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Mary Jane Chaignot, Bible scholar and
writer, focuses on Hannah and Samuel.
Hannah
Bible Characters...
- The book of Samuel begins with the story of
Hannah, the childless wife of Elkanah, an Ephraimite.
- The story of Hannah and Peninnah echoes that
of Sarah and Hagar as well as Rachel and Leah.
- Peninnah mocked Hannah's barrenness.
- Elkanah was probably a man of means to be
able to support two wives.
- Elkanah said those amazing words to Hannah:
"Why are you sad?
Am I not more to
you than ten sons? (Commentators are divided
in their assessment of them. Some think Elkanah
was saying that love is more important than
childbearing. Others think because he already
had sons by Peninnah, he was insensitive to
Hannah's unhappiness, along the lines of his
needs were met; hers were of no consequence.)
- In that society, a woman's prestige depended
upon her ability to produce sons.
- Not having offspring was oftentimes thought
to be divine punishment. Indeed, the text says,
"Yahweh closed Hannah's womb."
- Hannah decided to take her case directly to
Yahweh.
- She prayed earnestly [i.e. women prayed].
- Most prayer involved sacrifice and ritual;
silent prayer without benefit of clergy was
so unusual, Eli thought her to be drunk and
scolded her for violating the sacredness of
the place of worship.
- It would be a long time before Rabbis would
ratify Hannah's prayer of the heart as authentic
prayer, thereby foregoing sacrifice and ritual.
- Hannah was not intimidated, nor deterred,
by Eli's religious authority.
- Hannah asserts her right to pray and gives
voice to her need.
- Hannah made a vow [i.e. women could make vows]
that if Yahweh gave her a son, she would give
him back to Yahweh.
- Having a son would change her societal position
even if she didn't have the pleasure of raising
that son.
- Hannah's loss was Israel's gain.
- Upon hearing her need, Eli was able to bless
her and add his prayers to hers. Hannah accepted
this without recrimination and went home feeling
that her prayers had been answered.
- Some scholars also think that giving her first
son to the temple was much like offering the
firstfruits of harvest - the goal is to get
more.
- Indeed, Hannah had three more sons and two
daughters.
- Hannah's story begins with weeping; it will
end with singing.
- Hannah keeps her vow, bringing Samuel to the
temple once he was weaned.
- No one knew of her oath, except Hannah - even
so, she kept it.
- Hannah's highest sense involved giving her
beloved child to the Lord.
- The song of Hannah is a song of praise for
her good fortune.
- Hannah's song puts childbirth on the same
plane as winning wars.
- Hannah's song anticipates the "anointed
one."
- Hannah's song was the basis of the Magnificat,
sung by Mary when she was a witness to the child
in her womb.
- Through Hannah, God used a very insignificant
woman to accomplish a very significant work.
Samuel
Bible Characters...
- Israel was in moral chaos prior to Samuel's
birth. The Israelites were waiting for a king
who would protect, guide, and defend them as
well as give legitimacy to the community.
- Samuel's father had an impressive genealogy,
but his mother was barren.
- His mother vowed that if Yahweh gave her a
son, she would consecrate him to the Lord and
give that son to the temple. ("Not a razor
shall touch his head" implies a Nazirite
vow - the Hebrew word "nazar" means
to separate or consecrate.)
- Hannah named Samuel - his name means, "the
name of God is 'El'." His name commemorates
the power of God. Hannah's explanation because
"I have asked him of the Lord" is
really the etymology for the name Saul.
- Samuel was a very young boy when he took up
residence in the temple.
- Eli's own sons were morally unfit and Eli
was unable to rein them in. He, therefore, shared
in their guilt, which led to the downfall and
demise of his family.
- Scholars do not know how old Samuel was when
the Lord called him three times.
- The purpose of this call sequence was to legitimize
new leadership and depose the old.
- Eli instructed Samuel how to respond to the
call of his name.
- Samuel followed those instructions - showing
his dependence on Eli.
- Samuel then had to tell Eli about the oracle
that was against Eli. The words are harsh, unrelenting,
and devastating. Eli's house was supposed to
last forever. Now it will be punished forever.
- Neither Eli nor Samuel questioned the verdict.
The Lord is now with Samuel.
- Samuel's credibility was rooted in God's resolve
to do a new thing.
- In 7:3, Samuel, acting as judge, summarized
the covenantal faith, much like Moses had in
the past. (The similarities are certainly intentional.)
- Samuel urged them to have a single heart,
to look to the Lord in every need.
- The people responded positively; Samuel gave
them a new beginning.
- When the Philistines attacked, Samuel prayed
and offered sacrifices. The Lord answered with
thunder and the Philistines were summarily routed
on behalf of Israel.
- Samuel functioned effectively as a judge for
the rest of his days.
- Unfortunately, his sons "did not walk
in his ways." They were failures.
- The elders of Israel brought up the idea of
a monarchy; after all, everyone else had a king.
- Samuel was alarmed, displeased. He saw this
as a fundamental shift in Israel's commitment
to the covenant.
- Yahweh was the one who convinced Samuel to
accept their proposal. Yahweh did not endorse
it, but he did not oppose it. Israel had a long
history of dissatisfaction with Yahweh; this
was simply one more step in that direction.
- The Lord instructed Samuel to warn them,
to let them know the costs involved in their
decision.
