"Thus far the LORD has helped us." (1 Samuel 7:12)
Samuel tells Israel: if you are returning to the LORD with all your hearts, then rid yourselves of the foreign gods and the Ashtoreths and commit yourselves to the LORD and serve him only, and he will deliver you from the Philistines. They put away their Baals and Ashtoreths and serve the LORD only. Samuel calls them to Mizpah to pray on their behalf. While Samuel is offering a burnt offering, the Philistines advance. The LORD thunders with great thunder against the Philistines and throws them into confusion. Israel pursues and defeats them. Samuel takes a stone and sets it up between Mizpah and Shen, naming it Ebenezer: Thus far the LORD has helped us.
The Ebenezer stone, the stone of help, is the memorial of chapter 4's reversal. The ark had been lost at the first battle of Ebenezer; now a new stone marks the place of victory through repentance and prayer. The Catechism identifies the Ebenezer moment as the pattern of every covenant renewal: the community that puts away its idols and serves the LORD only receives the divine help that the idolatrous community cannot (CCC 2113).
Brothers and sisters, thus far the LORD has helped us. Set up your Ebenezer stone today. Name the place where you are now and the distance God has brought you from where you were. The stone is not a celebration of arrival but a memorial of the journey and the help that has carried it. Thus far.
Lord God, thus far you have helped us. We set up this stone. From this Ebenezer we look back at every mile of the journey and see your hand. Help us from here to wherever we are going. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.