Tuesday, October 28, 2008

1 Samuel 2

5 comments:

Unknown said...

wow. I was floored this morning as I read this. This past week I read a chapter in "The Jesus I Never Knew" by Philip Yancey about the Beatitudes. In essence, what it was saying was that it is not the healthy, wealthy and wise who are blessed, but the sick, the poor and the downcast (which we all pretty much get, but maybe don't get the depth of it?) because it is the sick, the poor and the downcast who need and receive more of God's grace and mercy, love and strength. Since there can be no greater blessing than that, it is those people who ARE blessed. Now, the secular humanism that we have been steeped in doesn't fit with that picture, but it is reality, it is truth, the other stuff we've been suckered into believing is the lie. In contemplating this, and this mentality that we have to wish health, wealth and happiness on people I have come to realize the greatest blessing we can give someone is to pray that whatever the state of their health, pocketbook or circumstances, they will be rich in the love, joy, grace, peace and power of their Heavenly Father (all the things outlined in the beatitudes countering the physical circumstances). This has been such a light bulb week for me about the depth of meaning in the Beatitudes passage.

So when Hannah says; "The bows of warriors break, but weak people become strong. Those who once had plenty of food now must work for food, but people who are hungry are hungry no more. The woman who could not have children now has seven, but the woman who had many children now is sad." It packed extra punch for me. She is saying all this while she is HANDING OVER her child. She has come to realize the truth of the Beatitudes.... she is blessed because she is Leaning on the Everlasting Arms.

Spectacular to read this chapter in light of the truth of the Beatitudes. it just blessed my socks off.

I also got goosebumps when I read;

"The Lord destroys His enemies; He will thunder in heaven against them. The Lord will judge all the earth. He will give power to His king and make His appointed king strong." v10

Talk about faith to hand your child over to the discipleship of a man who raised wicked sons. I am so controlling, this kills me! But I know that I have to trust that God cares and can and will form my children into pillars of faith even if everything in their life is a less than ideal example, and sometimes it's the less than ideal examples that can actually encourage their growth. So hard for a controlling parent to practice, but I know it in my heart. I want the best for them, but the truth is that God knows best, and sometimes crappy, painful, less than ideal circumstances are the best breeding ground for faith and growth. Don't I know it...

Wow. Those little buggers. The way they treated the offering of the meat... hmmmm... let me see, this is my favourite cut here, but I don't like it boiled, I like mine barbecued, so just hand it over and I'll go fire up the barby.... yeeks. No wonder they got laid flat by lightning (or fire from heaven or whatever it was).

I love that Hannah had 5 more children. Praise the Lord. My heart just fills with joy to think of that.

I think it is telling that Samuel "sort of" rebuked his sons, but didn't enforce consequences and God looked at that and said; "You honor your sons more than me." Yikes. It's not enough to give faint lip service to parenting. We need to show by our actions and motives that God and His ways are central in our family life and nothing is going to challenge that. Otherwise, God is not really LORD of our family at all.

So when I read;

Berry Girl said...

just a few comments there? ;-)

I love Hannah's song too - it's simply beautiful. And I love that God blessed her with many children after Samuel - what a gracious God.

I was floored by the behaviour of the priests, and Eli's total lack of involvement. And his "rebuke" which really amounted to nothing. And I wondered why his sons grew up to be like that? Was it parenting? Just who they were? did they see that Eli didn't have enough respect for God and so they didn't either? Curious.

Even more curious that God would then allow Eli to train Samuel. After the way his sons went, you'd think God would want someone else to train up this next boy.

God's judgement on Eli is harsh, "I will cut off your arm and the arm of your father's house, so that there will not be an old man in your house" "But any of your men whom I do not cut off from My altar shall consume your eyes and grieve your heart. And all the descendants of your house shall die in the flower of their age" Yikes. No lineage after this. basically. That is a huge deal.

Leanne said...

This was a great chapter. I just love hearing about the great women of the Bible. They sure do set a wonderful example for us. I can't even imagine going through the heart break of not being able to conceive a child and then turning around and giving that precious child to someone else to raise, talk about faith. Also letting someone raise your child that appears to have failed in the parenting area would be more than a little scary. Then in verse 19, it talks about her making Samuel a little coat each year and bringing it to him. It makes me smile to imagine how much time she probably put into making that precious little piece of clothing for her beloved child. I also love how it says in the Bible that the Lord visited her(v.21) and she had 5 more children(3 boys & 2 girls just like you prairie chick). There is no doubt that children are a blessing from our God!

Unknown said...

yeah, just a few... I've had a few dry days, so when it started pouring today, I really soaked it all up like a sponge =D

Unknown said...

>>I also love how it says in the Bible that the Lord visited her(v.21) and she had 5 more children(3 boys & 2 girls just like you prairie chick). <<

that is so cool, I didn't even get the 3 boys and 2 girl thing. sweet!