1 Samuel 2
Eli's sons, Hophni and Phinehas, abuse their priestly office, taking choice portions of sacrifices for themselves and sleeping with women who serve at the sanctuary (2:12-17, 22), embodying the spiritual and moral corruption of Shiloh's priesthood that has metastasized under Eli's weak oversight. A man of God pronounces judgment on Eli's house: 'I said that your house and your father's house would walk before me forever, but now the LORD says, Far from it!' (2:30)—a covenant reversal that foreshadows Eli's house's destruction and the rise of a faithful priesthood. Samuel, in contrast to Eli's sons, 'continued to grow in stature and favor with the LORD and with man' (2:26), implying that true priesthood depends on covenantal righteousness, not institutional position, and that the LORD will raise up those faithful to the covenant. The chapter establishes the theological pattern: corrupt leadership (Eli's sons) and weak oversight (Eli's passivity) invite divine judgment, while the young, committed servant (Samuel) embodies the renewal that will follow; the transition from a failed priesthood to true prophecy is underway.
1 Samuel 2:36
And everyone who is left in your house shall come to implore him for a piece of silver or a loaf of bread and shall say: Please put me in one of the priest's places, that I may eat a morsel of bread—the surviving members of Eli's line will be reduced to beggary, seeking scraps from the new priestly establishment. Their former dignity and sustenance are completely reversed.
1 Samuel 2:26
Now the boy Samuel continued to grow and to gain favor both with the LORD and also with the people—*vayigdal Shemu'el* (Samuel grew) contrasts with the moral decay of Eli's sons. His favor (*chesed*, covenant love and grace) with both divine and human realms marks him as chosen.
1 Samuel 2:27
And there came a man of God to Eli and said to him: Thus the LORD has said: I revealed myself to the house of your father when they were in Egypt under Pharaoh's rule—the *ish Elohim* (man of God) appears as a prophetic messenger, recalling the covenantal history. The revelation to the priestly line of Aaron is invoked to condemn Eli's present failures.
1 Samuel 2:28
And I chose him out of all the tribes of Israel to be my priest, to go up to my altar, to burn incense, to wear an ephod before me; and I gave to the house of your father all the food offerings by fire from the people of Israel—the *bachar* (chose) language establishes the priestly privilege as divine election. The *kol mincha'ot* (all grain offerings) are explicitly granted as covenant sustenance.
1 Samuel 2:29
Why then do you scorn my sacrifices and my offerings that I commanded for my dwelling place? And why do you honor your sons more than me by fattening yourselves on the choicest parts of every offering of my people Israel?—the double accusation: (1) *balal* (you scorn) my sacrifices, (2) *atkarta et-baneycha mimeni* (you honor your sons more than me). The verb *bahal*, to regard highly, is inverted—Eli's love for his sons exceeds his fear of the LORD.