was bid without delay return to the land of Israel, and prosecute the Lord's work there. To convince him that an idolatrous nation will not be unpunished, He commissions him to anoint three persons who were destined in Providence to avenge God's controversy with the people of Israel. Anointing is used synonymously with appointment (Jud 9:8), and is applied to all named, although Jehu alone had the consecrated oil poured over his head. They were all three destined to be eminent instruments in achieving the destruction of idolaters, though in different ways. But of the three commissions, Elijah personally executed only one; namely, the call of Elisha to be his assistant and successor [1Ki 19:19], and by him the other two were accomplished (2Ki 8:7-13; 9:1-10). Having thus satisfied the fiery zeal of the erring but sincere and pious prophet, the Lord proceeded to correct the erroneous impression under which Elijah had been laboring, of his being the sole adherent of the true religion in the land; for God, who seeth in secret, and knew all that were His, knew that there were seven thousand persons who had not done homage (literally, "kissed the hand") to Baal.
Barnes (1832)
A still small voice - literally, "a sound of soft stillness." The teaching is a condemnation of that "zeal" which Elijah had gloried in, a zeal exhibiting itself in fierce and terrible vengeances, and an exaltation and recommendation of that mild and gentle temper, which "beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things." But it was so contrary to the whole character of the stern, harsh, unsparing Tishbite, that it could have found no ready entrance into his heart. It may have for a while moderated his excessive zeal, and inclined him to gentler courses; but later in his life the old harshness recurred in a deed in reference to which our Lord himself drew the well-known contrast between the spirits of the two Dispensations Luke 9:51-56 .
Cross-References (TSK)
1Kings 19:11; 1Kings 19:13; 1Kings 18:38; Genesis 15:17; Exodus 3:2; Deuteronomy 4:11; 2Kings 1:10; 2Kings 2:11; Hebrews 12:29; Exodus 34:6; Job 4:16; Job 33:7; Zechariah 4:6; Acts 2:2; 1Kings 19:1; 1Kings 19:4; 1Kings 19:9; 1Kings 19:19; Judges 7:20; 1Kings 17:17; Revelation 16:18; Deuteronomy 32:2; 1Kings 18:44; 1Kings 7:16; 1Kings 18:41; 1Kings 18:29; Lamentations 3:62; 1Chronicles 16:6; Job 3:11; Isaiah 29:6; Matthew 27:51; Job 15:11; 1Kings 20:27; 2Chronicles 4:17; 2Kings 4:31; Job 4:12; 1Kings 19:12