1 Samuel 2:12-26 · Eli’s Wicked Sons
The Promising Child
1 Samuel 2:12-26
Sermon
by Harry N. Huxhold
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The Holy Gospel appointed for this First Sunday after Christmas was chosen to help us understand the development of that Holy Child whose birth we have just celebrated with joy and high delight. However, in Bible classes pastors generally have difficulty handling the protests of mothers who think that the behavior of the twelve-year-old boy Jesus was quite reprehensible. Mothers normally contend that no matter how impressive Jesus may have been with the teachers in the Temple, he gets poor marks for the anxiety he caused both Mary and Joseph. Any parent who has experienced the trauma of worrying about a lost child for any length of time can appreciate the fact that Mary immediately faulted Jesus for what appeared to be thoughtlessness on his part in not informing his parents of his whereabouts.

We can be sure that the Evangelist Luke did not intend to portray Jesus in such a bad light. In fact, the evangelist relates the story to inform us of the faithfulness of both the parents and the Child Jesus. In an earlier story Luke recounts the Presentation in the Temple when Mary and Joseph carefully fulfilled all that was required of them according to Hebrew law and tradition. In the Gospel today Luke reminds us that Mary and Joseph went to the Passover festival in Jerusalem each year. Normally, that was required only of the adult male in the family. However, this pious couple went together each year, and, no doubt, took Jesus with them. That would also account for the fact that Jesus felt comfortable in what he was doing. To appreciate fully what was going on between Jesus and his parents we can look to the First Lesson appointed for today, the story of Samuel and his mother Hannah. The Evangelist Luke found this to be a model for his treatment of the accounts of the infancy and childhood of Jesus.

About Hannah

The story of Hannah is one of the accounts from the Hebrew Scriptures that is well-rehearsed in the Church. Hannah was the beloved wife of Elkanah, a man from Ephraim who had two wives. Hannah was barren, but the other wife of Elkanah, Penninah, did have children. Each year Elkannah took his entire family to worship at the temple which was at Shiloh. At whatever festival the family was celebrating they had a special feast, and Elkanah would present gifts to each member of his family. Out of love and sympathy for Hannah, her husband gave her double portion of the gifts. Yet Hannah was not consoled. She refused to eat and went to the temple and prayed through tears for God to bless her with a child. In her prayers she vowed to God that were she to be blessed with a son, she would dedicate the child in service to the Lord.

Eli, the priest, observed Hannah in prayer and thought she was drunk, because she moved her lips but did not speak audibly. The priest reproached her for her behavior, but she explained that she was not drunk. She also revealed her distress and why she had been praying in such a state of anxiety. Eli dismissed her with a blessing with the hope that God would grant her petition. She returned to her family, ate of the festival foods, and returned to her home with joy. Her prayer was granted, and she bore a son whom she named Samuel. When Elkanah took his family again to Shiloh for the annual worship, she preferred to remain home with the child. She waited until she had weaned Samuel and then took him and an elaborate sacrifice to present Samuel to the Lord. She explained to Eli that she had been the woman he had comforted, and now she was placing the child in Eli’s care that the child might live a life of service to God.

Lent To The Lord

When Hannah placed Samuel into the care of Levi, she said, “For this child I prayed; and the Lord granted me the petition. Therefore I have lent him to the Lord; as long as he lives, he is given to the Lord” (1 Samuel 1:27-28). The Law of Moses (Exodus 13:1-2) did require that every firstborn male be designated as holy to the Lord. The understanding of this requirement was that Israel might trust that God claimed all of Israel as God’s people. The dedication of the firstborn was a significant way of remembering that, especially since all the firstborn of the Egyptians were lost at the time of the Exodus. Hannah and Elkanah went well beyond that in offering their very young son to serve the Lord for all of his life.

Many of our Christian families had such traditions among them. The Irish Catholics who came to America were noted for their willingness to offer one of their sons to serve as a policeman, one in some political office, and one in the priesthood. Anglicans were noted for offering a son to government service, another to banking, and one to the Anglican priesthood. In German Lutheran homes it also was common practice to offer a son to the ministry. In rural areas the joke often was that the one who was not strong enough for working the farm should go to the ministry. In the case of Roman Catholic and some of the German Lutheran families, this meant that the young boys were enrolled in pre-theological and liberal arts training schools at the tender age of twelve or thirteen. The difficulty of the separation from mother very often was equally traumatic for the young boys, and the good plan sometimes had to be aborted.

The Faithful Mother

It is not difficult to understand that when a mother offers her son for service to the Lord that this is done with mixed feelings. On the one hand, the mother, like Hannah, is prompted by the highest motives and sincere devotion to God. That must be not only with a sense of offering one’s best gift but also with thanksgiving and proper pride that one is able to do so. The Hannah story exudes that kind of joy. At the same time, any time a mother must experience separations from her children she has a deep feeling that is incomparable with any other kind of loss. She senses a pain of separation when her children go to kindergarten for the first time, when they move on into the freedom and confusion of adolescence, when they marry, and, worst of all if they should precede her in death. If we can understand that, then we can appreciate the feelings of Hannah and the mothers like her who dramatized the separation of their sons from their sides when they offered them for service to the Lord.

