1 Samuel 7

1Sa 7:6

THEY DREW WATER AND POURED IT OUT BEFORE THE LORD: Water mixed with wine, a traditional sacrifice: cp Isa 12:3; Joh 7:37.

1Sa 7:9

A SUCKLING LAMB: Sig a new nation, reborn (cp vv 3,4), and rededicated.

1Sa 7:12

THUS FAR HAS THE LORD HELPED US: The words “thus far” seem like a hand pointing in the direction of the past. It may have been twenty years or it may have been seventy, and yet, “thus far the Lord has helped!” Through poverty, through wealth, through sickness, through health, at home, abroad, on the land, on the sea, in honor, in dishonor, in perplexity, in joy, in trial, in triumph, in prayer, in temptation… “thus far has the Lord helped us!” We delight to look down a long avenue of trees. It is delightful to gaze from end to end of the long vista, seeing a sort of green and living temple, with its branching pillars and its arches of leaves. In like manner we may look down the long aisles of our years, at the green boughs of mercy overhead, and the strong pillars of love and faithfulness which bear up our joys. We hear the birds singing in the trees, and they all sing of mercy received “thus far”.

But the words also point forward. For when a man gets up to a certain age and may write “thus far” alongside his life, still he is not yet at the end; there is still a distance to be traveled. More trials, more joys; more temptations, more triumphs; more prayers, more answers; more toils, more strength; more fights, more victories; and then come sickness, old age, disease, death. Is it over now? No! there is more yet — awakening in Jesus’ likeness, the glories of God’s Kingdom, white raiment, the face of Jesus, the company of the saints, the glory of God, the fullness of eternity.

Let us be encouraged, and with grateful confidence raise our “Ebenezer” — our memorial stones of faith: “Thus far has the LORD helped us…” and He isn’t finished yet!

1Sa 7:16

A CIRCUIT: Samuel was circulating amongst the flock of God, to various towns: seeking out those whom he could teach, strengthening and encouraging. He was a shepherd to all of Israel.

Samuel’s influence centered in south; all these cities were in the territory of Benjamin.

1 Samuel 8

1Sa 8:5

NOW APPOINT A KING…: Cp Exo 32:1: “Come, make us gods.” God had previously made provision for just such an eventuality: Deu 17:14,15.

TO LEAD US: They were also afraid of Nahash of Ammon (1Sa 12:12).

1Sa 8:7

Cp vv 9,22: Samuel has to be encouraged, several times, to give Israel a human king — he knows it is not right!

1Sa 8:9

Cp v 7n.

1Sa 8:22

Cp v 7n.

1 Samuel 2

1Sa 2:1

For several years now, Hannah had been absent from the sanctuary of Shiloh. (Modern practice is to wean a child before it is a year old, but in Israel women were accustomed to nurse their children three or four years — and sometimes longer: cp 2Ma 7:27.) Nevertheless her heart had been full with rejoicing and praise to the Almighty for the great blessing of a son. In her meditations, as she cared for the child, she had seen beyond even Samuel’s time to the greater time of which it was typical — that is, to the establishment of God’s kingdom in its worldwide scope. Now Hannah, bringing her precious gift to the Lord, stands once more at Shiloh. The troubles of former days are recalled, the provocations and inner conflicts. Now the sunshine of Divine favor has been experienced, and her life has come full circle, back again to the place where she cried out of the depths of despair and God heard her plea. Her heart is full with thanksgiving to God, and her words pour forth like a fountain, fresh and clear and sweet.

Hannah’s song has close links with three other Bible passages: Psa 75 (most likely dealing with the angelic destruction of Sennacherib’s army), Psa 113 (one of the “great Hallel” Psalms, commemorating the Passover and deliverance from Egypt), and of course Luk 1:46-55 (Mary’s song of rejoicing at the prospective birth of an even more important son than Samuel). Perhaps one reason for this is that, in each instance, deliverance or visitation came at Passover!

MY HORN IS LIFTED HIGH: Sym power and strength and exaltation, as the power of an animal is in its horn, or horns (Psa 75:4,5; 89:17,24; 112:9; 2Sa 22:3).

MY MOUTH BOASTS OVER MY ENEMIES: Hannah was now in a position to speak in confidence and even to rebuke her enemies, because God had vindicated her in giving her a son. Now she could open wide her mouth in praise to God. The plural, “enemies”, suggests that Peninnah had been joined by her children in taunting the barren Hannah — just as Hagar had been joined by Ishmael in taunting first Sarah and then Isaac. (Cp Christ: out of his mouth goes a sharp 2-edged sword: Rev 1:16; 2:16; 19:15.)

FOR I DELIGHT IN YOUR DELIVERANCE: The reason why “my heart rejoices in the Lord.” All things are possible, all things work together for good, if we will steadfastly set ourselves to rejoice in God’s salvation. The psalmists of Israel used the word “rejoice” many times. It is the very spirit of the Psalms. Five times they repeat the precise words of Hannah: “I will rejoice in thy salvation.” Paul, writing to the Philippians, expressed a closely related thought. He spoke of his imprisonment, of enmity and rivalry, of partisanship, insincerity, and pretense. Then he spoke of the need continually to rejoice: Phi 1:18,19. So even evil men could be used by God to serve a good purpose, and even in distress and persecution Paul could rejoice at the outworking of God’s salvation. Hannah too had suffered for several years from the cruelty and reproach of Peninnah (1Sa 1:6), because of her barrenness. Perhaps others had taken up the thought that God was sorely punishing barren Hannah for some great hidden sin. It did indeed appear that God was blessing Peninnah and chastening Hannah, but there was a wise divine providence at work that in time drastically changed these outward appearances.

REJOICE… DELIVERANCE: Or “salvation” (AV). Salvation is so wonderful and marvelous and glorious a thing that — if the whole mind is set on it, and the whole life directed toward it, and everything else is put resolutely aside — there can be no unhappiness. Unhappiness can only be due to failure of vision!

1Sa 2:2

THERE IS NO ONE HOLY LIKE THE LORD: The perfect, glorious, and incomparable holiness of the Lord is a great and powerful and inspiring thought. “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts!”, even the seraphim cried (Isa 6:3). Holiness is the highest ambition toward which any mortal can aspire, for it brings him closest to God. Cp Luk 1:49.

