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Elijah
C. O’Donnell, O.Carm., by kind permission. Published in
“Meeting God: Carmelite Reflections and Prayers” (Dublin: Columba, 2007).

In the Basilica of St. Peter’s Rome, there is a statue of the
prophet
Elijah with the inscription, “The entire Carmelite Order erected this
statue to its founder.” The statue faces Saints Dominic, Benedict, and
Francis of Assisi. There was controversy before and after the erection of the fine
statue by Cornacchini in 1727: many denied the truth of the claim of
Carmelites that Elijah was their founder, in the sense of the other thirty
seven figures in St. Peter’s.
Today Carmelites would not see their Order going back in an
historical line to the prophet who flourished more than 800 years before
Christ. But there are spiritual links. The first Carmelites
venerated the prophet, and established themselves near the fountain called
Elijah’s on Mount Carmel. Moreover they saw their life as in spiritual
succession to that of the prophet.
Elijah was one of the greatest of the prophets; he appeared
with Moses at the Transfiguration (Luke 9:28-36); many people at the time
thought that John the Baptist and also Jesus might have been Elijah
returning as promised in the Old Testament (Malachi 4:5-6; see Sirach
48:1-11).
The history of Elijah is found in (1Kings 17 – 2Kings 2).
There we find a complex figure that has attracted the contemplation of
Carmelites over the centuries. There are dramatic movements as when he
proclaimed a drought in Israel and conquered the prophets of Baal (1Kings
17-18); he was a loyal prophet speaking the word of God. He successfully
outwitted the evil King Ahab and his wicked wife Jezebel. He was a protector
of the poor, the widow of Zaraphat (1Kings 17:8-24); he condemned the murder
of Naboth planned by the queen and proclaimed God’s judgement against them
(1Kings 21).
But he was also frail and lapsed into discouragement and
self-pity, until restored by God in the vision upon Mount Horeb (Sinai). He
was strengthened by an angel who fed him so that he could walk to the holy
mountain. When he arrived there he complained to God that he had been
forsaken, even though he could say, “I have been zealous for the Lord God of
hosts” (1Kings 19:10 – these words later became the motto of the Carmelite
Order). God surprised him not by an appearance in a great wind, earthquake
or fire, but in the sound of sheer silence (1Kings 19:11-14). He resumed his
prophetic ministry and some time later he was taken up into heaven in a
fiery chariot, leaving behind his disciple Elisha to continue on as prophet.
At different times in its history the Carmelite Order has
looked to one or more aspects of the prophet’s life: he is active and
contemplative; one who heard and spoke the word of God; a friend of the
dispossessed. The Constitutions in 1995 gave a fine summary of what Elijah
means to the Carmelite Order today.
“In Elijah we see the solitary prophet who nurtured his
thirst for the one and only God, and lived in his presence. He is the
contemplative, burning with passionate love for the Absolute who is God,
“his word flaring like a torch” (Sirach 48:1). He is the mystic, who after a
long and wearisome journey, learned to read the new signs of God’s presence.
He is the prophet who became involved in the lives of the people, and who,
by battling against false idols, brought them back to faithfulness to the
Covenant with the One God. He is the prophet who was in solidarity with the
poor and the forgotten, and who defended those who endured violence and
injustice.
From Elijah, Carmelites learn to be people of the desert,
with heart undivided, standing before God and entirely dedicated to his
service, uncompromising in the choice to serve God’s cause, aflame with a
passionate love for God. Like Elijah, they believe in God and allow
themselves to be led by the Spirit and by the Word that has taken root in
their hearts, in order to bear witness to the divine presence in the world,
allowing God to be truly God in their lives. Finally, in Elijah they learn
to be channels of God’s tender love for the poor and humble”
Carmelite Constitutions (1995) 26
As it stands, the biblical presentation of Elijah is one that
can inspire and challenge today’s readers too. His single-minded zeal for
Yahweh unmasked the cultic syncretism of his contemporaries and can help
unmask the perennial tendencies towards compromise with various more subtle
forms of idolatry that menace the life of believers, both as individuals and
as social groupings. Elijah was an uncomfortable personage for the society
in which he lived, and he remains so today. Austere and distant though he
may seem to be in some of the texts, he appears in others as a man of flesh
and blood, experiencing the human weakness of fear, depression and
loneliness (see 1Kings 19:1ff). While the prophet proclaims the word of the
Lord, he also stands subject to that word, which is his inner driving force
but not his secure personal possession. That too is not without relevance
for the prophetic people of God today.
Charles Conroy, MSC. 1-2 Samuel, 1-2 Kings: Old Testament
Message 6 (Wilmington: Glazier, 1983) 177-178.
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