1 Samuel is the hinge on which Israel's history turns. It tells the story of how a loose confederation of tribes, led by intermittent judges, became a monarchy—and how ambivalent that transformation was. When the people demand a king "like all the other nations," God grants the request even as he names it a rejection of his own rule, then works through the very institution to carry his promises forward. No book in Scripture wrestles more directly with the meaning and the danger of human power.
This volume guides readers through the book's distinctive architecture: the overlapping lives of Eli, Samuel, Saul, and David, in which each figure rises as the one before him falls. It traces the birth of Israel's monarchy, the emergence of the prophetic office, and the Bible's first fully drawn tragedy in the slow unraveling of Saul—a gifted man undone by insecurity and disobedience.
The book opens with Hannah's song of reversal, in which the proud are brought low and the lowly lifted up, and shows how the entire narrative dramatizes that theme. From the boy Samuel hearing his name in the night, to David facing Goliath, to Saul's desperate visit to the medium at Endor, the familiar episodes are set within the larger argument the book is making about leadership, obedience, and the gap between outward appearance and the condition of the heart.
Rather than examining every verse, 1 Samuel Explained focuses on the larger patterns:
The historical world that produced the text The themes that run throughout the narrative The structure that organizes the whole The ways the book continues to speak to questions of power, authority, and faithfulness today
Written for thoughtful readers, students, and study groups, this guide offers the orientation needed to engage one of Scripture's richest narratives with the understanding it deserves—and to discover why its questions remain as urgent now as when they were first written.
Part of The Bible for Modern Life series—an ongoing collection that explores the meaning, historical setting, and message of individual books of Scripture, one book at a time.
Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
Samuel Whitaker is the author of The Bible for Modern Life series, a book-by-book guide to the Scriptures written for thoughtful modern readers. The series aims to make the historical context, literary structure, and enduring message of each biblical book accessible without requiring specialized training. Whitaker writes for readers who want to understand not only what the biblical texts say but why they continue to matter, approaching each book on its own terms and with attention to both its original setting and its relevance to contemporary life.
„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
Anbieter: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Vereinigtes Königreich
Paperback. Zustand: Brand New. 120 pages. 6.00x0.30x9.00 inches. In Stock. Artikel-Nr. x-197288509X
Anzahl: 2 verfügbar