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Text -- 2 Samuel 14:1-33 (NET)

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Context
David Permits Absalom to Return to Jerusalem
14:1 Now Joab son of Zeruiah realized that the king longed to see Absalom. 14:2 So Joab sent to Tekoa and brought from there a wise woman. He told her, “Pretend to be in mourning and put on garments for mourning. Don’t anoint yourself with oil. Instead, act like a woman who has been mourning for the dead for some time. 14:3 Go to the king and speak to him in the following fashion.” Then Joab told her what to say. 14:4 So the Tekoan woman went to the king. She bowed down with her face to the ground in deference to him and said, “Please help me, O king!” 14:5 The king replied to her, “What do you want?” She answered, “I am a widow; my husband is dead. 14:6 Your servant has two sons. When the two of them got into a fight in the field, there was no one present who could intervene. One of them struck the other and killed him. 14:7 Now the entire family has risen up against your servant, saying, ‘Turn over the one who struck down his brother, so that we can execute him and avenge the death of his brother whom he killed. In so doing we will also destroy the heir.’ They want to extinguish my remaining coal, leaving no one on the face of the earth to carry on the name of my husband.” 14:8 Then the king told the woman, “Go to your home. I will give instructions concerning your situation.” 14:9 The Tekoan woman said to the king, “My lord the king, let any blame fall on me and on the house of my father. But let the king and his throne be innocent!” 14:10 The king said, “Bring to me whoever speaks to you, and he won’t bother you again!” 14:11 She replied, “In that case, let the king invoke the name of the Lord your God so that the avenger of blood may not kill! Then they will not destroy my son!” He replied, “As surely as the Lord lives, not a single hair of your son’s head will fall to the ground.” 14:12 Then the woman said, “Please permit your servant to speak to my lord the king about another matter.” He replied, “Tell me.” 14:13 The woman said, “Why have you devised something like this against God’s people? When the king speaks in this fashion, he makes himself guilty, for the king has not brought back the one he has banished. 14:14 Certainly we must die, and are like water spilled on the ground that cannot be gathered up again. But God does not take away life; instead he devises ways for the banished to be restored. 14:15 I have now come to speak with my lord the king about this matter, because the people have made me fearful. But your servant said, ‘I will speak to the king! Perhaps the king will do what his female servant asks. 14:16 Yes! The king may listen and deliver his female servant from the hand of the man who seeks to remove both me and my son from the inheritance God has given us!’ 14:17 So your servant said, ‘May the word of my lord the king be my security, for my lord the king is like the angel of God when it comes to deciding between right and wrong! May the Lord your God be with you!’” 14:18 Then the king replied to the woman, “Don’t hide any information from me when I question you.” The woman said, “Let my lord the king speak!” 14:19 The king said, “Did Joab put you up to all of this?” The woman answered, “As surely as you live, my lord the king, there is no deviation to the right or to the left from all that my lord the king has said. For your servant Joab gave me instructions. He has put all these words in your servant’s mouth. 14:20 Your servant Joab did this so as to change this situation. But my lord has wisdom like that of the angel of God, and knows everything that is happening in the land.” 14:21 Then the king said to Joab, “All right! I will do this thing! Go and bring back the young man Absalom! 14:22 Then Joab bowed down with his face toward the ground and thanked the king. Joab said, “Today your servant knows that I have found favor in your sight, my lord the king, because the king has granted the request of your servant!” 14:23 So Joab got up and went to Geshur and brought Absalom back to Jerusalem. 14:24 But the king said, “Let him go over to his own house. He may not see my face.” So Absalom went over to his own house; he did not see the king’s face. 14:25 Now in all Israel everyone acknowledged that there was no man as handsome as Absalom. From the sole of his feet to the top of his head he was perfect in appearance. 14:26 When he would shave his head– at the end of every year he used to shave his head, for it grew too long and he would shave it– he used to weigh the hair of his head at three pounds according to the king’s weight. 14:27 Absalom had three sons and one daughter, whose name was Tamar. She was a very attractive woman. 14:28 Absalom lived in Jerusalem for two years without seeing the king’s face. 14:29 Then Absalom sent a message to Joab asking him to send him to the king, but Joab was not willing to come to him. So he sent a second message to him, but he still was not willing to come. 14:30 So he said to his servants, “Look, Joab has a portion of field adjacent to mine and he has some barley there. Go and set it on fire.” So Absalom’s servants set Joab’s portion of the field on fire. 14:31 Then Joab got up and came to Absalom’s house. He said to him, “Why did your servants set my portion of field on fire?” 14:32 Absalom said to Joab, “Look, I sent a message to you saying, ‘Come here so that I can send you to the king with this message: “Why have I come from Geshur? It would be better for me if I were still there.”’ Let me now see the face of the king. If I am at fault, let him put me to death!” 14:33 So Joab went to the king and informed him. The king summoned Absalom, and he came to the king. Absalom bowed down before the king with his face toward the ground and the king kissed him.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Absalom the son of David and Maacah
 · Geshur a town and nation
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel
 · Jerusalem the capital city of Israel,a town; the capital of Israel near the southern border of Benjamin
 · Joab son of Zeruiah, David's sister; commander of King David's army,son of Seraiah son of Kenaz of Judah; grand nephew of Caleb of Moses' time,a man whose descendants returned from exile in Babylon,ancestor of a family group who returned from exile headed by Obadiah the son of Jehiel
 · Tamar the daughter-in-law of Judah; the mother of Judah's sons Perez and Zerah; an ancestor of Jesus,daughter-in-law to Judah; mother of Zerah and Perez,daughter of King David,daughter of Absalom,a town of Judah 60 km SE of Beersheba & 35 km SSW of the Dead Sea
 · Tekoa resident(s) of the town of Tekoa
 · Zeruiah daughter of Jesse; sister of David; mother of Abishai, Asahel and Joab


