Genesis 0.0:

The First Book of Moses,

Commonly Called

Genesis

Genesis 1.0:

1

Genesis 1.1: 1 In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.

Genesis 1.2: 2 The earth was formless and empty. Darkness was on the surface of the deep and God’s Spirit was hovering over the surface of the waters.

Genesis 1.3: 3 God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light.

Genesis 1.4: 4 God saw the light, and saw that it was good. God divided the light from the darkness.

Genesis 1.5: 5 God called the light “day”, and the darkness he called “night”. There was evening and there was morning, the first day.

Genesis 1.6: 6 God said, “Let there be an expanse in the middle of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters.”

Genesis 1.7: 7 God made the expanse, and divided the waters which were under the expanse from the waters which were above the expanse; and it was so.

Genesis 1.8: 8 God called the expanse “sky”. There was evening and there was morning, a second day.

Genesis 1.9: 9 God said, “Let the waters under the sky be gathered together to one place, and let the dry land appear;” and it was so.

Genesis 1.10: 10 God called the dry land “earth”, and the gathering together of the waters he called “seas”. God saw that it was good.

Genesis 1.11: 11 God said, “Let the earth yield grass, herbs yielding seeds, and fruit trees bearing fruit after their kind, with their seeds in it, on the earth;” and it was so.

Genesis 1.12: 12 The earth yielded grass, herbs yielding seed after their kind, and trees bearing fruit, with their seeds in it, after their kind; and God saw that it was good.

Genesis 1.13: 13 There was evening and there was morning, a third day.

Genesis 1.14: 14 God said, “Let there be lights in the expanse of the sky to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs to mark seasons, days, and years;

Genesis 1.15: 15 and let them be for lights in the expanse of the sky to give light on the earth;” and it was so.

Genesis 1.16: 16 God made the two great lights: the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night. He also made the stars.

Genesis 1.17: 17 God set them in the expanse of the sky to give light to the earth,

Genesis 1.18: 18 and to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the light from the darkness. God saw that it was good.

Genesis 1.19: 19 There was evening and there was morning, a fourth day.

Genesis 1.20: 20 God said, “Let the waters abound with living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth in the open expanse of the sky.”

Genesis 1.21: 21 God created the large sea creatures and every living creature that moves, with which the waters swarmed, after their kind, and every winged bird after its kind. God saw that it was good.

Genesis 1.22: 22 God blessed them, saying, “Be fruitful, and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas, and let birds multiply on the earth.”

Genesis 1.23: 23 There was evening and there was morning, a fifth day.

Genesis 1.24: 24 God said, “Let the earth produce living creatures after their kind, livestock, creeping things, and animals of the earth after their kind;” and it was so.

Genesis 1.25: 25 God made the animals of the earth after their kind, and the livestock after their kind, and everything that creeps on the ground after its kind. God saw that it was good.

Genesis 1.26: 26 God said, “Let’s make man in our image, after our likeness. Let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the sky, and over the livestock, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.”

Genesis 1.27: 27 God created man in his own image. In God’s image he created him; male and female he created them.

Genesis 1.28: 28 God blessed them. God said to them, “Be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth, and subdue it. Have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the sky, and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”

Genesis 1.29: 29 God said, “Behold, I have given you every herb yielding seed, which is on the surface of all the earth, and every tree, which bears fruit yielding seed. It will be your food.

Genesis 1.30: 30 To every animal of the earth, and to every bird of the sky, and to everything that creeps on the earth, in which there is life, I have given every green herb for food;” and it was so.

Genesis 1.31: 31 God saw everything that he had made, and, behold, it was very good. There was evening and there was morning, a sixth day.

Genesis 2.0:

2

Genesis 2.1: 1 The heavens, the earth, and all their vast array were finished.

Genesis 2.2: 2 On the seventh day God finished his work which he had done; and he rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had done.

Genesis 2.3: 3 God blessed the seventh day, and made it holy, because he rested in it from all his work of creation which he had done.

Genesis 2.4: 4 This is the history of the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created, in the day that Yahweh God made the earth and the heavens.

Genesis 2.5: 5 No plant of the field was yet in the earth, and no herb of the field had yet sprung up; for Yahweh God had not caused it to rain on the earth. There was not a man to till the ground,

Genesis 2.6: 6 but a mist went up from the earth, and watered the whole surface of the ground.

Genesis 2.7: 7 Yahweh God formed man from the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.

Genesis 2.8: 8 Yahweh God planted a garden eastward, in Eden, and there he put the man whom he had formed.

Genesis 2.9: 9 Out of the ground Yahweh God made every tree to grow that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food, including the tree of life in the middle of the garden and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.

Genesis 2.10: 10 A river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from there it was parted, and became the source of four rivers.

Genesis 2.11: 11 The name of the first is Pishon: it flows through the whole land of Havilah, where there is gold;

Genesis 2.12: 12 and the gold of that land is good. Bdellium and onyx stone are also there.

Genesis 2.13: 13 The name of the second river is Gihon. It is the same river that flows through the whole land of Cush.

Genesis 2.14: 14 The name of the third river is Hiddekel. This is the one which flows in front of Assyria. The fourth river is the Euphrates.

Genesis 2.15: 15 Yahweh God took the man, and put him into the garden of Eden to cultivate and keep it.

Genesis 2.16: 16 Yahweh God commanded the man, saying, “You may freely eat of every tree of the garden;

Genesis 2.17: 17 but you shall not eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil; for in the day that you eat of it, you will surely die.”

Genesis 2.18: 18 Yahweh God said, “It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make him a helper comparable to him.”

Genesis 2.19: 19 Out of the ground Yahweh God formed every animal of the field, and every bird of the sky, and brought them to the man to see what he would call them. Whatever the man called every living creature became its name.

Genesis 2.20: 20 The man gave names to all livestock, and to the birds of the sky, and to every animal of the field; but for man there was not found a helper comparable to him.

Genesis 2.21: 21 Yahweh God caused the man to fall into a deep sleep. As the man slept, he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place.

Genesis 2.22: 22 Yahweh God made a woman from the rib which he had taken from the man, and brought her to the man.

Genesis 2.23: 23 The man said, “This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh. She will be called ‘woman,’ because she was taken out of Man.”

Genesis 2.24: 24 Therefore a man will leave his father and his mother, and will join with his wife, and they will be one flesh.

Genesis 2.25: 25 The man and his wife were both naked, and they were not ashamed.

Genesis 3.0:

3

Genesis 3.1: 1 Now the serpent was more subtle than any animal of the field which Yahweh God had made. He said to the woman, “Has God really said, ‘You shall not eat of any tree of the garden’?”

Genesis 3.2: 2 The woman said to the serpent, “We may eat fruit from the trees of the garden,

Genesis 3.3: 3 but not the fruit of the tree which is in the middle of the garden. God has said, ‘You shall not eat of it. You shall not touch it, lest you die.’”

Genesis 3.4: 4 The serpent said to the woman, “You won’t really die,

Genesis 3.5: 5 for God knows that in the day you eat it, your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”

Genesis 3.6: 6 When the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took some of its fruit, and ate. Then she gave some to her husband with her, and he ate it, too.

Genesis 3.7: 7 Their eyes were opened, and they both knew that they were naked. They sewed fig leaves together, and made coverings for themselves.

Genesis 3.8: 8 They heard Yahweh God’s voice walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of Yahweh God among the trees of the garden.

Genesis 3.9: 9 Yahweh God called to the man, and said to him, “Where are you?”

Genesis 3.10: 10 The man said, “I heard your voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; so I hid myself.”

Genesis 3.11: 11 God said, “Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten from the tree that I commanded you not to eat from?”

Genesis 3.12: 12 The man said, “The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit from the tree, and I ate it.”

Genesis 3.13: 13 Yahweh God said to the woman, “What have you done?”

The woman said, “The serpent deceived me, and I ate.”

Genesis 3.14: 14 Yahweh God said to the serpent,

“Because you have done this,

you are cursed above all livestock,

and above every animal of the field.

You shall go on your belly

and you shall eat dust all the days of your life.

Genesis 3.15: 15 I will put hostility between you and the woman,

and between your offspring and her offspring.

He will bruise your head,

and you will bruise his heel.”

Genesis 3.16: 16 To the woman he said,

“I will greatly multiply your pain in childbirth.

You will bear children in pain.

Your desire will be for your husband,

and he will rule over you.”

Genesis 3.17: 17 To Adam he said,

“Because you have listened to your wife’s voice,

and ate from the tree,

about which I commanded you, saying, ‘You shall not eat of it,’

the ground is cursed for your sake.

You will eat from it with much labor all the days of your life.

Genesis 3.18: 18 It will yield thorns and thistles to you;

and you will eat the herb of the field.

Genesis 3.19: 19 You will eat bread by the sweat of your face until you return to the ground,

for you were taken out of it.

For you are dust,

and you shall return to dust.”

Genesis 3.20: 20 The man called his wife Eve because she would be the mother of all the living.

Genesis 3.21: 21 Yahweh God made garments of animal skins for Adam and for his wife, and clothed them.

Genesis 3.22: 22 Yahweh God said, “Behold, the man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil. Now, lest he reach out his hand, and also take of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever—”

Genesis 3.23: 23 Therefore Yahweh God sent him out from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from which he was taken.

Genesis 3.24: 24 So he drove out the man; and he placed cherubim at the east of the garden of Eden, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to guard the way to the tree of life.

Genesis 4.0:

4

Genesis 4.1: 1 The man knew Eve his wife. She conceived, and gave birth to Cain, and said, “I have gotten a man with Yahweh’s help.”

Genesis 4.2: 2 Again she gave birth, to Cain’s brother Abel. Abel was a keeper of sheep, but Cain was a tiller of the ground.

Genesis 4.3: 3 As time passed, Cain brought an offering to Yahweh from the fruit of the ground.

Genesis 4.4: 4 Abel also brought some of the firstborn of his flock and of its fat. Yahweh respected Abel and his offering,

Genesis 4.5: 5 but he didn’t respect Cain and his offering. Cain was very angry, and the expression on his face fell.

Genesis 4.6: 6 Yahweh said to Cain, “Why are you angry? Why has the expression of your face fallen?

Genesis 4.7: 7 If you do well, won’t it be lifted up? If you don’t do well, sin crouches at the door. Its desire is for you, but you are to rule over it.”

Genesis 4.8: 8 Cain said to Abel, his brother, “Let’s go into the field.” While they were in the field, Cain rose up against Abel, his brother, and killed him.

Genesis 4.9: 9 Yahweh said to Cain, “Where is Abel, your brother?”

He said, “I don’t know. Am I my brother’s keeper?”

Genesis 4.10: 10 Yahweh said, “What have you done? The voice of your brother’s blood cries to me from the ground.

Genesis 4.11: 11 Now you are cursed because of the ground, which has opened its mouth to receive your brother’s blood from your hand.

Genesis 4.12: 12 From now on, when you till the ground, it won’t yield its strength to you. You will be a fugitive and a wanderer in the earth.”

Genesis 4.13: 13 Cain said to Yahweh, “My punishment is greater than I can bear.

Genesis 4.14: 14 Behold, you have driven me out today from the surface of the ground. I will be hidden from your face, and I will be a fugitive and a wanderer in the earth. Whoever finds me will kill me.”

Genesis 4.15: 15 Yahweh said to him, “Therefore whoever slays Cain, vengeance will be taken on him sevenfold.” Yahweh appointed a sign for Cain, so that anyone finding him would not strike him.

Genesis 4.16: 16 Cain left Yahweh’s presence, and lived in the land of Nod, east of Eden.

Genesis 4.17: 17 Cain knew his wife. She conceived, and gave birth to Enoch. He built a city, and named the city after the name of his son, Enoch.

Genesis 4.18: 18 Irad was born to Enoch. Irad became the father of Mehujael. Mehujael became the father of Methushael. Methushael became the father of Lamech.

Genesis 4.19: 19 Lamech took two wives: the name of the first one was Adah, and the name of the second one was Zillah.

Genesis 4.20: 20 Adah gave birth to Jabal, who was the father of those who dwell in tents and have livestock.

Genesis 4.21: 21 His brother’s name was Jubal, who was the father of all who handle the harp and pipe.

Genesis 4.22: 22 Zillah also gave birth to Tubal Cain, the forger of every cutting instrument of bronze and iron. Tubal Cain’s sister was Naamah.

Genesis 4.23: 23 Lamech said to his wives,

“Adah and Zillah, hear my voice.

You wives of Lamech, listen to my speech,

for I have slain a man for wounding me,

a young man for bruising me.

Genesis 4.24: 24 If Cain will be avenged seven times,

truly Lamech seventy-seven times.”

Genesis 4.25: 25 Adam knew his wife again. She gave birth to a son, and named him Seth, saying, “for God has given me another child instead of Abel, for Cain killed him.”

Genesis 4.26: 26 A son was also born to Seth, and he named him Enosh. At that time men began to call on Yahweh’s name.

Genesis 5.0:

5

Genesis 5.1: 1 This is the book of the generations of Adam. In the day that God created man, he made him in God’s likeness.

Genesis 5.2: 2 He created them male and female, and blessed them. On the day they were created, he named them Adam.

Genesis 5.3: 3 Adam lived one hundred thirty years, and became the father of a son in his own likeness, after his image, and named him Seth.

Genesis 5.4: 4 The days of Adam after he became the father of Seth were eight hundred years, and he became the father of other sons and daughters.

Genesis 5.5: 5 All the days that Adam lived were nine hundred thirty years, then he died.

Genesis 5.6: 6 Seth lived one hundred five years, then became the father of Enosh.

Genesis 5.7: 7 Seth lived after he became the father of Enosh eight hundred seven years, and became the father of other sons and daughters.

Genesis 5.8: 8 All of the days of Seth were nine hundred twelve years, then he died.

Genesis 5.9: 9 Enosh lived ninety years, and became the father of Kenan.

Genesis 5.10: 10 Enosh lived after he became the father of Kenan eight hundred fifteen years, and became the father of other sons and daughters.

Genesis 5.11: 11 All of the days of Enosh were nine hundred five years, then he died.

Genesis 5.12: 12 Kenan lived seventy years, then became the father of Mahalalel.

Genesis 5.13: 13 Kenan lived after he became the father of Mahalalel eight hundred forty years, and became the father of other sons and daughters

Genesis 5.14: 14 and all of the days of Kenan were nine hundred ten years, then he died.

Genesis 5.15: 15 Mahalalel lived sixty-five years, then became the father of Jared.

Genesis 5.16: 16 Mahalalel lived after he became the father of Jared eight hundred thirty years, and became the father of other sons and daughters.

Genesis 5.17: 17 All of the days of Mahalalel were eight hundred ninety-five years, then he died.

Genesis 5.18: 18 Jared lived one hundred sixty-two years, then became the father of Enoch.

Genesis 5.19: 19 Jared lived after he became the father of Enoch eight hundred years, and became the father of other sons and daughters.

Genesis 5.20: 20 All of the days of Jared were nine hundred sixty-two years, then he died.

Genesis 5.21: 21 Enoch lived sixty-five years, then became the father of Methuselah.

Genesis 5.22: 22 After Methuselah’s birth, Enoch walked with God for three hundred years, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 5.23: 23 All the days of Enoch were three hundred sixty-five years.

Genesis 5.24: 24 Enoch walked with God, and he was not found, for God took him.

Genesis 5.25: 25 Methuselah lived one hundred eighty-seven years, then became the father of Lamech.

Genesis 5.26: 26 Methuselah lived after he became the father of Lamech seven hundred eighty-two years, and became the father of other sons and daughters.

Genesis 5.27: 27 All the days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty-nine years, then he died.

Genesis 5.28: 28 Lamech lived one hundred eighty-two years, then became the father of a son.

Genesis 5.29: 29 He named him Noah, saying, “This one will comfort us in our work and in the toil of our hands, caused by the ground which Yahweh has cursed.”

Genesis 5.30: 30 Lamech lived after he became the father of Noah five hundred ninety-five years, and became the father of other sons and daughters.

Genesis 5.31: 31 All the days of Lamech were seven hundred seventy-seven years, then he died.

Genesis 5.32: 32 Noah was five hundred years old, then Noah became the father of Shem, Ham, and Japheth.

Genesis 6.0:

6

Genesis 6.1: 1 When men began to multiply on the surface of the ground, and daughters were born to them,

Genesis 6.2: 2 God’s sons saw that men’s daughters were beautiful, and they took any that they wanted for themselves as wives.

Genesis 6.3: 3 Yahweh said, “My Spirit will not strive with man forever, because he also is flesh; so his days will be one hundred twenty years.”

Genesis 6.4: 4 The Nephilim were in the earth in those days, and also after that, when God’s sons came in to men’s daughters and had children with them. Those were the mighty men who were of old, men of renown.

Genesis 6.5: 5 Yahweh saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of man’s heart was continually only evil.

Genesis 6.6: 6 Yahweh was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him in his heart.

Genesis 6.7: 7 Yahweh said, “I will destroy man whom I have created from the surface of the ground—man, along with animals, creeping things, and birds of the sky—for I am sorry that I have made them.”

Genesis 6.8: 8 But Noah found favor in Yahweh’s eyes.

Genesis 6.9: 9 This is the history of the generations of Noah: Noah was a righteous man, blameless among the people of his time. Noah walked with God.

Genesis 6.10: 10 Noah became the father of three sons: Shem, Ham, and Japheth.

Genesis 6.11: 11 The earth was corrupt before God, and the earth was filled with violence.

Genesis 6.12: 12 God saw the earth, and saw that it was corrupt, for all flesh had corrupted their way on the earth.

Genesis 6.13: 13 God said to Noah, “I will bring an end to all flesh, for the earth is filled with violence through them. Behold, I will destroy them and the earth.

Genesis 6.14: 14 Make a ship of gopher wood. You shall make rooms in the ship, and shall seal it inside and outside with pitch.

Genesis 6.15: 15 This is how you shall make it. The length of the ship shall be three hundred cubits, its width fifty cubits, and its height thirty cubits.

Genesis 6.16: 16 You shall make a roof in the ship, and you shall finish it to a cubit upward. You shall set the door of the ship in its side. You shall make it with lower, second, and third levels.

Genesis 6.17: 17 I, even I, will bring the flood of waters on this earth, to destroy all flesh having the breath of life from under the sky. Everything that is in the earth will die.

Genesis 6.18: 18 But I will establish my covenant with you. You shall come into the ship, you, your sons, your wife, and your sons’ wives with you.

Genesis 6.19: 19 Of every living thing of all flesh, you shall bring two of every sort into the ship, to keep them alive with you. They shall be male and female.

Genesis 6.20: 20 Of the birds after their kind, of the livestock after their kind, of every creeping thing of the ground after its kind, two of every sort will come to you, to keep them alive.

Genesis 6.21: 21 Take with you some of all food that is eaten, and gather it to yourself; and it will be for food for you, and for them.”

Genesis 6.22: 22 Thus Noah did. He did all that God commanded him.

Genesis 7.0:

7

Genesis 7.1: 1 Yahweh said to Noah, “Come with all of your household into the ship, for I have seen your righteousness before me in this generation.

Genesis 7.2: 2 You shall take seven pairs of every clean animal with you, the male and his female. Of the animals that are not clean, take two, the male and his female.

Genesis 7.3: 3 Also of the birds of the sky, seven and seven, male and female, to keep seed alive on the surface of all the earth.

Genesis 7.4: 4 In seven days, I will cause it to rain on the earth for forty days and forty nights. I will destroy every living thing that I have made from the surface of the ground.”

Genesis 7.5: 5 Noah did everything that Yahweh commanded him.

Genesis 7.6: 6 Noah was six hundred years old when the flood of waters came on the earth.

Genesis 7.7: 7 Noah went into the ship with his sons, his wife, and his sons’ wives, because of the floodwaters.

Genesis 7.8: 8 Clean animals, unclean animals, birds, and everything that creeps on the ground

Genesis 7.9: 9 went by pairs to Noah into the ship, male and female, as God commanded Noah.

Genesis 7.10: 10 After the seven days, the floodwaters came on the earth.

Genesis 7.11: 11 In the six hundredth year of Noah’s life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month, on that day all the fountains of the great deep burst open, and the sky’s windows opened.

Genesis 7.12: 12 It rained on the earth forty days and forty nights.

Genesis 7.13: 13 In the same day Noah, and Shem, Ham, and Japheth—the sons of Noah—and Noah’s wife and the three wives of his sons with them, entered into the ship—

Genesis 7.14: 14 they, and every animal after its kind, all the livestock after their kind, every creeping thing that creeps on the earth after its kind, and every bird after its kind, every bird of every sort.

Genesis 7.15: 15 Pairs from all flesh with the breath of life in them went into the ship to Noah.

Genesis 7.16: 16 Those who went in, went in male and female of all flesh, as God commanded him; then Yahweh shut him in.

Genesis 7.17: 17 The flood was forty days on the earth. The waters increased, and lifted up the ship, and it was lifted up above the earth.

Genesis 7.18: 18 The waters rose, and increased greatly on the earth; and the ship floated on the surface of the waters.

Genesis 7.19: 19 The waters rose very high on the earth. All the high mountains that were under the whole sky were covered.

Genesis 7.20: 20 The waters rose fifteen cubits higher, and the mountains were covered.

Genesis 7.21: 21 All flesh died that moved on the earth, including birds, livestock, animals, every creeping thing that creeps on the earth, and every man.

Genesis 7.22: 22 All on the dry land, in whose nostrils was the breath of the spirit of life, died.

Genesis 7.23: 23 Every living thing was destroyed that was on the surface of the ground, including man, livestock, creeping things, and birds of the sky. They were destroyed from the earth. Only Noah was left, and those who were with him in the ship.

Genesis 7.24: 24 The waters flooded the earth one hundred fifty days.

Genesis 8.0:

8

Genesis 8.1: 1 God remembered Noah, all the animals, and all the livestock that were with him in the ship; and God made a wind to pass over the earth. The waters subsided.

Genesis 8.2: 2 The deep’s fountains and the sky’s windows were also stopped, and the rain from the sky was restrained.

Genesis 8.3: 3 The waters continually receded from the earth. After the end of one hundred fifty days the waters receded.

Genesis 8.4: 4 The ship rested in the seventh month, on the seventeenth day of the month, on Ararat’s mountains.

Genesis 8.5: 5 The waters receded continually until the tenth month. In the tenth month, on the first day of the month, the tops of the mountains were visible.

Genesis 8.6: 6 At the end of forty days, Noah opened the window of the ship which he had made,

Genesis 8.7: 7 and he sent out a raven. It went back and forth, until the waters were dried up from the earth.

Genesis 8.8: 8 He himself sent out a dove to see if the waters were abated from the surface of the ground,

Genesis 8.9: 9 but the dove found no place to rest her foot, and she returned into the ship to him, for the waters were on the surface of the whole earth. He put out his hand, and took her, and brought her to him into the ship.

Genesis 8.10: 10 He waited yet another seven days; and again he sent the dove out of the ship.

Genesis 8.11: 11 The dove came back to him at evening and, behold, in her mouth was a freshly plucked olive leaf. So Noah knew that the waters were abated from the earth.

Genesis 8.12: 12 He waited yet another seven days, and sent out the dove; and she didn’t return to him any more.

Genesis 8.13: 13 In the six hundred first year, in the first month, the first day of the month, the waters were dried up from the earth. Noah removed the covering of the ship, and looked. He saw that the surface of the ground was dry.

Genesis 8.14: 14 In the second month, on the twenty-seventh day of the month, the earth was dry.

Genesis 8.15: 15 God spoke to Noah, saying,

Genesis 8.16: 16 “Go out of the ship, you, your wife, your sons, and your sons’ wives with you.

Genesis 8.17: 17 Bring out with you every living thing that is with you of all flesh, including birds, livestock, and every creeping thing that creeps on the earth, that they may breed abundantly in the earth, and be fruitful, and multiply on the earth.”

Genesis 8.18: 18 Noah went out, with his sons, his wife, and his sons’ wives with him.

Genesis 8.19: 19 Every animal, every creeping thing, and every bird, whatever moves on the earth, after their families, went out of the ship.

Genesis 8.20: 20 Noah built an altar to Yahweh, and took of every clean animal, and of every clean bird, and offered burnt offerings on the altar.

