The Lying Spirit from God?
Discover how God's judgement works in real world.
Discover how God's judgement works in real world.
By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)
Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.
Can a holy God employ deception? The story of the prophet Micaiah and the doomed King Ahab (1 Kings 22) forces this very question. A close reading of the Hebrew text, however, reveals a far more nuanced picture than English translations suggest—one not of divine deceit, but of divine justice.
The context
In the wake of three years of fragile peace between Aram (modern Syria) and Israel, the wicked King Ahab of Israel received a state visit from Jehoshaphat, the righteous king of Judah (1 Kgs 22:1-2). About 77-78 years had passed since the united monarchy split after Solomon’s death (c. 930 BC). Seizing on positive political momentum, Ahab reminded his servants that Ramoth-Gilead, a rightful Israelite city, remained under Aramean control, which Ben-Hadad had previously promised to return (1 Kgs 20:34), though it apparently remained in Aramean hands. He then proposed a joint military campaign to reclaim it (1 Kgs 22:3-4). Jehoshaphat readily pledged alliance—”I am as you are, my people as your people, my horses as your horses”—yet he wisely insisted that they first inquire of the LORD (1 Kgs 22:4-5).
The False Prophets and Micaiah
While the two kings sat enthroned in royal splendor at the gate of Samaria, the false prophets performed their “ministerial” duties before them. Zedekiah, son of Chenaanah, their chief prophet, fashioned iron horns and, displaying them, proclaimed that with them Ahab would gore the Arameans until they were fully destroyed (1 Kgs 22:10-11). All the prophets echoed the same triumphant message, urging the king onward to certain success at Ramoth-Gilead (1 Kgs 22:12). Thus the stage was set for a dramatic confrontation between flattery and truth.
Dissatisfied with their positive uniformity, Jehoshaphat asked whether a prophet of YHVH was around (1 Kgs 22:7). The question put Ahab in a difficult spot. His reign, defined by the Baal worship he promoted with Jezebel, had been a relentless war against the prophets of Yahweh. Elijah had confronted him time and again. Now, with Elijah most likely gone, Ahab grudgingly identified one remaining Yahwistic prophet he could summon—Micaiah son of Imlah. “But I hate him,” Ahab confessed, “for he never prophesies good concerning me, but only disaster” (1 Kgs 22:8). At Jehoshaphat’s insistence, he was sent for.
The messenger sent to fetch Micaiah urged him to rubber-stamp the prophecy of the four hundred court prophets before the two kings (1 Kgs 22:13). With biting sarcasm, he quotes the phrase used by the false prophets verbatim and theatrically intensifies it by adding “and prosper”: “’Go up, and prosper, and the LORD will deliver it into the hand of the king!” (1 Kgs 22:6, 15). Detecting the obvious mockery, Ahab angrily demanded to hear the truth under oath (1 Kgs 22:16).
Micaiah then delivered a chilling message from the LORD: he saw all Israel scattered upon the mountains like a sheep without a shepherd (1 Kgs 22:17). The prophecy also foretold King Ahab’s death and his entire army’s defeat. Ahab turned bitterly to Jehoshaphat, saying, “Did I not tell you that he would not prophesy good concerning me, but only disaster?” (1 Kgs 22:18). But this was not the end of the confrontation. The true prophet of the LORD continued.
Micaiah’s Vision of the Heavenly Council
19 …I saw the Lord (יְהוָה) sitting on His throne, and all the army of heaven (וְכָל-צְבָא הַשָּׁמַיִם עֹמֵד עָלָיו) standing by Him on His right and on His left.
Some translations specify that the LORD was surrounded by angels (NASB), but the Hebrew text is broader, describing “the entire army of heaven” (כָל-צְבָא הַשָּׁמַיִם) surrounding Him. Micaiah’s statement is probably hyperbolic, as the sheer scale of this heavenly army defies visual containment in a single scene. Nevertheless, his deliberate emphasis on its completeness highlights the public and authoritative character of the divine council.
