Overview of 1 Samuel

Settings: Shiloh, Gibeah, Ramah

1 Samuel Overview

It begins with a woman weeping in a temple. Hannah cannot have children. She pours out her grief to God so intensely that the priest thinks she is drunk. God hears her. Samuel is born. And from that single answered prayer, the entire transition from judges to kings begins to unfold.

Samuel grows up in the tabernacle and becomes the last judge and first great prophet. Israel watches the nations and wants what they have. They want a king. God warns them what kings cost. They insist. So Saul is chosen – tall, handsome, impressive by every human measure. He wins early battles and unites the tribes. Then power does what power always does to a heart not fully surrendered. Saul obeys selectively, makes excuses, and performs religion without repentance. Samuel speaks the sentence that echoes through all of Scripture: obedience is better than sacrifice.

God sends Samuel to Bethlehem to anoint the next king. Not the oldest son. Not the tallest. A shepherd boy so far from the family’s thinking that his father did not even call him in from the fields. David. And from that day the book becomes his long, slow, wilderness preparation – Goliath falls, Jonathan’s covenant holds, Saul hunts him through caves, and the promise waits.

The Author's Vision

The author writes from the vantage point of someone who has watched two men given the same opportunity produce opposite outcomes, and traced the difference to a single factor. Saul had the anointing and the early victories. What he lacked was a heart that trusted God when obedience was costly. The author holds that contrast up and asks the reader to look honestly at their own heart.

The Audience of Book

First Samuel was written for people grappling with the nature of true leadership. They had watched judges, prophets, and now kings, and the track record was sobering. The book speaks to anyone who has placed hope in a human leader and watched it collapse, and who needs to know why God’s chosen king looked nothing like anyone expected.

Key Themes of 1 Samuel

Samuel’s Birth and Calling (1 Samuel 1–3)

Israel’s story of leadership begins not in a palace but in the quiet grief of Hannah’s barrenness. God answers her prayer and raises Samuel in the tabernacle under Eli. While the priesthood grows corrupt, God calls a young boy in the night and establishes him as His prophet. From the beginning, God shows that He raises leaders according to His own purposes, not human expectation.

Israel Demands a King (1 Samuel 4–8)

Israel attempts to control God’s power by carrying the ark into battle, only to suffer defeat and humiliation before the Philistines. Even after God restores the ark and grants victory through Samuel, the people demand a king like the surrounding nations. Their request reveals a deeper problem: they want visible security rather than trusting the unseen rule of God.

Saul’s Rise and Rebellion (1 Samuel 9–15)

Saul begins with promise. Chosen by God and anointed by Samuel, he possesses the stature and appearance the people desire in a king. Yet his reign slowly unravels through impatience, fear of public opinion, and selective obedience. Each decision appears reasonable, but together they reveal a heart unwilling to fully submit to God. What begins in humility ends in rejection.

Saul’s Rise and Rebellion (1 Samuel 9–15)

While Saul’s kingdom weakens, God secretly prepares a new king. David, the youngest son of Jesse, is anointed because God looks not at outward appearance but at the heart. His victory over Goliath demonstrates that faith, not military strength, determines the outcome of battles. Yet David’s rise brings danger, forcing him to live as a fugitive while Saul pursues him.

David’s Rise (1 Samuel 16–23)

David twice finds himself with the opportunity to kill Saul and end his suffering. Instead, he refuses to harm the Lord’s anointed. Even while unjustly hunted, David entrusts justice to God rather than seizing the throne by force. His restraint reveals the character of a king who understands that God alone appoints and removes rulers.

David’s Future (1 Samuel 30–31)

As Saul’s reign collapses, David begins to step toward the future God has prepared for him. After recovering what was lost at Ziklag, David learns of Saul’s death in battle against the Philistines. The fall of Saul closes a tragic chapter in Israel’s history, while quietly preparing the way for David’s kingdom to begin.

What We Can Learn Form This Book

About God

  • God hears the prayers of the desperate and the overlooked, as He heard Hannah weeping in the temple.
  • God evaluates by heart not by appearance, height, experience, or the world’s definition of readiness.
  • God takes obedience seriously and will not indefinitely overlook selective compliance dressed as service.
  • God prepares His chosen leaders through long hidden difficult seasons before placing them on the platform.
  • God is patient with human demands but never abandons His own purposes, even when He accommodates them.

About Humanity

  • We repeatedly choose leaders based on what impresses us rather than what God values.
  • Power exposes what is already in a heart – it does not create new character, it reveals existing character.
  • We excuse our disobedience with reasons that feel legitimate in the moment and are hollow in retrospect.
  • Waiting for God’s timing while under pressure is one of the hardest and most defining tests of faith.
  • True loyalty, like Jonathan’s friendship with David, chooses the right person over personal advantage.

