The siege of Samaria broken
The Lord brings Samaria to the edge of covenant judgment and then reverses the disaster by his own word and action. Elisha’s prophecy proves true exactly, while the king’s despair and the officer’s mockery expose unbelief as rebellion against God’s promise. The four lepers, though socially excluded,
Commentary
6:24 Later King Ben Hadad of Syria assembled his entire army and attacked and besieged Samaria.
6:25 Samaria’s food supply ran out. They laid siege to it so long that a donkey’s head was selling for eighty shekels of silver and a quarter of a kab of dove’s droppings for five shekels of silver.
6:26 While the king of Israel was passing by on the city wall, a woman shouted to him, “Help us, my master, O king!”
6:27 He replied, “No, let the Lord help you. How can I help you? The threshing floor and winepress are empty.”
6:28 Then the king asked her, “What’s your problem?” She answered, “This woman said to me, ‘Hand over your son; we’ll eat him today and then eat my son tomorrow.’
6:29 So we boiled my son and ate him. Then I said to her the next day, ‘Hand over your son and we’ll eat him.’ But she hid her son!”
6:30 When the king heard what the woman said, he tore his clothes. As he was passing by on the wall, the people could see he was wearing sackcloth under his clothes.
6:31 Then he said, “May God judge me severely if Elisha son of Shaphat still has his head by the end of the day!”
6:32 Now Elisha was sitting in his house with the community leaders. The king sent a messenger on ahead, but before he arrived, Elisha said to the leaders, “Do you realize this assassin intends to cut off my head?” Look, when the messenger arrives, shut the door and lean against it. His master will certainly be right behind him.”
6:33 He was still talking to them when the messenger approached and said, “Look, the Lord is responsible for this disaster! Why should I continue to wait for the Lord to help?”
7:1 Elisha replied, “Hear the word of the Lord! This is what the Lord says, ‘About this time tomorrow a seah of finely milled flour will sell for a shekel and two seahs of barley for a shekel at the gate of Samaria.’”
7:2 An officer who was the king’s right-hand man responded to the prophet, “Look, even if the Lord made it rain by opening holes in the sky, could this happen so soon?” Elisha said, “Look, you will see it happen with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of the food!”
7:3 Now four men with a skin disease were sitting at the entrance of the city gate. They said to one another, “Why are we just sitting here waiting to die?
7:4 If we go into the city, we’ll die of starvation, and if we stay here we’ll die! So come on, let’s defect to the Syrian camp! If they spare us, we’ll live; if they kill us – well, we were going to die anyway.”
7:5 So they started toward the Syrian camp at dusk. When they reached the edge of the Syrian camp, there was no one there.
7:6 The Lord had caused the Syrian camp to hear the sound of chariots and horses and a large army. Then they said to one another, “Look, the king of Israel has paid the kings of the Hittites and Egypt to attack us!”
7:7 So they got up and fled at dusk, leaving behind their tents, horses, and donkeys. They left the camp as it was and ran for their lives.
7:8 When the men with a skin disease reached the edge of the camp, they entered a tent and had a meal. They also took some silver, gold, and clothes and went and hid it all. Then they went back and entered another tent. They looted it and went and hid what they had taken.
7:9 Then they said to one another, “It’s not right what we’re doing! This is a day to celebrate, but we haven’t told anyone. If we wait until dawn, we’ll be punished. So come on, let’s go and inform the royal palace.”
7:10 So they went and called out to the gatekeepers of the city. They told them, “We entered the Syrian camp and there was no one there. We didn’t even hear a man’s voice. But the horses and donkeys are still tied up, and the tents remain up.”
7:11 The gatekeepers relayed the news to the royal palace.
7:12 The king got up in the night and said to his advisers, “I will tell you what the Syrians have done to us. They know we are starving, so they left the camp and hid in the field, thinking, ‘When they come out of the city, we will capture them alive and enter the city.’”
7:13 One of his advisers replied, “Pick some men and have them take five of the horses that are left in the city. (Even if they are killed, their fate will be no different than that of all the Israelite people – we’re all going to die!) Let’s send them out so we can know for sure what’s going on.”
7:14 So they picked two horsemen and the king sent them out to track the Syrian army. He ordered them, “Go and find out what’s going on.”
7:15 So they tracked them as far as the Jordan. The road was filled with clothes and equipment that the Syrians had discarded in their haste. The scouts went back and told the king.
7:16 Then the people went out and looted the Syrian camp. A seah of finely milled flour sold for a shekel, and two seahs of barley for a shekel, just as the Lord had said they would.
7:17 Now the king had placed the officer who was his right-hand man at the city gate. When the people rushed out, they trampled him to death in the gate. This fulfilled the prophet’s word which he had spoken when the king tried to arrest him.
