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David returned from defeating the Amalekites and remained in Ziklag for two days without receiving any news of the battle between the Philistines and Israelites.
On the third day, a man with his clothes torn and with dirt on his head came to David.
The young man said that Saul and his son Jonathan were killed.
The young man said he was on Mount Gilboa, and Saul was there leaning on his spear.
The young man said Saul asked him to stand over him and kill him.
Saul asked the young Amalekite man to kill him because great agony had seized him, but his life was still in him.
The young man took the crown that was on Saul’s head and the band that was on his arm.
David and his men tore their clothes, and they mourned, wept, and fasted until evening.
David and his men also mourned for the people of Yahweh and for the house of Israel, because they had fallen by the sword.
David had the young Amalekite man killed because the man’s own words testified that he had killed Yahweh’s anointed.
David had the young Amalekite man killed because the man’s own words testified that he had killed Yahweh’s anointed.
The song is written in the Book of Jashar.
The splendor of Israel was slain there.
He did not want the daughters of the Philistines to rejoice or triumph.
The shield of the mighty king remains on ground on Mount Gilboa.
He made Israel a safe and prosperous place in which they had beautiful scarlet clothes and expensive jewelry and gold ornaments to wear.
David said Jonathan’s love for him was more wonderful than the love of women.
David asked if he should go up to one of the cities of Judah, and Yahweh told him to go up.
Yahweh told David to go to Hebron.
David went up to Hebron with his two wives, Ahinoam and Abigail, and all his men and their families.
The men of Judah came and anointed David as king over the house of Judah.
Abner was the son of Ner and the commander of Saul’s army.
Abner took Ishbosheth to Mahanaim and made him king of all the territory that would later be the northern kingdom of Israel.
David was king in Hebron over the house of Judah for seven years and six months.
They met near the large pool of Gibeon, staying on opposite sides of the pool.
Twelve men from Benjamin for Ishbosheth and twelve men from David’s soldiers fought.
The soldiers of David defeated Abner and the soldiers from the other tribes of Israel.
Asahel pursued Abner.
Abner warned Asahel that if he had to strike him down, he could never again have a peaceful relationship with Asahel’s brother Joab.
Abner struck him in the stomach with the butt end of his spear, and the spear went right through his stomach and came out of his back, so Asahel fell and died there.
Joab and Abishai pursued Abner to the hill of Ammah, which is near Giah on the way to the wilderness of Gibeon.
Abner called out to Joab that they should not continue this deadly battle any longer. He told Joab to realize that if they continue fighting, many people will suffer great harm. He said that they are all Israelites, and asked Joab to please tell his soldiers right now to stop chasing Abner and his soldiers.
Abner and his men marched back to Mahanaim.
Joab and his men traveled to Hebron to bury Asahel’s body in the tomb of his father at Bethlehem. Then they marched all night, going back to Hebron, their home.
The house of David grew stronger, and the house of Saul grew weaker.
Amnon, Chileab, and Absalom were the first three sons born to David in Hebron.
Ishbosheth accused Abner of doing something wrong by having sexual relations with his father Saul’s concubine.
Abner swore that he would transfer the kingdom from Saul’s house to David and establish David’s throne over all Israel and Judah.
Abner had to bring his wife Michal, Saul’s daughter, when he came to see David.
David had paid the price of 100 Philistine foreskins for Michal.
Abner told the elders to make David their king, since Yahweh spoke about David, saying that by the hand of his servant David my servant, he would save his people Israel from the hand of the Philistines and from the hand of all of their enemies.
David made a feast for Abner and his men.
Abner said he would gather all of Israel to David so they could make a covenant with him, and so David could reign over all that he desired.
David sent Abner away, and he went in peace.
Joab accused Abner of coming to deceive David and to learn all about his plans.
To avenge the death of his brother Asahel, Joab took Abner aside to the middle of the gate and struck him in the stomach, and he died.
Joab and Abishai his brother had murdered Abner because he had killed Asahel their brother at Gibeon in the battle. They should not have taken revenge.
