Hannah’s Prayer for a Child
Pseudo-Philo
Biblical Antiquities 50.4–5
1st Century
And Hannah prayed and said, “Did you not, Lord, search out the heart of all generations before you formed the world? Now what womb is born opened or dies closed unless you wish it? And now let my prayer ascend before you today lest I go down from here empty, because you know my heart, how I have walked before you from the day of my youth.” And…
This passage from Biblical Antiquities is based on 1 Samuel 1, in which Hannah, the future mother of prophet Samuel, prays for a child. The biblical text states that Hannah prays silently, only moving her lips (1 Samuel 1:13). Biblical Antiquities explains that she does so out of concern that if her prayer is not fulfilled, she will be taunted even more by Peninah, her husband’s other wife, who has children and ridicules Hannah for being barren (1 Samuel 1:2, 6). Hannah is also concerned that if other people hear her prayer and see that it is not fulfilled, they will blaspheme. Hannah’s modest affirmation that she may not be worthy to be heard by God is a common characteristic of penitential prayers.
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Creator Bio
Pseudo-Philo
Pseudo-Philo is the name given to the otherwise unknown, anonymous author of Biblical Antiquities, which may have been written in Hebrew but survives only in Latin. The text was originally attributed to Philo of Alexandria, but that has been disproven. Biblical Antiquities is a retelling of the biblical narrative filled with literary reworkings, including many traditions not found in other sources.