Encontrados 1238 resultados para: Fall Of Jerusalem
but they would not have it. It makes no great matter to the enemy, they said, whether we are routed: even if half of us should fall, they would set little store by it; thy life is more to them than the lives of ten thousand others. Better that thou shouldst remain in the city and garrison it for us. (2 Samuel 18, 3)
Bestir thyself, come out and speak to thy men, and earn their good will; I swear by the Lord that if thou dost not come out, not a man will be left to serve thy cause by night-fall; and worse awaits thee than all the troubles which have come upon thee from the days of thy youth till now. (2 Samuel 19, 7)
My lord, he said, do not hold me guilty, forget the wrong thy servant did thee when thou, my lord king, hadst left Jerusalem; let there be no grudge in thy royal heart. (2 Samuel 19, 19)
Down from Jerusalem he came to meet him, and when the king asked, Why didst thou not bear me company, Miphiboseth? (2 Samuel 19, 25)
To him the king said, Bear me company, and take thy ease with me at Jerusalem. (2 Samuel 19, 33)
But Berzellai answered, What, a man of my years go up to Jerusalem with the king’s grace? (2 Samuel 19, 34)
Thereupon all the Israelites parted from David’s company, and marched away with Seba, son of Bochri; it was only the men of Juda that escorted David all the way from Jordan to Jerusalem. (2 Samuel 20, 2)
So in pursuit of Seba they went, under Abisai’s command, Joab’s men, and the Cerethites and Phelethites, and all the picked warriors in Jerusalem; (2 Samuel 20, 7)
And with that she went in, and spoke to the defenders in the wisdom that was her craft; whereupon they cut off the head of Seba, son of Bochri, and cast it down to Joab. So he blew his trumpet, and his men raised the siege and went to their tents; Joab himself went back to the king’s court at Jerusalem. (2 Samuel 20, 22)
So they made their review of the whole country, and returned to Jerusalem after nine months’ and twenty days’ absence. (2 Samuel 24, 8)
I am hard pressed on all sides, David told him; but it is better to fall into the hands of the Lord, so rich is he in mercy, than into the hands of men. (2 Samuel 24, 14)
But when the angel of the Lord was stretching out his hand over Jerusalem, to bring destruction on it, the Lord was moved with pity over their calamity, and said to the angel who was smiting the people down, It is enough, stay thy hand. The angel of the Lord stood close, then, to the threshing-floor of Areuna the Jebusite. (2 Samuel 24, 16)
