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Books of Samuel

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Books of Samuel
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BooksOfSamuel
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The BibleOld Testament/TanakhGenesis | Exodus | Joshua | Judges | Ruth | Samuel | Kings | Ezra | Nehemiah | Esther | Job | Psalms | Proverbs | Ecclesiastes | Songs | Isaiah | Jeremiah | Ezekiel | Daniel | Hosea | Joel | Amos | Obadiah | Jonah | Micah | Nahum | Habakkuk | Zephania | Haggai | Zechariah | MalachiApocrypha/DeuterocanonicalTobit | Judith | MaccabeesNew TestamentGospels | Acts | Romans | Corinthians | Galatians | Ephesians | Philippians | Colossians | Thessalonians | Timothy | Titus | Philemon | Hebrews | James | Peter | John | Jude | RevelationThe ninth and tenth books of The Bible.The first book tells the story of Samuel who is dedicated by his mother to the priesthood. He grows up to be the most important religious and political figure of his day, becoming the last shofet or "Judge" of Israel (in the sense meant by the Book of Judges) and (somewhat reluctantly) helps establish the Israelite kingship.The second book tells of the kingship of David, Israel's greatest king and (in the Christian tradition) ancestor of Jesus.The first book provided the inspiration for the famous David sculpture, while Joseph Heller's God Knows — with a little meta — retold the Books of Samuel as a whole.The Books of Samuel are followed by the Books of Kings. In some old Catholic and Orthodox bibles, the books are sometimes confusingly called 1 Kings and 2 Kings, with the later Books of Kings being 3 and 4 Kings in suit.
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 Books of Samuel / int_107edaa4
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Comforting the Widow
 Books of Samuel / int_107edaa4
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Comforting the Widow: In 1st Samuel chapter 25, after God avenged David by having Nabal die of a heart attack, David makes a proposal to Nabal's wife Abigail to become his wife. She immediately accepts and becomes the second of three wives that David married in the narrative at that point.
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 Books of Samuel / int_13992073
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Rasputinian Death
 Books of Samuel / int_13992073
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Rasputinian Death: An alternate interpretation of the two death accounts of King Saul in these books is that Saul fell on his sword to kill himself, but was still somehow alive when the Amalekite found him among the slain, who begged the Amalekite to finish the job, which he obliged, taking the king's possessions so he could give them to David and inform him of what happened. The Amalekite was still rewarded with death for having slain the Lord's anointed.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1439161f
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Heroic BSoD
 Books of Samuel / int_1439161f
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Heroic BSoD: David suffers one when he receives the news that Absalom has been killed. Joab has to snap him out of it with a What the Hell, Hero? speech accusing him of ruining morale by caring more for his traitorous son than his loyal followers.
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 Books of Samuel / int_14d633ed
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If I Wanted You Dead...
 Books of Samuel / int_14d633ed
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If I Wanted You Dead...: Twice when David had the opportunity to kill King Saul whenever the king was nearby, David refused, even as at the first time he only cut off a corner of the king's robe and his heart was smitten, realizing that King Saul was still the LORD's anointed and he cannot touch the anointed and be considered guiltless. Both incidents ended up with Saul and David walking away with their lives. Unfortunately, Saul still didn't get it.
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 Books of Samuel / int_154aa477
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Big, Screwed-Up Family
 Books of Samuel / int_154aa477
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Big, Screwed-Up Family: David’s family! Amnon rapes his half-sister, Absalom kills Amnon and then plots sedition against his father, Adonijah plots to take over the kingdom when David was near death and no successor was officially named, and most of David's other sons just go along with the whole thing like it's no big deal.
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 Books of Samuel / int_16e4b425
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20 Bear Asses
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David is allowed to marry Michal after bringing back 200 Philistine foreskins.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1869b4b1
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Unreliable Narrator
 Books of Samuel / int_1869b4b1
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Unreliable Narrator: In-universe with two examples: 2 Samuel opens with an Amalekite bringing the account of Saul's death to David; the man claims he performed a Mercy Kill on Saul. However, the end of 1 Samuel reveals that the Amalekite is lying; Saul was actually Driven to Suicide. The Amalekite presumably hoped to get credit for Saul's death; this went horribly right for him when David decided killing "the Lord's anointed" warranted the death penalty. Later on, Ziba the servant of Mephibosheth comes to David's aid when he and his men were fleeing from Absalom during his seditious takeover of the kingdom. David asks Ziba where Mephibosheth is, and Ziba answers that he's still in Jerusalem because he sided with Absalom, thinking that his grandfather Saul's kingdom would be turned over to him. After Absalom dies and David is brought back to Jerusalem, he encounters Mephibosheth and asks why he didn't come with the king, and Mephibosheth answers that Ziba had deceived him while he was preparing to go with David. So in this case, Ziba was the Unreliable Narrator who lied to the king about Mephibosheth.
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 Books of Samuel / int_18a65667
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I'll Take That as a Compliment
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I'll Take That as a Compliment: Michal was appalled by David’s celebratory dancing when the Ark was returned to Jerusalem, but David is unashamed. His response doesn't really do much of anything to help save the relationship between them, though.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1adcd502
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Sins of Our Fathers
 Books of Samuel / int_1adcd502
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Sins of Our Fathers: David commits adultery with Bathsheba and then pulls off his infamous Uriah Gambit. As a punishment, the son of that adultery dies, but later they have another son: Solomon. David is also cursed with war and public shame, which results in the deaths of two of his other sons. (And though they probably deserved it, David is still crushed.) David delivered seven of Saul's descendants to be executed because Saul committed the massacre of the Gibeonites. Inverted with Eli and his sons. Eli himself seems to have been a faithful priest and judge, and he tried to warn his sons about God’s wrath. But they ignored him, and God extends his wrath to Eli's entire line because Eli did not fully discipline his sons.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1b3b48f3
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David Versus Goliath
 Books of Samuel / int_1b3b48f3
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David Versus Goliath: Trope Namer. Goliath was more or less Bible Times' André the Giant — some translations put him at over nine feet tall!note This incredible size is likely just a very particular mistranslation by the Masoretic Text of the measurements given in earlier tellings of the Book of Samuel, however; the Dead Sea Scrolls list his height as "four cubits and a span", or about 6'9"—impressively tall, especially for a time when people were considerably shorter than they are today, but not outright preternatural. Thus, him later being said to be six cubits and a span was either an error or embellishment made over the centuries of translation (though even the original measurement itself is speculated to be a metaphorical allusion to the height of the walls surrounding Gath, the Philistines' capital). David, meanwhile, was hammered home as the runt of his family, the youngest of ten siblings and not much older than 18 when Goliath bellowed his challenge to Saul's army. On a political level, David and Saul. Saul was not a short man, and was God's anointed king (for a time) with direct control of the army. That's stiff competition for a former sheep herder.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1b8c7503
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The Exile
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The Exile: Absalom becomes this when he kills his half-brother Amnon in a private little party and flees to another country. It takes Joab using an old woman from Tekoa pretending to be a mourner to talk some sense into King David to have Absalom returned to his own country. Unfortunately, this also leads to Absalom's seditious acts against his own father as he gathers support from most of Israel to have him be king instead of his father David.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1c263b9f
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The Purge
 Books of Samuel / int_1c263b9f
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The Purge: Saul's mission was to completely wipe out the Amalekites. Unfortunately, he failed, keeping Agag alive as a prisoner and a trophy that was later hacked to death by Samuel. It is assumed that there was at least one other survivor, as King Ahasuerus's adviser Haman from the Book of Esther was said to be the descendant of Agag (and quite possibly the last Amalekite still living at the time).
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 Books of Samuel / int_1c785368
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Badass Israeli
 Books of Samuel / int_1c785368
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Badass Israeli: A whole lot of them, probably most notably David and his mighty men. Saul was no wimp either.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1cbde068
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Oblivious to His Own Description
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Oblivious to His Own Description: Nathan tells David a story about a rich man who stole a poor man's pet lamb. But when David expresses outrage, Nathan reveals that the rich man was an allegory for David's Uriah Gambit and lays down his "The Reason You Suck" Speech.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1dacdb4f
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Senseless Sacrifice
 Books of Samuel / int_1dacdb4f
comment
Senseless Sacrifice: In 2nd Samuel chapter 18, when David was in hiding and had mustered up an army of his faithful followers to fight against Absalom's army of followers, David said that he would go out and fight with his army. His army, however, refuses to let him do so, telling David to the effect that his life means much more to the people of Israel than the lives of his followers and that losing him would mean a much greater loss than that of his followers, and so David acquiesces and stays behind in protective custody.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1df37537
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Mutual Kill
 Books of Samuel / int_1df37537
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Mutual Kill: In 2nd Samuel 2:12-16, David's army (under Joab's command) and Ishbosheth's army (under Abner's command) meet at the pool of Gibeon and have a contest of twelve soldiers each from both armies. As verse 16 states, "Each one grabbed his opponent by the head and thrust his sword in his opponent’s side; so they fell down together. Therefore that place was called Helkath Hazzurim, which is at Gibeon."
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 Books of Samuel / int_1edfa2c7
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Royals Who Actually Do Something
 Books of Samuel / int_1edfa2c7
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Royals Who Actually Do Something: Saul, Jonathan, and David. David’s troubles begin when he subverts this trope and stays at home while his army was at war. It is then that David spies Bathsheba showering.
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 Books of Samuel / int_1f4bb5b4
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Let Me Tell You a Story
 Books of Samuel / int_1f4bb5b4
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Let Me Tell You a Story: In 2 Samuel 12, King David has just had one of his soldiers killed to cover up the fact that he (David) had impregnated the man's wife. The prophet Nathan shows up and calls him to repent by giving an account of a rich man who stole the only lamb of his poor neighbor to feed a houseguest, despite having many sheep of his own. He asks what should be done to this man. David, incensed, declared that the man should be put to death and asked who he was. Nathan replies, "That man is you!"
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 Books of Samuel / int_21f60711
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Good Is Not Soft
 Books of Samuel / int_21f60711
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Good Is Not Soft: In 2nd Samuel chapter 7, God tells King David that He will set up one of David's sons to be king after him and he will build the Temple of the Lord. In verses 14 to 15, God says, "I will be a father to him, and he will be a son to Me. When he goes astray, I will correct him with the rod of men and afflictions of the sons of men. My commitment will not abandon him, as I removed it from Saul, whom I deposed before you."
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 Books of Samuel / int_229c2ec8
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Uriah Gambit
 Books of Samuel / int_229c2ec8
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Uriah Gambit: Trope Maker and Trope Namer, but not in the same event. The Trope Maker is Saul sending David on missions to get him killed (unsuccessful), whereas the Trope Namer is David's attempt to get a woman and conceal his guilt by sending her husband who is one of his own loyal soldiers to death in the hands of the enemy.
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 Books of Samuel / int_272b4fce
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What's Up, King Dude?
 Books of Samuel / int_272b4fce
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What's Up, King Dude?: Invoked by Absalom, who stood at the city gates of Jerusalem and met with all who came to Jerusalem who wanted to meet the king. He used this to gain favor with the people in preparation for his rebellion.
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 Books of Samuel / int_27ab0123
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Offing the Offspring
 Books of Samuel / int_27ab0123
comment
Offing the Offspring: King Saul comes very close to having his own son Jonathan executed for unknowingly breaking his oath for every soldier to fast and only relents because Jonathan is popular among the soldiers. Later on, he threatens to kill Jonathan by throwing his spear at him if he refuses to reveal David's location when he was hiding from Saul.
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 Books of Samuel / int_28bbbe24
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Hereditary Curse
 Books of Samuel / int_28bbbe24
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Hereditary Curse: God cursed the family line of Eli for Eli not taking hard measures against his two sons misusing their position as priests unto God. Because Joab had killed Abner after David had sent him away in peace, David cursed not only Joab, but also the rest of his family with painful hardships. God does this to David's family after David has an affair with Bathsheba and has her husband killed.
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Use Their Own Weapon Against Them
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Use Their Own Weapon Against Them: After knocking down Goliath, David finishes off the Philistine giant by using Goliath's own sword to decapitate him. Benaiah son of Jehoiada killed an Egyptian warrior with the Egyptian's own spear, after wresting it out of his hands.
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Lampshade Hanging
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Lampshade Hanging: "As I served your father, so shall I serve you."
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 Books of Samuel / int_2aff6a25
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Death of the Hypotenuse
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Death of the Hypotenuse: In 1st Samuel, Abigail's husband Nabal dies of a heart attack, clearing the way for David to make Abigail his wife. In 2nd Samuel, David engineers the death of Bathsheba's husband Uriah to keep him from finding out about the affair she had with David, and soon afterward David marries Bathsheba.
