Samuel and His God
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An insightful untangling of divergent voices and viewpoints found in the story of the last Hebrew judge and first major prophet.
Samuel and His God explores the relationship among a prophet, his deity, and their people in 1 Samuel. Marti J. Steussy illumines the vexing elements central to this multifaceted narrative and probes the questions it raises, particularly with regard to the authoritative voice of Samuel, of God as portrayed in this account, of the narrator or narrators, and of the Bible itself. In this sense, Samuel becomes a case study in how the Bible's authors use stories to argue for who may speak for God.
In the biblical account, Samuel hears the Lord's calling as a boy, becomes a servant to the priest Eli, and later becomes Eli's successor. As a leader of the people of Israel and a conduit for God's message, Samuel is a figure of immense authority, ultimately anointing the first two kings of Israel, Saul and David, and thus precipitating the transformation of Israel from a collection of tribes into a nation under a monarchy. But in biblical and historical portrayals of Samuel's interactions with his God, their people, and these early kings, the narratives introduce significant discontinuities and disruptions, most famously with respect to the question of whether kingship came to Israel as a sinful human initiative or as a divine gift.
Steussy takes up the challenge of helping readers grapple with the possibility that a multitude of storytellers representing disparate agendas may be responsible for aspects of Samuel's tale, and this makes mapping the cumulative story a problematic but revealing task. The relationship between Samuel and God is often contentious, and Samuel is presented as an irascible and ambitious character whose own stakes in his community at times govern how he interprets and represents his relationship to his God. Steussy's close readings negotiate the plethora of viewpoints to be found here—those of the narrator(s), the characters, and other scholars of Samuel's story.
Marti J. Steussy
Marti J. Steussy is the MacAllister-Petticrew Professor of Biblical Interpretation at Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis. Steussy is the author of two science fiction novels and three previous books in biblical studies, including David: Biblical Portraits of Power. She is also editor of the Chalice Introduction to the Old Testament.
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Samuel and His God - Marti J. Steussy
SAMUEL AND HIS GOD
Studies on Personalities of the Old Testament
James L. Crenshaw, Series Editor
SAMUEL
AND HIS GOD
MARTI J. STEUSSY
The University of South Carolina Press
© 2010 University of South Carolina
Cloth edition published by the University of South Carolina Press, 2010
Ebook edition published in Columbia, South Carolina,
by the University of South Carolina Press, 2013
www.sc.edu/uscpress
22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
The Library of Congress has cataloged the cloth edition as follows:
Steussy, Marti J., 1955–
Samuel and his God / Marti J. Steussy.
p. cm. — (Studies on personalities of the Old Testament)
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
ISBN 978-1-57003-924-9 (cloth : alk. paper)
1. Samuel (Biblical judge) 2. Bible. O.T. Samuel—Criticism, interpretation, etc. I. Title.
BS580.S2S74 2010
222’.406092—dc22
2010008117
The Scripture quotations contained herein are, unless otherwise marked, from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) of the Bible, Copyrighted 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America, and are used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked (NLT) are from the HOLY BIBLE, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers. All rights reserved.
Quotations designated (NIV) are from THE HOLY BIBLE: NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House. All rights reserved.
ISBN 978-1-61117-222-5 (ebook)
CONTENTS
Series Editor’s Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Samuel in the Bible
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 2: SOURCES OF THE SAMUEL STORIES
The Bible
Ancient Customs of Authorship
Evidence of Layers in 1 Samuel: A First Glance
The Deuteronomistic History
The Prophetic Record
Too Much Analysis of Layers?
Was It Ever Meant to Be Read All at Once?
CHAPTER 3: THE MANY ROLES OF SAMUEL
Priest
Judge
Ideas and Ideals of Prophecy
Samuel as Prophet
Summary
CHAPTER 4: THE PROBLEMATIC GOD OF SAMUEL
What LORD Does
LORD and Hannah: Caring for the Little People?