David pronounced a curse that the guilt for Abner’s blood would be on Joab and his father’s house forever. He asked that there will always be someone in Joab’s family who has sores or who is a leper or who cannot walk without a crutch or who dies in battle or who does not have enough food to eat.
David told them to tear their clothes, put on sackcloth, and mourn for Abner.
David swore an oath that he would not taste bread or anything else for the rest of this day.
They understood that the king had not wanted Joab to kill Abner.
The king told his servants that a commander and a great man had fallen that day in Israel.
David hoped that Yahweh would repay the evildoer according to his evil.
When Ishbosheth heard that Abner was dead in Hebron, his hands became weak.
The names of two of his commanders were Baanah and Rechab.
The name of Jonathan’s son who was crippled in his feet was Mephibosheth.
They went into the middle of the house as if they were getting wheat.
They went to his private bedroom and they stabbed and killed him as he was lying asleep on his bed, and then they removed his head.
They brought the head of Ishbosheth to David at Hebron.
David said they were wicked men who had murdered a righteous man in his own house on his bed.
The young men killed Rechab and Baanah, cut off their hands and feet, and hung them beside the pool at Hebron.
David had the head of Ishbosheth buried in Abner’s grave in Hebron.
They said Yahweh had promised that David would shepherd his people Israel and become their ruler.
All the elders of Israel came to Hebron, made a covenant with David, and anointed him king over Israel.
David reigned in Jerusalem for 33 years over all Israel and Judah.
The stronghold of Zion was also called the City of David.
David captured the stronghold of Zion from the Jebusites.
David became greater and greater because Yahweh, the God of Armies, was with him.
Hiram sent messengers, cedar trees, carpenters, and stonemasons to David to build a house for David.
Eleven sons were born to David in Jerusalem.
When the Philistines heard David had been anointed king, they marched toward Jerusalem to try to capture David.
Yahweh told David to go up because he would definitely enable David’s army to defeat them.”
David attacked the Philistines at Baal Perazim and defeated them there.
Yahweh told David not to go up to attack them from the front, but to circle around behind them and attack from opposite the balsam trees.
Yahweh told David to attack when he heard the sound of marching in the tops of the balsam trees.
David did just as Yahweh had commanded him.
David’s soldiers defeated the Philistine soldiers and chased them from the city of Geba all the way west to the city of Gezer.
David gathered the chosen men of Israel to bring up the Box of God from Baalah of Judah.
They set the Box of God on a new cart pulled by two oxen.
Uzzah and Ahio, the sons of Abinadab, were guiding the new cart.
The oxen stumbled, and Uzzah reached out to steady the Box of God.
God became angry and struck Uzzah for his fault, and Uzzah died there by the Box of God.
David was angry because Yahweh had broken out against Uzzah. Then David became afraid of Yahweh, and he said that it was too dangerous for him to try to bring the sacred chest to where he lived in Jerusalem.
David decided not to bring the sacred chest to the City of David. Instead, he had the people take it into the house of Obed Edom, there by the road.
David brought it because he was told that Yahweh had blessed the house of Obed Edom because of the Box of God.
As the Box of God was being brought up, David, wearing a linen ephod, danced before Yahweh with all his strength.
When Michal saw King David leaping and dancing before Yahweh, she despised him in her heart.
David offered burnt offerings and peace offerings to Yahweh.
He distributed a cake of bread, a date cake, and a raisin cake to each person.
She sarcastically asked how the king of Israel had honored himself by uncovering himself before the eyes of his servants’ female servants, like a worthless person.
David said that he celebrated before Yahweh, who chose him as leader. He said he would humble himself even more, and that the female servants would honor him.
Yahweh gave David rest from all his surrounding enemies.
The king said to Nathan that he was living in a house of cedar, but the Box of God was dwelling in a tent.
Nathan told David to do all that was in his heart, because Yahweh was with him.
Yahweh asked if he had ever commanded one of the leaders of Israel to build him a house of cedars.