About God’s Plan

  • The Messiah will be a king from David’s line, and that line begins its establishment in Bethlehem here.
  • The anointed one – the Mashiach – is a concept introduced through Samuel’s anointing of both Saul and David.
  • God’s pattern of choosing the unlikely, the youngest, the overlooked, runs from Abel to Joseph to David to Jesus.
  • The failure of every human king in Scripture is building the case for the one perfect King who never fails.
  • The prophetic office modelled by Samuel points forward to the Prophet greater than Moses promised in Deuteronomy.

Key Verses of 1 Samuel

From 1 Samuel, these verses reveal a God who hears the desperate, looks past appearances, demands genuine obedience, and prepares His chosen through seasons of waiting, assuring us that the same God is at work in every hidden season right now.

Reflection of Jesus From This Book

First Samuel introduces the anointed king from Bethlehem who defeats the enemy the nation could not face, and every element points directly to the greater Son of David who accomplishes what no human king ever could.

1 Samuel 1:11 - The Son Dedicated to God

Luke 2:22-23 – Hannah dedicates the son she prayed for entirely to God’s service, pointing to Mary presenting Jesus at the temple as the Son given wholly to the Father’s purposes.

1 Samuel 2:10 - The Horn of His Anointed

Luke 1:46-55 – Hannah’s prayer closes with a prophecy about the Lord exalting His anointed King, and Mary’s Magnificat echoes it almost word for word as the fulfilment arrives.

1 Samuel 16:1 - The Anointed from Bethlehem

Matthew 2:1-6 – Samuel is sent to Bethlehem to anoint God’s chosen king, and centuries later the Magi follow a star to the same town where the final and perfect King is born.

1 Samuel 17:45-47 - Victory Through the Unlikely Deliverer

1 Corinthians 1:27-29 – David defeats the giant with a sling and the name of God, pointing to Christ who defeats sin and death through what the world calls weakness – a cross.

1 Samuel 21:6 – The Bread Given to the Anointed

Matthew 12:3–4 – David receives the consecrated bread when in need, a moment Jesus later references to reveal that the Son of Man stands above ritual law and provides true sustenance for His people.

1 Samuel 23:17 – The King Who Will Surely Reign

Luke 1:32–33 – Jonathan acknowledges that David will surely become king over Israel. In the same way, the angel announces that Jesus will reign on David’s throne and His kingdom will never end.
First Samuel sets the stage for the Davidic line that culminates in Jesus – the anointed King from Bethlehem, the shepherd who defeats every giant, the priest who never fails.

Practical Applications for This Book

  • Let God redefine your measures – You are evaluating yourself by what you see. God is looking somewhere else entirely. Tend your heart.
  • Obey when it costs you – Saul’s disobedience always came with a reason. The test of real trust is the moment obedience is expensive.
  • Name the giant in God’s name – What has you paralysed is not bigger than the God whose name you carry into the room.
  • Don’t cut short your wilderness – David’s years as a fugitive were his formation. The waiting that feels like waste is often God’s most serious work in you.
  • Be a Jonathan – Someone in your life is carrying a calling that threatens your position. True friendship chooses them anyway.

"The Lord does not see as man sees. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart."

First Samuel is the sound of God reaching past everything impressive to find the one thing that actually matters.

A woman weeping in a corner no one notices. A boy sleeping in the dark when the voice comes. A shepherd so forgotten that his own father does not call him in from the field when a prophet arrives to anoint the next king.

These are the people God is looking for. Not the obvious candidates. And your heart is already the one He is searching.

3 Stories of This Book

First Samuel reveals a God who hears the silent cry, looks past every human credential, and takes the longest route to accomplish the most permanent result.

He hears in the temple when no one else does – Hannah’s lips moved but no sound came out. God heard every word. There is no prayer too quiet or too broken for Him to miss.

He speaks in the night to the young and unproven – Samuel was a child the first time God called his name. Eli had stopped hearing. God went to the one who was still listening.

He rejects the impressive and chooses the hidden – Seven brothers parade before Samuel and God says no to every one of them. The eighth is in a field with sheep. That is always the one.

He removes what He cannot work through – Saul’s kingship emptied from the inside when obedience left. God did not abandon Saul. Saul abandoned the posture that made God’s presence possible.

He prepares through the wilderness, not the palace – David spent years fighting bears and lions, writing songs in the dark, and trusting God when the promise looked dead. That was the curriculum.

He honours those who honour His anointed – David refused to harm Saul even when Saul was hunting him. What you do with authority entrusted to someone else reveals everything about what God can trust you with.

The God of 1 Samuel is still searching for the same thing He has always searched for: not the tallest person in the room, but the one whose heart is fully His.