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 Books of Samuel / int_2f329e3c
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Tomato in the Mirror
 Books of Samuel / int_2f329e3c
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In 2nd Samuel chapter 12, following David's adultery with Bathsheba and murder of her husband, the prophet Nathan tells him the story of a rich man who took the beloved lamb of his poor neighbor to serve to his dinner guest, despite having many fat sheep of his own. David is outraged and demands to know who the man is who could have done such a thing. Nathan tells him.
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Thou Shalt Not Kill
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Thou Shalt Not Kill: David was perfectly comfortable killing many people, but not Saul, since Saul was the Lord’s anointed. David passed up several opportunities to kill Saul and later executed the man who claimed to have given Saul a Mercy Kill.
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Dead Guy Junior
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Dead Guy Junior: Although Absalom's sister Tamar did not die after the rape by her half-brother Amnon, her public disgrace from the rape is treated as such so that Absalom named his own daughter Tamar as one of his last acts of honor.
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 Books of Samuel / int_30cdefe1
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Reluctant Ruler
 Books of Samuel / int_30cdefe1
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Reluctant Ruler: Saul, so much so that he hid himself once Samuel drew lots to prove he was God’s choice. Jonathan is also willing to step aside in favor of David.
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Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
 Books of Samuel / int_30d2ae29
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Self-Fulfilling Prophecy: Saul's attempts at killing David and saving his dynasty end up dooming it.
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100% Heroism Rating
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100% Heroism Rating: David! So much so that when he was the head of Saul’s armies before becoming king, the women of Israel sang, “Saul has struck down his thousands, and David his ten thousands!�
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 Books of Samuel / int_325a15f1
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Rags to Royalty
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Rags to Royalty: David. He is tending sheep when Samuel anoints him king of Israel.
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Bury Your Disabled
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Bury Your Disabled: Inverted by Mephibosheth, who is the only member of the House of Saul to survive David's reign and continue the family line. Likely a case of Disability Immunity, as Mephibosheth's lameness prevented him from fighting in the civil war and thus avoiding David's wrath.
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Shotgun Wedding
 Books of Samuel / int_32ec6393
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Shotgun Wedding: Though passed off by David as an Honorable Marriage Proposal; he married Bathsheba (after killing her husband off) because he got her pregnant.
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Burn the Witch!
 Books of Samuel / int_352def2a
comment
Burn the Witch!: When he became king, Saul was noted for executing witches among the Israelites. Later on, though, he proved to be a hypocrite by consulting the Witch of Endor to find out about his fate in battle.
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Murder the Hypotenuse
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Murder the Hypotenuse: The result of David's Uriah Gambit was his marriage to Bathsheba, whom he had knocked up.
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Betrayal by Offspring
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comment
Betrayal by Offspring: David's son, Absalom, turns against his father and seizes Jerusalem driving David beyond the Jordan River. Absalom then rules for a time as a regent and self-declared king before being slain by his father's Number Two, Joab, in the Battle of Ephraim Wood. Despite Absalom's revolt against him, David weeps over his death.
 Books of Samuel / int_37c0711c
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Books of Samuel / int_37c0711c
 Books of Samuel / int_38305779
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Baby as Payment
 Books of Samuel / int_38305779
comment
Baby as Payment: Samuel's mother Hannah prays to God for a son and promises that she will give him to the priests to raise when he's old enough. Sure enough, she gives birth to Samuel and keeps her promise. This is related to the Jewish practice of pidyon haben, "redemption of the firstborn", in which a priest is paid 5 silver shekels (or an equivalent value) to symbolically redeem a firstborn male child (it is considered unnecessary if the boy is preceded by a girl or a miscarriage, born by caesarean section, or the father is himself a priest).
 Books of Samuel / int_38305779
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Books of Samuel / int_38305779
 Books of Samuel / int_396e1c2a
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Face Death with Dignity
 Books of Samuel / int_396e1c2a
comment
Face Death with Dignity: In 1st Samuel chapter 15, when King Agag is brought before Samuel the prophet after being spared by King Saul, the Amalekite king was thinking he would be given a merciful death, only to find himself being hacked to pieces by Samuel, who told him, "As your sword made women childless, so may your mother be childless among them."
 Books of Samuel / int_396e1c2a
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Books of Samuel / int_396e1c2a
 Books of Samuel / int_3edeeff4
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Son of a Whore
 Books of Samuel / int_3edeeff4
comment
Son of a Whore: Jonathan gets called this by his own father Saul when he suspects that Jonathan is protecting David.
 Books of Samuel / int_3edeeff4
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Books of Samuel / int_3edeeff4
 Books of Samuel / int_3fe2b13f
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Ungrateful Bastard
 Books of Samuel / int_3fe2b13f
comment
Ungrateful Bastard: Nabal, the sheep owner of Carmel, whom David and his men had protected the entire time they were there in 1st Samuel chapter 25. David sent to Nabal to ask for food for the army, but Nabal refused. David was about to massacre the entire household over this insult when Nabal's wife Abigail heard about it and ran over with as much food as she and her servants could carry. David listened to her pleas to accept the food and not resort to vengeance, and God took care of it personally by causing Nabal to have a heart attack. King Nahash of Ammon's son Hanun, who in 2nd Samuel chapter 10 was visited by David's men to give him comfort concerning his father's death and mistook them for spies that were sent to help David conquer and destroy the land, who foolishly brought David's wrath upon himself by having the men sent back with half their beards shaved and their garments cut off at the buttocks. This resulted in a war between Israel and Ammon where, even with the help of Syria, Ammon was defeated twice by David's armies.
 Books of Samuel / int_3fe2b13f
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Books of Samuel / int_3fe2b13f
 Books of Samuel / int_4179d411
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Spooky Séance
 Books of Samuel / int_4179d411
comment
Spooky Séance: King Saul, after God ignores his inquiries as to how to defeat the Philistines, turns in desperation to a medium (or "witch") in Endor and asks her to raise Samuel's spirit. (The irony was that Saul had previously cracked down on all necromancy within the Kingdom of Israel.) The medium, though recognizing Saul despite his disguise and, suspecting entrapment, complies, and Samuel's spirit appears as an elderly man in a robe, none too pleased to be woken from his eternal rest. He curtly tells Saul that the next day he and his sons will die in battle, and, sure enough, guess what happens. It's intensely argued whether or not it was actually the ghost of Samuel or if it was some other spirit posing as Samuel, but most Biblical scholars agree that the witch of Endor called up something, and the news was not good.
 Books of Samuel / int_4179d411
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Books of Samuel / int_4179d411
 Books of Samuel / int_41a32b6
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Mystical Pregnancy
 Books of Samuel / int_41a32b6
comment
Mystical Pregnancy: Hannah, because she was so upset about not being able to bear children with her husband Elkanah and being teased by her sister wife Penninah because of that, prayed to the Lord for a son. The Lord granted her conception, and thus Hannah gave birth to her first son, Samuel, whom she gave to the Lord as part of her vow.
 Books of Samuel / int_41a32b6
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Books of Samuel / int_41a32b6
 Books of Samuel / int_44fc28e8
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Honor Before Reason
 Books of Samuel / int_44fc28e8
comment
Honor Before Reason: During a battle with the Philistines, Saul disrupted his own army by making them swear that they will not eat or drink until they have won. They had no choice but to obey, and the enemy escaped. Only Jonathan thought this was dumb.
 Books of Samuel / int_44fc28e8
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Books of Samuel / int_44fc28e8
 Books of Samuel / int_45b850b7
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Dead Animal Warning
 Books of Samuel / int_45b850b7
comment
Dead Animal Warning: Saul cuts an oxen apart and has its dismembered body parts sent to all the cities of Israel, a warning that the same dismemberment will happen to the livestock of any who do not fight against Nahash the Ammonite. Three hundred thousand soldiers answer the call.
 Books of Samuel / int_45b850b7
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Books of Samuel / int_45b850b7
 Books of Samuel / int_4603ea49
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Mystical Plague
 Books of Samuel / int_4603ea49
comment
Mystical Plague: When the Ark of the Covenant was in Philistine territory, the Philistines suffered a plague of tumors and mice, which occurred from city to city wherever the Ark was passed onto. Realizing how dangerous it was to continue holding the Ark hostage in their territory, the Philistines decided to have it sent back to the Israelites on a new cart pulled by oxen with an offering of gold tumors and gold mice for their trespass.
 Books of Samuel / int_4603ea49
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Books of Samuel / int_4603ea49
 Books of Samuel / int_49134628
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Bringing Back Proof
 Books of Samuel / int_49134628
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Bringing Back Proof: As dowry to let David marry his daughter, King Saul requests a hundred foreskins of the Philistines. Not only were they something that David couldn't possibly collect without having thoroughly defeated their owners, they also served as a reminder that the Philistines were uncircumcised and thus outside of God's covenant, marking them as Saul's enemies. David went above and beyond, gathering two hundred, to Saul's dismay; he really wanted David to get killed in the attempt.
 Books of Samuel / int_49134628
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Books of Samuel / int_49134628
 Books of Samuel / int_49fb5ccb
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Combat Pragmatist
 Books of Samuel / int_49fb5ccb
comment
Combat Pragmatist: David defeats his massive and well-equipped foe by pegging him in the face from a distance.
 Books of Samuel / int_49fb5ccb
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 Books of Samuel / int_49fb5ccb
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Books of Samuel / int_49fb5ccb
 Books of Samuel / int_4ce20451
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Rhetorical Request Blunder
 Books of Samuel / int_4ce20451
comment
Rhetorical Request Blunder: As recorded in 2nd Samuel, chapter 23 (and also in 1st Chronicles chapter 11), David was in the stronghold in the cave of Adullam while the Philistine garrison was in Bethlehem, and remarks apparently to himself that he misses drinking water from his hometown well. In this case, the desire is genuine but he doesn't expect it to actually happen. But one of his best warriors overheard, gathered a few other mighty men together, and broke through enemy lines to bring back Bethlehem well water, and the King was appalled that anyone would actually risk his life for that.
 Books of Samuel / int_4ce20451
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Books of Samuel / int_4ce20451
 Books of Samuel / int_4faa04bb
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Dream Team
 Books of Samuel / int_4faa04bb
comment
Dream Team: David assembles an elite squad of thirty "mighty men" to be his personal guard. All of them had impressive achievements in battle, including one who killed 800 Philistines in one day, one who single-handedly defended a field, and one who "killed a lion in a pit on a snowy day."
 Books of Samuel / int_4faa04bb
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Books of Samuel / int_4faa04bb
 Books of Samuel / int_50b05d30
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Disproportionate Retribution
 Books of Samuel / int_50b05d30
comment
Disproportionate Retribution: The rejection of Saul as king just for doing some of Samuel's duties may seem like this at the outset, but the high priest makes sure the king does God's commands to the letter. Saul tries to bypass this and concentrate all power on himself. He was a tyrant in the making. Also, when Nabal insults David and refuses to give him any food or aid, David plans to return the favor by slaughtering him and his household. He is persuaded not to by Nabal's wife, Abigail, at almost the last minute.
 Books of Samuel / int_50b05d30
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Books of Samuel / int_50b05d30
 Books of Samuel / int_51300dbf
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Fat Bastard
 Books of Samuel / int_51300dbf
comment
Fat Bastard: Eli is described as a heavy man, implying sloth, and, other than giving his sons a mild scolding, he doesn't move against them as soon as they abuse the priesthood to steal food offerings, act promiscuously, and insult God. Upon finding out his sons have been struck down in their arrogance, and that the ark of God had been taken, Eli's fat gets the better of them and he dies by falling onto his neck. Even the message God gives to Eli through young Samuel about his sons, which Samuel is forced to tell at the threat of a curse, doesn't do anything to change him; it simply makes him realize that his goose is cooked.
 Books of Samuel / int_51300dbf
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Books of Samuel / int_51300dbf
 Books of Samuel / int_51ecf708
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Self-Disposing Villain
 Books of Samuel / int_51ecf708
comment
Self-Disposing Villain: Nabal, who, after David is prevented from slaughtering him and his servants by Abigail, ends up dying soon after, likely from a combination of a Villainous BSoD and his alcoholism.
 Books of Samuel / int_51ecf708
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Books of Samuel / int_51ecf708
 Books of Samuel / int_52b36340
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What Measure Is a Mook?
 Books of Samuel / int_52b36340
comment
What Measure Is a Mook?: David has no problem killing Saul's soldiers in battle, but refuses to kill Saul himself, even when he gets the chance, since Saul is still considered God's anointed, and David could not kill God's anointed and be guiltless.
 Books of Samuel / int_52b36340
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Books of Samuel / int_52b36340
 Books of Samuel / int_54eceae6
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Magic Is Evil
 Books of Samuel / int_54eceae6
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Magic Is Evil: Although King Saul had put away all the people who had familiar spirits out of the land of Israel, he resorted to using a witch to conjure up the spirit of Samuel from the dead to consult him in what he should do regarding the army of the Philistines when God would no longer answer Saul. For that, judgment was pronounced on Saul, as he and his three sons would die in battle together on Mount Gilboa. Long before that, Samuel had told Saul that rebellion against God is as evil and sinful as using witchcraft.