Yahweh said he took David from the pasture to be ruler over Israel, had been with him everywhere, and had cut off all his enemies from before him.
Yahweh said he had established a place for them and will plant them so they could live in their own place and not be afflicted by wicked people anymore.
Yahweh said he would raise up David’s own offspring after him, and that offspring would build a house for his name.
Yahweh said David’s descendants would continually rule the kingdom of Israel after him.
David went in and sat before Yahweh and prayed to him.
David said that Yahweh knew his servant so well.
David said Yahweh had done it for the sake of his word and according to his own heart.
God redeemed Israel to make them a people for himself and to make a name for himself.
David said he found the heart to pray because Yahweh had revealed that he would build a house for David.
David said that Yahweh’s words are true.
David asked Yahweh to be pleased to bless his house so that it would continue forever before him.
They captured Metheg Ammah and made the Philistines subject to the Israelites.
He made them lie on the ground and measured them with a rope, measuring two rope lengths to be killed and one full rope length to be kept alive.
The rest of the Moabites had to accept David as their ruler. Every year they had to give him the payment that he demanded.
David captured from him 1,700 horsemen and 20,000 men on foot.
David struck 22,000 men among the Arameans.
Each time David led his soldiers into battle, Yahweh enabled them to win victories over their enemies.
Toi sent his son Joram to greet and bless David, and Joram brought vessels of silver, gold, and bronze.
David consecrated the silver and gold to Yahweh.
David killed 18,000 Arameans in the Valley of Salt.
David did justice and righteousness for all his people.
David’s sons were his advisors.
David wanted to show covenant faithfulness for the sake of Jonathan.
Ziba told the king that one son of Jonathan was still alive but not able to walk.
Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan, the son of Saul, was left.
David restored to Mephibosheth all the land of his grandfather Saul, and he had Mephibosheth eat meals with his family continually.
David told Ziba that he, his sons, and his servants were to work the land for Mephibosheth and bring in the harvest.
Mephibosheth lived in Jerusalem because he ate meals with David’s family in the palace.
Mephibosheth was lame in both of his feet.
Hanun his son became the new king.
David sent his servants to console Hanun concerning the death of his father.
The commanders told Hanun that David had sent his servants to explore the city in order to spy on it and overthrow it.
He commanded his soldiers to seize David’s officials and insult them by shaving off one side of their beards and cut off the lower part of their robes so that their buttocks would show. Then he sent them back to Israel.
The Ammonites hired soldiers because they saw that they had greatly insulted David.
The Ammonites formed a battle line at their city gate, while their hired soldiers from Aram, Tob, and Maacah were by themselves in the field.
When David heard of it, he sent Joab and all the army of mighty men to fight against them.
Joab chose some of the best men of Israel and arrayed them to meet the Arameans, and he put the rest of the people in the hand of his brother Abishai to meet the Ammonites.
When the Ammonites saw that the Arameans had fled, they also fled from Abishai and went into the city.
The Arameans gathered themselves together again at Helam, and Hadadezer sent for many troops from Aramean kingdoms beyond the Euphrates River.
David gathered all Israel, crossed the Jordan, and came toward Helam to fight the Arameans.
They made peace with Israel and served them. The Arameans would not help the Ammonites anymore after that, because they were afraid of Israel.
Kings normally went out to war at the return of the year, in the spring.
David sent out his commander Joab with his officers and the rest of the Israelite army, but David himself stayed in Jerusalem.
David saw a very beautiful woman bathing, and her name was Bathsheba.
Bathsheba’s husband was Uriah the Hittite.
David sent for her, he had sexual relations with her, and she became pregnant.
He told Joab to send Uriah the Hittite to him.
David tried to get Uriah to go down to his house and relax for a while.
Uriah did not go to his house, but instead slept at the entrance of the king’s house with all the servants of his master.
Uriah said he would never go to his house to eat, drink, and lie with his wife while the Box, Israel, and Judah were dwelling in tents, and Joab and his men were camping in the open field.
