1Sam 7:1-6, 12
I Got Help There

Notice the word "Ebenezer."  It means "stone of help."  By putting
the stone in that place and calling it Ebenezer, Samuel was drawing
people’s attention to a spot and saying, "We got help there!"  This
stone then became a memorial  for future generations.  A place when
people passed by and inquired, "Why is that stone there?"  Someone
would answer, "That’s where we got help from God."

Let’s look at the account.

I. \\#1\\ The Ark of the Covenant
    A. The Ark of the Covenant was a rather large (45 inch), holy
        chest that God had the Jews build when they came out of Egypt.
        1. Inside the chest, the Jews copy of the Ten Commandments,
            Aaron’s rod that had budded to show that God would work
            through the line of Levi in spiritual matters, and a jar
            of manna were stored.
        2. It had the Mercy Seat on top of it.
            a. The Mercy Seat was the gold top on the box.
            b. On it, there were two angels whose wings spread
                to the center as a cover over the Mercy Seat.
            c. But the most important thing about the Ark was that
                God’s presence abode and appeared on the Mercy Seat.
        3. This Ark was very scared.
            a. It was not common furniture.
            b. God had given specific commands on how it was to be
                handled and while I don’t recall a command that would
                have prohibited it from being taken into the battle
                field, I don’t believe that was where God wanted it.
    B. The Jews were fighting the Philistines and losing.
        1. It was a time when they were not obeying God so God’s
            blessings were not on them.
        2. So the Jews decided to bring the Ark of the Covenant on
            the battlefield.
        3. They considered it to be the same bringing God onto the
            battlefield.
            a. They figured they could not lose if the Ark were
                there.
            b. They were wrong.

1Sam 4:10  And the Philistines fought, and Israel
was smitten, and they fled every man into his
tent: and there was a very great slaughter; for
there fell of Israel thirty thousand footmen.
11  And the ark of God was taken; and the two
sons of Eli, Hophni and Phinehas, were slain.

        4. \\#Sam 6:1\\ The Philistines kept the Ark for seven
            months, moving it around from city to city.
            a. They kept moving it because whatever city it rested,
                God cursed.
            b. After seven months, the Philistines had enough and
                sent it back to Israel.
            c. It only got as far as Kirjath-jear-im, to Abinadab’s
                house though.
            d. The Bible says it stated there 20 years.
            e. It was never returned to Shiloh, the place the Ark
                had originally been kept.
        5. But the Jews kept on doing the same things—sins.  Neither
            losing nor recovering the Ark did anything to change that.

II. \\#2\\ The people "lamented."

1Sam 7:2  …and all the house of Israel lamented
after the LORD.

    A. The text seems to indicate that all the time the Ark was at
        Abinadab’s house, the people were lamenting.
        1. Lament means to cry but it means to cry aloud, to wail.
        2. To lament would indicate the people were very sorrowful so
            much so that it affected their life.
            a. It left them wailing.
            b. Twenty years is a long time to wail,  It is a long
                time to be emotionally tore up about something—
                especially when all they hadn’t bothered to return
                the Ark to where it belonged.
            c. Without that Ark, they could not fulfill the Law.
                (1) Once a year, the High Priest was to carry the
                     blood of a sacrifice and sprinkle it on that
                     Mercy Seat.
                (2) If the Ark were separated from the other parts of
                     Tabernacle, nothing was functioning properly at
                     either location.
                (3) The sacrifices that were being offered on the
                     brazen altar, we being offered in place where
                     God’s presence was NOT.
                (4) If the Altar of Incense was still being used,
                     the sweet odor was being released in a place
                     where God’s presence was NOT.
                (5) None of the sacrifices had completion if the Ark
                     was not there.
        3. I also notice also that when Samuel decided to deal with
            the situation, he had to tell the people—those that were
            "lamenting after the Lord"—to put away their strange
            gods.
            a. They were "lamenting after the Lord" while worshipping
                other gods.
            b. I understand that people can grow ignorant in time but
                it doesn’t seem to me that you have to know a lot
                about the Bible to figure out that something is wrong
                with that.
        4. Now, I don’t doubt that people were lamenting those 20
            years.
            a. The Bible says they were and I believe the Bible.
            b. Besides that, people from that culture seem to love to
                lament—to wail aloud.
                (1) I would not be surprised if the people did not
                     set a day or a few days aside to just lament.
                (2) We have Memorial Day to remember.  Perhaps they
                     had an Ark of the Covenant Day to lament.
        5. What I am questioning is was their tears genuine or was it
            just for show.
        6. Tears are a wonderful show of contrition and brokenness
            IF we are contrite and broken.  If we are not, they are
            just a show.
    B. Some people get the words "show" and "sincerity" confused.
        1. A show is what you put on for people to see.
        2. Sincerity is what is really going on inside.
        3. I wonder if these people were not putting on a show for
            God but were not sincerely sorrow for the sins that had
            brought this condition to pass.
    C. We must be careful for we make lousy rock throwers, especially
        if we do the same kinds of things.
        1. Someone knows they are not right with God and decides they
            will go to church, as if going to church makes things
            right.
        2. Someone knows they are lost and goes to the front of the
            church and signs a card, as if doing that is salvation.
        3. Someone knows they need God and prays, offering God a
            deal, and moves on as if that was all it took to patch up
            years of rebellion against God.
    D. I am here to tell you, it takes more.
        1. To be honest, I think the Ark had become an idol to
            Israel.
            a. That’s why they wanted in the camp when they fought
                against the Philistines in the first place.
            b. They associated the Ark with God and figured if they
                had it, they had Him.  Surprise!
        2. I think their tears had become tears of ritual.
            a. They did not lament because they were broken.
            b. They lamented because they figured they should be
                broken.
        3. By the way, when we go to church because we know we need
            to get right and leave, figuring that took of that, we
            have made the church an idol.
        4. And when our prayers and our offerings are bargains for
            God’s favors, we have made them nothing more than rituals
            with no meaning.