Genesis 8.21: 21 Yahweh smelled the pleasant aroma. Yahweh said in his heart, “I will not again curse the ground any more for man’s sake because the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth. I will never again strike every living thing, as I have done.

Genesis 8.22: 22 While the earth remains, seed time and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night will not cease.”

Genesis 9.0:

9

Genesis 9.1: 1 God blessed Noah and his sons, and said to them, “Be fruitful, multiply, and replenish the earth.

Genesis 9.2: 2 The fear of you and the dread of you will be on every animal of the earth, and on every bird of the sky. Everything that moves along the ground, and all the fish of the sea, are delivered into your hand.

Genesis 9.3: 3 Every moving thing that lives will be food for you. As I gave you the green herb, I have given everything to you.

Genesis 9.4: 4 But flesh with its life, that is, its blood, you shall not eat.

Genesis 9.5: 5 I will surely require accounting for your life’s blood. At the hand of every animal I will require it. At the hand of man, even at the hand of every man’s brother, I will require the life of man.

Genesis 9.6: 6 Whoever sheds man’s blood, his blood will be shed by man, for God made man in his own image.

Genesis 9.7: 7 Be fruitful and multiply. Increase abundantly in the earth, and multiply in it.”

Genesis 9.8: 8 God spoke to Noah and to his sons with him, saying,

Genesis 9.9: 9 “As for me, behold, I establish my covenant with you, and with your offspring after you,

Genesis 9.10: 10 and with every living creature that is with you: the birds, the livestock, and every animal of the earth with you, of all that go out of the ship, even every animal of the earth.

Genesis 9.11: 11 I will establish my covenant with you: All flesh will not be cut off any more by the waters of the flood. There will never again be a flood to destroy the earth.”

Genesis 9.12: 12 God said, “This is the token of the covenant which I make between me and you and every living creature that is with you, for perpetual generations:

Genesis 9.13: 13 I set my rainbow in the cloud, and it will be a sign of a covenant between me and the earth.

Genesis 9.14: 14 When I bring a cloud over the earth, that the rainbow will be seen in the cloud,

Genesis 9.15: 15 I will remember my covenant, which is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh, and the waters will no more become a flood to destroy all flesh.

Genesis 9.16: 16 The rainbow will be in the cloud. I will look at it, that I may remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is on the earth.”

Genesis 9.17: 17 God said to Noah, “This is the token of the covenant which I have established between me and all flesh that is on the earth.”

Genesis 9.18: 18 The sons of Noah who went out from the ship were Shem, Ham, and Japheth. Ham is the father of Canaan.

Genesis 9.19: 19 These three were the sons of Noah, and from these the whole earth was populated.

Genesis 9.20: 20 Noah began to be a farmer, and planted a vineyard.

Genesis 9.21: 21 He drank of the wine and got drunk. He was uncovered within his tent.

Genesis 9.22: 22 Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brothers outside.

Genesis 9.23: 23 Shem and Japheth took a garment, and laid it on both their shoulders, went in backwards, and covered the nakedness of their father. Their faces were backwards, and they didn’t see their father’s nakedness.

Genesis 9.24: 24 Noah awoke from his wine, and knew what his youngest son had done to him.

Genesis 9.25: 25 He said,

“Canaan is cursed.

He will be a servant of servants to his brothers.”

Genesis 9.26: 26 He said,

“Blessed be Yahweh, the God of Shem.

Let Canaan be his servant.

Genesis 9.27: 27 May God enlarge Japheth.

Let him dwell in the tents of Shem.

Let Canaan be his servant.”

Genesis 9.28: 28 Noah lived three hundred fifty years after the flood.

Genesis 9.29: 29 All the days of Noah were nine hundred fifty years, and then he died.

Genesis 10.0:

10

Genesis 10.1: 1 Now this is the history of the generations of the sons of Noah and of Shem, Ham, and Japheth. Sons were born to them after the flood.

Genesis 10.2: 2 The sons of Japheth were: Gomer, Magog, Madai, Javan, Tubal, Meshech, and Tiras.

Genesis 10.3: 3 The sons of Gomer were: Ashkenaz, Riphath, and Togarmah.

Genesis 10.4: 4 The sons of Javan were: Elishah, Tarshish, Kittim, and Dodanim.

Genesis 10.5: 5 Of these were the islands of the nations divided in their lands, everyone after his language, after their families, in their nations.

Genesis 10.6: 6 The sons of Ham were: Cush, Mizraim, Put, and Canaan.

Genesis 10.7: 7 The sons of Cush were: Seba, Havilah, Sabtah, Raamah, and Sabteca. The sons of Raamah were: Sheba and Dedan.

Genesis 10.8: 8 Cush became the father of Nimrod. He began to be a mighty one in the earth.

Genesis 10.9: 9 He was a mighty hunter before Yahweh. Therefore it is said, “like Nimrod, a mighty hunter before Yahweh”.

Genesis 10.10: 10 The beginning of his kingdom was Babel, Erech, Accad, and Calneh, in the land of Shinar.

Genesis 10.11: 11 Out of that land he went into Assyria, and built Nineveh, Rehoboth Ir, Calah,

Genesis 10.12: 12 and Resen between Nineveh and the great city Calah.

Genesis 10.13: 13 Mizraim became the father of Ludim, Anamim, Lehabim, Naphtuhim,

Genesis 10.14: 14 Pathrusim, Casluhim (which the Philistines descended from), and Caphtorim.

Genesis 10.15: 15 Canaan became the father of Sidon (his firstborn), Heth,

Genesis 10.16: 16 the Jebusites, the Amorites, the Girgashites,

Genesis 10.17: 17 the Hivites, the Arkites, the Sinites,

Genesis 10.18: 18 the Arvadites, the Zemarites, and the Hamathites. Afterward the families of the Canaanites were spread abroad.

Genesis 10.19: 19 The border of the Canaanites was from Sidon—as you go toward Gerar—to Gaza—as you go toward Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, and Zeboiim—to Lasha.

Genesis 10.20: 20 These are the sons of Ham, after their families, according to their languages, in their lands and their nations.

Genesis 10.21: 21 Children were also born to Shem (the elder brother of Japheth), the father of all the children of Eber.

Genesis 10.22: 22 The sons of Shem were: Elam, Asshur, Arpachshad, Lud, and Aram.

Genesis 10.23: 23 The sons of Aram were: Uz, Hul, Gether, and Mash.

Genesis 10.24: 24 Arpachshad became the father of Shelah. Shelah became the father of Eber.

Genesis 10.25: 25 To Eber were born two sons. The name of the one was Peleg, for in his days the earth was divided. His brother’s name was Joktan.

Genesis 10.26: 26 Joktan became the father of Almodad, Sheleph, Hazarmaveth, Jerah,

Genesis 10.27: 27 Hadoram, Uzal, Diklah,

Genesis 10.28: 28 Obal, Abimael, Sheba,

Genesis 10.29: 29 Ophir, Havilah, and Jobab. All these were the sons of Joktan.

Genesis 10.30: 30 Their dwelling extended from Mesha, as you go toward Sephar, the mountain of the east.

Genesis 10.31: 31 These are the sons of Shem, by their families, according to their languages, lands, and nations.

Genesis 10.32: 32 These are the families of the sons of Noah, by their generations, according to their nations. The nations divided from these in the earth after the flood.

Genesis 11.0:

11

Genesis 11.1: 1 The whole earth was of one language and of one speech.

Genesis 11.2: 2 As they traveled from the east, they found a plain in the land of Shinar, and they lived there.

Genesis 11.3: 3 They said to one another, “Come, let’s make bricks, and burn them thoroughly.” They had brick for stone, and they used tar for mortar.

Genesis 11.4: 4 They said, “Come, let’s build ourselves a city, and a tower whose top reaches to the sky, and let’s make a name for ourselves, lest we be scattered abroad on the surface of the whole earth.”

Genesis 11.5: 5 Yahweh came down to see the city and the tower, which the children of men built.

Genesis 11.6: 6 Yahweh said, “Behold, they are one people, and they all have one language, and this is what they begin to do. Now nothing will be withheld from them, which they intend to do.

Genesis 11.7: 7 Come, let’s go down, and there confuse their language, that they may not understand one another’s speech.”

Genesis 11.8: 8 So Yahweh scattered them abroad from there on the surface of all the earth. They stopped building the city.

Genesis 11.9: 9 Therefore its name was called Babel, because there Yahweh confused the language of all the earth. From there, Yahweh scattered them abroad on the surface of all the earth.

Genesis 11.10: 10 This is the history of the generations of Shem: Shem was one hundred years old when he became the father of Arpachshad two years after the flood.

Genesis 11.11: 11 Shem lived five hundred years after he became the father of Arpachshad, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 11.12: 12 Arpachshad lived thirty-five years and became the father of Shelah.

Genesis 11.13: 13 Arpachshad lived four hundred three years after he became the father of Shelah, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 11.14: 14 Shelah lived thirty years, and became the father of Eber.

Genesis 11.15: 15 Shelah lived four hundred three years after he became the father of Eber, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 11.16: 16 Eber lived thirty-four years, and became the father of Peleg.

Genesis 11.17: 17 Eber lived four hundred thirty years after he became the father of Peleg, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 11.18: 18 Peleg lived thirty years, and became the father of Reu.

Genesis 11.19: 19 Peleg lived two hundred nine years after he became the father of Reu, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 11.20: 20 Reu lived thirty-two years, and became the father of Serug.

Genesis 11.21: 21 Reu lived two hundred seven years after he became the father of Serug, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 11.22: 22 Serug lived thirty years, and became the father of Nahor.

Genesis 11.23: 23 Serug lived two hundred years after he became the father of Nahor, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 11.24: 24 Nahor lived twenty-nine years, and became the father of Terah.

Genesis 11.25: 25 Nahor lived one hundred nineteen years after he became the father of Terah, and became the father of more sons and daughters.

Genesis 11.26: 26 Terah lived seventy years, and became the father of Abram, Nahor, and Haran.

Genesis 11.27: 27 Now this is the history of the generations of Terah. Terah became the father of Abram, Nahor, and Haran. Haran became the father of Lot.

Genesis 11.28: 28 Haran died in the land of his birth, in Ur of the Chaldees, while his father Terah was still alive.

Genesis 11.29: 29 Abram and Nahor married wives. The name of Abram’s wife was Sarai, and the name of Nahor’s wife was Milcah, the daughter of Haran, who was also the father of Iscah.

Genesis 11.30: 30 Sarai was barren. She had no child.

Genesis 11.31: 31 Terah took Abram his son, Lot the son of Haran, his son’s son, and Sarai his daughter-in-law, his son Abram’s wife. They went from Ur of the Chaldees, to go into the land of Canaan. They came to Haran and lived there.

Genesis 11.32: 32 The days of Terah were two hundred five years. Terah died in Haran.

Genesis 12.0:

12

Genesis 12.1: 1 Now Yahweh said to Abram, “Leave your country, and your relatives, and your father’s house, and go to the land that I will show you.

Genesis 12.2: 2 I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing.

Genesis 12.3: 3 I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who treats you with contempt. All the families of the earth will be blessed through you.”

Genesis 12.4: 4 So Abram went, as Yahweh had told him. Lot went with him. Abram was seventy-five years old when he departed from Haran.

Genesis 12.5: 5 Abram took Sarai his wife, Lot his brother’s son, all their possessions that they had gathered, and the people whom they had acquired in Haran, and they went to go into the land of Canaan. They entered into the land of Canaan.

Genesis 12.6: 6 Abram passed through the land to the place of Shechem, to the oak of Moreh. At that time, Canaanites were in the land.

Genesis 12.7: 7 Yahweh appeared to Abram and said, “I will give this land to your offspring.”

He built an altar there to Yahweh, who had appeared to him.

Genesis 12.8: 8 He left from there to go to the mountain on the east of Bethel and pitched his tent, having Bethel on the west, and Ai on the east. There he built an altar to Yahweh and called on Yahweh’s name.

Genesis 12.9: 9 Abram traveled, still going on toward the South.

Genesis 12.10: 10 There was a famine in the land. Abram went down into Egypt to live as a foreigner there, for the famine was severe in the land.

Genesis 12.11: 11 When he had come near to enter Egypt, he said to Sarai his wife, “See now, I know that you are a beautiful woman to look at.

Genesis 12.12: 12 It will happen, when the Egyptians see you, that they will say, ‘This is his wife.’ They will kill me, but they will save you alive.

Genesis 12.13: 13 Please say that you are my sister, that it may be well with me for your sake, and that my soul may live because of you.”

Genesis 12.14: 14 When Abram had come into Egypt, Egyptians saw that the woman was very beautiful.

Genesis 12.15: 15 The princes of Pharaoh saw her, and praised her to Pharaoh; and the woman was taken into Pharaoh’s house.

Genesis 12.16: 16 He dealt well with Abram for her sake. He had sheep, cattle, male donkeys, male servants, female servants, female donkeys, and camels.

Genesis 12.17: 17 Yahweh afflicted Pharaoh and his house with great plagues because of Sarai, Abram’s wife.

Genesis 12.18: 18 Pharaoh called Abram and said, “What is this that you have done to me? Why didn’t you tell me that she was your wife?

Genesis 12.19: 19 Why did you say, ‘She is my sister,’ so that I took her to be my wife? Now therefore, see your wife, take her, and go your way.”

Genesis 12.20: 20 Pharaoh commanded men concerning him, and they escorted him away with his wife and all that he had.

Genesis 13.0:

13

Genesis 13.1: 1 Abram went up out of Egypt—he, his wife, all that he had, and Lot with him—into the South.

Genesis 13.2: 2 Abram was very rich in livestock, in silver, and in gold.

Genesis 13.3: 3 He went on his journeys from the South as far as Bethel, to the place where his tent had been at the beginning, between Bethel and Ai,

Genesis 13.4: 4 to the place of the altar, which he had made there at the first. There Abram called on Yahweh’s name.

Genesis 13.5: 5 Lot also, who went with Abram, had flocks, herds, and tents.

Genesis 13.6: 6 The land was not able to bear them, that they might live together; for their possessions were so great that they couldn’t live together.

Genesis 13.7: 7 There was strife between the herdsmen of Abram’s livestock and the herdsmen of Lot’s livestock. The Canaanites and the Perizzites lived in the land at that time.

Genesis 13.8: 8 Abram said to Lot, “Please, let there be no strife between you and me, and between your herdsmen and my herdsmen; for we are relatives.

Genesis 13.9: 9 Isn’t the whole land before you? Please separate yourself from me. If you go to the left hand, then I will go to the right. Or if you go to the right hand, then I will go to the left.”

Genesis 13.10: 10 Lot lifted up his eyes, and saw all the plain of the Jordan, that it was well-watered everywhere, before Yahweh destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah, like the garden of Yahweh, like the land of Egypt, as you go to Zoar.

Genesis 13.11: 11 So Lot chose the Plain of the Jordan for himself. Lot traveled east, and they separated themselves from one other.

Genesis 13.12: 12 Abram lived in the land of Canaan, and Lot lived in the cities of the plain, and moved his tent as far as Sodom.

Genesis 13.13: 13 Now the men of Sodom were exceedingly wicked and sinners against Yahweh.

Genesis 13.14: 14 Yahweh said to Abram, after Lot was separated from him, “Now, lift up your eyes, and look from the place where you are, northward and southward and eastward and westward,

Genesis 13.15: 15 for I will give all the land which you see to you and to your offspring forever.

Genesis 13.16: 16 I will make your offspring as the dust of the earth, so that if a man can count the dust of the earth, then your offspring may also be counted.

Genesis 13.17: 17 Arise, walk through the land in its length and in its width; for I will give it to you.”

Genesis 13.18: 18 Abram moved his tent, and came and lived by the oaks of Mamre, which are in Hebron, and built an altar there to Yahweh.

Genesis 14.0:

14

Genesis 14.1: 1 In the days of Amraphel, king of Shinar; Arioch, king of Ellasar; Chedorlaomer, king of Elam; and Tidal, king of Goiim,

Genesis 14.2: 2 they made war with Bera, king of Sodom; Birsha, king of Gomorrah; Shinab, king of Admah; Shemeber, king of Zeboiim; and the king of Bela (also called Zoar).

Genesis 14.3: 3 All these joined together in the valley of Siddim (also called the Salt Sea).

Genesis 14.4: 4 They served Chedorlaomer for twelve years, and in the thirteenth year they rebelled.

Genesis 14.5: 5 In the fourteenth year Chedorlaomer came, and the kings who were with him, and struck the Rephaim in Ashteroth Karnaim, the Zuzim in Ham, the Emim in Shaveh Kiriathaim,

Genesis 14.6: 6 and the Horites in their Mount Seir, to El Paran, which is by the wilderness.

Genesis 14.7: 7 They returned, and came to En Mishpat (also called Kadesh), and struck all the country of the Amalekites, and also the Amorites, that lived in Hazazon Tamar.

Genesis 14.8: 8 The king of Sodom, and the king of Gomorrah, the king of Admah, the king of Zeboiim, and the king of Bela (also called Zoar) went out; and they set the battle in array against them in the valley of Siddim

Genesis 14.9: 9 against Chedorlaomer king of Elam, Tidal king of Goiim, Amraphel king of Shinar, and Arioch king of Ellasar; four kings against the five.

Genesis 14.10: 10 Now the valley of Siddim was full of tar pits; and the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah fled, and some fell there. Those who remained fled to the hills.

Genesis 14.11: 11 They took all the goods of Sodom and Gomorrah, and all their food, and went their way.

Genesis 14.12: 12 They took Lot, Abram’s brother’s son, who lived in Sodom, and his goods, and departed.

Genesis 14.13: 13 One who had escaped came and told Abram, the Hebrew. At that time, he lived by the oaks of Mamre, the Amorite, brother of Eshcol and brother of Aner. They were allies of Abram.

Genesis 14.14: 14 When Abram heard that his relative was taken captive, he led out his three hundred eighteen trained men, born in his house, and pursued as far as Dan.

Genesis 14.15: 15 He divided himself against them by night, he and his servants, and struck them, and pursued them to Hobah, which is on the left hand of Damascus.

Genesis 14.16: 16 He brought back all the goods, and also brought back his relative Lot and his goods, and the women also, and the other people.

Genesis 14.17: 17 The king of Sodom went out to meet him after his return from the slaughter of Chedorlaomer and the kings who were with him, at the valley of Shaveh (that is, the King’s Valley).

Genesis 14.18: 18 Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine. He was priest of God Most High.

Genesis 14.19: 19 He blessed him, and said, “Blessed be Abram of God Most High, possessor of heaven and earth.

Genesis 14.20: 20 Blessed be God Most High, who has delivered your enemies into your hand.”

Abram gave him a tenth of all.

Genesis 14.21: 21 The king of Sodom said to Abram, “Give me the people, and take the goods for yourself.”

Genesis 14.22: 22 Abram said to the king of Sodom, “I have lifted up my hand to Yahweh, God Most High, possessor of heaven and earth,

Genesis 14.23: 23 that I will not take a thread nor a sandal strap nor anything that is yours, lest you should say, ‘I have made Abram rich.’

Genesis 14.24: 24 I will accept nothing from you except that which the young men have eaten, and the portion of the men who went with me: Aner, Eshcol, and Mamre. Let them take their portion.”

Genesis 15.0:

15

Genesis 15.1: 1 After these things Yahweh’s word came to Abram in a vision, saying, “Don’t be afraid, Abram. I am your shield, your exceedingly great reward.”

Genesis 15.2: 2 Abram said, “Lord Yahweh, what will you give me, since I go childless, and he who will inherit my estate is Eliezer of Damascus?”

Genesis 15.3: 3 Abram said, “Behold, you have given no children to me: and, behold, one born in my house is my heir.”

Genesis 15.4: 4 Behold, Yahweh’s word came to him, saying, “This man will not be your heir, but he who will come out of your own body will be your heir.”

Genesis 15.5: 5 Yahweh brought him outside, and said, “Look now toward the sky, and count the stars, if you are able to count them.” He said to Abram, “So your offspring will be.”

Genesis 15.6: 6 He believed in Yahweh, who credited it to him for righteousness.

Genesis 15.7: 7 He said to Abram, “I am Yahweh who brought you out of Ur of the Chaldees, to give you this land to inherit it.”

Genesis 15.8: 8 He said, “Lord Yahweh, how will I know that I will inherit it?”

Genesis 15.9: 9 He said to him, “Bring me a heifer three years old, a female goat three years old, a ram three years old, a turtledove, and a young pigeon.”

Genesis 15.10: 10 He brought him all these, and divided them in the middle, and laid each half opposite the other; but he didn’t divide the birds.

Genesis 15.11: 11 The birds of prey came down on the carcasses, and Abram drove them away.

Genesis 15.12: 12 When the sun was going down, a deep sleep fell on Abram. Now terror and great darkness fell on him.

Genesis 15.13: 13 He said to Abram, “Know for sure that your offspring will live as foreigners in a land that is not theirs, and will serve them. They will afflict them four hundred years.

Genesis 15.14: 14 I will also judge that nation, whom they will serve. Afterward they will come out with great wealth;

Genesis 15.15: 15 but you will go to your fathers in peace. You will be buried at a good old age.

Genesis 15.16: 16 In the fourth generation they will come here again, for the iniquity of the Amorite is not yet full.”

Genesis 15.17: 17 It came to pass that, when the sun went down, and it was dark, behold, a smoking furnace and a flaming torch passed between these pieces.

Genesis 15.18: 18 In that day Yahweh made a covenant with Abram, saying, “I have given this land to your offspring, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the river Euphrates:

Genesis 15.19: 19 the land of the Kenites, the Kenizzites, the Kadmonites,

Genesis 15.20: 20 the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Rephaim,

Genesis 15.21: 21 the Amorites, the Canaanites, the Girgashites, and the Jebusites.”

Genesis 16.0:

16

Genesis 16.1: 1 Now Sarai, Abram’s wife, bore him no children. She had a servant, an Egyptian, whose name was Hagar.

Genesis 16.2: 2 Sarai said to Abram, “See now, Yahweh has restrained me from bearing. Please go in to my servant. It may be that I will obtain children by her.” Abram listened to the voice of Sarai.

Genesis 16.3: 3 Sarai, Abram’s wife, took Hagar the Egyptian, her servant, after Abram had lived ten years in the land of Canaan, and gave her to Abram her husband to be his wife.

Genesis 16.4: 4 He went in to Hagar, and she conceived. When she saw that she had conceived, her mistress was despised in her eyes.

Genesis 16.5: 5 Sarai said to Abram, “This wrong is your fault. I gave my servant into your bosom, and when she saw that she had conceived, she despised me. May Yahweh judge between me and you.”

Genesis 16.6: 6 But Abram said to Sarai, “Behold, your maid is in your hand. Do to her whatever is good in your eyes.” Sarai dealt harshly with her, and she fled from her face.

Genesis 16.7: 7 Yahweh’s angel found her by a fountain of water in the wilderness, by the fountain on the way to Shur.

Genesis 16.8: 8 He said, “Hagar, Sarai’s servant, where did you come from? Where are you going?”

She said, “I am fleeing from the face of my mistress Sarai.”

Genesis 16.9: 9 Yahweh’s angel said to her, “Return to your mistress, and submit yourself under her hands.”

Genesis 16.10: 10 Yahweh’s angel said to her, “I will greatly multiply your offspring, that they will not be counted for multitude.”

Genesis 16.11: 11 Yahweh’s angel said to her, “Behold, you are with child, and will bear a son. You shall call his name Ishmael, because Yahweh has heard your affliction.

Genesis 16.12: 12 He will be like a wild donkey among men. His hand will be against every man, and every man’s hand against him. He will live opposed to all of his brothers.”

Genesis 16.13: 13 She called the name of Yahweh who spoke to her, “You are a God who sees,” for she said, “Have I even stayed alive after seeing him?”

Genesis 16.14: 14 Therefore the well was called Beer Lahai Roi. Behold, it is between Kadesh and Bered.

Genesis 16.15: 15 Hagar bore a son for Abram. Abram called the name of his son, whom Hagar bore, Ishmael.

Genesis 16.16: 16 Abram was eighty-six years old when Hagar bore Ishmael to Abram.

Genesis 17.0:

17

Genesis 17.1: 1 When Abram was ninety-nine years old, Yahweh appeared to Abram and said to him, “I am God Almighty. Walk before me and be blameless.

