{"id":8776,"date":"2020-02-09T15:56:00","date_gmt":"2020-02-09T20:56:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/?post_type=message&#038;p=8776"},"modified":"2020-02-12T16:00:26","modified_gmt":"2020-02-12T21:00:26","slug":"birth-in-a-barren-land","status":"publish","type":"message","link":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/message\/birth-in-a-barren-land","title":{"rendered":"Birth in a Barren Land"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Below is an automated transcript of this message:<\/h3>\n\n\n\n <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3.74\">all <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> right. Good morning, church. Hey, we&#8217;re kicking off a new series today.   Aren&#8217;t you excited? I&#8217;m excited to do this. We&#8217;re going to be going through the book of First Samuel,  the first fifteen chapters.  We&#8217;re not going to be able to finish the whole book because we have to take a break for Easter and we have other items that we must cover over the year.   We&#8217;ll be looking at first and second Samuel over the next couple of years, taking it in portions.  We&#8217;re going to be looking at the first fifteen chapters over the next eight weeks.  We&#8217;ve titled this series, \u201cThe Original Game of Thrones.\u201d  Essentially, these first fifteen chapters are  really about two people,  Samuel and Saul.   <br \/><br \/>\nSamuel is  the last judge from the time of the judges. Saul, is the first king in the age of kings in the land of Israel. It&#8217;s a transitional season;  we&#8217;ve taken this title first of all, because of <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"62.14\">the <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> theme  verse that we see in 1 Samuel 8:7 (ESV) \u201cAnd the Lord said to Samuel, \u201cObey the voice of the people in all that they say to you, for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected me from being king over them.\u201d  <br \/><br \/>\nYou know, of course, our title is kind of a nod to the fantasy books and  the TV series;  however, the true original game of thrones began with Adam and Eve because they decided to play a game of thrones with God. They decided that they wanted to be on the throne. They wanted to take the place of God. Since then, humanity has continually struggled with this of wanting to be in charge, in control, to be God of their own lives, to be the king on the throne of their own heart. This is the struggle that we&#8217;ll see all throughout the Bible. <br \/><br \/>\nAs we begin this study, I think it&#8217;s important to give you a <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"123.26\">a <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> situational check, a context of where 1 Samuel is at in history. Here&#8217;s a quick chart. You guys know how I like charts, right? <br \/><br \/>\n1350 BC\n1294 BC\n1134 BC\n1118 BC\n1090 BC\n1050 BC\nAge of Judges begins with Othniel\nRuth marries into Naomi\u2019s family\nBirth of Eli\nBirth of Samson\nBirth of Samuel\nAge of Kings begins with Saul\n<br \/><br \/>\nIf you&#8217;re reading through the Bible,  and you hit the book of Judges, it\u2019s 1350 BC. There are 12 judges in the Book of Judges. It begins with a man named Othniel.   This season of the Judges, there were no kings in Israel.   God was the king, but He would raise up certain men , and even a woman named Debra,during this season to lead the people  for that season. <br \/><br \/>\nNested in between the book of Judges and 1 Samuel is a little four-chapter book called Ruth;  it&#8217;s also during the time of the judges. This gives you a context of where it takes place.  \nAbout 1134 BC is the birth of Eli. You&#8217;ll be introduced to <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"183.38\">him <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> this morning.  You won\u2019t  get to know as much about him as you will later, but he is a judge and a prophet of Israel. <br \/><br \/>\nYou will see the birth of Sampson in 1118 BC, who was the last judge in the book of Judges. Everybody knows about Samson. You saw the movie,  right?   You know about Samson.<br \/><br \/>\nThen,  about 1090 BC is the birth of Samuel; he is who this  book is named after.   Samuel is the last of the judges, if you will. He&#8217;s the last judge. <br \/><br \/>\nAround about 1050 BC,  Samuel anoints Saul  to be king.  You can now  get a sense of where we are in this book.   As we begin with chapter one, I wanted  you to know how it fits into the larger story; in the span of history. I find it interesting that Samuel may have known Samson. That&#8217;s interesting to me. At least Eli probably knew of Samson. When you read  through the Bible, <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"241.6\">sometimes <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> you might not know how these stories overlap. <br \/><br \/>\nThe book begins in the midst of turmoil,  famine and barrenness in the land of Israel. As you can see, the last verse in the book of Judges 21:25 reads,  \u201cIn those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.\u201d  So, you see, the people had a barrenness and emptiness in their heart. they were just doing their own thing. They were being king of their own lives. <br \/><br \/>\nThen,  we see the  book of Ruth. If you turn the page from the last verse of  Judges to the first page of the book of Ruth. This is what you read in the first verse, Ruth 1:1 (ESV) \u201cIn the days when the judges ruled there was a famine in the land, and a man of Bethlehem in Judah went to sojourn in the country of Moab \u2026\u201d   And so there was no bread in the \u201chouse of bread.\u201d Bethlehem means <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"296.86\">\u201dhouse <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> of bread.