Encontrados 863 resultados para: David
It was all over when David heard of it, and he cried, Never shall I or my kingdom be held answerable for Abner’s death! (2 Samuel 3, 28)
As for David, he bade Joab and his men tear their garments and put on sackcloth, and go mourning at Abner’s funeral; he himself followed the bier, (2 Samuel 3, 31)
Then, while it was still full day, they came together to eat, and would have David eat with them; but he took an oath, The Lord punish me as I deserve, and more than I deserve, if I taste bread or any other food before set of sun! (2 Samuel 3, 35)
among all that multitude, and in all Israel, there was not a man that blamed David for the slaying of Abner, son of Ner. (2 Samuel 3, 37)
So they brought the head of Isboseth to David at Hebron; See, they told him, here is the head of Isboseth, the heir of Saul, that was thy mortal enemy; the Lord has revenged our royal master this day upon Saul and his race. (2 Samuel 4, 8)
But this was the answer David made to Rechab and his brother Baana, sons of Remmon: As the Lord, my rescuer from all peril, is a living God, you shall repent it!✻ (2 Samuel 4, 9)
So David ordered his men to kill them and cut off their hands and feet; the bodies were hung up over the fish-pond at Hebron. As for the head of Isboseth, it was carried away, and buried in Abner’s grave. (2 Samuel 4, 12)
After this, all the tribes of Israel rallied to David at Hebron; We are kith and kin of thine, they said. (2 Samuel 5, 1)
And so the elders of Israel went to his court at Hebron; and there, at Hebron, in the Lord’s presence, David made a covenant with them, and they anointed him king of Israel. (2 Samuel 5, 3)
When the king and his army marched on Jerusalem, to attack the Jebusites, that were native to the soil, they met him with the taunt, Thou must rid thyself of blind men and lame, before thou canst make thy way in here, meaning that David would never make his way in; (2 Samuel 5, 6)
but take it he did, the Citadel of Sion that is called David’s Keep. (2 Samuel 5, 7)
He had promised a reward to the conqueror of the Jebusites, to the man who should reach the gutters of the roofs, and clear them of the blind and lame (as he called them) that were David’s enemies. That was how the saying arose, No entry into the precincts for the blind and the lame.✻ (2 Samuel 5, 8)
