I Samuel 1:4

Berean Standard Bible · deep dive

And whenever the day came for Elkanah to present his sacrifice, he would give portions to his wife Peninnah and to all her sons and daughters.

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What it means

On the surface, this verse looks like a footnote — a small domestic detail about how Elkanah handled the family meal after his yearly sacrifice at Shiloh. But the writer is doing something quietly devastating, and you need to slow down to see it.

Elkanah went up regularly to offer what was almost certainly a peace offering (sometimes called a fellowship offering). In that kind of sacrifice, part of the animal was burned for God, part went to the priests, and the rest came back to the worshiper to be eaten with his family as a joyful meal — a feast in God's presence. So this verse describes the moment Elkanah, as the head of the household, doled out the meat at the holy picnic.

Notice how the writer lingers on Peninnah. He doesn't just say "he gave portions to his family." He carefully lists: his wife Peninnah, and all her sons and daughters. Plural. Many. The camera pans slowly across her crowded side of the blanket — and you, the reader, are meant to feel the empty space at Hannah's side before her name is even mentioned in the next verse. The Hebrew word for "portions" (manot) shows up again in the next verse where Elkanah gives Hannah a "double portion" — so this verse is setting up that contrast.

It's also worth knowing where this sits in the bigger story. The book of 1 Samuel is the hinge between the chaos of the Judges (the closing line of Judges is "everyone did what was right in his own eyes") and the rise of Israel's kings. And God starts that whole new chapter not in a palace, not on a battlefield, but at a family dinner where one woman has no children to feed. The writer wants you to feel that.

There isn't a major denominational fight over this verse — Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant readers all read it pretty much the same way: as the painful setup for Hannah's prayer.

Historical Context

Picture Israel somewhere around 1100–1050 BC, before there was a king. There is no temple in Jerusalem yet — David hasn't even been born. The center of Israel's worship is a town called Shiloh, in the hill country north of where Jerusalem will eventually be. The Tabernacle — the portable tent-sanctuary Moses built in the wilderness — has been pitched there for generations. Think of it as a sacred tent on the edge of a small farming village, with a courtyard, an altar, and priests on duty.

The book of Judges has just ended, and life in Israel is a mess. The tribes barely cooperate. Idolatry is everywhere. The priesthood itself is corrupt — you'll meet Eli's wicked sons in chapter 2. Into this broken religious landscape walks an unremarkable man named Elkanah, faithfully making his annual pilgrimage with his family.

Now the cultural detail that hits hardest in this verse: Elkanah has two wives. Polygamy was legal in ancient Israel but never God's design (go back to Genesis 2:24 — one man, one woman). And in the Bible's storytelling, polygamy almost always produces grief. Think Sarah and Hagar. Think Rachel and Leah. Whenever a man takes a second wife, the narrator basically warns you: this is going to hurt someone.

Why did Elkanah marry Peninnah? Almost certainly because Hannah, his first love, couldn't give him children. In that world, a woman without children had no social standing, no economic security, and — most painfully — was assumed to be under God's displeasure. Children, especially sons, were everything: your name, your inheritance, your old-age care, your future.

So when Elkanah hands out the meat — a piece to Peninnah, a piece to this son, a piece to that daughter, on and on — Hannah sits there counting Peninnah's blessings out loud, in front of her, every year. The communal meal that was supposed to be pure joy in God's presence has become her annual humiliation.

Original Language

- וְהָיָה הַיּוֹם (v'hayah hayom) — "and it came to pass on the day." The phrasing suggests a recurring, scheduled event. This wasn't a one-time scene. Year after year. The pain in this story is a chronic ache, not a sudden wound.

- וְזָבַח (v'zavach) — "he sacrificed." From the root zavach, which specifically points to the kind of sacrifice that produced a shared meal — what Leviticus calls a zevach sh'lamim, a "peace offering" or "fellowship offering." So this whole scene is a feast meant for joy in God's presence (see Deuteronomy 16:11). The bitter irony is the writer's setup: a joy-feast that's anything but joyful for Hannah.

- מָנוֹת (manot) — "portions." This is the key word. It's the same word used in Esther 9:22 for the festival gifts of food Jews send each other at Purim. Manot aren't just nutrition; they're tokens of celebration, belonging, honor. Elkanah is publicly honoring each person with a manah. And the next verse will say he gave Hannah a "double manah" — a tender gesture, but one that can't compete with the row of children getting their own.

- בָּנֶיהָ וּבְנוֹתֶיהָ (baneha u'vnoteha) — "her sons and her daughters." The possessive sting: hers. Not Hannah's. Every word in Hebrew is choosing sides.

How it points to Christ

Here's where this little verse opens up into something huge.

The whole story of 1 Samuel 1 is about a woman whose womb is closed — until God opens it, and the son she receives turns out to be the one who anoints Israel's first kings and sets the stage for David. And from David's line comes Jesus.

But the deeper pattern is this: God keeps choosing the empty woman to bring the savior through. Sarah was barren before Isaac. Rebekah was barren before Jacob. Rachel was barren before Joseph. Hannah is barren before Samuel. Elizabeth is barren before John the Baptist (Luke 1:7). And then — the climax — Mary, not barren but a virgin, conceives Jesus (Luke 1:34-35). God's pattern through the whole Bible is to bring life out of the place where, humanly, there is no possibility of life.

Now read Hannah's song in 1 Samuel 2:1-10 sometime soon. Then read Mary's song in Luke 1:46-55. They are almost the same song. Mary, a thousand years later, sees what God did for Hannah and recognizes that God is doing it again — for her, and through her, for the whole world.

So this little verse about meat being passed around a feast in Shiloh — Peninnah's children getting their portions while Hannah sits empty-handed — is the opening note of a song that ends with Mary singing about the Son in her womb who will fill the hungry with good things and send the rich away empty (Luke 1:53).

And there's one more thing: that peace offering Elkanah was eating? It was a shadow. The reason you and I can sit at a feast in God's presence with joy is because Jesus is the true peace offering (Ephesians 2:14-16). He absorbed every reason God might have to be at war with you, so the family meal can finally be pure gladness.

Application

Look again at where Hannah is sitting. She's at worship. She's at the holy feast. She's done everything right — she came to Shiloh, she's standing in the place God promised to meet his people, her husband loves her — and her heart is breaking while the meat gets passed around.

Be honest: does that surprise you? It probably shouldn't, but it often does. There's a quiet lie that whispers, "If you were really walking with God, you wouldn't be sitting at this dinner counting other people's blessings and choking on your own emptiness." That lie has to die.

Hannah's grief at the table is not a failure of faith. It's the setting in which God is about to do one of the greatest things in the Old Testament. The waiting woman with the empty plate is the woman God has chosen.

Where is your "Peninnah portion" right now? Whose pile of children, whose marriage, whose career, whose ministry, whose easy life are you watching God spoon out while you sit there with a single piece of meat and a forced smile? Name it. Don't be too spiritual to name it.

Here's what this verse asks of you, specifically: stop pretending the feast doesn't hurt. Stop performing gratitude you don't feel. Stop showing up to church with your face arranged. The cost of this verse is the cost of dropping the mask — first with God, and then maybe with one trusted person who can sit beside you.

Because what comes next in this chapter is Hannah getting up from the table and pouring out her real, raw, mascara-streaked prayer to God (1 Samuel 1:10). And that is the prayer God answers. He has never been afraid of your real face. The performance is what's keeping you from the breakthrough.

Prayer Points

Reflections

Sources

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