He walked into the throne room of the most powerful king in Israel with no name, no credentials, no gift - and words that stopped the rain.
Elijah: Fire on the Mountain is a biographical reconstruction of the most electrifying figure in the Hebrew prophetic tradition - a man whose ministry burned so hot it nearly consumed him, and whose most defining moment was not the fire that fell on Carmel, but the silence he heard in a cave at the end of his strength.
Drawing on archaeology, ancient Near Eastern history, and the biblical text itself, S.W. Ogden places Elijah inside his world with precision and force. The ivory-walled palace of Omri's Samaria. The bone-dry ravines of the Wadi Cherith during a three-year drought. The limestone ridge of Mount Carmel where four hundred and fifty men spent six hours calling on a god who did not answer. The desert road south to Horeb, where a burnt-out prophet lay under a broom tree and asked to die.
This is not a devotional book. It is not a typology study or a small-group curriculum. It is the story of what it actually cost to be Elijah - the man from the margins of Gilead who arrived mid-sentence in the biblical record, already in motion, the drought already declared, carrying no genealogy and no institutional support, only a name that was itself a declaration of war: My God is Yahweh.
Each chapter pairs an immersive narrative vignette - written as close to the ground as the evidence allows - with analytical prose that lays out the archaeological and historical record in full, so the reader can assess every reconstruction for themselves.
For readers who want to understand not just what Elijah did, but what it felt like to be the man who did it.
Book Two of The Believers Series