Context: Hannah, barren and in deep anguish, vows to the LORD at Shiloh: "O LORD of hosts, if you will indeed look on the affliction of your servant and remember me and not forget your servant, but will give to your servant a son, then I will give him to the LORD all the days of his life, and no razor shall touch his head." The phrase "no razor shall touch his head" echoes Nazirite language directly (Numbers 6:5), and the lifelong dedication to tabernacle service parallels the Nazirite concept of heightened consecration. Though the text does not use the word nazir explicitly, the Septuagint and 4QSam-a add "and he shall drink neither wine nor strong drink," making the Nazirite identification unmistakable in the textual tradition. Hannah's vow represents a mother's consecration of her child — voluntary yet permanent, sacrificial yet joyful.
Hebrew/Greek Key Terms:
OT-to-OT Development:
Hannah's vow advances the Nazirite trajectory in several crucial ways. First, it shifts the initiative: in Numbers 6, the individual takes the vow upon themselves; here, a mother consecrates her unborn child, paralleling the divine imposition of Samson's Nazirite status (Judges 13:5) but from a human agent moved by faith. Second, unlike Samson's tragic story, Samuel's lifelong consecration produces faithful, fruitful ministry — he serves as prophet, priest, and judge, the last and greatest of the pre-monarchic leaders. Where Samson's consecration was externally imposed yet internally resisted, Samuel's consecration (initiated by his mother's faith) was externally maintained and internally embraced. Third, Hannah's prayer of thanksgiving (1 Samuel 2:1-10) develops the theology of consecration into a theology of reversal: God lifts the barren, humbles the proud, raises the poor, and — climactically — "will give strength to his king and exalt the horn of his anointed" (2:10). This is the first occurrence of "anointed" (מָשִׁיחַ, māshîaḥ) in the prophetic-royal sense, linking Samuel's Nazirite-type consecration directly to the messianic trajectory. The barren-woman pattern (Sarah, Rebekah, Rachel, Manoah's wife, Hannah) establishes that God's consecrated servants come through miraculous divine intervention, not natural human capacity.
Connections:
Christological Connection:
Hannah's consecration of Samuel establishes a pattern that runs directly to the incarnation. The structural parallels between 1 Samuel 1-2 and Luke 1-2 are among the most widely recognized in biblical scholarship: a barren/virgin woman receives divine intervention, bears a son destined for God's service, sings a hymn of praise celebrating divine reversal (Hannah's prayer / Mary's Magnificat), and presents the child at the sanctuary. Luke deliberately patterns the Magnificat on Hannah's prayer, signaling that Mary's son fulfills what Samuel only anticipated. Samuel was "asked of God" (shā'ûl); Jesus was "given by God" (John 3:16) — the escalation from human petition to divine initiative.
Samuel's faithful Nazirite-type consecration stands between Samson's failure and Christ's perfection as an intermediate stage of the trajectory. Where Samson broke his vow, Samuel kept it; where Samuel served faithfully within the limitations of his era (he could not save Israel permanently), Christ serves as the eternal prophet, priest, and king. Samuel anointed Israel's kings but was not himself the king; Christ is the Anointed One (Messiah) whom all previous anointings prefigured. Hannah's word in 2:10 — "he will exalt the horn of his anointed" — spoken at the dedication of a Nazirite-type son, leaps across centuries to find its fulfillment in the One who was consecrated not by a mother's vow but by the Father's eternal decree: "You are my Son; today I have begotten you" (Psalm 2:7; Hebrews 1:5).
The presentation of the child at the sanctuary is particularly significant. Hannah brought Samuel to Shiloh and said, "I have lent him to the LORD. As long as he lives, he is lent to the LORD" (1 Samuel 1:28). Luke records that Mary and Joseph brought Jesus to the temple to "present him to the Lord" (Luke 2:22), where Simeon recognized him as "a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and for glory to your people Israel" (Luke 2:32). The escalation: Hannah lent her son to serve in the tabernacle; God gave His Son to serve as the true temple (John 2:19-21). Samuel's consecration was for lifelong sanctuary service; Christ's consecration was for eternal redemption. The already/not-yet dimension: Christ has already been consecrated and has completed His redemptive work, yet believers — who are themselves "lent to the LORD" through union with Christ — await the consummation when their consecration will be made complete in glorification.
Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct Type, Forward-Looking) — Hannah's consecration of Samuel at the sanctuary prefigures the presentation of Christ at the temple (Luke 2:22), and Samuel's faithful Nazirite-type ministry as prophet-priest-judge anticipates Christ's threefold office. Also Redemptive-Historical Progression — Samuel stands at a critical juncture: the last judge, the transitional figure who inaugurates the monarchy and anoints Israel's first kings, connecting the Nazirite consecration concept to the messianic trajectory through Hannah's prophetic word about God's "anointed" (1 Samuel 2:10). ANTI-DEFAULT CHECK: Typology is warranted by the five criteria (analogical correspondence in consecration/presentation, historicity, escalation from temporary service to eternal redemption, forward-pointing through the "anointed" prophecy, NT identification via Luke's deliberate patterning). Redemptive-historical progression is also necessary because the text advances the narrative from judges to monarchy.
Trajectory Table: 106 - Nazirite Vow (Separation unto God)