\u201d  There was no bread. This is God&#8217;s  chosen people, and there\u2019s no bread in  the house of bread. The favored nation of Israel is barren. It\u2019s human judges, it\u2019s Levite priests, even it\u2019s land is barren, empty and fruitless. God\u2019s favored people are in desperate need of new leadership. God\u2019s people need a Redeemer. They needed something new to come their way. <br \/><br \/>\nNow,  this is what I&#8217;ve noticed, and  maybe you&#8217;ve noticed it too.   When we try to take control of our own lives, in other words, when we try to sit on the throne of our own lives, we often experience what the Israelites were experiencing. We experience a kind of emptiness,  a barrenness in our souls, and it might lead to brokenness.   Perhaps you feel this way today. Perhaps you feel this way in your marriage;  there&#8217;s a sense that you  thought this was going to fix everything. If I get  married, maybe I would not feel so lonely; maybe it&#8217;s not working out that way. Maybe you thought having children would make you feel that way. Maybe you thought of a new job; you  have just changed jobs. Maybe if I could fill this \u201chole in my soul,\u201d  I could get a sense of fulfillment. You keep searching for it. Maybe today, as you look around at our country, you feel a sense of abandonment.  You thought that the last politician was gonna be somebody who could really lead us to a better place. You&#8217;re disappointed in politicians.   You\u2019re disappointed in preachers who have disappointed you.  If you stick around here long enough, I&#8217;ll disappoint you, because here&#8217;s the thing. That is  what happens if you put a human on the throne; they will  disappoint <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"417.75\"><i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> you. If you put yourself on the throne, you&#8217;ll disappoint yourself. If you try to put me on the throne, I&#8217;ll disappoint you. We need a better way. We need a better king. <br \/><br \/>\nThe Bible&#8217;s trying to show us this. This book is about many people; we will encounter many people here in the first chapter. It&#8217;s really a book about God. God. We&#8217;re gonna be looking at this story today and asking ourselves this question,   \u201cWho&#8217;s on the throne?\u201d  \u201c Who&#8217;s on the throne in my life?\u201d   <br \/><br \/>\nAs we look in the book, the Lord turns the sorrow and barrenness of a woman named Hannah into fullness and exaltation. Her life completely flips upside down to the good, and in so doing, He prepares the way of the coming of Israel&#8217;s true King and redeemer. And so, as He was working in her life, He was <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"479.54\">really <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> working in Israel. She kind of represents the story of Israel because, as she was barren,  so all of Israel, all of God&#8217;s people were barren. <br \/><br \/>\nWe can understand how the Lord is at work in our lives and   that He&#8217;s preparing  a way for us to come out of our emptiness, our barrenness and our sorrow.   He  leads us to a place where we can be fulfilled and be full of joy.  He has prepared a way for us.   <br \/><br \/>\nAs we look at the text today, I think we&#8217;ll see four insights into the Lord&#8217;s preparation for us. Let&#8217;s look at it. I&#8217;m going to read it in four portions;   this might be the best way to get through fifteen  chapters in  eight Sundays. We&#8217;ll take small bites and then  talk about it; hopefully,  as we&#8217;ve been praying,  that the Lord will speak to us from His word.  <br \/><br \/>\n1 Samuel 1:1-10 (ESV) \u201c1 There was a certain man of Ramathaim-zophim of the hill country of Ephraim whose name was Elkanah the son of Jeroham, son of Elihu, son of Tohu, son of Zuph, an Ephrathite. 2 He had two wives. The name of the one was Hannah, and the name of the other, Peninnah. And Peninnah had children, but Hannah had no children. 3 Now this man 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. 4 On the day when Elkanah sacrificed, he would give portions to Peninnah his wife and to all her sons and daughters. 5 But to Hannah he gave a double portion, because he loved her, though the LORD had closed her womb. 6 And her rival used to provoke her grievously to irritate her, because the LORD had closed her womb. 7 So it went on year by year. As often as she went up to the house of the LORD, she used to provoke her. Therefore Hannah wept and would not eat. 8 And Elkanah, her husband, said to her, \u201cHannah, why do you weep? And why do you not eat? And why is your heart sad? Am I not more to you than ten sons?\u201d 9 After they had eaten and drunk in Shiloh, Hannah rose. Now Eli the priest was sitting on the seat beside the doorpost of the temple of the LORD. 10 She was deeply distressed and prayed to the LORD and wept bitterly.\u201d    This is God&#8217;s word.<br \/><br \/>\nLet&#8217;s pause here and talk about this first insight that we can gather from God&#8217;s word. <br \/><br \/>\nHow God has prepared the way for us:<br \/><br \/>\n1. God graciously gives us barrenness in hope.<br \/><br \/>\nI want you to take note of Hannah&#8217;s sorrow. What&#8217;s the source of her sorrow? It seems ironic, because her name,  Hannah,  in the Hebrew,  means \u201cfavored one.\u201d   She&#8217;s the favorite. It seems odd that the \u201cfavored one\u201d  would be empty;  that she would be barren. Do we see this <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"677.39\">as <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> we look at the text? <br \/><br \/>\nOne of the challenges of teaching or preaching from a book like this is it&#8217;s a story.  Should I preach it to you from the perspective of Hannah and how life is looking to her?  Or should I climb up into the clouds as it were and and preach it from God&#8217;s perspective?  That&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve been feeling all week, wrestling with  which way I go. I&#8217;m going to attempt to do both today. But I&#8217;m going to land into God&#8217;s perspective. <br \/><br \/>\nSome of you have your Bible in your hands and maybe you have noticed it in the text that every time you saw the word Lord, it was in all caps. Did you notice  LORD in  all caps?    