20 And the Lord said, ‘Who will entice Ahab (מִי יְפַתֶּה אֶת-אַחְאָב) to go up and fall at Ramoth-Gilead?’ And one said this, while another said that.
Central to the scene is the verb פָּתָה (patah), repeated by both YHVH and later by the spirit (vv. 20–22). This verb does not mean “to lie” but carries a more nuanced meaning: “to seduce, entice, and allure.”
ַיֵּצֵא הָרוּחַ, וַיַּעֲמֹד לִפְנֵי יְהוָה, וַיֹּאמֶר, אֲנִי אֲפַתֶּנּוּ
21 Then the spirit came forward and stood before the Lord, and said, ‘I will entice him.’
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Given the context of the story, the spirit does not invent falsehood; it amplifies the flattery Ahab has already chosen to believe and demanded to hear. This ‘spirit’ (hā-rûaḥ), likely the same adversarial figure who operates under God’s authority in Job and Zechariah, then proposes its method. Equally striking is the definite article in וַיֵּצֵא הָרוּחַ—“the (הָ) spirit came forward” (v. 21). Despite most translations rendering it “a spirit,” the Hebrew implies a known entity, possibly the same adversarial figure who appears as the Satan (הַשָּׂטָן), operating strictly under YHVH’s authority (Job 1:6, 7, 8, 9, 12; Job 2:1, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 7, as well as Zech 3:1). While many interpreters (ancient and modern) identify this figure with the Satan (the Accuser) known from Job and Zechariah, the text itself leaves the spirit’s precise identity somewhat open.
וַיֹּאמֶר יְהוָה אֵלָיו, בַּמָּה וַיֹּאמֶר, אֵצֵא וְהָיִיתִי רוּחַ שֶׁקֶר, בְּפִי, כָּל-נְבִיאָיו; וַיֹּאמֶר, תְּפַתֶּה וְגַם-תּוּכָל-צֵא, וַעֲשֵׂה-כֵן
22 And the Lord said to him, ‘How?’ And he said, ‘I will go out and be a deceiving spirit (רוּחַ שֶׁקֶר) in the mouths of all his prophets (בְּפִי, כָּל-נְבִיאָיו).’ Then He said, ‘You shall entice (תְּפַתֶּה), and you will also be able to/succeed/prevail (וְגַם-תּוּכָל). Go and do so.’ (צֵא, וַעֲשֵׂה-כֵן)
YHVH’s response in verse 22 is decisive: “You shall entice, and you shall also succeed. Go and do so.” The emphatic “you will also prevail” is not mere permission but a judicial decree guaranteeing the sentence will be carried out. It is followed by “go out and do so” (צֵא, וַעֲשֵׂה-כֵן), which is the key moment in the story. The phrase isn’t passive allowance; it’s an active commissioning of a sentence.
Judgement of God
In another context but speaking basically of the same thing, Apostle Paul summed up this dynamic as follows:
11 For this reason God will send upon them a deluding influence so that they will believe what is false, 12 in order that they all may be judged who did not believe the truth but took pleasure in wickedness. (2 Thess 2:11-12; see also Rom 1:18-31)
Paul’s ἐνέργειαν πλάνης (“deluding influence”) God sends (2 Thess 2:11) exactly mirrors 1 Kings 22’s רוּחַ שֶׁקֶר God gives (נָתַן). Both describe divine judgment: sovereignly handing rebels over to the enticing lie they already crave.
The Lord’s prophet continued:
23 Now then, behold, the Lord gave a deceiving spirit (נָתַן יְהוָה רוּחַ שֶׁקֶר) in the mouth of all these your prophets, and the Lord spoke about you evil/disaster (רָעָה).”
This dynamic is not unique to Ahab. Scripture reveals a sobering pattern: God’s judicial response to entrenched rebellion is to ratify the sinner’s chosen path. Just as He hardened Pharaoh’s heart (Ex 7:3; 9:12)—turning the tyrant’s obstinacy into the stage for the plagues and Israel’s deliverance—so He here commissions a deceiving spirit to confirm Ahab in the flattery he demanded. In both cases, divine sovereignty actively reinforces the rebel’s chosen course: Pharaoh would not let God’s people go, and Ahab would not heed true warning.