The letter said to put Uriah in the front of the strongest battle and then to retreat from him so he would be struck and die.
Joab thought David might become angry because he had allowed the Ammonites to kill some of his soldiers.
Joab thought David might be angry that soldiers got so close to the city to fight because the Ammonite soldiers would shoot arrows at them from the top of the city wall.
Joab told the messenger to say that his servant Uriah the Hittite was also dead.
David told the messenger to encourage Joab by telling him to not feel badly since no one ever knows who might die in a battle. David advised him to strengthen his battle against the city and destroy it.
When she heard her husband was dead, she mourned for him.
After her mourning passed, David sent for her, and she became his wife, and she bore him a son.
Yahweh was very displeased with what David had done.
Nathan went to David because Yahweh sent him.
The story was about a rich man with many flocks and herds and a poor man who had only one little ewe lamb that was like a daughter to him.
When a traveler came to the rich man, he took the poor man’s lamb and prepared it as a meal for his guest.
David was very angry and said that he wanted to execute the man who did that.
Nathan told David, “You are the man.”
Yahweh said David had struck Uriah the Hittite with the sword, had taken his wife to be his own wife, and had murdered him with the sword of the Ammonites. Yahweh said that David did not take seriously what he commanded when he said that his people must not commit adultery or murder. David did things that Yahweh considers to be very evil!
Yahweh said that he would make someone from David’s own family cause disaster for him. Yahweh would take David’s wives away from him and give them to that person instead. He will have sexual relations with them in public.
Nathan told David that Yahweh had taken away his sin and that he would not die.
Nathan said that because David had shown great contempt for Yahweh by doing this., the son born to him would surely die.
David prayed to God that the child would not die, fasted, and went in and slept on the floor of his room.
The child died on the seventh day.
David arose from the ground, washed and anointed himself, changed his clothes, and went to the house of Yahweh and prostrated himself. Then he asked his servants for food and he ate it.
David reasoned that there was no reason to fast since he could not bring the child back again.
Yahweh said to name him Jedidiah because of Yahweh.
Joab was fighting against Rabbah of the sons of Ammon.
Joab did not want to capture the city himself, because if he did, it would renamed to honor him and not King David.
David brought out the people and set them to work with saws, iron picks, and iron axes. David’s troops also forced them to make bricks.
Amnon loved his beautiful half-sister Tamar, who was the sister of Absalom.
Amnon told Jonadab that he loved Tamar, his brother Absalom’s sister.
Amnon pretended to be sick, and when David came to see him, he asked David to let Tamar come and make food for him so he could eat from her hand.
When Tamar came to feed him, he seized her and told her to come and lie with him.
He refused to do what she said he should do. He was stronger than she was, so he forcibly had sexual relations with her.
Amnon hated her with a very great hatred that was greater than the love with which he had loved her.
Amnon commanded Tamar to leave.
He ordered his servant to send Tamar outside and to lock the door behind her.
Tamar tore the long robe that she was wearing. She put ashes on her head, and she put her hand on her head. As she went away, she kept screaming.
When King David heard all these things, it made him very angry, but he did nothing about it.
Absalom hated Amnon because he had humbled his sister Tamar.
Absalom invited the king and all the king’s sons to visit him.
The king said they should not all go because they would be a heavy burden to Absalom.
But the king replied, “You do not need to invite him to the celebration either.”
Absalom urged David, so he sent Amnon and all the king’s sons with him.
Absalom commanded his servants to kill Amnon when Amnon began to be drunk with wine.
All the king’s sons arose, and they got onto their mules and escaped by riding away fast.
The first report to David said that Absalom had killed all the king’s sons and not one was still alive.
Jonadab said that only Amnon is dead. Absalom has been determined to kill him ever since the day that Amnon raped his sister Tamar.
Absalom fled to Talmai, the son of Ammihud, king of Geshur.
Absalom was in Geshur for three years.
King David had intended to attack Absalom and punish him for killing Amnon.