Lifting the Poor: Hannah’s Song (1 Samuel 2:1–10)
LORD’S Attitudes
Reflections
CHAPTER 5: A SEQUENTIAL READING OF SAMUEL
Samuel’s Earliest Years (1 Samuel 1–2)
Samuel’s Calling (1 Samuel 3:1–4:1)
Interlude of Absence (1 Samuel 4:2–7:2)
Samuel as Judge (1 Samuel 7:3–17)
Request for Kingship (1 Samuel 8)
Samuel Designates Saul (1 Samuel 9:1–10:27)
Saul Steps Forward (1 Samuel 11)
Samuel’s Farewell Speech? (1 Samuel 12)
Prophet and King: Round 1 (1 Samuel 13:1–15a)
The Missing Prophet (1 Samuel 13:15b–14:52)
Prophet and King: Round 2 (1 Samuel 15)
A New Era Begins (1 Samuel 16:1–13)
The Fading of Samuel (1 Samuel 19:18–24 and 25:1)
Encore (1 Samuel 28:3–25)
CHAPTER 6: SAMUEL, HIS GOD, AND US
Samuel
God
Us
Notes
Bibliography
Scripture Index
Hebrew Word Index
Topic Index
SERIES EDITOR’S PREFACE
Critical study of the Bible in its ancient Near Eastern setting has stimulated interest in the individuals who shaped the course of history and whom events singled out as tragic or heroic figures. Rolf Rendtorff’s Men of the Old Testament (1968) focuses on the lives of important biblical figures as a means of illuminating history, particularly the sacred dimension that permeates Israel’s convictions about its God. Fleming James’s Personalities of the Old Testament (1939) addresses another issue, that of individuals who function as inspiration for their religious successors in the twentieth century. Studies restricting themselves to a single individual—e.g., Moses, Abraham, Samson, Elijah, David, Saul, Ruth, Jonah, Job, Jeremiah—enable scholars to deal with a host of questions: psychological, literary, theological, sociological, and historical. Some, like Gerhard von Rad’s Moses, introduce a specific approach to interpreting the Bible, hence provide valuable pedagogic tools.
As a rule, these treatments of isolated figures have not reached the general public. Some were written by outsiders who lacked a knowledge of biblical criticism (Freud on Moses, Jung on Job) and whose conclusions, however provocative, remain problematic. Others were targeted for the guild of professional biblical critics (David Gunn on David and Saul, Phyllis Trible on Ruth, Terence Fretheim and Jonathan Magonet on Jonah). None has succeeded in capturing the imagination of the reading public in the way fictional works like Archibald MacLeish’s J. B. and Joseph Heller’s God Knows have done.
It could be argued that the general public would derive little benefit from learning more about the personalities of the Bible. Their conduct, often less then exemplary, reveals a flawed character, and their everyday concerns have nothing to do with our preoccupations from dawn to dusk. To be sure, some individuals transcend their own age, entering the gallery of classical literary figures from time immemorial. But only these rare achievers can justify specific treatments of them. Then why publish additional studies on biblical personalities?
The answer cannot be that we read about biblical figures to learn ancient history, even of the sacred kind, or to discover models for ethical action. But what remains? Perhaps the primary significance of biblical personages is the light they throw on the imaging of deity in biblical times. At the very least, the Bible constitutes human perceptions of deity’s relationship with the world and its creatures. Close readings of biblical personalities therefore clarify ancient understandings of God. That is the important datum which we seek—not because we endorse that specific view of deity, but because all such efforts to make sense of reality contribute something worthwhile to the endless quest for knowledge.
James L. Crenshaw
Duke Divinity School
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book owes its existence to James L. Crenshaw. He taught me much of what I know about biblical scholarship and also specifically requested that my 1999 book, David: Biblical Portraits of Power, be followed by an additional volume on Samuel. Most of the writing took place during a research leave granted by the trustees of Christian Theological Seminary. I am grateful to them and to my faculty colleagues, who so capably sustained the school’s teaching and administrative work in my absence. The Bibleworks 5.0 computer program (Bibleworks L.L.C., 2001) and my daughter Cally, who returned from Japan just in time to help with final critique and proofreading, have also greatly assisted my work.
I thank Jean Denton, Gordon Chastain, Linda Ferreira, Michael St. A. Miller, Mark Mousse, Antony Campbell, and my colleagues in the Network of Biblical Storytellers Scholars Seminar for conversations in which I worked out my thinking about the Samuel stories. I dedicate this book to my teachers and to my students, who perpetually refresh my vision of the Bible.
