2 Samuel 2:18
2:18 The three sons of Zeruiah were there – Joab, Abishai, and Asahel. (Now Asahel was as quick on his feet as one of the gazelles in the field.)
2 Samuel 3:30
3:30 So Joab and his brother Abishai killed Abner, because he had killed their brother Asahel in Gibeon during the battle.
2 Samuel 10:10
10:10 He put his brother Abishai in charge of the rest of the army
and they were deployed
against the Ammonites.
2 Samuel 10:14
10:14 When the Ammonites saw the Arameans flee, they fled before his brother Abishai and went into the city. Joab withdrew from fighting the Ammonites and returned to
Jerusalem.
2 Samuel 18:2
18:2 David then sent out the army – a third under the leadership of Joab, a third under the leadership of Joab’s brother Abishai son of Zeruiah, and a third under the leadership of Ittai the Gittite. The king said to the troops, “I too will indeed march out with you.”
2 Samuel 20:10
20:10 Amasa did not protect himself from the knife in Joab’s other hand, and Joab
stabbed him in the abdomen, causing Amasa’s
intestines to spill out on the ground. There was no need to stab him again; the first blow was fatal.
Then Joab and his brother Abishai pursued Sheba son of Bicri.
2 Samuel 20:1
Sheba’s Rebellion
20:1 Now a wicked man named Sheba son of Bicri, a Benjaminite, happened to be there. He blew the trumpet and said,
“We have no share in David;
we have no inheritance in this son of Jesse!
Every man go home, O Israel!”
2 Samuel 1:6-8
1:6 The young man who was telling him this
said, “I just happened to be on Mount Gilboa and came across Saul leaning on his spear for support. The chariots and leaders of the horsemen were in hot pursuit of him.
1:7 When he turned around and saw me, he called out to me. I answered, ‘Here I am!’
1:8 He asked me, ‘Who are you?’ I told him, ‘I’m
an Amalekite.’
2 Samuel 1:1
David Learns of the Deaths of Saul and Jonathan
1:1 After the death of Saul, when David had returned from defeating the Amalekites, he stayed at Ziklag for two days.
2 Samuel 2:16
2:16 As they grappled with one another, each one stabbed his opponent with his sword and they fell dead together.
So that place is called the Field of Flints;
it is in Gibeon.
2 Samuel 11:20-21
11:20 if the king becomes angry and asks you, ‘Why did you go so close to the city to fight? Didn’t you realize they would shoot from the wall?
11:21 Who struck down Abimelech the son of Jerub-Besheth? Didn’t a woman throw an upper millstone
down on him from the wall so that he died in Thebez? Why did you go so close to the wall?’ just say to him, ‘Your servant Uriah the Hittite is also dead.’”