THERE IS NO ONE BESIDES YOU: Hannah recognizes the unique and exclusive supremacy of God. This attribute of God is emphasized over and over throughout the Bible, but nowhere more effectively than: “I am the Lord, and there is none else. There is no God beside me…” (Isa 45:5,6).

THERE IS NO ROCK LIKE OUR GOD: Used by Moses numerous times in Deu 32. Strength, dependability, defense, shelter, security, permanence, and unchangeableness. More tangibly, a “rock in ancient times could be a fortress or a hiding place or an impregnable refuge.

1Sa 2:3

DO NOT KEEP TALKING: The verb is in the masculine plural, which could refer to the sons of Peninnah, or perhaps the sons of Eli (v 12), since Hannah no doubt saw that her son’s mission would involve in some way the elimination of these “sons of Belial” (cp Pro 8:13).

A GOD WHO KNOWS: “A God of knowledge” (AV). God knew all things: He knew the sins of Eli’s sons, and He knew the faith of the barren woman. He knew the need, of the whole nation of Israel, for a man to lead them back to righteousness. And He was not only a God who KNEW, but He was also a God who ACTED upon that knowledge. He was a God who could wait, with infinite patience, and then still act, deliberately, to do what must be done.

BY HIM DEEDS ARE WEIGHED: God judges not by outward appearance, but God judges the heart. Even Hannah’s son needed to learn this lesson, when years later he looked upon the sons of Jesse (1Sa 16:7). By outward appearances, Peninnah was more righteous than Hannah — but God was trying the hearts (Psa 11:4,5). In the conclusion of the matter, the relative positions of the two wives were reversed for all the world to see.

Israel compared to Sodom:

1 Samuel 3

1Sa 3:1

VISIONS: A technical term for “divine revelation mediated through a seer” (‘hozeh’ = one of the two Heb words for ‘seer’, has the same root as that for ‘vision,’ ‘hazon’; ‘mar’ah’ — the other word for “vision” — in this ch (v 15), also is used in the sense of “vision as a means of divine revelation” and has the same root as ‘ro’eh’ the other word for “seer”) (EBC).

We are told of the background of these days that “the word of the Lord was precious (AV; ‘rare’: NIV); there was no open vision” (v 1). The word “yakar” (precious) literally means “heavy”, and is used of precious stones (1Ki 10:2,10,11). It is also used of the most desirable building stones, such as the “costly stones” of Solomon (1Ki 5:17) and the foundation stone of the Temple mount — the “precious corner stone” (Isa 28:16) which typifies Jesus Christ (1Pe 2:6; Rom 10:11). The word of the Lord was precious or “rare” (RSV, NIV) because there were “not many visions” (NIV).

The earlier pages of Bible history are filled with references to open visions. In the beginning communion between God and man was quite direct: “the Elohim walked in the garden.” In the days of Abraham and Jacob, angels appeared relatively often to men, bringing special messages. Angels appeared frequently to Moses also, and the Angel of the Lord’s presence led the tribes of Israel in the pillar of fire and cloud. Even in the days of Joshua and the Judges there are references to angels who brought God’s word to men. But when we come to the later history — of Samuel and Kings and Chronicles — such incidents are few indeed. The times of Samuel are a period of transition. Indeed, God is continuing to speak to His people, but now more so through special human messengers — the prophets, of which the child Samuel was destined to be one of the greatest.

Is God’s word “precious” to us today, who have no open vision whatsoever? Surely it should be esteemed as, if anything, more precious to us than it was to those of Samuel’s day — because we can expect no other means of direct revelation from God than what we may find in the pages of our Bibles. And again, God’s word should be precious to us when we realize that today, in many parts of the world, the supply of Bibles is severely limited, and some people desperately seek for even a hand-copied fragment. And all the time our shelves and tables are loaded down with Bibles in half a dozen different versions, each one easier to read and understand than the one before — if we can find the time to read any of them properly!

Where God’s word is rare, so is His presence.

We may learn valuable lessons by contemplating what things are considered “precious” by the inspired writers, who knew the mind of God. In addition to His word, the “precious” things of God include: (a) wisdom and understanding — “more precious than rubies” (Pro 3:13-18; cp Pro 8:11); (b) the lips that speak knowledge (Pro 20:15) (for knowledge must not only be possessed; it must be disseminated!); (c) the thoughts of God (Psa 139:17); (d) the redemption of our lives (Psa 49:8); and (e) the blood, or the deaths, of God’s saints (Psa 72:14; 116:15). It may be just as instructive also, with this list in mind, to reflect on the unnamed things — so many different things! — that apparently are not nearly so “precious” in the eyes of God.

1Sa 3:2

ELI, WHOSE EYES WERE BECOMING SO WEAK…: Eli would esp need young Samuel more and more as he grew more blind. Thus Samuel would expect that the calls of v 4 would have come from Eli.

1Sa 3:3

THE LAMP OF GOD HAD NOT YET GONE OUT: At night, but just before dawn, when light might go out. The lampstand should not be allowed to go out (Lev 24:2).

1Sa 3:10

For the first time, the angel of Yahweh came and STOOD there! See Lesson, Samuel, and Jesus in temple. Thus so gently was the child prepared to receive the message from God, as if the reassuring hand of the beloved Eli was upon his shoulder. So patient was the Father that He called four times, until finally the answer which He sought was forthcoming, and His servant, young as he was, stood ready to listen.

1Sa 3:11

Vv 11-14: So fearful was the Divine message that it would affect the ears of every hearer like a sharp, piercing sound (2Ki 21:12; Jer 19:3). Judgment was about to begin at the house of Eli, for the house of the high priest was “the house of God” (cp 1Pe 4:17) — it bore greater responsibility than all others because of its privileged position. But judgment would only begin there! Its effects would be felt throughout the nation: vv 17,18. As all the nation, to some degree, had looked the other way when Eli’s sons blasphemed — so all the nation would now bear the consequences. But Eli’s house would be judged forever — no sacrifice could purge their sins — because his sons had made themselves “contemptible” (NIV): and Eli, though he rebuked them, had not restrained them. Eli had not done the work of an “elder”: he had not ruled well his own house — his children had not been trained in subjection (1Ti 3:4,5; cp Tit 1:6).