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Joab | David | Chronicles, Books of | AMOS (1) | SAMUEL, BOOKS OF | Absalom | Intercession | Kindness | Tact | EDUCATION | Dishonesty | Avenger of Blood | LAW OF MOSES | Parables | Hair | Flattery | MURDER | Exile | ADORATION | Tekoa, Tekoah | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:1 Heb “the heart of the king was upon.” The Syriac Peshitta adds the verb ’ethre’i (“was reconciled”).

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:2 Heb “these many days.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:3 Heb “put the words in her mouth” (so NASB, NIV).

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:4 The word “me” is left to be inferred in the Hebrew text; it is present in the Syriac Peshitta and Vulgate.

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:5 Heb “What to you?”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:6 Here and elsewhere (vv. 7, 12, 15a, 17, 19) the woman uses a term which suggests a lower level female servant. She uses the term to express her humili...

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:7 My remaining coal is here metaphorical language, describing the one remaining son as her only source of lingering hope for continuing the family line.

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:8 Heb “concerning you.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:11 Heb “of your son.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:14 Heb “he devises plans for the one banished from him not to be banished.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:15 Here and in v. 16 the woman refers to herself as the king’s אָמָה (’amah), a term that refers to a higher le...

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:16 Heb “from the inheritance of God.” The expression refers to the property that was granted to her family line in the division of the land a...

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:19 Heb “Is the hand of Joab with you in all this?”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:20 Heb “to know all that is in the land.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:21 Many medieval Hebrew mss have “you” rather than “I.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:22 The present translation reads with the Qere “your” rather than the MT “his.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:23 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:24 Heb “turned aside.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:25 Heb “there was not in him a blemish.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:26 Heb “two hundred shekels.” The modern equivalent would be about three pounds (1.4 kg).

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:27 The LXX adds here the following words: “And she became a wife to Rehoboam the son of Solomon and bore to him Abia.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:30 The word “Joab’s” is not in the Hebrew text, but has been supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:32 Heb “saying.”

NET Notes: 2Sa 14:33 Heb “Absalom.” For stylistic reasons the name has been replaced by the pronoun (“him”) in the translation.

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