From Hannah's prayer to David's rise — the birth of the monarchy
For the LORD seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the LORD looketh on the heart.
1 Samuel 16:71 Samuel covers roughly a hundred years of Israel's history — from the birth of Samuel around 1105 BC to the death of Saul around 1010 BC. It is a hinge book: the era of the judges ends, the monarchy begins. Three towering figures dominate the narrative — Samuel the last judge and first major prophet, Saul the rejected king, and David the man after God's own heart. Through their interlocking stories, the book traces how God establishes the line that will lead to the Messiah.
The book opens with Hannah's barrenness, her desperate prayer, and the birth of Samuel — given to the LORD from infancy. Samuel grows up serving in the tabernacle under Eli the corrupt priest. God's word comes to him as a child, calling him by name in the night. Samuel becomes the bridge prophet: he transitions Israel from theocracy to monarchy, anoints Saul reluctantly, and later anoints David. His ministry holds the entire book together.
The book's central drama is the rise and fall of Saul. Tall, handsome, chosen by the people themselves, Saul begins well but fractures under pressure. Two great failures (1 Samuel 13 and 15) lead to his rejection. In his place God selects David — the youngest of Jesse's eight sons, a shepherd boy with no political standing. The contrast is the theological point: 'Man looketh on the outward appearance, but the LORD looketh on the heart.' The second half of the book traces David's anointing, his victory over Goliath, his years as a fugitive, and the inexorable rise of the throne God has promised him.
2 chapters per day · with Hannah's song & Mary's Magnificat alongside
When Samuel arrives at Jesse's house to anoint the next king, Jesse parades his seven older sons before the prophet. Each one looks like a king. Samuel keeps thinking he sees the chosen one. God's correction is one of the central theological statements in the entire Old Testament: 'Look not on his countenance, or on the height of his stature... for the LORD seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the LORD looketh on the heart.' The chosen one — David — is out tending the sheep, the youngest, the overlooked. This verse is the foundation for every NT teaching about hypocrisy, humility, and the inner life. God's evaluation criteria are not ours.
Modern readers usually treat the David and Goliath story as a metaphor for underdog triumphs. The original meaning is sharper. Goliath was a 9-foot Philistine champion who blasphemed the God of Israel for forty days. The army of Israel was paralyzed by fear, including their towering king Saul (a head taller than any other Israelite — exactly the kind of man who should have fought Goliath). Instead, a shepherd boy with five smooth stones from the brook steps forward — not because he is brave but because the LORD's reputation is at stake. 'I come to thee in the name of the LORD of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast defied.' The victory belongs to the LORD; David is the instrument. The pattern points to Christ — the unexpected One, despised by the powerful, who slays the giant of sin and death single-handed.
Saul's story is the Bible's most extended psychological portrait of a king who fails. He begins humble — hiding among the supplies at his coronation. He shows real courage and political skill in his early years. But the cracks appear quickly: anxious about delay, he offers an unlawful sacrifice (chapter 13). Commanded to destroy the Amalekites completely, he spares the king and the best livestock — and then lies about it (chapter 15). His response to David's success is paranoid jealousy that becomes murderous obsession. By the end he consults a medium at Endor, having forbidden mediums earlier himself. The Spirit of the LORD departs from him; an evil spirit torments him. Saul is the picture of a man who chose appearance over reality, expedience over obedience, and was systematically destroyed by his own unrepentance. His story is a warning to every leader.
Hannah's prayer-song in 1 Samuel 2 is one of the most theologically rich passages in the Old Testament. After years of barrenness and finally receiving Samuel, she sings: 'My heart rejoiceth in the LORD... the bows of the mighty men are broken, and they that stumbled are girded with strength. They that were full have hired out themselves for bread; and they that were hungry ceased.' The pattern of divine reversal — the lowly exalted, the proud cast down — runs through the whole song. A thousand years later, Mary's Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55) echoes Hannah's song almost verse for verse. The Holy Spirit gave Hannah the template that another faithful Jewish mother would inherit when announcing the coming of the Messiah.