Joab sent to Tekoa and brought a wise woman from there to act as if she had been in mourning for a long time.
Joab wanted the wise woman to pretend to be a mourner and to go speak to the king the words Joab told her to say.
The wise woman told the king she was a widow.
She told the king that her two sons fought in a field, and one struck the other and killed him.
She said she was afraid the whole clan would kill her remaining son, destroying her heir and leaving no descendants to preserve her family’s name.
She asked the king to remember Yahweh so that the avenger of blood would not destroy her son.
The king swore by the life of Yahweh.
The woman said the king was acting badly because he had not brought back his own banished son.
She said that God forgives people who have sinned against him so that they can once more be in a good relationship with him.
She said she came because the people had frightened her, and she hoped the king would listen and deliver her.
She said that what the king says will comfort her, because he is like an angel of God, and he knows how to determine what is right and what is wrong.
The king asked the woman if Joab arranged for her to do all this.
Joab did that to try to get David to feel differently about this matter.
Joab lay facedown on the ground in honor and gratitude to the king.
The king said that Absalom could return to his own house but could go and speak with the king.
He was so handsome that people throughout Israel praised Absalom for being a very handsome man. He did not seem to have any flaws in any part of his body. His hair was long, thick, and heavy.
Absalom lived in Jerusalem for two years, during which David still did not allow Absalom to come and speak with him.
Absalom told his servants to go and burn Joab’s barley field with fire.
Absalom wanted Joab to go to the king and ask why he had come from Geshur, and to say that he wanted to come and speak with him.
The king kissed Absalom on the cheek to show that he was no longer hostile to him.
Absalom prepared a chariot and horses for himself.
He hired fifty men to run in front of his chariot.
Absalom would call to any man who had a dispute and was coming to the king for judgment.
Absalom would say to them that their matter was good and right, but the king is not able to decide everyone’s case, and he has not appointed anyone else to judge cases for people like you.
Absalom said he wished he were a judge so that every person with a dispute could come to him and he would give them justice.
Absalom would stretch out his hand, hold the man up, and kiss him on the cheek.
Absalom stole the hearts of the men of Israel. The Israelites began to wish that Absalom were their king instead of David.
Absalom said he had to go to Hebron to fulfill a vow he had made to Yahweh.
The spies said that when people heard the sound of the shofar, they should say that Absalom has become the king at Hebron.
No, the two hundred men came because he had invited them to the feast he was going to host there. They were not part of his conspiracy. They knew nothing about what he was planning to do.
David told his servants in Jerusalem to arise and flee, because there would be no escape from Absalom.
The king left ten women, who were concubines, to keep the house.
All his servants, all the Cherethites, all the Pelethites, and all the Gittites—600 men from Gath—marched with him.
Ittai swore that he would go wherever the king would go, and he would fight to defend David even if he had to die doing that.
Since Absalom would be coming from the southwest, the king and the others crossed the Kidron Valley and then went up the hill on the road that goes through the desolate area east of Jerusalem.
The king told Zadok to take the Box of God back to the city.
He was going to wait there until a word came from the priests to tell him what to do.
David prayed that Yahweh would make Ahithophel give Absalom bad advice.
David unexpectedly met Hushai the Archite, who had torn his clothes and put dirt on his head to show that he was very sad.
David wanted Hushai to return to the city and offer to be Absalom’s servant so he would be able to counter any good advice that Ahithophel would give to Absalom.
David wanted Hushai to report everything to Zadok and Abiathar the priests.
Ziba brought a pair of saddled donkeys, 200 loaves of bread, 100 clusters of raisins, 100 summer fruits, and a skin of wine.
Ziba said Mephibosheth stayed because he said that the house of Israel would return the kingdom of his father to him that day.
The king told Ziba that all that belonged to Mephibosheth was now his.
Shimei came out cursing, and he threw stones at David and all the servants of King David.
Shimei called David a man of blood and a man of wickedness.
David hoped that Yahweh would look at his affliction and return good to him in place of the cursing.
Hushai said to Absalom, “May the king live! May the king live!”