ABBREVIATIONS
BOOKS OF THE BIBLE
Old Testament
Apocrypha
Sir Sirach (Ecclesiasticus)
BIBLE TRANSLATIONS
SAMUEL IN THE BIBLE
1 SAMUEL
OUTSIDE 1 SAMUEL
SAMUEL AND HIS GOD
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
The prophet Samuel’s story is told mostly in the first sixteen chapters of the book of 1 Samuel. Beginning with Samuel’s birth in the first chapter, 1 Samuel goes on to describe how Samuel grows up as servant to the priest Eli, whom he eventually replaces as the primary mediator between LORD¹ and Israel. Under Samuel’s leadership the people of Israel—who at this point have no other formal leader—enjoy relief from foreign attackers. But when Samuel grows too old to lead the people himself, they ask him to appoint a king. LORD tells a reluctant Samuel to comply. Samuel anoints Saul, who has some promising early successes but eventually loses LORD’S support. After Samuel has communicated this news to Saul, LORD sends Samuel to anoint David. The rest of 1 Samuel is primarily about David and Saul, with Samuel mentioned only a few times. He makes his final appearance as a ghost, summoned by Saul, who declares that on the morrow, LORD will give Israel along with you into the hands of the Philistines
(1 S 28:19; this and all subsequent biblical quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, unless otherwise indicated).
I first paid serious attention to the biblical character Samuel when a student asked me to preach on 1 Samuel 3 at his ordination. The student, whose great passion was ministry with children, had chosen the chapter because in it LORD calls to the young Samuel as the boy sleeps in the temple. Since my student mostly wanted to show that even a very young person can be called by God, he trimmed the reading to leave out God’s actual message to Samuel in 3:11–14, a message formulated to make both ears of anyone who hears of it tingle
(3:11).
Now this student, who had been my teaching assistant, knew full well that I do not think problematic verses should be clipped from readings (as they so frequently are in church Bible lessons). If people have a problem with something in the Bible, I think they should talk about it rather than proclaiming respect for the Bible while censoring—if not downright misrepresenting—it. Furthermore, in my experience people grow far more by wrestling with difficult passages than by lingering over old favorites. The ordinand was, I am sure, not at all surprised when I began my sermon with the omitted verses, in which LORD says, On that day I will fulfill against Eli all that I have spoken concerning his house, from beginning to end. For I have told him that I am about to punish his house forever, for the iniquity that he knew, because his sons were blaspheming God, and he did not restrain them. Therefore I swear to the house of Eli that the iniquity of Eli’s house shall not be expiated by sacrifice or offering forever
(3:12–14).
It is not hard to see why these verses were left out. They are rather sobering from the standpoint of ministry to children. The target of LORD’S condemnation, Eli, is not some stranger to Samuel. Eli is the person to whom Samuel’s mother, Hannah, brought her child as soon as he was weaned, fulfilling an earlier vow that if she conceived she would dedicate her child to LORD (1 S 1). While his mother had reportedly visited him once a year, bringing a new robe for him each time (2:19), it was Eli who cared for and taught Samuel. Their closeness shows when Eli addresses Samuel as my son
in 3:6 and 16. How does the young Samuel feel when he hears LORD’S declaration of punishment against Eli? What is he thinking as he lies in the temple during the long hours after his visitation until dawn (3:15)? Is this really the story we want to use to teach children that God may have something to say to them?
In commentaries and preaching resources on the chapter, interpreters asserted Eli’s corruption and the deservedness of LORD’S punishment with a vehemence that looked for all the world like protesting too much.
For instance, a popular online commentary, David Guzik’s Enduring Word Media, comments that LORD’S word was rare (3:1) probably, because of the hardness of heart among the people of Israel and the corruption of the priesthood. God will speak, and guide, when His people seek Him, and when His ministers seek to serve Him diligently.
Guzik further tells us that being unable to see (3:2) was true spiritually of Eli, as much as it was physically.