1Sa 3:17

MAY GOD DEAL WITH YOU, BE IT EVER SO SEVERELY, IF…: See Lesson, Covenant-victim, the.

1Sa 3:18

Eli makes no attempt to justify himself, either to Samuel or to God. It has been well said that God can forgive any sin, but He can forgive no excuse! From Eli there is no excuse: “It is of the Lord.” Many an old man in the same position (and not a few younger ones!) would have behaved much differently. But in Eli, despite his weaknesses, there was grace sufficient to humble himself and repent and (so we would expect) find forgiveness. The judgment of his house, however, was irrevocable.

LET HIM DO WHAT IS GOOD IN HIS EYES: Samuel begins to discharge the duties of priest, prophet, and judge.

1Sa 3:19

1Sa 3:19–1Sa 4:1a: The Lord was finally beginning to “bring low” Eli and his sons, and to “lift up” Samuel, even as Hannah had foreseen years earlier in her vision (1Sa 2:7). Now all Israel, from the far north to the extreme south, knew that the child Samuel was established to be a prophet, and that not one of his words would prove ineffective or false. Once again, after a long silence, the Lord was revealing Himself by His word in Shiloh. He was placing His seal upon Samuel: ‘This is My servant; as he heard Me when I spoke, so you must hear him when he speaks.’

Thus “all Israel recognized that Samuel was a prophet” (v 20)!

Or, less likely but possible, does v 19 mean: “SAMUEL let none of YAHWEH’s words fall to the ground”, and this is what made him a true prophet?

HE LET NONE OF HIS WORDS FALL TO THE GROUND: “An allusion either to water that falls to the ground, and becomes useless, or to an arrow falling out of the bow, and to the ground, before it reaches the mark, and so unsuccessful; or to any weapon of war, sword or spear, falling out of the hand of the soldier, whereby he is disarmed and rendered unserviceable” (Gill).

1Sa 3:20

SAMUEL WAS ATTESTED AS A PROPHET OF THE LORD: How? By the LORD not letting Samuel’s words “fall to the ground” (v 19) — ie, by seeing that Samuel’s prophetic words would come to pass: this would confirm Samuel’s status (Deu 18:15-22).

Examples of faithfulness in service: Samuel (1Sa 3:20); David (1Sa 22:14); the temple overseers (2Ki 12:15); the workers (2Ch 34:12); Hananiah (Neh 7:2); Abraham (Neh 9:8); the treasurers (Neh 13:13); Daniel (Dan 6:4); Timothy (1Co 4:17); Epaphras (Col 1:7); Tychicus (Col 4:7); Onesimus (Col 4:9); Paul (1Ti 1:12); Moses (Heb 3:2,5); Gaius (3Jo 1:5); Jesus Christ (Rev 1:5); Antipas (Rev 2:13).

Cp Luk 16:10; 2Ch 31:12.

1 Samuel 4

1Sa 4:1

PHILISTINES: See Lesson, Philistia in prophecy.

EBENEZER: Sig “stone of help”. The name is mentioned three times in the Bible (1Sa 4:1; 5:1; 7:12). According to 1Sa 7:12 it was the name given to a stone set up by Samuel to commemorate the divine assistance given to Israel in battle, whereby they were victorious over the Philistines. Its position was carefully defined as a place between Mizpah and Shen, near Aphek. According to 1Sa 4:1; 5:1, Israel 20 years previously had been soundly defeated there by the Philistines and the ark of God captured and taken to Ashdod. The writer used the name Ebenezer because the place was known by that name at the time of writing.

1Sa 4:3

LET US BRING THE ARK… FROM SHILOH: This carrying of a “god” into battle was a common practice of Gentile armies (cp 2Sa 5:21). This action here suggests the Jews’ superstitious reliance upon the ark of God, as though such alone would “save” them in battle, even when they had little or no regard for the commandments of their God.

In later times this characteristic would manifest itself again and again, in a strict observance of the letter of Law, and a love of outward show. “These people come near to me with their mouth and honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me. Their worship of me is made up only of rules taught by men” (Isa 29:13).

1Sa 4:7

THE PHILISTINES WERE AFRAID: They had more faith in the power of God than did the Jews. Sym triumph of Gospel (Gentiles) over Law (Jews).

1Sa 4:9

Cit 1Co 16:13: in context of Gentiles “triumphing” over Jews!

1Sa 4:10

THIRTY THOUSAND FOOT SOLDIERS: See Lesson, Large numbers in the OT.

1Sa 4:11

THE ARK OF GOD WAS CAPTURED: The symbol of God’s covenant falls into Gentile hands (1Sa 2:32).

1Sa 4:12

A BENJAMITE RAN FROM THE BATTLE LINE: The herald of the Gentiles’ victory over Israel was a Benjamite; typical of Paul sent to Gentiles with gospel.

WENT TO SHILOH: Paul left Israel’s hope and came to “Shiloh” (Christ) the same day, when blinded on Damascus road.

HIS CLOTHES TORN AND DUST ON HIS HEAD: Paul always grieved in later years, concerning his persecution of the Christians.

1Sa 4:18

1Sa 4:18.

Eli’s two “arms” (his sons: 1Sa 2:31,34) are both cut off. Cp destruction of Dagon: 1Sa 5:4. Two “idolatries”: Jewish and Philistine: Eli’s neck broken; Dagon’s head broken off. Eli’s 2 sons/arms cut off; Dagon’s arms broken off. Ark departs; ark departs.

1Sa 4:21

THE GLORY HAS DEPARTED: God’s glory departs Jerusalem: Eze 10; 11. Cp birth of Benoni/Benjamin in Gen 35:18n.

1 Samuel 5

1Sa 5:1

1Sa 5: The captured ark proves to be a very uncomfortable prize.

