1 Samuel 1-7

Narrator: Chris Genthree
1 Samuel 1‑7  •  3 min. read  •  grade level: 8
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The inspired histories become typical, or parabolical, by the simplest necessity. Because, God acting in them, He must act according to His own counsels. And then, the fragments of history which we get, (introducing God as they do,) necessarily become so many revelations, more or less full, more or less distinct, of God’s way, of the purposes of His grace, of the operations of His Spirit, of the doings of His hand, and of the mode of bringing His purposes to pass.
Man being in action also, exposes Himself in various ways, as God being in action, reveals Himself.
This may prepare us to find parables in histories; and in other words, parts of the divine way in the pieces of history which we get in the inspired Book.
Now, I have thought this, in connection with 1 Sam. 1-7, which form the first part of 1 Samuel; and it is a very complete piece in itself.
Man is here exposed; but God in the ways and counsels of His grace, and in the operations of His Spirit, is also revealed.
Man is exposed, first, in Peninnah—confidence or pride in fleshly advantages, (a common principle of corrupt nature); betrays itself in her. She provokes Hannah weak in the flesh—in the spirit of Hagar and Ishmael. Man is exposed next in the camp of Israel. Confidence in fleshly or carnal ordinances in spite of a bad conscience and evil practices (another common principle of corrupt nature), betrays itself there. They bring the Ark into the battle. (Chapter 4.) I say not how man betrays himself in the sons of Eli; that is evident enough. But even in the saint, in Eli, the easiness that conferred with flesh and blood, and did not take counsel with the will of God only, (common enough with us all) betrays itself in him.
In these ways man is here exposing himself. But God is revealed. He enters this scene of action, and He cannot but enter it consistently with Himself, and this of necessity reveals Him.
He takes up the weak thing-He visits Hannah. This is a great principle with Him. To be sure it is in a world that has departed from Him in pride-for while He blesses us, He must humble us, leaving us no room or occasion to boast.
His Spirit in Hannah celebrates this; as His Spirit afterward in Samuel forms a vessel or quickens a vessel, the very opposite of the proud and confident Peninnah. Samuel is all meekness in the presence of Eli—Peninnah had been, all haughtiness in the presence of Hannah (chap. 3.)—different ways in which they used their several advantages.
Then, His Anointed one, the true Ark, has some of the deepest mysteries in His history, brought out in type here. The Ark which symbolizes Him is a captive, but a conqueror also in the place of its captivity (c. v. 6.) This is Christ dead and risen.
Then, in the last place, the divine way of blessing is traced in chap. 7; Samuel the vessel and witness of the Spirit, instructs the people in this way. It is the very contradiction of the human way. We saw that in chap. 4, there man will trust in an ordinance, a carnal piece of religiousness, a rudiment of the world; and that, too, in the midst of his practical uncleanness. Man will be religious and worldly, religious and polluted, at the same time. But God’s way, witnessed and taught by Samuel, is the way of faith and righteousness. Samuel requires of them to be honest with the Lord, by putting away the strange gods. He then will have them in the place of good-for-nothing ones, like water spilled on the ground—then on their cry he pleads the bloody sacrifice, and then God, answering the sacrifice with deliverance, he raises the pillar that tells how the Lord Himself had done it all for His people.
Here the witness for God instructs the camp in God’s way, which leads them to blessing—for they take that way in the obedience of faith.