1 Samuel 3
The LORD calls Samuel by name in the night, but Samuel, not yet knowing the LORD's voice directly, repeatedly goes to Eli (3:4-9); on the fourth call, Eli recognizes that it is the LORD summoning Samuel and instructs him to respond 'Speak, LORD, for your servant is listening' (3:9)—a prayer that marks Samuel's willing reception of the divine word. The LORD reveals to Samuel that Eli's house will be judged: 'I am about to do something in Israel that will make the ears of everyone who hears about it tingle' (3:11), and Samuel reports the entire message to Eli, who accepts the judgment with resignation ('He is the LORD; let him do what is good to him,' 3:18). Samuel's growth in authority is marked by the observation that 'none of his words fell to the ground' (3:19)—a phrase meaning his prophecies were fulfilled and his word was reliable, establishing him as a prophet whose utterance is covenantally binding. The chapter affirms that prophecy—the direct communication of the LORD's word—becomes the foundation for Israel's leadership in the transition from judges to kingship, and Samuel's willingness to hear and report the divine word, even when it condemns his mentor Eli, demonstrates the priority of covenant fidelity over human loyalty.
1 Samuel 3:1
Now the boy Samuel was serving the LORD under Eli; and the word of the LORD was rare in those days; there was no frequent vision—the *dabar YHWH* (word of the LORD), the foundation of prophecy, is scarce (*yaqar*, precious, rare). The absence of *chazon* (vision) marks a spiritual drought, a famine of revelation prior to Samuel's call.
1 Samuel 3:2
At that time Eli, whose eyesight had begun to grow dim so that he could not see, was lying down in his own place—Eli's physical blindness (*va'ad orot eynayim ledimot* literally, 'until the lights of his eyes dimmed') is symbolic of spiritual darkness. He cannot see what is coming, neither his sons' judgment nor Samuel's call.
1 Samuel 3:3
The lamp of God had not yet gone out, and Samuel was lying down in the temple of the LORD, where the ark of the covenant of God was—*ner Elohim* (lamp of God) refers to the golden lampstand (*menorah*) in the holy place, burning continuously. Samuel lies in proximity to the *aron brit YHWH* (ark of covenant), in the innermost sanctuary, marking him as set apart for encounter.
1 Samuel 3:4
Then the LORD called, Samuel! Samuel! and he said, Here I am—*vayiqra YHWH et-Shemu'el* (the LORD called Samuel), the double name expressing urgency and intimacy. Samuel's *hineni* (Here I am) is the posture of obedient availability, echoing Abraham, Jacob, and Moses.
1 Samuel 3:5
And he ran to Eli, and said: Here I am, for you called me—the boy's immediate response to what he takes for Eli's voice shows his eagerness to serve, yet also his ignorance of the divine voice. He has not yet learned to distinguish the LORD's call from human summons.