1Sa 5:2

DAGON: “Temples are reported for Dagon as a Philistine deity (1Sa 5:1-7; Jdg 16:23; 1Ch 10:10; 1Ma 10:83,84; 11:4) in the cities of Ashdod, Beth-shan, and perhaps Gaza. Yet, no archaeological evidence has independently confirmed such a temple to Dagon in any of these sites. Several place names also include Dagon’s name, thus confirming the deity’s importance for the area. This importance may also be assumed from the use made of Dagon in Biblical texts through the end of the 2nd century BC…

“Three major theories have been posited for the function of Dagon. It was long thought the god was related to the Semitic root ‘dg’ or ‘fish’; this understanding was supported by references in Jerome and in the Talmudic tradition. A case was made that Dagon was related to Odakon, a fish-man character… Though both arguments were rejected early in the 20th century, they were later revived. The fish aspect is still argued to be a secondary attribute, while the Odakon connection is now considered highly improbable…

“The Semitic root ‘dgn’, when translated as ‘grain,’ is also seen as the original meaning of the name Dagon… yet the notion of Dagon as a god of grain finds no solid evidence in the ANE. Albright, followed by several others, argues that Semitic ‘grain’ may have been named after the god Dagon rather than the other way around… [Poss} Dagon was named as a storm god on the basis of an Arabic root dg, which he translated “be cloudy, rainy,” and argued that the fertility aspect of Dagon was related to this weather aspect. This theory has been widely accepted” (ABD).

1Sa 5:4

What happened to Dagon also happened to Goliath (1Sa 17:49) — as though he were merely one more “god” of the Philistines!

For that matter, consider also the fate of Eli: 1Sa 4:18n.

HIS HEAD AND HIS HANDS HAD BEEN BROKEN OFF: Cp Goliath’s head, cut off by David; and his sword (that is, his “hands” or “arms”) confiscated by the enemy.

1Sa 5:6

TUMORS: Also in vv 9,11; 1Sa 6:5. KJV has “emerods”, or hemorrhoids — which is incorrect. Prob a species of bubonic plague (Tes 33:280). The northeast corner of the Egyptian delta was the source of many plagues of ancient times. “High temperatures, mingled salt and fresh water… the Philistines — a trading people by nature — occupied the open door by which plague entered Syria” (HistGeo 118,119).

1 Samuel 6

1Sa 6:1

The LXX adds here, “And the land swarmed with mice.”

1Sa 6:12

LOWING ALL THE WAY: Showing discomfort and displeasure at bearing the yoke and being deprived of their young (v 7).

1Sa 6:17

GATH: There were 5 major cities (1Sa 6:17; Josh 13:3), but in later days the prophets carefully leave Gath out of the picture (Amo 1:6-8; Zeph 2:4; Jer 25:20; Zech 9:5,6). Why? Uzziah, in his war against the Philistines, smashed up Gath, Jabneh and Ashdod (2Ch 26:6). The last of these was evidently strategic enough to warrant rebuilding (Isa 20:1), but the other two disappeared from history — and from prophecy also.

1Sa 6:19

The extremely large number of men (according to the KJV: 50,070) may perhaps be translated “50 out of a thousand, even 70 men” — that is, one out of every twenty, or 70 out of a total population of 1,400 men (Josephus, JFB). Or… “70 men, 50 chief men” (YLT). Or… “70 men, 2 fifties, and a thousand” — total 1,170 (Comp Bib note) (Tes 19:212).

1Sa 6:21

KIRIATH JEARIM: Prob the Jewish town nearest Bethshemesh.

1 Samuel Overview

Author: Possibly Samuel, Nathan and Gad (see 1Ch 29:29).

Period: c 1100 BC (the birth of Samuel) to c 970 (the close of David’s reign).

Title: In the original Heb text, 1 and 2 Samuel are counted as one book called “Samuel.” In the LXX, the book was divided into two due to the length of the scrolls then in use. In the Greek OT, the Books of Samuel are referred to as the First and Second Books of Kingdoms. The Latin Vulgate entitles the same books the First and Second Books of Kings.

Summary: 1 Samuel is the first of two historical books that illustrate Israel’s transition from a loose confederation of tribes to a strong and united nation. It portrays the anointing of the first king of Israel, Saul, by the prophet Samuel. It then recounts the degenerating reign of Saul and his loss of the throne to David, a man after God’s own heart. 2 Samuel begins with the death of Saul and the ascension of David to the throne. The rest of the book records military conquests and political intrigues during David’s reign. It concludes with the blessing of Solomon by David.

Key verses:

“We want a king over us. Then we will be like all the other nations, with a king to lead us and to go out before us and fight our battles” (1Sa 8:19-20).

“When your days are over and you rest with your fathers, I will raise up your offspring to succeed you, who will come from your own body, and I will establish his kingdom. He is the one who will build a house for my Name and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever” (2Sa 7:12-13).

SAMUEL / KINGS / CHRONICLES DIFFERENCE

“Samuel-Kings was written just after the fall of Jerusalem in 586 BC. The author, whether it was Jeremiah or someone else from the ‘school of the prophets,’ had access to the royal records of both the northern Kingdom of Israel and the southern Kingdom of Judah, as well as records that antedated the Divided Kingdom period. It is truly a story about the history of the kings of Israel, beginning with the desire to have a king because of the wickedness of first Eli’s sons and then Samuel’s, down to the wickedness of the last kings of Judah before it became time to ‘overturn, overturn, overturn… until he come whose right it is’ (Ezek 21:27). Samuel-Kings then documents much of the reasons for judgment.

“Chronicles, on the other hand, was written more to encourage the returning exiles. From the opening words citing Cyrus’ decree, down through the selection of material showing God’s continuing grace even during times of judgment, the writer of Chronicles (Ezra?) concentrates on God’s plan to return the exiles back to the land, living righteously under God’s rulership. The Chronicles record differs from that of Samuel-Kings with regard to Abijah’s reign and also Manasseh’s… the differing treatments of David’s reign are also instructive. If one only reads Chronicles, one would never know about the seven-and-a-half years of Ishbosheth’s reign, about David’s sin regarding Bathsheba and Uriah, or about any of the fallout from that sin — namely what happened with Amnon and Tamar, and about all that involved Absalom’s rebellion.

“In short, Samuel-Kings serves to document why God was right to judge both Israel and Judah, while Chronicles was focusing more on God’s mercy” (DB).

