Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Samuel 1:24
And when she had weaned him, she took him up with her, with three bullocks, and one ephah of flour, and a bottle of wine, and brought him unto the house of the LORD in Shiloh: and the child [was] young.
24. three bullocks ] We may conjecture that one was intended for a burnt-offering, one for the “sacrifice in performing a vow,” and one for a peace-offering. See Num 15:8.
one ephah of flour ] According to Josephus, the ephah contained about 8 gallons, according to Jewish authorities about 4 gallons. The smaller estimate is probably correct. Three tenth parts of an ephah of flour were to be offered with each bullock (Num 15:9) as a “meat-offering” ( minchah).
a bottle of wine ] i.e. a skin-bottle, which would hold a considerable quantity. The prescribed drink-offering with each bullock was half an hin of wine (Num 15:10), or about three pints, the hin being a sixth part of the bath, which was of the same capacity as the ephah (Eze 45:11).
the house of the Lord] See note on 1Sa 1:9.
the child was young ] Lit. “the child was a child.” The term is quite vague, and gives no clue to Samuel’s age at the time. See however the note on 1Sa 1:22.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
1Sa 1:24-28
And when she had weaned him, she took him up with her, with three bullocks.
The duty of presenting children to God in the way of religious education
There is nothing more characteristic of Christianity than the tenderness and sympathy which it inspires. The Bible delights in domestic scenes; and it presents to us the pious mother in her anxieties, in her prayers, in her vows, and then in the dedication of the child obtained by prayer to the Lord her God.
I. The first question we purpose to consider is, at what age do we propose to commence the education of children? And I answer, at the age at which Samuel was brought by Hannah to the Lord; when she had weaned him–when the child was young. Now, the reason why we begin with children so early, even under the age of seven years, is important. The reason, therefore, why we begin so early is, because their depravity begins to manifest itself so early: the disorder begins early, and we must begin early to apply the remedy.
2. And, also, because habits are early formed.
3. Because, also, in early age they are most susceptible.
4. Also, because in this age juvenile depravity abounds.
5. But it may be asked, not only at what age do we begin, and why do we begin so early; but, how do we apply ourselves to the work? I answer, we seize on the natural vivacity and buoyancy of children, and aim to improve it to good purposes.
II. The object we have ultimately in view. And that is, their dedication to God; we lend them to the Lord, that, as long as they live, they may be His.
1. Instruction in the elements of the Christian religion. The first thing that Eli would probably do with the young Samuel, would be to instruct him in the history of the Old Testament.
2. But there would be a danger, even in religious instruction, if the children were not early taught to deny themselves; if they were not duly disciplined, and made to practise self-government.
3. But beside this, due regard must be paid to the great sacrifice of the Christian system. I gather this from the first verse of the text. When Hannah took the young child to the house of God, she took with her three bullocks.
4. There is the hope that these children will be brought to dedicate themselves to God all the days of their lives. As long as he liveth, he shall be lent unto the Lord.
5. And then, all this must be accompanied by fervent prayer.
III. The motives we have to encourage us. The first is gratitude, looking back to the past; the next is hope, looking forward to the future. (D. Wilson.)
And the child was young.
Of infant baptism and of childlike children
In the Hebrew of this passage, the word translated young is the same as that translated child, so that the literal rendering of the words is, and the child was a child. This may have two meanings, both of which are very instructive. The first meaning is that the child was young in age, when he was dedicated to the Lord by his parents. Very likely the words before us, the child was young, are put in as a sort of explanation, as much as to say: He was entirely dependent upon his mother and father; so young that he could not have gone up to Shiloh by himself; if he could walk a little, it was all he could do; he could not have brought himself to Eli, or into the house of the Lord. But the words, and the child was young, may bear another and perhaps a more satisfactory meaning. It would be high praise if it were said of a man, and the man was a man; we should understand by it that he was brave, outspoken, fearless, upright, possessed of all manly virtues. And when it is said, the child was a child, perhaps we are to understand that the little Samuel had all childlike graces, was gentle, teachable, humble, submissive to his parents, and those set over him. And this may lead us to think how the young people of our own days have too often none of those graces, which should distinguish young people; the children are too often children no more–in forwardness, in conceit, in insubordination, in want of respect for parents and elders, they are like persons three or four times as old as themselves: a very bad sign of the times, and only matching too well with others which we see around us. (Dean Goulburn.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 24. With three bullocks] The Septuagint, the Syriac, and the Arabic, read, a bullock of three years old; and this is probably correct, because we read, 1Sa 1:25, that they slew eth happar, THE bullock. We hear of no more, and we know that a bullock or heifer of three years old was ordinarily used, see Ge 15:9.