Now,  most modern translations, English translations,  do that when they encounter the word,  Yahweh.  That&#8217;s the covenantal  name of God. It means <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"738.35\">\u201dI <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> am\u201d  in Hebrew. It was the name revealed to Moses at the burning bush when he asks, \u2018who shall I say  your name?  Noone knows your name. Everybody just keeps calling you the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. That\u2019s a long name.  So what&#8217;s your real name?\u2019  God reveals to Him his name, Yahweh, or, as some pronounce it, Jehovah. Every time you see that in the Hebrew, the English translations are making it in all caps. If it&#8217;s written,  Lord, the meaning is Adona.  If it&#8217;s written in all caps, it&#8217;s Yahweh. Do you see that? LORD is in there  33 times from chapter one, verse one to chapter two, verse 11,  which is what we&#8217;re covering today. It says, Yahweh 33 times;  it says Hannah, about 10 or 12 times. I&#8217;m thinking this is about Yahweh.   This is about <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"794.79\">God <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>. So that&#8217;s why, as you look at the four insights, it&#8217;s my attempt to try to see it from God&#8217;s perspective, and that&#8217;s what I think God wants to say to us today. <br \/><br \/>\nHe wants us to see what&#8217;s going on in our lives from His perspective.   He gives Hannah this barrenness.   Let&#8217;s get a little background and then we&#8217;ll dig in a little deeper. I like charts, but I also like maps. You&#8217;ll know that about me, right?.<br \/><br \/>\n(Looking at the map.  Points to Dead Sea, Sea of Galilee, Mount Herodes,  Jordan River and Ramah.) This is the Dead Sea. Sea of Galilee.  Mount Herodes and as you go down the Jordan River, it fills  up the Dead Sea.  Here&#8217;s Jerusalem.  Two  heights is  a mountainous place in Jerusalem and at the peak and just north of Jerusalem is Ramah.   In the beginning verse, it says, Ramathaim-zophim.   But from then on, later in chapters one and two, it&#8217;s always <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"851.38\">referred <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> to as Ramah. I&#8217;m really glad about that because it&#8217;s much easier to pronounce. <br \/><br \/>\nRamah is the hometown of Elkanah  and his two wives. They&#8217;re traveling from Ramah to Shiloh.   Shiloh is  the place where the Tabernacle, the tent of meeting which Moses built in the wilderness , when they first came into the Promised Land,  with Joshua leading. That&#8217;s where they put the Tabernacle;  they put it in Shiloh.  It&#8217;s been there ever since. It&#8217;s referred to as a temple here, but it&#8217;s not Solomon&#8217;s Temple. It&#8217;s not a temple like you&#8217;re thinking of. It&#8217;s the tent of meeting;  the tent may have been somewhat worn out by this point.   It probably is a more permanent structure at Shiloh. They travel to Shiloh  annually. <br \/><br \/>\nElkanah\u2019s name means,  \u201cGod&#8217;s possession.\u201d   That means he is  God&#8217;s man. He&#8217;s the father of Samuel. He lived in Ephraim, it says.   As you&#8217;re <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"916.98\">looking <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> at the first few verses.   I had this question; maybe you&#8217;ve had the question before as well.  My question would be, how in the world is Samuel qualified to be a priest, since you have to be from the tribe of Levi in order to qualify? I&#8217;m looking here and it says he&#8217;s from the hill country of Ephraim and his father is from the hill country of Ephraim.   I&#8217;m thinking he&#8217;s from the tribe of Ephraim, which is from the house of Joseph. How in the world is  he going to be a priest? How does he qualify? I thought of a couple ways he qualified.   Samuel  got adopted by Eli. Eli adopted him.   But really, as I begin to study it, I did background study on this, he&#8217;s not saying that, his father, Elkanah, is an Ephraimite.   He&#8217;s just saying that&#8217;s where he lives. As you go back and read <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"970.04\">further <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> in the background of the earlier books, you find out there was a group of Levites that moved  to that land.  It really looks like,  as you study this, that Samuel is actually  a Levite. It gave me satisfaction that he&#8217;s qualified to be a priest. I&#8217;m sure if God called him, he was qualified. I just needed to work that out. <br \/><br \/>\nNow,  there&#8217;s a troubling problem here. Verse two says that Elkanah had two wives.   Already, Elkanah has  figured out that it was not a good idea. Polygamy goes on a lot in the Old Testament; it must have been okay because God allowed it,  where there&#8217;s a whole lot of other sins  that God was apparently allowing back then. But,  it was not  God&#8217;s best.  All  I have to do is read the book of Genesis. It says He made <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1027.19\">them <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> male and female.   Then  it goes on and says that the two might become one flesh. God&#8217;s plan was one man, one woman for life.  That was His plan.  Jesus repeats this  in the book of Matthew. He agrees with His father and says that God meant for it to be.  <br \/><br \/>\nElkanah is  a righteous man. He goes up and offers sacrifices every year.  He  loves his wives, but he probably should have stopped at one. Instead of the sermon title being, \u201cBirth in a Barren Land,\u201d  I started to name it,  \u201cRival Wives,\u201d but that really would have been from the perspective of the two women.  He lists Hannah first here;  he had two wives. The name of one was Hannah and the name  of the other was Peninnah.   