Samuel

Scriptures: 1st Samuel 7 & 8

YouTube Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6MRCFooFNw

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Samuel – prophet, priest and judge
  • Conclusion  

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

How often do you get your hair cut? Is it once a month, every two or three months or maybe once a year?

If you go to the hairdresser once every three months, then you might have close to 300 haircuts in your lifetime (depending how long you live).

But if your hair grows relatively quickly and you get a cut say once every 4-6 weeks, then you might have more than 800 haircuts in your lifetime. Interestingly, men tend to get more haircuts than women (on average). 

Today we continue our series on hair and hairy people in the Bible. Last week we heard about Samson who, because he was a Nazarite for life, was not supposed to cut his hair. Sadly, Samson’s first and only haircut resulted in him losing his strength. 

This morning we hear about another Nazarite, Samuel. In case you missed last week’s sermon, a Nazarite was someone (in ancient Israel) who was dedicated to God. During the time of their dedication to God a Nazarite was under a vow to not do three things. A Nazarite could not drink alcohol, they were not to come in contact with a dead body, and they could not cut their hair.

Normally a Nazarite vow was voluntary and for a limited period of time but in the case of Samson and Samuel, it was for life.

Although Samson & Samuel were both Nazarites, Samuel was a very different character to Samson. As we heard last week, Samson broke all the rules and was not very holy at all. Nevertheless, God still worked his purpose through Samson. 

Samuel was almost the complete opposite of Samson. Samuel was the quintessential holy man, serving God and Israel as a prophet, priest and judge. Samson was alienated from his own people, whereas Samuel brought the nation of Israel together. Samson relied on his fists and brute strength, while Samuel relied on God’s word and prayer.

If Samson’s super power was super strength, then Samuel’s super power was communication. Samuel had the ability to listen to God and speak difficult truths to the people. For those who are familiar with the Marvel Universe, Samson was like the Hulk and Samuel was more like Vision, except with long hair.

Samson was hairy, both in the physical sense and in the metaphorical sense of being a bit scary and less than perfect. In contrast, Samuel was thoughtful and forthright. He had God given discernment and insight, combined with moral integrity. Samuel was the ideal leader.  

Samuel, prophet, priest & judge:

Samuel’s story begins with his mother Hannah. Hannah was not able to have children and, in deep distress, went to the house of the Lord in Shiloh and cried out bitterly to God in prayer. From verse 11 of 1st Samuel chapter 1, Hannah prays…

“Lord Almighty, look at me, your servant! See my trouble and remember me! Don’t forget me! If you give me a son, I promise that I will dedicate him to you for his whole life and that he will never have his hair cut.”

Hannah was desperate and made a deal with God. If God gave her a son she would dedicate him to the Lord’s service as a Nazarite.

You may be wondering why a Nazarite can never drink wine, never touch a corpse and never cut their hair. Well, all of those things are about the body. The idea is that the Nazarite’s body belongs to God. Even the hairs on their head belong to God and therefore the Nazarite’s life is not their own. They can’t do whatever they want with their body – it is set apart as sacred or holy for the Lord’s use.    

The principle is similar for Christians. As followers of Jesus our body is not ours to do with as we please. Our body belongs to Christ. We are set apart for the Lord’s use. As the apostle Paul says in his letter to the Romans: offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God — for this is your true and proper worship. (Romans 12:1)

To be clear, we are not under the obligations of a Nazarite vow and so we can still get our haircut and maybe have the odd wine or beer, in moderation. Being in Christ does give us some degree of freedom. But we also need to remember that our body is sacred – it is a temple of the Holy Spirit (1st Corinthians 6:19).  

God heard Hannah’s prayer and she became pregnant, giving birth to Samuel. Then, when Samuel had been weaned, she made good on her promise and left her young son at the temple in Shiloh, with Eli, the priest. This was quite an act of faith as the priesthood at that time in Israel was a bit rotten.  

But God looked after Samuel and started speaking to him from a young age. In chapter 3, the boy Samuel hears a voice calling his name. At first he thinks it is Eli, the aging priest. But when he goes to Eli, the old man sends him back to bed. After this keeps happening Eli realises it is God who is speaking to Samuel and tells the boy to respond with, “Speak; your servant is listening.”

