1 Samuel 6:16
Context6:16 The five leaders of the Philistines watched what was happening and then returned to Ekron on the same day.
1 Samuel 21:3
Context21:3 Now what do you have at your disposal? 1 Give me five loaves of bread, or whatever can be found.”
1 Samuel 6:4
Context6:4 They inquired, “What is the guilt offering that we should send to him?”
They replied, “The Philistine leaders number five. So send five gold sores and five gold mice, for it is the same plague that has afflicted both you and your leaders.
1 Samuel 25:42
Context25:42 Then Abigail quickly went and mounted her donkey, with five of her female servants accompanying her. 2 She followed David’s messengers and became his wife.
1 Samuel 25:18
Context25:18 So Abigail quickly took two hundred loaves of bread, two containers 3 of wine, five prepared sheep, five seahs 4 of roasted grain, a hundred bunches of raisins, and two hundred lumps of pressed figs. She loaded them on donkeys
1 Samuel 17:5
Context17:5 He had a bronze helmet on his head and was wearing scale body armor. The weight of his bronze body armor was five thousand shekels. 5
1 Samuel 22:18
Context22:18 Then the king said to Doeg, “You turn and strike down the priests!” So Doeg the Edomite turned and struck down the priests. He killed on that day eighty-five 6 men who wore the linen ephod.
1 Samuel 6:18
Context6:18 The gold mice corresponded in number to all the Philistine cities of the five leaders, from the fortified cities to hamlet villages, to greater Abel, 7 where they positioned the ark of the Lord until this very day in the field of Joshua who was from Beth Shemesh.
1 Samuel 17:40
Context17:40 He took his staff in his hand, picked out five smooth stones from the stream, placed them in the pouch 8 of his shepherd’s bag, took his sling in hand, and approached the Philistine.
1 Samuel 6:17
Context6:17 These are the gold sores that the Philistines brought as a guilt offering to the Lord – one for each of the following cities: Ashdod, Gaza, Ashkelon, Gath, and Ekron.
1 Samuel 16:20
Context16:20 So Jesse took a donkey loaded with bread, a container of wine, and a young goat 9 and sent them to Saul with 10 his son David.
1 Samuel 5:8
Context5:8 So they assembled 11 all the leaders of the Philistines and asked, “What should we do with the ark of the God of Israel?” They replied, “The ark of the God of Israel should be moved to Gath.” So they moved the ark of the God of Israel.


[21:3] 1 tn Heb “under your hand.”
[25:42] 1 tn Heb “going at her feet.”
[25:18] 2 sn The seah was a dry measure equal to one-third of an ephah, or not quite eleven quarts.
[17:5] 1 sn Although the exact weight of Goliath’s defensive body armor is difficult to estimate in terms of modern equivalency, it was obviously quite heavy. Driver, following Kennedy, suggests a modern equivalent of about 220 pounds (100 kg); see S. R. Driver, Notes on the Hebrew Text and the Topography of the Books of Samuel, 139. Klein, taking the shekel to be equal to .403 ounces, arrives at a somewhat smaller weight of about 126 pounds (57 kg); see R. W. Klein, 1 Samuel (WBC), 175. But by any estimate it is clear that Goliath presented himself as a formidable foe indeed.
[22:18] 1 tc The number is confused in the Greek
[6:18] 1 tc A few Hebrew
[17:40] 1 tn This Hebrew word occurs only here and its exact meaning is not entirely clear. It refers to a receptacle of some sort and apparently was a common part of a shepherd’s equipment. Here it serves as a depository for the stones that David will use in his sling.
[16:20] 1 tn Heb “a kid of the goats.”