Samuel in Easton's Bible Dictionary
heard of God. The peculiar circumstances connected with his
birth are recorded in 1 Sam. 1:20. Hannah, one of
the two wives
of Elkanah, who came up to Shiloh to worship before
the Lord,
earnestly prayed to God that she might become the
mother of a
son. Her prayer was graciously granted; and after
the child was
weaned she brought him to Shiloh nd consecrated him
to the Lord
as a perpetual Nazarite (1:23-2:11). Here his bodily
wants and
training were attended to by the women who served in
the
tabernacle, while Eli cared for his religious
culture. Thus,
probably, twelve years of his life passed away. "The
child
Samuel grew on, and was in favour both with the
Lord, and also
with men" (2:26; comp. Luke 2:52). It was a time of
great and
growing degeneracy in Israel (Judg. 21:19-21; 1 Sam.
2:12-17,
22). The Philistines, who of late had greatly
increased in
number and in power, were practically masters of the
country,
and kept the people in subjection (1 Sam. 10:5;
13:3).
At this time new communications from God began to be
made to
the pious child. A mysterious voice came to him in
the night
season, calling him by name, and, instructed by Eli,
he
answered, "Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth."
The message
that came from the Lord was one of woe and ruin to
Eli and his
profligate sons. Samuel told it all to Eli, whose
only answer to
the terrible denunciations (1 Sam. 3:11-18) was, "It
is the
Lord; let him do what seemeth him good", the passive
submission
of a weak character, not, in his case, the
expression of the
highest trust and faith. The Lord revealed himself
now in divers
manners to Samuel, and his fame and his influence
increased
throughout the land as of one divinely called to the
prophetical
office. A new period in the history of the kingdom
of God now
commenced...
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