Samuel does as he is told and the Lord gives Samuel a message of judgment against Eli’s family. When Eli asks Samuel what the Lord said, Samuel tells his mentor the difficult truth. God is going to end Eli’s family because of the evil Eli’s sons have done.

From verse 19 of Samuel chapter 3 we read…

As Samuel grew up, the Lord was with him and made everything that Samuel said come true. So all the people of Israel, from one end of the country to the other, knew that Samuel was indeed a prophet of the Lord. The Lord continued to reveal himself at Shiloh, where he had appeared to Samuel and had spoken to him. And when Samuel spoke, all Israel listened. 

Samuel was sort of like the sign language interpreters we see on TV. He provided the communication link between God and his people. God’s word through Samuel came true.

In chapter 7 of 1st Samuel we read that twenty years go past and during that time the people of Israel cried out to the Lord for help. It seems they continued to suffer at the hands of the Philistines.

Earlier in the week I was doing some baking for a baby shower. I preheated the oven, mixed the ingredients, then put the raw brownie batter in a tray and into the oven.

Timing is particularly important with a brownie. If you leave your brownie in the oven too long, it will burn and taste bitter. But if you don’t leave it long enough it will be too raw and runny, it won’t hold together in your hand. I find that 18 minutes on 180 degrees, in a reliable oven, is normally just right to give you a firm outer crust with a lovely warm gooey centre.

Unfortunately, while my brownie was in the oven, I got distracted with work emails and, instead of 18 minutes, the brownie got 33 minutes. Needless to say it was overdone. The brownie was just edible for our family but there was no way I was going to let it leave the house. So, after a few minutes berating myself, I started again and made a new one.

We can’t be sure if Samuel made brownie but if he did I expect his timing would have been perfect. Certainly his prophetic timing was spot on.    

The Israelites cried out to the Lord for 20 years. Imagine that, twenty years cooking in the oven of oppression. Twenty years under the thumb. Twenty years with the monkey on your back. Twenty years living with anxiety and fear. Twenty years putting up with the harsh voice of the critic. Twenty years of regret.

During that time Samuel faithfully serves the Lord as prophet and judge for the people. As a prophet, Samuel listened to the Lord and spoke truth from God. The sort of truth that sets people free. And as a judge, Samuel listened to the people and settled disputes in a way which was just and fair. The kind of justice that leads to community peace and right relationship.

As you can imagine, after 20 years of faithfully ministering truth and justice, Samuel would have created a pretty significant bank of trust with the nation. And with that trust came authority and respect. The kind of authority and respect which is hard earned.

Samuel could have abused that trust or used it to his own advantage, but he doesn’t. Instead he spends that trust for the well-being of the people.

Samuel had the insight to sense when the people had been suffering long enough. He could see they were ready for genuine repentance (they were firm on the outside and gooey in the middle) and so he says to the people of Israel… 

“If you are going to turn to the Lord with all your hearts, you must get rid of all the foreign gods and the images of the goddess Astarte. Dedicate yourselves completely to the Lord and worship only him, and he will rescue you from the power of the Philistines.” 

True repentance isn’t just about feeling sorry. True repentance may start with sadness but it must lead to a change of heart; a change from the inside out. The sorrow of repentance provides the motivation for a change of mind that leads to a change in behaviour.

Apparently the Israelites were mixing their worship of Yahweh with the worship of the pagan fertility gods of the Canaanites. In practice this pagan worship involved things like sacrificing to idols and performing sexual rituals at local Canaanite shrines. [1] 

Samuel is saying, you can’t do that and worship the one true God at the same time. Samuel won’t abide cheap grace. He uses the bank of trust he has earned over 20 years to insist on costly grace.

According to Bonhoeffer, cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance. Cheap grace is grace without the cross. Cheap grace, for example, says to the man who beats his wife, ‘You are forgiven and you can continue abusing your wife.’ Or it says to the gossiper, ‘You are forgiven, and you are free to carry on destroying other people’s reputations.’ 

In contrast, costly grace says to the wife beater, ‘Stop hitting your wife and treat her with kindness and respect.’ Costly grace says to the gossiper, ‘Do not speak badly of others but instead see the good in them.’ Costly grace comes as a word of forgiveness to the broken spirit and the contrite heart. It is costly because it compels a person to submit to the yoke of Christ and follow him.

