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  • Then David fled from Naioth, which is in Ramah, and he went and said before Jonathan: “What have I done? What is my iniquity, or what is my sin, against your father, so that he would seek my life?” (1 Samuel 20, 1)

  • And he said to him: “May this not be! You shall not die. For my father will not do anything, great or small, without first revealing it to me. Therefore, has my father concealed this word solely from me? By no means shall this be!” (1 Samuel 20, 2)

  • And he swore again to David. And David said: “Your father certainly knows that I have found favor in your sight, and so he will say, ‘Let Jonathan not know this, lest he be saddened.’ So truly, as the Lord lives, and as your soul lives, there is only one step (if I may say it) separating me from death.” (1 Samuel 20, 3)

  • If your father, looking around, will seek me, you shall respond to him: ‘David asked me if he may hurry to Bethlehem, his own city. For there are solemn sacrifices in that place for all of his tribe together.’ (1 Samuel 20, 6)

  • Therefore, show mercy to your servant. For you have brought me, your servant, into a covenant of the Lord with you. But if there is any iniquity in me, you may kill me, and you shall not lead me in to your father.” (1 Samuel 20, 8)

  • And Jonathan said: “May this be far from you. For certainly, if I ever realized that any wickedness was determined by my father against you, I would not be able to do anything other than report it to you.” (1 Samuel 20, 9)

  • And David responded to Jonathan, “Who will repeat it to me, if your father may perhaps answer you harshly about me?” (1 Samuel 20, 10)

  • Jonathan said before David: “O Lord, God of Israel, if I will discover a decision by my father, tomorrow, or the day after, and if there will be anything good concerning David, and yet I do not immediately send to you and make it known to you, (1 Samuel 20, 12)

  • may the Lord do these things to Jonathan, and may he add these other things. But if my father will have persevered in malice against you, I will reveal it to your ear, and I will send you away, so that you may go in peace, and so that the Lord may be with you, just as he was with my father. (1 Samuel 20, 13)

  • Then Jonathan, answering his father Saul, said: “Why should he die? What has he done?” (1 Samuel 20, 32)

  • And Saul picked up a lance, so that he might strike him. And Jonathan understood that it had been decided by his father that David be put to death. (1 Samuel 20, 33)

  • Therefore, Jonathan rose up from the table in a rage of anger. And he did not eat bread on the second day after the new moon. For he was saddened over David, because his father had confounded him. (1 Samuel 20, 34)


“Seja grato e beije docemente a mão de Deus. É sempre a mão de um pai que pune porque lhe quer bem” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina