A Case of Open and Shut: The Five Thresholds in 1 Samuel 1:1-7:2

2010 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-157
Author(s):  
Christopher Meredith

AbstractThough scholars have occasionally noted various parings of the five thresholds of 1 Samuel's first six chapters, the overall spatial construction of the text has generally been neglected. This article argues that the five doors form a spatially organised schema that structures both the text and the described universe, it assesses how the text socially (re) produces space within this matrix and poses questions as to how spatial dialectics and character interaction might collude in the processes of constituting and reconstituting the world as marked out by these thresholds.

2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven C. SALARIS
Keyword(s):  
Samuel 1 ◽  

2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-258
Author(s):  
Reed Carlson

This essay argues that Hannah’s story in 1 Samuel 1–2 is an example of a ‘spirit phenomenon’ in the Hebrew Bible. The story displays an uncanny sensitivity to Hannah’s psychological state, which is consistent with how spirit language is used as self-language in biblical literature. Hannah describes herself as a ‘woman of hard spirit’ (1 Sam. 1.15) and engages in a kind of trance, which is disruptive enough to draw the attention of Eli. Through inner-biblical allusion and intentional alterations in the Old Greek and Dead Sea Scroll versions of 1 Samuel, Hannah comes to be associated with other prophetic women in biblical literature. Several Second Temple Jewish interpreters read Hannah as a prophetess and as a practitioner of spirit ecstasy, culminating in Philo’s association of Hannah with Bacchic possession and in Hannah’s experience at Shiloh serving as a model for Pentecost in the book of Acts.


Numen ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pieter W. Van Der Horst

AbstractIn antiquity prayers were said out loud and silent prayer was regarded as an anomalous practice that was looked upon with great suspicion. It was brought into connection with a variety of base motives which it was feared would be strongly objected to by others, foremost among which are wishes to practice magic, to have illicit sex, or to conceal crimes or criminal plans. It was also feared that one's prayer might be counteracted or undone by more powerful prayers of the opponents. It is only in circles of later (esp. Neo-)Platonism, in the framework of the increasing transcendentalisation in its concept of deity and the corresponding downgrading of anything material or corporeal, that complete silence as the purest form of worship was gradually accepted. This new trend had its influence on the Jewish philosopher Philo and especially on Churchfathers from Clement of Alexandria onwards (and also on some Hermetic and Gnostic circles). But in Jewish and Christian documents there was also another motive that facilitated a gradual acceptance of silent prayer as a respectable form of worship, namely, the biblical story (in 1 Samuel 1) about Hanna's inaudible prayer that was heard by God. It is the combination of these Platonic and biblical influences that brings about a change of attitude towards speechless prayer in both Judaism and Christianity, but the evidence clearly demonstrates that this was a very slow process, because the old suspicions surrounding this phenomenon did not easily disappear.


1987 ◽  
Vol 106 (4) ◽  
pp. 703
Author(s):  
Richard D. Nelson ◽  
Antony F. Campbell

Author(s):  
GUMULYA DJUHARTO
Keyword(s):  
Samuel 1 ◽  

Abstract: Reading Hannah‘s success to overcome life‘s dilemma proved that the true worship based on the sincerity of heart will be a kind of laboratory and clinic for healing. It is a place where believers had an experience of recovery process and finding solution even though someone can give an unsuitable reaction toward their condition. As long as the attitude of trusting God becomes an integral part of believer‘s life, they can always find hope in God.  Keywords: Laboratory, Worship, Reaction, Finding Solution


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