OUTLINE

1. Childhood of Samuel (1Sa 1-3)

  1. Samuel’s birth and dedication (1Sa 1:1-28)
  2. Hannah’s prayer (1Sa 2:1-10)
  3. Eli’s wicked sons (1Sa 2:11-17)
  4. The child Samuel at Shiloh (1Sa 2:18-21)
  5. Prophecy against Eli’s household (1Sa 2:22-36)
  6. Samuel’s calling and prophetic activity (1Sa 3:1-21)

2. Capture and return of the ark (1Sa 4:1–7:2)

  • The ark of God is captured (1Sa 4:1-11)
  • Death of Eli (1Sa 4:12-22)
  • The Philistines and the ark (1Sa 5:1-12)
  • The ark is returned to Israel (1Sa 6:1-18)
  • The ark at Kiriath-jearim (1Sa 7:1-2)

3. Monarchy (1Sa 7:3–12:25)

  1. Samuel as judge (1Sa 7:3-17)
  2. Israel demands a king (1Sa 8:1-18)
  3. Israel’s request for a king is granted (1Sa 8:19-22)
  4. Saul is chosen to be king (1Sa 9:1-26)
  5. Samuel anoints Saul (1Sa 10:1-8)
  6. Saul prophesies (1Sa 10:9-16)
  7. Saul is proclaimed king (1Sa 10:17-27)
  8. Saul defeats the Ammonites (1Sa 11:1-15)
  9. Samuel’s farewell address (1Sa 12:1-25)

4. War (1Sa 13-15)

  1. Saul’s unlawful sacrifice (1Sa 13:1-15)
  2. Preparations for battle (1Sa 13:16-22)
  3. Jonathan surprises and routs the Philistines (1Sa 14:1-23)
  4. Saul’s rash oath (1Sa 14:24-35)
  5. Jonathan in danger of death (1Sa 14:36-46)
  6. Saul’s continuing wars (1Sa 14:47-52)
  7. Saul defeats the Amalekites but spares their king (1Sa 15:1-9)
  8. Saul is rejected as king (1Sa 15:10-35)

5. The rise of David

  1. David is anointed as king (1Sa 16:1-13)
  2. David plays the lyre for Saul (1Sa 16:14-23)
  3. David and Goliath (1Sa 17:1-58)
  4. Jonathan’s covenant with David (1Sa 18:1-9)
  5. Saul tries to kill David (1Sa 18:10-16)
  6. David marries Michal (1Sa 18:17-30)

6. Rivalry between Saul and David (1Sa 19; 20)

  1. Jonathan intercedes for David (1Sa 19:1-7)
  2. Michal helps David escape from Saul (1Sa 19:8-17)
  3. David joins Samuel in Ramah (1Sa 19:18-24)
  4. The friendship of David and Jonathan (1Sa 20:1-42)

7. Civil War (1Sa 21-26)

  1. David and the holy bread (1Sa 21:1-9)
  2. David flees to Gath (1Sa 21:10-15)
  3. David and his followers at Adullam (1Sa 22:1-5)
  4. Saul slaughters the priests at Nob (1Sa 22:6-23)
  5. David saves the city of Keilah (1Sa 23:1-14)
  6. David eludes Saul in the wilderness (1Sa 23:15-29)
  7. David spares Saul’s life (1Sa 24:1-22)
  8. Death of Samuel (1Sa 25:1)
  9. David and Abigail (1Sa 25:2-44)
  10. David spares Saul’s life a second time (1Sa 26:1-25)

8. War with Philistines (1Sa 27-31)

  1. David serves King Achish of Gath (1Sa 27:1-28:2)
  2. Saul consults a medium (1Sa 28:3-25)
  3. The Philistines reject David (1Sa 29:1-11)
  4. David avenges the destruction of Ziklag (1Sa 30:1-31)
  5. The death of Saul and his sons (1Sa 31:1-13)

1 Samuel 1

1Sa 1:1

See Lesson, Josh–Samuel, typical history.

1Sa 1; 2: See article, For this child I prayed.

RAMATHAIM, A ZUPHITE: Or “Ramathaim-zophim” (AV). A town in the hill country of Ephraim (1Sa 1:1,19; 2:11), where Samuel’s parents lived. Near Bethhoron — a city of Kohathites (Jdg 21:20-22). It was not only Samuel’s birthplace, but after the destruction of Shiloh he made it his main headquarters on his judicial circuit (1Sa 7:17; 8:4; cf 1Sa 15:34; 16:13). To this place David fled from the wrath of Saul (1Sa 19:18-23; 20:1). Samuel was buried there (1Sa 25:1; 28:3). Since Elkanah, Samuel’s father, was a member of the Levitical Zuphites (1Sa 1:1; 1Ch 6:33-35), who had apparently received their inheritance in the territory of Ephraim (Jos 21:5; 1Ch 6:22-26,35,66; cp Tes 30:250), it was prob at Ramathaim in the land of Zuph that Saul first met Samuel (1Sa 9:5-6,18). In NT times its name seems to have been Arimathea.

ELKANAH: A Levite and a descendant of Korah (1Ch 6:33-38). His name means “God-acquired”, suggesting two possible interpretations: (1) all his possessions were acquired from God, or (2) he was acquired by God, and his possessions were held in stewardship. In either case Elkanah’s name highlights the lesson of this story: it is about possessions and how they may be used in the service of God.

1Sa 1:2

HE HAD TWO WIVES: How many sad memories of domestic unrest this verse evokes: Sarah and Hagar, Rachel and Leah, the households of David and Solomon. Polygamy was permitted by the Law of Moses, which merely attempted to mitigate its abuses, but it was certainly not the ideal. “From the beginning it was not so” (Mat 19:8; Gen 2:24).

HANNAH: “Hannah” means grace or favor.

PENINNAH: “Peninnah” means coral, truly a beautiful substance, but a substance composed of dead material (the skeletons of little sea-creatures) which is, significantly, the color of flesh. The two women picture the extremes of inward and outward adorning (possessions again!); their characters and subsequent actions reflect their names.

1Sa 1:3

This domestic triangle was accustomed to go up yearly — prob at Passover — to worship at Shiloh, the site of the ark and the tabernacle (Jos 18:1; 19:51; 22:9; Jdg 18:31). There lived Eli (alah, to ascend) the priest with his sons Hophni (‘handful’? — either of incense or of stolen offerings, it mattered not!) and Phinehas (‘mouth of the serpent’! — wise and subtle, yet also destructive).