From verse 4 of 1st Samuel 7 we read…  

So the Israelites got rid of their idols of Baal and Astarte, and worshiped only the Lord. Then Samuel called for all the Israelites to meet at Mizpah, telling them, “I will pray to the Lord for you there.” So they all gathered at Mizpah. They drew some water and poured it out as an offering to the Lord and fasted that whole day. They said, “We have sinned against the Lord.”

Here we see Samuel acting in his capacity as a priest, carrying out a religious ritual which solemnises or validates the people’s act of repentance. The ritual includes three things:

The pouring out of water, which is a symbol of sacrifice and cleansing.

Going without food for a day, which is an act of cleansing one’s body in dedication to the Lord God Almighty.

And a verbal confession, which is a declaration of their collective truth.

This ritual may seem strange to us but rituals are necessary for people both spiritually and psychologically. When our heart is in it, and we are not just going through the motions, rituals make things real. They seal the deal and leave an impression on our minds.

As prophet and priest, Samuel calls for costly grace and in so doing he cleans and dresses the nation’s wound in their relationship with God.

From verse 7 of Samuel 7 we continue the story…

When the Philistines heard that the Israelites had gathered at Mizpah, the five Philistine kings started out with their men to attack them. The Israelites heard about it and were afraid, and said to Samuel, “Keep praying to the Lord our God to save us from the Philistines.” Samuel killed a young lamb and burned it whole as a sacrifice to the Lord. Then he prayed to the Lord to help Israel, and the Lord answered his prayer. 10 While Samuel was offering the sacrifice, the Philistines moved forward to attack; but just then the Lord thundered from heaven against them. They became completely confused and fled in panic. 11 The Israelites marched out from Mizpah and pursued the Philistines almost as far as Bethcar, killing them along the way.

The main thing we notice here is that Samuel and the Israelites rely on prayer to defeat their enemies. Samuel’s mum believed in prayer and so does Samuel. He intercedes for the people. Not by might, nor by power but by my Spirit sayeth the Lord.

During my training for ministry I spent three months working as a chaplain at Greenlane Hospital in Auckland (before they shut it down). For most of that three months I felt quite powerless. There I was surrounded by doctors and nurses who were all highly skilled and useful, saving people’s lives. And then there was me, the padre (the chaplain), wanting to be useful and hoping I wasn’t in the way.

Next to the wonders of modern medical science I felt quite inadequate. All I had to offer was three things: my presence, my listening and my prayers. I had no way of measuring whether I was making a positive difference or not. Everything I did was done in faith that God would somehow use it for good.

Presence, listening and prayer. These were the same things Samuel offered as chaplain to the Israelites. No doubt he had more faith than I do but, to the casual observer, those three simple things (presence, listening and prayer) seem so ineffectual and inadequate, especially as your enemies are closing in fast. The temptation is to abandon prayer and reach for the sword. 

But there is more power in Samuel’s prayer than in all the military might of the five Philistine kings combined, because Samuel has cleansed the wound and helped the people make their peace with God.

There may be times or circumstances when you wish you had some kind of super power or special skill to fix the situation or heal the person or save the day, when in reality you don’t. You may feel inadequate or overwhelmed. But we must not despise the seemingly small or ordinary things. God can use your presence, your listening and your prayers.

Focus on what you can do and don’t worry about what you can’t control. Trust Jesus with it all. Remember how Jesus used the lunch of a young boy to feed the multitudes. In the Lord’s hands our little becomes great.        

God is quick to forgive the Israelites for their disloyalty. He answers Samuel’s prayer on the spot and confuses the Philistines so they flee in a panic. Israel is set free. The timing is perfect. 

The rest of 1st Samuel chapter 7 summarises Samuel’s work. From verse 13…

So the Philistines were defeated, and the Lord prevented them from invading Israel’s territory as long as Samuel lived. 14 All the cities which the Philistines had captured between Ekron and Gath were returned to Israel, and so Israel got back all its territory. And there was peace also between the Israelites and the Canaanites.

