Glancing back at the tiny figure clinging tightly to the old priest’s hand, she drew in a stabilizing breath, straightened her shoulders, and kept walking. Slowly. One foot in front of the other. One step at a time. It was the best she could manage under the circumstances. Her hands shook. Her knees wobbled. Her heart felt like it was being ripped from her chest. The pain was nearly unbearable. Tears clouded her vision, rolled down her cheeks, dripped off her chin. It was the hardest day of her life. Harder than realizing the truth of her barrenness. Harder than seeing her husband choose another woman to bear his sons. Harder than all the years of taunts and abuse at the hands of that same woman. This was the most difficult day of Hannah’s entire life.
For years, she had been travelling to Shiloh with her husband, Elkanah, to offer sacrifices and worship the Lord at the Tabernacle. They never missed a year. Never failed to bring the appropriate sacrifice. Never skipped the sacrificial meal. They were faithful. Dutiful. Obedient. They were also childless. Hannah had been unable to produce a child in all the years of their marriage. It broke her heart. Especially as she watched Elkanah’s other wife, Peninah, birth multiple children. She wasn’t greedy. She didn’t need as many children as Peninah had. Hannah simply wanted to present her husband with a son. One. It was the cry of her heart. The request she brought before the Lord year after year. The prayer that seemed destined to forever go unanswered.
Slipping away after the sacrificial meal, Hannah would make her way to the Tabernacle to pray. In tears and fasting, she would beg God for a child. Every year. Her request never changed. Not when her faith faltered. Not when her hope dimmed. Not when the heavens remained silent, her womb still. She never gave up. She kept coming. Not just to Shiloh. Not just to the Tabernacle. Not just for the sacrifice. Hannah kept coming to talk to God.
That year had been no different. Arriving in Shiloh, Hannah had gone through the motions of everything they did there. Sacrifice. Worship. Meal. She barely made it through. Peninah was especially spiteful this year. Her snide remarks were more barbed than usual. It was all Hannah could do to stay at the table, stomach the food, survive the acerbic jabs. She wasn’t hungry. At all. Her heart hurt. Intensely. Her soul felt battered and bruised by every unanswered prayer she had ever prayed. Doubts and fears and hopelessness wrecked her being. Excusing herself as soon as possible, Hannah fled to the refuge of the Tabernacle. She needed to talk to God.
Once there, a volley of words erupted, punctuated by ragged sobs and an outpouring of pent-up tears. Hannah had things she wanted to say to God. She couldn’t take this anymore. The pain. The sadness. The sorrow. She couldn’t handle another unanswered prayer. She didn’t have the emotional strength to endure another year of empty arms and a perpetually broken heart. So she proposed a deal. Made a promise. Offered an exchange. A son for her. A servant for Him. If God would bless her with a son, she would give the child back to Him. Completely. Physically. Literally leave him at Shiloh in the service of the Lord. From the time he was weaned to the end of his life. Her son would belong solely to God. His boy for His purpose. And God said, “Deal.”
Hannah didn’t mention her promise to Elkanah. Not at first. Not until the conversation became necessary. It must have been an enormous shock to Elkanah. What did she mean they weren’t keeping the boy at home?! They were his parents! She had done what?! Promised who?! Resting his face in his hands, Elkanah dragged in a deep breath and sorted his thoughts. Accepted reality. There was nothing he could do to change the situation. As unimpressed as he was with the bargain, he was no less duty-bound to fulfill it. The promise was already made. To God. The terms were already set. There was no negotiating. What was done was done. When their son, Samuel, was weaned, Hannah would take him to the Tabernacle and leave him there. Elkanah wished her good luck with that. He honestly wasn’t sure she could make herself do it. He said as much. Said he knew God would have to give her the strength to keep that promise. Because Elkanah knew what we are all so loath to remember or admit. Promises are easy to make, but difficult to keep. Even promises to God. Elkanah suspected that would be the case with this one. He wasn’t wrong.
Keeping that promise had to have cost Hannah. Deeply. Childhood milestones would pass without her being part of them. An annual visit was not the type of mothering her young self had thought she would do. The temptation to make up an excuse, find a reason to rescind, or delay the fulfillment of her promise must have been overwhelmingly strong. But Hannah didn’t. Instead, she enjoyed every moment of his infancy and toddlerhood until he was weaned. Then, she packed his tiny clothes in a bag, gathered his favorite blanket, clasped his tiny hand in hers, and walked him up the path to the Tabernacle. His new home. Forever. Fulfilling her promise to God.