While we can imagine the farewell of Hannah for the boy Samuel may have been a bittersweet kind of experience, the writer who gives us the account of that moment does not describe Hannah’s feelings. Instead the writer simply states, “She left him there for the Lord.” Then the writer includes a beautiful psalmody we know as “The Song of Hannah,” in which her faith in God is described as a thanksgiving for all that God had done for her in granting her the gift of her son Samuel. She regards this as a victory of faith. The song goes on to praise God for the manner in which God reverses the fortunes of the poor and lowly and humbles the proud. The song, which became a model for the “Magnificat,” the song of Mary at the time of the Visitation recorded by the Evangelist Luke, celebrates God’s control over all of life.

The Blessed Mother

In the First Lesson appointed for today we read that Hannah faithfully made the annual visit to the temple at Shiloh to worship. As she did so she also visited with her son Samuel and brought him a linen ephod which she lovingly and carefully fashioned for him each year. The ephod was a liturgical garment. It was a light garment that covered only the front of the body. As an apron-type garment it was meant for service in the temple and designated the wearer of it as a servant for the worship ceremonies. No doubt, she took pride in her handiwork but was all the more proud of her son Samuel as he performed his duties and functions in the house of the Lord. By the same token, Samuel must have been equally proud and grateful as he wore the ephod as a symbol of the presence of his mother’s love and care as well as her devotion to God.

In addition to the mutually rewarding experiences Mother Hannah and her son Samuel had from the satisfactions of their joint commitment of service to God, Hannah had other blessings. Each year as she worshiped at Shiloh the priest Eli would bless both Hannah and Elkanah. He made a ritual of saying to them, “May the Lord repay you with children of this woman for the gift she made to the Lord” (2:20). Those blessings became realities in the life of Elkanah and Hannah. Hannah was blessed with the gifts of three more sons and two daughters. In the meantime Samuel continued to mature and grow in his role as the servant of the Lord. One gets the impression that Hannah felt especially blessed in her role as a faithful mother.

The Blessed Family

The beauty of the Hannah Story for all of us is clearly how the faith of a wife and mother was not only for her personal benefit. She was to influence the lives of many through her son Samuel. As in the stories of Sarah and Abraham and Zechariah and Elizabeth, sons born are born to barren women. By God’s grace and providence, the sons born to these barren mothers are ordained to be special servants of God and unique individuals. Though he was not born to the priesthood, Samuel was dedicated to the priesthood in a special way and, in addition, distinguished himself to become a judge and a prophet in Israel. Samuel was to be a shining reflection of the faith and godliness of his mother. From his youth on he was distinguished as being a man of prayer, just as his mother was immortalized by the fervent prayers she offered to God. Samuel stood tall among men as a man of faith. We can only guess, but we can imagine that Hannah was an equally good mother for all of her children and that they also mirrored her goodness in their lives.

We could only guess as to how many times the story of Hannah has been repeated in the lives of outstanding figures in history who would pay tribute to the mothers who bequeathed their faith to them. John Wesley’s mother was dubbed the “Mother of Method-ism,” because of her noted faith and executive abilities which she passed on to her sons John and Charles. Probably one of the best known mothers in America is Abraham Lincoln’s mother, because of his famous tribute to her, “All that I am, or hope to be, I owe to my angel mother.” However, we do not have to recite the lists of prominent historical figures to make the point that the high and the mighty are indebted for their success to good mothers. The story is repeated every day in the homes of good God fearing people where mothers bequeath their love and faith to their children in constant faithfulness. The world continues to stand, and history moves on, because God can rely on these dear mothers to do the divine work of raising God’s children.

The Blessed Son

The purpose of reviewing the story of Hannah and Samuel on this day was to help us appreciate the story of the Boy Jesus in the Temple. In the light of the story from the Hebrew Scriptures we can understand why Jesus answered as he did his very anxious Mother Mary when she remonstrated with him about his dallying in the Temple. The Evangelist Luke, who used the Hannah story to model the accounts of the Visitation and the Presentation, would also use Samuel as the model here. Jesus had good precedent for remaining in the Temple in the person of Samuel, who had entered the service of the temple at even a more tender age than Jesus. Luke indicates that at the moment neither Mary or Joseph understood what Jesus was saying to them. We understand. We understand, because we know the rest of the story. We know how Jesus lived out his life under the Father by his life, ministry, suffering, death, and resurrection. Knowing that, we can imagine he could have said anything he wanted to his Mother Mary. But he did not.

The Boy Jesus did not say more or less than he did, because he still needed to mature, to grow up, and to deepen his own understanding of what he himself had said. Luke adds, “He went down with them and came to Nazareth, and was obedient to them ... And Jesus increased in wisdom and in years, and in divine and human favor.” Jesus needed the continued faithful love, instruction, care, and rearing of his beloved mother. The Story of the Boy Jesus in the Temple is included by the Evangelist Luke so that we can understand how dependent Jesus was upon the love of Mary and Joseph in a truly God-fearing home. It was in that home Jesus experienced the love and grace of his Heavenly Father. That is how it should work in all of our homes. God does reveal the divine to us in this homely way. And we are blessed.

CSS Publishing Company, The Presence in the Promise, by Harry N. Huxhold