II Kings 5:27

Berean Standard Bible · deep dive

Therefore, the leprosy of Naaman will cling to you and your descendants forever!” And as Gehazi left his presence, he was leprous—as white as snow.

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What it means

The verse lands like a hammer at the end of a story that began so beautifully. Naaman, a foreign general, came to Israel desperate and dying of leprosy. He went home clean — and worshiping the God of Israel. Elisha refused payment because grace cannot be bought. But Elisha's servant Gehazi couldn't stand watching all that silver and clothing walk out the door. So he ran after Naaman, lied about his master's needs, and pocketed the goods. Then he lied to Elisha's face about where he'd been (verse 25).

Now Elisha pronounces the sentence: "The leprosy of Naaman will cling to you and to your descendants forever." Notice the wording — it's not just a leprosy; it's Naaman's leprosy. The very disease that grace lifted off the Gentile is now transferred to the Israelite who tried to monetize that grace. The blessing Naaman walked away with, Gehazi walks into.

Then the picture: "as white as snow." That phrase is loaded. It's the same description used when God turned Moses' hand leprous as a sign (Exodus 4:6), and when Miriam was struck with leprosy for speaking against Moses (Numbers 12:10). In other words, this is God's own signature on the judgment, not just a coincidence of skin disease.

"Forever" (Hebrew le'olam) has been debated. Some readers picture Gehazi's descendants suffering for generations on end. Most Jewish and Christian interpreters — including older commentators like Adam Clarke — take it more soberly: as long as Gehazi's line continued, the curse continued. Leprosy in that culture tended to wipe a family line out quickly.

In the larger flow of 1–2 Kings, this scene sits as a mirror: a pagan is saved by faith; an insider is condemned by greed. The story is asking you which one you actually resemble.

Historical Context

We're in the northern kingdom of Israel, roughly 850–840 BC, during the ministry of the prophet Elisha. After King Solomon died, the kingdom split in two — the northern ten tribes ("Israel") and the southern two ("Judah"). The north was a spiritual disaster, mostly worshiping Baal under the dynasty Ahab and Jezebel had built. Elisha was God's voice in that mess, the successor to Elijah.

Aram (modern-day Syria) was Israel's hostile neighbor to the northeast — they raided constantly, and Naaman was the four-star general running those raids. So when Naaman shows up at Elisha's door, it's like an enemy commander knocking during an active war. That's the political tension humming under this story.

Now Gehazi. He's Elisha's personal assistant — the disciple who walks with the prophet, prepares his food, manages his household. Think of him as a young man being groomed for spiritual leadership, the way Elisha himself had once served Elijah. He's seen miracles up close: the widow's oil multiplied (2 Kings 4), the Shunammite's son raised from the dead (2 Kings 4), and now Naaman's healing. He's not an outsider to God's work. He's an insider who decided God's work could be a side hustle.

Leprosy in this world was social death. The Hebrew word covers a range of skin conditions, not just what we now call Hansen's disease. But the social and religious consequences were brutal: you were ritually unclean, banished from worship, often banished from your own family. You lived in a separate house (compare King Uzziah in 2 Kings 15:5). Money in your pocket meant nothing if you couldn't enter the village to spend it. Gehazi got rich and got exiled in the same hour.

The "as white as snow" detail would have hit ancient readers like a flashbulb — that's the visual signature of divine judgment, the same one branded on Miriam centuries earlier.

Original Language

צָרַעַת (tsara'at) — usually translated "leprosy," but it's broader: a category of skin diseases that made you ritually unclean. The point isn't medical precision; it's that tsara'at cut you off from worship and community. Gehazi didn't just get sick — he got exiled from the very presence of God he'd been working near.

תִּדְבַּק (tidbaq) — "will cling." This is the same root used in Genesis 2:24 for a husband clinging to his wife. It's the language of permanent attachment, glue, covenant bonding. Gehazi wanted to cling to Naaman's silver; now Naaman's disease clings to him. Whatever you grasp for outside of God will eventually grasp you.

לְעוֹלָם (le'olam) — "forever." Don't read this as English "eternity." It means "for the foreseeable horizon, as far as the eye can see." Often it's translated "for all time," but it really means for the whole duration of the thing in view — here, for as long as Gehazi's line lasts.

כַּשָּׁלֶג (kashshaleg) — "as snow." A small phrase doing big work. It links Gehazi to Moses' sign-leprosy (Exodus 4:6) and Miriam's judgment (Numbers 12:10). The narrator is telling you: this isn't a medical accident. God himself signed the order.

How it points to Christ

Jesus himself reaches back and picks up this exact story. In Luke 4:27, standing in his hometown synagogue, he says: "And there were many lepers in Israel in the time of the prophet Elisha, yet not one of them was cleansed — only Naaman the Syrian." He's pointing at this chapter to make a stinging point: God's grace has always reached outsiders, often skipping over insiders who assumed they had a claim on him. That sermon got Jesus nearly thrown off a cliff.

Naaman is a picture of every Gentile — every outsider — who comes to Christ with empty hands and walks away clean. Gehazi is a picture of every religious insider who watches grace happen and tries to turn it into leverage, status, or income. The pattern shows up again with Simon the magician in Acts 8:18–24, who tried to buy the gift of the Holy Spirit — and with Ananias and Sapphira in Acts 5:1–11, who lied to the apostles about money and dropped dead. The New Testament keeps replaying this scene because the temptation never dies.

But here's where the gospel goes deeper than the warning. On the cross, Jesus does something neither Elisha nor Gehazi could imagine: he voluntarily takes the uncleanness onto himself. Where Gehazi was forced to wear Naaman's leprosy as judgment, Jesus chose to wear our sin as substitute. "He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree" (1 Peter 2:24). The transfer that destroyed Gehazi is the transfer that saves you — but only if you receive it as gift, never as wages.

Which means the question Luke 4 puts to you is the question this verse puts to you: Are you Naaman, or are you Gehazi? Have you received grace, or are you trying to monetize it?

Application

The thing that should haunt you about this story is that Gehazi was close. He wasn't a Baal priest. He wasn't an enemy soldier. He was the guy carrying the prophet's bag. He saw the dead raised. He watched the foreigner go home clean. And he still couldn't keep his hands off the silver.

Proximity to God's work is not the same as participation in God's heart.

You can sit in church every week. You can know your Bible. You can be the one people ask for prayer. And still be running quietly down the road behind Naaman, working out how to extract something for yourself from what God is doing for others. The form your "Naaman's silver" takes will be specific to you. Maybe it's the reputation you get from being known as a serious Christian. Maybe it's the influence ministry gives you. Maybe it's the way you've turned someone else's spiritual breakthrough into your own social capital — "let me tell you what I prayed over them." Maybe it's actual money. Gehazi's sin wasn't exotic; it was just garden-variety greed dressed up in religious clothes.

Here's the cost this verse is asking from you: Stop using God's work as a way to get something else. Stop running after the silver. Whatever it is you're tempted to grab when you think the Master isn't looking — name it, today, out loud, to him. He already knows. Elisha did.

And then receive what Naaman received. You came to this chapter dirty. The good news is that the only one who walks away clean in this story is the one who came with nothing in his hands and believed God anyway. Come the way Naaman came. Don't leave the way Gehazi left.

Prayer Points

Reflections

Sources

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