It seems like he probably married Hannah first, and maybe this is me, just sort of looking between the lines. She was infertile and he took on a second wife <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1086.56\">in <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> order to pass on his name. But we don&#8217;t know. It doesn&#8217;t say this;  we know that Peninnah has a bunch of kids.   Peninnah  apparently recognizes that he loves Hannah best, and so she&#8217;s constantly picking at her.  I can imagine Peninnah  saying, \u201cyou know, maybe he loves you best, and maybe he gives you extra food when we go up to the Tabernacle, but I&#8217;ve got his kids.  God closed your womb.\u2019   Do you see that in verse five and six? It&#8217;s as if, as we&#8217;re looking at this book, the author wanted to make sure we didn&#8217;t miss it. He says \u201cclosed up her womb\u201d twice.   I say the author, because we&#8217;re not positive who wrote  1 Samuel.   It&#8217;s named after Samuel because he&#8217;s the first significant person, and we believe that he probably did write  most of the first part of it, and maybe as we look at  1 Chronicles, we see that the Prophet Gad  and the Prophet Nathan may have been the ones who helped <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1148.98\">complete <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> it, but we&#8217;re uncertain.   There&#8217;s no \u201cautograph;\u201d  but we know that God is the one who inspired it.  Aren&#8217;t you troubled when you read this in verse five and six?   5 \u201c&#8230;because he loved her, though the LORD had closed her womb. 6 And her rival used to provoke her grievously to irritate her, because the LORD had closed her womb.\u201d    Here&#8217;s what I want to say; the Lord allowed that to happen. That&#8217;s what I prefer to say, but I can&#8217;t prefer to say that, unfortunately, because the text does not say that.  The text says,  \u201cthe Lord closed her womb.\u201d  . Are you troubled by that? I&#8217;m a little troubled by that. <br \/><br \/>\nWhy would the Lord do that? Here\u2019s a couple of thoughts I had, as I was thinking about it. He did it out of grace.  What if He did it so that people would look to Him? What if He did it so that Israel would look to Him? What if he did it so that Hannah would be the most <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1212.87\">righteous <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> woman ever written about in the whole Old Testament, because she is?  There is  no one like her in the whole Old Testament. What if he did it because He had a higher purpose,  a purpose higher than ours?   It&#8217;s still troubling, but that&#8217;s apparently what&#8217;s going on. <br \/><br \/>\nIf you look at the book of Romans,  and we were just there this past  Fall, maybe some of you remember it. Romans 8:20-21 (ESV) \u201c 20 For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope 21 that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God.\u201d  What if God graciously allows us to feel emptiness and barrenness  in hopes that we will look to Him? What if He lets us go all the way down the road, with ourselves on the throne,  and just get what we get in <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1283.61\">order <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> to draw us closer to Him? That seems to be what&#8217;s going on here. The favored one is barren, but it&#8217;s only temporary. <br \/><br \/>\nGod has a plan, you know.  The French mathematician and philosopher,  Paschal,  has been quoted as saying, \u201cThere is a god-shaped vacuum in the heart of each man, which cannot be satisfied by any created thing, but only by God himself  made known through the person of Jesus Christ.\u201d  <br \/><br \/>\nThere&#8217;s a hole in your soul; there&#8217;s a place that only God can fill, and people try to put everything in it. There&#8217;s a barrenness  in us, but only God can take that place and give you the fulfillment because He made you for Himself. Why does God allow suffering and sorrow? Why does he allow barrenness? Why do bad things happen to good people? Could it be, because some of it is self inflicted? Certainly, it is sin inflicted;  some of the bad stuff that happens to us, we do to ourselves. I would say most of it.  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1352.94\">But <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> Hannah didn&#8217;t do this to herself. The Bible says God did this;  that&#8217;s somewhat troubling, but He&#8217;s not finished. It&#8217;s temporary because He wants to take and show them how He can turn their barrenness  to fullness. <br \/><br \/>\nLet&#8217;s keep reading. We&#8217;ll pick it up at Verse 11. Remember, she&#8217;s crying at the gate.  They are  at the front of the Tabernacle.  1 Samuel 1:11-19 (ESV) \u201c11 And she vowed a vow and said, \u201cO 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.\u201d 12 As she continued praying before the Lord, Eli observed her mouth. 13 Hannah was speaking in her heart; only her lips moved, and her voice was not heard. Therefore Eli took her to be a drunken woman. 14 And Eli said to her, \u201cHow long will you go on being drunk? Put your wine away from you.\u201d 15 But Hannah answered, \u201cNo, my lord, I am a woman troubled in spirit. I have drunk neither wine nor strong drink, but I have been pouring out my soul before the LORD. 16 Do not regard your servant as a worthless woman, for all along I have been speaking out of my great anxiety and vexation.\u201d 17 Then Eli answered, \u201cGo in peace, and the God of Israel grant your petition that you have made to him.\u201d 18 And she said, \u201cLet your servant find favor in your eyes.\u201d Then the woman went her way and ate, and her face was no longer sad. 19 They rose early in the morning and worshiped before the LORD; then they went back to their house at Ramah. And Elkanah knew Hannah his wife, and the Lord remembered her.