Encontrados 925 resultados para: Root Of David
I will promise her, thought Saul, in such a way as to entrap him; the Philistines shall rid me of him. And he told David, I have a second condition for thee to fulfil, and thereupon thou shalt have my daughter.✻ (1 Samuel 18, 21)
Meanwhile, Saul had bidden his servants encourage David, when he himself was not by, telling him what favour the king, what love the king’s servants bore him; it was time he became the king’s son-in-law. (1 Samuel 18, 22)
But when they whispered these hopes to him, David said, Think you such a prize is won easily, when a man has neither purse nor station? (1 Samuel 18, 23)
When his servants came back to him with the news that David had answered thus, (1 Samuel 18, 24)
Saul bade them tell David, The king claims no bridal gifts, if thou wilt bring him the foreskins of a hundred Philistines, to give him a royal revenge on his enemies. In this way, Saul thought to betray David into the power of the Philistines; (1 Samuel 18, 25)
but when they told him what their master had said, David was well pleased to win the king’s daughter so. (1 Samuel 18, 26)
A few days afterwards, he set out with the men under his command, slew two hundred Philistines, and brought back their foreskins, which he counted out before the king as the price of his bride. And now Saul must give David his daughter Michol’s hand. (1 Samuel 18, 27)
That the Lord was with David, Saul could tell beyond doubt, and here was his daughter Michol David’s loving wife; (1 Samuel 18, 28)
Meanwhile, the Philistine chiefs came out to battle; David, from the time when their attacks began, shewed greater skill than all the rest of Saul’s officers, and his name was in high renown. (1 Samuel 18, 30)
Once, Saul gave the word to Jonathan and to all his servants that they must put David to death. But Saul’s son Jonathan, who loved David well, (1 Samuel 19, 1)
So Jonathan pleaded David’s cause with his father Saul; Do no wrong he said, to thy servant David, that has done thee no wrong, but is much thy benefactor. (1 Samuel 19, 4)
Did he not put his life in peril, that day when he slew the Philistine, and the Lord gave the whole army of Israel a great victory? Thou wast there to see it, and rejoice at it; and wilt thou bring on thyself the guilt of blood wrongfully shed, by slaying David, who is innocent of fault? (1 Samuel 19, 5)