Ezekiel 14:9 strikingly repeats the same verb: “If the prophet is enticed (פָּתָה) to utter a prophecy, I the LORD have enticed that prophet.” Here God openly claims responsibility for the deception of false prophets who have already sold themselves to idolatry, confirming them in their chosen path exactly as He does with Ahab’s 400 court prophets.
Note that in Ezek 14:9 the verb פָּתָה is used twice in one verse, with God as the subject of the second instance: ‘I the LORD have enticed [פִּתֵּיתִי] that prophet’—exactly the same judicial pattern seen with Ahab’s 400. This parallel proves the pattern is judicial, not arbitrary trickery.
The Hebrew text, therefore, never portrays God as lying. Instead, it reveals a holy God who, in perfect justice, withdraws restraint and ratifies the self-deception of the rebellious, using their desires as the very means of their destruction. Ahab is not tricked against his will; he is given in the identical manner what he insisted on believing.
Conclusion
A holy God never lies. In His justice, He sometimes withdraws restraint and judicially confirms obstinate rebels in the self-deception they have already chosen, handing them over to the flattering lies they crave until those very lies become the noose that drags them to destruction.
That is what happened to Ahab. God spoke no falsehood; He simply removed every barrier and gave the king the prophets his heart demanded. The mouth that despised Micaiah’s truth was filled with the deception it loved—until Ahab’s destruction.
The God who hardens the stubborn heals the broken. The proud He abandons to their delusions; the humble He guards with omnipotent grace. Your fear, your hunger for truth, your ache to honor Him—these are the Holy Spirit’s fingerprints proving the door still stands wide.
The Judge of all the earth has become your Savior. The voice that pronounced doom over wicked kings now says to you, “Come.” No truly repentant heart will ever be refused. Run to Him—the arms that rule the heavens are open, and the blood that satisfies God’s holiness covers you forever.
Hallelujah!
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Comments (66)
I love this article , it show how greed and selfish desires lured a rebellious heart to demise. This calls for all true believers to meditated deeply and to discern and know the voice of the Lord.
May the Lord bless you and keep you!
Dear Eli,
The way you have explained and done exegesis on this subject, just blessed me. Thank you.
We serve a Great, Loving and Gracious God. !
Amen and amen!
Thanks for rerouting the article so quickly. I hope the issue with cloudflare is resolved just as quickly. Glory, praise, and thanks to YHWH for His justice and judgement!
Blessings!
I could clearly see a correlation between this story and the tower Babel. Unity in Rebellion, Seeking security and glory apart from God, Suppression of Truth and God's response of scattering and confusion. For the People of Babel feared scattering and wanted self preservation, Scattering became their Judgement. Zedekiah and the 400prophets mocked the prophecy of scattering; scattering became their outcome. They sought unity in a lie, their unity is shattered in battle.
Let's keep thinking.
I also see this as a “final” act of His Grace on behalf of Ahab. It’s interesting that God tells Ahab through the prophet that He will/has sent a spirit to entice him toward destruction. Don’t sound much like lying to me but rather a strong warning that Ahab has reached the end of the pathway of grace.
Thank you for your comment, Robert.
I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.
Wow, what a powerful revelation.
Blessings!
SHALOM Dr,
My takeaway in passage "the arms that rule the heavens are open and the blood that satisfies God's Holiness covers me forever, and that would be the blood of Jesus and no true repentance will ever be refused.
Amen!
Est il possible d avoir la traduction en français?
There is a French translation of many articles. This one will be available some time in the future.
Hallelujah! ❤️✝️🙏❤️
Elaborately explained for a layman. May the blessed Lord and God Yeshua protect you,guide you and give wisdom and understanding.
Amen and Amen.
Thank you so much!
I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.