One ephah of flour] Seven gallons and a half.
A bottle of wine] nebel yayin, a skin full of wine. Their bottles for wine and fluids in general were made out of skins of goats, stripped off without being cut up; the places whence the legs were extracted sewed up, as also the lower part; and the top tied. See Clarke on Ge 21:14, and “Mt 9:17“. These three things, the ox, the flour, and the wine, probably constituted the consecration-offering.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Three bullocks; either, first, One to be offered at that time; the other two presented to the priest, whether for his own use, or to be offered afterwards, as he saw fit. Or, secondly, One for a burnt-offering the second for a sin-offering, the third for a peace-offering, of which they might all feast together; for all these sorts seem expedient for this work and time.
One ephah of flour, for the meat-offerings belonging to the principal sacrifices, which to each bullock were three tenth deals, or three tenth parts of an ephah, as appears from Num 15:9; 28:12; and so nine homers, or nine parts of the ephah, were spent, and the tenth part was either a separate meat-offering, or given to the priest.
A bottle of wine, for drink-offerings, according to the manner.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
24. three bullocksTheSeptuagint renders it “a bullock of three years old”;which is probably the true rendering.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And when she had weaned him,…. At the usual time of weaning children; [See comments on 1Sa 1:23] some refer this not only to the milk of the breast, from which he was weaned, but to such food as was common to children, and so supposes him grown up to nine or ten years of age:
she took him up with her; to the tabernacle at Shiloh, at a yearly festival: with three bullocks; for three sorts of offerings, burnt offering, sin offering, and peace offering; or since one only is spoken of as slain, that is, for sacrifice, the other two might be for food to entertain her family and friends with while there; or as a present to the high priest, to whose care she committed her son:
and one ephah of flour; if the bullocks were all sacrificed, three tenth deals, or three tenth parts of the ephah, went for a meat offering to each bullock, which made nine parts out of ten, and the tenth part she had to dispose of at pleasure; see Nu 15:9, though that seems to be restrained to a burnt offering only:
and a bottle of wine; part of which might be for the drink offering which always attended a meat offering, and the rest for her own use, and that of her friends:
and brought him unto the house of the Lord in Shiloh: the tabernacle there, and delivered him up to the care of the high priest, to be trained up in the service of God:
and the child was young; a very child, very young in years, a little infant; not a sucking child, as the Targum, because weaned, otherwise of a very tender age; though some think this expresses that he was a well grown lad, and was sharp and acute, and could well distinguish between good and evil.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
As soon as the boy was weaned, Hannah brought him, although still a , i.e., a tender boy, to Shiloh, with a sacrifice of three oxen, an ephah of meal, and a pitcher of wine, and gave him up to Eli when the ox (bullock) had been slain, i.e., offered in sacrifice as a burnt-offering. The striking circumstance that, according to 1Sa 1:24, Samuel’s parents brought three oxen with them to Shiloh, and yet in 1Sa 1:25 the ox ( ) alone is spoken of as being slain (or sacrificed), may be explained very simply on the supposition that in 1Sa 1:25 that particular sacrifice is referred to, which was associated with the presentation of the boy, that is to say, the burnt-offering by virtue of which the boy was consecrated to the Lord as a spiritual sacrifice for a lifelong service at His sanctuary, whereas the other two oxen served as the yearly festal offering, i.e., the burnt-offerings and thank-offerings which Elkanah presented year by year, and the presentation of which the writer did not think it needful to mention, simply because it followed partly from 1Sa 1:3 and partly from the Mosaic law.