Genesis 17.2: 2 I will make my covenant between me and you, and will multiply you exceedingly.”

Genesis 17.3: 3 Abram fell on his face. God talked with him, saying,

Genesis 17.4: 4 “As for me, behold, my covenant is with you. You will be the father of a multitude of nations.

Genesis 17.5: 5 Your name will no more be called Abram, but your name will be Abraham; for I have made you the father of a multitude of nations.

Genesis 17.6: 6 I will make you exceedingly fruitful, and I will make nations of you. Kings will come out of you.

Genesis 17.7: 7 I will establish my covenant between me and you and your offspring after you throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be a God to you and to your offspring after you.

Genesis 17.8: 8 I will give to you, and to your offspring after you, the land where you are traveling, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession. I will be their God.”

Genesis 17.9: 9 God said to Abraham, “As for you, you will keep my covenant, you and your offspring after you throughout their generations.

Genesis 17.10: 10 This is my covenant, which you shall keep, between me and you and your offspring after you. Every male among you shall be circumcised.

Genesis 17.11: 11 You shall be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskin. It will be a token of the covenant between me and you.

Genesis 17.12: 12 He who is eight days old will be circumcised among you, every male throughout your generations, he who is born in the house, or bought with money from any foreigner who is not of your offspring.

Genesis 17.13: 13 He who is born in your house, and he who is bought with your money, must be circumcised. My covenant will be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant.

Genesis 17.14: 14 The uncircumcised male who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin, that soul shall be cut off from his people. He has broken my covenant.”

Genesis 17.15: 15 God said to Abraham, “As for Sarai your wife, you shall not call her name Sarai, but her name will be Sarah.

Genesis 17.16: 16 I will bless her, and moreover I will give you a son by her. Yes, I will bless her, and she will be a mother of nations. Kings of peoples will come from her.”

Genesis 17.17: 17 Then Abraham fell on his face, and laughed, and said in his heart, “Will a child be born to him who is one hundred years old? Will Sarah, who is ninety years old, give birth?”

Genesis 17.18: 18 Abraham said to God, “Oh that Ishmael might live before you!”

Genesis 17.19: 19 God said, “No, but Sarah, your wife, will bear you a son. You shall call his name Isaac. I will establish my covenant with him for an everlasting covenant for his offspring after him.

Genesis 17.20: 20 As for Ishmael, I have heard you. Behold, I have blessed him, and will make him fruitful, and will multiply him exceedingly. He will become the father of twelve princes, and I will make him a great nation.

Genesis 17.21: 21 But I will establish my covenant with Isaac, whom Sarah will bear to you at this set time next year.”

Genesis 17.22: 22 When he finished talking with him, God went up from Abraham.

Genesis 17.23: 23 Abraham took Ishmael his son, all who were born in his house, and all who were bought with his money: every male among the men of Abraham’s house, and circumcised the flesh of their foreskin in the same day, as God had said to him.

Genesis 17.24: 24 Abraham was ninety-nine years old when he was circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin.

Genesis 17.25: 25 Ishmael, his son, was thirteen years old when he was circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin.

Genesis 17.26: 26 In the same day both Abraham and Ishmael, his son, were circumcised.

Genesis 17.27: 27 All the men of his house, those born in the house, and those bought with money from a foreigner, were circumcised with him.

Genesis 18.0:

18

Genesis 18.1: 1 Yahweh appeared to him by the oaks of Mamre, as he sat in the tent door in the heat of the day.

Genesis 18.2: 2 He lifted up his eyes and looked, and saw that three men stood near him. When he saw them, he ran to meet them from the tent door, and bowed himself to the earth,

Genesis 18.3: 3 and said, “My lord, if now I have found favor in your sight, please don’t go away from your servant.

Genesis 18.4: 4 Now let a little water be fetched, wash your feet, and rest yourselves under the tree.

Genesis 18.5: 5 I will get a piece of bread so you can refresh your heart. After that you may go your way, now that you have come to your servant.”

They said, “Very well, do as you have said.”

Genesis 18.6: 6 Abraham hurried into the tent to Sarah, and said, “Quickly prepare three seahs of fine meal, knead it, and make cakes.”

Genesis 18.7: 7 Abraham ran to the herd, and fetched a tender and good calf, and gave it to the servant. He hurried to dress it.

Genesis 18.8: 8 He took butter, milk, and the calf which he had dressed, and set it before them. He stood by them under the tree, and they ate.

Genesis 18.9: 9 They asked him, “Where is Sarah, your wife?”

He said, “There, in the tent.”

Genesis 18.10: 10 He said, “I will certainly return to you at about this time next year; and behold, Sarah your wife will have a son.”

Sarah heard in the tent door, which was behind him.

Genesis 18.11: 11 Now Abraham and Sarah were old, well advanced in age. Sarah had passed the age of childbearing.

Genesis 18.12: 12 Sarah laughed within herself, saying, “After I have grown old will I have pleasure, my lord being old also?”

Genesis 18.13: 13 Yahweh said to Abraham, “Why did Sarah laugh, saying, ‘Will I really bear a child when I am old?’

Genesis 18.14: 14 Is anything too hard for Yahweh? At the set time I will return to you, when the season comes round, and Sarah will have a son.”

Genesis 18.15: 15 Then Sarah denied it, saying, “I didn’t laugh,” for she was afraid.

He said, “No, but you did laugh.”

Genesis 18.16: 16 The men rose up from there, and looked toward Sodom. Abraham went with them to see them on their way.

Genesis 18.17: 17 Yahweh said, “Will I hide from Abraham what I do,

Genesis 18.18: 18 since Abraham will surely become a great and mighty nation, and all the nations of the earth will be blessed in him?

Genesis 18.19: 19 For I have known him, to the end that he may command his children and his household after him, that they may keep the way of Yahweh, to do righteousness and justice; to the end that Yahweh may bring on Abraham that which he has spoken of him.”

Genesis 18.20: 20 Yahweh said, “Because the cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is great, and because their sin is very grievous,

Genesis 18.21: 21 I will go down now, and see whether their deeds are as bad as the reports which have come to me. If not, I will know.”

Genesis 18.22: 22 The men turned from there, and went toward Sodom, but Abraham stood yet before Yahweh.

Genesis 18.23: 23 Abraham came near, and said, “Will you consume the righteous with the wicked?

Genesis 18.24: 24 What if there are fifty righteous within the city? Will you consume and not spare the place for the fifty righteous who are in it?

Genesis 18.25: 25 May it be far from you to do things like that, to kill the righteous with the wicked, so that the righteous should be like the wicked. May that be far from you. Shouldn’t the Judge of all the earth do right?”

Genesis 18.26: 26 Yahweh said, “If I find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city, then I will spare the whole place for their sake.”

Genesis 18.27: 27 Abraham answered, “See now, I have taken it on myself to speak to the Lord, although I am dust and ashes.

Genesis 18.28: 28 What if there will lack five of the fifty righteous? Will you destroy all the city for lack of five?”

He said, “I will not destroy it if I find forty-five there.”

Genesis 18.29: 29 He spoke to him yet again, and said, “What if there are forty found there?”

He said, “I will not do it for the forty’s sake.”

Genesis 18.30: 30 He said, “Oh don’t let the Lord be angry, and I will speak. What if there are thirty found there?”

He said, “I will not do it if I find thirty there.”

Genesis 18.31: 31 He said, “See now, I have taken it on myself to speak to the Lord. What if there are twenty found there?”

He said, “I will not destroy it for the twenty’s sake.”

Genesis 18.32: 32 He said, “Oh don’t let the Lord be angry, and I will speak just once more. What if ten are found there?”

He said, “I will not destroy it for the ten’s sake.”

Genesis 18.33: 33 Yahweh went his way, as soon as he had finished communing with Abraham, and Abraham returned to his place.

Genesis 19.0:

19

Genesis 19.1: 1 The two angels came to Sodom at evening. Lot sat in the gate of Sodom. Lot saw them, and rose up to meet them. He bowed himself with his face to the earth,

Genesis 19.2: 2 and he said, “See now, my lords, please come into your servant’s house, stay all night, wash your feet, and you can rise up early, and go on your way.”

They said, “No, but we will stay in the street all night.”

Genesis 19.3: 3 He urged them greatly, and they came in with him, and entered into his house. He made them a feast, and baked unleavened bread, and they ate.

Genesis 19.4: 4 But before they lay down, the men of the city, the men of Sodom, surrounded the house, both young and old, all the people from every quarter.

Genesis 19.5: 5 They called to Lot, and said to him, “Where are the men who came in to you this night? Bring them out to us, that we may have sex with them.”

Genesis 19.6: 6 Lot went out to them through the door, and shut the door after himself.

Genesis 19.7: 7 He said, “Please, my brothers, don’t act so wickedly.

Genesis 19.8: 8 See now, I have two virgin daughters. Please let me bring them out to you, and you may do to them what seems good to you. Only don’t do anything to these men, because they have come under the shadow of my roof.”

Genesis 19.9: 9 They said, “Stand back!” Then they said, “This one fellow came in to live as a foreigner, and he appoints himself a judge. Now we will deal worse with you than with them!” They pressed hard on the man Lot, and came near to break the door.

Genesis 19.10: 10 But the men reached out their hand, and brought Lot into the house to them, and shut the door.

Genesis 19.11: 11 They struck the men who were at the door of the house with blindness, both small and great, so that they wearied themselves to find the door.

Genesis 19.12: 12 The men said to Lot, “Do you have anybody else here? Sons-in-law, your sons, your daughters, and whomever you have in the city, bring them out of the place:

Genesis 19.13: 13 for we will destroy this place, because the outcry against them has grown so great before Yahweh that Yahweh has sent us to destroy it.”

Genesis 19.14: 14 Lot went out, and spoke to his sons-in-law, who were pledged to marry his daughters, and said, “Get up! Get out of this place, for Yahweh will destroy the city!”

But he seemed to his sons-in-law to be joking.

Genesis 19.15: 15 When the morning came, then the angels hurried Lot, saying, “Get up! Take your wife and your two daughters who are here, lest you be consumed in the iniquity of the city.”

Genesis 19.16: 16 But he lingered; and the men grabbed his hand, his wife’s hand, and his two daughters’ hands, Yahweh being merciful to him; and they took him out, and set him outside of the city.

Genesis 19.17: 17 It came to pass, when they had taken them out, that he said, “Escape for your life! Don’t look behind you, and don’t stay anywhere in the plain. Escape to the mountains, lest you be consumed!”

Genesis 19.18: 18 Lot said to them, “Oh, not so, my lord.

Genesis 19.19: 19 See now, your servant has found favor in your sight, and you have magnified your loving kindness, which you have shown to me in saving my life. I can’t escape to the mountain, lest evil overtake me, and I die.

Genesis 19.20: 20 See now, this city is near to flee to, and it is a little one. Oh let me escape there (isn’t it a little one?), and my soul will live.”

Genesis 19.21: 21 He said to him, “Behold, I have granted your request concerning this thing also, that I will not overthrow the city of which you have spoken.

Genesis 19.22: 22 Hurry, escape there, for I can’t do anything until you get there.” Therefore the name of the city was called Zoar.

Genesis 19.23: 23 The sun had risen on the earth when Lot came to Zoar.

Genesis 19.24: 24 Then Yahweh rained on Sodom and on Gomorrah sulfur and fire from Yahweh out of the sky.

Genesis 19.25: 25 He overthrew those cities, all the plain, all the inhabitants of the cities, and that which grew on the ground.

Genesis 19.26: 26 But Lot’s wife looked back from behind him, and she became a pillar of salt.

Genesis 19.27: 27 Abraham went up early in the morning to the place where he had stood before Yahweh.

Genesis 19.28: 28 He looked toward Sodom and Gomorrah, and toward all the land of the plain, and saw that the smoke of the land went up as the smoke of a furnace.

Genesis 19.29: 29 When God destroyed the cities of the plain, God remembered Abraham, and sent Lot out of the middle of the overthrow, when he overthrew the cities in which Lot lived.

Genesis 19.30: 30 Lot went up out of Zoar, and lived in the mountain, and his two daughters with him; for he was afraid to live in Zoar. He lived in a cave with his two daughters.

Genesis 19.31: 31 The firstborn said to the younger, “Our father is old, and there is not a man in the earth to come in to us in the way of all the earth.

Genesis 19.32: 32 Come, let’s make our father drink wine, and we will lie with him, that we may preserve our father’s family line.”

Genesis 19.33: 33 They made their father drink wine that night: and the firstborn went in, and lay with her father. He didn’t know when she lay down, nor when she arose.

Genesis 19.34: 34 It came to pass on the next day, that the firstborn said to the younger, “Behold, I lay last night with my father. Let’s make him drink wine again tonight. You go in, and lie with him, that we may preserve our father’s family line.”

Genesis 19.35: 35 They made their father drink wine that night also. The younger went and lay with him. He didn’t know when she lay down, nor when she got up.

Genesis 19.36: 36 Thus both of Lot’s daughters were with child by their father.

Genesis 19.37: 37 The firstborn bore a son, and named him Moab. He is the father of the Moabites to this day.

Genesis 19.38: 38 The younger also bore a son, and called his name Ben Ammi. He is the father of the children of Ammon to this day.

Genesis 20.0:

20

Genesis 20.1: 1 Abraham traveled from there toward the land of the South, and lived between Kadesh and Shur. He lived as a foreigner in Gerar.

Genesis 20.2: 2 Abraham said about Sarah his wife, “She is my sister.” Abimelech king of Gerar sent, and took Sarah.

Genesis 20.3: 3 But God came to Abimelech in a dream of the night, and said to him, “Behold, you are a dead man, because of the woman whom you have taken; for she is a man’s wife.”

Genesis 20.4: 4 Now Abimelech had not come near her. He said, “Lord, will you kill even a righteous nation?

Genesis 20.5: 5 Didn’t he tell me, ‘She is my sister’? She, even she herself, said, ‘He is my brother.’ I have done this in the integrity of my heart and the innocence of my hands.”

Genesis 20.6: 6 God said to him in the dream, “Yes, I know that in the integrity of your heart you have done this, and I also withheld you from sinning against me. Therefore I didn’t allow you to touch her.

Genesis 20.7: 7 Now therefore, restore the man’s wife. For he is a prophet, and he will pray for you, and you will live. If you don’t restore her, know for sure that you will die, you, and all who are yours.”

Genesis 20.8: 8 Abimelech rose early in the morning, and called all his servants, and told all these things in their ear. The men were very scared.

Genesis 20.9: 9 Then Abimelech called Abraham, and said to him, “What have you done to us? How have I sinned against you, that you have brought on me and on my kingdom a great sin? You have done deeds to me that ought not to be done!”

Genesis 20.10: 10 Abimelech said to Abraham, “What did you see, that you have done this thing?”

Genesis 20.11: 11 Abraham said, “Because I thought, ‘Surely the fear of God is not in this place. They will kill me for my wife’s sake.’

Genesis 20.12: 12 Besides, she is indeed my sister, the daughter of my father, but not the daughter of my mother; and she became my wife.

Genesis 20.13: 13 When God caused me to wander from my father’s house, I said to her, ‘This is your kindness which you shall show to me. Everywhere that we go, say of me, “He is my brother.”’”

Genesis 20.14: 14 Abimelech took sheep and cattle, male servants and female servants, and gave them to Abraham, and restored Sarah, his wife, to him.

Genesis 20.15: 15 Abimelech said, “Behold, my land is before you. Dwell where it pleases you.”

Genesis 20.16: 16 To Sarah he said, “Behold, I have given your brother a thousand pieces of silver. Behold, it is for you a covering of the eyes to all that are with you. In front of all you are vindicated.”

Genesis 20.17: 17 Abraham prayed to God. God healed Abimelech, and his wife, and his female servants, and they bore children.

Genesis 20.18: 18 For Yahweh had closed up tight all the wombs of the house of Abimelech, because of Sarah, Abraham’s wife.

Genesis 21.0:

21

Genesis 21.1: 1 Yahweh visited Sarah as he had said, and Yahweh did to Sarah as he had spoken.

Genesis 21.2: 2 Sarah conceived, and bore Abraham a son in his old age, at the set time of which God had spoken to him.

Genesis 21.3: 3 Abraham called his son who was born to him, whom Sarah bore to him, Isaac.

Genesis 21.4: 4 Abraham circumcised his son, Isaac, when he was eight days old, as God had commanded him.

Genesis 21.5: 5 Abraham was one hundred years old when his son, Isaac, was born to him.

Genesis 21.6: 6 Sarah said, “God has made me laugh. Everyone who hears will laugh with me.”

Genesis 21.7: 7 She said, “Who would have said to Abraham that Sarah would nurse children? For I have borne him a son in his old age.”

Genesis 21.8: 8 The child grew and was weaned. Abraham made a great feast on the day that Isaac was weaned.

Genesis 21.9: 9 Sarah saw the son of Hagar the Egyptian, whom she had borne to Abraham, mocking.

Genesis 21.10: 10 Therefore she said to Abraham, “Cast out this servant and her son! For the son of this servant will not be heir with my son, Isaac.”

Genesis 21.11: 11 The thing was very grievous in Abraham’s sight on account of his son.

Genesis 21.12: 12 God said to Abraham, “Don’t let it be grievous in your sight because of the boy, and because of your servant. In all that Sarah says to you, listen to her voice. For your offspring will be named through Isaac.

Genesis 21.13: 13 I will also make a nation of the son of the servant, because he is your child.”

Genesis 21.14: 14 Abraham rose up early in the morning, and took bread and a container of water, and gave it to Hagar, putting it on her shoulder; and gave her the child, and sent her away. She departed, and wandered in the wilderness of Beersheba.

Genesis 21.15: 15 The water in the container was spent, and she put the child under one of the shrubs.

Genesis 21.16: 16 She went and sat down opposite him, a good way off, about a bow shot away. For she said, “Don’t let me see the death of the child.” She sat opposite him, and lifted up her voice, and wept.

Genesis 21.17: 17 God heard the voice of the boy.

The angel of God called to Hagar out of the sky, and said to her, “What troubles you, Hagar? Don’t be afraid. For God has heard the voice of the boy where he is.

Genesis 21.18: 18 Get up, lift up the boy, and hold him with your hand. For I will make him a great nation.”

Genesis 21.19: 19 God opened her eyes, and she saw a well of water. She went, filled the container with water, and gave the boy a drink.

Genesis 21.20: 20 God was with the boy, and he grew. He lived in the wilderness, and as he grew up, became an archer.

Genesis 21.21: 21 He lived in the wilderness of Paran. His mother got a wife for him out of the land of Egypt.

Genesis 21.22: 22 At that time, Abimelech and Phicol the captain of his army spoke to Abraham, saying, “God is with you in all that you do.

Genesis 21.23: 23 Now, therefore, swear to me here by God that you will not deal falsely with me, nor with my son, nor with my son’s son. But according to the kindness that I have done to you, you shall do to me, and to the land in which you have lived as a foreigner.”

Genesis 21.24: 24 Abraham said, “I will swear.”

Genesis 21.25: 25 Abraham complained to Abimelech because of a water well, which Abimelech’s servants had violently taken away.

Genesis 21.26: 26 Abimelech said, “I don’t know who has done this thing. You didn’t tell me, and I didn’t hear of it until today.”

Genesis 21.27: 27 Abraham took sheep and cattle, and gave them to Abimelech. Those two made a covenant.

Genesis 21.28: 28 Abraham set seven ewe lambs of the flock by themselves.

Genesis 21.29: 29 Abimelech said to Abraham, “What do these seven ewe lambs, which you have set by themselves, mean?”

Genesis 21.30: 30 He said, “You shall take these seven ewe lambs from my hand, that it may be a witness to me, that I have dug this well.”

Genesis 21.31: 31 Therefore he called that place Beersheba, because they both swore an oath there.

Genesis 21.32: 32 So they made a covenant at Beersheba. Abimelech rose up with Phicol, the captain of his army, and they returned into the land of the Philistines.

Genesis 21.33: 33 Abraham planted a tamarisk tree in Beersheba, and called there on the name of Yahweh, the Everlasting God.

Genesis 21.34: 34 Abraham lived as a foreigner in the land of the Philistines many days.

Genesis 22.0:

22

Genesis 22.1: 1 After these things, God tested Abraham, and said to him, “Abraham!”

He said, “Here I am.”

Genesis 22.2: 2 He said, “Now take your son, your only son, Isaac, whom you love, and go into the land of Moriah. Offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains which I will tell you of.”

Genesis 22.3: 3 Abraham rose early in the morning, and saddled his donkey; and took two of his young men with him, and Isaac his son. He split the wood for the burnt offering, and rose up, and went to the place of which God had told him.

Genesis 22.4: 4 On the third day Abraham lifted up his eyes, and saw the place far off.

Genesis 22.5: 5 Abraham said to his young men, “Stay here with the donkey. The boy and I will go over there. We will worship, and come back to you.”

Genesis 22.6: 6 Abraham took the wood of the burnt offering and laid it on Isaac his son. He took in his hand the fire and the knife. They both went together.

Genesis 22.7: 7 Isaac spoke to Abraham his father, and said, “My father?”

He said, “Here I am, my son.”

He said, “Here is the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?”

Genesis 22.8: 8 Abraham said, “God will provide himself the lamb for a burnt offering, my son.” So they both went together.

Genesis 22.9: 9 They came to the place which God had told him of. Abraham built the altar there, and laid the wood in order, bound Isaac his son, and laid him on the altar, on the wood.

Genesis 22.10: 10 Abraham stretched out his hand, and took the knife to kill his son.

Genesis 22.11: 11 Yahweh’s angel called to him out of the sky, and said, “Abraham, Abraham!”

He said, “Here I am.”

Genesis 22.12: 12 He said, “Don’t lay your hand on the boy or do anything to him. For now I know that you fear God, since you have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.”

Genesis 22.13: 13 Abraham lifted up his eyes, and looked, and saw that behind him was a ram caught in the thicket by his horns. Abraham went and took the ram, and offered him up for a burnt offering instead of his son.

Genesis 22.14: 14 Abraham called the name of that place “Yahweh Will Provide”. As it is said to this day, “On Yahweh’s mountain, it will be provided.”

Genesis 22.15: 15 Yahweh’s angel called to Abraham a second time out of the sky,

Genesis 22.16: 16 and said, “‘I have sworn by myself,’ says Yahweh, ‘because you have done this thing, and have not withheld your son, your only son,

Genesis 22.17: 17 that I will bless you greatly, and I will multiply your offspring greatly like the stars of the heavens, and like the sand which is on the seashore. Your offspring will possess the gate of his enemies.

Genesis 22.18: 18 All the nations of the earth will be blessed by your offspring, because you have obeyed my voice.’”

Genesis 22.19: 19 So Abraham returned to his young men, and they rose up and went together to Beersheba. Abraham lived at Beersheba.

Genesis 22.20: 20 After these things, Abraham was told, “Behold, Milcah, she also has borne children to your brother Nahor:

Genesis 22.21: 21 Uz his firstborn, Buz his brother, Kemuel the father of Aram,

Genesis 22.22: 22 Chesed, Hazo, Pildash, Jidlaph, and Bethuel.”

Genesis 22.23: 23 Bethuel became the father of Rebekah. These eight Milcah bore to Nahor, Abraham’s brother.

Genesis 22.24: 24 His concubine, whose name was Reumah, also bore Tebah, Gaham, Tahash, and Maacah.

Genesis 23.0:

23

Genesis 23.1: 1 Sarah lived one hundred twenty-seven years. This was the length of Sarah’s life.

Genesis 23.2: 2 Sarah died in Kiriath Arba (also called Hebron), in the land of Canaan. Abraham came to mourn for Sarah, and to weep for her.

Genesis 23.3: 3 Abraham rose up from before his dead and spoke to the children of Heth, saying,

Genesis 23.4: 4 “I am a stranger and a foreigner living with you. Give me a possession of a burying-place with you, that I may bury my dead out of my sight.”

Genesis 23.5: 5 The children of Heth answered Abraham, saying to him,

Genesis 23.6: 6 “Hear us, my lord. You are a prince of God among us. Bury your dead in the best of our tombs. None of us will withhold from you his tomb. Bury your dead.”

