Elkanah, her
husband, couldn’t understand her grief. "Why
do you grieve? Am I not more to you than
ten sons?" He didn't get it. Neither did Eli, the priest of God. He thought Hannah was drunk as she prayed
silently before the Lord, pouring out her heartaches, only moving her
lips. Little did Eli know that his own
family's line of priest-descendants would be replaced by Hannah's! Little did Hannah know that new life would
issue from her womb, that she would bear not just one, but four sons and two
daughters, and that her shame would be turned to profound joy!
Before the
Lord, Hannah's prayer of petition was sacred.
Her holy complaint was the beginning of profound "reversals"
in Israel's history. The greatest would
be least; the last would be first.
"The bows of the mighty are broken, while the tottering gird on
strength. The well-fed hire themselves
out for bread, while the hungry batten on spoil. The barren wife bears seven sons, while the
mother of many languishes." [Hannah's prayer, 1 Samuel 2:4-5]
Hannah's
first-born son, Samuel, would be a true servant of God and the greatest of all
Israel's judges. He would warn the
Israelites to return to their worship of the one living God, and only he could
purify the place of worship so that the Ark of the Lord could be returned to
their midst. He would anoint Saul, from
the smallest tribe of Israel, and Saul's successor, David, a shepherd boy, who
would become the greatest king in the history of their people, and the
forerunner of the promised messiah.
Hannah's boy did all this; he was the first-born son of a woman whose
prayer of lament was heard by God. And
in the end, she returned her son to God.
"'I prayed for this child, and the
Lord granted my request. Now I, in turn,
give him to the Lord; as long as he lives, he shall be dedicated to the
Lord.' She left him there (in the Temple
of the Lord)." [1
Samuel 1:27-28]
As I
reflected on Hannah’s story today, five lessons became clear to me:
1) We are
God's beloved.
2) God
listens to our cries.
3) We should
be open to new life, especially when hopelessness abounds.
4) We must
learn to expect the unexpected.
5) We should
always return and give thanks to God by sharing our gifts with others.
"How shall I make a return to the Lord for all the good he has done for me? The cup of salvation I will take up, and I will call upon the name of the Lord." [Psalm 116:12-13]
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