\u201d    \nHere&#8217;s the second insight:  \n\n\n2. God wants us to admit our need and ask for His help.<br \/><br \/>\nNotice Hannah&#8217;s supplication. We&#8217;ve noticed her sorrow; now look at her supplication. <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1497.54\">She <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> asked the Lord to look upon her affliction. The word affliction could be translated to poverty, trouble, misery, impoverishment or  powerlessness. The first step, it seems to me,  in finding a way back to God so that He&#8217;s in charge of your life.  is to admit your own powerlessness, your own affliction, your own sin.  To say, \u2018 I can&#8217;t do this;\u2019 to admit I can&#8217;t fix this.<br \/><br \/>\nHannah  says, \u201cremember me;\u201d she says, \u201clook upon my affliction.\u201d   She says, look at me, God, look at me.   Do you see me?   Look where I&#8217;m at; look at how this woman,  this rival wife makes fun of me and taunts me.   Look at me. I&#8217;m distressed. I&#8217;m afflicted. Look on me. Look on your servant.  And then she says, \u201cand remember me.\u201d  Don&#8217;t forget me.   <br \/><br \/>\nDo we have a forgetful God?  Do you ever think maybe sometimes He&#8217;s not looking?   <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1571.13\">God <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> did you turn away? Did you forget to notice me? Have you forgotten me? Have you ever wondered if God forgot you?  You believe in Him;  you don&#8217;t doubt his existence, but maybe  He didn&#8217;t see what was happening to you lately. Do we have a forgetful God? <br \/><br \/>\nIt says,  \u201che remembered her,\u201d  in verse 19. Does that mean that he forgot her for a little while? Is he like some sort of Einstein up in heaven?   You know, he knows everything, but he&#8217;s forgetful?   Somebody needs to give him a calendar because He forgot to keep up with Hannah.   See, this is the problem when you read something like this from her perspective;  He seems forgetful. But God has not forgotten her. In fact, the Lord remembers her; it says the Lord remembered her.  He had never forgotten her. <br \/><br \/>\nThe word, <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1635.6\">remembered,  <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> anytime you see it in the Old Testament it almost always has a soteriological meaning. In other words, He&#8217;s getting ready to do something new, something miraculous if the Lord remembers.   That\u2019s how it feels from her perspective; He forgot her for a while and then He remembered.   But,  He never forgot her. But from her perspective, it may have felt that way. He remembered her.  <br \/><br \/>\nShe says, in this vow before the Lord,  if you&#8217;ll give me a son, I&#8217;ll give him back to you and no razor shall ever touch his head. That\u2019s the Nazarite vow.   Have you heard of this? Samson was one of the first that you may have  heard about this.  He would have no haircut. No razor will touch his head. This is the Nazarite vow; no wine, no contact with dead bodies. He would be raised,  separated under the Lord,  belonging to the Lord. That&#8217;s her promise. If you give me a <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1692.13\">son <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>, I&#8217;ll give him back to you as a Nazarite.   <br \/><br \/>\nIn verse 19, the Lord remembered her.   A miracle is about to happen. Here&#8217;s what I want you to hear; the currency of the Kingdom is asking.   Whether  it&#8217;s money or whatever, but the currency of the Kingdom is asking.   James 4:2b (KJV) \u201c\u2026 ye have not, because ye ask not.\u201d  \nMatthew  says this, quoting Jesus,  Matthew 7:7-9 (ESV) 7 \u201cAsk, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. 8 For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened.\u201d  <br \/><br \/>\nAre you feeling afflicted today? Do you feel God has forgotten you? Do you feel barren  in your soul? Are you empty? God has not forgotten you; He&#8217;s waiting for you to ask,  to admit that you&#8217;re powerless to fix what&#8217;s wrong with you and for Him to fill  that vacancy in your life. <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1760. \u201c97\">, <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> Admit it and ask Him to help. Are you willing to ask God for help? <br \/><br \/>\nLet&#8217;s keep reading.   We&#8217;re in verse 20 I think will read from there to the end of the chapter.  \n1 Samuel 1:20-28 (ESV) \u201c20 And in due time Hannah conceived and bore a son, and she called his name Samuel, for she said, \u201cI have asked for him from the LORD.\u201d 21 The man Elkanah and all his house went up to offer to the Lord the yearly sacrifice and to pay his vow. 22 But Hannah did not go up, for she said to her husband, \u201cAs 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.\u201d 23 Elkanah her husband said to her, \u201cDo what seems best to you; wait until you have weaned him; only, may the LORD establish his word.\u201d So the woman remained and nursed her son until she weaned him. 24 And when she had weaned him, she took him up with her, along with a three-year-old bull, an ephah of flour, and a skin of wine, and she brought him to the house of the LORD at Shiloh. And the child was young. 25 Then they slaughtered the bull, and they brought the child to Eli. 26 And she said, \u201cOh, my lord! As you live, my lord, I am the woman who was standing here in your presence, praying to the LORD. 27 For this child I prayed, and the LORD has granted me my petition that I made to him. 28 Therefore I have lent him to the LORD. As long as he lives, he is lent to the LORD.\u201d And he worshiped the LORD there.\u201d  <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s the third Insight.<br \/><br \/>\n3. God wants us to surrender completely to His will.