| 
			HANNAH'S TRIAL AND TRUST.
			1Sa 1:1-18. 
			THE prophet Samuel, like the book which bears his name, comes in as 
			a connecting link between the Judges and the Kings of Israel. He 
			belonged to a transition period. It was appointed to him to pilot 
			the nation between two stages of its history: from a republic to a 
			monarchy; from a condition of somewhat casual and indefinite 
			arrangements to one of more systematic and orderly government. The 
			great object of his life was to secure that this change should be 
			made in the way most beneficial for the nation, and especially most 
			beneficial for its spiritual interests. Care must be taken that 
			while becoming like the nations in having a king, Israel shall not 
			become like them in religion, but shall continue to stand out in 
			hearty and unswerving allegiance to the law and covenant of their 
			fathers' God. 
 Samuel was the last of the judges, and in a sense the first of the 
			prophets. The last of the judges, but not a military judge; not 
			ruling like Samson by physical strength, but by high spiritual 
			qualities and prayer; not so much wrestling against flesh and blood 
			as against principalities and powers, and the rulers of the darkness 
			of this world, and spiritual wickedness in high places. In this 
			respect his function as judge blended with his work as prophet. 
			Before him, the prophetic office was but a casual illumination; 
			under him it becomes a more steady and systematic light. He was the 
			first of a succession of prophets whom God placed side by side with 
			the kings and priests of Israel to supply that fresh moral and 
			spiritual force which the prevailing worldliness of the one and 
			formalism of the other rendered so necessary for the great ends for 
			which Israel was chosen. With some fine exceptions, the kings and 
			priests would have allowed the seed of Abraham to drift away from 
			the noble purpose for which God had called them; conformity to the 
			world in spirit if not in form was the prevailing tendency; the 
			prophets were raised up to hold the nation firmly to the covenant, 
			to vindicate the claims of its heavenly King, to thunder judgments 
			against idolatry and all rebellion, and pour words of comfort into 
			the hearts of all who were faithful to their God, and who looked for 
			redemption in Israel. Of this order of God's servants Samuel was the 
			first. And called as he was to this office at a transition period, 
			the importance of it was all the greater. It was a work for which no 
			ordinary man was needed, and for which no ordinary man was found.
 
 Very often the finger of God is seen very clearly in connection with 
			the birth and early training of those who are to become His greatest 
			agents. The instances of Moses, Samson, and John the Baptist, to say 
			nothing of our blessed Lord, are familiar to us all. Very often the 
			family from which the great man is raised up is among the obscurest 
			and least distinguished of the country. The ''certain man" who lived 
			in some quiet cottage at Ramathaim-Zophim would never probably have 
			emerged from his native obscurity but for God's purpose to make a 
			chosen vessel of his son. In the case of this family, and in the 
			circumstances of Samuel's birth, we see a remarkable overruling of 
			human infirmity to the purposes of the Divine will. If Peninnah had 
			been kind to Hannah, Samuel might never have been born. It was the 
			unbearable harshness of Peninnah that drove Hannah to the throne of 
			grace, and brought to her wrestling faith the blessing she so 
			eagerly pled for. What must have seemed to Hannah at the time a most 
			painful dispensation became the occasion of a glorious rejoicing. 
			The very element that aggravated her trial was that which led to her 
			triumph. Like many another, Hannah found the beginning of her life 
			intensely painful, and as a godly woman she no doubt wondered why 
			God seemed to care for her so little. But at evening time there was 
			light; like Job, she saw "the end of the Lord;" the mystery cleared 
			away, and to her as to the patriarch it appeared very clearly that 
			"the Lord is very pitiful and of tender mercy."
 
 The home in which Samuel is born has some points of quiet interest 
			about it; but these are marred by serious defects. It is a religious 
			household, at least in the sense that the outward duties of religion 
			are carefully attended to; but the moral tone is defective. First, 
			there is that radical blemish - want of unity. No doubt it was 
			tacitly permitted to a man in those days to have two wives. But 
			where there were two wives there were two centers of interest and 
			feeling, and discord must ensue.
 
 Elkanah does not seem to have felt that in having two wives he could 
			do justice to neither. And he had but little sympathy for the 
			particular disappointment of Hannah. He calculated that a woman's 
			heart-hunger in one direction ought to be satisfied by copious gifts 
			in another. And as to Peninnah, so little idea had she of the 
			connection of true religion and high moral tone, that the occasion 
			of the most solemn religious service of the nation was her time for 
			pouring out her bitterest passion. Hannah is the only one of the 
			three of whom nothing but what is favourable is recorded.
 
