Bible Cross References
I have wounded them that they were not able to rise: they are fallen under my feet.
1 Samuel 17:49-51
49
He reached into his bag and took out a stone, which he slung at Goliath. It hit him on the forehead and broke his skull, and Goliath fell face downward on the ground.
50
And so, without a sword, David defeated and killed Goliath with a sling and a stone!
51
He ran to him, stood over him, took Goliath's sword out of its sheath, and cut off his head and killed him. When the Philistines saw that their hero was dead, they ran away.
1 Samuel 23:5
So David and his men went to Keilah and attacked the Philistines; they killed many of them and took their livestock. And so it was that David saved the town.
1 Samuel 30:17
At dawn the next day David attacked them and fought until evening. Except for four hundred young men who mounted camels and got away, none of them escaped.
2 Samuel 5:1-25
1
Then all the tribes of Israel went to David at Hebron and said to him, "We are your own flesh and blood.
2
In the past, even when Saul was still our king, you led the people of Israel in battle, and the LORD promised you that you would lead his people and be their ruler."
3
So all the leaders of Israel came to King David at Hebron. He made a sacred alliance with them, they anointed him, and he became king of Israel.
4
David was thirty years old when he became king, and he ruled for forty years.
5
He ruled in Hebron over Judah for seven and a half years, and in Jerusalem over all Israel and Judah for thirty-three years.
6
The time came when King David and his men set out to attack Jerusalem. The Jebusites, who lived there, thought that David would not be able to conquer the city, and so they said to him, "You will never get in here; even the blind and the crippled could keep you out."
7
(But David did capture their fortress of Zion, and it became known as "David's City.")
8
That day David said to his men, "Does anybody here hate the Jebusites as much as I do? Enough to kill them? Then go up through the water tunnel and attack those poor blind cripples." (That is why it is said, "The blind and the crippled cannot enter the LORD's house.")
9
After capturing the fortress, David lived in it and named it "David's City." He built the city around it, starting at the place where land was filled in on the east side of the hill.
10
He grew stronger all the time, because the LORD God Almighty was with him.
11
King Hiram of Tyre sent a trade mission to David; he provided him with cedar logs and with carpenters and stone masons to build a palace.
12
And so David realized that the LORD had established him as king of Israel and was making his kingdom prosperous for the sake of his people.
13
After moving from Hebron to Jerusalem, David took more concubines and wives, and had more sons and daughters.
14
The following children were born to him in Jerusalem: Shammua, Shobab, Nathan, Solomon,
15
Ibhar, Elishua, Nepheg, Japhia,
16
Elishama, Eliada, and Eliphelet.
17
The Philistines were told that David had been made king of Israel, so their army set out to capture him. When David heard of it, he went down to a fortified place.
18
The Philistines arrived at Rephaim Valley and occupied it.
19
David asked the LORD, "Shall I attack the Philistines? Will you give me the victory?" "Yes, attack!" the LORD answered. "I will give you the victory!"
20
So David went to Baal Perazim and there he defeated the Philistines. He said, "The LORD has broken through my enemies like a flood." And so that place is called Baal Perazim.
21
When the Philistines fled, they left their idols behind, and David and his men carried them away.
22
Then the Philistines went back to Rephaim Valley and occupied it again.
23
Once more David consulted the LORD, who answered, "Don't attack them from here, but go around and get ready to attack them from the other side, near the balsam trees.
24
When you hear the sound of marching in the treetops, then attack because I will be marching ahead of you to defeat the Philistine army."
25
David did what the LORD had commanded, and was able to drive the Philistines back from Geba all the way to Gezer.
2 Samuel 8:1-18
1
Some time later King David attacked the Philistines again, defeated them, and ended their control over the land.
2
Then he defeated the Moabites. He made the prisoners lie down on the ground and put two out of every three of them to death. So the Moabites became his subjects and paid taxes to him.
3
Then he defeated the king of the Syrian state of Zobah, Hadadezer son of Rehob, as Hadadezer was on his way to restore his control over the territory by the upper Euphrates River.
4
David captured seventeen hundred of his cavalry and twenty thousand of his foot soldiers. He kept enough horses for a hundred chariots and crippled all the rest.
5
When the Syrians of Damascus sent an army to help King Hadadezer, David attacked it and killed twenty-two thousand men.
6
Then he set up military camps in their territory, and they became his subjects and paid taxes to him. The LORD made David victorious everywhere.
7
David captured the gold shields carried by Hadadezer's officials and took them to Jerusalem.
8
He also took a great quantity of bronze from Betah and Berothai, cities ruled by Hadadezer.
9
King Toi of Hamath heard that David had defeated all of Hadadezer's army.
10
So he sent his son Joram to greet King David and congratulate him for his victory over Hadadezer, against whom Toi had fought many times. Joram took David presents made of gold, silver, and bronze.