Genesis 23.7: 7 Abraham rose up, and bowed himself to the people of the land, to the children of Heth.

Genesis 23.8: 8 He talked with them, saying, “If you agree that I should bury my dead out of my sight, hear me, and entreat for me to Ephron the son of Zohar,

Genesis 23.9: 9 that he may sell me the cave of Machpelah, which he has, which is in the end of his field. For the full price let him sell it to me among you as a possession for a burial place.”

Genesis 23.10: 10 Now Ephron was sitting in the middle of the children of Heth. Ephron the Hittite answered Abraham in the hearing of the children of Heth, even of all who went in at the gate of his city, saying,

Genesis 23.11: 11 “No, my lord, hear me. I give you the field, and I give you the cave that is in it. In the presence of the children of my people I give it to you. Bury your dead.”

Genesis 23.12: 12 Abraham bowed himself down before the people of the land.

Genesis 23.13: 13 He spoke to Ephron in the audience of the people of the land, saying, “But if you will, please hear me. I will give the price of the field. Take it from me, and I will bury my dead there.”

Genesis 23.14: 14 Ephron answered Abraham, saying to him,

Genesis 23.15: 15 “My lord, listen to me. What is a piece of land worth four hundred shekels of silver between me and you? Therefore bury your dead.”

Genesis 23.16: 16 Abraham listened to Ephron. Abraham weighed to Ephron the silver which he had named in the hearing of the children of Heth, four hundred shekels of silver, according to the current merchants’ standard.

Genesis 23.17: 17 So the field of Ephron, which was in Machpelah, which was before Mamre, the field, the cave which was in it, and all the trees that were in the field, that were in all of its borders, were deeded

Genesis 23.18: 18 to Abraham for a possession in the presence of the children of Heth, before all who went in at the gate of his city.

Genesis 23.19: 19 After this, Abraham buried Sarah his wife in the cave of the field of Machpelah before Mamre (that is, Hebron), in the land of Canaan.

Genesis 23.20: 20 The field, and the cave that is in it, were deeded to Abraham by the children of Heth as a possession for a burial place.

Genesis 24.0:

24

Genesis 24.1: 1 Abraham was old, and well advanced in age. Yahweh had blessed Abraham in all things.

Genesis 24.2: 2 Abraham said to his servant, the elder of his house, who ruled over all that he had, “Please put your hand under my thigh.

Genesis 24.3: 3 I will make you swear by Yahweh, the God of heaven and the God of the earth, that you shall not take a wife for my son of the daughters of the Canaanites, among whom I live.

Genesis 24.4: 4 But you shall go to my country, and to my relatives, and take a wife for my son Isaac.”

Genesis 24.5: 5 The servant said to him, “What if the woman isn’t willing to follow me to this land? Must I bring your son again to the land you came from?”

Genesis 24.6: 6 Abraham said to him, “Beware that you don’t bring my son there again.

Genesis 24.7: 7 Yahweh, the God of heaven—who took me from my father’s house, and from the land of my birth, who spoke to me, and who swore to me, saying, ‘I will give this land to your offspring—he will send his angel before you, and you shall take a wife for my son from there.

Genesis 24.8: 8 If the woman isn’t willing to follow you, then you shall be clear from this oath to me. Only you shall not bring my son there again.”

Genesis 24.9: 9 The servant put his hand under the thigh of Abraham his master, and swore to him concerning this matter.

Genesis 24.10: 10 The servant took ten of his master’s camels, and departed, having a variety of good things of his master’s with him. He arose, and went to Mesopotamia, to the city of Nahor.

Genesis 24.11: 11 He made the camels kneel down outside the city by the well of water at the time of evening, the time that women go out to draw water.

Genesis 24.12: 12 He said, “Yahweh, the God of my master Abraham, please give me success today, and show kindness to my master Abraham.

Genesis 24.13: 13 Behold, I am standing by the spring of water. The daughters of the men of the city are coming out to draw water.

Genesis 24.14: 14 Let it happen, that the young lady to whom I will say, ‘Please let down your pitcher, that I may drink,’ then she says, ‘Drink, and I will also give your camels a drink,’—let her be the one you have appointed for your servant Isaac. By this I will know that you have shown kindness to my master.”

Genesis 24.15: 15 Before he had finished speaking, behold, Rebekah came out, who was born to Bethuel the son of Milcah, the wife of Nahor, Abraham’s brother, with her pitcher on her shoulder.

Genesis 24.16: 16 The young lady was very beautiful to look at, a virgin. No man had known her. She went down to the spring, filled her pitcher, and came up.

Genesis 24.17: 17 The servant ran to meet her, and said, “Please give me a drink, a little water from your pitcher.”

Genesis 24.18: 18 She said, “Drink, my lord.” She hurried, and let down her pitcher on her hand, and gave him a drink.

Genesis 24.19: 19 When she had finished giving him a drink, she said, “I will also draw for your camels, until they have finished drinking.”

Genesis 24.20: 20 She hurried, and emptied her pitcher into the trough, and ran again to the well to draw, and drew for all his camels.

Genesis 24.21: 21 The man looked steadfastly at her, remaining silent, to know whether Yahweh had made his journey prosperous or not.

Genesis 24.22: 22 As the camels had done drinking, the man took a golden ring of half a shekel weight, and two bracelets for her hands of ten shekels weight of gold,

Genesis 24.23: 23 and said, “Whose daughter are you? Please tell me. Is there room in your father’s house for us to stay?”

Genesis 24.24: 24 She said to him, “I am the daughter of Bethuel the son of Milcah, whom she bore to Nahor.”

Genesis 24.25: 25 She said moreover to him, “We have both straw and feed enough, and room to lodge in.”

Genesis 24.26: 26 The man bowed his head, and worshiped Yahweh.

Genesis 24.27: 27 He said, “Blessed be Yahweh, the God of my master Abraham, who has not forsaken his loving kindness and his truth toward my master. As for me, Yahweh has led me on the way to the house of my master’s relatives.”

Genesis 24.28: 28 The young lady ran, and told her mother’s house about these words.

Genesis 24.29: 29 Rebekah had a brother, and his name was Laban. Laban ran out to the man, to the spring.

Genesis 24.30: 30 When he saw the ring, and the bracelets on his sister’s hands, and when he heard the words of Rebekah his sister, saying, “This is what the man said to me,” he came to the man. Behold, he was standing by the camels at the spring.

Genesis 24.31: 31 He said, “Come in, you blessed of Yahweh. Why do you stand outside? For I have prepared the house, and room for the camels.”

Genesis 24.32: 32 The man came into the house, and he unloaded the camels. He gave straw and feed for the camels, and water to wash his feet and the feet of the men who were with him.

Genesis 24.33: 33 Food was set before him to eat, but he said, “I will not eat until I have told my message.”

Laban said, “Speak on.”

Genesis 24.34: 34 He said, “I am Abraham’s servant.

Genesis 24.35: 35 Yahweh has blessed my master greatly. He has become great. Yahweh has given him flocks and herds, silver and gold, male servants and female servants, and camels and donkeys.

Genesis 24.36: 36 Sarah, my master’s wife, bore a son to my master when she was old. He has given all that he has to him.

Genesis 24.37: 37 My master made me swear, saying, ‘You shall not take a wife for my son from the daughters of the Canaanites, in whose land I live,

Genesis 24.38: 38 but you shall go to my father’s house, and to my relatives, and take a wife for my son.’

Genesis 24.39: 39 I asked my master, ‘What if the woman will not follow me?’

Genesis 24.40: 40 He said to me, ‘Yahweh, before whom I walk, will send his angel with you, and prosper your way. You shall take a wife for my son from my relatives, and of my father’s house.

Genesis 24.41: 41 Then you will be clear from my oath, when you come to my relatives. If they don’t give her to you, you shall be clear from my oath.’

Genesis 24.42: 42 I came today to the spring, and said, ‘Yahweh, the God of my master Abraham, if now you do prosper my way which I go—

Genesis 24.43: 43 behold, I am standing by this spring of water. Let it happen, that the maiden who comes out to draw, to whom I will say, “Please give me a little water from your pitcher to drink,”

Genesis 24.44: 44 then she tells me, “Drink, and I will also draw for your camels,”—let her be the woman whom Yahweh has appointed for my master’s son.’

Genesis 24.45: 45 Before I had finished speaking in my heart, behold, Rebekah came out with her pitcher on her shoulder. She went down to the spring, and drew. I said to her, ‘Please let me drink.’

Genesis 24.46: 46 She hurried and let down her pitcher from her shoulder, and said, ‘Drink, and I will also give your camels a drink.’ So I drank, and she also gave the camels a drink.

Genesis 24.47: 47 I asked her, and said, ‘Whose daughter are you?’ She said, ‘The daughter of Bethuel, Nahor’s son, whom Milcah bore to him.’ I put the ring on her nose, and the bracelets on her hands.

Genesis 24.48: 48 I bowed my head, and worshiped Yahweh, and blessed Yahweh, the God of my master Abraham, who had led me in the right way to take my master’s brother’s daughter for his son.

Genesis 24.49: 49 Now if you will deal kindly and truly with my master, tell me. If not, tell me, that I may turn to the right hand, or to the left.”

Genesis 24.50: 50 Then Laban and Bethuel answered, “The thing proceeds from Yahweh. We can’t speak to you bad or good.

Genesis 24.51: 51 Behold, Rebekah is before you. Take her, and go, and let her be your master’s son’s wife, as Yahweh has spoken.”

Genesis 24.52: 52 When Abraham’s servant heard their words, he bowed himself down to the earth to Yahweh.

Genesis 24.53: 53 The servant brought out jewels of silver, and jewels of gold, and clothing, and gave them to Rebekah. He also gave precious things to her brother and her mother.

Genesis 24.54: 54 They ate and drank, he and the men who were with him, and stayed all night. They rose up in the morning, and he said, “Send me away to my master.”

Genesis 24.55: 55 Her brother and her mother said, “Let the young lady stay with us a few days, at least ten. After that she will go.”

Genesis 24.56: 56 He said to them, “Don’t hinder me, since Yahweh has prospered my way. Send me away that I may go to my master.”

Genesis 24.57: 57 They said, “We will call the young lady, and ask her.”

Genesis 24.58: 58 They called Rebekah, and said to her, “Will you go with this man?”

She said, “I will go.”

Genesis 24.59: 59 They sent away Rebekah, their sister, with her nurse, Abraham’s servant, and his men.

Genesis 24.60: 60 They blessed Rebekah, and said to her, “Our sister, may you be the mother of thousands of ten thousands, and let your offspring possess the gate of those who hate them.”

Genesis 24.61: 61 Rebekah arose with her ladies. They rode on the camels, and followed the man. The servant took Rebekah, and went his way.

Genesis 24.62: 62 Isaac came from the way of Beer Lahai Roi, for he lived in the land of the South.

Genesis 24.63: 63 Isaac went out to meditate in the field at the evening. He lifted up his eyes and looked. Behold, there were camels coming.

Genesis 24.64: 64 Rebekah lifted up her eyes, and when she saw Isaac, she got off the camel.

Genesis 24.65: 65 She said to the servant, “Who is the man who is walking in the field to meet us?”

The servant said, “It is my master.”

She took her veil, and covered herself.

Genesis 24.66: 66 The servant told Isaac all the things that he had done.

Genesis 24.67: 67 Isaac brought her into his mother Sarah’s tent, and took Rebekah, and she became his wife. He loved her. So Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death.

Genesis 25.0:

25

Genesis 25.1: 1 Abraham took another wife, and her name was Keturah.

Genesis 25.2: 2 She bore him Zimran, Jokshan, Medan, Midian, Ishbak, and Shuah.

Genesis 25.3: 3 Jokshan became the father of Sheba, and Dedan. The sons of Dedan were Asshurim, Letushim, and Leummim.

Genesis 25.4: 4 The sons of Midian were Ephah, Epher, Hanoch, Abida, and Eldaah. All these were the children of Keturah.

Genesis 25.5: 5 Abraham gave all that he had to Isaac,

Genesis 25.6: 6 but Abraham gave gifts to the sons of Abraham’s concubines. While he still lived, he sent them away from Isaac his son, eastward, to the east country.

Genesis 25.7: 7 These are the days of the years of Abraham’s life which he lived: one hundred seventy-five years.

Genesis 25.8: 8 Abraham gave up his spirit, and died at a good old age, an old man, and full of years, and was gathered to his people.

Genesis 25.9: 9 Isaac and Ishmael, his sons, buried him in the cave of Machpelah, in the field of Ephron, the son of Zohar the Hittite, which is near Mamre,

Genesis 25.10: 10 the field which Abraham purchased from the children of Heth. Abraham was buried there with Sarah, his wife.

Genesis 25.11: 11 After the death of Abraham, God blessed Isaac, his son. Isaac lived by Beer Lahai Roi.

Genesis 25.12: 12 Now this is the history of the generations of Ishmael, Abraham’s son, whom Hagar the Egyptian, Sarah’s servant, bore to Abraham.

Genesis 25.13: 13 These are the names of the sons of Ishmael, by their names, according to the order of their birth: the firstborn of Ishmael, Nebaioth, then Kedar, Adbeel, Mibsam,

Genesis 25.14: 14 Mishma, Dumah, Massa,

Genesis 25.15: 15 Hadad, Tema, Jetur, Naphish, and Kedemah.

Genesis 25.16: 16 These are the sons of Ishmael, and these are their names, by their villages, and by their encampments: twelve princes, according to their nations.

Genesis 25.17: 17 These are the years of the life of Ishmael: one hundred thirty-seven years. He gave up his spirit and died, and was gathered to his people.

Genesis 25.18: 18 They lived from Havilah to Shur that is before Egypt, as you go toward Assyria. He lived opposite all his relatives.

Genesis 25.19: 19 This is the history of the generations of Isaac, Abraham’s son. Abraham became the father of Isaac.

Genesis 25.20: 20 Isaac was forty years old when he took Rebekah, the daughter of Bethuel the Syrian of Paddan Aram, the sister of Laban the Syrian, to be his wife.

Genesis 25.21: 21 Isaac entreated Yahweh for his wife, because she was barren. Yahweh was entreated by him, and Rebekah his wife conceived.

Genesis 25.22: 22 The children struggled together within her. She said, “If it is like this, why do I live?” She went to inquire of Yahweh.

Genesis 25.23: 23 Yahweh said to her,

“Two nations are in your womb.

Two peoples will be separated from your body.

The one people will be stronger than the other people.

The elder will serve the younger.”

Genesis 25.24: 24 When her days to be delivered were fulfilled, behold, there were twins in her womb.

Genesis 25.25: 25 The first came out red all over, like a hairy garment. They named him Esau.

Genesis 25.26: 26 After that, his brother came out, and his hand had hold on Esau’s heel. He was named Jacob. Isaac was sixty years old when she bore them.

Genesis 25.27: 27 The boys grew. Esau was a skillful hunter, a man of the field. Jacob was a quiet man, living in tents.

Genesis 25.28: 28 Now Isaac loved Esau, because he ate his venison. Rebekah loved Jacob.

Genesis 25.29: 29 Jacob boiled stew. Esau came in from the field, and he was famished.

Genesis 25.30: 30 Esau said to Jacob, “Please feed me with some of that red stew, for I am famished.” Therefore his name was called Edom.

Genesis 25.31: 31 Jacob said, “First, sell me your birthright.”

Genesis 25.32: 32 Esau said, “Behold, I am about to die. What good is the birthright to me?”

Genesis 25.33: 33 Jacob said, “Swear to me first.”

He swore to him. He sold his birthright to Jacob.

Genesis 25.34: 34 Jacob gave Esau bread and lentil stew. He ate and drank, rose up, and went his way. So Esau despised his birthright.

Genesis 26.0:

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Genesis 26.1: 1 There was a famine in the land, in addition to the first famine that was in the days of Abraham. Isaac went to Abimelech king of the Philistines, to Gerar.

Genesis 26.2: 2 Yahweh appeared to him, and said, “Don’t go down into Egypt. Live in the land I will tell you about.

Genesis 26.3: 3 Live in this land, and I will be with you, and will bless you. For I will give to you, and to your offspring, all these lands, and I will establish the oath which I swore to Abraham your father.

Genesis 26.4: 4 I will multiply your offspring as the stars of the sky, and will give all these lands to your offspring. In your offspring all the nations of the earth will be blessed,

Genesis 26.5: 5 because Abraham obeyed my voice, and kept my requirements, my commandments, my statutes, and my laws.”

Genesis 26.6: 6 Isaac lived in Gerar.

Genesis 26.7: 7 The men of the place asked him about his wife. He said, “She is my sister,” for he was afraid to say, “My wife”, lest, he thought, “the men of the place might kill me for Rebekah, because she is beautiful to look at.”

Genesis 26.8: 8 When he had been there a long time, Abimelech king of the Philistines looked out at a window, and saw, and, behold, Isaac was caressing Rebekah, his wife.

Genesis 26.9: 9 Abimelech called Isaac, and said, “Behold, surely she is your wife. Why did you say, ‘She is my sister?’”

Isaac said to him, “Because I said, ‘Lest I die because of her.’”

Genesis 26.10: 10 Abimelech said, “What is this you have done to us? One of the people might easily have lain with your wife, and you would have brought guilt on us!”

Genesis 26.11: 11 Abimelech commanded all the people, saying, “He who touches this man or his wife will surely be put to death.”

Genesis 26.12: 12 Isaac sowed in that land, and reaped in the same year one hundred times what he planted. Yahweh blessed him.

Genesis 26.13: 13 The man grew great, and grew more and more until he became very great.

Genesis 26.14: 14 He had possessions of flocks, possessions of herds, and a great household. The Philistines envied him.

Genesis 26.15: 15 Now all the wells which his father’s servants had dug in the days of Abraham his father, the Philistines had stopped, and filled with earth.

Genesis 26.16: 16 Abimelech said to Isaac, “Go away from us, for you are much mightier than we.”

Genesis 26.17: 17 Isaac departed from there, encamped in the valley of Gerar, and lived there.

Genesis 26.18: 18 Isaac dug again the wells of water, which they had dug in the days of Abraham his father, for the Philistines had stopped them after the death of Abraham. He called their names after the names by which his father had called them.

Genesis 26.19: 19 Isaac’s servants dug in the valley, and found there a well of springing water.

Genesis 26.20: 20 The herdsmen of Gerar argued with Isaac’s herdsmen, saying, “The water is ours.” He called the name of the well Esek, because they contended with him.

Genesis 26.21: 21 They dug another well, and they argued over that, also. He called its name Sitnah.

Genesis 26.22: 22 He left that place, and dug another well. They didn’t argue over that one. He called it Rehoboth. He said, “For now Yahweh has made room for us, and we will be fruitful in the land.”

Genesis 26.23: 23 He went up from there to Beersheba.

Genesis 26.24: 24 Yahweh appeared to him the same night, and said, “I am the God of Abraham your father. Don’t be afraid, for I am with you, and will bless you, and multiply your offspring for my servant Abraham’s sake.”

Genesis 26.25: 25 He built an altar there, and called on Yahweh’s name, and pitched his tent there. There Isaac’s servants dug a well.

Genesis 26.26: 26 Then Abimelech went to him from Gerar, and Ahuzzath his friend, and Phicol the captain of his army.

Genesis 26.27: 27 Isaac said to them, “Why have you come to me, since you hate me, and have sent me away from you?”

Genesis 26.28: 28 They said, “We saw plainly that Yahweh was with you. We said, ‘Let there now be an oath between us, even between us and you, and let’s make a covenant with you,

Genesis 26.29: 29 that you will do us no harm, as we have not touched you, and as we have done to you nothing but good, and have sent you away in peace.’ You are now the blessed of Yahweh.”

Genesis 26.30: 30 He made them a feast, and they ate and drank.

Genesis 26.31: 31 They rose up some time in the morning, and swore an oath to one another. Isaac sent them away, and they departed from him in peace.

Genesis 26.32: 32 The same day, Isaac’s servants came, and told him concerning the well which they had dug, and said to him, “We have found water.”

Genesis 26.33: 33 He called it “Shibah”. Therefore the name of the city is “Beersheba” to this day.

Genesis 26.34: 34 When Esau was forty years old, he took as wife Judith, the daughter of Beeri the Hittite, and Basemath, the daughter of Elon the Hittite.

Genesis 26.35: 35 They grieved Isaac’s and Rebekah’s spirits.

Genesis 27.0:

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Genesis 27.1: 1 When Isaac was old, and his eyes were dim, so that he could not see, he called Esau his elder son, and said to him, “My son?”

He said to him, “Here I am.”

Genesis 27.2: 2 He said, “See now, I am old. I don’t know the day of my death.

Genesis 27.3: 3 Now therefore, please take your weapons, your quiver and your bow, and go out to the field, and get me venison.

Genesis 27.4: 4 Make me savory food, such as I love, and bring it to me, that I may eat, and that my soul may bless you before I die.”

Genesis 27.5: 5 Rebekah heard when Isaac spoke to Esau his son. Esau went to the field to hunt for venison, and to bring it.

Genesis 27.6: 6 Rebekah spoke to Jacob her son, saying, “Behold, I heard your father speak to Esau your brother, saying,

Genesis 27.7: 7 ‘Bring me venison, and make me savory food, that I may eat, and bless you before Yahweh before my death.’

Genesis 27.8: 8 Now therefore, my son, obey my voice according to that which I command you.

Genesis 27.9: 9 Go now to the flock and get me two good young goats from there. I will make them savory food for your father, such as he loves.

Genesis 27.10: 10 You shall bring it to your father, that he may eat, so that he may bless you before his death.”

Genesis 27.11: 11 Jacob said to Rebekah his mother, “Behold, Esau my brother is a hairy man, and I am a smooth man.

Genesis 27.12: 12 What if my father touches me? I will seem to him as a deceiver, and I would bring a curse on myself, and not a blessing.”

Genesis 27.13: 13 His mother said to him, “Let your curse be on me, my son. Only obey my voice, and go get them for me.”

Genesis 27.14: 14 He went, and got them, and brought them to his mother. His mother made savory food, such as his father loved.

Genesis 27.15: 15 Rebekah took the good clothes of Esau, her elder son, which were with her in the house, and put them on Jacob, her younger son.

Genesis 27.16: 16 She put the skins of the young goats on his hands, and on the smooth of his neck.

Genesis 27.17: 17 She gave the savory food and the bread, which she had prepared, into the hand of her son Jacob.

Genesis 27.18: 18 He came to his father, and said, “My father?”

He said, “Here I am. Who are you, my son?”

Genesis 27.19: 19 Jacob said to his father, “I am Esau your firstborn. I have done what you asked me to do. Please arise, sit and eat of my venison, that your soul may bless me.”

Genesis 27.20: 20 Isaac said to his son, “How is it that you have found it so quickly, my son?”

He said, “Because Yahweh your God gave me success.”

Genesis 27.21: 21 Isaac said to Jacob, “Please come near, that I may feel you, my son, whether you are really my son Esau or not.”

Genesis 27.22: 22 Jacob went near to Isaac his father. He felt him, and said, “The voice is Jacob’s voice, but the hands are the hands of Esau.”

Genesis 27.23: 23 He didn’t recognize him, because his hands were hairy, like his brother, Esau’s hands. So he blessed him.

Genesis 27.24: 24 He said, “Are you really my son Esau?”

He said, “I am.”

Genesis 27.25: 25 He said, “Bring it near to me, and I will eat of my son’s venison, that my soul may bless you.”

He brought it near to him, and he ate. He brought him wine, and he drank.

Genesis 27.26: 26 His father Isaac said to him, “Come near now, and kiss me, my son.”

Genesis 27.27: 27 He came near, and kissed him. He smelled the smell of his clothing, and blessed him, and said,

“Behold, the smell of my son

is as the smell of a field which Yahweh has blessed.

Genesis 27.28: 28 God give you of the dew of the sky,

of the fatness of the earth,

and plenty of grain and new wine.

Genesis 27.29: 29 Let peoples serve you,

and nations bow down to you.

Be lord over your brothers.

Let your mother’s sons bow down to you.

Cursed be everyone who curses you.

Blessed be everyone who blesses you.”

Genesis 27.30: 30 As soon as Isaac had finished blessing Jacob, and Jacob had just gone out from the presence of Isaac his father, Esau his brother came in from his hunting.