 Books of Samuel / int_54eceae6
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Books of Samuel / int_54eceae6
 Books of Samuel / int_5530e11b
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Founder of the Kingdom
 Books of Samuel / int_5530e11b
comment
Founder of the Kingdom: David, but really God. (See page quote above.)
 Books of Samuel / int_5530e11b
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Books of Samuel / int_5530e11b
 Books of Samuel / int_55ab1be5
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Royal Brat
 Books of Samuel / int_55ab1be5
comment
Royal Brat: Eli's, Samuel's, and most of David's sons all fall into this category. The people of Israel actually hoped to avoid this trope by asking for a king. They saw Eli's and Samuel's sons' poor quality and hoped having a king would fix the problem. And, in fact, Israel’s first crown prince Jonathan completely averted this trope. If anything, Jonathan and Saul inverted this trope, with Jonathan being The Wise Prince and Saul being a more immature king. With David’s sons, though, it is played completely straight.
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Books of Samuel / int_55ab1be5
 Books of Samuel / int_5674af1a
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The Famine
 Books of Samuel / int_5674af1a
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The Famine: In 2nd Samuel chapter 21, there was a famine in Israel that lasted for three years. David found out from the Lord that it was because of Saul's bloody slaughter of the Gibeonites, the people whom the Israelites had bound themselves with an oath to protect. The Gibeonites ask for seven of Saul's sons to be killed, and David gives them Armoni and Mephiboshethnote This person was different from Jonathan's son of the same name, whom David protected by a covenant he made with Jonathan before his death., the two sons of Rizpah, the daughter of Saul's concubine Aiah, and the five adopted sons of Michal, whom she brought up for her sister Merab's husband, and had them hanged before the Gibeonites. He also brings the bones of Saul and Jonathan from Jabesh Gilead and reburies them in the tomb of Saul's father Kish, and thus God was entreated by David and the famine had ended.
 Books of Samuel / int_5674af1a
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Books of Samuel / int_5674af1a
 Books of Samuel / int_575fd5e2
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Dark Is Not Evil
 Books of Samuel / int_575fd5e2
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Dark Is Not Evil: The Witch of Endor is a necromancer, a practitioner of dark arts forbidden by YHVH Himself. She's also portrayed as a kindly old woman, making sure King Saul has something to eat when the spirit she summons - the prophet Samuel, whom one assumes can be counted on for accuracy - prophesies his death.
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Books of Samuel / int_575fd5e2
 Books of Samuel / int_5989e3b6
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Enemy Mine
 Books of Samuel / int_5989e3b6
comment
Enemy Mine: David works for Philistines while on the run from Saul. Once he becomes king of Israel, he goes back to battling them.
 Books of Samuel / int_5989e3b6
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Books of Samuel / int_5989e3b6
 Books of Samuel / int_59938d30
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Better than Sex
 Books of Samuel / int_59938d30
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Better than Sex: In the Song of the Bow from 2nd Samuel chapter 1, David says Jonathan's love for him surpassed that of the love of women.
 Books of Samuel / int_59938d30
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Books of Samuel / int_59938d30
 Books of Samuel / int_5a399cff
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Malingering Romance Ploy
 Books of Samuel / int_5a399cff
comment
Malingering Romance Ploy: When Amnon, one of King David's sons, falls desperately in lust with Tamar, His friend Jonadab advises him to use this trope to gain her affection... or at least to gain access to her.
 Books of Samuel / int_5a399cff
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Books of Samuel / int_5a399cff
 Books of Samuel / int_5a7b4065
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Bedsheet Ladder
 Books of Samuel / int_5a7b4065
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Bedsheet Ladder: Michal helps her beloved David escape her father King Saul's wrath with this trick. She also sticks a human-sized idol in his bed so she can tell her father's messengers that he's sick and still asleep.
 Books of Samuel / int_5a7b4065
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Books of Samuel / int_5a7b4065
 Books of Samuel / int_5ad80bf8
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It's All My Fault
 Books of Samuel / int_5ad80bf8
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It's All My Fault: David bravely comes clean and says "I have sinned against the Lord" when Nathan the prophet confronts him with his sin of adultery with Bathsheba and killing her husband Uriah to cover it up. Because he repents, the Lord lets him live but still punishes him. Earlier on, David takes responsibility for King Saul having Doeg the Edomite massacre the priests of God, knowing that his brief encounter with the high priest with Doeg present has doomed them.
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Books of Samuel / int_5ad80bf8
 Books of Samuel / int_5bd1083d
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Holy Is Not Safe
 Books of Samuel / int_5bd1083d
comment
Holy Is Not Safe The Ark of the Covenant proves to be an equal-opportunity Doomsday Device in 1 Samuel 4-7. The Israelites bring the Ark onto the field of battle, which scares the Philistines into fighting harder instead. They capture it, then make the mistake of keeping it in the same room as an idol of Dagon. God breaks the statue and smites the Philistines with a plague of tumorsnote some translations mention that these tumors were in the Philistines' "secret parts." Yikes. and rats. The Philistine cities play hot potato with the Ark for a while before sending it back to Israel with a guilt offering. Aaaand the Israelites promptly have a whole bunch of people die from looking into the Ark. When David visited Ahimelech the high priest while on the run from King Saul in 1st Samuel chapter 21 and asks if the priest has any common bread to eat, Ahimelech says that they only have consecrated bread, which was only for the priests to eat. However, Ahimelech is willing to give David the bread if him and his friends have kept themselves from women. David replies, “Surely women have been kept from us as previously when I set out and the vessels of the young men were holy, though it was an ordinary journey; how much more then today will their vessels be holy?â€� As David tried to bring the Ark on a cart into Jerusalem and the oxen stumbled, Uzzah used his hand to steady the Ark lest it fall off the cart, and he was promptly struck dead for doing so.
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Books of Samuel / int_5bd1083d
 Books of Samuel / int_5d25f366
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You Can Leave Your Hat On
 Books of Samuel / int_5d25f366
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You Can Leave Your Hat On: When David and the Israelites are successful in bringing the Ark of the Covenant into Jerusalem, they break out into song, and David supposedly strips all the way down until he is wearing a linen ephod in worship to the Lord. Michal, one of David's wives, sees through a window David doing this, and ended up depising him in her heart, giving him a chewing out that accused him of debasing himself like a lewd person in front of the maidens. This doesn't go well for her, though, as Michal was cursed with never bearing children from that day forward.
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Books of Samuel / int_5d25f366
 Books of Samuel / int_5e70919d
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Catch the Conscience
 Books of Samuel / int_5e70919d
comment
Catch the Conscience: In 2nd Samuel chapter 12, following David's adultery with Bathsheba and murder of her husband, the prophet Nathan tells him the story of a rich man who took the beloved lamb of his poor neighbor to serve to his dinner guest, despite having many fat sheep of his own. David is outraged and demands to know who the man is who could have done such a thing. Nathan tells him. In 2nd Samuel chapter 14, Joab gets a woman from Tekoa to pose as a mourning widower that was coming to the king about protecting her last surviving son who killed his brother in an argument from being slain by her relatives, all for the purpose of getting David to recognize the wrongness in not bringing back his son Absalom from exile.
 Books of Samuel / int_5e70919d
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Books of Samuel / int_5e70919d
 Books of Samuel / int_615cad18
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Outdoor Bath Peeping
 Books of Samuel / int_615cad18
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Outdoor Bath Peeping: David infamously peeps on Bathsheba when she is bathing on a rooftop. This leads to his adultery and the resulting Uriah Gambit.
 Books of Samuel / int_615cad18
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Books of Samuel / int_615cad18
 Books of Samuel / int_616a4c
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Give the Baby a Father
 Books of Samuel / int_616a4c
comment
Give the Baby a Father: David knocked up Bathsheba while she was still married to Uriah the Hittite. David tries to get Uriah to go home and enjoy company with his wife to prevent her from being put to death, but Uriah refuses to do so, even when David made him drunk, so David ordered for him to be put in the front of the hottest battle where he may be killed. After Uriah's death, David did the "honorable thing" and married Bathsheba so that her child wouldn't be without a father. But the thing that he did still displeased the Lord.
 Books of Samuel / int_616a4c
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Books of Samuel / int_616a4c
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Armor Is Useless
 Books of Samuel / int_638b65bc
comment
Armor Is Useless: Goliath is wearing more than a hundred pounds of armor, including a bronze helmet. However, the rock David fires at Goliath kills him instantly by going through his eye socket, which presumably was not covered by the helmet. David also rejects Saul's armor, as it's far too big for him.
 Books of Samuel / int_638b65bc
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Books of Samuel / int_638b65bc
 Books of Samuel / int_6480c255
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Robbing the Dead
 Books of Samuel / int_6480c255
comment
Robbing the Dead: The Amalekite who came to David with Saul's royal crown and armband claiming to have killed him was almost certainly not being straight with David in other parts of his story as well as the part about killing Saul (who'd already committed suicide). For one thing, people don't just "happen" to be hanging around places where battles are taking place (like Mount Gilboa) as he claims to have been. For another, he must have gotten to Saul awfully quickly to have gotten his royal trappings before the Philistines found him. The likeliest explanation? He was a thief there to scavenge from the dead and just figured he'd found the biggest score of his career when he stumbled across Saul's remains.
 Books of Samuel / int_6480c255
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Books of Samuel / int_6480c255
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Non-Indicative Name
 Books of Samuel / int_6509bb9f
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Nonindicative Name: Samuel figures prominently in the first book, but he dies in chapter 25 and (obviously) doesn't appear at all in 2 Samuel, which is all about David's reign.
 Books of Samuel / int_6509bb9f
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Books of Samuel / int_6509bb9f
 Books of Samuel / int_69391768
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Expecting Someone Taller
 Books of Samuel / int_69391768
comment
Expecting Someone Taller: In 1st Samuel, when it came the time for prophet Samuel to anoint the new king, God instructed him to go to a house of a certain Jesse who had many sons. He inspected them, and they were no doubt strong, smart, and reputable, but to the surprise of Jesse and probably Samuel too, none of them were to be the king. Samuel, wondering whether he or God had mistaken the house, asked whether those were really all Jesse's sons. There was one more, a young boy who preferred to spend time alone tending the sheep. Guess which one became the king.
 Books of Samuel / int_69391768
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Books of Samuel / int_69391768
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Improbable Weapon User
 Books of Samuel / int_6a2ae11f
comment
Improbable Weapon User: The Philistines had a monopoly on weapons so the Israelites (with the exception of Saul & Jonathan) had to weaponise their farm tools. The Philistines promised not to go to war with Israel if they destroyed all of their weapons. The Israelites, being Too Dumb to Live, complied. They regretted their decision almost immediately.
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Books of Samuel / int_6a2ae11f
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Brats with Slingshots
 Books of Samuel / int_6a9c9b41
comment
Brats with Slingshots: Notably not David, though many, many people believe he used one. What he really used was a sling, a weapon that relied on built-up centrifugal force to propel a dense bullet at high speed against a target; it did not use elasticity to propel the projectile in any meaningful way. In ancient-world terms it was more like a difficult-to-aim gun than a kid's toy.
 Books of Samuel / int_6a9c9b41
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Books of Samuel / int_6a9c9b41
 Books of Samuel / int_6af8ebb5
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Death by Falling Over
 Books of Samuel / int_6af8ebb5
comment
Death by Falling Over: Eli in 1st Samuel, when he was sitting by the roadside and got the news that his two sons were killed in battle and the Ark of God had been taken away, fell over from his seat, broke his neck, and died when he heard about the Ark of God.
 Books of Samuel / int_6af8ebb5
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Books of Samuel / int_6af8ebb5
 Books of Samuel / int_6b7e3069
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Birth-Death Juxtaposition
 Books of Samuel / int_6b7e3069
comment
Birth-Death Juxtaposition: Phinehas' wife goes into labor when she heard that her father-in-law and husband were dead, and she gives birth to Ichabod (meaning "The Glory is not") around the time of her death.
 Books of Samuel / int_6b7e3069
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Books of Samuel / int_6b7e3069
 Books of Samuel / int_6bda9a30
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Meaningful Name
 Books of Samuel / int_6bda9a30
comment
Meaningful Name: Nabal, which means "fool". He lives up to that name as he reacts harshly to David's request for food to be given to him and his men, nearly causing a massacre to fall upon Nabal and his men had not his wife Abigail intervened.