THE LORD ALMIGHTY: Heb “Yahweh Tzvaoth” = He who shall be Armies, or hosts. The first of 231 occurrences in the Bible.

SHILOH: According to Jdg 21:19 it was located north of Bethel, south of Lebonah, and on the east side of the highway connecting Bethel with Shechem, in the territory of Ephraim. After the initial conquest of Canaan the tabernacle was moved from Gilgal to Shiloh (Jos 18:1). Here the last seven tribes received their allotments (Jos 18:8-10). From Shiloh the tribes of Reuben, Gad, and half of Manasseh returned to their inheritances (Jos 22:9), and at Shiloh the other tribes gathered to war on those tribes for erecting an altar at the Jordan (Jos 22:12). The tabernacle was located at Shiloh throughout the period of the judges, which included the days of Eli and Samuel. It was at Shiloh that Hannah prayed for a child (1Sa 1:3,11), and to this place she brought Samuel to minister before Eli (1Sa 1:24). The ark was taken from Shiloh during a battle with the Philistines, was captured, and was not returned to Shiloh. Psa 78:60 attributes the fall of Shiloh to the judgment of God, and Jeremiah cites its fall as an illustration of God’s judgment (Jer 7:12,14; 26:6,9).

1Sa 1:5

So often we witness the barren woman in the Divine plan. Is God unmerciful to deny good things to his servants? Let us recognize that God in His providence often works through the adversity of his children, and there is no ultimate evil for those who conform to His will. Long years of meekly endured trial — and childlessness was a great trial to an Israelite woman — may in fact be only a preparation. We must all be trained to subordinate our natural desires, even when they seem worthy in themselves, to the promotion of God’s will. It is possible that if God had immediately granted children to Hannah, as he had to Peninnah, that the one might have been as selfish and ungrateful as the other. It is certain she would never have felt the urge to dedicate her children wholly to the Lord.

DOUBLE PORTION: Showing that her son, if and when she had one, would be the firstborn (Deu 21:17).

THE LORD HAD CLOSED HER WOMB: Sarah believed her barren condition was of God (Gen 16:2). Rachel was taught by her husband Jacob that God was the Source of her condition (Gen 30:2). Were these patriarchs right in thinking that this affliction of barrenness was from God? Clearly God could do this, and in the case of Hannah it is explicitly stated that “the Lord had shut up her womb.” In fact, in the time of Abraham there was a clear demonstration of God’s power in this matter. When Sarah was taken into the house of Abimelech, all the women in his household stopped bearing children, and at the end of the incident the record states: “For the Lord had fast closed up all the wombs of the house of Abimelech, because of Sarah…” (Gen 20:17,18). By contrast with all these cases, Israel as a nation was promised that if they would keep God’s laws, He in turn would bless the fruit of their wombs, and none would be barren among them (Deu 7:13,14).

1Sa 1:6

Vv 6,7: Peninnah had all things, acquired from a benevolent God, children and social rank and satisfaction and probably wealth — yet she gave no glory to God. And continually, perhaps in subtle ways, and with feigned “sorrow”, she reminded the less fortunate Hannah of her plight. By comparison, Hannah had very little (a barren woman was a reproach and a pitiable creature), yet she recognized herself as acquired by God. Therefore her problems were His and she was not alone in her distress. There was no retaliation, but a turning of the other cheek, a casting of her burdens upon a greater Power.

“Better a dry crust with peace and quiet than a house full of feasting (Heb sacrifices), with strife” (Pro 17:1).

1Sa 1:8

“No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it” (Heb 12:11).

TEN SONS: Jacob had 10 sons (by Leah, Bilhah, and Zilpah) before he ever had one by Rachel. Was Elkanah telling his beloved Hannah that he loved her as much as Jacob loved Rachel, even though she had borne no sons?

1Sa 1:9

HANNAH STOOD UP: She and the family must have been eating in the very precincts of the tabernacle — where she would feel esp the presence of God and the Mercy Seat.

ELI: Eli must have been a great leader, to rise to such prominence. The country was now prosperous — in ct times of Samson. Eli is High Priest, though of the house of Ithamar instead of Phinehas.

TEMPLE: Heb “heykal”. The earlier form of the word translated “temple” means “palace” and thus reminds us that the tabernacle and temple in the Israelite theocracy were residences inhabited by the Divine King.

1Sa 1:10

Leaving the table of feasting, for which she had no appetite (v 7), she made her way to the sanctuary nearby, where God might be approached. She knelt in the court, outside the veil of the holy place (Xd 38:518), sensing that her prayer of faith would pierce the heavy curtains and find its way to the golden mercy seat. And so “she prayed to the Lord, and wept sore.”

“Consider Hannah’s example. Her story is well known. Hannah longed for a child, but it was denied her until after much prayer she was granted her request, and received the desire of her heart. She was to become a mother and so fulfil the wish of every woman in Israel. Motherhood was particularly desirable in Israel, for the covenant promised that the ‘seed of the woman’ would bruise the serpent power, and every godly woman desired to contribute to that end. So Hannah hoped and prayed, and hoped and prayed again, until, in the goodness of God, her ardent ambition was realised in the birth of little Samuel. Did Hannah then, in her excess of joy and the love that she poured out upon the child, forget her obligations to God? By no means! Having experienced the goodness of Yahweh in the birth of Samuel she turned to Yahweh in fervent thanksgiving. More, she attempted to repay God, and so endorse the genuineness of her thanks, by a most generous act of unselfishness: she gave the child back to Yahweh. Her thanks were endorsed by sacrifice. Yahweh’s gift to her found response in her gift to Yahweh. What a wonderful example. We often pray for things; do we remember to thank God in return when the prayer has been answered? Thanksgiving is a gracious act of recognition of benefits received. What is the normal reaction to circumstances when a generous warmhearted deed that has been unselfishly done for another is taken for granted, or is received coldly, or with indifference? Is it not one of hurt? Is it not a divine command that we ‘in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you’ (1Th 5:18)? Let us be warm in our expressions of thanks one to another; and above all to God” (HPM).