Genesis 27.31: 31 He also made savory food, and brought it to his father. He said to his father, “Let my father arise, and eat of his son’s venison, that your soul may bless me.”

Genesis 27.32: 32 Isaac his father said to him, “Who are you?”

He said, “I am your son, your firstborn, Esau.”

Genesis 27.33: 33 Isaac trembled violently, and said, “Who, then, is he who has taken venison, and brought it to me, and I have eaten of all before you came, and have blessed him? Yes, he will be blessed.”

Genesis 27.34: 34 When Esau heard the words of his father, he cried with an exceedingly great and bitter cry, and said to his father, “Bless me, even me also, my father.”

Genesis 27.35: 35 He said, “Your brother came with deceit, and has taken away your blessing.”

Genesis 27.36: 36 He said, “Isn’t he rightly named Jacob? For he has supplanted me these two times. He took away my birthright. See, now he has taken away my blessing.” He said, “Haven’t you reserved a blessing for me?”

Genesis 27.37: 37 Isaac answered Esau, “Behold, I have made him your lord, and all his brothers I have given to him for servants. I have sustained him with grain and new wine. What then will I do for you, my son?”

Genesis 27.38: 38 Esau said to his father, “Do you have just one blessing, my father? Bless me, even me also, my father.” Esau lifted up his voice, and wept.

Genesis 27.39: 39 Isaac his father answered him,

“Behold, your dwelling will be of the fatness of the earth,

and of the dew of the sky from above.

Genesis 27.40: 40 You will live by your sword, and you will serve your brother.

It will happen, when you will break loose,

that you will shake his yoke from off your neck.”

Genesis 27.41: 41 Esau hated Jacob because of the blessing with which his father blessed him. Esau said in his heart, “The days of mourning for my father are at hand. Then I will kill my brother Jacob.”

Genesis 27.42: 42 The words of Esau, her elder son, were told to Rebekah. She sent and called Jacob, her younger son, and said to him, “Behold, your brother Esau comforts himself about you by planning to kill you.

Genesis 27.43: 43 Now therefore, my son, obey my voice. Arise, flee to Laban, my brother, in Haran.

Genesis 27.44: 44 Stay with him a few days, until your brother’s fury turns away—

Genesis 27.45: 45 until your brother’s anger turns away from you, and he forgets what you have done to him. Then I will send, and get you from there. Why should I be bereaved of you both in one day?”

Genesis 27.46: 46 Rebekah said to Isaac, “I am weary of my life because of the daughters of Heth. If Jacob takes a wife of the daughters of Heth, such as these, of the daughters of the land, what good will my life do me?”

Genesis 28.0:

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Genesis 28.1: 1 Isaac called Jacob, blessed him, and commanded him, “You shall not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan.

Genesis 28.2: 2 Arise, go to Paddan Aram, to the house of Bethuel your mother’s father. Take a wife from there from the daughters of Laban, your mother’s brother.

Genesis 28.3: 3 May God Almighty bless you, and make you fruitful, and multiply you, that you may be a company of peoples,

Genesis 28.4: 4 and give you the blessing of Abraham, to you and to your offspring with you, that you may inherit the land where you travel, which God gave to Abraham.”

Genesis 28.5: 5 Isaac sent Jacob away. He went to Paddan Aram to Laban, son of Bethuel the Syrian, the brother of Rebekah, Jacob’s and Esau’s mother.

Genesis 28.6: 6 Now Esau saw that Isaac had blessed Jacob and sent him away to Paddan Aram, to take him a wife from there, and that as he blessed him he gave him a command, saying, “You shall not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan;”

Genesis 28.7: 7 and that Jacob obeyed his father and his mother, and was gone to Paddan Aram.

Genesis 28.8: 8 Esau saw that the daughters of Canaan didn’t please Isaac, his father.

Genesis 28.9: 9 Esau went to Ishmael, and took, in addition to the wives that he had, Mahalath the daughter of Ishmael, Abraham’s son, the sister of Nebaioth, to be his wife.

Genesis 28.10: 10 Jacob went out from Beersheba, and went toward Haran.

Genesis 28.11: 11 He came to a certain place, and stayed there all night, because the sun had set. He took one of the stones of the place, and put it under his head, and lay down in that place to sleep.

Genesis 28.12: 12 He dreamed and saw a stairway set upon the earth, and its top reached to heaven. Behold, the angels of God were ascending and descending on it.

Genesis 28.13: 13 Behold, Yahweh stood above it, and said, “I am Yahweh, the God of Abraham your father, and the God of Isaac. I will give the land you lie on to you and to your offspring.

Genesis 28.14: 14 Your offspring will be as the dust of the earth, and you will spread abroad to the west, and to the east, and to the north, and to the south. In you and in your offspring, all the families of the earth will be blessed.

Genesis 28.15: 15 Behold, I am with you, and will keep you, wherever you go, and will bring you again into this land. For I will not leave you, until I have done that which I have spoken of to you.”

Genesis 28.16: 16 Jacob awakened out of his sleep, and he said, “Surely Yahweh is in this place, and I didn’t know it.”

Genesis 28.17: 17 He was afraid, and said, “How awesome this place is! This is none other than God’s house, and this is the gate of heaven.”

Genesis 28.18: 18 Jacob rose up early in the morning, and took the stone that he had put under his head, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil on its top.

Genesis 28.19: 19 He called the name of that place Bethel, but the name of the city was Luz at the first.

Genesis 28.20: 20 Jacob vowed a vow, saying, “If God will be with me, and will keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and clothing to put on,

Genesis 28.21: 21 so that I come again to my father’s house in peace, and Yahweh will be my God,

Genesis 28.22: 22 then this stone, which I have set up for a pillar, will be God’s house. Of all that you will give me I will surely give a tenth to you.”

Genesis 29.0:

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Genesis 29.1: 1 Then Jacob went on his journey, and came to the land of the children of the east.

Genesis 29.2: 2 He looked, and behold, a well in the field, and saw three flocks of sheep lying there by it. For out of that well they watered the flocks. The stone on the well’s mouth was large.

Genesis 29.3: 3 There all the flocks were gathered. They rolled the stone from the well’s mouth, and watered the sheep, and put the stone again on the well’s mouth in its place.

Genesis 29.4: 4 Jacob said to them, “My relatives, where are you from?”

They said, “We are from Haran.”

Genesis 29.5: 5 He said to them, “Do you know Laban, the son of Nahor?”

They said, “We know him.”

Genesis 29.6: 6 He said to them, “Is it well with him?”

They said, “It is well. See, Rachel, his daughter, is coming with the sheep.”

Genesis 29.7: 7 He said, “Behold, it is still the middle of the day, not time to gather the livestock together. Water the sheep, and go and feed them.”

Genesis 29.8: 8 They said, “We can’t, until all the flocks are gathered together, and they roll the stone from the well’s mouth. Then we water the sheep.”

Genesis 29.9: 9 While he was yet speaking with them, Rachel came with her father’s sheep, for she kept them.

Genesis 29.10: 10 When Jacob saw Rachel the daughter of Laban, his mother’s brother, and the sheep of Laban, his mother’s brother, Jacob went near, and rolled the stone from the well’s mouth, and watered the flock of Laban his mother’s brother.

Genesis 29.11: 11 Jacob kissed Rachel, and lifted up his voice, and wept.

Genesis 29.12: 12 Jacob told Rachel that he was her father’s relative, and that he was Rebekah’s son. She ran and told her father.

Genesis 29.13: 13 When Laban heard the news of Jacob, his sister’s son, he ran to meet Jacob, and embraced him, and kissed him, and brought him to his house. Jacob told Laban all these things.

Genesis 29.14: 14 Laban said to him, “Surely you are my bone and my flesh.” Jacob stayed with him for a month.

Genesis 29.15: 15 Laban said to Jacob, “Because you are my relative, should you therefore serve me for nothing? Tell me, what will your wages be?”

Genesis 29.16: 16 Laban had two daughters. The name of the elder was Leah, and the name of the younger was Rachel.

Genesis 29.17: 17 Leah’s eyes were weak, but Rachel was beautiful in form and attractive.

Genesis 29.18: 18 Jacob loved Rachel. He said, “I will serve you seven years for Rachel, your younger daughter.”

Genesis 29.19: 19 Laban said, “It is better that I give her to you, than that I should give her to another man. Stay with me.”

Genesis 29.20: 20 Jacob served seven years for Rachel. They seemed to him but a few days, for the love he had for her.

Genesis 29.21: 21 Jacob said to Laban, “Give me my wife, for my days are fulfilled, that I may go in to her.”

Genesis 29.22: 22 Laban gathered together all the men of the place, and made a feast.

Genesis 29.23: 23 In the evening, he took Leah his daughter, and brought her to Jacob. He went in to her.

Genesis 29.24: 24 Laban gave Zilpah his servant to his daughter Leah for a servant.

Genesis 29.25: 25 In the morning, behold, it was Leah! He said to Laban, “What is this you have done to me? Didn’t I serve with you for Rachel? Why then have you deceived me?”

Genesis 29.26: 26 Laban said, “It is not done so in our place, to give the younger before the firstborn.

Genesis 29.27: 27 Fulfill the week of this one, and we will give you the other also for the service which you will serve with me for seven more years.”

Genesis 29.28: 28 Jacob did so, and fulfilled her week. He gave him Rachel his daughter as wife.

Genesis 29.29: 29 Laban gave Bilhah, his servant, to his daughter Rachel to be her servant.

Genesis 29.30: 30 He went in also to Rachel, and he loved also Rachel more than Leah, and served with him seven more years.

Genesis 29.31: 31 Yahweh saw that Leah was hated, and he opened her womb, but Rachel was barren.

Genesis 29.32: 32 Leah conceived, and bore a son, and she named him Reuben. For she said, “Because Yahweh has looked at my affliction; for now my husband will love me.”

Genesis 29.33: 33 She conceived again, and bore a son, and said, “Because Yahweh has heard that I am hated, he has therefore given me this son also.” She named him Simeon.

Genesis 29.34: 34 She conceived again, and bore a son. She said, “Now this time my husband will be joined to me, because I have borne him three sons.” Therefore his name was called Levi.

Genesis 29.35: 35 She conceived again, and bore a son. She said, “This time I will praise Yahweh.” Therefore she named him Judah. Then she stopped bearing.

Genesis 30.0:

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Genesis 30.1: 1 When Rachel saw that she bore Jacob no children, Rachel envied her sister. She said to Jacob, “Give me children, or else I will die.”

Genesis 30.2: 2 Jacob’s anger burned against Rachel, and he said, “Am I in God’s place, who has withheld from you the fruit of the womb?”

Genesis 30.3: 3 She said, “Behold, my maid Bilhah. Go in to her, that she may bear on my knees, and I also may obtain children by her.”

Genesis 30.4: 4 She gave him Bilhah her servant as wife, and Jacob went in to her.

Genesis 30.5: 5 Bilhah conceived, and bore Jacob a son.

Genesis 30.6: 6 Rachel said, “God has judged me, and has also heard my voice, and has given me a son.” Therefore she called his name Dan.

Genesis 30.7: 7 Bilhah, Rachel’s servant, conceived again, and bore Jacob a second son.

Genesis 30.8: 8 Rachel said, “I have wrestled with my sister with mighty wrestlings, and have prevailed.” She named him Naphtali.

Genesis 30.9: 9 When Leah saw that she had finished bearing, she took Zilpah, her servant, and gave her to Jacob as a wife.

Genesis 30.10: 10 Zilpah, Leah’s servant, bore Jacob a son.

Genesis 30.11: 11 Leah said, “How fortunate!” She named him Gad.

Genesis 30.12: 12 Zilpah, Leah’s servant, bore Jacob a second son.

Genesis 30.13: 13 Leah said, “Happy am I, for the daughters will call me happy.” She named him Asher.

Genesis 30.14: 14 Reuben went in the days of wheat harvest, and found mandrakes in the field, and brought them to his mother, Leah. Then Rachel said to Leah, “Please give me some of your son’s mandrakes.”

Genesis 30.15: 15 Leah said to her, “Is it a small matter that you have taken away my husband? Would you take away my son’s mandrakes, also?”

Rachel said, “Therefore he will lie with you tonight for your son’s mandrakes.”

Genesis 30.16: 16 Jacob came from the field in the evening, and Leah went out to meet him, and said, “You must come in to me; for I have surely hired you with my son’s mandrakes.”

He lay with her that night.

Genesis 30.17: 17 God listened to Leah, and she conceived, and bore Jacob a fifth son.

Genesis 30.18: 18 Leah said, “God has given me my hire, because I gave my servant to my husband.” She named him Issachar.

Genesis 30.19: 19 Leah conceived again, and bore a sixth son to Jacob.

Genesis 30.20: 20 Leah said, “God has endowed me with a good dowry. Now my husband will live with me, because I have borne him six sons.” She named him Zebulun.

Genesis 30.21: 21 Afterwards, she bore a daughter, and named her Dinah.

Genesis 30.22: 22 God remembered Rachel, and God listened to her, and opened her womb.

Genesis 30.23: 23 She conceived, bore a son, and said, “God has taken away my reproach.”

Genesis 30.24: 24 She named him Joseph, saying, “May Yahweh add another son to me.”

Genesis 30.25: 25 When Rachel had borne Joseph, Jacob said to Laban, “Send me away, that I may go to my own place, and to my country.

Genesis 30.26: 26 Give me my wives and my children for whom I have served you, and let me go; for you know my service with which I have served you.”

Genesis 30.27: 27 Laban said to him, “If now I have found favor in your eyes, stay here, for I have divined that Yahweh has blessed me for your sake.”

Genesis 30.28: 28 He said, “Appoint me your wages, and I will give it.”

Genesis 30.29: 29 Jacob said to him, “You know how I have served you, and how your livestock have fared with me.

Genesis 30.30: 30 For it was little which you had before I came, and it has increased to a multitude. Yahweh has blessed you wherever I turned. Now when will I provide for my own house also?”

Genesis 30.31: 31 Laban said, “What shall I give you?”

Jacob said, “You shall not give me anything. If you will do this thing for me, I will again feed your flock and keep it.

Genesis 30.32: 32 I will pass through all your flock today, removing from there every speckled and spotted one, and every black one among the sheep, and the spotted and speckled among the goats. This will be my hire.

Genesis 30.33: 33 So my righteousness will answer for me hereafter, when you come concerning my hire that is before you. Every one that is not speckled and spotted among the goats, and black among the sheep, that might be with me, will be considered stolen.”

Genesis 30.34: 34 Laban said, “Behold, let it be according to your word.”

Genesis 30.35: 35 That day, he removed the male goats that were streaked and spotted, and all the female goats that were speckled and spotted, every one that had white in it, and all the black ones among the sheep, and gave them into the hand of his sons.

Genesis 30.36: 36 He set three days’ journey between himself and Jacob, and Jacob fed the rest of Laban’s flocks.

Genesis 30.37: 37 Jacob took to himself rods of fresh poplar, almond, and plane tree, peeled white streaks in them, and made the white appear which was in the rods.

Genesis 30.38: 38 He set the rods which he had peeled opposite the flocks in the watering troughs where the flocks came to drink. They conceived when they came to drink.

Genesis 30.39: 39 The flocks conceived before the rods, and the flocks produced streaked, speckled, and spotted.

Genesis 30.40: 40 Jacob separated the lambs, and set the faces of the flocks toward the streaked and all the black in Laban’s flock. He put his own droves apart, and didn’t put them into Laban’s flock.

Genesis 30.41: 41 Whenever the stronger of the flock conceived, Jacob laid the rods in front of the eyes of the flock in the watering troughs, that they might conceive among the rods;

Genesis 30.42: 42 but when the flock were feeble, he didn’t put them in. So the feebler were Laban’s, and the stronger Jacob’s.

Genesis 30.43: 43 The man increased exceedingly, and had large flocks, female servants and male servants, and camels and donkeys.

Genesis 31.0:

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Genesis 31.1: 1 Jacob heard Laban’s sons’ words, saying, “Jacob has taken away all that was our father’s. He has obtained all this wealth from that which was our father’s.”

Genesis 31.2: 2 Jacob saw the expression on Laban’s face, and, behold, it was not toward him as before.

Genesis 31.3: 3 Yahweh said to Jacob, “Return to the land of your fathers, and to your relatives, and I will be with you.”

Genesis 31.4: 4 Jacob sent and called Rachel and Leah to the field to his flock,

Genesis 31.5: 5 and said to them, “I see the expression on your father’s face, that it is not toward me as before; but the God of my father has been with me.

Genesis 31.6: 6 You know that I have served your father with all of my strength.

Genesis 31.7: 7 Your father has deceived me, and changed my wages ten times, but God didn’t allow him to hurt me.

Genesis 31.8: 8 If he said, ‘The speckled will be your wages,’ then all the flock bore speckled. If he said, ‘The streaked will be your wages,’ then all the flock bore streaked.

Genesis 31.9: 9 Thus God has taken away your father’s livestock, and given them to me.

Genesis 31.10: 10 During mating season, I lifted up my eyes, and saw in a dream, and behold, the male goats which leaped on the flock were streaked, speckled, and grizzled.

Genesis 31.11: 11 The angel of God said to me in the dream, ‘Jacob,’ and I said, ‘Here I am.’

Genesis 31.12: 12 He said, ‘Now lift up your eyes, and behold, all the male goats which leap on the flock are streaked, speckled, and grizzled, for I have seen all that Laban does to you.

Genesis 31.13: 13 I am the God of Bethel, where you anointed a pillar, where you vowed a vow to me. Now arise, get out from this land, and return to the land of your birth.’”

Genesis 31.14: 14 Rachel and Leah answered him, “Is there yet any portion or inheritance for us in our father’s house?

Genesis 31.15: 15 Aren’t we considered as foreigners by him? For he has sold us, and has also used up our money.

Genesis 31.16: 16 For all the riches which God has taken away from our father are ours and our children’s. Now then, whatever God has said to you, do.”

Genesis 31.17: 17 Then Jacob rose up, and set his sons and his wives on the camels,

Genesis 31.18: 18 and he took away all his livestock, and all his possessions which he had gathered, including the livestock which he had gained in Paddan Aram, to go to Isaac his father, to the land of Canaan.

Genesis 31.19: 19 Now Laban had gone to shear his sheep; and Rachel stole the teraphim that were her father’s.

Genesis 31.20: 20 Jacob deceived Laban the Syrian, in that he didn’t tell him that he was running away.

Genesis 31.21: 21 So he fled with all that he had. He rose up, passed over the River, and set his face toward the mountain of Gilead.

Genesis 31.22: 22 Laban was told on the third day that Jacob had fled.

Genesis 31.23: 23 He took his relatives with him, and pursued him seven days’ journey. He overtook him in the mountain of Gilead.

Genesis 31.24: 24 God came to Laban the Syrian in a dream of the night, and said to him, “Be careful that you don’t speak to Jacob either good or bad.”

Genesis 31.25: 25 Laban caught up with Jacob. Now Jacob had pitched his tent in the mountain, and Laban with his relatives encamped in the mountain of Gilead.

Genesis 31.26: 26 Laban said to Jacob, “What have you done, that you have deceived me, and carried away my daughters like captives of the sword?

Genesis 31.27: 27 Why did you flee secretly, and deceive me, and didn’t tell me, that I might have sent you away with mirth and with songs, with tambourine and with harp;

Genesis 31.28: 28 and didn’t allow me to kiss my sons and my daughters? Now have you done foolishly.

Genesis 31.29: 29 It is in the power of my hand to hurt you, but the God of your father spoke to me last night, saying, ‘Be careful that you don’t speak to Jacob either good or bad.’

Genesis 31.30: 30 Now, you want to be gone, because you greatly longed for your father’s house, but why have you stolen my gods?”

Genesis 31.31: 31 Jacob answered Laban, “Because I was afraid, for I said, ‘Lest you should take your daughters from me by force.’

Genesis 31.32: 32 Anyone you find your gods with shall not live. Before our relatives, discern what is yours with me, and take it.” For Jacob didn’t know that Rachel had stolen them.

Genesis 31.33: 33 Laban went into Jacob’s tent, into Leah’s tent, and into the tent of the two female servants; but he didn’t find them. He went out of Leah’s tent, and entered into Rachel’s tent.

Genesis 31.34: 34 Now Rachel had taken the teraphim, put them in the camel’s saddle, and sat on them. Laban felt around all the tent, but didn’t find them.

Genesis 31.35: 35 She said to her father, “Don’t let my lord be angry that I can’t rise up before you; for I’m having my period.” He searched, but didn’t find the teraphim.

Genesis 31.36: 36 Jacob was angry, and argued with Laban. Jacob answered Laban, “What is my trespass? What is my sin, that you have hotly pursued me?

Genesis 31.37: 37 Now that you have felt around in all my stuff, what have you found of all your household stuff? Set it here before my relatives and your relatives, that they may judge between us two.

Genesis 31.38: 38 “These twenty years I have been with you. Your ewes and your female goats have not cast their young, and I haven’t eaten the rams of your flocks.

Genesis 31.39: 39 That which was torn of animals, I didn’t bring to you. I bore its loss. Of my hand you required it, whether stolen by day or stolen by night.

Genesis 31.40: 40 This was my situation: in the day the drought consumed me, and the frost by night; and my sleep fled from my eyes.

Genesis 31.41: 41 These twenty years I have been in your house. I served you fourteen years for your two daughters, and six years for your flock, and you have changed my wages ten times.

Genesis 31.42: 42 Unless the God of my father, the God of Abraham, and the fear of Isaac, had been with me, surely now you would have sent me away empty. God has seen my affliction and the labor of my hands, and rebuked you last night.”

Genesis 31.43: 43 Laban answered Jacob, “The daughters are my daughters, the children are my children, the flocks are my flocks, and all that you see is mine! What can I do today to these my daughters, or to their children whom they have borne?

Genesis 31.44: 44 Now come, let’s make a covenant, you and I. Let it be for a witness between me and you.”

Genesis 31.45: 45 Jacob took a stone, and set it up for a pillar.

Genesis 31.46: 46 Jacob said to his relatives, “Gather stones.” They took stones, and made a heap. They ate there by the heap.

Genesis 31.47: 47 Laban called it Jegar Sahadutha, but Jacob called it Galeed.

Genesis 31.48: 48 Laban said, “This heap is witness between me and you today.” Therefore it was named Galeed

Genesis 31.49: 49 and Mizpah, for he said, “Yahweh watch between me and you, when we are absent one from another.

Genesis 31.50: 50 If you afflict my daughters, or if you take wives in addition to my daughters, no man is with us; behold, God is witness between me and you.”

Genesis 31.51: 51 Laban said to Jacob, “See this heap, and see the pillar, which I have set between me and you.

Genesis 31.52: 52 May this heap be a witness, and the pillar be a witness, that I will not pass over this heap to you, and that you will not pass over this heap and this pillar to me, for harm.

Genesis 31.53: 53 The God of Abraham, and the God of Nahor, the God of their father, judge between us.” Then Jacob swore by the fear of his father, Isaac.

Genesis 31.54: 54 Jacob offered a sacrifice in the mountain, and called his relatives to eat bread. They ate bread, and stayed all night in the mountain.

Genesis 31.55: 55 Early in the morning, Laban rose up, and kissed his sons and his daughters, and blessed them. Laban departed and returned to his place.

Genesis 32.0:

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Genesis 32.1: 1 Jacob went on his way, and the angels of God met him.

Genesis 32.2: 2 When he saw them, Jacob said, “This is God’s army.” He called the name of that place Mahanaim.

Genesis 32.3: 3 Jacob sent messengers in front of him to Esau, his brother, to the land of Seir, the field of Edom.

Genesis 32.4: 4 He commanded them, saying, “This is what you shall tell my lord, Esau: ‘This is what your servant, Jacob, says. I have lived as a foreigner with Laban, and stayed until now.

Genesis 32.5: 5 I have cattle, donkeys, flocks, male servants, and female servants. I have sent to tell my lord, that I may find favor in your sight.’”

Genesis 32.6: 6 The messengers returned to Jacob, saying, “We came to your brother Esau. He is coming to meet you, and four hundred men are with him.”

Genesis 32.7: 7 Then Jacob was greatly afraid and was distressed. He divided the people who were with him, and the flocks, and the herds, and the camels, into two companies;

Genesis 32.8: 8 and he said, “If Esau comes to the one company, and strikes it, then the company which is left will escape.”

