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SAMUEL , a prominent figure in Old Testament See also: history, was See also: born at Ramah and was dedicated to the service of Yahweh at the sanctuary of See also: Shiloh where his youth was spent with Eli (q.v.).' Here he announced the impending See also: fate of the priesthood and gained reputation throughout Israel as a See also: prophet
.
Best known as " See also: king-maker," two distinct accounts are preserved of his share in the institution of the
See also: monarchy
.
In one, the See also: Philistines overthrow Israel at Ebenezer near Aphek, Eli's sons
' The name Samuel (Shemu'el), on the See also: analogy of Penuel, Reuel, seems to mean " name (i.e. manifestation) of El " (See also: God)
.
Other interpretations are " posterity of God " or " his name (shemo; perhaps Yahweh's) is God." " Heard of God," based on t Sam. i
.
20, is quite impossible and the interpretation of the passage is really only appropriate to See also: Saul (" the asked one ") : the two names are sometimes confused in the Septuagint (Ency. ib. col
.
4303, n
.
3)
.
Ramah is presumably er-Ram, 5 m
.
N. of Jerusalem (probably the Arimathaea of Matt. See also: xxvii
.
57), or See also: Bet Rima, W. of Jiljilia (Gilgal), and N.W. of Beitin, i.e
.
See also: Bethel (cf. the Ramathaim of 1 Mace. xi
.
34).are slain, and the ark is captured (I Sam. iv.)
.
After a See also: period of oppression, Samuel suddenly reappears as a See also: great religious See also: leader of Israel, summons the See also: people to return to Yahweh, and convenes a See also: national See also: assembly at See also: Mizpah
.
The Philistines are defeated at Ebenezer (near Mizpah) through the See also: direct inter-position of Yahweh, and Samuel rules peacefully as a theocratic See also: judge (vii)
.
But in his old age the elders demand a king, his sons are corrupt, a monarchy and a military leader are wanted (viii
.
3, 5, 20)
.
The See also: request for a monarchy is a deliberate offence against Yahweh (viii
.
7, cf. it
.
19, xii
.
12); nevertheless, an assembly is called, and the people are warned of the drawbacks of monarchical institutions (viii. i1-21; note the milder attitude in Deut. xvii
.
14-20)
.
At Mizpah, after another solemn warning, the sacred See also: lot is taken and falls upon Saul of Benjamin, who, however, is not at first unanimously accepted (x
.
17-27a)
.
About a See also: month later (x
.
27b; see Revised Version, margin), Saul—with Samuel (xi . 7)—leads an army of Israel andSee also: Judah to deliver Jabesh-Gilead from the See also: Ammonites, and is now recognized as king
.
Samuel in a farewell address formally abdicates his office, reviews the past history, and, after convincing the people of the responsibility they had incurred in choosing a king, promises to remain always their intercessor (xii., cf
.
Jer. xv
.
I)
.
So, according to one view, Samuel's See also: death marks a vital change in the fortunes of Israel (See also: xxv. i, See also: xxviii
.
3, 6, 15)
.
But, according to an earlier account, instead of a See also: state of See also: peace after the defeat of the Philistines (vii
.
14) the people groan under their yoke, and the position of Israel moves Yahweh to pity
.
Samuel is a See also: local seer consulted by Saul, and is bidden by Yahweh to see in the youth the future ruler
.
Saul is privately anointed and receives various signs as proof of his new destiny (ix. i-x. i6)
.
Despite the straitened circumstances of Israel, an army is mustered, a sudden See also: blow is struck at the Philistines, and, as before, super-natural assistance is at See also: hand
.
The See also: Hebrews who had fled across the See also: Jordan (xiii
.
7), or who had sought See also: refuge in caverns (xiii
.
6,
xiv. ii), or had joined the enemy (xiv
.
21), rallied together and a decisive victory is obtained
.
That these two accounts are absolutely contradictory is now generally recognized by Biblical scholars, and it is to the former (and later) of them that the See also: simple See also: story of Samuel's youth at Shiloh will belong
.
Next we find that Samuel's See also: interest on behalf of the Israelite king is transferred to See also: David, the founder of the Judaean dynasty, and it is his See also: part to announce the rejection of Saul and Yahweh's new decision (xiii
.
7b-I5a, xv
.
10-35, xxviii
.
17), to anoint the See also: young David, and, as See also: head of a small community of prophets, to protect him from the hostility of Saul (xvi
.
1-13, xix
.
18-24)
.
All these features in the See also: life of Samuel reflect the varying traditions regarding a figure who, like Elijah and Elisha, held an important place in N
.
Israelite history . That he was an Ephrathite and lived at Ramah may only be due to the incorporation of oneSee also: cycle of specifically local tradition; the name of his grandfather Jerohaln (or See also: Jerahmeel, so Septuagint) suggests a See also: southern origin, and one may compare the relation between Saul and the See also: Kenites (I Sam
.
xv
.
6) or See also: Jehu and the See also: Rechabites (2 See also: Kings x
.
15)
.
But, although his great victory in r Sam. vii. may imply that he was properly a secular leader, comparable to See also: Othniel, Gideon or See also: jephthah ee I Sam. xii
.
II, cf
.
Heb. xi
.
32), the idea of non-hereditary rulers over all Israel in the pre-monarchical age is a later theory (see See also: JUDGES)
.
However, so epoch-making an event as the institution of the monarchy naturally held a prominent place in later ideas and encouraged the growth of tradition
.
The Saul who became the first king of N
.
Israel must needs be indebted to the influence of the prophet (cf
.
Jehu in 2 Kings ix.) . While the figure of Samuel grows in grandeur, the disastrous fate of Saul invited explanation, which is found in his previous acts of disobedience (I Sam. xv., xxviii . 16–18; cf . Ahab, I Kings xx . 35-43) . Further, while on the oneSee also: side the institution of the monarchy is subsequently regarded as hostile to the pre-See also: eminence of Yahweh, Samuel's connexion with the history of David belongs to a relatively See also: late stage in the history of the written traditions where events are viewed from a specifically Judaean aspect
.
Samuel's name ultimately becomes a by-word for the inauguration and observance of religious See also: custom (seer Chron. ix
.
22, See also: xxvi
.
28, 2 Chron. See also: xxxv
.
18, Ps. xcix
.
6, Ecclus. xlvi
.
13 sqq.)
.
According to the late See also: post-exilic genealogies he was of Levitical origin (I Chron
.
Vt
.
28, 33)
.
See further DAVID; SAMUEL, BOOKS OF; SAUL
.
(S
.
A
.
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