The Forgotten Father:
1 Sam 1:21-29
- INTRODUCTION.
- Fathers, do ever feel neglected on
Father's Day?
- You know what I mean: the kids want to make
something special for Mommy on Mother's Day, you take her out to
a nice restaurant, you pamper her, and Father's Day rolls around,
and it?s the same ol' thing.
- If you've ever felt that way, don?t
despair:
- Before the widespread use of cell phones,
there were more collect calls on Father's Day than any other day
of the year.
- Also, fathers receive far fewer cards than
moms: About 140 million moms receive cards for Mother's Day,
compared to just 90 million days who get Father's Day
cards.
- Dads (and moms), did you realize that we get
one day out of the year dedicated to us.
- Egg salad gets a whole week. As do pickles,
pancakes, pickled peppers, split pea soup, clowns, carpenter ants
and aardvarks.
- Peanut butter, chickens, and oatmeal each
rate an entire month!
- But, we can take solace knowing that
national treasures such as rubber erasers and moles also only
merit a single day of recognition.
- This morning—because I will be away
next Sunday—we will talk about a father who has truly been
neglected.
- We have read the narrative of Samuel?s birth
countless times, but we've read this passage from the
standpoint of Hannah.
- How many Mother?s Day sermons have you heard
from this text? But, how many times have you ever heard a
preacher come here on Father?s Day?
- The fact that Hannah and Samuel remain
popular names testifies to our emphasis in this text. How many
boys do you know by the name of Elkanah?
- In my living room, hangs a picture of a
woman?s holding a baby with the words of Hannah: “I have
asked for him from the LORD” (1:20).
- Poor Elkanah!
- He has been neglected through centuries of
Christian preaching and teaching.
- However, as we read this narrative, it
becomes quite clear that it wasn't just Hannah who was so
godly, but Elkanah was everything we need a father and husband to
be. In Elkanah, we see a father who was LEADING, LOVING, &
LISTENING.
- LEADING, v 3.
- Elkanah “used to go up year by year
from his city to worship and to sacrifice to the LORD of hosts at
Shiloh, where the two sons of Eli, Hophni and Phinehas, were
priests of the LORD.”
- Three times a year Israelite males were to
travel to the sanctuary to offer sacrifices.
- “Three times a year
all your males shall appear before the LORD your God at the place
that he will choose: at the Feast of Unleavened Bread, at the
Feast of Weeks, and at the Feast of Booths. They shall not appear
before the LORD empty-handed” (Deut
16:16).
- While the men were required to sacrifice,
they were required to bring their households with them in order
that the households might eat and rejoice before the Lord:
“You shall seek the place the LORD your God will choose out
of all your tribes to put his name and make his habitation there.
And there you shall eat before the LORD your God, and you shall
rejoice, you and your households, in all that you undertake, in
which the LORD your God has blessed you” (Deut 12:5,
7).
- Here's the point:
- Elkanah was not only faithfully going to
Shiloh to sacrifice as the Law required, but he was faithful in
leading his family in doing the right thing.
- Elkanah is quite like Joshua when Moses'
successor declared: “If it is evil in your eyes to serve
the LORD, choose this day whom you will serve, whether the gods
your fathers served in the region beyond the River, or the gods
of the Amorites in whose land you dwell. But as for me and my
house, we will serve the LORD” (Josh 24:15).
- In his farewell address, Joshua speaks for
God and recounts the Lord's might acts on behalf of the
Israelites.
- Joshua calls on his hearers to make a
decision: to rid their hearts of the idols their forefathers had
worshiped and to serve solely the Lord.
- And, he concludes with his famous call for
action: You can choose whatever deity you want to worship, but my
family and I are going to worship the true God.
- Joshua stakes his claim in a pagan world:
I'm going to do what's right, and I'm going to lead
my family in doing what's right.
- Oh, that we had more men like
Elkanah!
- We understand, do we not, that God intends
for us to be that kind of men.
- About Abraham, God says, “I have
chosen him, that he may command his children and his household
after him to keep the way of the LORD by doing righteousness and
justice” (Gn 18:19).
- God “established a testimony in Jacob
and appointed a law in Israel, which he commanded our fathers to
teach to their children” (Ps 78:5).
- “Fathers, do not
provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the
discipline and instruction of the Lord” (Eph
6:4).
