1 Samuel 7:12-17
7:12 a Ebenezer: The location of this stone memorial is unknown. The Philistines had defeated Israel and captured the Ark at a place with the same name (4:1 b; 5:1 c). Samuel erected this memorial to commemorate God’s help in turning the tide against the Philistine attacks.7:13 d The Philistines were quiet for some time—until Saul became king (see 13:5 e).
• God’s powerful hand, not Samuel’s giftedness, was the key factor in Israel’s deliverance from the Philistines.
7:14 f The Amorites had inhabited Canaan and the region east of the Jordan before Israel’s conquest of the Promised Land (see Gen 15:16 g; Deut 3:8 h; Josh 2:10 i). Some Amorites remained in the area after the conquest (see 2 Sam 21:2 j).
7:15 k judge for the rest of his life: Once Saul became king (ch 10 l), Samuel’s role was more judicial than military.
7:16 m Bethel and Mizpah were places of national assembly in the judges era (Judg 20:1 n, 18 o, 26 p; 21:1-2 q). Bethel’s significance went back to the days of Abraham (Gen 12:8 r; 13:3-4 s; 28:10-22 t; 35:1-15 u).
• Gilgal, located near Jericho, had been a sacred place since Joshua’s day (Josh 4:19-24 v; 5:2-10 w). From this circuit, Samuel influenced “all the people of Israel” (1 Sam 10:17 x).
7:17 y Ramah was Samuel’s hometown (see 1:1 z).
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