• Contact
  • Return to IBSA
  • Advertise Through Us
  • Subscribe
  • E-Reader

IBSA News

Illinois Baptist State Newspaper

  • Quick Links
    • E-Reader
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Resource
  • News
    • IBSA
    • SBC
    • Culture
    • Illinois Churches
  • Stories
    • Church Planting
    • Mission
  • In Focus
  • Columns
    • Nate Adams
    • Eric Reed
    • Meredith Flynn
    • Table Talk
    • Reporter’s Notebook
    • Encouraging Words
The Shunammite woman falls at Elisha's feet

The Shunammite woman falls at Elisha's feet (2 Kings 4:37) by Gerbrand van den Eeckhout. National Museum in Warsaw (MNW)

She had (almost) everything

July 21, 2025 By Meredith Flynn

When we first meet the woman of Shunem in 2 Kings 4, she’s got a lot going for her. She’s hospitable, welcoming the prophet Elijah into her home for a meal every time he passes through town. She also has resources—enough to build an addition onto her home for Elijah to use as he comes and goes!

She’s comfortable enough that when Elijah asks what the Lord can do for her in return, she basically tells him she’s got everything she needs. She lives among her own people, and she’s doing fine.

There is one thing she doesn’t have, though. Her husband is old, and she has no son. Elijah knows this, even though she neglects to mention it. Through the mercy and provision of the Lord, the Shunammite woman has a child. He grows up until one day, he falls deathly ill. Her hope quickly running out, the woman goes directly to Elijah.

She bypasses his servant with an “all is well” on her way to tell the real story to the man of God. And that’s when we see her break, finally. I didn’t ask for this, she says. She had pled with Elijah not to lie to her when he told her she would have a son. And now, she’s lost him.

But she hasn’t. Elijah goes back to the Shunammite’s house. The boy is healed. His mother is shown again that God is powerful and merciful to save and deliver. And we get two beautiful reminders of how God handles our deepest desires:

First, he sees them. Even when we would prefer to keep hidden the things that are most painful, God knows the desires of our hearts. From the outside, it looked like the Shunammite woman had everything. But God knew the one thing she wouldn’t say out loud.

Second, not only does God know those desires, he holds them in his hands. The Shunammite woman knew exactly where to go to plead for her son’s deliverance. Not her husband. Not Elijah’s servant. She goes straight to the prophet and doesn’t leave his side until he agrees to follow her back to Shunem, where he heals her son.

God saw, and God saved. He does the same for us, knowing the desires of our hearts even when we are afraid to name them. He sees them, and he holds them in his hands.

Meredith Flynn is a wife, mother of two, and writer living in Springfield. She and her family are active members of Delta Church.

Share This Story

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Featured Columns

Stock photo

How your Church can cultivate an evangelistic culture

Mark Emerson

A renewal of evangelistic zeal is dependent first on the Holy Spirit. When he finds a people who are open to his work and eager to share their faith, the Spirit opens doors for gospel conversations and readies the waters for baptism. IBSA’s Mark Emerson said there are vital ways for churches to encourage an […]

Christ Washing the Disciples' Feet by Benvenuto Tisi da Garofalo (Public Domain/Wiki Commons)

Half-stepping for Jesus

Eric Reed

A pastor-friend called me just before Easter. “We’re having a joint Maundy Thursday service with the church down the street,” he told me. “Their minister said he’d rather not have the foot washing, because feet are gross. He wants to wash hands instead.” “Hands?!” I erupted. “That’s Pilate!” “What?” “Pilate! That’s Pilate, washing his hands […]

Evangelism matters

Doug Munton

Once, some years ago, our family drove to the mall. Do you remember malls? When we arrived at the parking lot, our kids piled out of the minivan. Except one didn’t. My wife gasped, “Where is Rachel?” Somehow, in the confusion and mayhem of loading the family of six into the vehicle, we left our […]

More Columns

More than a mission trip: Encounters from the border

Rita Klundt

Editor’s note: A team of women from Illinois Baptist churches spent a week with the Send Relief Center in Laredo, Texas. The center, operated by the North American Mission Board, has served thousands of “the least of these,” migrants and refugees at the Rio Grande border with Mexico. Today, about 20 people arrive each week. […]

News

Where's Scott?

Where’s Foshie? He’s on a listening tour─ all over Illinois

Illinois Baptist Staff

Updated April 1, 2026 | Waldo has nothing on Scott Foshie. The new IBSA Executive Director is traveling Illinois, wedging listening sessions with pastors and associational leaders into a busy onboarding schedule. “At every meeting, I have been humbled by the love and support for our Illinois Baptist Team,” Foshie said. He is well known […]

After Moody sues, Chicago opens teaching intern spots to students

Former SBC President Steve Gaines dies at 68

More News Stories

Mission

“While we have not yet arrived at the destination we envision, I believe we are clearly headed in the right direction,” said IMB President Paul Chitwood to trustees in the May 22 plenary session. IMB Photo

IMB trustees appoint new missionaries, elect first woman chair

Leslie Caldwell

Richmond | International Mission Board trustees approved 65 fully funded missionaries for appointment during their May 21-22 meeting near Richmond, Virginia. The missionaries approved for appointment will be recognized during a Sending Celebration on Tuesday, June 10, at 10:08 a.m. CDT in conjunction with the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting in Dallas. The event will […]

Metro East church plant hosts multiplication meeting

Sallateeska baptism demonstrates SBC connections

More Mission Stories

  • News
  • Mission
  • In Focus
  • Columns

Copyright © 2026 · Website by Megaphone Designs