 Books of Samuel / int_6bda9a30
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Books of Samuel / int_6bda9a30
 Books of Samuel / int_6ce41758
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Mistaken for Junkie
 Books of Samuel / int_6ce41758
comment
Mistaken for Junkie: When Hannah is praying for a child, Eli (the priest) assumes she's drunk. When she corrects him, he apologizes, and says something along the lines of "May God grant you what you ask for."
 Books of Samuel / int_6ce41758
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Books of Samuel / int_6ce41758
 Books of Samuel / int_6d332aea
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Driven to Suicide
 Books of Samuel / int_6d332aea
comment
Driven to Suicide: Saul, when the battle at Mount Gilboa turned against him and his sons, and he couldn't get his shield bearer to kill him so he wouldn't be abused by the Philistines. Ahithophel, when Absalom seeks advice as for what to do with King David when he was driven from the kingdom, and prefers Hushai's advice over Ahithophel's.
 Books of Samuel / int_6d332aea
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Books of Samuel / int_6d332aea
 Books of Samuel / int_6d9bc945
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Babies Ever After
 Books of Samuel / int_6d9bc945
comment
Babies Ever After: God was so pleased at Hannah giving her firstborn to His service after years of infertility that He made her quite fertile from that point on. She proceeds to have five more children.
 Books of Samuel / int_6d9bc945
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Books of Samuel / int_6d9bc945
 Books of Samuel / int_708cabf8
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Sleeping Dummy
 Books of Samuel / int_708cabf8
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Sleeping Dummy: Michal creates one by using an image stuffed under the covers of David's bed to help her husband escape being killed by her father King Saul.
 Books of Samuel / int_708cabf8
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Books of Samuel / int_708cabf8
 Books of Samuel / int_710f9249
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Unusual Dysphemism
 Books of Samuel / int_710f9249
comment
Unusual Dysphemism: In 1st Samuel chapter 25, King David uses the term "one who urinates against a wall" in reference to males that are considered worthy of slaughter, equating those men to dogs, when he is refused any help by Nabal in gratitude for protecting his flocks and servants.
 Books of Samuel / int_710f9249
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Books of Samuel / int_710f9249
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Incest-ant Admirer
 Books of Samuel / int_7188e626
comment
Incest-ant Admirer: Amnon was heavily attracted to his half-sister Tamar. When he managed to get her alone, he tried to coerce her into having sex with him. Tamar protested and he eventually raped her.
 Books of Samuel / int_7188e626
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Books of Samuel / int_7188e626
 Books of Samuel / int_723be11b
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Villain Has a Point
 Books of Samuel / int_723be11b
comment
Villain Has a Point: After Absalom's rebellion fails because, despite David's explicit orders he be spared, Joab kills the rebel, David becomes extremely sad and the story clearly expects us to feel sympathy for the man who just lost one of his sons. Joab goes to his uncle and tells him to man up and behave like a king should and stop crying like a child, and criticizes him to his face how he constantly shows goodwill to people who try to harm him while showing no gratitude to those who faithfully serve him. Not even the narrative denies that Joab, morally ambiguous as he is, has something of a point by now, especially since David does just what his nephew tells him afterwards.
 Books of Samuel / int_723be11b
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Books of Samuel / int_723be11b
 Books of Samuel / int_7294b403
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Altar Diplomacy
 Books of Samuel / int_7294b403
comment
Altar Diplomacy: A variation of this trope occurs in 2nd Samuel chapter 3, where Abner son of Ner makes a treaty with King David to transfer rulership of all the other tribes of Israel to David on the agreement that David's first wife Michal (who was given over to another man when David was on the run and presumed to be dead or a deserter) would be returned to him. Michal was then brought to David with her second husband following behind crying until he was told to return home.
 Books of Samuel / int_7294b403
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Books of Samuel / int_7294b403
 Books of Samuel / int_73309776
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Psycho Sidekick
 Books of Samuel / int_73309776
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Psycho Sidekick: Joab respects David (at least up until the end of his life) and seems to have some kind of respect for God (or at least a fairly deep understanding of the scriptures for a military man), but he clearly doesn't believe that either have any authority over him. He will do what he thinks is necessary, including killing people he thinks deserves it. He's so good at his job that David can't do anything about it. He gets Solomon to promise to do it after David dies, and Solomon does.
 Books of Samuel / int_73309776
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Books of Samuel / int_73309776
 Books of Samuel / int_735b3587
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Naked First Impression
 Books of Samuel / int_735b3587
comment
Naked First Impression: David first sees Bathsheba bathing outdoors. Thus begins the affair.
 Books of Samuel / int_735b3587
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 Books of Samuel / int_735b3587
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Books of Samuel / int_735b3587
 Books of Samuel / int_740139a8
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Redemption Equals Affliction
 Books of Samuel / int_740139a8
comment
Redemption Equals Affliction: David repents of pulling the Uriah Gambit as well as committing adultery. Although God forgave him, He allowed David and Bathsheba's child to die in infancy and David's life got quite complicated afterwards.
 Books of Samuel / int_740139a8
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Books of Samuel / int_740139a8
 Books of Samuel / int_7503483d
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Original Position Fallacy
 Books of Samuel / int_7503483d
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Original Position Fallacy: In 2 Samuel chapter 12, the prophet Nathan invokes this to guilt-trip King David after learning that David had Uriah killed and took Uriah's wife Bathsheba for himself in the previous chapter. Nathan tells a story about a rich man with many sheep, whose neighbor is a poor man with only one lamb, and the rich man steals his neighbor's lamb and slaughters it for his dinner. David angrily says that such a man deserves to be put to death. Nathan replies "That man is you!" David isn't killed, but he is horrified at what he's done and immediately sets about trying to repent, and the Kingdom of Israel is cursed to fall as a consequence of his misdeed (first by the split between Israel and Judah in the reign of his grandson Rehoboam, then by the Babylonian conquest).
 Books of Samuel / int_7503483d
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Books of Samuel / int_7503483d
 Books of Samuel / int_754df088
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Put on a Bus
 Books of Samuel / int_754df088
comment
Put on a Bus: After Michal criticizes David's dancing, the text says she had no children. (Although, probably because of a copyist error or something, it says later on that she bore five children to Adriel, the son of Barzillai the Meholathite.) That is the Biblical version of this trope.
 Books of Samuel / int_754df088
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Books of Samuel / int_754df088
 Books of Samuel / int_771f6307
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Brother–Sister Incest
 Books of Samuel / int_771f6307
comment
Brother–Sister Incest: Amnon tricks his half-sister Tamar to be alone with him and rapes her. Tamar tries to reason with Amnon by telling him to speak to King David about giving her to him as a wife, hoping that what he intends to do to her won't happen, but Amnon couldn't care less about her dignity or well-being.
 Books of Samuel / int_771f6307
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Books of Samuel / int_771f6307
 Books of Samuel / int_78338469
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A Hero Is Born
 Books of Samuel / int_78338469
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A Hero Is Born: 1st Samuel starts off with the conception and birth of its first main protagonist Samuel the prophet.
 Books of Samuel / int_78338469
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Books of Samuel / int_78338469
 Books of Samuel / int_790b1e6
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Nasty Party
 Books of Samuel / int_790b1e6
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Nasty Party: Absalom gets his revenge on his half-brother Amnon by inviting him to a private party and then having his servants slay him in secret. This gets misinterpreted as Absalom slaying all of David's sons until Amnon's friend clears up the whole situation.
 Books of Samuel / int_790b1e6
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Books of Samuel / int_790b1e6
 Books of Samuel / int_7958175
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Unequal Rites
 Books of Samuel / int_7958175
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Unequal Rites: King Saul consults a Witch at Endor on the night before a crucial battle, to God's great displeasure. She summons up the soul of a deceased Prophet of Israel who passes on the displeasure of God that His anointed King of Israel so lacks faith that he is doing something accursed in the divine eye - consulting a Witch and using magic to contact the dead. It isn't so much recalling the soul of the deceased prophet Samuel back from Heaven to answer Saul's questions about the next day's battle with the Philistines - it is implied Samuel has been sent with God's permission to pass on the divine message. The sin is that Saul has used a Witch as his intermediary. note King Saul was previously tasked by God with driving all witches and practitioners of magic out of Israel; he has also clearly failed in, and gone back on, his promise to God to purge the land of Israel of witches
 Books of Samuel / int_7958175
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Books of Samuel / int_7958175
 Books of Samuel / int_7bd88e4a
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Slain in Their Sleep
 Books of Samuel / int_7bd88e4a
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Slain in Their Sleep: Ishbosheth was slain by two men while he was resting in his house, with his head cut off and brought to David, hoping to expect a reward, which turned out to be death for both of them.
 Books of Samuel / int_7bd88e4a
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Books of Samuel / int_7bd88e4a
 Books of Samuel / int_7c14d0f2
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Rejected Apology
 Books of Samuel / int_7c14d0f2
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Rejected Apology: Saul repents to God for leaving the Amalekite genocide incomplete, but Samuel informs him that God won't accept it and has now rejected him as King of Israel.
 Books of Samuel / int_7c14d0f2
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Books of Samuel / int_7c14d0f2
 Books of Samuel / int_7c9dcc1
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THeUnfavorite
 Books of Samuel / int_7c9dcc1
comment
The Unfavorite: Elkanah loved Hannah more than his other wife Penninah, despite being able to bear children for him. In return, Penninah routinely mocked Hannah, who had no children, until Hannah got upset and wouldn't eat. David initially, as his father Jesse didn't even invite him to the sacrifice along with his other brothers until Samuel went through all the sons present and, the Lord finding none among them to anoint, asks if Jesse still has another son. Michal becomes this among David’s wives once she criticizes his un-kingly dancing.
 Books of Samuel / int_7c9dcc1
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Books of Samuel / int_7c9dcc1
 Books of Samuel / int_7e6c0522
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Off with His Head!
 Books of Samuel / int_7e6c0522
comment
Off with His Head!: Goliath was beheaded by David after he was slain with the rock thrown from David's sling. King Saul gets beheaded after he fell upon his own sword and died in the battle with the Philistines. Ishbosheth was beheaded by Rechab and Baanah and his head was presented to David, with the two hoping that they would be rewarded. They did — with death! A rebel named Sheba son of Bikri, who incited sedition against King David, was beheaded by the people of Abel when he went to that city to hide from David's forces.
 Books of Samuel / int_7e6c0522
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Books of Samuel / int_7e6c0522
 Books of Samuel / int_7fbb2a3
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Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!
 Books of Samuel / int_7fbb2a3
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Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Joab (who is at best more of an Anti-Hero ) uses a ruse to convince David to invite Absalom back to Israel, as Absalom was in exile for killing Amnon. Absalom’s return allowed him to sow the seeds of rebellion two years later.
 Books of Samuel / int_7fbb2a3
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Books of Samuel / int_7fbb2a3
 Books of Samuel / int_813afa05
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Defiled Forever
 Books of Samuel / int_813afa05
comment
Defiled Forever: David's daughter Tamar, who was raped by her half-brother Amnon, who ended up living in her other brother Absalom's house as a desolate woman. This eventually results in Absalom getting even with Amnon by having him killed in a private little party. David's ten concubines by his own son Absalom going into them when he took over as king. To protect them, David had the concubines shut up afterward and no longer went into them, forcing them to live the rest of their lives in widowhood.
 Books of Samuel / int_813afa05
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Books of Samuel / int_813afa05
 Books of Samuel / int_8173ce7b
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Amulet of Concentrated Awesome
 Books of Samuel / int_8173ce7b
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Amulet of Concentrated Awesome: The ark of God is treated as this in these books. In 1st Samuel, when the Israelites were first defeated by the Philistines, they believe that if they could carry the ark of God into battle, God would have to fight for them and wipe out their enemies. As it turns out, though, God not only lets the Israelites be defeated by the Philistines again, He also allows the ark to be taken into Philistine territory, where it causes trouble among their people until they decide to have it be brought back to the Israelites by putting it on a cart driven by oxen alongside a trespass offering.
 Books of Samuel / int_8173ce7b
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Books of Samuel / int_8173ce7b
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Rewarded as a Traitor Deserves
 Books of Samuel / int_8288929a
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Rewarded as a Traitor Deserves: Though Saul's death means David's ascension to the throne, he has a liar who claims to have done a Mercy Kill on Saul put to death for daring to raise his hand against God's anointed King. Later, when two men who murdered his rival for the throne Ish-Bosheth come to him looking for a reward, he reminds them of what he did to Saul's (supposed) murderer and has them put to death and hung up as a warning to others while burying his rival with full honors.
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Books of Samuel / int_8288929a
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Shameful Strip
 Books of Samuel / int_8591611a
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Shameful Strip: In 2nd Samuel, chapter 10, King Hanun of Ammon decided to embarrass King David's team of delegates by sending them back to their master with their garments cut off showing their buttocks, as well as half their beards forcibly shaven.
