Hannah, Samuel, and the gift of a son
God hears the bitter prayer of a barren woman, gives her a son, and receives that son back as a lifelong dedication to his service. Hannah’s faith is expressed not in manipulation but in humble dependence, and the passage shows the Lord quietly advancing his purposes through answered prayer and cons
Commentary
1:1 There was a man from Ramathaim Zophim, from the hill country of Ephraim, whose name was Elkanah. He was the son of Jeroham, the son of Elihu, the son of Tohu, the son of Zuph, an Ephraimite.
1:2 He had two wives; the name of the first was Hannah and the name of the second was Peninnah. Now Peninnah had children, but Hannah was childless.
1:3 Year after year this man would go up from his city to worship and to sacrifice to the Lord of hosts at Shiloh. It was there that the two sons of Eli, Hophni and Phineas, served as the Lord’s priests.
1:4 Whenever the day came for Elkanah to sacrifice, he used to give meat portions to his wife Peninnah and to all her sons and daughters.
1:5 But he would give a double portion to Hannah, because he especially loved her. Now the Lord had not enabled her to have children.
1:6 Her rival wife used to upset her and make her worry, for the Lord had not enabled her to have children.
1:7 Peninnah would behave this way year after year. Whenever Hannah went up to the Lord’s house, Peninnah would upset her so that she would weep and refuse to eat.
1:8 Finally her husband Elkanah said to her, “Hannah, why do you weep and not eat? Why are you so sad? Am I not better to you than ten sons?”
1:9 On one occasion in Shiloh, after they had finished eating and drinking, Hannah got up. (Now at the time Eli the priest was sitting in his chair by the doorpost of the Lord’s temple.)
1:10 She was very upset as she prayed to the Lord, and she was weeping uncontrollably.
1:11 She made a vow saying, “O Lord of hosts, if you will look with compassion on the suffering of your female servant, remembering me and not forgetting your servant, and give a male child to your servant, then I will dedicate him to the Lord all the days of his life. His hair will never be cut.”
1:12 As she continued praying to the Lord, Eli was watching her mouth.
1:13 Now Hannah was speaking from her heart. Although her lips were moving, her voice was inaudible. Eli therefore thought she was drunk.
1:14 So he said to her, “How often do you intend to get drunk? Put away your wine!”
1:15 But Hannah replied, “That’s not the way it is, my lord! I am under a great deal of stress. I have drunk neither wine nor beer. Rather, I have poured out my soul to the Lord.
1:16 Don’t consider your servant a wicked woman, for until now I have spoken from my deep pain and anguish.”
1:17 Eli replied, “Go in peace, and may the God of Israel grant the request that you have asked of him.”
1:18 She said, “May I, your servant, find favor in your sight.” So the woman went her way and got something to eat. Her face no longer looked sad.
1:19 They got up early the next morning and after worshiping the Lord, they returned to their home at Ramah. Elkanah had marital relations with his wife Hannah, and the Lord remembered her.
1:20 After some time Hannah became pregnant and gave birth to a son. She named him Samuel, thinking, “I asked the Lord for him.
1:21 This man Elkanah went up with all his family to make the yearly sacrifice to the Lord and to keep his vow,
1:22 but Hannah did not go up with them. Instead she told her husband, “Once the boy is weaned, I will bring him and appear before the Lord, and he will remain there from then on.”
1:23 So her husband Elkanah said to her, “Do what you think best. Stay until you have weaned him. May the Lord fulfill his promise.” So the woman stayed and nursed her son until she had weaned him.
1:24 Once she had weaned him, she took him up with her, along with three bulls, an ephah of flour, and a container of wine. She brought him to the Lord’s house at Shiloh, even though he was young.
1:25 Once the bull had been slaughtered, they brought the boy to Eli.
1:26 She said, “Just as surely as you are alive, my lord, I am the woman who previously stood here with you in order to pray to the Lord.
1:27 I prayed for this boy, and the Lord has given me the request that I asked of him.