1Sa 1:11

Her beautiful and delicate prayer (v 11) and her later song of triumph (1Sa 2:1-10) must have been the constant study of the young maiden Mary a thousand years later; we have intimations of Hannah’s spiritual daughter in every word of this godly woman. Even to this day the whole creation groans in affliction (Rom 8:22), waiting for the manchild who sits at the right hand of the Father. How great will be the joy of the world when he returns (Isa 54).

REMEMBER ME: Cp Gen 29:31: “When the LORD saw that Leah was not loved, he opened her womb, but Rachel was barren.” And Gen 30:22: “When the LORD saw that Leah was not loved, he opened her womb, but Rachel was barren.” Cp the situation: 2 wives and a rivalry.

THEN I WILL GIVE HIM TO THE LORD: That very thing that Hannah wanted most, she promised to give away (cp Abraham and Isaac: Gen 22). For her there could be nothing short of total and absolute consecration. Her son — if God were to grant her request — would be a Nazarite, totally dedicated to God, not for a fixed period (as was common), but for life! Do we feel the same about our possessions? Do we view ourselves as “God-acquired”, or as “self-made” men and women? Do we ask what we can do for our Father, or rather what He can do for us? Do our prayers often seem to go unanswered? If so, then see Jam 4:3.

FOR ALL THE DAYS OF HIS LIFE: In ct to the fixed period of Num 6:4.

1Sa 1:13

We may sadly infer from Eli’s thoughts that prayer was less frequent than sin at God’s house; Eli knew of his sons’ adulterous (and probably drunken) consorts (1Sa 2:22), and most likely assumed that this woman was one of them. But Eli should have been slower in judging appearances. We gain an insight into the character of the righteous but timid priest. He was severe when he should have been gentle (with Hannah), possibly hoping to compensate for his gentleness when he should have been severe (with his sons). He was a parent with love but no firmness and no discipline. We may imagine his love shriveling year by year, as his seed in the face of his feeble protests were transformed by their natural inclinations into the seed of the serpent.

1Sa 1:14

GET RID OF YOUR WINE: LXX adds: “And go from the presence of the LORD.”

1Sa 1:15

Hannah by a soft and wise answer (Pro 15:1) turned away the misdirected wrath of Eli. Such foresight and meekness prepared the way for Eli’s later reception of Samuel as a young child, and this in turn prepared the way for God to work through the young child at Shiloh.

I HAVE NOT BEEN DRINKING WINE: Had she already begun her own Nazarite vow, in anticipation of the conception of a son (v 11)?

1Sa 1:16

But Hannah, although properly meek before the old man, was not indifferent to his shortcomings. We detect in her words a subtle rebuke: ‘Why are you so anxious to criticize my “sin”, when the true offspring of Belial are your own sons?’ (1Sa 2:12). Here again is the undercurrent of faith in this remarkable woman: Hannah knew of Eli’s sons and their wicked deeds; they were a public reproach to Israel. She had prayed for a son, a gift from God, so that she might give him back to God. At a previous time, when Israel had cried for deliverance (Exo 2:23-25), a faithful woman had cast her son upon the waters (Exo 2:2,3; Heb 11:23), trusting in God to protect and use the goodly child for His purpose (Ecc 11:1). Now Hannah visualized her son-to-be as another Moses, a deliverer of his people from bondage and corruption. Had not Moses promised the people that the Lord would raise up unto them a prophet from their midst, like unto him (Deu 18:15,18)?

WICKED WOMAN: “Base woman” (RSV). From “belial” = worthless or vain.

1Sa 1:17

So Hannah had experienced the calm, composing influence of prayer. Her burden, which an hour before had seemed unbearable, was now laid upon another. Whether the response would be favorable or not, she felt a new peace.

1Sa 1:18

HER FACE WAS NO LONGER DOWNCAST: The composing influence of prayer. Cp Psa 42:1, etc.

1Sa 1:19

RAMA: See v 1n.

1Sa 1:20

SAMUEL: The derivation of the name appears a bit confusing. According to the AV text, the reason given for the choice is that Hannah had asked (Heb “shaal”) him of the Lord. But this Heb word is not the root of the name Samuel. In fact, the Heb word “shaal” is found in the name Saul, whom the people of Israel received when they asked for a king! Samuel, or “Shemuel” (1Ch 6:33), signifies “God hears”. (It is practically identical with Ishmael: Gen 16:11!) The idea, in brief, seems to be this: Hannah asked (shaal) God for a son. God heard (shema-El) her request, and as a memorial Hannah named her son “Shemuel”, or Samuel. And, to fulfill her vow, Hannah gave back (or “lent”) the “Asked one” to God (1Sa 1:27,28).

1Sa 1:21

Vv 21,22: The next feast day Hannah was unable to attend as she had before, but it was no hardship at all, for she could now hold and cherish and nurture the long-awaited child. Elkanah and the rest of his house (how interesting that his other wife no longer even merits a name!) went up to Shiloh as usual. Elkanah had a special vow to perform (v 21) — poss an indication that he had now made Hannah’s vow his own also. It is a fact that, had he so desired, he could have annulled his wife’s vow when he learned of it (Num 30:6-8). Not only did he not do so, but — it appears — he joyfully took up the pledge himself, as a gesture of thanksgiving for the gift of the special child!

1Sa 1:22

AFTER THE BOY IS WEANED: Cp vv 23,24. The rabbis differ as to whether this was most commonly done at age 2, or 3, or 5, or 7, or even older. One scholar observes, “There was a three-fold weaning of children in old times; the first from their mother’s milk, when three years old [cp the direct statement in 2Ma 7:27]; the second from their tender age, and care of a dry nurse [ie, generally, one who cares for a small child: GB], when seven years old; the third from childish manners, when at twelve years of age; and that it is this last and metaphorical weaning which is here meant, when Samuel was twelve years of age, and fit to serve in the temple” (Gill). It is possible that Samuel came to the tabernacle, AND received the call of God (1Sa 3), at the age of 12 — to accord with the age of Jesus when his Father spoke to him at the Temple (Luk 2).

Hannah saw beyond the present and the immediate future. Her eyes and her heart were fixed upon eternity! What a great purpose the sorrow of one barren woman played in the development of God’s plan! The real strength of Israel lay not in its judges, nor in its priests, and there was “no king in Israel” (Jdg 21:25). The strength of Israel lay in its godly households, few though they were, where women like Hannah created islands of purity, order, and peace. Her quiet faith and subtle strength were victorious at last to move mountains and alter the landscape of the Divine plan.