7:18 The prophet told the king, “Two seahs of barley will sell for a shekel, and a seah of finely milled flour for a shekel; this will happen about this time tomorrow in the gate of Samaria.”
7:19 But the officer replied to the prophet, “Look, even if the Lord made it rain by opening holes in the sky, could this happen so soon?” Elisha said, “Look, you will see it happen with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of the food!”
7:20 This is exactly what happened to him. The people trampled him to death in the city gate.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
This episode belongs to the Aramean siege of Samaria during the divided monarchy, when Israel is being crushed both militarily and economically. Siege warfare in the ancient Near East regularly produced famine, and the grotesque prices and the report of cannibalism show total social collapse under pressure. The city gate is the public center for commerce, announcement, and later movement of the population, so the deliverance and the officer’s death there both carry public, official significance. The four men with a skin disease stand outside the city as excluded persons under Israel’s purity system, which heightens the irony that they become the human instruments by which the city learns of rescue.
Central idea
The Lord brings Samaria to the edge of covenant judgment and then reverses the disaster by his own word and action. Elisha’s prophecy proves true exactly, while the king’s despair and the officer’s mockery expose unbelief as rebellion against God’s promise. The four lepers, though socially excluded, become the unexpected witnesses of deliverance, showing that the Lord can save by means no one in the city would have predicted.
Context and flow
This unit follows the larger Elisha cycle in which the prophet has already shown the Lord’s power over Aramean hostility and Israel’s crisis. The passage moves in three scenes: the siege and famine in Samaria, the prophetic oracle of immediate relief, and the discovery and public verification of the deserted Aramean camp. It closes by repeating the oracle and showing its exact fulfillment in the death of the unbelieving officer, thereby bracketing the narrative with the certainty of the prophetic word.
Exegetical analysis
The narrative is built around a sharp contrast between visible ruin and prophetic certainty. In 6:24-29 the siege has produced catastrophic scarcity, expressed in the absurd price of food and the appalling report of cannibalism. The narrator does not soften the horror; the famine is the logical outworking of prolonged siege and, in covenant terms, a sign of judgment. The king’s response is morally complex: he tears his clothes and even wears sackcloth, suggesting grief, but he remains spiritually unstable. His cry, 'Let the Lord help you,' and his later vow against Elisha show that he both recognizes divine sovereignty and resents it. Instead of repentance, he turns toward blaming the prophet.
Elisha’s calm in 6:32-33 is deliberate. He is seated with the elders, which suggests a protected and respected setting, and he immediately perceives the king’s messenger as an attempt to arrest or kill him. By ordering the door shut, he controls access and signals that the messenger cannot override the prophetic word. The messenger’s complaint in 6:33 is the theological hinge of the passage: 'Look, the Lord is responsible for this disaster.' That statement is true in the sense of divine sovereignty, but it is spoken in unbelieving frustration, not submission. The king and his messenger are not seeking the Lord’s face; they are rebelling against the same Lord whose judgment has fallen.
In 7:1 Elisha answers with a direct oracle introduced by the standard prophetic formula, 'Hear the word of the Lord.' The contrast is intentional: where the city sees only scarcity, the Lord announces abundance 'about this time tomorrow.' The exactness of the prediction matters. It is not merely that relief will eventually come, but that the reversal will be immediate and measurable at the gate of Samaria. The officer’s scoff in 7:2 exposes the unbelief of a court official who can imagine no pathway from famine to abundance. Elisha’s response is equally exact: the man will see the fulfillment but will not eat of it, because unbelief excludes him from the benefit of the promised provision.
The four men with a skin disease become the narrative agents of discovery in 7:3-10. Their reasoning is brutally realistic: death is certain whether they stay outside, enter the city, or approach the Arameans, so they choose the only possible course that might spare them. The text does not commend their self-preserving calculation as a model of virtue; it simply shows God using marginal men. When they arrive, the camp is empty because the Lord has caused the Arameans to hear a terrifyingly magnified sound of chariots and horses. The text attributes the panic directly to the Lord; the mechanism is not explained because the theological point is that God can rout an army without Israel’s military action. The Arameans flee in haste, abandoning supplies and equipment.
The lepers’ behavior in 7:8-9 is morally mixed. They first satisfy their immediate hunger and hoard valuables, but then their conscience awakens: 'It’s not right what we’re doing.' Their change of mind is not sentimental; they recognize that the day of deliverance must be reported, not privatized. The gatekeepers then relay the news to the palace, and the king’s interpretation in 7:12 is again faithless. He assumes a military trap because he cannot conceive that the Lord would simply fulfill the prophetic word. One adviser proposes a cautious reconnaissance, and the scouts confirm that the camp route is littered with discarded goods. The resulting plunder fulfills the oracle exactly in 7:16.
