The other day I was reading the story in 1 Samuel about God's calling of Samuel. For those of you who, like me, grew up on the flannel-graph versions of this Sunday School gem, you'll remember that the Lord calls Samuel three times and each time Samuel mistakes him for Eli. After the third time, Eli tells Samuel that if he hears the voice again, he should reply: "Speak Lord, your servant is listening." He does, and the rest is Messianic history.
No wonder this mysterious episode has made it to so many a Sunday School coloring page. It's vivid and compelling and charming; but as I say, I was re-reading it the other day and I realized that, though we often end the telling after the fourth call of Samuel (the "Speak Lord, your servant is listening" one), Samuel is actually called five times in the story, and the "fifth call" is essential to the boy's prophetic ministry. Because when Samuel does recognize the Word of the Lord at last, it turns out to be a prophetic judgment against Eli and his house, one that will make "the ears of everyone who hears it tingle." It's a message so heavy and heart-rending that Samuel, we're told, is afraid to tell the vision to Eli.
And then comes the fifth call: the next morning Eli himself "calls" to Samuel. The narrative accentuates the irony here by using the same verb as before (karaw-- to call), and by putting the same response into Samuel's mouth-- "Here I am." Previously Samuel had mistaken God's voice for Eli's, but now, having responded to God's call, Samuel hears and recognizes Eli's call for what it is. And what it is, in fact, is an invitation to share the terrifying word of the Lord with the very one against whom it has been uttered. It's a call to do the very thing that young Samuel is loathe to do: to speak the prophetic Word to power.
So here's what I'm wondering as I meditate on this "fifth call" of Samuel. If the "fifth call" is the call for ministers of the Word to share it faithfully with God's people, even when it may cause the ears of those who hear it to tingle (inasmuch as Samuel's "fifth call" was a call from Eli to share what God had spoken against him), if the "fifth call" is our invitation to speak the Word of God to "power" when we're most afraid to do so because we're most uncertain of the outcome and we have the most at stake-- if Samuel's story is in some way paradigmatic for the Ministry of the Word, then what would it take for us to speak a willing "Here I am" with Samuel when we receive this "fifth call" in our ministries?
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2 comments:
whoa, thanks for bringing that story to life. great insight.
Dale - thanks for this. I appreciate your insight.
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