(Note: The interpretation of by (lxx), upon which Thenius would found an alteration of the text, is proved to be both arbitrary and wrong by the fact that the translators themselves afterwards mention the , which Elkanah brought year by year, and the , and consequently represent him as offering at least two animals, in direct opposition to the . This discrepancy cannot be removed by the assertion that in 1Sa 1:24 the sacrificial animal intended for the dedication of the boy is the only one mentioned; and the presentation of the regular festal sacrifice is taken for granted, for an ephah of meal would not be the proper quantity to be offered in connection with a single ox, since, according to the law in Num 15:8-9, only three-tenths of an ephah of meal were required when an ox was presented as a burnt-offering or slain offering. The presentation of an ephah of meal presupposes the offering of three oxen, and therefore shows that in 1Sa 1:24 the materials are mentioned for all the sacrifices that Elkanah was about to offer.)
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
CRITICAL AND EXPOSITORY NOTES.
1Sa. 1:24. Hebrew mothers were accustomed to suckle their children for three years (2Ma. 7:27). A child three years old is not troublesome in the East, and his nurture and education could be committed to the women that served at the door of the Tabernacle. By the education which the boy received in the Sanctuary he was even as a child to grow into the service; and moreover, as a child, he could perform little outward services (Langes Commentary). Three bullocks. Two would be required for the customary yearly offering, viz., one for the burnt-offering and the other for the thank-offering, the third was probably a special offering in connection with Samuels consecration, and on this account, the only one whose slaying is mentioned in 1Sa. 1:25. The child was young, literally, the child was a child, i.e., not merely in tenderness of years, but in docility, meekness, and gentleness (Wordsworth).
1Sa. 1:28. Lent. The meaning to lend, which the lexicons give to the word both here and in Exo. 12:36, has no other support than the false rendering of the Septuagint, and is altogether unsuitable both in the one and in the other. Jehovah had not lent the son to Hannah, but had given him; still less could a man lend his son to the Lord (Keil). He refers to Elkanah, and not to Samuel (Keil).
MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.1Sa. 1:24-28
VOWS
I. When we pledge ourselves to a certain act or line of conduct on condition that God grants us a certain blessing, we must be very careful to fulfil our vow. If we enter into such a contract with a fellow-creature, we hold ourselves bound by honour to observe every jot and tittle of the contract. Let us be at least equally scrupulous in the performance of any pledge which we give to God. Hannah had placed before the Lord the conditions under which she would give to His service a son, to dwell in His house for ever. The petition had been granted on her own terms, and there is no holding back on her part. She evidently hastened to perform her vow; there was none of that deferring (Ecc. 5:4) which looks like a repenting of the promise made. When she had weaned himas soon as ever his age permitted his separation from his mothers careshe took him up with her. And the sacrifices of thanksgiving which accompanied the dedication of this darling child show that the gift was that of a cheerful giverthat this great act of devotion on her part was performed with gladness (Psa. 100:2).
II. Our faith is strengthened, and our gratitude deepened, when our vows can be paid on the very spot where they have been made. Arise, and go up to Bethel (Gen. 35:1), said the Lord to Jacob. The command indicates that to visit the spot where he had fled from the face of Esau, and where he had dedicated himself to the service of God, would deepen the patriarchs gratitude for all the mercy and truth that had followed him since, and would strengthen his faith in the faithful Creator and covenant-keeping God. Arise, and go to Bethel testifies that it is good to pay our vow in the place in which it was made. The very sight of the spot brings before us more vividly than anything else can do the circumstances of the past, and thus makes us realise more fully the blessings we have received in answer to the prayers then offered. Hannah was enabled to pay her vow in the very spot where she had made it: I am the woman that stood by thee here, praying to the Lord, etc.
OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS
1Sa. 1:28. A double sacrifice was celebrated; one of the victims is endowed with reason, and the other is not; the one is offered up by the priest, the other by Hannah. That which was offered by the mother was a far more costly sacrifice than that presented by the priest. For Hannah offered the fruit of her womb; she treads in the steps of Abraham, she emulates the self-sacrifice of the patriarch. But Abraham received back his son and led him away, but Hannah leaves hers in the temple for the rest of his days.Chrysostom.
Hannahs piety did not cool when her wish was gratified.Steele.
