Verse 1
1 Samuel 3:1. The child Samuel
ministered before Eli — That is,
under his inspection and
direction. The word of the Lord
was precious — That is, the word
of prophecy, or the revelation
of God’s will to and by the
prophets, was rare or scarce,
such things being most precious
in men’s esteem, whereas common
things are generally despised.
In other words, God did very
rarely in those days reveal his
mind to any person. There was no
open vision — Here vision
includes all the ways whereby
God revealed himself to men. And
the declaration implies that
though God might privately
reveal himself and his will, to
some pious persons for their
particular direction, he did not
impart his mind by way of
revelation openly, or to any
public person, to whom others
might resort for satisfaction.
In the whole book of Judges, we
find only two prophets
mentioned. This is premised as a
reason why Samuel understood not
when God called him once or
twice.
Verses 2-4
1 Samuel 3:2-4. At that time —
After the man of God, mentioned
in the foregoing chapter, (1
Samuel 2:27,) had been with Eli;
perhaps the very night after he
had delivered his message: when
Eli was laid down in his place —
In the court of the tabernacle,
where there were divers rooms
for several uses of the priests,
as there were afterward at the
temple. That he could not see —
Clearly to do his duty, after it
became duskish. This, it is
likely, made him go to bed
betimes, and leave directions
with Samuel what to do, till it
was time for him also to repose
himself. Ere the lamp of God
went out — Before the lights of
the gold en candlestick were put
out in the morning. It has been
inferred by some, from Exodus
27:20-21, that the lamp in the
great shaft of this candlestick,
which bent toward the most holy
place, never went out. Some
others of them, however, did go
out, or were put out when it was
morning. The meaning, therefore,
here is, that ere it was day the
Lord called Samuel, which, it
appears, he did, out of the most
holy place. So the Targum, A
voice was heard out of the
temple of the Lord. He answered,
Here am I — It is likely Eli lay
nearer the tabernacle than
Samuel did. It appears, however,
he heard nothing, the voice
passing by him to Samuel, to
whom it was directed, and who
alone heard it.
Verse 7
1 Samuel 3:7. Samuel did not yet
know the Lord — How God was wont
to teach and instruct men in his
will. Neither was the word of
the Lord yet revealed to him —
He was not acquainted with the
way wherein God made himself and
his mind known unto the
prophets, because he had never
spoken to him before. So that he
did not know how to distinguish
between the voice of God and
that of men. And this ignorance
of Samuel served God’s design,
as it gave Eli the fuller
assurance of the truth of God’s
call and message to Samuel.
Verse 10
1 Samuel 3:10. The Lord came and
stood, &c. — Before, the Lord
spake to him at a distance, even
from the holy oracle between the
cherubim: but now, to prevent
all further mistake, the voice
came near to him, as if the
person speaking had been
standing near him. And Rabbi
Kimchi thinks the expression
denotes some glorious appearance
of God to him, because it is the
same which is used Numbers
22:22-31, where the angel is
said to stand to oppose Balaam’s
proceedings. And so the Targum,
The Lord was revealed, and stood
and called, &c.
Verse 11
1 Samuel 3:11. Both the ears of
every one shall tingle — Or, as
we would express it, It shall
stun all that hear it. This was
awfully fulfilled, when the
doleful news came that the ark
was taken, and both Eli’s sons
were slain, and when Eli himself
fell down and broke his neck.
Verse 12
1 Samuel 3:12. In that day I
will perform against Eli, &c. —
In that time which I have
appointed for this work, which
was about twenty or thirty years
after this threatening. So long
space of repentance God allows
to this wicked generation. When
I begin, &c. — Though this
vengeance shall be delayed for a
season, to manifest my patience,
and incite them to repentance;
yet when once I begin to
inflict, I shall not desist till
I have made a full end; or, have
fully accomplished all my
threatenings, which was done in
the death of Eli and his sons;
and the slaughter of eighty-five
priests of this family by Doeg,
and the thrusting Abiathar, who
escaped that slaughter, out of
his office, and so depriving
that family of its dignity and
honour.