Hushai told Absalom that he would belong to the one whom Yahweh, the people, and every man of Israel had chosen.
Ahithophel advised Absalom to go in to his father’s concubines whom David had left to keep the house.
The counsel of Ahithophel was viewed as if God himself had recommended it.
Ahithophel’s advice was to let him lead a large army carry out a surprise attack on David that night, when he was weary and weak, kill only David, and bring back all the rest of the people for Absalom to rule.
Hushai said that the counsel Ahithophel had given on this occasion was not good.
Hushai said that David and his very brave warriors were probably in a safe place, and David’s soldiers will certainly kill some of Ahithophel’s soldiers at the start of the battle. When people hear about that, they will say that David’s soldiers are slaughtering Absalom’s soldiers! Then your other soldiers, even if they are as fearless as lions, will become very afraid.
Hushai advised Absalom to gather all of Israel, from Dan to Beersheba, and for Absalom himself to go into the battle. He said that this great army would overwhelm David’s smaller army and none of them would survive.
They said the counsel of Hushai was better than the counsel of Ahithophel and they decided to do what Hushai suggested.
The message was that David should not stay at the place where people can walk across the Jordan River but should cross over immediately, because otherwise, Absalom and his army may come and kill them.
A maidservant of the two priests would go and declare news to Jonathan and Ahimaaz, and they would go and declare it to King David.
The two of them went quickly to the house of a man in Bahurim and went down into a well in his courtyard.
The man’s wife spread a covering over the well and spread grain on it, and when Absalom’s servants asked where the men were, she told them they had crossed the brook.
They came up from the well, went and reported the news to King David, and told him to get all these people across the Jordan River quickly.
Ahithophel saddled his donkey, went to his house, gave to his family instructions about what to do with his possessions, and then he hanged himself because he knew that otherwise David would kill him as a traitor.
Shobi, Machir, and Barzillai brought beds, basins, pottery, and all kinds of food for David and the people with him to eat.
King David told the army that he would also go out with them himself.
The men told King David not to go out, because he was worth ten thousand of them, and it was better for him to be ready to help them from the city.
The king told the commanders not to harm the young man Absalom for his sake.
The people of Israel were struck down before the servants of David, and more of Absalom’s soldiers died because of accidents in the forest than the number of them whom David’s soldiers killed in the battle.
Absalom’s head was caught in the oak tree. The mule kept going, and that left Absalom dangling in the air.
Joab was upset because the man did not kill Absalom immediately.
He refused because he had heard the king command his commanders to keep from hurting the young man Absalom.
Joab took three spears and thrust them into the heart of Absalom while he was still alive in the oak tree.
They threw Absalom’s body into a great pit in the forest and set up a very great heap of stones over him.
Absalom set up a pillar to make his name remembered, because he said he had no son to make people remember his name.
Joab told him not to bring the news that day because the king’s son was dead.
Ahimaaz insisted on running after the Cushite, even though Joab told him there was no reward for the news, so Joab told him to go.
The king said that if the man was by himself, that indicates that he is bringing news.
The king said that this one was also bringing news.
The king said that he was a good man and came with good news.
Ahimaaz told the king that Yahweh had defeated the men who had lifted their hand against the king.
Ahimaaz said he saw a great tumult but did not know what it was about.
The Cushite said that he wished that what happened to Absalom would happen to all of David’s enemies and to anyone who rebels against him.
The king trembled, went up to the upper room of the gate, and wept, wishing he had died in place of his son.
The victory turned into mourning because the people heard that the king was grieved because of his son.
The king cried, “My son Absalom! Absalom, my son, my son!”
Joab said that he could see that if Absalom were still alive and all of David’s men were dead today, David would like that better.
Joab swore by Yahweh that if the king did not go out, all his soldiers will have abandoned him by tomorrow morning.
All the people came before the king after they were told that the king was sitting in the gate.
The people were arguing about what they should do now that Absalom was dead and David had left Israel to escape from Absalom.