1:28 Now I dedicate him to the Lord. From this time on he is dedicated to the Lord.” Then they worshiped the Lord there.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The story belongs to the late judges period, before the establishment of the monarchy, when Israel’s life was centered around the sanctuary at Shiloh and the priesthood of Eli’s house. The repeated yearly pilgrimage, sacrificial meals, and vow language reflect covenant life under the Mosaic order. The household is marked by polygyny, childlessness, and rivalry, all of which intensify Hannah’s social shame and grief. The corrupt or at least weak priestly setting heightens the contrast between Hannah’s earnest prayer and the sanctuary leadership that initially misunderstands her.
Central idea
God hears the bitter prayer of a barren woman, gives her a son, and receives that son back as a lifelong dedication to his service. Hannah’s faith is expressed not in manipulation but in humble dependence, and the passage shows the Lord quietly advancing his purposes through answered prayer and consecration.
Context and flow
This unit opens 1 Samuel and sets the stage for the book’s major transition from the era of the judges to the rise of prophetic leadership and monarchy. It moves from Hannah’s distress, to prayer, to divine remembrance, to Samuel’s birth, and finally to his dedication at Shiloh. Chapter 2 will turn Hannah’s experience into a song of reversal, and chapter 3 will narrate Samuel’s prophetic call.
Exegetical analysis
The narrative begins by locating Elkanah in the hill country of Ephraim and by listing his lineage, which gives the account historical concreteness and situates it firmly within covenant history. The opening problem is not merely infertility but a covenant household marked by rivalry and sorrow. The narrator repeatedly states that the Lord had not enabled Hannah to bear children, so the text places the matter under divine sovereignty without making God the author of Peninnah’s cruelty.
Elkanah’s annual pilgrimage to Shiloh shows that the family is outwardly pious. Yet the family system is fractured: Peninnah’s children contrast with Hannah’s barrenness, and Peninnah’s provocation deepens Hannah’s grief year after year. Elkanah’s double portion to Hannah expresses love, but his question, ‘Am I not better to you than ten sons?’ reveals pastoral inadequacy; he cannot fully answer the ache that childlessness created in that world.
Hannah’s prayer is the narrative center. She approaches the Lord of hosts in deep distress, ‘pours out’ her soul, and vows that if the Lord gives her a son, she will return him to the Lord all the days of his life. The request is not selfish in the modern sense; it is already oriented toward consecration. Her promise that his hair will never be cut signals lifelong special dedication, likely comparable to Nazirite-style consecration, though the text does not explicitly label him as a Nazirite. The point is total devotion, not personal ownership.
Eli’s role is mixed. He initially misjudges Hannah as drunk, which exposes the spiritual dullness of the sanctuary leadership, but once corrected he speaks a blessing: ‘may the God of Israel grant the request.’ The narrative does not endorse his first accusation; rather, it shows that even a flawed priest may pronounce a true blessing. Hannah leaves encouraged not because Eli has power in himself, but because she has entrusted herself to the Lord and now receives peace.
The statement that ‘the Lord remembered her’ is the decisive turning point. The narrator intentionally links divine remembrance with conception: Hannah bears a son because the Lord acts. Samuel’s birth is therefore gift, not accident or merely the result of marital relations. Hannah’s naming of the child makes that theological point explicit. When she later returns to Shiloh, she fulfills her vow with costly faithfulness, bringing a significant offering and handing the child over to Eli so that Samuel will remain at the Lord’s house. The unit closes with worship, which frames the entire account as response to grace rather than celebration of human achievement.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands within Israel’s life under the Mosaic covenant in the sanctuary period before kingship. Hannah’s prayer, vow, and sacrifice all belong to the covenant order at Shiloh, where the Lord’s presence and priestly mediation are central. The birth of Samuel is a major turning point in redemptive history because he will become the prophet who judges Israel, confronts the failure of Eli’s house, and anoints the king through whom the Davidic line will emerge. The passage therefore sits at the threshold between the judges and the monarchy and prepares the way for later messianic expectation without collapsing that development into the text itself.