Verse 13
1 Samuel 3:13. For the iniquity
which he knoweth — Here we see
the crime of Eli, and cause of
all the awful judgments executed
on his house. He knew the
wickedness of his sons: the man
of God told him of it: he heard
of it from all the people, 1
Samuel 2:23. And he knew he
ought to punish it, and that he
was guilty of great iniquity in
not doing so. Because his sons
made themselves vile — Hebrews
מקללים להם mekallelim lahem,
literally, rendered themselves
execrable, or accursed. And he
restrained them not — ולא כהה בם
velo chehah bam, non fuit
corrugatus in eos, he did not
frown upon and knit his brows at
them in righteous anger, as the
word means. It does not signify
that he showed no sign of
displeasure against their
wickedness, for he did chide
them, though too gently, for it;
but he did not severely reprove
them; and, when that would not
restrain them, turn them out of
their office, or suspend them
till they were reformed. For
which cause God passed this
severe sentence upon the whole
family; that they should lose
the dignity of the
high-priesthood, and be made as
contemptible as they had
rendered God’s service. “Unhappy
those superiors,” says Dr. Dodd,
“and more particularly those
parents, who, by a blind
indulgence, omit to chastise
their inferiors and children for
their crimes! They provide for
themselves the most chagrining
evils and afflictive
punishments.” And what shall we
say of those ministers of
religion, who, like Eli’s sons,
instead of doing honour to, and
recommending the service of God
by an exemplary conduct, bring
it into disgrace, and expose it
to contempt, through their
impieties and immoralities? Or,
what shall we think of their
superiors in the church, who
know of this their wickedness,
and use no means to restrain or
check it?
Surely, in every department of
society, and especially in the
sacred office of the ministry,
they who can, and do not,
restrain others from sin, make
themselves, like Eli, partakers
of their guilt. And even civil
magistrates will have a great
deal to answer for, if the sword
they bear be not a terror to
evil-doers.
Verse 14
1 Samuel 3:14. I have sworn —
Or, I do swear; the past tense
being commonly put for the
present in the Hebrew tongue.
Unto the house of Eli — Or,
concerning it. Shall not be
purged — That is, the punishment
threatened against Eli and his
family shall not be prevented by
all their sacrifices, but shall
infallibly be executed.
Verse 15
1 Samuel 3:15. Opened the doors
— Although the tabernacle, while
it was to be removed from place
to place in the wilderness, had
no doors, but consisted only of
curtains, and had hangings
before the entrance, instead of
doors; yet when it was settled
in one place, as now it was in
Shiloh, it was enclosed within
some solid building which had
doors and posts, and other
parts, belonging to it. Feared
to show Eli the vision — The
matter of the vision or
revelation, partly from the
reverence he bore to his person,
to whom he was loath to be a
messenger of such sad tidings;
partly lest, if he had been
hasty to utter it, Eli should
think him guilty of arrogancy or
secret complacency in his
calamity.
Verse 17
1 Samuel 3:17. God do so, &c. —
God inflict the same evils upon
thee which I suspect he hath
pronounced against me, and
greater evils too.
Verse 18
1 Samuel 3:18. It is the Lord —
This severe sentence is from the
sovereign Lord of the world, who
hath an absolute right to
dispose of me and all his
creatures; who is in a special
manner the ruler of the people
of Israel, to whom it properly
belongs to punish all mine
offences; whose chastisement I
therefore accept. This was a
pious and noble answer, and
shows what a deep sense Eli had
of the divine sovereignty over
him, and the entire, implicit,
and willing submission he owed
to all God’s decrees, however
hard they bore upon him. This
ought to be our language; this
ought to be the feeling of our
hearts, under all the
dispensations of the divine
providence toward us, whether
prosperous or adverse, whether
pleasing or painful to flesh and
blood. Under all, our will
should be resigned, and all that
is within us should say, It is
the Lord; let him do what
seemeth him good.
Verse 19
1 Samuel 3:19. The Lord was with
him — There were manifest tokens
of God’s presence with him, and
favour toward him. See Genesis
31:2. Or, he revealed his mind
more and more to him: so that
Israel knew God intended him for
the prophetic office. Let none
of his words fall to the ground
— That is, want their proper
effect: God made good all his
predictions. It is a metaphor
taken from precious liquors,
which, when they are spilt upon
the ground, are altogether
useless. Or rather, it is taken
from arrows shot out of a bow;
which, when directed by a good
archer, fail not to arrive at
their intended mark.
Verse 20-21
1 Samuel 3:20-21. All Israel,
from Dan, &c. — That is, through
the whole land, from the
northern bound, Dan, to the
southern, Beer-sheba: which was
the whole length of the land.
That Samuel was established, &c.
— That is, settled to be a
constant prophet. The Lord
appeared again, &c. — Having
begun to appear to him in
Shiloh, he continued this great
favour, and revealed himself,
not by dreams and visions, but
by speaking to him with an
audible voice, as he had done at
first. And indeed he seems to
have been the first eminent
prophet that was raised up,
after Moses, to be a public
instructer and governor of God’s
people. Others there had been
before him; but not with so high
an authority and public
approbation. And therefore St.
Peter says, Acts 3:24, All the
prophets from Samuel spake of
these days; intimating, that he
was the first eminent prophet
whom the Lord raised up after
Moses. |