This week I have been digesting the story of the healing of
Naaman from 2 Kings 5. I have gotten stuck at verses 2-3 pondering the servant
girl who suggested to Naaman’s wife that he could be cured if he saw the
prophet in Samaria (Elisha). She was captured in a military raid and forced
into slavery to serve the military leader of the army that had captured her. We’re
not told her age, but the story seems to suggest she was young enough not to be
considered a grown, adult woman. Still, I think the story suggests that she was
old enough to know about and appreciate the Prophet Elisha.
From our modern perspective, we readily recognize the brutal
injustice of this practice, especially involving a child. We might also ascribe
her sympathy for Naaman’s suffering with disease (the umbrella label of leprosy) to the Stockholm Syndrome, but
the text seems to suggest she had an authentic compassion for her captors and
masters. Also, the text presents her as an example of faith, recognizing that
God worked through the Prophet Elisha. This is all the more remarkable since
this seems to come during the reign of Ahab’s son Joram who “did evil in the
eyes of the Lord," (3:2) and who seems less aware of Elisha than the captive
servant girl (5:7).
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