Tuesday, November 4, 2008

1 Samuel 3

5 comments:

Unknown said...

v. 1 "In those days the Lord did not speak directlyto people very often; there were very few visions."

Interesting. I never noticed this before. Sometimes (in the shaky times) I have read over passages of angel visitations and Godly "visits" and visions and had this niggling thought in the back of my head... "really? come on.... I mean... if God works that way, why is He so far removed now... how come *we* don't hear stories of angel visitations and Mt. Horeb thunder.." you know what I mean? The Bible appears to be chalk full of Damascus road like experiences, and we? Nothin. Still small voice it is for us. So this was interesting for me to read. (not that I'm whining, I know that our situation, indwelt continuously by the Holy Spirit is far superior to one physical encounter with the spiritual realm in one's lifetime.) I'm not whining, I'm thinking how calloused we must be to the whole concept of having HIM in us continuously. It's sad. It reminds me of the saying that if the stars only came out once in your lifetime you would stay up all night to stare at them. But since they are there every night, we come to take their splendor for granted.

v.7 "Samuel did not yet know the Lord and the Lord had not spoken directly to him yet." I sometimes also ponder what it means to "know" the Lord, and to be "known" by Him. I know that He knows us fully and all, but to be the kind of person who is just so attuned to Him that we are truly "connected". I know that I *am* connected, but so often I think I kink up the chord so much that the flow can only trickle through.

v 14 "So I swore to Eli's family, "Your guilt willnever be removedby sacrifice or offereing." Ouch.

v18 Samuel's response. "He is the Lord. Let him do what he thinks is best." An exemplary response, but does anyone remember reading in a different book that Samuel seemed to totally not care about the Lord's rebuke, because after all, nothing of this was going to take place in his lifetime. Kind of would change how you view his words here if that's true. Or on second thought, I think I am mixing him up with Hezekiah or one of the kings who was rebuked...

Berry Girl said...

no, that was Hezekiah. Not Eli.
My you were up early :)

I was having the same thought - people complain all the time that God doesn't do the same stuff He did before with visions etc. But it wouldn't be the first time. And I have to confess that I don't think we *need* it for the same reasons you stated, we have the Holy Spirit.

I was wondering how old Samuel would have been when God first spoke to him here. And how difficult it must have been to tell Eli exactly what God had spoken when Eli was his superior and his mentor.

In light of our Small Group study, I admire Eli's words - "It is the Lord. Let Him do what seems good to Him" Wow. May I be able to say the same when my circumstances are difficult.

Berry Girl said...

oh, never mind. my post time says 6am(ish) too - but it's 8am actually. Blogger's clock must be set for a different time zone :)

Unknown said...

I re-read the days passage to the kids in the Living Paraphrase at the start of school. In that paraphrase (loose as it is) I am usually able to get a better "broader" picture of the principles set forth, while other more "precise" translations sometimes lose me in the details and trappings. Here is what really jumped out to me over "there".

v 11"I am going to do a shocking thing in Israel. I am going to do all of the dreadful things I warned Eli about. I have continually threatened him and his entire family with punishment because his sons are blaspheming God, and he doesn't stop them. So I have vowed that the sins of Eli and of his sons shall never be forgiven by sacrifices and offerings."

Wow. I've been thinking lately how we (as a culture) give lip service to God while our bodies are quick to participate in evil. We are your holy people Lord while we partay with the gods of materialism, humanism, secularism and while we sit here and saturate our minds with all this lust and worldliness we deem "entertainment".

We (well, not *we* but you know who I'm talkin' about here) will raise our hands and proudly proclaim "God Bless the United States of America" while legalizing and endorsing the murder of millions of innocent and helpless babies.

How can we claim His as Lord and then blaspheme his standards? How can we beg His blessing and repudiate His values? I fear that North America is in for this same "shocking and dreadful things" that was warned against Israel. Because we blaspheme God while calling Him master.

Berry Girl said...

I think I've said this before - Canada and the US, we're both in for a major spiritual a** kicking. Abortion, gay marriage, just to name two. When Chretien was on his way out and passing all these terrible bills, I was holding my breath. And every time I see another one of these issues come frontline, I tremble a bit inside. Because I don't think our nations are above the discipline of God for all this.