- Samuel held nothing back in criticizing the
monarchy, telling them they would eventually
be like "slaves." (Do you see the
irony here, remembering that these people had
lived in bondage under the Egyptians and what
they went through to become liberated?) The
people were undaunted; they wanted the security
of being "like all the nations."
- Yahweh did not abandon his people; instead
he took the initiative and revealed to Samuel
what he must do, how he would meet the future
king, and that he was to anoint him.
- When Samuel and Saul
met, the Lord confirmed that Saul was the one.
- Saul was looking for his father's missing
donkeys, and before he even had a chance to
open his mouth, Samuel told him that they had
been found.
- Saul was so impressed that he followed Samuel's
leadings without question.
- Samuel's first anointing of Saul was done
privately; Saul would need to grow into his
position in order to garner the support of his
fellow countrymen.
- Later, Samuel called the people to Mizpah
for the purpose of selecting a king - by casting
lots. Saul was the one who was chosen.
- Samuel wrote up the "manner of the kingdom"
and "laid it up before the Lord."
The monarchy was now part of the covenantal
agreement between Yahweh and Israel.
- Samuel's next task was to hand over the administrative
duties to the new king - and to go home.
- An attack from the Amorites intervened and
after Saul led them to victory, Samuel asked
to renew the covenant one more time. This provided
him with the occasion for his farewell speech
to the nation.
- Samuel began by vindicating his own career,
then reminding them of their covenantal relationship
with Yahweh (essentially vindicating Yahweh
as well), and then reiterating his doubts and
warnings about the monarchy. He essentially
subsumed the kingship under the covenantal structure
of blessings and curses. The king would have
no theological authority. Samuel invoked a thunderstorm
to sanction his words - no king could do that.
- The king would only
have the power to be obedient; prophets would
have decisive authority. The real authority
belonged to Samuel and the torah.
- For one brief shining moment, the people saw
the dangers ahead. Samuel reassured them, instructing
them to serve the Lord with "all your heart."
And if they didn't, no king would be able to
save them.
- As a result of these speeches, job descriptions
should have been clear: Samuel was supposed
to do the praying and sacrificing; Saul would
be in charge of the fighting.
- Yet during the very
next battle when Samuel was delayed, Saul, not
wanting to lose momentum, jumped in to do the
sacrifices and prayers. Samuel was outraged
and told him what "might have been."
Had Saul been obedient, his kingdom would have
been established forever.
- Scholars struggle with these events because
they seem so harsh to us, but obedience was
the #1 quality required of a king. (Remember:
his job was to work in the service of the Lord.)
- Things worsened
after the next battle with the Amalekites when
Saul took some of the spoils for himself. Again,
he did not obey his instructions to "utterly
destroy all that they have." Then Samuel
"grieved over Saul" and the Lord "was
sorry that he had made Saul king over Israel."
- Samuel was then commissioned to go to Jesse
and anoint a new king from among his sons.
- This act was not without
risk - anointing a king when there already was
a king is risky business.
- Even the townspeople were nervous when Samuel
showed up in their city - they knew he was a
king-maker, as well as a king-breaker. Nonetheless,
Yahweh gave Samuel the words to say, and Jesse's
sons passed by him, one by one.
- When Samuel saw David, he was told, "David
is the one."
- Samuel privately anointed David. (The oil
is binding, and the spirit came upon David.)
- Samuel's last recorded activity was to protect
David. Saul had sent men to kill David, but
they forgot their intentions when in the presence
of Samuel. The spirit of the Lord came upon
them and they prophesied. The same thing happened
to Saul when he went to do the job himself.
He forgot his murderous intentions and "prophesied."
The "would be killer" of God's anointed
was powerless in the presence of Samuel.
- Samuel's death is noted in a single verse
in chapter 25. He was mourned and buried.
- Samuel's power haunted Saul even after his
death. Saul asked a witch to raise up Samuel
so he could ask his advice - an indication that
the Lord was no longer with Saul.
- Samuel's words were devastating for Saul:
Both he and his sons would be killed in the
upcoming battle. The Lord had departed from
Saul and was now his enemy.
- On that ominous note, Samuel disappears from
the story.
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Bibliography
Alter, Robert and Frank Kermode. The Literary
Guide to the Bible. Cambridge, MA: Belknap
Press. 1987.
Brueggeman, Walter. "1 & 2 Samuel."
Interpretation. Louisville, KY: Westminster
John Knox Press,
1990.
Evans, Mary. "1 and 2 Samuel." New
International Biblical Commentary. Peabody,
MA: Hendrickson
Publishers, 2000.
Mills, Watson and Richard Wilson. Mercer Commentary
on the Bible. Macon, GA: Mercer
University Press, 1995
Newsom, Carol and Sharon Ringe. The Women's
Bible Commentary. Louisville, KY:
Westminster/John Knox Press, 1992.
Payne, David. "I & II Samuel."
The Daily Study Bible Series. Philadelphia,
PA: Westminster
Press, 1982.
Peterson, Eugene. "First and Second Samuel."
The Westminster Bible Companion.
Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1999.
Robinson, Gnana. "1 & 2 Samuel, Let
Us Be Like the Nations." The International
Theological Commentary.
Grand Rapids, MI: Wm B Eerdmans, 1993.
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