15 Samuel ruled Israel as long as he lived. 16 Every year he would go around to Bethel, Gilgal, and Mizpah, and in these places he would settle disputes. 17 Then he would go back to his home in Ramah, where also he would serve as judge.

Here we see how Samuel’s approach was so completely different from Samson’s. While Samson would have gone on a one-man rampage, smashing everything in his path, Samuel puts God first and he communicates.

He uses God’s word and a discerning mind to maintain justice in the land. And with justice comes peace. It speaks volumes that when God’s people make peace with the Lord and with each other, the Canaanites and the Philistines enjoy peace as well.    

That would be a nice place for a happy ending, but we know by now that if we want a story with a happy ending, then we should read some other book.

Many years pass between the end of chapter 7 and the beginning of chapter 8, where we read…

When Samuel grew old, he made his sons judges in Israel. The older son was named Joel and the younger one Abijah; they were judges in Beersheba. But they did not follow their father’s example; they were interested only in making money, so they accepted bribes and did not decide cases honestly.

Then all the leaders of Israel met together, went to Samuel in Ramah, and said to him, “Look, you are getting old and your sons don’t follow your example. So then, appoint a king to rule over us, so that we will have a king, as other countries have.” Samuel was displeased with their request for a king; so he prayed to the Lord, and the Lord said, “Listen to everything the people say to you. You are not the one they have rejected; I am the one they have rejected as their king. Ever since I brought them out of Egypt, they have turned away from me and worshiped other gods; and now they are doing to you what they have always done to me. So then, listen to them, but give them strict warnings and explain how their kings will treat them.”

Anyone who has been in leadership for a reasonable amount of time will probably feel for Samuel here. He has given himself generously in service to the people and it hasn’t been easy. Dealing with the public, particularly the disgruntled public, is demanding work.

Now, after a lifetime of service and self-sacrifice, the elders get together and say they want to replace Samuel with someone else, a king like the other nations have. Ouch. That must have hurt. The sting of rejection.

They are making Samuel redundant and it’s not fair. Samuel has done nothing wrong. In fact, Israel has never had it so good. It’s just that Samuel is getting old, his sons are crooked and the elders have to be practical and look to the future.

God is not that pleased either. He says to Samuel, ‘It’s really me they are rejecting. They always have’. The loneliness of leadership. Samuel stands with God, apart from the people.     

They say that, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely, but that is not the case with Samuel or with God. Samuel has the moral integrity to remain unaffected by any temptation to power.

The Lord tells Samuel to listen to the people and to warn them of the negative consequences of having a king. Yet again Samuel has to confront the people with the difficult truth; a king, like the other nations, will take and take and take, the best and the brightest. But the people don’t listen.

To his credit, Samuel does not throw his toys out of the cot. Nor does he try to cling to power. He doesn’t set himself up as king. A servant leader, humble to the end, Samuel supports the people in their decision, even though he does not agree with it.      

First, Samuel anoints Saul as king and then later David, to succeed Saul. And all of Samuel’s warnings come true in their time.

Conclusion:

Samuel is the ideal leader. He points us to Jesus in so many ways. His courage in having difficult conversations. His life of service to the people. His complete dedication and loyalty to God. His spiritual discernment in knowing the right time to call people to repentance. His unrelenting commitment to justice. His reliance on prayer. Not to mention his grace and humility in facing rejection.

Samuel, like Jesus, shows us what it means to offer our bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God — for this is our true and proper worship.

Let us pray…  

Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, help us to act justly, to love mercy and to walk humbly with you. Amen.

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading these Scriptures and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • How often do you get your haircut? How would you manage your hair if you were not allowed to cut it?
  • In what ways are Samson & Samuel similar? In what ways are they different? 
  • Can you identify with Hannah? Have you ever been so desperate that you made a deal with God? What happened? How did God respond. Did you keep the deal?
  • The apostle Paul says we are to offer our bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God — for this is our true and proper worship. What does this mean? How might we do this? 
  • What is the difference between cheap grace and costly grace? Why is repentance the necessary companion of forgiveness?
  • Can you think of a time when God used yours (or someone else’s) presence, listening and/or prayer to save the day? What happened?
  • In what ways does Samuel remind us of Jesus?   

[1] Refer Bill T. Arnold, NIVAC 1 & 2 Samuel, pages 131-132.