- Fathers play a very, very important role in
the development of their children.
- Dr. Paul C. Vitz, professor of psychology at New York
University and a former atheist, is the author of Faith of the Fatherless.
- In his thought-provoking book, Vitz
diagnoses the root causes of atheism and agnosticism.
- In studying the biographies of many of the
leading atheists of the past three centuries, Vitz concludes that
virtually all had an absent, distant, harassed or abusive father
early in their childhood—often before 18 months of
age.
- Did you realize that the United States leads
the world in fatherless countries, and that nearly 34 percent of
American children live apart from their biological
fathers?
- That poses great dangers for our
society.
- Research demonstrates that children who live
apart from their fathers are approximately 2-3 times more likely
to use drugs, to experience educational, health, emotional and
behavioral problems than are those who live with their married or
adoptive parents.
- Children with engaged fathers are
significantly more likely to do well in school, have healthy
self-esteem, exhibit empathy and prosocial behavior, and avoid
high-risk behaviors such as drug use, truancy, and criminal
activity compared to those children who have uninvolved
fathers.
- Are we loving fathers who are engaged in our
children's lives?
- LOVING, vv 4-5.
- “On the day when
Elkanah sacrificed, he would give portions to Peninnah his wife
and to all her sons and daughters. But to Hannah he gave a double
portion, because he loved her, though the LORD had closed her
womb,” vv 4-5.
- The worshipers ate sacrifices under the OT:
Deut 12:17-18.
- What is interesting from this passage,
however, is not that Elkanah did as the Lord instructed, for he
was leading his family in doing the right thing.
- Yet, he gave Hannah a double portion, for he
loved her, though the Lord has closed her womb.
- There was great social stigma in the ancient
world for barren women. It is possible that Elkanah married
Peninnah simply because Hannah was barren.
- As we mentioned a couple weeks ago,
Scripture presents children as a gift of God:
- Jacob introduced his children to Esau by
saying that they were “the children whom God has graciously
given your servant” (Gn 33:5).
- “Behold, children are
a heritage from the LORD, the fruit of the womb a reward”
(Ps 127:3).
- Hannah recognizes this principle herself and
says, as she prays to the LORD: “If you will indeed look on
the affliction of your servant and remember me and not forget
your servant, but will give to your servant a son, then I will
give him to the LORD all the days of his life” (v
11).
- The opposite would also obviously be true:
if the Lord had not given a woman children, God was punishing
her.
- Even though Hannah was not what an ancient
woman was expected to be, Elkanah loved her.
- In today?s world, so many are interested in
love for what they can get out of it: they enjoy being with the
person, their partner allowed them to move up the socio-economic
scale, or their partner gives a lot of nice gifts.
- True love—as we have
mentioned—is more concerned with giving than getting:
Elkanah clearly demonstrates that type of love.
- “Love is patient and
kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It
does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful;
it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth.
Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things,
endures all things” (1 Cor 3:4-7).
- “Husbands, love your
wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her . .
. .Husbands should love their wives as their own bodies. He who
loves his wife loves himself” (Eph 5:25,
28).
- Gentlemen, how much do we truly demonstrate
love to our wives?
- If they have worked all week, helped with
baths and bedtime, are we willing to give them some time
off?
- Do we demonstrate affection for our wives in
front of our children? As we demonstrate affection to our wives,
our sons learn how they should treat a woman and our daughters
learn how they ought to be treated?
- Are we willing to do our part around the
house so that everything doesn't fall on our
wives?
- The cliché has been told many times but
rings very true: “The most important gift a man can give
his children is to love their mother.”
- Doing so provides children a sense of
security. A fourth-grade girl wrote about her father: “He
treats my mom very nicely, which makes me feel
wanted.”
- Loving our wives also provides our children
with economic security. The number one predictor of children
living in poverty is an absent father.
- According to research by the federal
government, healthy marriages provide numerous benefits to
children: children from healthy marriages are more likely to
attend college, they are less likely to exhibit problem behaviors
in schools, and they are less likely to become pregnant or
impregnate someone.
- The government has also found benefits of
healthy marriages for women: they are less likely to contemplate
or attempt suicide, they have better relationships with their
children, and they are emotionally healthier.