David sent Zadok and Abiathar the priests to speak to the elders of Judah.
David said Amasa would be the commander of the army in place of Joab.
The men of Judah came to Gilgal to meet the king and to bring him across the Jordan.
Shimei, with 1,000 men from Benjamin, and Ziba, with his 15 sons and 20 servants, rushed to the Jordan.
Shimei came first because he knew that he had sinned against the king.
The king told Shimei that he would not die, and he swore an oath to him.
Mephibosheth had not cared for his feet, trimmed his mustache, or washed his clothes from the day the king went away.
Mephibosheth told the king that his servant, Ziba, had deceived him and left without him, and Mephibosheth could not follow him because he was crippled.
Mephibosheth said Ziba had lied about him to the king.
Mephibosheth told the king to let Ziba take the whole field, because all that mattered to him was that the king had returned safely.
Barzillai had provided all of the food that the king and his soldiers needed while they were at Mahanaim.
Barzillai said he was too old, could no longer taste what he ate or drank, could not hear singers, and would be a burden to the king.
Barzillai asked to return to his own city to die, but he asked the king to take his servant Chimham and do for him what was good in the king’s eyes.
Chimham, all the people of Judah, and also half the people of Israel crossed over to Gilgal with the king.
The men of Israel said they had more right to David because they represented ten tribes that were related to the king. The men of Judah represented only one tribe. Also, the people of Judah had started the rebellion against David.
The word of the men of Judah was harsher than the word of the men of Israel.
He was called a man of wickedness because he blew a shofar and told the men of Israel to return home; he said David did not belong to them at all.
The men of Judah clung to their king, but the men of Israel did what Sheba had said and returned to their homes.
He put them in another residence where someone guarded them. They had to stay in that house until they died. David provided what they needed, but he never had sexual relations with them again.
The king told Amasa to call up the men of Judah within three days and to be there himself.
David told Abishai to take the soldiers already here and go to capture him. If not, we will no longer know where his is going, and the delay would allow him and his soldiers to go into fortified cities.
As Joab held Amasa’s beard with his right hand to kiss him, he struck him in the stomach with the sword in his left hand.
He stood by Amasa and called for those who delighted in Joab and David to follow Joab, and then he removed Amasa’s body from the road into a field so the soldiers would not stop to look.
They besieged him in the city built a dirt ramp up against the outer wall of the city to batter and collapse the city wall.
She described the residents as peaceful and loyal Israelites.
The woman asked Joab why he would try to destroy an Israelite community.
Joab said that if they would give him Sheba, who is rebelling against King David, he would go away from the city.
The woman came to the people in her wisdom, and they cut off the head of Sheba and threw it to Joab.
Adoniram was over the forced labor.
There was a famine because of the bloodguilt on Saul and his house. The Israelites had solemnly promised that they would not kill them, but Saul had tried to kill all of them because he wanted the people of Judah and Israel to be the only ones living in that land.
David wanted to make atonement so that they ask Yahweh to do good things for us Israelites again.
David agreed to do whatever the Gibeonites asked him to do.
They requested that seven men from Saul’s sons be given to them so they could hang them before Yahweh at Gibeah.
David spared Mephibosheth but gave them the two sons of Rizpah and the five sons of Michal, and the Gibeonites hanged them on the hill.
She did not allow any birds to come near the corpses during the day, and she did not allow any animals to come near them during the night from the time that people started to harvest barley until the autumn rains began.
David took the bones of Saul and Jonathan from the leaders of the city of Jabesh Gilead.
When David was weary, Abishai helped him by striking and killing the Philistine giant Ishbi Benob, who had intended to kill David.
They said that if enemy soldiers killed him in battle, Israel would no longer have him as king to guide them.
They killed four giants who were born to Rapha in Gath.
David sang the song on the day Yahweh delivered him from the hand of all his enemies and from the hand of Saul.
David says when he calls on Yahweh, he is saved from his enemies.
David felt like the waves of death and the cords of Sheol surrounded him.
