It was during one of my early morning devotional times that
I had a very strong impression from the Lord. It was just three words: a new
season. I pondered that phrase and then the Lord directed my attention to the
first chapters of 1 Samuel and the birthing of a new season in Israel.
As a nation, Israel was at a very low point. Chapter three,
verse one tells us that there was no open revelation of the Word and there were
only a few true prophets who would preach righteousness and repentance and
bring the Word of God to the people. The priests were typified by Eli, who was
passive and did little to turn the people away from their sin. Eli’s two sons,
also priests, were blatantly corrupt. Israel was in a pathetic state with its
sinful, immoral religious leaders. At that time, the center of national worship
was in Shiloh.
Elkanah and his family lived a distance from Shiloh and
each year they traveled there to worship and offer sacrifice. One of Elkanah’s
wives was a godly woman named Hannah. Hannah’s husband loved her dearly but she
was desperately unhappy because she had no children—and that broke her heart.
During one of the family’s visits to Shiloh, Hannah went
alone to the temple to pray. She poured out her brokenness and pain to the Lord
and also made a vow that if God would bless her with a son, she would give him
to the Lord for His service all the days of his life (1:11).
Eli the priest saw Hannah silently praying and rebuked her
because he thought she was drunk. When Hannah corrected Eli’s misunderstanding,
he quickly backpedaled and muttered a blessing.
Hannah wanted a son and Eli was so misguided that he did
not recognize her desperate hunger. However, God used this occasion to usher in
a new season for Israel and sweep out the corruption that had built up from the
past. There is much for us to learn from this story, told largely in 1 Samuel chapters
one through four.
Hannah represents the hungry saints who even now are
praying into existence the new thing God is doing. Hannah recognized that she
was barren and refused to accept it as the status
quo. On the contrary, she took her burden and sorrow to the Lord in prayer.
She was persecuted by her husband’s other wife for being barren and chided by
Eli for her intensity in prayer. However, these acts did not deter Hannah but
seemed to strengthen her resolve to see God’s answer.
My dear friends, please understand that if you begin to
pursue the heart of God for a new season in Him, you will be persecuted, not by
the world but by the religious establishment. “He who was born according to the flesh persecuted him who was born
according to the Spirit, so also it is now” (Galatians 4:29, ESV). Largely,
the contemporary church does not want to pray and has replaced following the
Lord with acceptance by the world. They are more interested in numbers than
being the people of God!
Eli, who was simply going through the motions of being a
priest, represents the old corrupt, broken-down religious system. He did not
quickly recognize the voice of the Lord when He spoke. He was extremely passive
toward sin even when it was being carried on within the temple grounds. His
sons were highly immoral to the point of forcing themselves on women who came
to worship and sacrifice. “They did not
know the Lord” (2:12). Eli saw it all, knew about the sin, and did nothing.
Hannah was not the only one whose heart was broken and open
to the Lord. There was a small remnant of faithful men and women of God. One of
the men, most likely a prophet whose name we never get to know, came to Eli and
prophesied what was about to happen. The prophecy established that Eli’s family
(his house, including both of his sons) would be destroyed (see 2:31) and that
God would raise up a new and faithful priest. “I will raise up for Myself a faithful priest who shall do according to
what is in My heart and in My mind. I will build him a sure house” (2:35).
God was about to sweep out the old and bring in the new!
Samuel represents the new thing God is doing. Into the
religious and political confusion that was so clearly seen at that time came a
miracle of God in the person of Samuel. Samuel was a miracle child born to a
barren mother, and the renewal and joy that his birth brought to Hannah
prefigures the renewal and joy that this godly man brought to Israel.
Dear friends, don’t be discouraged by the mess of the
moment. God is still in charge and a new day is about to dawn. Thank God that
there is a praying remnant in our land. They are not deterred by the political
and religious confusion that now reigns. The remnant is “pouring” itself out to
the Lord in prayer. It was the brokenhearted prayer of one woman that God was
waiting for and a new season dawned in Israel—and so it will be in our day!
A new day, a new season is coming!
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