- Fellas, we also gain benefits from healthy
marriages: we live longer, we have more steady employment, and we
are less likely to commit violent crimes.
- LISTENING, vv 21-23.
- “The man Elkanah and
all his house went up to offer to the LORD the yearly sacrifice
and to pay his vow. But Hannah did not go up, for she said to her
husband, 'As soon as the child is weaned, I will bring him,
so that he may appear in the presence of the LORD and dwell there
forever.' Elkanah her husband said to her, 'Do what seems
best to you; wait until you have weaned him; only, may the LORD
establish his word.'”
- Elkanah, in his devoutness, goes up to offer
his yearly sacrifice.
- Hannah says, “Honey, I'm not going
this year. I'm going to wait until I'm no longer nursing
Samuel. Then, I'm going to present him before the LORD
forever.”
- Hannah, as she prayed before the LORD, made
a vow to do that very thing: “O LORD of hosts, if you will
indeed look on the affliction of your servant and remember me and
not forget your servant, but will give to your servant a son,
then I will give him to the LORD all the days of his life, and no
razor shall touch his head” (1:11).
- The fact that no razor would ever touch his
head may indicate that Hannah was making the vow of a Nazarite
(Num 6) for her son.
- Many point out that this could not have been
the Nazarite vow, for that vow was not usually for life and was
not entered into by proxy—you made the vow
yourself.
- Yet, Samson is a notable exception—the
angel who spoke to Samson?s mother said he would be a Nazarite
and he would be a Nazarite from the day of his birth until the
day of his death (Jud13:4-7).
- It is, in my view, therefore, at least
plausible that Hannah made a life-long Nazarite vow for her
son.
- Why would I even mention the possibility
that Hannah made the Nazarite vow for Samuel?
- The purpose of the Nazarite vow was to
separate oneself to the Lord:
- The word “Nazarite” itself means
“one separated” or “one
consecrated.”
- Notice the words of God to Moses:
“When either a man or a woman makes a special vow, the vow
of a Nazarite, to separate himself to the LORD, he shall separate
himself from wine and strong drink” (Num
6:2-3).
- Thus, Hannah in praying to God promises to
consecrate her child to the Lord.
- The text mentions that Elkanah was going up
to offer to the LORD the yearly sacrifice and to pay his
vow—the vow Elkanah intended to pay on this trip may have
been to offer Samuel to the Lord.
- Yet, Hannah refuses to go this trip.
- It's not that she's changed her mind
about her vow—not at all. She simply wants to wait until
Samuel has been weaned.
- However, Elkanah had every right to nullify
her vow.
- As we read this narrative, it's clear
that Elkanah was not at the sanctuary when Hannah made her
vow.
- When Elkanah learned of the vow, he could
have nullified it: “If her husband makes them [his wife?s
vows] null and void on the day that he hears them, then whatever
proceeds out of her lips concerning her vows or concerning her
pledge of herself shall not stand. Her husband has made them
void, and the LORD will forgive her” (Num 30:12). Yet,
Elkanah allows the vow to stand.
- Why would Elkanah not make void the
vow?
- It's obvious as we read through this
narrative that Elkanah was a man who loved the Lord deeply, and
he knew vows weren't to be entered into or broken
lightly.
- So, perhaps, it's his devoutness that
prevents his nullifing the vow.
- However, could Elkanah not have been just as
devout if he broke the vow, according to the Word of God, as if
he hadn't? How can doing what the Lord permits be contrary to
the will of God?
- I?m much more inclined to think that Elkanah
permitted Hannah to keep this vow because he knew what this child
meant so very much to Hannah.
- Perhaps the Lord wouldn't have granted
the child to Hannah had Elkanah nullified her vow; Elkanah knew
that and knew what Samuel would mean to his beloved wife, so he
allowed the vow to stand.
- The point is that Elkanah allowed the vow to
stand because he listened to his wife, he understood her, and he
sought to please her.
- That is the type of husband God expects us
all to be: “Husbands, live with your wives in an
understanding way, showing honor to the woman as the weaker
vessel, since they are heirs with you of the grace of life, so
that your prayers may not be hindered” (1 Pt 3:7).
- We are to live with our wives in an
understanding way—to be concerned about them and take their
thoughts and feelings into consideration.
- Do we live with our wives in an
understanding way?