In his distress, David called to Yahweh, and Yahweh heard his voice from his temple.
The earth shook and trembled, smoke went up from his nose, and a stream of fire was flowing out from his mouth to burn up everything in its path.
He lowered the heavens and came down, riding on a cherub and flying on the wings of the wind.
Yahweh thundered from the heavens, sent out arrows and flashes of lightning, and panicked them.
The foundations of the world were uncovered at the rebuke of Yahweh, from the blast of the breath of his nose.
David said it was as if Yahweh reached down from heaven and grabbed him so that he could pull David up out of the deep water of the ocean.
Yahweh delivered David because he delighted in him.
David kept the ways of Yahweh and did not turn away from his statutes.
Yahweh gave back to him according to his righteousness and his cleanness.
Yahweh is aware of people who are arrogant, and he humiliates them.
Yahweh is a shield to all who take refuge in him.
David said God was his rock, the only real God, because God is where he can go to be safe. He said God was his fortress of strength because, to David, God is like a very secure place where he could go to hide from danger.
David says that God gave him many ways to respond to each situation, so that his enemies were not able to trap him.
David defeated them so completely that they were no longer any threat to him no more than tiny particles of dust would be.
Yahweh rescued David from the disputes of his people and kept him as the head of nations.
Yahweh enabled David to conquer enemies, protecting him from being captured by them. Yahweh kept David safe when people rebelled against him and rescued hm from men who tried to harm him.
David said he thanks Yahweh so that all people groups will know that Yahweh is the one who has helped him. He sings to praise Yahweh for the great things he has done, faithfully showing kindness to David and to his descendants in the future.
They are the oracle of David, the man raised to a high position, the anointed of the God of Jacob, and the one who wrote beautiful songs for the people of Israel.
The God of Israel said that a righteous one ruling over man in the fear of God is like the light of morning when the sun rises.
God will remove people who disrespect him, just as people throw away thorns that hurt their hands when they try to pick them up.
When other Israelites retreated in fear, Eleazar arose and struck the Philistines until his hand cramped and he could not let go of his sword, Yahweh won a great victory for the Israelites on that day.
When other Israelite soldiers ran away from the battle, Shammah stationed himself in the middle of the field full of ripe lentils and fought and killed the Philistines, who wanted to steal the lentils. And so Yahweh won a great victory for the Israelites.
The three warriors broke through the camp of the Philistines, drew water from the well, and brought it to David.
David said it would not be right to drink it because he said that would be like drinking the blood of these men who were willing to die to get it for him.
He once fought against 300 enemy soldiers and killed them all. As a result, he became famous like the three very greatest soldiers.
Benaiah went down against the Egyptian with a staff, seized the spear from the Egyptian’s hand, and killed him with his own spear.
David asked Joab to go through all the tribes of Israel and count the men who could fight as soldiers.
Joab did not understand why David wanted to count the people, and he did not think it was a good idea to count how many soldiers they had.
It took nine months and twenty days for Joab to go throughout all the land and return to Jerusalem.
They reported to David that there were 800,000 men in Israel and 500,000 men in Judah who were fit to serve as soldiers in the army.
David realized that he had committed a very serious sin, confessed it to Yahweh, and asked Yahweh to forgive him for his foolish act.
Yahweh told David that he must choose one of three punishments.
God offered a choice of seven years of famine, three months of fleeing from his enemies, or three days of plague in the land.
Yahweh grieved about punishing any more people, and told the angel to lower his hand.
David said that he had sinned, and he asked that Yahweh’s hand be against him and his father’s house, not against the people.
Gad told David to go up and set up an altar for Yahweh on the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite.
David wanted to buy the threshing floor to build an altar for Yahweh so that he will stop the plague that has been killing so many Israelites.
David insisted on buying it because he would not offer to Yahweh burnt offerings that cost him nothing.
David built an altar for Yahweh and he offered burnt offerings and peace offerings. Then Yahweh answered David’s prayers, and he ended the plague that had been killing so many Israelites.