 With regard to the origin of the family, it seems to have been of 
			the tribe of Levi. If so, Elkanah would occasionally have to serve 
			the sanctuary; but no mention is made of such service. For anything 
			that appears, Elkanah may have spent his life in the same 
			occupations as the great bulk of the people. The place of his 
			residence was not many miles from Shiloh, which was at that time the 
			national sanctuary. But the moral influence from that quarter was by 
			no means beneficial; a decrepit high priest, unable to restrain the 
			profligacy of his sons, whose vile character brought religion into 
			contempt, and led men to associate gross wickedness with Divine 
			service, - of such a state of things the influence seemed fitted 
			rather to aggravate than to lessen the defects of Elkanah's 
			household.
 
 Inside Elkanah's house we see two strange arrangements of 
			Providence, of a kind that often moves our astonishment elsewhere. 
			First, we see a woman eminently fitted to bring up children, but 
			having none to bring up. On the other hand, we see another woman, 
			whose temper and ways are fitted to ruin children, entrusted with 
			the rearing of a family. In the one case a God-fearing woman does 
			not receive the gifts of Providence; in the other case a woman of a 
			selfish and cruel nature seems loaded with His benefits. In looking 
			round us, we often see a similar arrangement of other gifts; we see 
			riches, for example, in the very worst of hands; while those who 
			from their principles and character are fitted to make the best use 
			of them have often difficulty in securing the bare necessaries of 
			life. How is this? Does God really govern, or do time and chance 
			regulate all? If it were God's purpose to distribute His gifts 
			exactly as men are able to estimate and use them aright, we should 
			doubtless see a very different distribution; but God's aim in this 
			world is much more to try and to train than to reward and fulfill. 
			All these anomalies of Providence point to a future state. What God 
			does we know not now, but we shall know hereafter. The misuse of 
			God's gifts brings its punishment both here and in the life to come. 
			To whom much is given, of them much shall be required. For those who 
			have shown the capacity to use God's gifts aright, there will be 
			splendid opportunities in another life. To those who have received 
			much, but abused much, there comes a fearful reckoning, and a dismal 
			experience of the "the unprofitable servant's doom."
 
 The trial which Hannah had to bear was peculiarly heavy, as is well 
			known, to a Hebrew woman. To have no child was not only a 
			disappointment, but seemed to mark one out as dishonoured by God, - 
			as unworthy of any part or lot in the means that were to bring about 
			the fulfillment of the promise, "In thee and in thy seed shall all 
			the families of the earth be blessed." In the case of Hannah, the 
			trial was aggravated by the very presence of Peninnah and her 
			children in the same household. Had she been alone, her mind might 
			not have brooded over her want, and she and her husband might have 
			so ordered their life as almost to forget the blank. But with 
			Peninnah and her children constantly before her eyes, such a course 
			was impossible. She could never forget the contrast between the two 
			wives. Like an aching tooth or an aching head, it bred a perpetual 
			pain.
 
 In many cases home affords a refuge from our trials, but in this 
			case home was the very scene of the trial. There is another refuge 
			from trial, which is very grateful to devout hearts - the house of 
			God and the exercises of public worship. A member of Hannah's race, 
			who was afterwards to pass through many a trial, was able even when 
			far away, to find great comfort in the very thought of the house of 
			God, with its songs of joy and praise, and its multitude of happy 
			worshippers, and to rally his desponding feelings into cheerfulness 
			and hope. "Why art thou cast down, O my soul, and why art thou 
			disquieted within me? Hope in God, for I shall yet praise Him for 
			the health of His countenance." But from Hannah this resource 
			likewise was cut off. The days of high festival were her days of 
			bitter prostration.
 
 It was the custom in religious households for the head of the house 
			to give presents at the public festivals. Elkanah, a kind-hearted 
			but not very discriminating man, kept up the custom, and as we 
			suppose, to compensate Hannah for the want of children, he gave her 
			at these times a worthy or double portion. But his kindness was 
			inconsiderate. It only raised the jealousy of Peninnah. For her and 
			her children to get less than the childless Hannah was intolerable. 
			No sense of courtesy restrained her from uttering her feeling. No 
			sisterly compassion urged her to spare the feelings of her rival. No 
			regard for God or His worship kept back the storm of bitterness. 
			With the reckless impetuosity of a bitter heart she took these 
			opportunities to reproach Hannah with her childless condition. She 
			knew the tender spot of her heart, and, instead of sparing it, she 
			selected it as the very spot on which to plant her blows. Her very 
			object was to give Hannah pain, to give her the greatest pain she 
			could. And so the very place that should have been a rebuke to every 
			bitter feeling, the very time which was sacred to joyous festivity, 
			and the very sorrow that should have been kept furthest from 
			Hannah's thoughts, were selected by her bitter rival to poison all 
			her happiness, and overwhelm her with lamentation and woe.
 