Theological significance
The passage reveals the Lord as sovereign over life, fertility, and family distress. He hears the prayer of the humble, remembers covenant need, and answers in a way that advances his own purposes. It also shows the seriousness of vows, the legitimacy of grief before God, and the reality that true worship can occur in weakness and tears. At the same time, it exposes the limits of human comfort and priestly discernment: love, blessing, and religious office are not enough apart from God’s action. The story highlights divine grace, consecration, and faithful return to the Lord what he gives.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy or direct messianic oracle appears in this unit. The main pattern is the recurring biblical reversal in which God grants life where there was barrenness, but the passage itself is focused on Samuel’s historical birth and dedication. The lifelong consecration and the barren-to-bearing reversal are meaningful canonical patterns, yet they should be handled as grounded narrative theology rather than forced symbolism.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
Childlessness carried real social and family shame in the ancient world because offspring secured continuity, honor, and practical support. The yearly pilgrimage and sacrificial meal reflect a family’s corporate participation in covenant worship. Hannah’s ‘poured out my soul’ is a vivid Hebrew idiom for intense, undivided prayer, and Eli’s mistake shows how easily outward appearance can be misread. The narrative works with concrete, relational, honor-shame realities rather than abstract religious theory.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its own setting, the passage introduces Samuel as the divinely given servant who will mediate a critical transition in Israel’s history. Canonically, that matters because Samuel will later function as prophet, judge, and kingmaker, preparing the way for David and the Davidic promise. The birth-from-barrenness motif contributes to a larger biblical pattern of God bringing salvation through unexpected means, a pattern that eventually reaches fuller expression in the coming of the promised king. The text itself does not directly predict Christ, but it does help establish the redemptive framework in which God raises up his chosen servant from humble beginnings.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s timing may differ from ours, but his delay is not neglect. Believers may bring deep grief to the Lord honestly and reverently, without pretending strength they do not have. Vows and commitments made before God must be treated seriously. Families should not weaponize one another’s weaknesses, and religious leaders should be careful not to misread sincere devotion. In Hannah’s unique case, the child received in answer to prayer is returned to the Lord in obedience; more broadly, parents should remember that children are gifts entrusted by God rather than personal possessions.
Textual critical note
A small textual and translational difficulty exists in 1:24 regarding the offering Hannah brought; some traditions understand a specific number of bulls, while others infer a three-year-old bull. The passage’s main point does not depend on the exact reading: Hannah brought a substantial sacrificial gift with her son. No other major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive questions are whether Samuel’s dedication implies a formal Nazirite status, how to understand the offering in 1:24, and whether Elkanah’s words should be read as comfort or as shallow consolation. The safest reading is that Samuel is set apart for lifelong service in a manner reminiscent of, but not identical to, Nazirite consecration; Elkanah genuinely loves Hannah but does not fully understand her sorrow.
Application boundary note
Do not turn Hannah’s vow into a formula for bargaining with God or a guarantee that prayer will produce the specific gift requested. Do not flatten Samuel’s unique consecration into a universal rule about hair, religious vow-making, or child dedication practices. Keep the passage anchored in its covenantal and sanctuary setting, and do not erase Israel’s historical role by making the story function only as a general lesson about perseverance.
Key Hebrew terms
tseva'ot
Gloss: armies; hosts
In the title ‘Lord of hosts,’ the name stresses Yahweh’s sovereignty and warrior-rule. It is especially fitting in a setting where Israel’s visible leadership is weak and the sanctuary is compromised.
nadar
Gloss: to vow, make a solemn pledge
Hannah’s promise is a serious covenantal pledge, not a casual bargain. It shows that her request for a son is bound to consecration, not private possession.
sha'al
Gloss: to ask, request
Samuel’s name is explained by Hannah’s petition: she has ‘asked’ him from the Lord. The name ties the child to answered prayer and divine gift.
zakar
Gloss: to remember, call to mind with action
When the Lord ‘remembered’ Hannah, it means more than mental recollection. It signals covenant faithfulness expressed in action on her behalf.
shemu'el
Gloss: heard of God; asked of God
The narrator links the name to Hannah’s statement that she asked the Lord for the child. The exact etymology is debated, but the theological point is clear: Samuel is the child of prayer and gift.
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