1 Samuel
3.1-20, John 1.43-end
In today’s
readings we have two stories about people who took a bit of getting through to,
who just didn’t seem to be able to hear or see something which they needed to. Nathanael
can’t believe that Jesus might be the Messiah; Samuel takes all night to
realise that God is speaking to him and the old priest Eli has been unable or
unwilling to hear the voice of God for many years. I expect we can all
sympathise with them. I’m sure we’ve all been confronted with a truth about
someone or something which, looking back, we feel we should have known all
along. Worse still, perhaps we realise that we did know it, but couldn’t
acknowledge it.
Why didn’t governments
see Covid coming and make better preparation for it?
Why
couldn’t the Post Office have seen that the financial losses they had spotted
were a glitch in the computer system, not a sudden outbreak of widespread
criminality among their subpostmasters and mistresses.
On a
personal level we might ask ourselves why we didn’t we take notice of the
niggling symptoms that later turned out to be a serious illness?
Or Why we didn’t
spot the warning signs of a relationship that was getting into difficulties?
Or Why it
took us so long to realise that were called into, or out of, a particular role
or career?
In
hindsight it all seems so obvious, but so often our vision is clouded and our
ears stopped.
In
Nathanael’s case it seems to be prejudice which gets in the way of him seeing
the truth about Jesus. “A Messiah from Nazareth! You’ve got to be joking” he
says to his friends. We’re not sure why Nazareth seemed such a dodgy place to
hail from, but presumably people at the time would have understood. It might
have been because the northern territory of Galilee was more mixed ethnically
and religiously than the southern lands of Judea around Jerusalem. It was also
where the majority of the occupying Roman soldiers were stationed, forcing the
people into greater collaboration with them. Or perhaps Nazareth just had a bad
reputation – a backwater, hicksville place people wanted to avoid. Whatever it
was though, Nathanael seems convinced that Nazarenes are not Messiah material,
and he can’t get past that.
It‘s only
when he meets Jesus that he realises his mistake. This man knows him, somehow,
even better than Nathanael knows himself, because he sees Nathanael’s potential
as a disciple, something which was also way off Nathanael’s radar. Seeing a new
truth about Jesus enables him to see a new truth about himself.
The Old
Testament story of Eli and Samuel is a more complex tale, and a sadder one. Eli
was the old priest at the shrine of Shiloh where the Ark of the Covenant – the
symbol of God’s presence in Israel - was kept. He had two adult sons who should
have followed him as priests in this important position. But they had gone off
the rails and are abusing their positions. They are stealing the offerings that
people are bringing to Shiloh. Eli knows this at some level, but he’s never
quite found the courage or energy to confront them. In the end, of course, they
are responsible for themselves, but at least Eli could have tried to influence
them, and it seems he hasn’t.
And that’s
where Samuel comes in, a young boy whose mother, Hannah, had brought him to the
sanctuary for Eli to bring up as his own. It might seem like an odd thing for a loving mother to do, but there is,
of course, a back story. Hannah is one of two wives of her husband, Elkanah .
The other wife has borne him lots of children, but Hannah hasn’t been able to
conceive, and her co-wife and step-children never let her forget it, making her
life a misery. In desperation, Hannah comes to the shrine at Shiloh and prays
for a child. Her prayers are so passionate that Eli thinks she must be drunk,
but when she explains the situation, he assures her that God had heard her
prayer, and that she will have a son. It all happens as he said it would and
once the child is weaned, Hannah decides that, in thanksgiving, she will
entrust the child to Eli to help at the shrine as soon as he is old enough to
leave her. As I said, it seems like an odd decision, but maybe he will be safer
there than at home with step-brothers and sisters who treated his mother so
badly, and will probably do the same to him. Whatever Hannah’s motivation, it
is clear that Hannah has realised that her child matters, not only to her, but to
the people of Israel and that God is calling him to do something important.
But, as the
story says “the word of the Lord was rare in those days; visions were not
widespread”, so when God literally calls to him, one dark night as he lies
asleep in the sanctuary at Shiloh, it takes a while for both Samuel and Eli to
work out what is going on. And when Samuel finally does say, “speak Lord for
your servant is listening”, the message he is asked to give Eli is grim.
It is the
end of the road for Eli’s household. His sons will eventually be killed in
battle, and Eli himself will die of sorrow. No wonder Samuel seems reluctant to
pass this message on. But Eli finds the courage to urge Samuel to tell the
truth, no matter what it is, and by doing that he teaches Samuel a vital lesson
which he will need to draw on often in the future – that the truth, however
painful, can’t be avoided forever.
Samuel goes
on to be one of Israel’s most important prophets, instrumental in the lives of
King Saul and King David. He is often called by God to challenge them – and
those who challenge kings need all the courage they can muster. I like to hope
that Eli would have been glad, for all his own failures, to know that he had
been able to play at least a little part in God’s work.
And that is
what it is about – God’s work. Because it is most often where the pain and the
mess are that God is. We see this in Jesus, born in a dung-strewn stable,
growing up in that dodgy town of Nazareth, dying on a cross, alone and reviled,
looking to all the world as if he had failed. Who would have thought that God
could be in these squalid places, in these squalid things? Not the Magi who
headed first for Herod’s palace. Not Nathanael with his blinkered views. Not
the horrified disciples who ran away from the crucifixion. But that is where
God was, at work in the world through Christ. And that is where he still is. In
the places, the people, the situations we would rather not see at all – the things
within ourselves we’d rather bury or ignore. It is there that God waits
patiently with his healing and his love because it’s there that we need him
most. Turn away from that place and we turn away from God too.
I wonder
what would happen today if we were to say, as Samuel does, “Speak, Lord, for
your servant is listening?” I don’t know, and that’s why it frightens me, as
perhaps it does you, but if we are serious in our search for God’s presence in
our lives and in our world then the places where we least want to be may turn
out to be the very places where we will find him. Amen
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