Authors: Inc. Tyndale House Publishers
Tags: #BIBLES / Other Translations / Text
David went to the city of Nob to see Ahimelech, the priest. Ahimelech trembled when he saw him.
“Why are you alone?” he asked. “Why is no one with you?”
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“The king has sent me on a private matter,” David lied. “He told me not to tell anybody why I am here. I have told my men where to meet me later.
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Now, what is there to eat? Give me five loaves of bread or anything else you can.”
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“We don’t have any regular bread,” the priest replied, “but there is the holy bread, which I guess you can have if only your young men have not slept with any women for a while.”
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“Rest assured,” David replied. “I never let my men run wild when they are on an expedition, and since they stay clean even on ordinary trips, how much more so on this one!”
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So, since there was no other food available, the priest gave him the holy bread—the Bread of the Presence that was placed before the Lord in the Tabernacle. It had just been replaced that day with fresh bread.
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(Incidentally, Doeg the Edomite, Saul’s chief herdsman, was there at that time for ceremonial purification.
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)
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David asked Ahimelech if he had a spear or sword he could use. “The king’s business required such haste, and I left in such a rush that I came away without a weapon!” David explained.
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“Well,” the priest replied, “I have the sword of Goliath, the Philistine—the fellow you killed in the valley of Elah. It is wrapped in a cloth in the clothes closet.
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Take that if you want it, for there is nothing else here.”
“Just the thing!” David replied. “Give it to me!”
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Then David hurried on, for he was fearful of Saul, and went to King Achish of Gath.
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But Achish’s officers weren’t happy about his being there. “Isn’t he the top leader of Israel?” they asked.
“Isn’t he the one the people honor at their dances, singing, ‘Saul has slain his thousands and David his ten thousands’?”
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David heard these comments and was afraid of what King Achish might do to him,
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so he pretended to be insane! He scratched on doors and let his spittle flow down his beard,
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until finally King Achish said to his men, “Must you bring me a madman? We already have enough of them around here! Should such a fellow as this be my guest?”
So David left Gath and escaped to the cave of Adullam, where his brothers and other relatives soon joined him.
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Then others began coming—those who were in any kind of trouble, such as being in debt, or merely discontented—until David was the leader of about four hundred men.
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(Later David went to Mizpeh in Moab to ask permission of the king for his father and mother to live there under royal protection until David knew what God was going to do for him.
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They stayed in Moab during the entire period when David was living in the cave.)
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One day the prophet Gad told David to leave the cave and return to the land of Judah. So David went to the forest of Hereth.
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The news of his arrival in Judah soon reached Saul. He was in Gibeah at the time, sitting beneath an oak tree playing with his spear, surrounded by his officers.
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“Listen here, you men of Benjamin!” Saul exclaimed when he heard the news. “Has David promised you fields and vineyards and commissions in his army?
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Is that why you are against me? For not one of you has ever told me that my own son is on David’s side. You’re not even sorry for me. Think of it! My own son—encouraging David to come and kill me!”
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Then Doeg the Edomite, who was standing there with Saul’s men, spoke up. “When I was at Nob,” he said, “I saw David talking to Ahimelech the priest. Ahimelech consulted the Lord to find out what David should do, and then gave him food and the sword of Goliath the Philistine.”
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King Saul immediately summoned Ahimelech and all his family and all the other priests at Nob. When they arrived Saul shouted at him, “Listen to me, you son of Ahitub!”
“What is it?” quavered Ahimelech.
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“Why have you and David conspired against me?” Saul demanded. “Why did you give him food and a sword and talk to God for him? Why did you encourage him to revolt against me and to come here and attack me?”
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“But sir,” Ahimelech replied, “is there anyone among all your servants who is as faithful as David your son-in-law? Why, he is the captain of your bodyguard and a highly honored member of your own household!
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This was certainly not the first time I had consulted God for him! It’s unfair for you to accuse me and my family in this matter, for we knew nothing of any plot against you.”
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“You shall die, Ahimelech, along with your entire family!” the king shouted.
