BetteTheRed
Resident Heretic
- Pronouns
- She/Her/Her
Wonder what those self-righteous "sanctity of marriage" types do with David?
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David's was the most disfunctional family since Jacob with his four wives and 13 children.
David's decision: "The share of the man who stayed with the supplies is to be the same as that of him who went down o the battle." He made this a statute and ordinance for Israel. Righteousness and justice?
Gratitude for the summary. Nice to see a text from ancient days finding present voice. I constantly wonder why the Bible’s egalitarian vision and practice is so strongly resisted. The bias being for possessive individualism expressed as political hedonism. Are we not in this together? All of us and our children?More psalms - 121 / 121-123 / 125 / 128-130 - I note that these are more up-beat than the ones I read earlier this week.
And 1 Samuel is finished. It seems that David and his outlaw band crossed into Philistine lands and made an agreement with the leader of the Philistines. Peace for a short while. Then complications: The Philistines and Saul's armies meet in the battlefield. Saul, having lost God's favour, meets with the medium of Endor who calls up Samuel's ghost who predicts Saul's death and that of his sons.
David's band sets out to support the Philistines but are sent back before the battle begins so they are not present when Saul, and Jonathan and his brothers are killed and their bodies mutilated.
Meanwhile, the Amalekites had raided David's settlement and captured the women and children, including David's two wives.
David's men are exhausted, so much so that he divides them and leaves half to guard the excess baggage while the stronger push on to defeat the Amalekites and get back their wives and children and claim the spoils of war. When the two halves of David's band are rejoined and the wives and children back with their men, the spoils are to be divided. Question - do the spoils belong solely to those who were involved in the battle or are they shared with those left behind?
David's decision: "The share of the man who stayed with the supplies is to be the same as that of him who went down o the battle." He made this a statute and ordinance for Israel. Righteousness and justice?
Psalms 105, 106, 107 = long poems reviewing their history in song.
2 Sam 5:22 - 6:23 and 1 Chron. 13 - 16
Both cover the same material, sometimes almost word for word; but Chronicles adds more detail.
David is established in Jerusalem and a palace built for him. He acquires more wives and concubines and more sons are born to him.
More battles with the Phiilistines.
The ark of the Lord is brought to Jerusalem with much celebration; (David and Michal have their differences. )
David composes a long song for the ccelebration - very similar to the Psalms 105-107.
And doesn't David dance naked?
And doesn't David dance naked?
Recognition that guarding the rear is as important as being in the vanguard in a military campaign, I would say. If the Amalekites had circled back to try to take out David's supply lines or something, the ones left behind would have been the ones doing the fighting and would possibly have saved the day.