Reflections
The Child Born of Prayer
In short: When Eli the High Priest threatened to punish the young Samuel for ruling on a point of Jewish law in his teacher's presence, his mother Hannah refused any substitute. Her biblical declaration — 'It was for this boy that I prayed' (1 Samuel 1) — becomes, in the reading of a Hasidic master, a profound statement about the bond between a child and the prayers that brought him into being. The child forged through tears and longing is irreplaceable precisely because of the spiritual struggle he embodies.
When Eli the High Priest sought to punish the young prophet Samuel for having ruled on a point of Jewish law in the presence of his own teacher, Samuel’s mother Hannah pleaded with Eli to relent. Eli offered her another son in Samuel’s place — but Hannah refused.
“It was for this boy that I prayed,” she answered (1 Samuel 1).
One of the righteous masters of the Hasidic tradition offered the following interpretation of her words: “It was for this boy — this specific child, the one I received through countless prayers and supplications; through hours, days, weeks, and months of entreaty, of crying out, of weeping and heartbreak — this is the one I want. He is the child of prayer, and no other can take his place.”