That God gives in answer to prayer, and that man devotes to God what he obtains, so that God takes again what He has given, or lays claim to it for the ends of His kingdom, is the law of reciprocity in the intercourse between the living God and His saints; the latter contribute nothing for the realisation of the special ends of His kingdom which they have not received from Him, and are not by Him enabled to contribute.Langes Commentary.
True religion is a divine life in the soul, which its author first tries and then honours.
1. It is a life of faith, hope, and love.
2. It is tried by Satan, who will seek to place such men as Hophni and Phinehas at the altar, if it be but to distress and drive away from it such worshippers as Hannah. The family is often our furnace, it has pains as necessarily secret as severe; and where they can be told they are told in vain to any but God. Such was the family of Hannah. The Church itself will try the patience and faith of its true members. It will try whether we can acknowledge a true minister of God, and meekly bear with his infirmities, though, like Eli, he mistakes our case, and chills the heart which he should cherish; whether we can receive the promises of God from His mouth, though it sometimes speaks unadvisedly. The Church is a fire to try the Church. 3. But true religion will be owned and honoured of him who gave it, as was the case with Hannah. The Lord often does so beyond all that we ask or think. Hannah had asked for a man-child; but it was not in her contemplation to ask for a Samuelthat light of Israelthat prophet mighty in word and deedthat blessing and pattern to the world in every age.Cecil.
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Samuel presented to the Lord. 1Sa. 1:24-28
24 And when she had weaned him, she took him up with her, with three bullocks, and one ephah of flour, and a bottle of wine, and brought him unto the house of the Lord in Shiloh: and the child was young.
25 And they slew a bullock, and brought the child to Eli.
26 And she said, Oh my lord, as thy soul liveth, my lord, I am the woman that stood by thee here, praying unto the Lord.
27 For this child I prayed; and the Lord hath given me my petition which I asked of him:
28 Therefore also I have lent him to the Lord; as long as he liveth he shall be lent to the Lord. And he worshiped the Lord there.
31.
Why did they take a bottle of wine? 1Sa. 1:24
The size of the offering given by Elkanah and his wife when they presented Samuel to the Lord is an indication of the sobriety of the occasion. Their bullocks would be used for burnt offerings (Leviticus 1). The ephah of flour would be used as a meal offering (Leviticus 2). The bottle of wine was not for human consumption but was to be poured out as a drink offering to the Lord (see Gen. 35:14; 2Ki. 16:13; Eze. 20:28).
32.
Why did they slay a bullock? 1Sa. 1:25
When God described the various offerings to be offered by the children of Israel, He indicated that a burnt offering of the herd should be a male without blemish (Lev. 1:3). The practice was for the worshiper to bring the bullock to the priest. The priest would then present the blood and sprinkle the blood round about the altar that was at the door of the meeting. They would then flay the burnt offering and cut it into pieces. The priests would then lay fire on the altar and put the pieces of the sacrifice in order upon the wood. The whole bullock was to be burned on the altar as a burnt offering. It was described as a sweet savor unto the Lord (Lev. 1:9). This solemn ceremony preceded their presentation of the child Samuel to the high priest, Eli.
33.
Did Hannah fulfill her vow? 1Sa. 1:26
The vow was fulfilled when Samuel was presented to the Lord. Hannah remained at home and did not attend the yearly feasts until the child was weaned. Ancient custom among the Hebrew women kept the children unweaned until their third year. At that time Samuel was taken to the Tabernacle and probably cared for by one of the women who served about the Tabernacle and regularly worshiped there. When Hannah brought him, she made a sacrifice of three oxen, an ephah of meal, and a pitcher of wine.
The fact that it says she lent him to the Lord did not mean that she did not give him to the Lord. She fulfilled her vow in every sense of the word.
34.
Why did Hannah say that it was this child for which she had prayed? 1Sa. 1:27
Hannah had no other children. She was not specifying Samuel as the child to be given to the Lord in distinction from any other child which she had. She was emphasizing the fact that it was this very child for which she prayed. On occasions people who had made vows to give children, houses, lands, or other possessions to the Lord might make a substitution (Lev. 27:10). Hannah was giving the very child for which she had prayed earlier. Although Samuel was her first child and to that time her only child, she was gladly giving him to God.
35.