 After all, was Hannah or Peninnah the more wretched of the two? To 
			suffer in the tenderest part of one's nature is no doubt a heavy 
			affliction But to have a heart eager to inflict such suffering on 
			another is far more awful. Young people that sting a comrade when 
			out of temper, that call him names, that reproach him with his 
			infirmities, are far more wretched and pitiable creatures than those 
			whom they try to irritate. It has always been regarded as a natural 
			proof of the holiness of God that He has made man so that there is a 
			pleasure in the exercise of his amiable feelings, while his evil 
			passions, in the very play of them, produce pain and misery. Lady 
			Macbeth is miserable over the murdered king, even while exulting in 
			the triumph of her ambition. Torn by her heartless and reckless 
			passions, her bosom is like a hell. The tumult in her raging soul is 
			like the writhing of an evil spirit. Yes, my friends, if you accept 
			the offices of sin, if you make passion the instrument of your 
			purposes, if you make it your business to sting and to stab those 
			who in some way cross your path, you may succeed for the moment, and 
			you may experience whatever of satisfaction can be found in gloated 
			revenge. But know this, that you have been cherishing a viper in 
			your bosom that will not content itself with fulfilling your desire. 
			It will make itself a habitual resident in your heart, and distil 
			its poison over it. It will make it impossible for you to know 
			anything of the sweetness of love, the serenity of a well-ordered 
			heart, the joy of trust, the peace of heaven. You will be like the 
			troubled sea, whose waters cast up mire and dirt. You will find the 
			truth of that solemn word, "There is no peace, saith my God, to the 
			wicked."
 
 If the heart of Peninnah was actuated by this infernal desire to 
			make her neighbour fret, it need not surprise us that she chose the 
			most solemn season of religious worship to gratify her desire. What 
			could religion be to such a one but a form? What communion could she 
			have, or care to have, with God? How could she realize what she did 
			in disturbing the communion of another heart? If we could suppose 
			her realizing the presence of God, and holding soul-to-soul 
			communion with Him, she would have received such a withering rebuke 
			to her bitter feelings as would have filled her with shame and 
			contrition. But when religious services are a mere form, there is 
			absolutely nothing in them to prevent, at such times, the outbreak 
			of the heart's worst passions. There are men and women whose visits 
			to the house of God are often the occasions of rousing their worst, 
			or at least very unworthy, passions. Pride, scorn, malice, vanity - 
			how often are they moved by the very sight of others in the house of 
			God! What strange and unworthy conceptions of Divine service such 
			persons must have! What a dishonouring idea of God, if they imagine 
			that the service of their bodies or of their lips is anything to 
			Him. Surely in the house of God, and in the presence of God, men 
			ought to feel that among the things most offensive in His eyes are a 
			foul heart; a fierce temper, and the spirit that hateth a brother. 
			While, on the other hand, if we would serve Him acceptably, we must 
			lay aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisies, envies and all 
			evil speakings. Instead of trying to make others fret, we should 
			try, young and old alike, to make the crooked places of men's hearts 
			straight, and the rough places of their lives plain; try to give the 
			soft answer that turneth away wrath; try to extinguish the flame of 
			passion, to lessen the sum-total of sin, and stimulate all that is 
			lovely and of good report in the world around us.
 
 But to return to Hannah and her trial. Year by year it went on, and 
			her sensitive spirit, instead of feeling it less, seemed to feel it 
			more. It would appear that, on one occasion, her distress reached a 
			climax. She was so overcome that even the sacred feast remained by 
			her untasted. Her husband's attention was now thoroughly roused. 
			"Hannah, why weepest thou? and why eatest thou not? and why is thy 
			heart grieved? am not I better to thee than ten sons?" There was not 
			much comfort in these questions. He did not understand the poor 
			woman's feeling. Possibly his attempts to show her how little cause 
			she had to complain only aggravated her distress. Perhaps she 
			thought, "When my very husband does not understand me, it is time 
			for me to cease from man." With the double feeling - my distress is 
			beyond endurance, and there is no sympathy for me in any 
			fellow-creature - the thought may have come into her mind, "I will 
			arise and go to my Father." However it came about, her trials had 
			the happy effect of sending her to God. Blessed fruit of affliction! 
			Is not this the reason why afflictions are often so severe? If they 
			were of ordinary intensity, then, in the world's phrase, we might 
			"grin and bear them." It is when they become intolerable that men 
			think of God. As Archbishop Leighton has said, God closes up the way 
			to every broken cistern, one after another, that He may induce you, 
			baffled everywhere else, to take the way to the fountain of living 
			waters. "I looked on my right hand and beheld, but there was no man 
			that would know me; refuge failed me, no man cared for my soul. I 
			cried unto thee, O Lord; I said, Thou art my refuge and my portion 
			in the land of the living."
 
