Znaleziono 195 Wyniki dla: Jonathan
And there they set up the image; the tribe of Dan had its own priests down to the day when it went into exile, descended from Moses’ son Gersam, and his son Jonathan. (Judges 18, 30)
when he picked an army of three thousand men. Of these, two thousand were under his own command, around Machmas and the hill country of Bethel, and a thousand under Jonathan at Gabaa in Benjamin. The rest of the people he sent back to their homes. (1 Samuel 13, 2)
But now Jonathan overpowered the Philistine garrison at Gabaa, and news of it was brought to the Philistines; whereupon Saul sounded an alarm all through the country, Hebrews, here is news for you! (1 Samuel 13, 3)
There, at Gabaa, Saul and his son Jonathan encamped with their followers, while the Philistines confronted them at Machmas. (1 Samuel 13, 16)
and in times of battle Saul and his son Jonathan were the only men in the army that carried sword or lance.) (1 Samuel 13, 22)
And one day, Saul’s son Jonathan proposed to the lad who carried his armour for him, Let us attack the Philistine detachment over yonder; but he said no word of it to Saul. (1 Samuel 14, 1)
he had a priest with him, bearing the sacred mantle, Achias son of Achitob. (This Achitob was brother to Ichabod, and son of that Phinees whose father Heli was once the Lord’s priest at Silo.) The men in the ranks, too, knew nothing of Jonathan’s errand. (1 Samuel 14, 3)
Here, then, Jonathan said to his squire, Let us attack the post these uncircumcised Philistines have set on guard, and see if the Lord will speed us. Many or few, if the Lord means to grant us victory, who shall prevent him? (1 Samuel 14, 6)
We approach them, then, said Jonathan, and shew ourselves. (1 Samuel 14, 8)
And they cried out from their post to Jonathan and his squire, Come up to our side; we have something to disclose to you. And at that, Jonathan said to his squire, Up, then, go we; follow me close; the Lord is giving Israel the mastery. (1 Samuel 14, 12)
So, crawling upon hands and knees, Jonathan climbed up, and his squire after him; and of the enemy, some fell to Jonathan himself, some to the squire as he came up behind him. (1 Samuel 14, 13)
This first slaughter that befell, when Jonathan and his squire assailed them, was but of twenty men, on a piece of ground that measured half an acre, a day’s ploughing for a pair of oxen. (1 Samuel 14, 14)