Genesis 32.9: 9 Jacob said, “God of my father Abraham, and God of my father Isaac, Yahweh, who said to me, ‘Return to your country, and to your relatives, and I will do you good,’

Genesis 32.10: 10 I am not worthy of the least of all the loving kindnesses, and of all the truth, which you have shown to your servant; for with just my staff I crossed over this Jordan; and now I have become two companies.

Genesis 32.11: 11 Please deliver me from the hand of my brother, from the hand of Esau; for I fear him, lest he come and strike me and the mothers with the children.

Genesis 32.12: 12 You said, ‘I will surely do you good, and make your offspring as the sand of the sea, which can’t be counted because there are so many.’”

Genesis 32.13: 13 He stayed there that night, and took from that which he had with him a present for Esau, his brother:

Genesis 32.14: 14 two hundred female goats and twenty male goats, two hundred ewes and twenty rams,

Genesis 32.15: 15 thirty milk camels and their colts, forty cows, ten bulls, twenty female donkeys and ten foals.

Genesis 32.16: 16 He delivered them into the hands of his servants, every herd by itself, and said to his servants, “Pass over before me, and put a space between herd and herd.”

Genesis 32.17: 17 He commanded the foremost, saying, “When Esau, my brother, meets you, and asks you, saying, ‘Whose are you? Where are you going? Whose are these before you?’

Genesis 32.18: 18 Then you shall say, ‘They are your servant, Jacob’s. It is a present sent to my lord, Esau. Behold, he also is behind us.’”

Genesis 32.19: 19 He commanded also the second, and the third, and all that followed the herds, saying, “This is how you shall speak to Esau, when you find him.

Genesis 32.20: 20 You shall say, ‘Not only that, but behold, your servant, Jacob, is behind us.’” For, he said, “I will appease him with the present that goes before me, and afterward I will see his face. Perhaps he will accept me.”

Genesis 32.21: 21 So the present passed over before him, and he himself stayed that night in the camp.

Genesis 32.22: 22 He rose up that night, and took his two wives, and his two servants, and his eleven sons, and crossed over the ford of the Jabbok.

Genesis 32.23: 23 He took them, and sent them over the stream, and sent over that which he had.

Genesis 32.24: 24 Jacob was left alone, and wrestled with a man there until the breaking of the day.

Genesis 32.25: 25 When he saw that he didn’t prevail against him, the man touched the hollow of his thigh, and the hollow of Jacob’s thigh was strained as he wrestled.

Genesis 32.26: 26 The man said, “Let me go, for the day breaks.”

Jacob said, “I won’t let you go unless you bless me.”

Genesis 32.27: 27 He said to him, “What is your name?”

He said, “Jacob”.

Genesis 32.28: 28 He said, “Your name will no longer be called Jacob, but Israel; for you have fought with God and with men, and have prevailed.”

Genesis 32.29: 29 Jacob asked him, “Please tell me your name.”

He said, “Why is it that you ask what my name is?” He blessed him there.

Genesis 32.30: 30 Jacob called the name of the place Peniel; for he said, “I have seen God face to face, and my life is preserved.”

Genesis 32.31: 31 The sun rose on him as he passed over Peniel, and he limped because of his thigh.

Genesis 32.32: 32 Therefore the children of Israel don’t eat the sinew of the hip, which is on the hollow of the thigh, to this day, because he touched the hollow of Jacob’s thigh in the sinew of the hip.

Genesis 33.0:

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Genesis 33.1: 1 Jacob lifted up his eyes, and looked, and, behold, Esau was coming, and with him four hundred men. He divided the children between Leah, Rachel, and the two servants.

Genesis 33.2: 2 He put the servants and their children in front, Leah and her children after, and Rachel and Joseph at the rear.

Genesis 33.3: 3 He himself passed over in front of them, and bowed himself to the ground seven times, until he came near to his brother.

Genesis 33.4: 4 Esau ran to meet him, embraced him, fell on his neck, kissed him, and they wept.

Genesis 33.5: 5 He lifted up his eyes, and saw the women and the children; and said, “Who are these with you?”

He said, “The children whom God has graciously given your servant.”

Genesis 33.6: 6 Then the servants came near with their children, and they bowed themselves.

Genesis 33.7: 7 Leah also and her children came near, and bowed themselves. After them, Joseph came near with Rachel, and they bowed themselves.

Genesis 33.8: 8 Esau said, “What do you mean by all this company which I met?”

Jacob said, “To find favor in the sight of my lord.”

Genesis 33.9: 9 Esau said, “I have enough, my brother; let that which you have be yours.”

Genesis 33.10: 10 Jacob said, “Please, no, if I have now found favor in your sight, then receive my present at my hand, because I have seen your face, as one sees the face of God, and you were pleased with me.

Genesis 33.11: 11 Please take the gift that I brought to you, because God has dealt graciously with me, and because I have enough.” He urged him, and he took it.

Genesis 33.12: 12 Esau said, “Let’s take our journey, and let’s go, and I will go before you.”

Genesis 33.13: 13 Jacob said to him, “My lord knows that the children are tender, and that the flocks and herds with me have their young, and if they overdrive them one day, all the flocks will die.

Genesis 33.14: 14 Please let my lord pass over before his servant, and I will lead on gently, according to the pace of the livestock that are before me and according to the pace of the children, until I come to my lord to Seir.”

Genesis 33.15: 15 Esau said, “Let me now leave with you some of the people who are with me.”

He said, “Why? Let me find favor in the sight of my lord.”

Genesis 33.16: 16 So Esau returned that day on his way to Seir.

Genesis 33.17: 17 Jacob traveled to Succoth, built himself a house, and made shelters for his livestock. Therefore the name of the place is called Succoth.

Genesis 33.18: 18 Jacob came in peace to the city of Shechem, which is in the land of Canaan, when he came from Paddan Aram; and encamped before the city.

Genesis 33.19: 19 He bought the parcel of ground where he had spread his tent, at the hand of the children of Hamor, Shechem’s father, for one hundred pieces of money.

Genesis 33.20: 20 He erected an altar there, and called it El Elohe Israel.

Genesis 34.0:

34

Genesis 34.1: 1 Dinah, the daughter of Leah, whom she bore to Jacob, went out to see the daughters of the land.

Genesis 34.2: 2 Shechem the son of Hamor the Hivite, the prince of the land, saw her. He took her, lay with her, and humbled her.

Genesis 34.3: 3 His soul joined to Dinah, the daughter of Jacob, and he loved the young lady, and spoke kindly to the young lady.

Genesis 34.4: 4 Shechem spoke to his father, Hamor, saying, “Get me this young lady as a wife.”

Genesis 34.5: 5 Now Jacob heard that he had defiled Dinah, his daughter; and his sons were with his livestock in the field. Jacob held his peace until they came.

Genesis 34.6: 6 Hamor the father of Shechem went out to Jacob to talk with him.

Genesis 34.7: 7 The sons of Jacob came in from the field when they heard it. The men were grieved, and they were very angry, because he had done folly in Israel in lying with Jacob’s daughter, a thing ought not to be done.

Genesis 34.8: 8 Hamor talked with them, saying, “The soul of my son, Shechem, longs for your daughter. Please give her to him as a wife.

Genesis 34.9: 9 Make marriages with us. Give your daughters to us, and take our daughters for yourselves.

Genesis 34.10: 10 You shall dwell with us, and the land will be before you. Live and trade in it, and get possessions in it.”

Genesis 34.11: 11 Shechem said to her father and to her brothers, “Let me find favor in your eyes, and whatever you will tell me I will give.

Genesis 34.12: 12 Ask me a great amount for a dowry, and I will give whatever you ask of me, but give me the young lady as a wife.”

Genesis 34.13: 13 The sons of Jacob answered Shechem and Hamor his father with deceit when they spoke, because he had defiled Dinah their sister,

Genesis 34.14: 14 and said to them, “We can’t do this thing, to give our sister to one who is uncircumcised; for that is a reproach to us.

Genesis 34.15: 15 Only on this condition will we consent to you. If you will be as we are, that every male of you be circumcised,

Genesis 34.16: 16 then will we give our daughters to you; and we will take your daughters to us, and we will dwell with you, and we will become one people.

Genesis 34.17: 17 But if you will not listen to us and be circumcised, then we will take our sister, and we will be gone.”

Genesis 34.18: 18 Their words pleased Hamor and Shechem, Hamor’s son.

Genesis 34.19: 19 The young man didn’t wait to do this thing, because he had delight in Jacob’s daughter, and he was honored above all the house of his father.

Genesis 34.20: 20 Hamor and Shechem, his son, came to the gate of their city, and talked with the men of their city, saying,

Genesis 34.21: 21 “These men are peaceful with us. Therefore let them live in the land and trade in it. For behold, the land is large enough for them. Let’s take their daughters to us for wives, and let’s give them our daughters.

Genesis 34.22: 22 Only on this condition will the men consent to us to live with us, to become one people, if every male among us is circumcised, as they are circumcised.

Genesis 34.23: 23 Won’t their livestock and their possessions and all their animals be ours? Only let’s give our consent to them, and they will dwell with us.”

Genesis 34.24: 24 All who went out of the gate of his city listened to Hamor, and to Shechem his son; and every male was circumcised, all who went out of the gate of his city.

Genesis 34.25: 25 On the third day, when they were sore, two of Jacob’s sons, Simeon and Levi, Dinah’s brothers, each took his sword, came upon the unsuspecting city, and killed all the males.

Genesis 34.26: 26 They killed Hamor and Shechem, his son, with the edge of the sword, and took Dinah out of Shechem’s house, and went away.

Genesis 34.27: 27 Jacob’s sons came on the dead, and plundered the city, because they had defiled their sister.

Genesis 34.28: 28 They took their flocks, their herds, their donkeys, that which was in the city, that which was in the field,

Genesis 34.29: 29 and all their wealth. They took captive all their little ones and their wives, and took as plunder everything that was in the house.

Genesis 34.30: 30 Jacob said to Simeon and Levi, “You have troubled me, to make me odious to the inhabitants of the land, among the Canaanites and the Perizzites. I am few in number. They will gather themselves together against me and strike me, and I will be destroyed, I and my house.”

Genesis 34.31: 31 They said, “Should he deal with our sister as with a prostitute?”

Genesis 35.0:

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Genesis 35.1: 1 God said to Jacob, “Arise, go up to Bethel, and live there. Make there an altar to God, who appeared to you when you fled from the face of Esau your brother.”

Genesis 35.2: 2 Then Jacob said to his household, and to all who were with him, “Put away the foreign gods that are among you, purify yourselves, change your garments.

Genesis 35.3: 3 Let’s arise, and go up to Bethel. I will make there an altar to God, who answered me in the day of my distress, and was with me on the way which I went.”

Genesis 35.4: 4 They gave to Jacob all the foreign gods which were in their hands, and the rings which were in their ears; and Jacob hid them under the oak which was by Shechem.

Genesis 35.5: 5 They traveled, and a terror of God was on the cities that were around them, and they didn’t pursue the sons of Jacob.

Genesis 35.6: 6 So Jacob came to Luz (that is, Bethel), which is in the land of Canaan, he and all the people who were with him.

Genesis 35.7: 7 He built an altar there, and called the place El Beth El; because there God was revealed to him, when he fled from the face of his brother.

Genesis 35.8: 8 Deborah, Rebekah’s nurse, died, and she was buried below Bethel under the oak; and its name was called Allon Bacuth.

Genesis 35.9: 9 God appeared to Jacob again, when he came from Paddan Aram, and blessed him.

Genesis 35.10: 10 God said to him, “Your name is Jacob. Your name shall not be Jacob any more, but your name will be Israel.” He named him Israel.

Genesis 35.11: 11 God said to him, “I am God Almighty. Be fruitful and multiply. A nation and a company of nations will be from you, and kings will come out of your body.

Genesis 35.12: 12 The land which I gave to Abraham and Isaac, I will give it to you, and to your offspring after you I will give the land.”

Genesis 35.13: 13 God went up from him in the place where he spoke with him.

Genesis 35.14: 14 Jacob set up a pillar in the place where he spoke with him, a pillar of stone. He poured out a drink offering on it, and poured oil on it.

Genesis 35.15: 15 Jacob called the name of the place where God spoke with him “Bethel”.

Genesis 35.16: 16 They traveled from Bethel. There was still some distance to come to Ephrath, and Rachel travailed. She had hard labor.

Genesis 35.17: 17 When she was in hard labor, the midwife said to her, “Don’t be afraid, for now you will have another son.”

Genesis 35.18: 18 As her soul was departing (for she died), she named him Benoni, but his father named him Benjamin.

Genesis 35.19: 19 Rachel died, and was buried on the way to Ephrath (also called Bethlehem).

Genesis 35.20: 20 Jacob set up a pillar on her grave. The same is the Pillar of Rachel’s grave to this day.

Genesis 35.21: 21 Israel traveled, and spread his tent beyond the tower of Eder.

Genesis 35.22: 22 While Israel lived in that land, Reuben went and lay with Bilhah, his father’s concubine, and Israel heard of it.

Now the sons of Jacob were twelve.

Genesis 35.23: 23 The sons of Leah: Reuben (Jacob’s firstborn), Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun.

Genesis 35.24: 24 The sons of Rachel: Joseph and Benjamin.

Genesis 35.25: 25 The sons of Bilhah (Rachel’s servant): Dan and Naphtali.

Genesis 35.26: 26 The sons of Zilpah (Leah’s servant): Gad and Asher. These are the sons of Jacob, who were born to him in Paddan Aram.

Genesis 35.27: 27 Jacob came to Isaac his father, to Mamre, to Kiriath Arba (which is Hebron), where Abraham and Isaac lived as foreigners.

Genesis 35.28: 28 The days of Isaac were one hundred eighty years.

Genesis 35.29: 29 Isaac gave up the spirit and died, and was gathered to his people, old and full of days. Esau and Jacob, his sons, buried him.

Genesis 36.0:

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Genesis 36.1: 1 Now this is the history of the generations of Esau (that is, Edom).

Genesis 36.2: 2 Esau took his wives from the daughters of Canaan: Adah the daughter of Elon, the Hittite; and Oholibamah the daughter of Anah, the daughter of Zibeon, the Hivite;

Genesis 36.3: 3 and Basemath, Ishmael’s daughter, sister of Nebaioth.

Genesis 36.4: 4 Adah bore to Esau Eliphaz. Basemath bore Reuel.

Genesis 36.5: 5 Oholibamah bore Jeush, Jalam, and Korah. These are the sons of Esau, who were born to him in the land of Canaan.

Genesis 36.6: 6 Esau took his wives, his sons, his daughters, and all the members of his household, with his livestock, all his animals, and all his possessions, which he had gathered in the land of Canaan, and went into a land away from his brother Jacob.

Genesis 36.7: 7 For their substance was too great for them to dwell together, and the land of their travels couldn’t bear them because of their livestock.

Genesis 36.8: 8 Esau lived in the hill country of Seir. Esau is Edom.

Genesis 36.9: 9 This is the history of the generations of Esau the father of the Edomites in the hill country of Seir:

Genesis 36.10: 10 these are the names of Esau’s sons: Eliphaz, the son of Adah, the wife of Esau; and Reuel, the son of Basemath, the wife of Esau.

Genesis 36.11: 11 The sons of Eliphaz were Teman, Omar, Zepho, and Gatam, and Kenaz.

Genesis 36.12: 12 Timna was concubine to Eliphaz, Esau’s son; and she bore to Eliphaz Amalek. These are the descendants of Adah, Esau’s wife.

Genesis 36.13: 13 These are the sons of Reuel: Nahath, Zerah, Shammah, and Mizzah. These were the descendants of Basemath, Esau’s wife.

Genesis 36.14: 14 These were the sons of Oholibamah, the daughter of Anah, the daughter of Zibeon, Esau’s wife: she bore to Esau Jeush, Jalam, and Korah.

Genesis 36.15: 15 These are the chiefs of the sons of Esau: the sons of Eliphaz the firstborn of Esau: chief Teman, chief Omar, chief Zepho, chief Kenaz,

Genesis 36.16: 16 chief Korah, chief Gatam, chief Amalek. These are the chiefs who came of Eliphaz in the land of Edom. These are the sons of Adah.

Genesis 36.17: 17 These are the sons of Reuel, Esau’s son: chief Nahath, chief Zerah, chief Shammah, chief Mizzah. These are the chiefs who came of Reuel in the land of Edom. These are the sons of Basemath, Esau’s wife.

Genesis 36.18: 18 These are the sons of Oholibamah, Esau’s wife: chief Jeush, chief Jalam, chief Korah. These are the chiefs who came of Oholibamah the daughter of Anah, Esau’s wife.

Genesis 36.19: 19 These are the sons of Esau (that is, Edom), and these are their chiefs.

Genesis 36.20: 20 These are the sons of Seir the Horite, the inhabitants of the land: Lotan, Shobal, Zibeon, Anah,

Genesis 36.21: 21 Dishon, Ezer, and Dishan. These are the chiefs who came of the Horites, the children of Seir in the land of Edom.

Genesis 36.22: 22 The children of Lotan were Hori and Heman. Lotan’s sister was Timna.

Genesis 36.23: 23 These are the children of Shobal: Alvan, Manahath, Ebal, Shepho, and Onam.

Genesis 36.24: 24 These are the children of Zibeon: Aiah and Anah. This is Anah who found the hot springs in the wilderness, as he fed the donkeys of Zibeon his father.

Genesis 36.25: 25 These are the children of Anah: Dishon and Oholibamah, the daughter of Anah.

Genesis 36.26: 26 These are the children of Dishon: Hemdan, Eshban, Ithran, and Cheran.

Genesis 36.27: 27 These are the children of Ezer: Bilhan, Zaavan, and Akan.

Genesis 36.28: 28 These are the children of Dishan: Uz and Aran.

Genesis 36.29: 29 These are the chiefs who came of the Horites: chief Lotan, chief Shobal, chief Zibeon, chief Anah,

Genesis 36.30: 30 chief Dishon, chief Ezer, and chief Dishan. These are the chiefs who came of the Horites, according to their chiefs in the land of Seir.

Genesis 36.31: 31 These are the kings who reigned in the land of Edom, before any king reigned over the children of Israel.

Genesis 36.32: 32 Bela, the son of Beor, reigned in Edom. The name of his city was Dinhabah.

Genesis 36.33: 33 Bela died, and Jobab, the son of Zerah of Bozrah, reigned in his place.

Genesis 36.34: 34 Jobab died, and Husham of the land of the Temanites reigned in his place.

Genesis 36.35: 35 Husham died, and Hadad, the son of Bedad, who struck Midian in the field of Moab, reigned in his place. The name of his city was Avith.

Genesis 36.36: 36 Hadad died, and Samlah of Masrekah reigned in his place.

Genesis 36.37: 37 Samlah died, and Shaul of Rehoboth by the river, reigned in his place.

Genesis 36.38: 38 Shaul died, and Baal Hanan the son of Achbor reigned in his place.

Genesis 36.39: 39 Baal Hanan the son of Achbor died, and Hadar reigned in his place. The name of his city was Pau. His wife’s name was Mehetabel, the daughter of Matred, the daughter of Mezahab.

Genesis 36.40: 40 These are the names of the chiefs who came from Esau, according to their families, after their places, and by their names: chief Timna, chief Alvah, chief Jetheth,

Genesis 36.41: 41 chief Oholibamah, chief Elah, chief Pinon,

Genesis 36.42: 42 chief Kenaz, chief Teman, chief Mibzar,

Genesis 36.43: 43 chief Magdiel, and chief Iram. These are the chiefs of Edom, according to their habitations in the land of their possession. This is Esau, the father of the Edomites.

Genesis 37.0:

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Genesis 37.1: 1 Jacob lived in the land of his father’s travels, in the land of Canaan.

Genesis 37.2: 2 This is the history of the generations of Jacob. Joseph, being seventeen years old, was feeding the flock with his brothers. He was a boy with the sons of Bilhah and Zilpah, his father’s wives. Joseph brought an evil report of them to their father.

Genesis 37.3: 3 Now Israel loved Joseph more than all his children, because he was the son of his old age, and he made him a tunic of many colors.

Genesis 37.4: 4 His brothers saw that their father loved him more than all his brothers, and they hated him, and couldn’t speak peaceably to him.

Genesis 37.5: 5 Joseph dreamed a dream, and he told it to his brothers, and they hated him all the more.

Genesis 37.6: 6 He said to them, “Please hear this dream which I have dreamed:

Genesis 37.7: 7 for behold, we were binding sheaves in the field, and behold, my sheaf arose and also stood upright; and behold, your sheaves came around, and bowed down to my sheaf.”

Genesis 37.8: 8 His brothers asked him, “Will you indeed reign over us? Will you indeed have dominion over us?” They hated him all the more for his dreams and for his words.

Genesis 37.9: 9 He dreamed yet another dream, and told it to his brothers, and said, “Behold, I have dreamed yet another dream: and behold, the sun and the moon and eleven stars bowed down to me.”

Genesis 37.10: 10 He told it to his father and to his brothers. His father rebuked him, and said to him, “What is this dream that you have dreamed? Will I and your mother and your brothers indeed come to bow ourselves down to you to the earth?”

Genesis 37.11: 11 His brothers envied him, but his father kept this saying in mind.

Genesis 37.12: 12 His brothers went to feed their father’s flock in Shechem.

Genesis 37.13: 13 Israel said to Joseph, “Aren’t your brothers feeding the flock in Shechem? Come, and I will send you to them.” He said to him, “Here I am.”

Genesis 37.14: 14 He said to him, “Go now, see whether it is well with your brothers, and well with the flock; and bring me word again.” So he sent him out of the valley of Hebron, and he came to Shechem.

Genesis 37.15: 15 A certain man found him, and behold, he was wandering in the field. The man asked him, “What are you looking for?”

Genesis 37.16: 16 He said, “I am looking for my brothers. Tell me, please, where they are feeding the flock.”

Genesis 37.17: 17 The man said, “They have left here, for I heard them say, ‘Let’s go to Dothan.’”

Joseph went after his brothers, and found them in Dothan.

Genesis 37.18: 18 They saw him afar off, and before he came near to them, they conspired against him to kill him.

Genesis 37.19: 19 They said to one another, “Behold, this dreamer comes.

Genesis 37.20: 20 Come now therefore, and let’s kill him, and cast him into one of the pits, and we will say, ‘An evil animal has devoured him.’ We will see what will become of his dreams.”

Genesis 37.21: 21 Reuben heard it, and delivered him out of their hand, and said, “Let’s not take his life.”

Genesis 37.22: 22 Reuben said to them, “Shed no blood. Throw him into this pit that is in the wilderness, but lay no hand on him”—that he might deliver him out of their hand, to restore him to his father.

Genesis 37.23: 23 When Joseph came to his brothers, they stripped Joseph of his tunic, the tunic of many colors that was on him;

Genesis 37.24: 24 and they took him, and threw him into the pit. The pit was empty. There was no water in it.

Genesis 37.25: 25 They sat down to eat bread, and they lifted up their eyes and looked, and saw a caravan of Ishmaelites was coming from Gilead, with their camels bearing spices and balm and myrrh, going to carry it down to Egypt.

Genesis 37.26: 26 Judah said to his brothers, “What profit is it if we kill our brother and conceal his blood?

Genesis 37.27: 27 Come, and let’s sell him to the Ishmaelites, and not let our hand be on him; for he is our brother, our flesh.” His brothers listened to him.

Genesis 37.28: 28 Midianites who were merchants passed by, and they drew and lifted up Joseph out of the pit, and sold Joseph to the Ishmaelites for twenty pieces of silver. The merchants brought Joseph into Egypt.

Genesis 37.29: 29 Reuben returned to the pit, and saw that Joseph wasn’t in the pit; and he tore his clothes.

Genesis 37.30: 30 He returned to his brothers, and said, “The child is no more; and I, where will I go?”

Genesis 37.31: 31 They took Joseph’s tunic, and killed a male goat, and dipped the tunic in the blood.

Genesis 37.32: 32 They took the tunic of many colors, and they brought it to their father, and said, “We have found this. Examine it, now, and see if it is your son’s tunic or not.”