Scholars believe Samuel would have been 3-4 years old when Hannah left him at the Tabernacle, some 15-20 miles from her home in Ramah. It doesn’t seem so very far away to us. A quick drive. A phone call. A door dash away. Except Hannah had none of those options. There were no cars, no trains, no rapid transit systems. There were no telephones, no cell phones, no internet. She couldn’t drop by once a week, call every night, or dash dinner to his door. She wouldn’t know if he fell ill, caught a cold, skinned his knee. Unless it turned into something life-threatening, no one would notify her. Even then, by the time a messenger came to get her and she travelled to him, she might not make it in time to hold his hand as he expelled his last breath. When she threw that final glance back at her little boy, Hannah knew it might well be the last time she saw him.
Leaving her son to be raised by Eli may well have seemed risky to Hannah as well. His own sons were an indictment of his child-rearing abilities. They were wretched sinners. Flat out rebellious. Men of distinct ill-repute. Their violations of God’s laws were known far and wide. Relishing their sin, they were not the type of men Hannah would choose to influence her son’s life. But she realized something. She wasn’t leaving her son with Eli. She was leaving Him with God. The same God who had heard her gut-wrenching cries for a child, accepted her bargain, and given her strength to keep her promise. None of that had been done on her own. It wasn’t her own strength now. It was God. The same God who helped her keep her promise.
Transferring Samuel’s worldly goods into Eli’s hands, Hannah placed her son in the elderly priest’s care. Running her hand through his soft hair one more time, she kissed his cheek, hugged him close, and she walked away. A torrent of tears ran down her face as she placed one foot in front of the other. Not the same type of tears that flowed in the Tabernacle years before. These were different. Mingled with her tears of sadness were tears of joy. God had done it! God had answered her prayer. He had given her a son. He had done such amazing work in her heart that she was able to find the strength to give that child back to Him. He had done exactly as Elkanah had said. The Lord had helped her fulfill her vow. He had done marvelous things! (I Samuel 1-2)
Walking away from her son, Hannah again went to pray. She had things to say to God. Again. Good things. Triumphant things. Exultant things. Not just because God had answered her ragged prayer from the past. Not because she now had a son. Not even because Peninah had been forced to shut her mouth. Of all the things Hannah had to be grateful for, she praised God for sharing His strength. With her. For the entirety of her life. Strength that carried her through years of barrenness. Strength to endure Peninah’s obnoxious taunting. Strength to finally carry and give birth to a son. And strength to help her keep her promise to God. When it was hard. When her heart was breaking. When fear overtook her. When her humanity wanted to find a way out of it. God did exactly what Elkanah said he hoped God would do, He helped Hannah keep her promise. (I Samuel 2:1)
On some level, we all identify with Hannah. We are all intimately acquainted with making promises to God. We do it regularly. In an attempt to achieve our desired outcome, we rashly vow to do something, give something, sacrifice something in return for the granting of our requests. Unfortunately, when the moment comes to follow through, we often fail. We make excuses. Create caveats. Find ways to renege on our promises. We simply do not have the internal fortitude to keep our promises to God. Not regularly. Not on our own. Not without His strength to carry us. Because promises are easier to make than to keep. Especially ones that cost us, make us uncomfortable, or force us to place ourselves fully in His care. Yet in God’s care is the safest place to be. (Psalm 91:1-2; 32:7; 46:1; Proverbs 3:5-6)
Hannah found that out. Walking away from Samuel, fulfilling her promise to God, was the hardest thing she had ever done in her life. But Samuel wasn’t alone. He was with God. He grew up in God’s presence. Every year, when Hannah came back to visit, she saw her son. She watched as he grew up to be a man of God, fully committed to following God no matter what anyone around him was doing. She watched as God blessed him and people loved him. And, as every mother proud of her son would do, surely Hannah broke into praise again. Praise for all God had done in Samuel’s life, His protection, provision, and preservation. Praise that God had heard her prayers. Praise that He had answered. Praise that God had given her strength to keep her promise, no matter how many reasons her mind offered not to.
May praise be your answer, too. When everything is said and done, when the answer to your prayer is before you, may you keep your promises to God. All of them. Even when you would rather not. Even when you plain don’t want to. Even when you don’t think you have the courage or strength to fulfill them. You do. You can. Through God. When it is hard. When it is painful. When it isn’t what you wish it was. God will pour into you the strength to keep your promises to Him. Strength like Hannah. (Philippians 4:13; II Corinthians 3:5; Matthew 19:26; Romans 8:37; Ecclesiastes 5:4-5; Deuteronomy 23:23; Psalm 76:11)