I concluded that perhaps I was not the only person unsettled by this oracle of punishment. I began to question it. Does Eli’s dimming physical vision really symbolize spiritual blindness? Eli’s physical eyes may not be able to see, but he can perceive who is calling Samuel and tell the clueless boy (who cannot tell the difference between LORD’S voice and Eli’s) how to reply (3:8). Meanwhile the supposed paragon of new faith, Samuel, fails to follow Eli’s instructions: instead of answering, Speak, LORD, for your servant is listening,
as Eli advises, Samuel says simply, Speak, for your servant is listening
(3:9–10). Possibly Samuel’s dropping of LORD’S name is an inconsequential variation, but I have learned from scholars such as Robert Alter (1981), Adele Berlin (1983), and Meir Sternberg (1985) to pay close attention to repetition in biblical narratives and ask if exact or inexact repetitions suggest some nuance of meaning. I wondered if the child Samuel actually doubted Eli’s conclusion about the speaker and was hedging his bets by leaving out the divine name when he answered.
Then I noticed something even more disturbing. LORD says in 3:11 that Eli’s sons were blaspheming God, and he did not restrain them.
But according to the previous chapter, Eli did make a spirited attempt to restrain his sons. They refused to listen, but the reason given is not that Eli has been lax in his exhortation. Rather we are told that they would not listen to the voice of their father; for it was the will of the LORD to kill them
(2:23–25). LORD condemns Eli for the sons’ failure to reform, but the narrative has already named LORD’S intervention as their reason for persisting in sin. This is a God who is not merely harsh, but one who shifts blame for divine actions onto humans (Fokkelman 1993, 177).
Given this troublesome aspect of LORD’S words, I did not rush to align myself with the divine condemnation of Eli. Instead I observed in the sermon that my student was shifting from the role of Samuel to that of Eli, and he might learn something from the virtues of the older character in the story. Eli keeps trying even when he does not get much support from above, has the perceptiveness and generosity to instruct his fosterling in responding to a voice that Eli himself cannot hear, and accepts LORD’S bitter sentence without raging against the youngster who reports the message and who will take Eli’s place. Would that more of us in teaching and ministry had the faithfulness and skill to send our charges so generously to places we ourselves cannot go! I noted, as comfort for those of us in roles more like Eli’s than Samuel’s, that while 1 Samuel 2–3 may leave the impression that all positive connections between Eli’s family and LORD are being terminated, the cutoff is not absolute: the prophet Jeremiah seems to be a descendant of Eli.²
The preaching of this sermon piqued my curiosity about how people respond to Samuel. Most Bible readers are, in my experience, uneasy with him. This uneasiness arises in part from the negativity of Samuel’s messages. From the oracle against Eli at the beginning of Samuel’s career to the message of death that his ghost delivers the night before Saul’s final battle (Tomorrow you and your sons shall be with me; the LORD will also give the army of Israel into the hands of the Philistines
; 1 S 28:19), Samuel speaks stern warnings and predicts destruction. Worse yet (remember that oracle against Eli), it is not always obvious that the condemnations are deserved.
Even relatively inexperienced readers sense the problem. I ask students in my Introduction to the Old Testament class to write questions related to biblical readings, and one semester a striking twenty-six of twenty-eight students asked whether Samuel’s condemnation of Saul in 1 Samuel 13 is fair (Steussy 2000, 126). In this story Saul, who has experienced some initial military successes, musters the Israelites at Gilgal (a site that the book of Joshua associates with the beginning of Israel’s successful conquest of Canaan). This is the place were Saul’s kingship has been confirmed and celebrated in 1 Samuel 11:14–15. The Philistines muster, too, with thirty thousand chariots, and six thousand horsemen, and troops like the sand on the seashore in multitude
(13:5). The frightened Israelites hide in caves, cisterns, and even tombs; some flee to the other side of the Jordan (13:6–7). Now comes the crucial verse: Saul, we are told, waited seven days, the time appointed by Samuel; but Samuel did not come to Gilgal, and the people began to slip away from Saul
(13:8).
The words, the time appointed by Samuel,
apparently refer to 1 Samuel 10:8, where Samuel tells Saul that you shall go down to Gilgal ahead of me; then I will come down to you to present burnt offerings and offer sacrifices of well-being. Seven days you shall wait, until I come to you and show you what you shall do.
Saul has