Genesis 37.33: 33 He recognized it, and said, “It is my son’s tunic. An evil animal has devoured him. Joseph is without doubt torn in pieces.”

Genesis 37.34: 34 Jacob tore his clothes, and put sackcloth on his waist, and mourned for his son many days.

Genesis 37.35: 35 All his sons and all his daughters rose up to comfort him, but he refused to be comforted. He said, “For I will go down to Sheol to my son, mourning.” His father wept for him.

Genesis 37.36: 36 The Midianites sold him into Egypt to Potiphar, an officer of Pharaoh’s, the captain of the guard.

Genesis 38.0:

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Genesis 38.1: 1 At that time, Judah went down from his brothers, and visited a certain Adullamite, whose name was Hirah.

Genesis 38.2: 2 There, Judah saw the daughter of a certain Canaanite man named Shua. He took her, and went in to her.

Genesis 38.3: 3 She conceived, and bore a son; and he named him Er.

Genesis 38.4: 4 She conceived again, and bore a son; and she named him Onan.

Genesis 38.5: 5 She yet again bore a son, and named him Shelah. He was at Chezib when she bore him.

Genesis 38.6: 6 Judah took a wife for Er, his firstborn, and her name was Tamar.

Genesis 38.7: 7 Er, Judah’s firstborn, was wicked in Yahweh’s sight. So Yahweh killed him.

Genesis 38.8: 8 Judah said to Onan, “Go in to your brother’s wife, and perform the duty of a husband’s brother to her, and raise up offspring for your brother.”

Genesis 38.9: 9 Onan knew that the offspring wouldn’t be his; and when he went in to his brother’s wife, he spilled his semen on the ground, lest he should give offspring to his brother.

Genesis 38.10: 10 The thing which he did was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and he killed him also.

Genesis 38.11: 11 Then Judah said to Tamar, his daughter-in-law, “Remain a widow in your father’s house, until Shelah, my son, is grown up;” for he said, “Lest he also die, like his brothers.” Tamar went and lived in her father’s house.

Genesis 38.12: 12 After many days, Shua’s daughter, the wife of Judah, died. Judah was comforted, and went up to his sheep shearers to Timnah, he and his friend Hirah, the Adullamite.

Genesis 38.13: 13 Tamar was told, “Behold, your father-in-law is going up to Timnah to shear his sheep.”

Genesis 38.14: 14 She took off the garments of her widowhood, and covered herself with her veil, and wrapped herself, and sat in the gate of Enaim, which is on the way to Timnah; for she saw that Shelah was grown up, and she wasn’t given to him as a wife.

Genesis 38.15: 15 When Judah saw her, he thought that she was a prostitute, for she had covered her face.

Genesis 38.16: 16 He turned to her by the way, and said, “Please come, let me come in to you,” for he didn’t know that she was his daughter-in-law.

She said, “What will you give me, that you may come in to me?”

Genesis 38.17: 17 He said, “I will send you a young goat from the flock.”

She said, “Will you give me a pledge, until you send it?”

Genesis 38.18: 18 He said, “What pledge will I give you?”

She said, “Your signet and your cord, and your staff that is in your hand.”

He gave them to her, and came in to her, and she conceived by him.

Genesis 38.19: 19 She arose, and went away, and put off her veil from her, and put on the garments of her widowhood.

Genesis 38.20: 20 Judah sent the young goat by the hand of his friend, the Adullamite, to receive the pledge from the woman’s hand, but he didn’t find her.

Genesis 38.21: 21 Then he asked the men of her place, saying, “Where is the prostitute, that was at Enaim by the road?”

They said, “There has been no prostitute here.”

Genesis 38.22: 22 He returned to Judah, and said, “I haven’t found her; and also the men of the place said, ‘There has been no prostitute here.’”

Genesis 38.23: 23 Judah said, “Let her keep it, lest we be shamed. Behold, I sent this young goat, and you haven’t found her.”

Genesis 38.24: 24 About three months later, Judah was told, “Tamar, your daughter-in-law, has played the prostitute. Moreover, behold, she is with child by prostitution.”

Judah said, “Bring her out, and let her be burned.”

Genesis 38.25: 25 When she was brought out, she sent to her father-in-law, saying, “I am with child by the man who owns these.” She also said, “Please discern whose these are—the signet, and the cords, and the staff.”

Genesis 38.26: 26 Judah acknowledged them, and said, “She is more righteous than I, because I didn’t give her to Shelah, my son.”

He knew her again no more.

Genesis 38.27: 27 In the time of her travail, behold, twins were in her womb.

Genesis 38.28: 28 When she travailed, one put out a hand, and the midwife took and tied a scarlet thread on his hand, saying, “This came out first.”

Genesis 38.29: 29 As he drew back his hand, behold, his brother came out, and she said, “Why have you made a breach for yourself?” Therefore his name was called Perez.

Genesis 38.30: 30 Afterward his brother came out, who had the scarlet thread on his hand, and his name was called Zerah.

Genesis 39.0:

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Genesis 39.1: 1 Joseph was brought down to Egypt. Potiphar, an officer of Pharaoh’s, the captain of the guard, an Egyptian, bought him from the hand of the Ishmaelites that had brought him down there.

Genesis 39.2: 2 Yahweh was with Joseph, and he was a prosperous man. He was in the house of his master the Egyptian.

Genesis 39.3: 3 His master saw that Yahweh was with him, and that Yahweh made all that he did prosper in his hand.

Genesis 39.4: 4 Joseph found favor in his sight. He ministered to him, and Potiphar made him overseer over his house, and all that he had he put into his hand.

Genesis 39.5: 5 From the time that he made him overseer in his house, and over all that he had, Yahweh blessed the Egyptian’s house for Joseph’s sake. Yahweh’s blessing was on all that he had, in the house and in the field.

Genesis 39.6: 6 He left all that he had in Joseph’s hand. He didn’t concern himself with anything, except for the food which he ate.

Joseph was well-built and handsome.

Genesis 39.7: 7 After these things, his master’s wife set her eyes on Joseph; and she said, “Lie with me.”

Genesis 39.8: 8 But he refused, and said to his master’s wife, “Behold, my master doesn’t know what is with me in the house, and he has put all that he has into my hand.

Genesis 39.9: 9 No one is greater in this house than I am, and he has not kept back anything from me but you, because you are his wife. How then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?”

Genesis 39.10: 10 As she spoke to Joseph day by day, he didn’t listen to her, to lie by her, or to be with her.

Genesis 39.11: 11 About this time, he went into the house to do his work, and there were none of the men of the house inside.

Genesis 39.12: 12 She caught him by his garment, saying, “Lie with me!”

He left his garment in her hand, and ran outside.

Genesis 39.13: 13 When she saw that he had left his garment in her hand, and had run outside,

Genesis 39.14: 14 she called to the men of her house, and spoke to them, saying, “Behold, he has brought a Hebrew in to us to mock us. He came in to me to lie with me, and I cried with a loud voice.

Genesis 39.15: 15 When he heard that I lifted up my voice and cried, he left his garment by me, and ran outside.”

Genesis 39.16: 16 She laid up his garment by her, until his master came home.

Genesis 39.17: 17 She spoke to him according to these words, saying, “The Hebrew servant, whom you have brought to us, came in to me to mock me,

Genesis 39.18: 18 and as I lifted up my voice and cried, he left his garment by me, and ran outside.”

Genesis 39.19: 19 When his master heard the words of his wife, which she spoke to him, saying, “This is what your servant did to me,” his wrath was kindled.

Genesis 39.20: 20 Joseph’s master took him, and put him into the prison, the place where the king’s prisoners were bound, and he was there in custody.

Genesis 39.21: 21 But Yahweh was with Joseph, and showed kindness to him, and gave him favor in the sight of the keeper of the prison.

Genesis 39.22: 22 The keeper of the prison committed to Joseph’s hand all the prisoners who were in the prison. Whatever they did there, he was responsible for it.

Genesis 39.23: 23 The keeper of the prison didn’t look after anything that was under his hand, because Yahweh was with him; and that which he did, Yahweh made it prosper.

Genesis 40.0:

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Genesis 40.1: 1 After these things, the butler of the king of Egypt and his baker offended their lord, the king of Egypt.

Genesis 40.2: 2 Pharaoh was angry with his two officers, the chief cup bearer and the chief baker.

Genesis 40.3: 3 He put them in custody in the house of the captain of the guard, into the prison, the place where Joseph was bound.

Genesis 40.4: 4 The captain of the guard assigned them to Joseph, and he took care of them. They stayed in prison many days.

Genesis 40.5: 5 They both dreamed a dream, each man his dream, in one night, each man according to the interpretation of his dream, the cup bearer and the baker of the king of Egypt, who were bound in the prison.

Genesis 40.6: 6 Joseph came in to them in the morning, and saw them, and saw that they were sad.

Genesis 40.7: 7 He asked Pharaoh’s officers who were with him in custody in his master’s house, saying, “Why do you look so sad today?”

Genesis 40.8: 8 They said to him, “We have dreamed a dream, and there is no one who can interpret it.”

Joseph said to them, “Don’t interpretations belong to God? Please tell it to me.”

Genesis 40.9: 9 The chief cup bearer told his dream to Joseph, and said to him, “In my dream, behold, a vine was in front of me,

Genesis 40.10: 10 and in the vine were three branches. It was as though it budded, it blossomed, and its clusters produced ripe grapes.

Genesis 40.11: 11 Pharaoh’s cup was in my hand; and I took the grapes, and pressed them into Pharaoh’s cup, and I gave the cup into Pharaoh’s hand.”

Genesis 40.12: 12 Joseph said to him, “This is its interpretation: the three branches are three days.

Genesis 40.13: 13 Within three more days, Pharaoh will lift up your head, and restore you to your office. You will give Pharaoh’s cup into his hand, the way you did when you were his cup bearer.

Genesis 40.14: 14 But remember me when it is well with you. Please show kindness to me, and make mention of me to Pharaoh, and bring me out of this house.

Genesis 40.15: 15 For indeed, I was stolen away out of the land of the Hebrews, and here also I have done nothing that they should put me into the dungeon.”

Genesis 40.16: 16 When the chief baker saw that the interpretation was good, he said to Joseph, “I also was in my dream, and behold, three baskets of white bread were on my head.

Genesis 40.17: 17 In the uppermost basket there were all kinds of baked food for Pharaoh, and the birds ate them out of the basket on my head.”

Genesis 40.18: 18 Joseph answered, “This is its interpretation. The three baskets are three days.

Genesis 40.19: 19 Within three more days, Pharaoh will lift up your head from off you, and will hang you on a tree; and the birds will eat your flesh from off you.”

Genesis 40.20: 20 On the third day, which was Pharaoh’s birthday, he made a feast for all his servants, and he lifted up the head of the chief cup bearer and the head of the chief baker among his servants.

Genesis 40.21: 21 He restored the chief cup bearer to his position again, and he gave the cup into Pharaoh’s hand;

Genesis 40.22: 22 but he hanged the chief baker, as Joseph had interpreted to them.

Genesis 40.23: 23 Yet the chief cup bearer didn’t remember Joseph, but forgot him.

Genesis 41.0:

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Genesis 41.1: 1 At the end of two full years, Pharaoh dreamed, and behold, he stood by the river.

Genesis 41.2: 2 Behold, seven cattle came up out of the river. They were sleek and fat, and they fed in the marsh grass.

Genesis 41.3: 3 Behold, seven other cattle came up after them out of the river, ugly and thin, and stood by the other cattle on the brink of the river.

Genesis 41.4: 4 The ugly and thin cattle ate up the seven sleek and fat cattle. So Pharaoh awoke.

Genesis 41.5: 5 He slept and dreamed a second time; and behold, seven heads of grain came up on one stalk, healthy and good.

Genesis 41.6: 6 Behold, seven heads of grain, thin and blasted with the east wind, sprung up after them.

Genesis 41.7: 7 The thin heads of grain swallowed up the seven healthy and full ears. Pharaoh awoke, and behold, it was a dream.

Genesis 41.8: 8 In the morning, his spirit was troubled, and he sent and called for all of Egypt’s magicians and wise men. Pharaoh told them his dreams, but there was no one who could interpret them to Pharaoh.

Genesis 41.9: 9 Then the chief cup bearer spoke to Pharaoh, saying, “I remember my faults today.

Genesis 41.10: 10 Pharaoh was angry with his servants, and put me in custody in the house of the captain of the guard, with the chief baker.

Genesis 41.11: 11 We dreamed a dream in one night, he and I. Each man dreamed according to the interpretation of his dream.

Genesis 41.12: 12 There was with us there a young man, a Hebrew, servant to the captain of the guard, and we told him, and he interpreted to us our dreams. He interpreted to each man according to his dream.

Genesis 41.13: 13 As he interpreted to us, so it was. He restored me to my office, and he hanged him.”

Genesis 41.14: 14 Then Pharaoh sent and called Joseph, and they brought him hastily out of the dungeon. He shaved himself, changed his clothing, and came in to Pharaoh.

Genesis 41.15: 15 Pharaoh said to Joseph, “I have dreamed a dream, and there is no one who can interpret it. I have heard it said of you, that when you hear a dream you can interpret it.”

Genesis 41.16: 16 Joseph answered Pharaoh, saying, “It isn’t in me. God will give Pharaoh an answer of peace.”

Genesis 41.17: 17 Pharaoh spoke to Joseph, “In my dream, behold, I stood on the brink of the river;

Genesis 41.18: 18 and behold, there came up out of the river seven cattle, fat and sleek. They fed in the marsh grass;

Genesis 41.19: 19 and behold, seven other cattle came up after them, poor and very ugly and thin, such as I never saw in all the land of Egypt for ugliness.

Genesis 41.20: 20 The thin and ugly cattle ate up the first seven fat cattle;

Genesis 41.21: 21 and when they had eaten them up, it couldn’t be known that they had eaten them, but they were still ugly, as at the beginning. So I awoke.

Genesis 41.22: 22 I saw in my dream, and behold, seven heads of grain came up on one stalk, full and good;

Genesis 41.23: 23 and behold, seven heads of grain, withered, thin, and blasted with the east wind, sprung up after them.

Genesis 41.24: 24 The thin heads of grain swallowed up the seven good heads of grain. I told it to the magicians, but there was no one who could explain it to me.”

Genesis 41.25: 25 Joseph said to Pharaoh, “The dream of Pharaoh is one. What God is about to do he has declared to Pharaoh.

Genesis 41.26: 26 The seven good cattle are seven years; and the seven good heads of grain are seven years. The dream is one.

Genesis 41.27: 27 The seven thin and ugly cattle that came up after them are seven years, and also the seven empty heads of grain blasted with the east wind; they will be seven years of famine.

Genesis 41.28: 28 That is the thing which I have spoken to Pharaoh. God has shown Pharaoh what he is about to do.

Genesis 41.29: 29 Behold, seven years of great plenty throughout all the land of Egypt are coming.

Genesis 41.30: 30 Seven years of famine will arise after them, and all the plenty will be forgotten in the land of Egypt. The famine will consume the land,

Genesis 41.31: 31 and the plenty will not be known in the land by reason of that famine which follows; for it will be very grievous.

Genesis 41.32: 32 The dream was doubled to Pharaoh, because the thing is established by God, and God will shortly bring it to pass.

Genesis 41.33: 33 “Now therefore let Pharaoh look for a discreet and wise man, and set him over the land of Egypt.

Genesis 41.34: 34 Let Pharaoh do this, and let him appoint overseers over the land, and take up the fifth part of the land of Egypt’s produce in the seven plenteous years.

Genesis 41.35: 35 Let them gather all the food of these good years that come, and store grain under the hand of Pharaoh for food in the cities, and let them keep it.

Genesis 41.36: 36 The food will be to supply the land against the seven years of famine, which will be in the land of Egypt; so that the land will not perish through the famine.”

Genesis 41.37: 37 The thing was good in the eyes of Pharaoh, and in the eyes of all his servants.

Genesis 41.38: 38 Pharaoh said to his servants, “Can we find such a one as this, a man in whom is the Spirit of God?”

Genesis 41.39: 39 Pharaoh said to Joseph, “Because God has shown you all of this, there is no one so discreet and wise as you.

Genesis 41.40: 40 You shall be over my house. All my people will be ruled according to your word. Only in the throne I will be greater than you.”

Genesis 41.41: 41 Pharaoh said to Joseph, “Behold, I have set you over all the land of Egypt.”

Genesis 41.42: 42 Pharaoh took off his signet ring from his hand, and put it on Joseph’s hand, and arrayed him in robes of fine linen, and put a gold chain about his neck.

Genesis 41.43: 43 He made him ride in the second chariot which he had. They cried before him, “Bow the knee!” He set him over all the land of Egypt.

Genesis 41.44: 44 Pharaoh said to Joseph, “I am Pharaoh. Without you, no man shall lift up his hand or his foot in all the land of Egypt.”

Genesis 41.45: 45 Pharaoh called Joseph’s name Zaphenath-Paneah. He gave him Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera priest of On as a wife. Joseph went out over the land of Egypt.

Genesis 41.46: 46 Joseph was thirty years old when he stood before Pharaoh king of Egypt. Joseph went out from the presence of Pharaoh, and went throughout all the land of Egypt.

Genesis 41.47: 47 In the seven plenteous years the earth produced abundantly.

Genesis 41.48: 48 He gathered up all the food of the seven years which were in the land of Egypt, and laid up the food in the cities. He stored food in each city from the fields around that city.

Genesis 41.49: 49 Joseph laid up grain as the sand of the sea, very much, until he stopped counting, for it was without number.

Genesis 41.50: 50 To Joseph were born two sons before the year of famine came, whom Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera priest of On, bore to him.

Genesis 41.51: 51 Joseph called the name of the firstborn Manasseh, “For”, he said, “God has made me forget all my toil, and all my father’s house.”

Genesis 41.52: 52 The name of the second, he called Ephraim: “For God has made me fruitful in the land of my affliction.”

Genesis 41.53: 53 The seven years of plenty, that were in the land of Egypt, came to an end.

Genesis 41.54: 54 The seven years of famine began to come, just as Joseph had said. There was famine in all lands, but in all the land of Egypt there was bread.

Genesis 41.55: 55 When all the land of Egypt was famished, the people cried to Pharaoh for bread, and Pharaoh said to all the Egyptians, “Go to Joseph. What he says to you, do.”

Genesis 41.56: 56 The famine was over all the surface of the earth. Joseph opened all the store houses, and sold to the Egyptians. The famine was severe in the land of Egypt.

Genesis 41.57: 57 All countries came into Egypt, to Joseph, to buy grain, because the famine was severe in all the earth.

Genesis 42.0:

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Genesis 42.1: 1 Now Jacob saw that there was grain in Egypt, and Jacob said to his sons, “Why do you look at one another?”

Genesis 42.2: 2 He said, “Behold, I have heard that there is grain in Egypt. Go down there, and buy for us from there, so that we may live, and not die.”

Genesis 42.3: 3 Joseph’s ten brothers went down to buy grain from Egypt.

Genesis 42.4: 4 But Jacob didn’t send Benjamin, Joseph’s brother, with his brothers; for he said, “Lest perhaps harm happen to him.”

Genesis 42.5: 5 The sons of Israel came to buy among those who came, for the famine was in the land of Canaan.

Genesis 42.6: 6 Joseph was the governor over the land. It was he who sold to all the people of the land. Joseph’s brothers came, and bowed themselves down to him with their faces to the earth.

Genesis 42.7: 7 Joseph saw his brothers, and he recognized them, but acted like a stranger to them, and spoke roughly with them. He said to them, “Where did you come from?”

They said, “From the land of Canaan, to buy food.”

Genesis 42.8: 8 Joseph recognized his brothers, but they didn’t recognize him.

Genesis 42.9: 9 Joseph remembered the dreams which he dreamed about them, and said to them, “You are spies! You have come to see the nakedness of the land.”

Genesis 42.10: 10 They said to him, “No, my lord, but your servants have come to buy food.

Genesis 42.11: 11 We are all one man’s sons; we are honest men. Your servants are not spies.”

Genesis 42.12: 12 He said to them, “No, but you have come to see the nakedness of the land!”

Genesis 42.13: 13 They said, “We, your servants, are twelve brothers, the sons of one man in the land of Canaan; and behold, the youngest is today with our father, and one is no more.”

Genesis 42.14: 14 Joseph said to them, “It is like I told you, saying, ‘You are spies!’

Genesis 42.15: 15 By this you shall be tested. By the life of Pharaoh, you shall not go out from here, unless your youngest brother comes here.

Genesis 42.16: 16 Send one of you, and let him get your brother, and you shall be bound, that your words may be tested, whether there is truth in you, or else by the life of Pharaoh surely you are spies.”

Genesis 42.17: 17 He put them all together into custody for three days.

Genesis 42.18: 18 Joseph said to them the third day, “Do this, and live, for I fear God.

Genesis 42.19: 19 If you are honest men, then let one of your brothers be bound in your prison; but you go, carry grain for the famine of your houses.

Genesis 42.20: 20 Bring your youngest brother to me; so will your words be verified, and you won’t die.”

They did so.

Genesis 42.21: 21 They said to one another, “We are certainly guilty concerning our brother, in that we saw the distress of his soul, when he begged us, and we wouldn’t listen. Therefore this distress has come upon us.”

Genesis 42.22: 22 Reuben answered them, saying, “Didn’t I tell you, saying, ‘Don’t sin against the child,’ and you wouldn’t listen? Therefore also, behold, his blood is required.”

Genesis 42.23: 23 They didn’t know that Joseph understood them; for there was an interpreter between them.

Genesis 42.24: 24 He turned himself away from them, and wept. Then he returned to them, and spoke to them, and took Simeon from among them, and bound him before their eyes.

Genesis 42.25: 25 Then Joseph gave a command to fill their bags with grain, and to restore each man’s money into his sack, and to give them food for the way. So it was done to them.

Genesis 42.26: 26 They loaded their donkeys with their grain, and departed from there.

Genesis 42.27: 27 As one of them opened his sack to give his donkey food in the lodging place, he saw his money. Behold, it was in the mouth of his sack.

Genesis 42.28: 28 He said to his brothers, “My money is restored! Behold, it is in my sack!” Their hearts failed them, and they turned trembling to one another, saying, “What is this that God has done to us?”

Genesis 42.29: 29 They came to Jacob their father, to the land of Canaan, and told him all that had happened to them, saying,

Genesis 42.30: 30 “The man, the lord of the land, spoke roughly with us, and took us for spies of the country.

Genesis 42.31: 31 We said to him, ‘We are honest men. We are no spies.

Genesis 42.32: 32 We are twelve brothers, sons of our father; one is no more, and the youngest is today with our father in the land of Canaan.’

Genesis 42.33: 33 The man, the lord of the land, said to us, ‘By this I will know that you are honest men: leave one of your brothers with me, and take grain for the famine of your houses, and go your way.

Genesis 42.34: 34 Bring your youngest brother to me. Then I will know that you are not spies, but that you are honest men. So I will deliver your brother to you, and you shall trade in the land.’”

Genesis 42.35: 35 As they emptied their sacks, behold, each man’s bundle of money was in his sack. When they and their father saw their bundles of money, they were afraid.

Genesis 42.36: 36 Jacob, their father, said to them, “You have bereaved me of my children! Joseph is no more, Simeon is no more, and you want to take Benjamin away. All these things are against me.”

Genesis 42.37: 37 Reuben spoke to his father, saying, “Kill my two sons, if I don’t bring him to you. Entrust him to my care, and I will bring him to you again.”

Genesis 42.38: 38 He said, “My son shall not go down with you; for his brother is dead, and he only is left. If harm happens to him along the way in which you go, then you will bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to Sheol.”

Genesis 43.0:

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Genesis 43.1: 1 The famine was severe in the land.

Genesis 43.2: 2 When they had eaten up the grain which they had brought out of Egypt, their father said to them, “Go again, buy us a little more food.”

Genesis 43.3: 3 Judah spoke to him, saying, “The man solemnly warned us, saying, ‘You shall not see my face, unless your brother is with you.’

Genesis 43.4: 4 If you’ll send our brother with us, we’ll go down and buy you food;

Genesis 43.5: 5 but if you don’t send him, we won’t go down, for the man said to us, ‘You shall not see my face, unless your brother is with you.’”