11
King David dedicated them for use in worship, along with the silver and gold he took from the nations he had conquered---
12
Edom, Moab, Ammon, Philistia, and Amalek---as well as part of the loot he had taken from Hadadezer.
13
David became even more famous when he returned from killing eighteen thousand Edomites in Salt Valley.
14
He set up military camps throughout Edom, and the people there became his subjects. The LORD made David victorious everywhere.
15
David ruled over all of Israel and made sure that his people were always treated fairly and justly.
16
Joab, whose mother was Zeruiah, was the commander of the army; Jehoshaphat son of Ahilud was in charge of the records;
17
Zadok son of Ahitub and Ahimelech son of Abiathar were priests; Seraiah was the court secretary;
18
Benaiah son of Jehoiada was in charge of David's bodyguards; and David's sons were priests.
2 Samuel 10:1-19
1
Some time later King Nahash of Ammon died, and his son Hanun became king.
2
King David said, "I must show loyal friendship to Hanun, as his father Nahash did to me." So David sent messengers to express his sympathy. When they arrived in Ammon,
3
the Ammonite leaders said to the king, "Do you think that it is in your father's honor that David has sent these men to express sympathy to you? Of course not! He has sent them here as spies to explore the city, so that he can conquer us!"
4
Hanun seized David's messengers, shaved off one side of their beards, cut off their clothes at the hips, and sent them away.
5
They were too ashamed to return home. When David heard about what had happened, he sent word for them to stay in Jericho and not return until their beards had grown again.
6
The Ammonites realized that they had made David their enemy, so they hired twenty thousand Syrian soldiers from Bethrehob and Zobah, twelve thousand men from Tob, and the king of Maacah with a thousand men.
7
David heard of it and sent Joab against them with the whole army.
8
The Ammonites marched out and took up their position at the entrance to Rabbah, their capital city, while the others, both the Syrians and the men from Tob and Maacah, took up their position in the open countryside.
9
Joab saw that the enemy troops would attack him in front and from the rear, so he chose the best of Israel's soldiers and put them in position facing the Syrians.
10
He placed the rest of his troops under the command of his brother Abishai, who put them in position facing the Ammonites.
11
Joab said to him, "If you see that the Syrians are defeating me, come and help me, and if the Ammonites are defeating you, I will go and help you.
12
Be strong and courageous! Let's fight hard for our people and for the cities of our God. And may the LORD's will be done!"
13
Joab and his men advanced to attack, and the Syrians fled.
14
When the Ammonites saw the Syrians running away, they fled from Abishai and retreated into the city. Then Joab turned back from fighting the Ammonites and went back to Jerusalem.
15
The Syrians realized that they had been defeated by the Israelites, and so they called all their troops together.
16
King Hadadezer sent for the Syrians who were on the east side of the Euphrates River, and they came to Helam under the command of Shobach, commander of the army of King Hadadezer of Zobah.
17
When David heard of it, he gathered the Israelite troops, crossed the Jordan River, and marched to Helam, where the Syrians took up their position facing him. The fighting began,
18
and the Israelites drove the Syrian army back. David and his men killed seven hundred Syrian chariot drivers and forty thousand cavalry, and they wounded Shobach, the enemy commander, who died on the battlefield.
19
When the kings who were subject to Hadadezer realized that they had been defeated by the Israelites, they made peace with them and became their subjects. And the Syrians were afraid to help the Ammonites any more.
2 Samuel 18:7
The Israelites were defeated by David's men; it was a terrible defeat, with twenty thousand men killed that day.
2 Samuel 18:8
The fighting spread over the countryside, and more men died in the forest than were killed in battle.
2 Samuel 21:15-22
15
There was another war between the Philistines and Israel, and David and his men went and fought the Philistines. During one of the battles David grew tired.
16
A giant named Ishbibenob, who was carrying a bronze spear that weighed about seven and a half pounds and who was wearing a new sword, thought he could kill David.
17
But Abishai son of Zeruiah came to David's help, attacked the giant, and killed him. Then David's men made David promise that he would never again go out with them to battle. "You are the hope of Israel, and we don't want to lose you," they said.
18
After this there was a battle with the Philistines at Gob, during which Sibbecai from Hushah killed a giant named Saph.
19
There was another battle with the Philistines at Gob, and Elhanan son of Jair from Bethlehem killed Goliath from Gath, whose spear had a shaft as thick as the bar on a weaver's loom.
20
Then there was another battle at Gath, where there was a giant who loved to fight. He had six fingers on each hand and six toes on each foot.
21
He defied the Israelites, and Jonathan, the son of David's brother Shammah, killed him.
22
These four were descendants of the giants of Gath, and they were killed by David and his men.
2 Samuel 22:39
I strike them down, and they cannot rise; they lie defeated before me.