But we should recognize that we can sow the seed of servanthood, and God will return the harvest for it. He can make your position of servanthood a place refuge, even a place of promotion. As the Bible illustrates, the benefits of a servant’s heart are numerous. For the individuals mentioned in this series of articles, it was in their positions of servanthood that their greatness shined forth.
For the widow of Zarephath, her servant’s heart brought sustenance for herself and her son in a time of famine. My initial impression of Elijah's visit to the widow of Zarephath in I Kings 17 was that he was just passing through. This is incorrect, I would come to find out. When God told Elijah He had commanded a widow woman to sustain him, God wasn’t kiddin’. Elijah actually stayed with her and her son for an entire year.
There was a famine in the land, and this widow and her son were on the verge of starvation when the man of God comes to visit. In his first interaction with the widow, Elijah tells her to make him a cake that he might eat before she fed herself or her son. She did as instructed despite not having enough meal to feed one person, let alone several. Yet after feeding Elijah first, she realized she still had meal left over. She fed herself and her son, and still had more.
The miracle here was that every time she looked in her barrel, she always had the same amount of meal so long as at mealtime, she fed Elijah first. And she followed this routine everyday, perhaps several times a day for approximately a year.
Additionally, while Elijah abode with the widow, her son fell ill and died presumably for a reason unrelated to hunger. The man of God laid himself on top of the boy three times, and the boy’s life was restored. Again, as a result of how earnestly his mother had served Elijah.
There is a clear lesson to be learned from this woman whose name we will never know. She showed submission in a moment of desperation, and it actually saved her life. And for son, her servant's heart saved his life twice.

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