 Behold Hannah, then, overwhelmed with distress, in "the temple of 
			the Lord" (as His house at Shiloh was called), transacting solemnly 
			with God. "She vowed a vow." She entered into a transaction with 
			God, as really and as directly as one man transacts with another. It 
			is this directness and distinctness of dealing with God that is so 
			striking a feature in the piety of those early times. She asked God 
			for a man child. But she did not ask this gift merely to gratify her 
			personal wish. In the very act of dealing with God she felt that it 
			was His glory and not her personal feelings that she was called 
			chiefly to respect. No doubt she wished the child, and she asked the 
			child in fulfillment of her own vehement desire. But beyond and 
			above that desire there arose in her soul the sense of God's claim 
			and God's glory, and to these high considerations she desired to 
			subordinate every feeling of her own. If God should give her the man 
			child, he would not be hers, but God's. He would be specially 
			dedicated as a Nazarite to God's service. No razor should come on 
			his head; no drop of strong drink should pass his lips. And this 
			would not be a mere temporary dedication, it would last all: he days 
			of his life. Eagerly though Hannah desired a son, she did not wish 
			him merely for personal gratification. She was not to make herself 
			the end of her child's existence, but would sacrifice even her 
			reasonable and natural claims upon him in order that he might be 
			more thoroughly the servant of God.
 
 Hannah, as she continued praying, must have felt something of that 
			peace of soul whichever comes from conscious communion with a 
			prayer-hearing God. But probably her faith needed the element of 
			strengthening which a kindly and favourable word from one high in 
			God's service would have imparted. It must have been terrible for 
			her to find, when the high priest spoke to her, that it was to 
			insult her, and accuse her of an offence against decency itself from 
			which her very soul would have recoiled. Well meaning, but weak and 
			blundering, Eli never made a more outrageous mistake. With firmness 
			and dignity, and yet m perfect courtesy, Hannah repudiated the 
			charge. Others might try to drown their sorrows with strong drink, 
			but she had poured out her soul before God. The high priest must 
			have felt ashamed of his rude and unworthy charge, as well as 
			rebuked by the dignity and self-possession of this much-tried but 
			upright, godly woman. He sent her away with a hearty benediction, 
			which seemed to convey to her an assurance that her prayer would be 
			fulfilled. As yet it is all a matter of faith; but her "faith is the 
			substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." Her 
			burden is completely removed; her soul has returned to its quiet 
			rest. This chapter of the history has a happy ending - "The woman 
			went her way and did eat, and her countenance was no more sad."
 
 Is not this whole history just like one of the Psalms, expressed not 
			in words but in deeds? First the wail of distress; then the 
			wrestling of the troubled heart with God; then the repose and 
			triumph of faith. What a blessing, amid the multitude of this 
			world's sorrows, that such a process should be practicable I What a 
			blessed thing is faith, faith in God's word, and faith in God's 
			heart, that faith which becomes a bridge to the distressed from the 
			region of desolation and misery to the region of peace and joy? Is 
			there any fact more abundantly verified than this experience is - 
			this passage out of the depths, this way of shaking one's self from 
			the dust, and patting on the garments of praise? Are any of you 
			tired, worried, wearied in the battle of life, and yet ignorant of 
			this blessed process? Do any receive your fresh troubles with 
			nothing better than a growl of irritation - I will not say an angry 
			curse? Alas for your thorny experience I an experience which knows 
			no way of blunting the point of the thorns. Know, my friends, that 
			in Gilead there is a balm for soothing these bitter irritations. 
			There is a peace of God that passeth all understanding, and that 
			keeps the hearts and minds of His people through Christ Jesus. "Thou 
			wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee, because 
			he trusteth in Thee."
 
 But let those who profess to be Christ's see that they are 
			consistent here. A fretful, complaining Christian is a contradiction 
			in terms. How unlike to Christ! How forgetful such a one is of the 
			grand argument, "He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him 
			up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all 
			things?" "Be patient, brethren, for the coming of the Lord draweth 
			near." Amid the agitations of life often steal away to the green 
			pastures and the still waters, and they will calm your soul. And 
			while "the trial of your faith is much more precious than of gold 
			that perisheth, although it be tried with fire," it shall be "found 
			unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ"
 
 
 |