the Third Week of Advent
Click here to join the effort!
Read the Bible
Bahasa Indonesia Sehari-hari
2 Samuel 15:14
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- BridgewayEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
Kemudian berbicaralah Daud kepada semua pegawainya yang ada bersama-sama dengan dia di Yerusalem: "Bersiaplah, marilah kita melarikan diri, sebab jangan-jangan kita tidak akan luput dari pada Absalom. Pergilah dengan segera, supaya ia jangan dapat lekas menyusul kita, dan mendatangkan celaka atas kita dan memukul kota ini dengan mata pedang!"
Lalu titah Daud kepada segala hambanya yang sertanya di Yeruzalem: Bangkitlah kamu sekalian, baiklah kita lari, karena bagi kita tiada lain jalan akan luput dari hadapan Absalom. Bersegeralah kamu berjalan, asal jangan dengan segeranya ia mendapat akan kita dan mendatangkan celaka atas kita dan membunuh orang isi negeri ini dengan mata pedang.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Arise: 2 Samuel 19:9, Psalms 3:1, *title
bring: Heb. thrust, Ezekiel 46:18, Matthew 11:12, *marg. Luke 10:15
and smite: 2 Samuel 23:16, 2 Samuel 23:17, Psalms 51:18, Psalms 55:3-11, Psalms 137:5, Psalms 137:6
Reciprocal: 1 Samuel 23:26 - David made haste 2 Samuel 17:16 - but speedily Psalms 55:5 - Fearfulness Psalms 55:7 - General Psalms 64:4 - suddenly
Cross-References
After these thynges, the worde of the Lorde came vnto Abram in a vision, saying: feare not Abram I am thy shielde [and] thy exceedyng great rewarde.
And Abram sayde: Lorde God what wylt thou geue me when I go chyldelesse, the chylde of the stewardship of my house is this Eleazer of Damasco?
And beholde, the worde of the Lorde came vnto hym, saying, he shall not be thine heire: but one that shall come out of thine own bowels shalbe thine heire.
And he brought hym out, and sayde: loke vp vnto heauen, and tell the starres, if thou be able to number them. And he sayde vnto hym: euen so shall thy seede be.
And [Abram] beleued the Lord, & that counted he to hym for righteousnesse.
And agayne he saide vnto him: I am the Lorde that brought thee out of Ur of the Chaldees, to geue thee this lande, & that thou myghtest inherite it.
He aunswered vnto hym: Take an Heyfer of three yere olde, & a she Goate of three yere olde, and a three yere olde Ramme, a turtle Doue also, & a young Pigeon.
And when the foules fell on the carkases, Abram droue them away.
But the nation whom they shall serue wyll I iudge: and afterward shall they come out with great substaunce.
In that same day the Lorde made a couenaunt with Abram, saying: vnto thy seede haue I geuen this lande, fro the ryuer of Egypt, euen vnto the great ryuer, the ryuer of Euphrates.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And David said unto all his servants that [were] with him at Jerusalem,.... His courtiers and ministers of state, the officers of his household, as many of them as were with him in the city; for some of them very probably were in the country, as Ahithophel was, and some might be along with Absalom, whom he had invited to his peace offerings:
arise, and let us flee; it is much that a man of such courage and valour as David should be so intimidated at once as to make a flight as soon as he heard of a conspiracy forming against him:
for we shall not [else] escape from Absalom; his fears ran so high, that he fancied he would be upon them presently:
make speed to depart, lest he overtake us suddenly; which still more clearly shows the panic he was in:
and bring evil upon us; kill them, or make them prisoners:
and smite the city with the edge of the sword; the inhabitants of it, should they make resistance.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
And smite the city - David’s kind nature induced him to spare Jerusalem the horrors of a siege, and the risk of being taken by assault. He had no standing army with which to resist this sudden attack from so unexpected a quarter. Possibly too he remembered Nathan’s prophecy 2 Samuel 12:10-12.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse 2 Samuel 15:14. David said - Arise - let us flee — This, I believe, was the first time that David turned his back to his enemies. And why did he now flee? Jerusalem, far from not being in a state to sustain a siege, was so strong that even the blind and the lame were supposed to be a sufficient defence for the walls, see 2 Samuel 5:6. And he had still with him his faithful Cherethites and Pelethites; besides six hundred faithful Gittites, who were perfectly willing to follow his fortunes. There does not appear any reason why such a person, in such circumstances, should not act on the defensive; at least till he should be fully satisfied of the real complexion of affairs. But he appears to take all as coming from the hand of God; therefore he humbles himself, weeps, goes barefoot, and covers his head! He does not even hasten his departure, for the habit of mourners is not the habit of those who are flying before the face of their enemies. He sees the storm, and he yields to what he conceives to be the tempest of the Almighty.