Samuel in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
sam'-u-el (shemu'el; Samouel): The word "Samuel" signifies
"name of God," or "his name is El" (God). Other
interpretations of the name that have been offered are
almost certainly mistaken. The play upon the name in 1 Sam
1:20 is not intended of course to be an explanation of its
meaning, but is similar to the play upon the name Moses in
Ex 2:10 and frequently elsewhere in similar instances. Thus,
by the addition of a few letters shemu'el becomes sha'ul
me'el, "asked of God," and recalls to the mother of Samuel
the circumstances of the divine gift to her of a son.
Outside of 1st Samuel the name of the great judge and
prophet is found in Jer 15:1; Ps 99:6 and in 1 and 2
Chronicles. The reference in Jeremiah seems intended to
convey the same impression that is given by the narrative of
1 Samuel, that in some sense Samuel had come to be regarded
as a second Moses, upon whom the mantle of the latter had
fallen, and who had been once again the deliverer and guide
of the people at a great national crisis.
1. Sources and Character of the History:
The narrative of the events of the life of Samuel appears to
be derived from more than one source (see SAMUEL, BOOKS OF).
The narrator had before him and made use of biographies and
traditions, which he combined into a single consecutive
history. The completed picture of the prophet's position and
character which is thus presented is on the whole harmonious
and consistent, and gives a very high impression of his
piety and loyalty to Yahweh, and of the wide influence for
good which he exerted. There are divergences apparent in
detail and standpoint between the sources or traditions,
some of which may probably be due merely to misunderstanding
of the true nature of the events recorded, or to the failure
of the modern reader rightly to appreciate the exact
circumstances and time. The greater part of the narrative of
the life of Samuel, however, appears to have a single
origin....
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