He put forth his hand.

The prophecy against Jeroboam and its attendant circumstances

I. All human power and skill engaged against God will wither. The hand of man is the bodily mark of his superiority to the animal creation; it represents his power and skill. It is the bread winner of the body. By its skilful use he imitates the works of God in nature, and by its means he sends down his thoughts to posterity. Jeroboam’s outstretched hand was the type of all human opposition to God’s rule, especially the opposition of the rulers of the world. Its withering was the exposition of “No weapon formed against thee shall prosper” (Isaiah 54:17); “He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh” (Psalms 2:4, etc.)

II. Physical blessing is of more importance to the ungodly man than morality of character. Christ’s teaching is, “If thy hand offend thee, cut it off “ (Matthew 18:8), count no earthly loss worthy of a thought compared with an injury to the spiritual life. (Outline from Sermons by a London Minister.)

Hospitality refused

As the man of God from Judah so nobly refuses Jeroboam’s royal hospitality, I am reminded of Lord Napier. On one occasion his lordship was sent down to Scotland by the Queen on a royal errand of review and arbitration between a great duke and his poor crofters. The duke, the administration of whose estate was to be inquired into, was good enough to offer his lordship his ducal hospitality for as long as the royal session of review lasted. But Her Majesty’s Deputy felt that neither his Royal Mistress nor himself could afford to be for one moment compromised, or even suspected, by her poorest subject; and therefore it was that his lordship excused himself from the duke’s table, and took up his quarters in the little wayside inn. “At any rate, you will come to the manse,” said the minister, who was on the crofter’s side. “Thank you,” said Napier. “But in your college days you must have read Plutarch about Caesar’s wife. No, thank you.” And his lordship lodged all his time in the little hotel, and went back to his Royal Mistress when his work was done, not only with clean hands, but without even a suspicion attaching to her or to him. “Come home with me and refresh thyself.” But the man of God said to the king, “If thou wilt give me half thine house, I will not go in with thee, neither will I eat bread nor drink water with thee.” So he went another way, and returned not by the way that he came to Bethel. (A. Whyte, D. D.)

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