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OET-RV by cross-referenced section 1CH 20:1

1CH 20:1–20:8 ©

This is still a very early look into the unfinished text of the Open English Translation of the Bible. Please double-check the text in advance before using in public.

Snatched of David the Raba

1Ch 20:1–8

2Sa 12:26–31

20:1 Snatched of David the Raba

(2 Sam. 12:26-31)

20[ref] 2 3

4

5[ref] 6 7

8


12:26 David captures Rabbah

(1 Chr. 20:1-3)

26Then Yoav fought the Ammonites at Rabbah and captured their palace, 27then he sent messengers to David to tell him, “I’ve fought against Rabbah and I’ve overthrown the city’s water supply. 28So now, gather the rest of our fighters and lay siege to the city and capture it. Otherwise I’ll do it and then it’ll be named after me. 29So David gathered all his warriors and went to Rabbah, where he attacked the city and captured it. 30He took the king’s crown off his head (it was gold and weighed around 30kg), and it was placed on his head. A lot of other plunder was also taken from the city. 31The inhabitants of Rabbah were brought out and assigned to work at the brick kiln with saws, iron picks, and axes. (He did that to all the Ammonite cities.) Then David and all his people returned to Yerushalem.

Collected OET-RV cross-references

2Sam 11:1:

11:1 David takes Uriyyah’s wife

11The next spring (when kings usually go to war), David sent Yoav and his officials and all the Israeli warriors, and they defeated the Ammonites and besieged Rabbah.[ref]

But David stayed in Yerushalem,


11:1: 1Ch 20:1.

1Sam 17:4-7:

4Then the Philistines sent a champion out from their camp to represent them. His name was Goliat and he came from Gat, and he was almost three metres[fn] tall. 5He wore a bronze helmet, and his body armour had overlapping plates weighing a total of some fifty-five kilograms. 6He had bronze armour on his legs, and a bronze plate[fn] between his shoulders. 7The wooden shaft of his spear was like a weaver’s beam and his spear time weighed around seven kilograms. His shield-bearer walked in front of him.


17:4 Some Greek sources have a height closer to two metres.

17:6b It’s not totally clear what’s being described in the second part of this sentence, so other interpretations might differ.