<br \/><br \/>\nI want you to notice Hannah&#8217;s surrender. We&#8217;ve seen her sorrow. We&#8217;ve seen her supplication, now,  notice her surrender. God wants us to surrender completely to His will. She tells us the meaning of Samuel&#8217;s name. It&#8217;s a play <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1889.21\">on <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> words. Anytime you see \u201cel,\u201d   that&#8217;s the word forGod, \u201cElohim.\u201d  The name,  Samuel,  has this idea of \u201casked of  the Lord\u201d or \u201cheard from the Lord.\u201d  Hannah  asked of the Lord.  This child, Samuel, is God-given to her because the Lord heard her and remembered her. I have asked for him from the Lord, and so she names him, Samuel. <br \/><br \/>\nNotice this about Elkanah in verse 23. You know he&#8217;s going back up as he does every year for the yearly sacrifice. He&#8217;s got <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1960.73\">to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> make this little trip with his whole family. This is according to the Mosiac Law that you&#8217;re supposed to do this. He&#8217;s a very righteous man.  Hannah doesn\u2019t go because the child&#8217;s not weaned yet.  She&#8217;s not ready to give the child to Eli yet because she&#8217;s still nursing the child. Jewish women during this time would normally not wean their children  until about their third birthday.  She&#8217;s not ready to go yet. This may have happened for a couple of years until she has weaned Samuel.   Elkanah, in verse 23 says  to her, \u201cDo what seems best to you; wait until you have weaned him; only, may the LORD establish his word.\u201d <br \/><br \/>\nI \u201cchewed\u201d  on that forever this past week.  What does that mean?  Here&#8217;s what I think it means. Elkanah as her husband, according to Levitical  Law,  he <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2017.99\">could <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> have overturned her vow. If  a wife or a daughter is still under her father&#8217;s house, according to Levitical  Law makes a vow, the husband\/father can overturn it. He has the legal authority to overturn it, but Elkanah  doesn&#8217;t. He says, \u201cmay the Lord establish His word.\u201d   I think what he&#8217;s saying here is we&#8217;re going in agreement,   God gave you this, son. He gave us this son.   We&#8217;re going to give him back to the Lord.  You stay back until he&#8217;s weaned but may the Lord establish his word. I think that&#8217;s what it means. I think it raises the stock, if you will, of this guy Elkanah.   It makes you understand that this is his son, too, and this is his beloved wife. <br \/><br \/>\nElkanah is  like Jacob, who had Leah and Rachel, the two wives. But Rachel he loved and Rachel was barren. This is a repeating theme in the Scripture. Why does it keep happening? Because God is trying <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2080.27\">to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> show us something;  how we are barren and how the only way to be filled is through the miraculous remembering of God. God has not forgotten us, but He remembers us when we ask. There is a  theme. \nSarah, the wife of Abraham, was barren until God opened her womb.  Rebecca was barren until God opened her womb;  she had twins. Rachel was barren, and Leah was like Peninnah; God kept giving her sons. Finally, God opened Rachel&#8217;s womb.   We keep seeing this over and over again. Why would God keep giving us the same thing? Because we&#8217;re slow learners, I think,  is why He  has to keep saying it until we get it.  <br \/><br \/>\nThe word sha\u2019al, which sounds like Saul, also sounds like Samuel.  It&#8217;s still a play on words here and and \u201clent\u201d  here it&#8217;s kind of funny.  Okay, I&#8217;m gonna loan him to you.  He&#8217;s still my son, but I&#8217;m giving him to you, and I&#8217;m gonna leave him here and allow him to be raised by old Eli. Eli is somewhere  in his nineties, and so she&#8217;s going to \u201clend\u201d  Samuel to the Lord.  <br \/><br \/>\nIt says in verse 28, \u201cAnd he worshiped the LORD there.\u201d   I worked and worked on this verse; who is \u201che?\u201d  Is it Eli? Is it Elkanah?   Here&#8217;s what I think. Here&#8217;s who I think he is. \u201cTherefore I&#8217;ve lent him to the Lord,\u201d  who is  he? It\u2019s Samuel I think here. Could refer to Elkanah, but seems to be an ellipsis pointing to Samuel.  He will be one who worships there.   It&#8217;s not only Hanna that surrendered, but <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2210.06\"> <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>Samuel has surrendered as well. <br \/><br \/>\nHave you surrendered? Have you waved the white flag and said, \u201cGod, I don&#8217;t want to be on the throne anymore. I want You on the throne.   Some of you are sitting here right now, and you are thinking, I&#8217;m a believer already. I have Christ in my life.   What&#8217;s this whole sermon about? Hannah was a believer too. You can be a believer; you can have Christ in your life. But you can still have areas of your life where Christ is not  Lord.  You&#8217;ve given him your life  and He has saved you and you are following Him,  but you haven&#8217;t given Him your marriage. You haven&#8217;t given Him your parenting. You haven&#8217;t given Him your checkbook. You haven&#8217;t given Him your work. You haven&#8217;t given Him your school. You haven&#8217;t given Him your neighborhood. I could just keep going on.   You haven&#8217;t given Him your <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2261.45\">anxiety <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> and your fear.   There are  those untouched places that you&#8217;re still king. You&#8217;re still playing a game of thrones with God. So, believer, don&#8217;t check out on me here. We can&#8217;t check out. God wants to be the Lord of your whole life. Because if He&#8217;s not Lord of all, He&#8217;s not Lord at all. He wants to be the Lord  of all. <br \/><br \/>\nNow we&#8217;re at chapter two and we&#8217;re going to read down to  verse 11.  <br \/><br \/>\nText #4: 1 Samuel 2:1-11 (ESV) 1 And Hannah prayed and said, \u201cMy heart exults in the LORD; my horn is exalted in the LORD. My mouth derides my enemies, because I rejoice in your salvation. 2 \u201cThere is none holy like the LORD: for there is none besides you; there is no rock like our God. 3 Talk no more so very proudly, let not arrogance come from your mouth; for the LORD is a God of knowledge, and by him actions are weighed. 4 The bows of the mighty are broken, but the feeble bind on strength. 5 Those who were full have hired themselves out for bread, but those who were hungry have ceased to hunger. The barren has borne seven, but she who has many children is forlorn. 6 The LORD kills and brings to life; he brings down to Sheol and raises up. 7 The LORD makes poor and makes rich; he brings low and he exalts. 8 He raises up the poor from the dust; he lifts the needy from the ash heap to make them sit with princes and inherit a seat of honor. For the pillars of the earth are the LORD\u2019s, and on them he has set the world. 9 \u201cHe will guard the feet of his faithful ones, but the wicked shall be cut off in darkness, for not by might shall a man prevail. 10 The adversaries of the LORD shall be broken to pieces; against them he will thunder in heaven. The LORD will judge the ends of the earth; he will give strength to his king and exalt the horn of his anointed.\u201d 11 Then Elkanah went home to Ramah. And the boy was ministering to the LORD in the presence of Eli the priest. <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s the fourth insight.   We&#8217;ve gone through this passage and we&#8217;ve been looking for God&#8217;s perspective.<br \/><br \/>\n4. God has provided His own son to be our true King\n \nWe&#8217;ve seen her sorrow, her supplication, her surrender. Now,  let&#8217;s look at her son and let&#8217;s look at her son closely, because there is a way that we can look at the Old Testament and we can see what&#8217;s called typology.  We can see that it&#8217;s a foreshadowing,  that a person is a foreshadowing of something to come. As we look at this passage, as we look at verses one through 10, there&#8217;s there&#8217;s not much like this until you  go to the Psalms and see stuff like this <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2457.78\">by <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> King David. Really, you have to go all the way to the New Testament to see a woman sing a song like this. It looks a lot like another woman named Mary, and it looks a lot like the Magnificat in Luke, chapter one. Oh, it looks a whole lot like it. <br \/><br \/>\nHannah is a type who points to the New Testament;  that her barrenness  has now become birth, and she has  miraculously given birth to a son that she has given back to God. Abraham was asked  to go up on the hill and take his son, his one and only son and offer him,  but God provided the lamb instead.  This woman, Hannah,  is giving her son,  her firstborn son,  back to the Lord.   <br \/><br \/>\nIn verse one, it says that she exults. \u201cMy heart exults.\u201d   That means rejoices. It means \u201cto leap.\u201d   Literally,  in the Hebrew, it means to \u201cleap like a newborn calf in a stall;\u201d  to leap for joy.  That&#8217;s her heart; it&#8217;s exulting.  It\u2019s  about to leap out of <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2532.15\">her <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> chest. I think the Holy Spirit got hold of her so strong that she sang a song that you won&#8217;t hear again until you get to the New Testament. I wish I had time, but I&#8217;m trying to do this in eight weeks.  If I really took my time, we&#8217;d be here until Jesus comes working on every birth. But I want to draw your attention to what I think the point is,  because the point here is that we&#8217;re transitioning from the book of Judges,  from the age of judges,  to the age of kings and we&#8217;re getting ready for a king named David. We&#8217;re not going to get to him in this series. We&#8217;re going to be reading about Samuel and Saul. David&#8217;s coming, but David is a type pointing to Jesus. <br \/><br \/>\nI believe,  here,  this story of Hannah and Samuel, as we see her exultation and her joy, we also see the close here in verse 10. \u201cThe Lord will judge the ends of the <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2593.31\">earth <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>. He will give strength to his king.\u201d  What does that mean?  Why is she singing about that?   That just comes out of the blue. What is that,  exalt the horn of his anointed?  The last words in her song are \u201chis anointed.\u201d   That&#8217;s the word,  Messiah,  in Hebrew. What&#8217;s coming here? What is she talking about? She might not even know what she&#8217;s talking about. She&#8217;s singing about her son, the anointed one; God has called him. She&#8217;s saying more than she knows. I think she&#8217;s talking about King Jesus.   This boy,  who now serves and ministers in the presence of Eli,  and Eli in his house. God has turned the page on them.   We&#8217;re going to see that in the coming weeks, He&#8217;s going to shut that line off. They have not obeyed the  Lord;  Eli and his two sons, Hophni and Phineas,  are  not following the Lord.  Samuel is  the new priest. In <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2661.15\">fact <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>, Samuel is the last priest.   He&#8217;s the last one in the Bible.  <br \/><br \/>\nSamuel has all three titles. He&#8217;s a judge,  which is like the equivalent of a king. He&#8217;s a priest and he&#8217;s a prophet. All three titles.  He&#8217;s the last one like that, and we don&#8217;t see another one like that until King Jesus.   Samuel is a type and he points clearly to another Son that&#8217;s coming; the king and anointed one.  