 Books of Samuel / int_8591611a
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Books of Samuel / int_8591611a
 Books of Samuel / int_86b21114
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Badass Boast
 Books of Samuel / int_86b21114
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Badass Boast: In 2nd Samuel chapter 5, when David and his men set their sights on conquering Jersualem, the Jebusites resist with a boast that "even the blind and the lame will turn you away.â€� This didn't work for the Jebusites, as David and his men succeeded in conquering the city, and as a curse, "the blind and the lame" are not allowed to enter into God's house — a curse that endured into the day of Jesus' earthly ministry and that of the early church.
 Books of Samuel / int_86b21114
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Books of Samuel / int_86b21114
 Books of Samuel / int_8730251a
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Forgiveness Requires Death
 Books of Samuel / int_8730251a
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Forgiveness Requires Death: In 2nd Samuel chapter 12, Nathan the prophet tells King David that his sin with Bathsheba is exposed before God. David confesses that he has sinned before the Lord, and Nathan tells David that he has been forgiven, though because David has been spared from death, the Lord will punish David for his deeds by having his firstborn son with Bathsheba die in his place. Some Bible students say this is a prefigure of the future Son of David, Jesus Christ, dying for the sins of the world, being our sacrificial substitute for our forgiveness.
 Books of Samuel / int_8730251a
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Books of Samuel / int_8730251a
 Books of Samuel / int_87bb6874
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Villain with Good Publicity
 Books of Samuel / int_87bb6874
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Villain with Good Publicity: Absalom becomes this when he returns home from his exile after having his half-brother Amnon killed. Setting himself as a judge of the people of Israel, Absalom purposely made his father David look bad by saying that he himself could provide better justice for the people than David can, and thus stole the hearts of all Israel, setting up for the moment when he would declare himself king and force David and his faithful men to flee to the mountains.
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Books of Samuel / int_87bb6874
 Books of Samuel / int_8879db82
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Badass Crew
 Books of Samuel / int_8879db82
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Badass Crew: 2nd Samuel has a list of Badasses who worked for King David, and were referred to as the "Mighty Men". The list is filled with stories of people killing off hundreds of people singlehanded, or fighting wild animals.
 Books of Samuel / int_8879db82
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Books of Samuel / int_8879db82
 Books of Samuel / int_8976acda
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Civil War
 Books of Samuel / int_8976acda
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Civil War: First between Saul and David, then between Ish-Bosheth and David, and later between David and his son Absalom.
 Books of Samuel / int_8976acda
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Books of Samuel / int_8976acda
 Books of Samuel / int_8a2d8868
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Not Afraid to Die
 Books of Samuel / int_8a2d8868
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Not Afraid to Die: Agag, the king of the Amalekites, after seeing his nation destroyed and looted, tells Samuel the prophet "Ah, bitter death is at hand!"
 Books of Samuel / int_8a2d8868
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Books of Samuel / int_8a2d8868
 Books of Samuel / int_8ad43dc9
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Ragtag Bunch of Misfits
 Books of Samuel / int_8ad43dc9
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Ragtag Bunch of Misfits: David's Mighty Men.
 Books of Samuel / int_8ad43dc9
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Books of Samuel / int_8ad43dc9
 Books of Samuel / int_8ed5c6e4
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Asshole Victim
 Books of Samuel / int_8ed5c6e4
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Asshole Victim: Goliath, Absalom, Amnon, King Saul, Joab (eventually), the Philistines and the Amalekites.
 Books of Samuel / int_8ed5c6e4
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Books of Samuel / int_8ed5c6e4
 Books of Samuel / int_90c30080
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Bunker Woman
 Books of Samuel / int_90c30080
comment
Bunker Woman: David's unnamed ten concubines, who slept (very probably under duress) with Absalom when he took over Jerusalem during his coup. After David took back the city, he took revenge on them by having them locked away in a secluded ward of the palace, and "fed them, but went not in unto them," until they died.
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Books of Samuel / int_90c30080
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Sinister Minister
 Books of Samuel / int_9245d989
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Sinister Minister: Eli's sons Hophni and Phinehas, who not only took from the sacrifices the portions that were meant for God but also slept with the women that assembled at the door of the Tent of Meeting. This was considered wicked in Eli's eyes, but God also held Eli responsible for not taking strong measures against his sons for their abuse of power.
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Books of Samuel / int_9245d989
 Books of Samuel / int_9400b3b5
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Questionable Consent
 Books of Samuel / int_9400b3b5
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Questionable Consent: While David clearly wanted to sleep with Bathsheba, her interest in him is less clear. When the king asks you to come over (and your husband is away at war), how do you say no? When Nathan castigates David for his actions, he has nothing as bad to say about Bathsheba, instead comparing her to a lamb. The same goes for Absalom and David's concubines. He publicly has sex with them as a way of demonstrating he has replaced David as king. Left unsaid is whether these women wanted to have sex with him.
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Books of Samuel / int_9400b3b5
 Books of Samuel / int_95c2a9dd
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Outliving One's Offspring
 Books of Samuel / int_95c2a9dd
comment
Outliving One's Offspring: David loses three of his children to death — his unnamed infant son whom Bathsheba bore for him when David got her pregnant, his first son Amnon to his other son Absalom, and then later Absalom to David's general Joab when Absalom had led most of the nation of Israel to war against his own father. Absalom's death was so heartbreaking to David that his mourning made his own troops retreat from the battle in shame. And that's the bare minimum. There's a theory that David and Abigail's son Chileab also died young, given that he's second-eldest after Amnon and yet is never mentioned when it comes to the struggle over succession - David's assumed heir skips first to Absalom and then to Adonijah.
 Books of Samuel / int_95c2a9dd
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Books of Samuel / int_95c2a9dd
 Books of Samuel / int_967fd9b
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Perilous Old Fool
 Books of Samuel / int_967fd9b
comment
Perilous Old Fool: King David becomes this as he gets older, thinking he can still fight battles as an older man. When he almost gets killed and one of his men come to the rescue, he is told to stay home in Jerusalem so that "the lamp of Israel" doesn't get snuffed out.
 Books of Samuel / int_967fd9b
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Books of Samuel / int_967fd9b
 Books of Samuel / int_97522514
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Heel–Face Revolving Door
 Books of Samuel / int_97522514
comment
Heel–Face Revolving Door: King Saul changes his views on David every chapter. David actually has to prove twice that he has no intention to kill him.
 Books of Samuel / int_97522514
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1.0
 Books of Samuel / int_97522514
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Books of Samuel / int_97522514
 Books of Samuel / int_99010fab
type
Maternity Crisis
 Books of Samuel / int_99010fab
comment
Maternity Crisis: When Eli's daughter-in-law hears that the Ark of the Covenant has been taken by the Philistines, and that her husband, his brother, and her father-in-law have died the same day, she goes into labor from which she dies delivering her son Ichabod.
 Books of Samuel / int_99010fab
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Books of Samuel / int_99010fab
 Books of Samuel / int_99298c71
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Better to Die than Be Killed
 Books of Samuel / int_99298c71
comment
Better to Die than Be Killed: Saul chooses to kill himself rather than let the Philistines capture him.
 Books of Samuel / int_99298c71
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 Books of Samuel / int_99298c71
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Books of Samuel / int_99298c71
 Books of Samuel / int_9a79d84d
type
God Is Displeased
 Books of Samuel / int_9a79d84d
comment
God Is Displeased: A few examples. God was displeased with Saul for not killing all of the Amalekites and rejects him as king and replaces him with David. God was also very displeased with David's Uriah Gambit and subsequent marriage to Bathsheba, so he punished the household with public shame and war. God wasn't pleased when David was moved to count the number of the people of Israel, even when Joab tried to talk some sense into the king that such a thing wasn't necessary, since God promised to multiply the people of Israel like the stars in the sky.
 Books of Samuel / int_9a79d84d
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Books of Samuel / int_9a79d84d
 Books of Samuel / int_9bca83eb
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Death by Irony
 Books of Samuel / int_9bca83eb
comment
Death by Irony: Absalom was admired for his great strength and long hair. But once his rebellion failed, and he was fleeing for his life, his hair (or perhaps his whole head) got caught in some oak branches. This allowed Joab to kill him rather easily.
 Books of Samuel / int_9bca83eb
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Books of Samuel / int_9bca83eb
 Books of Samuel / int_9bfb2f41
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Dead Guy on Display
 Books of Samuel / int_9bfb2f41
comment
Dead Guy on Display: Saul, after he was killed in 1st Samuel chapter 31, had his head cut off and his body put on display by the Philistines gloating over their victory in their battle with the Israelites. The people of Jabesh Gilead, when they heard of the desecration of Saul's body, stole it from Beth Shan and buried it under a tamarisk tree in Jabesh, and fasted for seven days. The seven grandsons and sons of Saul who are sent to Gibeon to be killed and left to hang. Rizpah, the mother of two of them, guards the bodies from scavengers until David has them taken down.
 Books of Samuel / int_9bfb2f41
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Books of Samuel / int_9bfb2f41
 Books of Samuel / int_9d49c512
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Please Shoot the Messenger
 Books of Samuel / int_9d49c512
comment
Please Shoot the Messenger: King David gets Uriah out of the way by sending him back to camp with dispatches for the general, Joab. Joab's orders: "Put Uriah out in front where the fighting is fiercest. Then withdraw from him so he will be struck down and die."
 Books of Samuel / int_9d49c512
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 Books of Samuel / int_9d49c512
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Books of Samuel / int_9d49c512
 Books of Samuel / int_9ec132e7
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Accomplice by Inaction
 Books of Samuel / int_9ec132e7
comment
Accomplice by Inaction: Eli the high priest is regarded as this by God for not taking a more proactive stance to remove his wicked sons from serving as priests, and thus was cursed to die on the same day as his sons.
 Books of Samuel / int_9ec132e7
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Books of Samuel / int_9ec132e7
 Books of Samuel / int_9f037665
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Quit Your Whining
 Books of Samuel / int_9f037665
comment
Quit Your Whining: When Samuel mourned for Saul being rejected by the Lord as king over Israel for his pattern of disobedience to the Lord, God had to say something to this effect to get Samuel out of his funk and anoint someone else who will take Saul's place as king. When David mourned publicly for his son Absalom being dead, Joab had to speak something to this effect to get David to stop mourning for his enemy and thereby disgracing the people he was supposed to protect as their leader.
 Books of Samuel / int_9f037665
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Books of Samuel / int_9f037665
 Books of Samuel / int_9f62723d
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Get Out!
 Books of Samuel / int_9f62723d
comment
Get Out!: Amnon says this to his half-sister Tamar after he had raped her in 2nd Samuel chapter 13. When she wouldn't leave because she said it would be worse than what he did to her, Amnon had his servants force her out. In 2nd Samuel chapter 16, Shimei son of Gera was yelling to King David while he was on the run from Absalom: "Get out of here! Get out of here! You are a murderer! You are despicable! The LORD has paid you back for all the blood of Saul's family, in whose place you rule, and the LORD has handed the kingdom over to your son Absalom. You are in this trouble because you are a murderer!" (2nd Samuel 16:7-8, Common English Bible)
 Books of Samuel / int_9f62723d
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Books of Samuel / int_9f62723d
 Books of Samuel / int_a00c13e0
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Awesome Moment of Crowning
 Books of Samuel / int_a00c13e0
comment
Awesome Moment of Crowning: Inverted at Saul’s inauguration, which instead became an Awesome Moment of De-Crowning, specifically about how Israel had dethroned Samuel and, by extension, God. To demonstrate this point, Samuel calls for rain in the summer season, when it is least likely to rain. The subsequent thunder and rain greatly frightens the people of Israel, who ask Samuel to intercede for them.
 Books of Samuel / int_a00c13e0
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Books of Samuel / int_a00c13e0
 Books of Samuel / int_a084f0e0
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Never Speak Ill of the Dead
 Books of Samuel / int_a084f0e0
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Never Speak Ill of the Dead: Early in 2nd Samuel, despite knowing how evil King Saul became as king, David refused to speak ill of him in his Song Of The Bow, which eulogized both Saul and his son Jonathan.
 Books of Samuel / int_a084f0e0
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Books of Samuel / int_a084f0e0
 Books of Samuel / int_a1a38c5d
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Divine Right of Kings
 Books of Samuel / int_a1a38c5d
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Divine Right of Kings: Both Saul and David are specifically chosen by God to be Israel’s kings. While Saul is clearly chosen for his great size, God also chooses David, the youngest and smallest of the sons of Jesse, despite Samuel’s objections.
 Books of Samuel / int_a1a38c5d
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Books of Samuel / int_a1a38c5d
 Books of Samuel / int_a1b141f4
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My God, What Have I Done?