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He ordered his bodyguards, “Kill these priests, for they are allies and conspirators with David; they knew he was running away from me, but they didn’t tell me!”
But the soldiers refused to harm the clergy.
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Then the king said to Doeg, “You do it.”
So Doeg turned on them and killed them, eighty-five priests in all, all wearing their priestly robes.
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Then he went to Nob, the city of the priests, and killed the priests’ families—men, women, children, and babies, and also all the oxen, donkeys, and sheep.
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Only Abiathar, one of the sons of Ahimelech, escaped and fled to David.
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When he told him what Saul had done,
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David exclaimed, “I knew it! When I saw Doeg there, I knew he would tell Saul. Now I have caused the death of all of your father’s family.
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Stay here with me, and I’ll protect you with my own life. Any harm to you will be over my dead body.”
One day news came to David that the Philistines were at Keilah robbing the threshing floors.
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David asked the Lord, “Shall I go and attack them?”
“Yes, go and save Keilah,” the Lord told him.
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But David’s men said, “We’re afraid even here in Judah; we certainly don’t want to go to Keilah to fight the whole Philistine army!”
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David asked the Lord again, and the Lord again replied, “Go down to Keilah, for I will help you conquer the Philistines.”
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They went to Keilah and slaughtered the Philistines and confiscated their cattle, and so the people of Keilah were saved.
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(Abiathar the priest went to Keilah with David, taking his ephod with him to get answers for David from the Lord.)
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Saul soon learned that David was at Keilah.
“Good!” he exclaimed. “We’ve got him now! God has delivered him to me, for he has trapped himself in a walled city!”
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So Saul mobilized his entire army to march to Keilah and besiege David and his men.
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But David learned of Saul’s plan and told Abiathar the priest to bring the ephod and to ask the Lord what he should do.
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“O Lord God of Israel,” David said, “I have heard that Saul is planning to come and destroy Keilah because I am here.
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Will the men of Keilah surrender me to him? And will Saul actually come, as I have heard? O Lord God of Israel, please tell me.”
And the Lord said, “He will come.”
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“And will these men of Keilah betray me to Saul?” David persisted.
And the Lord replied, “Yes, they will betray you.”
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So David and his men—about six hundred of them now—left Keilah and began roaming the countryside. Word soon reached Saul that David had escaped, so he didn’t go there after all.
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David now lived in the wilderness caves in the hill country of Ziph. One day near Horesh he received the news that Saul was on the way to Ziph to search for him and kill him. Saul hunted him day after day, but the Lord didn’t let him find him.
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(Prince Jonathan now went to find David; he met him at Horesh and encouraged him in his faith in God.
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“Don’t be afraid,” Jonathan reassured him. “My father will never find you! You are going to be the king of Israel and I will be next to you, as my father is well aware.”
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So the two of them renewed their pact of friendship; and David stayed at Horesh while Jonathan returned home.)
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But now the men of Ziph went to Saul in Gibeah and betrayed David to him.
“We know where he is hiding,” they said. “He is in the caves of Horesh on Hachilah Hill, down in the southern part of the wilderness.
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Come on down, sir, and we will catch him for you and your fondest wish will be fulfilled!”
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“Well, praise the Lord!” Saul said. “At last someone has had pity on me!
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Go and check again to be sure of where he is staying and who has seen him there, for I know that he is very crafty.
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Discover his hiding places and then come back and give me a more definite report. Then I’ll go with you. And if he is in the area at all, I’ll find him if I have to search every inch of the entire land!”
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So the men of Ziph returned home. But when David heard that Saul was on his way to Ziph, he and his men went even further into the wilderness of Maon in the south of the desert. But Saul followed them there.
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He and David were now on opposite sides of a mountain. As Saul and his men began to close in, David tried his best to escape, but it was no use.
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But just then a message reached Saul that the Philistines were raiding Israel again,
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so Saul quit the chase and returned to fight the Philistines. Ever since that time the place where David was camped has been called, “The Rock of Escape.”
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David then went to live in the caves of Engedi.