Passage
And he lieth down and sleepeth under a certain retem-tree, and lo, a messenger cometh against him, and saith to him, `Rise, eat;'
And he lieth down and sleepeth under a certain retem-tree, and lo, a messenger cometh against him, and saith to him, `Rise, eat;'
1 Kings 19:3 And he feareth, and riseth, and goeth for his life, and cometh in to Beer-Sheba, that <FI>is<Fi> Judah's, and leaveth his young man there,
1 Kings 19:4 and he himself hath gone into the wilderness a day's Journey, and cometh and sitteth under a certain retem-tree, and desireth his soul to die, and saith, `Enough, now, O Jehovah, take my soul, for I <FI>am<Fi> not better than my fathers.'
1 Kings 19:5 And he lieth down and sleepeth under a certain retem-tree, and lo, a messenger cometh against him, and saith to him, `Rise, eat;'
1 Kings 19:6 and he looketh attentively, and lo, at his bolster a cake <FI>baken on<Fi> burning stones, and a dish of water, and he eateth, and drinketh, and turneth, and lieth down.
1 Kings 19:7 And the messenger of Jehovah turneth back a second time, and cometh against him, and saith, `Rise, eat, for the way is too great for thee;'
The verse centers on "lieth", "down", "sleepeth", "under", "certain", "retem-tree", "messenger", and "cometh". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "lieth" and "down", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 4's "and he himself hath gone into the..." into verse 6's "and he looketh attentively and lo at...", so "lieth" and "down" belong inside that flow. In 1 Kings context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "lieth" and "down" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.