A.B.D
Arabic Bible Dictionary
SAMUEL
SAMUEL heard of God. The peculiar circumstances connected with his
birth are recorded in 1 Samuel 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 (Judges
21=>19-21; 1 Samuel 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 Samuel 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 Samuel 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.
The Philistine yoke was heavy, and the people, groaning under the
wide-spread oppression, suddenly rose in revolt, and “went out against
the Philistines to battle.” A fierce and disastrous battle was fought at
Aphek, near to Ebenezer (1 Samuel 4=>1, 2). The Israelites were defeated,
leaving 4,000 dead “in the field.” The chiefs of the people thought to repair
this great disaster by carrying with them the ark of the covenant as the
symbol of Jehovah’s presence. They accordingly, without consulting
Samuel, fetched it out of Shiloh to the camp near Aphek. At the sight of
the ark among them the people “shouted with a great shout, so that the
earth rang again.” A second battle was fought, and again the Philistines
defeated the Israelites, stormed their camp, slew 30,000 men, and took the
sacred ark. The tidings of this fatal battle was speedily conveyed to Shiloh;
and so soon as the aged Eli heard that the ark of God was taken, he fell
backward from his seat at the entrance of the sanctuary, and his neck
brake, and he died. The tabernacle with its furniture was probably, by the
advice of Samuel, now about twenty years of age, removed from Shiloh to
some place of safety, and finally to Nob, where it remained many years
( 21 => 1 ).
The Philistines followed up their advantage, and marched upon Shiloh,
which they plundered and destroyed (comp. Jeremiah 7=>12; Psalm 78=>59).
This was a great epoch in the history of Israel. For twenty years after this
fatal battle at Aphek the whole land lay under the oppression of the
Philistines. During all these dreary years Samuel was a spiritual power in
the land. From Ramah, his native place, where he resided, his influence
went forth on every side among the people. With unwearied zeal he went
up and down from place to place, reproving, rebuking, and exhorting the
people, endeavouring to awaken in them a sense of their sinfulness, and to
lead them to repentance. His labours were so far successful that “all the
house of Israel lamented after the Lord.” Samuel summoned the people to
Mizpeh, one of the loftiest hills in Central Palestine, where they fasted
and prayed, and prepared themselves there, under his direction, for a great
war against the Philistines, who now marched their whole force toward
Mizpeh, in order to crush the Israelites once for all. At the intercession of
Samuel God interposed in behalf of Israel. Samuel himself was their leader,
the only occasion in which he acted as a leader in war. The Philistines were
utterly routed. They fled in terror before the army of Israel, and a great
slaughter ensued. This battle, fought probably about B.C. 1095, put an end
to the forty years of Philistine oppression. In memory of this great
deliverance, and in token of gratitude for the help vouchsafed, Samuel set
up a great stone in the battlefield, and called it “Ebenezer,” saying,
“Hitherto hath the Lord helped us” (1 Samuel 7=>1-12). This was the spot
where, twenty years before, the Israelites had suffered a great defeat, when
the ark of God was taken.
This victory over the Philistines was followed by a long period of peace
for Israel (1 Samuel 7=>13, 14), during which Samuel exercised the functions
of judge, going “from year to year in circuit” from his home in Ramah to
Bethel, thence to Gilgal (not that in the Jordan valley, but that which lay
to the west of Ebal and Gerizim), and returning by Mizpeh to Ramah. He
established regular services at Shiloh, where he built an altar; and at Ramah
he gathered a company of young men around him and established a school
of the prophets. The schools of the prophets, thus originated, and
afterwards established also at Gibeah, Bethel, Gilgal, and Jericho, exercised
an important influence on the national character and history of the people
in maintaining pure religion in the midst of growing corruption. They
continued to the end of the Jewish commonwealth.
Many years now passed, during which Samuel exercised the functions of
his judicial office, being the friend and counsellor of the people in all
matters of private and public interest. He was a great statesman as well as
a reformer, and all regarded him with veneration as the “seer,” the prophet
of the Lord. At the close of this period, when he was now an old man, the
elders of Israel came to him at Ramah (1 Samuel 8=>4, 5, 19-22); and feeling
how great was the danger to which the nation was exposed from the
misconduct of Samuel’s sons, whom he had invested with judicial
functions as his assistants, and had placed at Beersheba on the Philistine
border, and also from a threatened invasion of the Ammonites, they
demanded that a king should be set over them. This request was very
displeasing to Samuel. He remonstrated with them, and warned them of the
consequences of such a step. At length, however, referring the matter to
God, he acceded to their desires, and anointed Saul (q.v.) to be their king
(11=>15). Before retiring from public life he convened an assembly of the
people at Gilgal (ch. 12), and there solemnly addressed them with
reference to his own relation to them as judge and prophet.
The remainder of his life he spent in retirement at Ramah, only
occasionally and in special circumstances appearing again in public (1
Samuel 13, 15) with communications from God to king Saul. While
mourning over the many evils which now fell upon the nation, he is
suddenly summoned (ch.16) to go to Bethlehem and anoint David, the son
of Jesse, as king over Israel instead of Saul. After this little is known of
him till the time of his death, which took place at Ramah when he was
probably about eighty years of age. “And all Israel gathered themselves
together, and lamented him, and buried him in his house at Ramah” (25=>1),
not in the house itself, but in the court or garden of his house. (Comp. 2
Kings 21=>18; 2 Chronicles 33=>20; 1 Kings 2=>34; John 19=>41.)
Samuel’s devotion to God, and the special favour with which God regarded
him, are referred to in Jeremiah 15=>1 and Psalm 99=>6.