 Books of Samuel / int_a1b141f4
comment
My God, What Have I Done?: David had this kind of reaction a few times — once when his sin of adultery with Bathsheba and his subsequent arranged murder of her husband Uriah the Hittite was exposed by Nathan the prophet, and another time when he was moved (by the Lord or Satan, according to the Books of the Chronicles) to number the people of Israel for the sake of determining his nation's military power and realized what an idiot he was in doing that.
 Books of Samuel / int_a1b141f4
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Books of Samuel / int_a1b141f4
 Books of Samuel / int_a22c6d89
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The Evil Prince
 Books of Samuel / int_a22c6d89
comment
The Evil Prince: David's sons Amnon (raped his half-sister) and Absalom (led a rebellion). Later Adonijah, a much less overt and more underhanded type.
 Books of Samuel / int_a22c6d89
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Books of Samuel / int_a22c6d89
 Books of Samuel / int_a2b38d3b
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Eye Scream
 Books of Samuel / int_a2b38d3b
comment
Eye Scream: Saul's first great act was saving a city under siege from a warlord who would let them live if they allowed him to gouge out their eyes.
 Books of Samuel / int_a2b38d3b
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Books of Samuel / int_a2b38d3b
 Books of Samuel / int_a2e887be
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Secondary Character Title
 Books of Samuel / int_a2e887be
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Secondary Character Title: Samuel only played a significant role in the beginning of the first book, then died in the middle and is not mentioned in the second. Those books focus more on King David.
 Books of Samuel / int_a2e887be
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Books of Samuel / int_a2e887be
 Books of Samuel / int_a5de0ab9
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Polyamory
 Books of Samuel / int_a5de0ab9
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Polyamory: The story begins with Elkanah, who had two wives, Penninah and Hannah. Also, David has Michal, Abigail, and Bathsheba, plus several other women.
 Books of Samuel / int_a5de0ab9
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Books of Samuel / int_a5de0ab9
 Books of Samuel / int_a679184b
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Due to the Dead
 Books of Samuel / int_a679184b
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Due to the Dead: The funeral pyres for Saul and his three sons and the burial of their ashes at the end of 1 Samuel. David later has the ashes reburied in the family tomb along with the remains of the seven men who had been killed for their ancestor's massacre of the Gibeonites. David takes care of Mephibosheth as a way of honoring his friend, Jonathan. In 2nd Samuel chapter 10 (also repeated in 1st Chronicles chapter 19), David sends counselors to King Nahash's son Hanun to comfort him concerning his father's death, only for his counselors to be shamefully treated and sent back in embarrassment because Hanun thought David actually sent his men to spy out his kingdom. This ultimately led to a war between the two kings that resulted in a massive defeat for the Ammonites and their allies, the Syrians.
 Books of Samuel / int_a679184b
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Books of Samuel / int_a679184b
 Books of Samuel / int_a6be3ad5
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Rule of Seven
 Books of Samuel / int_a6be3ad5
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Rule of Seven: For a famine in 2 Samuel 21 to end, seven of King Saul's descendants have to pay for his massacre of the Gibeonites.
 Books of Samuel / int_a6be3ad5
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Books of Samuel / int_a6be3ad5
 Books of Samuel / int_a6cda066
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Rule of Three
 Books of Samuel / int_a6cda066
comment
Rule of Three: God calls for Samuel three times before Samuel finally responds. Also, Saul sends his men to go after David when he was with Samuel in Naioth three times, and they end up prophesying by God's power three times. Finally, near the end of 2nd Samuel, when David made the foolish mistake of having Joab number all the men of Israel and Judah, God had Gad the seer present David with three choices of how he wanted to be punished — three years of famine, three months of the sword pursuing him, or three days of the plague of the Lord striking His people.
 Books of Samuel / int_a6cda066
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Books of Samuel / int_a6cda066
 Books of Samuel / int_a70223
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Karma Houdini
 Books of Samuel / int_a70223
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Karma Houdini: Doeg the Edomite slaughters a village for aiding David, on Saul's orders. He is never mentioned again. (Although one Rabbinical tradition says that David personally kills him later, and it can be assumed he goes to Hell when he dies.) Jonadab, who gives Amnon advice on committing incestuous rape, and only turns up later to let David know that Absalom didn't kill all of his brothers.
 Books of Samuel / int_a70223
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Books of Samuel / int_a70223
 Books of Samuel / int_a73cef88
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Virginity Flag
 Books of Samuel / int_a73cef88
comment
Virginity Flag: After King David's daughter Tamar is raped by her half-brother Amnon, the poor girl tears her garment that was reserved for the King's virgin daughters. Her full brother Absolom immediately realizes what happened when he sees her, and it does NOT end well for Amnon.
 Books of Samuel / int_a73cef88
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Books of Samuel / int_a73cef88
 Books of Samuel / int_a8896b94
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Leave No Witnesses
 Books of Samuel / int_a8896b94
comment
Leave No Witnesses: In 1st Samuel, when David and his men temporarily sold their services to a Philistine lord, they would make raids upon the Geshurites, the Girzites, and the Amalekites. They would make it a point to leave no survivors in those raids because they didn't want any witnesses testifying in Gath to what David has done to those people, to maintain the illusion of being a true defector.
 Books of Samuel / int_a8896b94
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Books of Samuel / int_a8896b94
 Books of Samuel / int_a969c74a
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Final Solution
 Books of Samuel / int_a969c74a
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Final Solution: What God, through Samuel, orders King Saul to do the Amalekites, and is punished for being insufficiently thorough in the extermination.
 Books of Samuel / int_a969c74a
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Books of Samuel / int_a969c74a
 Books of Samuel / int_a9eb984b
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Warrior Poet
 Books of Samuel / int_a9eb984b
comment
Warrior Poet: David, giant slayer and great musician/poet/dancer.
 Books of Samuel / int_a9eb984b
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Books of Samuel / int_a9eb984b
 Books of Samuel / int_aa819622
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Let's Wait a While
 Books of Samuel / int_aa819622
comment
Let's Wait a While: Since soldiers are not allowed to have sex during war time, Uriah refuses to have sex with Bathsheba. David tries to manipulate him into doing so to cover his adultery up, but fails and decides to send him to a certain death.
 Books of Samuel / int_aa819622
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Books of Samuel / int_aa819622
 Books of Samuel / int_aba8065b
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Fatal Flaw
 Books of Samuel / int_aba8065b
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Fatal Flaw Saul's tendency to follow his own way rather than waiting for a command from God. David's inability to control his sex drive, which lead to the poor discipline of his children. Joab's violence.
 Books of Samuel / int_aba8065b
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Books of Samuel / int_aba8065b
 Books of Samuel / int_abdf1659
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Bodyguarding a Badass
 Books of Samuel / int_abdf1659
comment
Bodyguarding a Badass: King David had thirty elite One-Man Army soldiers to act as his personal bodyguards, but he's such a badass he probably didn't need them anyway. Although as David does get older, he had to be told to stay home in Jerusalem so that the "lamp of Israel" doesn't get snuffed out when he almost got killed in battle and one of his men came to his rescue.
 Books of Samuel / int_abdf1659
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Books of Samuel / int_abdf1659
 Books of Samuel / int_ac09dc0f
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Alas, Poor Villain
 Books of Samuel / int_ac09dc0f
comment
Alas, Poor Villain: David had a habit of fighting civil wars against his own family members, so he often engages in this trope. When Saul and Jonathan (David’s father- and brother-in-law) are killed in battle, David writes a song of lamentation for both of them. While Jonathan had long been David’s Heterosexual Life-Partner, Saul had tried to kill David on several occasions. David still greatly mourns for the man who was once like a father to him. When Absalom is defeated, David is devastated at losing his son, and mourns so intensely that his officers finally have to give him a What the Hell, Hero? for hurting his men's morale.
 Books of Samuel / int_ac09dc0f
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Books of Samuel / int_ac09dc0f
 Books of Samuel / int_ae3d6438
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Deadpan Snarker
 Books of Samuel / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker: David is brought before King Achish, and fearing for his life he feigns insanity. When Achish sees him, he sarcastically asks his servants if he has a shortage of madmen, that they need to bring him another.
 Books of Samuel / int_ae3d6438
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Books of Samuel / int_ae3d6438
 Books of Samuel / int_b06bbf4b
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Be Careful What You Wish For
 Books of Samuel / int_b06bbf4b
comment
Be Careful What You Wish For: The people of Israel ask Samuel for a king, believing this will bring greater stability to Israel. Samuel warns them about how oppressive kings can be, but they ignore his warning. The truth of Samuel’s warnings, though, isn’t apparent until a few kings later.
 Books of Samuel / int_b06bbf4b
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Books of Samuel / int_b06bbf4b
 Books of Samuel / int_b14ce563
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Pinned to the Wall
 Books of Samuel / int_b14ce563
comment
Pinned to the Wall: In 1 Samuel 18, King Saul tries unsuccessfully to "pin David to the wall" with a javelin. In Chapter 20, he also tries to do this to his son Jonathan, when he suspects that Jonathan is in league with David.
 Books of Samuel / int_b14ce563
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Books of Samuel / int_b14ce563
 Books of Samuel / int_b179eb00
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Tragic Bromance
 Books of Samuel / int_b179eb00
comment
Tragic Bromance: David and Jonathan were fast friends and routinely declared that they loved each other. But Jonathan was the son of Saul, who not only hated David but tended to go on ill-planned military crusades, which eventually got both Saul and Jonathan killed. David mourns for his loss of Jonathan in the Song of the Bow, saying, "Your love to me was wonderful, surpassing the love of women."
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Books of Samuel / int_b179eb00
 Books of Samuel / int_b17f6a27
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I Did What I Had to Do
 Books of Samuel / int_b17f6a27
comment
I Did What I Had to Do: King Saul in 1st Samuel chapter 13, when he saw that his troops were fleeing before the Philistines, and Samuel the prophet didn't come at the time Saul was expecting him to come to offer up the sacrifice to God, so he decided to offer the sacrifice himself. God was less than pleased with this attitude and fired him.
 Books of Samuel / int_b17f6a27
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Books of Samuel / int_b17f6a27
 Books of Samuel / int_b2b2093c
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Rape and Revenge
 Books of Samuel / int_b2b2093c
comment
Rape and Revenge: Absalom gets even with his half-brother Amnon for raping his sister Tamar by luring him to a private party and then having his servants kill him.
 Books of Samuel / int_b2b2093c
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Books of Samuel / int_b2b2093c
 Books of Samuel / int_b2c737e8
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Klingon Promotion
 Books of Samuel / int_b2c737e8
comment
Klingon Promotion: Joab lost his job as the commander of King David's armies when he was replaced by Amasa after the incident of Absalom's sedition. Joab gets his job back by slaying Amasa while he was leading the armies to follow after Sheba son of Bikri when he decided to lead a rebellion against King David.
 Books of Samuel / int_b2c737e8
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Books of Samuel / int_b2c737e8
 Books of Samuel / int_b35e77ee
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Fake Defector
 Books of Samuel / int_b35e77ee
comment
Fake Defector: David decides to offer his services to a Philistine lord in order to hide himself from King Saul. It works for a little over a year until the other Philistine lords see him and the other Hebrews with David and suspect that he is this trope working undercover to take down the Philistines from within in order to please his "true master". Hushai the Arkite became this when he served David's son Absalom during his reign of sedition, in order to find out Absalom's plans regarding his own father. Hushai does such a good job that he manages to convince the traitorous prince to take the precise strategy that would in fact help his father far more to defeat the rebellion.
 Books of Samuel / int_b35e77ee
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Books of Samuel / int_b35e77ee
 Books of Samuel / int_b4fce1ab
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Obfuscating Insanity
 Books of Samuel / int_b4fce1ab
comment
Obfuscating Insanity: David was forced to flee (from Saul) into exile at the court of the King of Gath (Goliath's hometown), who happened to be an enemy of Israel. When the King of Gath recognizes him as an anti-Philistine guerrilla warrior, David pretended to be a raving madman, causing the king to think him harmless.
 Books of Samuel / int_b4fce1ab
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Books of Samuel / int_b4fce1ab
 Books of Samuel / int_b5171e10
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Tragic Villain
 Books of Samuel / int_b5171e10
comment
Tragic Villain: Saul. He was a Reluctant Ruler who truly desired to be a great king, but he did not have the courage or faithfulness to be successful. He ultimately let his jealousy for David drive his country into a Civil War, committed a terrible atrocity against the priests of Nob, and died with most of his sons on the battlefield.
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Books of Samuel / int_b5171e10
 Books of Samuel / int_b78862d6
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Only I Can Kill Him
 Books of Samuel / int_b78862d6
comment
Only I Can Kill Him: In the case of King Saul, David said to the effect that only the I Am — God — can kill him, since Saul was the Lord's anointed, and ended up killing an Amalekite for making the claim that he had slain King Saul even for a Mercy Kill.