Israel’s destiny was in eclipse; there was apostasy, confusion, and decline on every side. But to remedy these great evils, God chose no grown man. His ways are not our ways, a thousand years are but as one day in His sight (Psa 90:4; 2Pe 3:8), and He never has to hurry. Instead, the Almighty prepares through necessary affliction a special mother, and then causes a special and cherished child to be born. In God’s own time when the precious “seed” has sprouted and grown to maturity, deliverance will come. The thankful mother, lost among the thousands of Israel but at one with her God, nourishes at her breast the destiny of her people. With his mother’s milk and tender care, Samuel receives also her simple faith. (“Who is best taught?” the rabbis asked. “The one who is taught by his mother.”) It is only for a few short years, but it is enough. Together they wait for the time to visit Shiloh.

1Sa 1:23

DO WHAT SEEMS BEST TO YOU: Elkanah agrees to Hannah’s vow. He could have annulled the vow (Num 30:6-8). Instead, it appears that he makes her vow his own.

1Sa 1:24

“Can a mother forget the baby at her breast and have no compassion on the child she has borne?” (Isa 49:15).

1Sa 1:27

At last the day arrives, and the little family makes its way to the house of God, to stand before Eli the priest. Our minds readily leap forward a thousand years, to another couple bringing a little baby into the Temple at Jerusalem, to offer sacrifice for purification and to present him to the Lord. The two scenes become almost as one to the eye of faith, and it is surely no flight of fancy to see in them both the epitome of every righteous parent’s hopes and longings. May the words of Hannah be the words of every believer to whom God has entrusted that most precious gift — another human life, to protect and cherish and nurture in the fear of the Lord.

I PRAYED FOR THIS CHILD: “I too desire that my son should be lent to the Lord. So when the last trump shall sound and I shall stand before the Judge of all the earth, what will he say to me? I see him reproving me for all my faults, and then he asks, ‘Where is the one talent that I gave you? What use have you made of it?’ Will I have hidden this talent in the earth, or will I with confidence be able to reply, ‘Lord, see my son!’?” (Xd 90:84). See Lesson, Thoughts of a mother…. See Article, For this child I prayed.

1Sa 1:28

1Sa 1:28.

SO NOW I GIVE HIM TO THE LORD: “That which we win by prayer we should dedicate to God, as Hannah dedicated Samuel. The gift came from heaven, let it go to heaven. Prayer brought it, gratitude sang over it… let devotion consecrate it” (CHS).

Judges 21

Jdg 21:1

Jdg 21: “So the book closes with a dark shadow over the history of Israel. The cost of the period of anarchy was enormous. The spiritual depth to which the nation sunk would take many years to recover. The Levite’s dramatic revelation of the murder of his concubine, and his demand for revenge had stirred the nation of Israel to its depths. A lust for blood seized men as they gave Benjamin over to slaughter. The land became a smoking ruin. Cities were overthrown, their inhabitants ruthlessly slain without sense or mercy, and men made with the desire for violence, marched through the land, putting all to an indiscriminate slaughter, until the tribe was on the point of extinction. And then a realisation of what they had done came over the nation. ‘The people wept’ (v 2). But in their passion they had bound themselves with oaths that now they regretted. Thus they set about legally to defeat the solemn promises they had made, and to provide continuance to the tribe of Benjamin and this led to further indiscriminate and senseless slaughter. The whole account in its dark and dreadful detail illustrated the comment of v 25. It was the end of the age, and we look with pleasure to the reading of the book of Ruth, and the day of the monarchy. [Likewise] this age of senseless violence… is a precursor to the glorious revelation of the Gentile Bride and the establishment of the throne of David” (GEM).

Vv 1,2: “The punitive campaign against Benjamin was no sooner concluded than the tribes immediately became very uneasy about the consequences of their zeal for righteousness. So fully and completely had they done what they had deemed to be their duty that there was now grave prospect of the complete disappearance of one of their twelve tribes. For Benjamin was reduced to a mere handful of men, and how could these continue their families since their brethren had sworn not to give their daughters in marriage to a tribe of such wickedness?

“Here is demonstrated the folly of human oaths. Only God, the Eternal, who knows the end from the beginning, can truly bind Himself by an oath never to be set aside, for with Him, only, is the wisdom to foresee the outworking of events. In this incident there is the plainest of all warnings to those who love government by constitution and minute-book and all the paraphernalia of the Medes and Persians. Such may be all very well for business executives, but in a community of the people of God reliance on a cast-iron adherence to rules and resolutions is a sign of small-mindedness. The fewer the governing principles of an ecclesia the smaller will be the risk of becoming fettered hand and foot by chains of one’s own fashioning. It was a lesson Israel should have learned from this experience with Benjamin. It is a lesson the New Israel has not learned yet” (WJR).

Jdg 21:3

How ironic! It was their own doing.

Jdg 21:4

BUILT AN ALTAR: A pointer that “the house of God” (v 2) was not Shiloh, for the altar there would not need (re)building. But it is easy to understand that the ancient holy place at Bethel had fallen into disuse.

Jdg 21:5

ANYONE WHO FAILED TO ASSEMBLE BEFORE THE LORD: Cp the curse on Meroz (Jdg 5:23).

Jdg 21:7

NOT TO GIVE THEM ANY OF OUR DAUGHTERS IN MARRIAGE: Treating Benjamin like Canaanites: Deu 7:3,4.

Jdg 21:10

“Straining out gnats and swallowing camels”: this attack on Jabesh-gilead was at least as sinful as the initial sin of Gibeah.

Jdg 21:19

Such precise details of location were necessary from time of Samuel onward, because the Philistines wiped Shiloh off the map (Jer 7:12-15; 26:6,9).

Jdg 21:21

THE GIRLS OF SHILOH: They would be mostly from Ephraim. The other wives of Benjamin were from Manasseh. Thus the descendants of Rachel come together — Ephraim and Manasseh with Benjamin.

Jdg 21:23

600 families in an area where there was once 25,000 (Jdg 20:46,47). (This incident was remembered in days of Hosea: Hos 10:9.)