The closing verses (7:17-20) complete the irony. The officer who mocked the prophecy is placed at the city gate, the very location where the promised abundance now becomes visible. As the people rush out, they trample him to death. The narrator explicitly states that this fulfilled the prophet’s word. The repetition of the oracle in 7:18-19 and the fulfillment statement in 7:17, 20 intentionally frame the story so the reader cannot miss the point: the Lord’s word is certain, and unbelief is deadly. The narrative is not mainly about clever lepers or bad military luck; it is about the Lord vindicating his word in judgment and mercy.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands within the Mosaic covenant administration over Israel and reads like a living enactment of Deuteronomy’s covenant curses: siege, famine, and even cannibalism are the kind of horrors threatened for national covenant unfaithfulness. Yet the Lord does not abandon his word or his people. Through Elisha he preserves the prophetic witness and grants deliverance, showing that judgment is real but not the final word. The unit contributes to the Bible’s broader movement toward restoration and messianic hope by demonstrating that the Lord alone can reverse deathly conditions for his covenant people, though it does not itself erase Israel’s historical identity or become a direct promise to the church.
Theological significance
The passage reveals the Lord’s absolute sovereignty over nations, scarcity, fear, and rescue. It also exposes the seriousness of unbelief: the king and his officer hear the word of the Lord but respond with cynicism, and the officer’s end shows that scorn of divine speech is not a light matter. The story displays both judgment and mercy at once. God disciplines Samaria under covenant curse, yet he still provides life-giving abundance and uses unexpected, socially marginal people to announce it. It also reinforces the truth that prophetic speech is accountable to God and that his promises stand even when circumstances seem to deny them.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
The oracle of flour and barley is direct prophecy and is fulfilled literally and immediately. The repeated forecast and fulfillment are the point of the passage, not a cipher for hidden meanings. The deserted camp and the lepers are narrative means by which the Lord effects deliverance, but they should not be pressed into speculative symbolism. Typologically, the passage may echo the broader biblical pattern of God bringing life out of death and vindicating his word through an unexpected mediator, but the text itself remains focused on Samaria’s historical rescue.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
In city life the gate was the place of trade, public information, and legal-administrative activity, so both the prophecy and the officer’s death there are socially charged. Wearing sackcloth under ordinary clothing suggests inward mourning without open political defeat, but it does not amount to repentance by itself. The siege setting reflects a common ancient warfare reality: starvation was often more devastating than the sword. The lepers’ exclusion outside the gate reflects purity boundaries and social marginalization, which the narrative uses to create irony when those excluded men become the first bearers of good news.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its original setting the passage is about the Lord vindicating Elisha’s word and rescuing Samaria from siege. Canonically, it contributes to the broader biblical theme that God gives life by his authoritative word and overturns impossible conditions through unexpected means. Any Christological connection is indirect and subordinate to the historical sense: Elisha functions as a true prophet whose word is fulfilled exactly, which anticipates the need for a greater mediator, but this should not be pressed as a direct messianic prediction. The passage also resonates with the later biblical pattern of God using outsiders and the lowly to expose the unbelief of the powerful, a theme that reaches fuller expression in the New Testament without canceling the text’s original meaning.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s word must be trusted even when present circumstances seem to contradict it. Leaders should respond to divine judgment with repentance rather than blame-shifting. The passage warns that unbelief can coexist with religious language and even visible signs of mourning. It also teaches that God often works through unlikely instruments, so believers should not despise humble means or unexpected messengers. Finally, when the Lord grants deliverance, his people should not hoard good news but report it faithfully.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
No major interpretive crux requires special comment.
Application boundary note
Do not flatten this narrative into a timeless promise that every crisis will end in the same way, and do not turn it into a template for modern political or national application. Its primary force lies in the Lord’s covenant dealings with Israel, the certainty of his prophetic word, and the exposure of unbelief. Application should remain theological and pastoral rather than allegorical or nation-specific.
Key Hebrew terms
ra'av
Gloss: hunger, famine
This is the controlling condition of the narrative. The siege turns ordinary life into covenant-curses level deprivation and explains both the desperate prices and the moral horror that follows.
davar
Gloss: word, matter, message
The repeated emphasis on the 'word of the Lord' frames the unit. What Elisha speaks is not speculation but divine speech that governs the outcome.
sha'ar
Gloss: gate
The gate is the public place of commerce and official life. The prophecy is fulfilled there, and the officer’s death there marks the public vindication of the prophetic word.
tsara'at
Gloss: leprosy, skin disease
The four men’s excluded status explains why they are outside the city and highlights the irony that outsiders become the first discoverers and messengers of deliverance.
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