III. \\#3\\ Samuel steps forward to set things right.
    A. Samuel wanted to set the people straight and he did.
        1. First, he told the people that tears along were not
            enough.
            a. They had to have a heart to repent as well. Twice in
                that verse, Samuel mentioned the "heart."
            b. The heart is the seat of our emotions and will.
            c. While their tears may have demonstrated some level of
                emotion, their behavior demonstrated they had no
                level of desire or will to serve God.
        2. Here again, we see the difference between show and
            sincerity.
            a. Both may look the same but sincerity is
                always backed up by its actions.
            b. We might say that those who are sincere about seeking
                God will repent, they will turn from their pagan
                actions.
            c. For these Jews, they were going to have to turn from
                their pagan gods.
        3. Is this not what God tells us?

1Ki 8:47  Yet if they shall bethink themselves
in the land whither they were carried captives,
and repent, and make supplication unto thee in
the land of them that carried them captives,
saying, We have sinned, and have done
perversely, we have committed wickedness;
48  And so return unto thee with all their heart,
and with all their soul, in the land of their
enemies, which led them away captive, and pray
unto thee toward their land, which thou gavest
unto their fathers, the city which thou hast
chosen, and the house which I have built for thy
name:
49  Then hear thou their prayer and their
supplication in heaven thy dwelling place, and
maintain their cause,

    B. To this, the people responded.

1Sam 7:6  And they gathered together to Mizpeh,
and drew water, and poured it out before the
LORD, and fasted on that day, and said there, We
have sinned against the LORD. And Samuel judged
the children of Israel in Mizpeh.

        1. The people hearing what Samuel said, truly repented.
        2. One of the signs of their repentance was they poured
            water unto the Lord.
            a. To us, that does not sound like much of a sacrifice.
            b. Water was precious.  I don’t know how far it had to be
                hauled but once it got to this place, it was poured
                out to God, given to God and God alone.
            c. Part of the Feast of Tabernacles was a Water Libation
                or a water sacrifice.
                (1) The feast last seven days.
                (2) Each night, water was fetched from the Pool of
                     Siloam.
                (3) It was a great celebration of joy.
                (4) While the water was being brought into the city:
                     (a) Two boys would climb a ladder to light
                          torches 75 feet high.
                     (b) Others danced and sang in front of these
                          candlesticks while carrying their own
                          torches.
                     (c) It began a great night of celebration and
                          joy and was done seven nights in a row.
                (5) The next morning, the water was brought to the
                     brazen altar and poured into it as a gift to the
                     Lord.
http://www.jewishroots.net/library/holiday-articles/water_libation_
ceremony.html

IV. \\#7-12\\ Repentance was the price.  Deliverance was the
     purchase.
    A. The Philistines heard that Israel was in one place and came to
        attack them.
    B. When the Jews heard of it, they offered a sacrifice and had
        Samuel pray.
        1. I’m sure the men also went and got their weapons, but it
            was not the weapons that saved them.

1Sam 7:10  And as Samuel was offering up the
burnt offering, the Philistines drew near to
battle against Israel: but the LORD thundered
with a great thunder on that day upon the
Philistines, and discomfited them; and they
were smitten before Israel.

        2. It was God showing up and God showed up because the people
            repented.
    C. So Samuel took a stone, probably a huge stone, set it up in
        the place where God showed up and named it Ebenezer, "the
        stone of help."
        1. It was not that the stone helped Israel.  It wasn’t even
            around when Israel was helped.
        2. It was God that helped them.
        3. The stone just marked the place where God showed up.
        4. It was marked the place where the people said, "I got help
            there."

Do you have any Ebenezers?
    1. If the house still stands, I believe I could take you to my
        first Ebenezer, the place where I got saved.
    2. If the house still stands, I believe I could take you to my
        second Ebenezer, the house where I told God I would not pick
        my Bible up ever again if He did not show me that He could
        and would provide for my family.
    3. I might could find the room in Erlanger’s Hospital where I got
        help from God when Christy was born and a company Kathy used
        to work for paid the bill.
    4. I suppose the Temple Building at Tennessee Temple University
        has been torn down but there was one of my Ebenezers.  God
        sent a man to give us a check to pay for the birth of our
        second child when we had been asking God, "How?"
    5. I remember an upturned stone behind New Gasper Baptist Church
        where I used to go out and practice my sermons.  I got help
        there many times.
    6. And the Sunday school class I used for a prayer room, sitting
        in a chair of a damp church and God would come down.
    7. I have many Ebenezers.  The new building entry way has been
        a place where I have gotten help on many occasions.

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