 Books of Samuel / int_b78862d6
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Books of Samuel / int_b78862d6
 Books of Samuel / int_b97c1d0b
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Standard Hero Reward
 Books of Samuel / int_b97c1d0b
comment
Standard Hero Reward: David is allowed to marry Michal after bringing back 200 Philistine foreskins. Before that, King Saul offered (presumably) his eldest daughter Merab in marriage to the one who would defeat Goliath the giant in man-to-man combat, in addition to giving his family exemption from taxes and great wealth. David succeeded in the challenge but refused to marry Merab, and she was given over to someone else.
 Books of Samuel / int_b97c1d0b
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Books of Samuel / int_b97c1d0b
 Books of Samuel / int_bc00493f
type
Precision F-Strike
 Books of Samuel / int_bc00493f
comment
Precision F-Strike: King Saul gets one in the original Hebrew and also in a few translations (e.g. The Living Bible) upon figuring out that Jonathan, whom he had favored to be his successor, was on David's side.
 Books of Samuel / int_bc00493f
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 Books of Samuel / int_bc00493f
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Books of Samuel / int_bc00493f
 Books of Samuel / int_bd3293fc
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Sleeping with the Boss's Wife
 Books of Samuel / int_bd3293fc
comment
Sleeping with the Boss's Wife: Abner, son of Ner, is accused by King Saul's son Ishbosheth of sleeping with his father's concubine, which makes Abner so upset over the accusation that he decides that he would no longer support Ishbosheth and instead hands over the rest of the nation of Israel to David to reign as king over.
 Books of Samuel / int_bd3293fc
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Books of Samuel / int_bd3293fc
 Books of Samuel / int_bf3a6bab
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Insists on Paying
 Books of Samuel / int_bf3a6bab
comment
Insists on Paying: When God told King David to go to the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite in 2nd Samuel chapter 24 to build an altar to the Lord in order to stop the plague sent upon Israel, David tells Araunah that he wants to purchase the threshing floor. Araunah was willing to give the threshing floor and the oxen and the wood free of charge to the king, but King David insists on buying the property, saying that he would not make sacrifices to the Lord with offerings that cost him nothing. In the book of 1st Chronicles (which repeats the same story), the threshing floor becomes the site for the future Temple that King David's son Solomon would build during his reign.
 Books of Samuel / int_bf3a6bab
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Books of Samuel / int_bf3a6bab
 Books of Samuel / int_c0b36b55
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Prefers Raw Meat
 Books of Samuel / int_c0b36b55
comment
Prefers Raw Meat: In 1st Samuel, chapter 2, the priests serving the Temple would have their servant demand those who were offering sacrifices to God to give the priests raw meat, although the real reason is that the priests prefer to eat roasted meat instead of boiled meat.
 Books of Samuel / int_c0b36b55
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Books of Samuel / int_c0b36b55
 Books of Samuel / int_c2e295cd
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Curse
 Books of Samuel / int_c2e295cd
comment
Curse: In 1st Samuel chapter 14, King Saul calls a curse on the man who eats food before the evening comes and the king gets his revenge on his enemies, the Philistines. Saul's son Jonathan, who hasn't heard the curse, defies it by eating a bit of honey that he found on the ground. Although Jonathan accepts the responsibility for the curse when his father found out what had happened, the Israelites protected Jonathan from death because he had helped them bring about a great victory. Although not outrightly stated as a curse, when David's first wife Michal criticizes David for his "unholy" dancing, the text says that she had no children to the day of her death.
 Books of Samuel / int_c2e295cd
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Books of Samuel / int_c2e295cd
 Books of Samuel / int_c301532f
type
Forgiven, but Not Forgotten
 Books of Samuel / int_c301532f
comment
Forgiven, but Not Forgotten: In 2nd Samuel, Shimei, a relative of King Saul, curses King David. After Absalom was killed by Joab, Shimei asks David to spare his life, to which David agrees. In 1st Kings, as David lies dying on his deathbed, he declares that Solomon will succeed him as king of Israel, and charges Solomon to not hold Shimei guiltless, but to properly deal with his enemies. After Solomon is crowned king, he has Shimei restricted to Jerusalem, not to cross the Brook Kidron under penalty of death. When Shimei heads to Gath to recover his slaves, Solomon has Shimei executed.
 Books of Samuel / int_c301532f
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Books of Samuel / int_c301532f
 Books of Samuel / int_c885a824
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Sucksessor
 Books of Samuel / int_c885a824
comment
Sucksessor: Eli's sons sucking leads the way for Samuel to become the priestnote and, to add in the irony, unlike Eli in Aaron's priestly line, Samuel descended from the infamous Korah; then, Samuel's just-as-terrible sons lead the way to Saul being crowned. Saul sees Jonathan as this since Jonathan cares more about his friendship with David than the throne, but being the suck-sessor to a terrible king is hardly a bad thing.
 Books of Samuel / int_c885a824
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 Books of Samuel / int_c885a824
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Books of Samuel / int_c885a824
 Books of Samuel / int_c928d01d
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Magic Music
 Books of Samuel / int_c928d01d
comment
Magic Music: David's harp music makes an "evil spirit" that is bothering Saul depart, at first. Later on, though, it's not powerful enough to improve Saul's mood and he tries to kill David with a spear.
 Books of Samuel / int_c928d01d
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Books of Samuel / int_c928d01d
 Books of Samuel / int_c93a6560
type
Impaled with Extreme Prejudice
 Books of Samuel / int_c93a6560
comment
Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: Joab's brother Asahel by Abner, when he refused to turn aside from chasing after Abner. Then Abner by Joab himself in revenge. Then Absalom by Joab and his men. And then Amasa by Joab after David replaced him as the commander of his armies. Finally there was Benaiah the son of Jehoiada, who killed an Egyptian with his own spear.
 Books of Samuel / int_c93a6560
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Books of Samuel / int_c93a6560
 Books of Samuel / int_cb0a7c33
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MinorKidroduction
 Books of Samuel / int_cb0a7c33
comment
Minor Kidroduction: God called Samuel when he was a child, but little else is said about him until he reaches adulthood.
 Books of Samuel / int_cb0a7c33
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1.0
 Books of Samuel / int_cb0a7c33
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Books of Samuel / int_cb0a7c33
 Books of Samuel / int_cb70651c
type
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane
 Books of Samuel / int_cb70651c
comment
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: The Witch of Endor calls up the spirit of Samuel from the grave, and he speaks in a disembodied voice, revealing the disguised Saul's identity and prophesying his defeat. Or did she? Some scholars have observed that the apparition as described would be very easy to fake with the help of a bit of clever ventriloquism note The Septuagint translation from the 2nd century BC goes so far as to translate "witch" with the Greek word for "ventriloquist", and it wouldn't exactly take supernatural aid to deduce that the disguised man was in fact the king known for being the tallest of all the Israelites. When read with that in mind, the text is actually rather cagey on the point of whether a spirit genuinely appeared. Interpreters are divided as to what might have really happened.
 Books of Samuel / int_cb70651c
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Books of Samuel / int_cb70651c
 Books of Samuel / int_cd149b1e
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Silent Treatment
 Books of Samuel / int_cd149b1e
comment
Silent Treatment: Amnon gets this from his half-brother Absalom after the rape of Tamar to express his total displeasure and to signal that things are going to go bad for Amnon.
 Books of Samuel / int_cd149b1e
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 Books of Samuel / int_cd149b1e
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Books of Samuel / int_cd149b1e
 Books of Samuel / int_cec8b87a
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This Is for Emphasis, Bitch!
 Books of Samuel / int_cec8b87a
comment
This Is for Emphasis, Bitch!: Courtesy of King Saul, and the first recorded example in human history.
 Books of Samuel / int_cec8b87a
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1.0
 Books of Samuel / int_cec8b87a
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Books of Samuel / int_cec8b87a
 Books of Samuel / int_d29a6629
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Death by Childbirth
 Books of Samuel / int_d29a6629
comment
Death by Childbirth: Phinehas' wife dies while giving birth to her child, which she names Ichabod ("no glory"), for "the glory has departed from Israel, for the ark of God was taken."
 Books of Samuel / int_d29a6629
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Books of Samuel / int_d29a6629
 Books of Samuel / int_d39e327f
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What the Hell, Hero?
 Books of Samuel / int_d39e327f
comment
What the Hell, Hero?: Samuel chews out Saul for burning an offering without waiting for him to arrive at Gilgal and later for sparing King Agag and the cattle and sheep when God commanded him to kill all Amalekites. Michal tries to do this with David and his supposed stripping dance before the Lord, but that just results in her never having any children. Nathan reams out David for his adultery, and his murder of Uriah. Joab gives one to David as well, for mourning over Absalom's death so much that he neglected to thank his men for their loyalty.
 Books of Samuel / int_d39e327f
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Books of Samuel / int_d39e327f
 Books of Samuel / int_d567ce13
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Who Will Bell the Cat?
 Books of Samuel / int_d567ce13
comment
Who Will Bell the Cat?: In 1st Samuel, chapter 17, the Israelites are faced with the situation of who's going to take on Goliath's challenge of facing him man-to-man in combat, with King Saul promising a reward to the man who would succeed in defeating the giant. Enter a 17-year-old shepherd boy named David, armed with only a sling, a few stones, and faith in God that he can take down the giant just as he took down a bear and a lion. David's overwhelming victory against Goliath astounded even King Saul, who was wondering whose son he was of the families of Israel.
 Books of Samuel / int_d567ce13
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Books of Samuel / int_d567ce13
 Books of Samuel / int_d6d26e96
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Just a Kid
 Books of Samuel / int_d6d26e96
comment
Just a Kid: David gets this reaction from King Saul in 1st Samuel chapter 17 when he declares that he will slay Goliath the giant. King Saul says, "You're just a youth, and he [Goliath] has been a man of war from his youth." David tells King Saul how with God's help he had slain a lion and a bear while still just a youth, and that with God's help he will also conquer the giant.
 Books of Samuel / int_d6d26e96
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 Books of Samuel / int_d6d26e96
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Books of Samuel / int_d6d26e96
 Books of Samuel / int_d786481
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Top Wife
 Books of Samuel / int_d786481
comment
Top Wife: Elkanah's wife Hannah, whom he loved more than his more fertile wife Penninah. Also presumably David's wife Bathsheba, since he had given her son Solomon the honor of becoming the next king after him.
 Books of Samuel / int_d786481
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 Books of Samuel / int_d786481
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Books of Samuel / int_d786481
 Books of Samuel / int_d7a5fa23
type
Symbolically Broken Object
 Books of Samuel / int_d7a5fa23
comment
Symbolically Broken Object: Tamar's special robe, which was a symbol of her virginity, was torn by her after she had been violated by her half-brother Amnon.
 Books of Samuel / int_d7a5fa23
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1.0
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Books of Samuel / int_d7a5fa23
 Books of Samuel / int_d848560f
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Unusual Euphemism
 Books of Samuel / int_d848560f
comment
Unusual Euphemism: Many English translations have Saul swear at Jonathan along the lines of, "You son of a perverse and rebellious woman!" There is indeed a closer English equivalent to the Hebrew original, but most translators apparently prefer to use an equally accurate but not so precise translation ("perverse and rebellious" is a very literal translation of the exact words) for The Bible. (The Living Bible is a notable exception.)
 Books of Samuel / int_d848560f
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Books of Samuel / int_d848560f
 Books of Samuel / int_d8ce4f07
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Memorial for the Antagonist
 Books of Samuel / int_d8ce4f07
comment
Memorial for the Antagonist: David gives a funeral to King Saul out of respect despite the latter trying to murder him multiple times throughout the legend out of jealousy of David becoming a war hero.
 Books of Samuel / int_d8ce4f07
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1.0
 Books of Samuel / int_d8ce4f07
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Books of Samuel / int_d8ce4f07
 Books of Samuel / int_db912a80
type
The Good King
 Books of Samuel / int_db912a80
comment
The Good King: David is the Biblical archetype. His portrayal in Samuel is really a subversion, however, since the books are very frank in relating much of both the dirty politics of the era and David's own personal failings.
 Books of Samuel / int_db912a80
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Books of Samuel / int_db912a80
 Books of Samuel / int_dd963bd3
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Our Giants Are Bigger
 Books of Samuel / int_dd963bd3
comment
Our Giants Are Bigger: The Rephaim, including Goliath. David and his friends make a name for themselves by killing a few of these in battle.
 Books of Samuel / int_dd963bd3
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 Books of Samuel / int_dd963bd3
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Books of Samuel / int_dd963bd3
 Books of Samuel / int_e26f04b4
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Last of His Kind
 Books of Samuel / int_e26f04b4
comment
Last of His Kind: Michal and Mephibosheth are the only remaining descendants of Saul following first the Civil War and then the execution of Saul’s grandsons as vengeance for Saul’s massacre of the Gibeonites. Michal remains barren because of her falling out with David, but Mephibosheth has at least one son, Mica, allowing Saul’s line through Jonathan to survive.