First Samuel is the story of every person who has ever been overlooked, ever been chosen, ever been corrupted by power, or ever sat in a wilderness wondering when the promise is going to arrive.

We pray like Hannah at the end of ourselves – She was not performing devotion. She was pouring out genuine desperation. God met her there. He still does.

We demand what we think we need like Israel – Give us a king. Everyone else has one. God gives the warning. We insist. Then we discover what the warning was for.

We look impressive like Saul – Tall, humble at first, winning early. Everything about Saul looks right from the outside. The inside is the problem. It always is.

We make excuses for partial obedience like Saul at Amalek – He kept the best of what God said to destroy. He had reasons. Reasonable people always do. But the question is never whether the reason sounds good.

We wait in the wilderness like David – Anointed and then immediately hunted. Chosen and then forced to hide in caves. The wilderness between the promise and its fulfilment is where character is actually built.

We form covenants like Jonathan – He gave David his robe, his armour, his sword. He chose the friend over the throne he stood to inherit. Loyalty that costs something is the only kind that counts.

We are tempted to take matters into our own hands – David had Saul at his mercy. Twice. His men urged him both times. He refused. Waiting for God to act when acting yourself is possible is one of the deepest tests of trust.

The same God who found the overlooked shepherd in a field in Bethlehem sees every person sitting in an unexpected waiting room, and His search has not stopped.

First Samuel speaks into every person who has ever felt overlooked, every leader who has felt the weight of power, and every believer sitting in a wilderness wondering what God is doing with the time.

In our obscurity, God says He has already found you – David was not discovered. He was chosen before Samuel arrived. Your hiddenness is not the obstacle to your calling. It may be the preparation for it.

In our selective obedience, God says the part you held back is the part He asked for – Saul kept the best sheep. God called it rebellion. What we withhold from full surrender is always the exact thing He asked us to release.

In our desperation, God says your Hannah-prayer is being heard – The most unanswered-feeling prayer in the room is the one God is already moving toward. Pray it again.

In our impatience, God says Saul’s mistake is available to you too – Pressure does not suspend the requirement to wait on God. It intensifies it.

In our wilderness seasons, God says this is not wasted – Every person who will ever lead has a version of those caves. Do not try to escape the formation. Let it do its work.

In our temptation to take what is already promised, God says wait – The throne was already David’s by anointing. Taking it by force would have been efficient. What is genuinely yours does not need to be seized.

First Samuel is not ancient political history. It is a mirror for every person asking why the promise has not arrived yet, and the answer is always the same: God is working. Not slowly. Precisely.

Reflection on 1 Samuel

“The Lord does not see as man sees; for man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.” – 1 Samuel 16:7

Maybe you have been measuring yourself by the wrong scale.

By what you have accomplished, or not. By how you compare to the person beside you. By whether anyone has noticed yet.

God is not using that scale. He never has.

He went to a field outside Bethlehem and found a boy that his own father had not thought worth calling in. He saw something in that boy that none of the seven impressive brothers carried.

He sees the same way now. Not what you have built. Not what you look like.

He is looking at your heart. And if it is turned toward Him, you are already exactly what He is looking for.

How 1 Samuel Connects to The Rest of Scripture

First Samuel is the foundation stone of the Davidic line that carries the entire Messianic hope of the Old Testament, and its themes thread forward through every book that follows.

  • Hannah’s song in chapter 2 is echoed almost word for word in Mary’s Magnificat in Luke 1 – the same reversal happening in Hannah’s story is happening in the birth of Jesus: God exalts the humble and brings down the proud.
  • The concept of the anointed one introduced in 1 Samuel becomes the defining title of Jesus throughout the New Testament – every time Christ is called Messiah, the thread leads back to the oil Samuel poured.
  • David’s friendship with Jonathan is one of Scripture’s great pictures of covenant love – pointing forward to the covenant love of Christ who lays down His life for His friends.
  • The pattern of the overlooked younger son chosen over the impressive older one runs from Abel to Isaac to Jacob to Joseph to David to Jesus – God’s kingdom consistently advances through the one the world would not have chosen.

When you understand 1 Samuel, you understand why the Messiah came from a small town, to an obscure family, born in a stable – because God has always been in the business of choosing what the world overlooks.

Living 1 Samuel in Action

This week, bring one area before God where you have been measuring yourself by the wrong scale or waiting on a promise that feels overdue.

“The Lord looks at the heart.” – 1 Samuel 16:7

He is not waiting for you to be more impressive.

You've Just Taken Your First Step.

1 Samuel is Book 9 of 66. Each one has something to say to you.

The same God who found David in a field already has His eye on you.

Keep surrendering. Keep obeying. The anointing follows the heart.