How could Samuel be loaned to the Lord as long as he lived? 1Sa. 1:28
A man might be a Nazarite for a period of time. Sometimes those who were Nazarites broke their vows and had to begin all over again to live the life of a Nazarite. Samuel, however, was not to be the Lords for a short time. He was the Lords completely and wholly for the duration of his life.
Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series
(24, 25) With three bullocks . . . And they slew a bullock.There at first sight seems a discrepancy here, and the LXX. translators seem to have felt it, for they read, instead of three bullocks, a bullock of three years old. The true explanation, however, is that the one bullock alluded to in 1Sa. 1:25 was the burnt offering by which the child was consecrated to the Lord. The other two were the yearly festival offering, the presentation of which being the usual gift, the chronicler did not think it here worth while to mention again.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
24. Three bullocks, and one ephah of flour, and a bottle of wine See the law of meat offerings. Num 15:1-13. Several ancient versions read, instead of three bullocks, a bullock three years old; but this is probably an error, for, according to Num 15:9, a single bullock required with it but three tenths of an ephah of flour, while Hannah took a whole ephah, enough for three offerings.
The child was young Probably three or four years old. Compare 1Sa 1:22, and 1Sa 2:18.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
1Sa 1:24. With three bullocks As one bullock only is mentioned in the next verse, the LXX, Syriac, and Arabic, read one bullock of three years old, which Houbigant approves and follows; observing, that in the 25th verse the demonstrative he, being prefixed, particularizes this very bullock, i.e. of three years old. And the child was young, Houbigant renders, was yet a crying infant; puerum vagientem.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
(24) And when she had weaned him, she took him up with her, with three bullocks, and one ephah of flour, and a bottle of wine, and brought him unto the house of the LORD in Shiloh: and the child was young.
It is not certain at what age Samuel was first presented. The weaning here spoken of, doth not perhaps mean from the breast only: but as he was to be the Lord’s servant, Hannah weaned him as much as possible from her over affections. Creature comforts should all be so weaned, by those who would find suitable room, for the great Creator’s love.
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
1Sa 1:24 And when she had weaned him, she took him up with her, with three bullocks, and one ephah of flour, and a bottle of wine, and brought him unto the house of the LORD in Shiloh: and the child [was] young.
Ver. 24. With three bullocks. ] One for sacrifice, 1Sa 1:25 and the other two for the use of the priests, who lived of the oblations. Let ministers be liberally maintained.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
weaned. From 2 Macc. 7.27 it has been inferred that the time of weaning included the periods of nourishment and up-bringing, which would bring Samuel to the age of at least twelve years. Compare Isaac’s weaning at the age of five years, and see Gen 21:8. three bullocks. Septuagint and Syriac read “a bullock of three years”. Compare 1Sa 1:25, and Gen 15:9.
ephah. See App-51.
a bottle = a skin bottle. and the child was young. Hebrew vehannar na ‘ ar. Figure of speech Paronomasia (App-6) = “now the boy was a child”. Note also the Figure of speech Parenthesis. App-6.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
am 2839, bc 1165, An, Ex, Is, 326
she took: Num 15:9, Num 15:10, Deu 12:5, Deu 12:6, Deu 12:11, Deu 16:16
three bullocks: The LXX, Syriac, and Arabic, read “a bullock of three years old;” which is probably correct, as we read – 1Sa 1:25 that they slew eth happar, “the bullock.”
house: 1Sa 4:3, 1Sa 4:4, Jos 18:1
Reciprocal: Jdg 11:39 – to his vow 1Ki 11:20 – weaned Psa 26:7 – That Psa 56:12 – Thy Mat 19:13 – brought Mat 19:14 – Suffer Luk 18:15 – they brought
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
1Sa 1:24. With three bullocks, &c. As they were not to appear before the Lord empty, so upon this occasion they brought an ample offering to him, to testify their gratitude. And it is highly probable that one of these bullocks was wholly offered to God as a burnt-offering, and the other two were peace-offerings; or, as some rather think, one a sin-offering, and the other a peace-offering. One ephah of flour For the meat or meal- offerings, which to each bullock were three tenth-deals, or three tenth parts of an ephah; and so nine parts of the ephah were spent, and the tenth part was given to the priest. Wine For drink-offerings.