 Books of Samuel / int_e26f04b4
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Books of Samuel / int_e26f04b4
 Books of Samuel / int_e3b0cd87
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Morality Pet
 Books of Samuel / int_e3b0cd87
comment
Morality Pet: Mephiboseth, Jonathan's crippled son, is this to David, to the point where he's exempted when David has to select seven of Saul's descendants to be punished for Saul's massacre of the Gibeonites.
 Books of Samuel / int_e3b0cd87
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Books of Samuel / int_e3b0cd87
 Books of Samuel / int_e3cee2e7
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Empathic Environment
 Books of Samuel / int_e3cee2e7
comment
Empathic Environment: Invoked by Samuel, who calls for a storm at Saul’s inauguration as a sign that God is unhappy that Israel has chosen a human king over their heavenly King.
 Books of Samuel / int_e3cee2e7
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Books of Samuel / int_e3cee2e7
 Books of Samuel / int_e45ce099
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The Wise Prince
 Books of Samuel / int_e45ce099
comment
The Wise Prince: Prince Jonathan proves to be a wiser and more caring ruler than his father King Saul, and the earlier stories involving him tend to be optimistic...until his Tragic Bromance with to-be-king David kicks in...
 Books of Samuel / int_e45ce099
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 Books of Samuel / int_e45ce099
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Books of Samuel / int_e45ce099
 Books of Samuel / int_e54326a2
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Hell
 Books of Samuel / int_e54326a2
comment
Doeg the Edomite slaughters a village for aiding David, on Saul's orders. He is never mentioned again. (Although one Rabbinical tradition says that David personally kills him later, and it can be assumed he goes to Hell when he dies.)
 Books of Samuel / int_e54326a2
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Books of Samuel / int_e54326a2
 Books of Samuel / int_e680af6f
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Grief Song
 Books of Samuel / int_e680af6f
comment
Grief Song: The Song of the Bow in 2nd Samuel chapter 1, where King David sings the loss of King Saul as well as his friend Jonathan, who both died in the battle at Mount Gilboa.
 Books of Samuel / int_e680af6f
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Books of Samuel / int_e680af6f
 Books of Samuel / int_e6defce9
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Bad News in a Good Way
 Books of Samuel / int_e6defce9
comment
Bad News in a Good Way: When King David asks a Cushite officer announcing his victory over Absalom whether Absalom is still alive, the Cushite rather tactfully replies that he hopes all of King David's enemies end up sharing that young fellow's fate.
 Books of Samuel / int_e6defce9
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Books of Samuel / int_e6defce9
 Books of Samuel / int_e6fa475c
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Offered the Crown
 Books of Samuel / int_e6fa475c
comment
Offered the Crown: Saul, then David.
 Books of Samuel / int_e6fa475c
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 Books of Samuel / int_e6fa475c
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Books of Samuel / int_e6fa475c
 Books of Samuel / int_eb3c0a1
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The Kingslayer
 Books of Samuel / int_eb3c0a1
comment
The Kingslayer: An Amalekite pretends to have killed Saul, but when he boasts about this to David, David is devastated over Saul and Jonathan’s death. The Amalekite is then Rewarded as a Traitor Deserves. Ish-bosheth’s killers meet the same fate.
 Books of Samuel / int_eb3c0a1
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Books of Samuel / int_eb3c0a1
 Books of Samuel / int_eb81c601
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Big Damn Heroes
 Books of Samuel / int_eb81c601
comment
Big Damn Heroes: The families of David and his mighty men, including David’s wives, Abigail and Ahinoam, were kidnapped by the Amalekites. David’s men nearly stoned him in their anguish, but after David prayed to the LORD, he led to his men to reclaim their lost families and property.
 Books of Samuel / int_eb81c601
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Books of Samuel / int_eb81c601
 Books of Samuel / int_eb8f64a6
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No Good Deed Goes Unpunished
 Books of Samuel / int_eb8f64a6
comment
No Good Deed Goes Unpunished: Ahimelech the priest provides David with food and a weapon when he flees from Saul. Saul has him, his family, and his entire hometown executed for this; only his son Abiathar escaped.
 Books of Samuel / int_eb8f64a6
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Books of Samuel / int_eb8f64a6
 Books of Samuel / int_f0864fd9
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Combat by Champion
 Books of Samuel / int_f0864fd9
comment
Combat by Champion: David Versus Goliath, the most famous example in history. After David wins, the Philistines flee and the Israelites slaughter them.
 Books of Samuel / int_f0864fd9
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 Books of Samuel / int_f0864fd9
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Books of Samuel / int_f0864fd9
 Books of Samuel / int_f3626b09
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Mercy Kill
 Books of Samuel / int_f3626b09
comment
2 Samuel opens with an Amalekite bringing the account of Saul's death to David; the man claims he performed a Mercy Kill on Saul. However, the end of 1 Samuel reveals that the Amalekite is lying; Saul was actually Driven to Suicide. The Amalekite presumably hoped to get credit for Saul's death; this went horribly right for him when David decided killing "the Lord's anointed" warranted the death penalty.
 Books of Samuel / int_f3626b09
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Books of Samuel / int_f3626b09
 Books of Samuel / int_f36c4f98
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Easily Forgiven
 Books of Samuel / int_f36c4f98
comment
Easily Forgiven: David forgives Abner (who led Saul’s armies during Saul’s civil war with David), Absalom (his son who led a rebellion against him), and Absalom’s supporters. Forgiveness for the first is subverted by Joab, and the latter by Solomon.
 Books of Samuel / int_f36c4f98
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Books of Samuel / int_f36c4f98
 Books of Samuel / int_f4f3252e
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Law of Inverse Fertility
 Books of Samuel / int_f4f3252e
comment
Law of Inverse Fertility: Penninah has children, and lords it over Hannah, who has none. Hannah eventually does conceive, but not without divine intervention.
 Books of Samuel / int_f4f3252e
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 Books of Samuel / int_f4f3252e
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Books of Samuel / int_f4f3252e
 Books of Samuel / int_f6e99f40
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Youngest Child Wins
 Books of Samuel / int_f6e99f40
comment
Youngest Child Wins: Of all Jesse's eight sons, the last of them, David, is the one chosen by God to be the one that would succeed Saul as king of Israel. This doesn't make his eldest brother Eliab all that happy, as in 1st Samuel chapter 17 he outrightly accuses David of coming down to the battlefield at the Valley of Elah just to see the spectacle of who will go up against Goliath.
 Books of Samuel / int_f6e99f40
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Books of Samuel / int_f6e99f40
 Books of Samuel / int_f74f567f
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Bastard Understudy
 Books of Samuel / int_f74f567f
comment
Bastard Understudy: How Saul comes to view David, as the Lord has departed from Saul and His Spirit is now resting on David to give him success in battle.
 Books of Samuel / int_f74f567f
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Books of Samuel / int_f74f567f
 Books of Samuel / int_f770e79d
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Punished for Sympathy
 Books of Samuel / int_f770e79d
comment
Punished for Sympathy: Eli is chastised by a prophet of God for not taking strong measures against his sons Hophni and Phinehas for abusing their positions as priests before God — the most that Eli did was warn them and that was it — and for that, not only did Eli lose both his sons in one day, but also his family line was cursed. King Saul is chastised by Samuel because he had spared only one Amalekite, King Agag (whom Saul viewed as a strategically valuable hostage), as well as the sheep and cattle. God had commanded Saul to kill them all. For this, God officially rejected Saul as king of Israel, to be replaced with David. note Technically it was not sympathy that Saul was practicing, but greed or lust for power. Joab calls out David for publicly mourning the death of his son Absalom, telling him that had his servants died instead of Absalom, he would be okay with it.
 Books of Samuel / int_f770e79d
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Books of Samuel / int_f770e79d
 Books of Samuel / int_f933e594
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How the Mighty Have Fallen
 Books of Samuel / int_f933e594
comment
How the Mighty Have Fallen: Trope Namer. Part of David's eulogy for King Saul and Jonathan, though it is how the king has fallen in battle, not how he has fallen in might.
 Books of Samuel / int_f933e594
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Books of Samuel / int_f933e594
 Books of Samuel / int_fd32c5a1
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Don't Make Me Destroy You
 Books of Samuel / int_fd32c5a1
comment
Don't Make Me Destroy You: In the Message translation, Abner tells Asahel when the latter wouldn't let up on chasing after the former, “Turn back. Don’t force me to kill you. How would I face your brother Joab?� (2nd Samuel 2:22)
 Books of Samuel / int_fd32c5a1
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 Books of Samuel
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Books of Samuel / int_fd32c5a1
 Books of Samuel / int_feea44a5
type
Fully-Clothed Nudity
 Books of Samuel / int_feea44a5
comment
Fully-Clothed Nudity: David danced before the Lord in an ephod when he successfully brought the Ark of the Covenant into Jerusalem as per the Lord's instructions. His wife Michal treats it as though he was dancing naked in public.
 Books of Samuel / int_feea44a5
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 Books of Samuel
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Books of Samuel / int_feea44a5
 Books of Samuel / int_name
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 Books of Samuel / int_name
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 Books of Samuel / int_name
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Books of Samuel / int_name
 Books of Samuel / int_name
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Books of Samuel

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Books of Samuel
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Actually, I Am Him / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Alas, Poor Villain / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Altar Diplomacy / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Anti-Hero / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Bad News in a Good Way / int_af88e831
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Bathing Beauty / int_af88e831
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Birth-Death Juxtaposition / int_af88e831
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Blame Game / int_af88e831
 Books Of Samuel
seeAlso
Books of Samuel
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By the Hair / int_af88e831
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Cain and Abel / int_af88e831
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Celebrity Elegy / int_af88e831
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Cradle-to-Grave Character / int_af88e831
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Creepy Camel Spider / int_af88e831
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Damsel in Distress / int_af88e831
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Dark Horse Sibling / int_af88e831
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Dead Animal Warning / int_af88e831
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Dead Guy on Display / int_af88e831
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Death by Falling Over / int_af88e831
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Decoy Protagonist / int_af88e831
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Defiled Forever / int_af88e831
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Disc-One Final Boss / int_af88e831
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Driven to Suicide / int_af88e831
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Due to the Dead / int_af88e831
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Fake Defector / int_af88e831
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Fatal Flaw / int_af88e831
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Forgiven, but Not Forgotten / int_af88e831
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Genocide Backfire / int_af88e831
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Give Me a Sword / int_af88e831
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Groin Attack / int_af88e831
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Handicapped Badass / int_af88e831
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Hot Consort / int_af88e831
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Improbable Aiming Skills / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Incredibly Inconvenient Deity / int_af88e831
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Insists on Paying / int_af88e831
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Just a Kid / int_af88e831
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Knight Templar Big Brother / int_af88e831
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Last-Minute Reprieve / int_af88e831
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Leave No Witnesses / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Let Me Tell You a Story / int_af88e831
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Loyal to the Position / int_af88e831
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Magnetic Hero / int_af88e831
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Malingering Romance Ploy / int_af88e831
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Mama Bear / int_af88e831
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Meaningful Name / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Memorial for the Antagonist / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Mistaken for Junkie / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Music Soothes the Savage Beast / int_af88e831
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Nasty Party / int_af88e831
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Off with His Head! / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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One-Night-Stand Pregnancy / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Original Position Fallacy / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Parenthetical Swearing / int_af88e831
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Pinned to the Wall / int_af88e831
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Playing Sick / int_af88e831
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Praetorian Guard / int_af88e831
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Preacher's Kid / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Pretentious Latin Motto / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Protection Racket / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Psycho Sidekick / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Punished for Sympathy / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Questionable Consent / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Rape and Revenge / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Rejected Apology / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Religion is Magic / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Renamed to Avoid Association / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Rhetorical Request Blunder / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Rhyme Theme Naming / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Robbing the Dead / int_af88e831
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Royal Harem / int_af88e831
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Scary Impractical Armor / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Set a Mook to Kill a Mook / int_af88e831
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Shameful Strip / int_af88e831
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Silent Treatment / int_af88e831
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Sinister Minister / int_af88e831
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Sins of Our Fathers / int_af88e831
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Sleeping with the Boss's Wife / int_af88e831
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Sociopathic Hero / int_af88e831
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Songs of Solace / int_af88e831
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Sweet Sheep / int_af88e831
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Tarnishing Their Own Beauty / int_af88e831
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Token Minority / int_af88e831
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Top Wife / int_af88e831
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Tragic Bromance / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Translation with an Agenda / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Traumatic Haircut / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Turn the Other Cheek / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Useless Bystander Parent / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Villainous Incest / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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What Happened to the Mouse? / int_af88e831
 Books of Samuel
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Would Hurt a Child / int_af88e831