The Messiah. He was separated to the Lord. We could see there&#8217;s really only three Nazarites  in the Bible. <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s another insight. Looking at Samuel,  Sampson was a Nazarene judge under the Nazarite vow. Then,  you go all the way to the New Testament. There was a preparer of the way named John the Baptist. Oh, by the way, his mother was barren; her name was Elizabeth. She was barren and God opened her womb in her old age.  Her son was a preparer of the way <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2733.31\">to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> prepare the way for King Jesus. So,  Samuel is a type in many ways.  God, as he goes through this Old Testament page by page and chapter by chapter and book by book. He&#8217;s preparing us for King Jesus, and He&#8217;s prepared a way for you. <br \/><br \/>\nIf you look back on your life, you look back at the threads of the past in your life, He has been after you the whole time. He&#8217;s been preparing the way for you. This was for Israel, then it&#8217;s for all of us. And certainly it was for Hannah and it was for Samuel. Why&#8217;s this story here? Because it is here  for you. He&#8217;s prepared a way for you. He&#8217;s prepared a way for you. <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s what Jesus said in John 14:6 (ESV) Jesus said to him, \u201cI am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.\u201d  Who&#8217;s on the throne of your life?   Are you still playing a game with God? Are <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2797.83\">you <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> still playing a game with God? <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s the question I want you to answer if you&#8217;re not a believer today, if you&#8217;ve never given your life to Jesus, you can do it now. We&#8217;re gonna pray in just a moment, and you might be thinking, why does that work? Why is it prayer? Because the currency of the kingdom is asking. Ask. Jesus says,  \u201cAsk, seek, knock.\u201d   Ask God. I want King Jesus to take the throne in my life. So ask.   There are  believers here today,  those who are already following Jesus. What&#8217;s God saying to you about that place of emptiness or that place where it feels like no matter how hard I struggle, I can&#8217;t seem to feel any sense of success there. Are you still in control of that? Is it perhaps because you&#8217;ve not made him king of that arena of your life? <br \/><br \/>\nLet&#8217;s pray and let&#8217;s talk to God about this.   Lord, we thank You for Your word. We thank you <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2856.82\">for <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> this story of Hannah and enters her husband Elkana and her son Samuel.  Lord, we see now that it points to how you&#8217;ve prepared a way for us so that we might surrender the throne of our lives to you.   I want to  pray for that person right now that is ready to do that. Is that you, my friend? Would you admit your need for a Savior? Would you admit your own emptiness and need for Jesus right now? Right where you&#8217;re at, right in your seat. You can pray with me. Dear Lord Jesus, I&#8217;m a sinner. I believe You died on the cross that You were raised from the grave. I believe that.   Come into my life and forgive me of my sin.   Make me the person You want me to be. I want to be a child of God. I want you to be my Lord and Savior and my King. If you&#8217;re praying that prayer, believing,  the Lord will save you.   Others are here today and you&#8217;ve prayed that prayer;  you believe and you know that the Lord has <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2919.77\">saved <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> you. But there&#8217;s an arena of emptiness right now in your life. There&#8217;s a barrenness  in certain places. Have you cried out to the Lord as Hannah did? Would you cry out and say, Look at me. Look at me right now. Look at me where I&#8217;m at right now. Lord, don&#8217;t forget me. Remember me.   Know this, He will not forget. He will remember.  Lord, we surrender our whole lives to you now in Jesus name, Amen.\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>When we try to take the throne of our own lives, trying to be in control, it always ends with a feeling of barrenness. We feel empty, fruitless, depleted, or broken. Perhaps, you feel this today. The things you do at work feel fruitless or unimportant. You feel depleted at home like you are losing the battle for your marriage or the battle for your children. Maybe you feel stuck, like you have no purpose. Maybe you feel abandoned or like you are fighting through life alone. And as you look to others for help and leadership, whether it\u2019s politicians, priests, or preachers, you have often been disappointed. When we feel this pain it is hard to imagine that turning our lives over to God could make a difference.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":8777,"template":"","tags":[2019],"series":[2747],"scripture-book":[1276],"scripture-chapter":[1334,1335],"speaker":[2007],"class_list":["post-8776","message","type-message","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","tag-exposition","series-the-original-game-of-thrones","scripture-book-1-samuel","scripture-chapter-1334","scripture-chapter-1335","speaker-gary-combs"],"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message\/8776","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/message"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message\/8776\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/8777"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=8776"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=8776"},{"taxonomy":"series","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/series?post=8776"},{"taxonomy":"scripture-book","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/scripture-book?post=8776"},{"taxonomy":"scripture-chapter","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/scripture-chapter?post=8776"},{"taxonomy":"speaker","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/speaker?post=8776"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}