2 Samuel 19:13
Context19:13 Say to Amasa, ‘Are you not my flesh and blood? 1 God will punish me severely, 2 if from this time on you are not the commander of my army in place of Joab!’”
2 Samuel 20:23
Context20:23 Now Joab was the general in command of all the army of Israel. Benaiah the son of Jehoida was over the Kerethites and the Perethites.
2 Samuel 20:1
Context20:1 Now a wicked man 3 named Sheba son of Bicri, a Benjaminite, 4 happened to be there. He blew the trumpet 5 and said,
“We have no share in David;
we have no inheritance in this son of Jesse!
Every man go home, 6 O Israel!”
2 Samuel 11:6
Context11:6 So David sent a message to Joab that said, “Send me Uriah the Hittite.” So Joab sent Uriah to David.
2 Samuel 18:15-17
Context18:15 Then ten soldiers who were Joab’s armor bearers struck Absalom and finished him off.
18:16 Then Joab blew the trumpet 7 and the army turned back from chasing Israel, for Joab had called for the army to halt. 18:17 They took Absalom, threw him into a large pit in the forest, and stacked a huge pile of stones over him. In the meantime all the Israelite soldiers fled to their homes. 8
[19:13] 1 tn Heb “my bone and my flesh.”
[19:13] 2 tn Heb “Thus God will do to me and thus he will add.”
[20:1] 3 tn Heb “a man of worthlessness.”
[20:1] 4 tn The expression used here יְמִינִי (yÿmini) is a short form of the more common “Benjamin.” It appears elsewhere in 1 Sam 9:4 and Esth 2:5. Cf. 1 Sam 9:1.
[20:1] 5 tn Heb “the shophar” (the ram’s horn trumpet). So also v. 22.
[20:1] 6 tc The MT reads לְאֹהָלָיו (lÿ’ohalav, “to his tents”). For a similar idiom, see 19:9. An ancient scribal tradition understands the reading to be לְאלֹהָיו (le’lohav, “to his gods”). The word is a tiqqun sopherim, and the scribes indicate that they changed the word from “gods” to “tents” so as to soften its theological implications. In a consonantal Hebrew text the change involved only the metathesis of two letters.
[18:16] 7 tn Heb “the shophar” (the ram’s horn trumpet).
[18:17] 8 tn Heb “and all Israel fled, each to his tent.” In this context this refers to the supporters of Absalom (see vv. 6-7, 16).