Genesis 43.6: 6 Israel said, “Why did you treat me so badly, telling the man that you had another brother?”

Genesis 43.7: 7 They said, “The man asked directly concerning ourselves, and concerning our relatives, saying, ‘Is your father still alive? Have you another brother?’ We just answered his questions. Is there any way we could know that he would say, ‘Bring your brother down?’”

Genesis 43.8: 8 Judah said to Israel, his father, “Send the boy with me, and we’ll get up and go, so that we may live, and not die, both we, and you, and also our little ones.

Genesis 43.9: 9 I’ll be collateral for him. From my hand will you require him. If I don’t bring him to you, and set him before you, then let me bear the blame forever;

Genesis 43.10: 10 for if we hadn’t delayed, surely we would have returned a second time by now.”

Genesis 43.11: 11 Their father, Israel, said to them, “If it must be so, then do this: Take from the choice fruits of the land in your bags, and carry down a present for the man, a little balm, a little honey, spices and myrrh, nuts, and almonds;

Genesis 43.12: 12 and take double money in your hand, and take back the money that was returned in the mouth of your sacks. Perhaps it was an oversight.

Genesis 43.13: 13 Take your brother also, get up, and return to the man.

Genesis 43.14: 14 May God Almighty give you mercy before the man, that he may release to you your other brother and Benjamin. If I am bereaved of my children, I am bereaved.”

Genesis 43.15: 15 The men took that present, and they took double money in their hand, and Benjamin; and got up, went down to Egypt, and stood before Joseph.

Genesis 43.16: 16 When Joseph saw Benjamin with them, he said to the steward of his house, “Bring the men into the house, and butcher an animal, and prepare; for the men will dine with me at noon.”

Genesis 43.17: 17 The man did as Joseph commanded, and the man brought the men to Joseph’s house.

Genesis 43.18: 18 The men were afraid, because they were brought to Joseph’s house; and they said, “Because of the money that was returned in our sacks the first time, we’re brought in; that he may seek occasion against us, attack us, and seize us as slaves, along with our donkeys.”

Genesis 43.19: 19 They came near to the steward of Joseph’s house, and they spoke to him at the door of the house,

Genesis 43.20: 20 and said, “Oh, my lord, we indeed came down the first time to buy food.

Genesis 43.21: 21 When we came to the lodging place, we opened our sacks, and behold, each man’s money was in the mouth of his sack, our money in full weight. We have brought it back in our hand.

Genesis 43.22: 22 We have brought down other money in our hand to buy food. We don’t know who put our money in our sacks.”

Genesis 43.23: 23 He said, “Peace be to you. Don’t be afraid. Your God, and the God of your father, has given you treasure in your sacks. I received your money.” He brought Simeon out to them.

Genesis 43.24: 24 The man brought the men into Joseph’s house, and gave them water, and they washed their feet. He gave their donkeys fodder.

Genesis 43.25: 25 They prepared the present for Joseph’s coming at noon, for they heard that they should eat bread there.

Genesis 43.26: 26 When Joseph came home, they brought him the present which was in their hand into the house, and bowed themselves down to the earth before him.

Genesis 43.27: 27 He asked them of their welfare, and said, “Is your father well, the old man of whom you spoke? Is he yet alive?”

Genesis 43.28: 28 They said, “Your servant, our father, is well. He is still alive.” They bowed down humbly.

Genesis 43.29: 29 He lifted up his eyes, and saw Benjamin, his brother, his mother’s son, and said, “Is this your youngest brother, of whom you spoke to me?” He said, “God be gracious to you, my son.”

Genesis 43.30: 30 Joseph hurried, for his heart yearned over his brother; and he sought a place to weep. He entered into his room, and wept there.

Genesis 43.31: 31 He washed his face, and came out. He controlled himself, and said, “Serve the meal.”

Genesis 43.32: 32 They served him by himself, and them by themselves, and the Egyptians who ate with him by themselves, because the Egyptians don’t eat with the Hebrews, for that is an abomination to the Egyptians.

Genesis 43.33: 33 They sat before him, the firstborn according to his birthright, and the youngest according to his youth, and the men marveled with one another.

Genesis 43.34: 34 He sent portions to them from before him, but Benjamin’s portion was five times as much as any of theirs. They drank, and were merry with him.

Genesis 44.0:

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Genesis 44.1: 1 He commanded the steward of his house, saying, “Fill the men’s sacks with food, as much as they can carry, and put each man’s money in his sack’s mouth.

Genesis 44.2: 2 Put my cup, the silver cup, in the sack’s mouth of the youngest, with his grain money.” He did according to the word that Joseph had spoken.

Genesis 44.3: 3 As soon as the morning was light, the men were sent away, they and their donkeys.

Genesis 44.4: 4 When they had gone out of the city, and were not yet far off, Joseph said to his steward, “Up, follow after the men. When you overtake them, ask them, ‘Why have you rewarded evil for good?

Genesis 44.5: 5 Isn’t this that from which my lord drinks, and by which he indeed divines? You have done evil in so doing.’”

Genesis 44.6: 6 He overtook them, and he spoke these words to them.

Genesis 44.7: 7 They said to him, “Why does my lord speak such words as these? Far be it from your servants that they should do such a thing!

Genesis 44.8: 8 Behold, the money, which we found in our sacks’ mouths, we brought again to you out of the land of Canaan. How then should we steal silver or gold out of your lord’s house?

Genesis 44.9: 9 With whomever of your servants it is found, let him die, and we also will be my lord’s slaves.”

Genesis 44.10: 10 He said, “Now also let it be according to your words. He with whom it is found will be my slave; and you will be blameless.”

Genesis 44.11: 11 Then they hurried, and each man took his sack down to the ground, and each man opened his sack.

Genesis 44.12: 12 He searched, beginning with the oldest, and ending at the youngest. The cup was found in Benjamin’s sack.

Genesis 44.13: 13 Then they tore their clothes, and each man loaded his donkey, and returned to the city.

Genesis 44.14: 14 Judah and his brothers came to Joseph’s house, and he was still there. They fell on the ground before him.

Genesis 44.15: 15 Joseph said to them, “What deed is this that you have done? Don’t you know that such a man as I can indeed do divination?”

Genesis 44.16: 16 Judah said, “What will we tell my lord? What will we speak? How will we clear ourselves? God has found out the iniquity of your servants. Behold, we are my lord’s slaves, both we and he also in whose hand the cup is found.”

Genesis 44.17: 17 He said, “Far be it from me that I should do so. The man in whose hand the cup is found, he will be my slave; but as for you, go up in peace to your father.”

Genesis 44.18: 18 Then Judah came near to him, and said, “Oh, my lord, please let your servant speak a word in my lord’s ears, and don’t let your anger burn against your servant; for you are even as Pharaoh.

Genesis 44.19: 19 My lord asked his servants, saying, ‘Have you a father, or a brother?’

Genesis 44.20: 20 We said to my lord, ‘We have a father, an old man, and a child of his old age, a little one; and his brother is dead, and he alone is left of his mother; and his father loves him.’

Genesis 44.21: 21 You said to your servants, ‘Bring him down to me, that I may set my eyes on him.’

Genesis 44.22: 22 We said to my lord, ‘The boy can’t leave his father, for if he should leave his father, his father would die.’

Genesis 44.23: 23 You said to your servants, ‘Unless your youngest brother comes down with you, you will see my face no more.’

Genesis 44.24: 24 When we came up to your servant my father, we told him the words of my lord.

Genesis 44.25: 25 Our father said, ‘Go again and buy us a little food.’

Genesis 44.26: 26 We said, ‘We can’t go down. If our youngest brother is with us, then we will go down: for we may not see the man’s face, unless our youngest brother is with us.’

Genesis 44.27: 27 Your servant, my father, said to us, ‘You know that my wife bore me two sons.

Genesis 44.28: 28 One went out from me, and I said, “Surely he is torn in pieces;” and I haven’t seen him since.

Genesis 44.29: 29 If you take this one also from me, and harm happens to him, you will bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to Sheol.’

Genesis 44.30: 30 Now therefore when I come to your servant my father, and the boy is not with us; since his life is bound up in the boy’s life;

Genesis 44.31: 31 it will happen, when he sees that the boy is no more, that he will die. Your servants will bring down the gray hairs of your servant, our father, with sorrow to Sheol.

Genesis 44.32: 32 For your servant became collateral for the boy to my father, saying, ‘If I don’t bring him to you, then I will bear the blame to my father forever.’

Genesis 44.33: 33 Now therefore, please let your servant stay instead of the boy, my lord’s slave; and let the boy go up with his brothers.

Genesis 44.34: 34 For how will I go up to my father, if the boy isn’t with me?—lest I see the evil that will come on my father.”

Genesis 45.0:

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Genesis 45.1: 1 Then Joseph couldn’t control himself before all those who stood before him, and he called out, “Cause everyone to go out from me!” No one else stood with him, while Joseph made himself known to his brothers.

Genesis 45.2: 2 He wept aloud. The Egyptians heard, and the house of Pharaoh heard.

Genesis 45.3: 3 Joseph said to his brothers, “I am Joseph! Does my father still live?”

His brothers couldn’t answer him; for they were terrified at his presence.

Genesis 45.4: 4 Joseph said to his brothers, “Come near to me, please.”

They came near. He said, “I am Joseph, your brother, whom you sold into Egypt.

Genesis 45.5: 5 Now don’t be grieved, nor angry with yourselves, that you sold me here, for God sent me before you to preserve life.

Genesis 45.6: 6 For these two years the famine has been in the land, and there are yet five years, in which there will be no plowing and no harvest.

Genesis 45.7: 7 God sent me before you to preserve for you a remnant in the earth, and to save you alive by a great deliverance.

Genesis 45.8: 8 So now it wasn’t you who sent me here, but God, and he has made me a father to Pharaoh, lord of all his house, and ruler over all the land of Egypt.

Genesis 45.9: 9 Hurry, and go up to my father, and tell him, ‘This is what your son Joseph says, “God has made me lord of all Egypt. Come down to me. Don’t wait.

Genesis 45.10: 10 You shall dwell in the land of Goshen, and you will be near to me, you, your children, your children’s children, your flocks, your herds, and all that you have.

Genesis 45.11: 11 There I will provide for you; for there are yet five years of famine; lest you come to poverty, you, and your household, and all that you have.”’

Genesis 45.12: 12 Behold, your eyes see, and the eyes of my brother Benjamin, that it is my mouth that speaks to you.

Genesis 45.13: 13 You shall tell my father of all my glory in Egypt, and of all that you have seen. You shall hurry and bring my father down here.”

Genesis 45.14: 14 He fell on his brother Benjamin’s neck and wept, and Benjamin wept on his neck.

Genesis 45.15: 15 He kissed all his brothers, and wept on them. After that his brothers talked with him.

Genesis 45.16: 16 The report of it was heard in Pharaoh’s house, saying, “Joseph’s brothers have come.” It pleased Pharaoh well, and his servants.

Genesis 45.17: 17 Pharaoh said to Joseph, “Tell your brothers, ‘Do this: Load your animals, and go, travel to the land of Canaan.

Genesis 45.18: 18 Take your father and your households, and come to me, and I will give you the good of the land of Egypt, and you will eat the fat of the land.’

Genesis 45.19: 19 Now you are commanded to do this: Take wagons out of the land of Egypt for your little ones, and for your wives, and bring your father, and come.

Genesis 45.20: 20 Also, don’t concern yourselves about your belongings, for the good of all the land of Egypt is yours.”

Genesis 45.21: 21 The sons of Israel did so. Joseph gave them wagons, according to the commandment of Pharaoh, and gave them provision for the way.

Genesis 45.22: 22 He gave each one of them changes of clothing, but to Benjamin he gave three hundred pieces of silver and five changes of clothing.

Genesis 45.23: 23 He sent the following to his father: ten donkeys loaded with the good things of Egypt, and ten female donkeys loaded with grain and bread and provision for his father by the way.

Genesis 45.24: 24 So he sent his brothers away, and they departed. He said to them, “See that you don’t quarrel on the way.”

Genesis 45.25: 25 They went up out of Egypt, and came into the land of Canaan, to Jacob their father.

Genesis 45.26: 26 They told him, saying, “Joseph is still alive, and he is ruler over all the land of Egypt.” His heart fainted, for he didn’t believe them.

Genesis 45.27: 27 They told him all the words of Joseph, which he had said to them. When he saw the wagons which Joseph had sent to carry him, the spirit of Jacob, their father, revived.

Genesis 45.28: 28 Israel said, “It is enough. Joseph my son is still alive. I will go and see him before I die.”

Genesis 46.0:

46

Genesis 46.1: 1 Israel traveled with all that he had, and came to Beersheba, and offered sacrifices to the God of his father, Isaac.

Genesis 46.2: 2 God spoke to Israel in the visions of the night, and said, “Jacob, Jacob!”

He said, “Here I am.”

Genesis 46.3: 3 He said, “I am God, the God of your father. Don’t be afraid to go down into Egypt, for there I will make of you a great nation.

Genesis 46.4: 4 I will go down with you into Egypt. I will also surely bring you up again. Joseph’s hand will close your eyes.”

Genesis 46.5: 5 Jacob rose up from Beersheba, and the sons of Israel carried Jacob, their father, their little ones, and their wives, in the wagons which Pharaoh had sent to carry him.

Genesis 46.6: 6 They took their livestock, and their goods, which they had gotten in the land of Canaan, and came into Egypt—Jacob, and all his offspring with him,

Genesis 46.7: 7 his sons, and his sons’ sons with him, his daughters, and his sons’ daughters, and he brought all his offspring with him into Egypt.

Genesis 46.8: 8 These are the names of the children of Israel, who came into Egypt, Jacob and his sons: Reuben, Jacob’s firstborn.

Genesis 46.9: 9 The sons of Reuben: Hanoch, Pallu, Hezron, and Carmi.

Genesis 46.10: 10 The sons of Simeon: Jemuel, Jamin, Ohad, Jachin, Zohar, and Shaul the son of a Canaanite woman.

Genesis 46.11: 11 The sons of Levi: Gershon, Kohath, and Merari.

Genesis 46.12: 12 The sons of Judah: Er, Onan, Shelah, Perez, and Zerah; but Er and Onan died in the land of Canaan. The sons of Perez were Hezron and Hamul.

Genesis 46.13: 13 The sons of Issachar: Tola, Puvah, Iob, and Shimron.

Genesis 46.14: 14 The sons of Zebulun: Sered, Elon, and Jahleel.

Genesis 46.15: 15 These are the sons of Leah, whom she bore to Jacob in Paddan Aram, with his daughter Dinah. All the souls of his sons and his daughters were thirty-three.

Genesis 46.16: 16 The sons of Gad: Ziphion, Haggi, Shuni, Ezbon, Eri, Arodi, and Areli.

Genesis 46.17: 17 The sons of Asher: Imnah, Ishvah, Ishvi, Beriah, and Serah their sister. The sons of Beriah: Heber and Malchiel.

Genesis 46.18: 18 These are the sons of Zilpah, whom Laban gave to Leah, his daughter, and these she bore to Jacob, even sixteen souls.

Genesis 46.19: 19 The sons of Rachel, Jacob’s wife: Joseph and Benjamin.

Genesis 46.20: 20 To Joseph in the land of Egypt were born Manasseh and Ephraim, whom Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera, priest of On, bore to him.

Genesis 46.21: 21 The sons of Benjamin: Bela, Becher, Ashbel, Gera, Naaman, Ehi, Rosh, Muppim, Huppim, and Ard.

Genesis 46.22: 22 These are the sons of Rachel, who were born to Jacob: all the souls were fourteen.

Genesis 46.23: 23 The son of Dan: Hushim.

Genesis 46.24: 24 The sons of Naphtali: Jahzeel, Guni, Jezer, and Shillem.

Genesis 46.25: 25 These are the sons of Bilhah, whom Laban gave to Rachel, his daughter, and these she bore to Jacob: all the souls were seven.

Genesis 46.26: 26 All the souls who came with Jacob into Egypt, who were his direct offspring, in addition to Jacob’s sons’ wives, all the souls were sixty-six.

Genesis 46.27: 27 The sons of Joseph, who were born to him in Egypt, were two souls. All the souls of the house of Jacob, who came into Egypt, were seventy.

Genesis 46.28: 28 Jacob sent Judah before him to Joseph, to show the way before him to Goshen, and they came into the land of Goshen.

Genesis 46.29: 29 Joseph prepared his chariot, and went up to meet Israel, his father, in Goshen. He presented himself to him, and fell on his neck, and wept on his neck a good while.

Genesis 46.30: 30 Israel said to Joseph, “Now let me die, since I have seen your face, that you are still alive.”

Genesis 46.31: 31 Joseph said to his brothers, and to his father’s house, “I will go up, and speak with Pharaoh, and will tell him, ‘My brothers, and my father’s house, who were in the land of Canaan, have come to me.

Genesis 46.32: 32 These men are shepherds, for they have been keepers of livestock, and they have brought their flocks, and their herds, and all that they have.’

Genesis 46.33: 33 It will happen, when Pharaoh summons you, and will say, ‘What is your occupation?’

Genesis 46.34: 34 that you shall say, ‘Your servants have been keepers of livestock from our youth even until now, both we, and our fathers:’ that you may dwell in the land of Goshen; for every shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians.”

Genesis 47.0:

47

Genesis 47.1: 1 Then Joseph went in and told Pharaoh, and said, “My father and my brothers, with their flocks, their herds, and all that they own, have come out of the land of Canaan; and behold, they are in the land of Goshen.”

Genesis 47.2: 2 From among his brothers he took five men, and presented them to Pharaoh.

Genesis 47.3: 3 Pharaoh said to his brothers, “What is your occupation?”

They said to Pharaoh, “Your servants are shepherds, both we, and our fathers.”

Genesis 47.4: 4 They also said to Pharaoh, “We have come to live as foreigners in the land, for there is no pasture for your servants’ flocks. For the famine is severe in the land of Canaan. Now therefore, please let your servants dwell in the land of Goshen.”

Genesis 47.5: 5 Pharaoh spoke to Joseph, saying, “Your father and your brothers have come to you.

Genesis 47.6: 6 The land of Egypt is before you. Make your father and your brothers dwell in the best of the land. Let them dwell in the land of Goshen. If you know any able men among them, then put them in charge of my livestock.”

Genesis 47.7: 7 Joseph brought in Jacob, his father, and set him before Pharaoh; and Jacob blessed Pharaoh.

Genesis 47.8: 8 Pharaoh said to Jacob, “How old are you?”

Genesis 47.9: 9 Jacob said to Pharaoh, “The years of my pilgrimage are one hundred thirty years. The days of the years of my life have been few and evil. They have not attained to the days of the years of the life of my fathers in the days of their pilgrimage.”

Genesis 47.10: 10 Jacob blessed Pharaoh, and went out from the presence of Pharaoh.

Genesis 47.11: 11 Joseph placed his father and his brothers, and gave them a possession in the land of Egypt, in the best of the land, in the land of Rameses, as Pharaoh had commanded.

Genesis 47.12: 12 Joseph provided his father, his brothers, and all of his father’s household with bread, according to the sizes of their families.

Genesis 47.13: 13 There was no bread in all the land; for the famine was very severe, so that the land of Egypt and the land of Canaan fainted by reason of the famine.

Genesis 47.14: 14 Joseph gathered up all the money that was found in the land of Egypt, and in the land of Canaan, for the grain which they bought: and Joseph brought the money into Pharaoh’s house.

Genesis 47.15: 15 When the money was all spent in the land of Egypt, and in the land of Canaan, all the Egyptians came to Joseph, and said, “Give us bread, for why should we die in your presence? For our money fails.”

Genesis 47.16: 16 Joseph said, “Give me your livestock; and I will give you food for your livestock, if your money is gone.”

Genesis 47.17: 17 They brought their livestock to Joseph, and Joseph gave them bread in exchange for the horses, and for the flocks, and for the herds, and for the donkeys: and he fed them with bread in exchange for all their livestock for that year.

Genesis 47.18: 18 When that year was ended, they came to him the second year, and said to him, “We will not hide from my lord how our money is all spent, and the herds of livestock are my lord’s. There is nothing left in the sight of my lord, but our bodies, and our lands.

Genesis 47.19: 19 Why should we die before your eyes, both we and our land? Buy us and our land for bread, and we and our land will be servants to Pharaoh. Give us seed, that we may live, and not die, and that the land won’t be desolate.”

Genesis 47.20: 20 So Joseph bought all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh, for every man of the Egyptians sold his field, because the famine was severe on them, and the land became Pharaoh’s.

Genesis 47.21: 21 As for the people, he moved them to the cities from one end of the border of Egypt even to the other end of it.

Genesis 47.22: 22 Only he didn’t buy the land of the priests, for the priests had a portion from Pharaoh, and ate their portion which Pharaoh gave them. That is why they didn’t sell their land.

Genesis 47.23: 23 Then Joseph said to the people, “Behold, I have bought you and your land today for Pharaoh. Behold, here is seed for you, and you shall sow the land.

Genesis 47.24: 24 It will happen at the harvests, that you shall give a fifth to Pharaoh, and four parts will be your own, for seed of the field, for your food, for them of your households, and for food for your little ones.”

Genesis 47.25: 25 They said, “You have saved our lives! Let us find favor in the sight of my lord, and we will be Pharaoh’s servants.”

Genesis 47.26: 26 Joseph made it a statute concerning the land of Egypt to this day, that Pharaoh should have the fifth. Only the land of the priests alone didn’t become Pharaoh’s.

Genesis 47.27: 27 Israel lived in the land of Egypt, in the land of Goshen; and they got themselves possessions therein, and were fruitful, and multiplied exceedingly.

Genesis 47.28: 28 Jacob lived in the land of Egypt seventeen years. So the days of Jacob, the years of his life, were one hundred forty-seven years.

Genesis 47.29: 29 The time came near that Israel must die, and he called his son Joseph, and said to him, “If now I have found favor in your sight, please put your hand under my thigh, and deal kindly and truly with me. Please don’t bury me in Egypt,

Genesis 47.30: 30 but when I sleep with my fathers, you shall carry me out of Egypt, and bury me in their burying place.”

Joseph said, “I will do as you have said.”

Genesis 47.31: 31 Israel said, “Swear to me,” and he swore to him. Then Israel bowed himself on the bed’s head.

Genesis 48.0:

48

Genesis 48.1: 1 After these things, someone said to Joseph, “Behold, your father is sick.” He took with him his two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim.

Genesis 48.2: 2 Someone told Jacob, and said, “Behold, your son Joseph comes to you,” and Israel strengthened himself, and sat on the bed.

Genesis 48.3: 3 Jacob said to Joseph, “God Almighty appeared to me at Luz in the land of Canaan, and blessed me,

Genesis 48.4: 4 and said to me, ‘Behold, I will make you fruitful, and multiply you, and I will make of you a company of peoples, and will give this land to your offspring after you for an everlasting possession.’

Genesis 48.5: 5 Now your two sons, who were born to you in the land of Egypt before I came to you into Egypt, are mine; Ephraim and Manasseh, even as Reuben and Simeon, will be mine.

Genesis 48.6: 6 Your offspring, whom you become the father of after them, will be yours. They will be called after the name of their brothers in their inheritance.

Genesis 48.7: 7 As for me, when I came from Paddan, Rachel died beside me in the land of Canaan on the way, when there was still some distance to come to Ephrath, and I buried her there on the way to Ephrath (also called Bethlehem).”

Genesis 48.8: 8 Israel saw Joseph’s sons, and said, “Who are these?”

Genesis 48.9: 9 Joseph said to his father, “They are my sons, whom God has given me here.”

He said, “Please bring them to me, and I will bless them.”

Genesis 48.10: 10 Now the eyes of Israel were dim for age, so that he couldn’t see well. Joseph brought them near to him; and he kissed them, and embraced them.

Genesis 48.11: 11 Israel said to Joseph, “I didn’t think I would see your face, and behold, God has let me see your offspring also.”

Genesis 48.12: 12 Joseph brought them out from between his knees, and he bowed himself with his face to the earth.

Genesis 48.13: 13 Joseph took them both, Ephraim in his right hand toward Israel’s left hand, and Manasseh in his left hand toward Israel’s right hand, and brought them near to him.

Genesis 48.14: 14 Israel stretched out his right hand, and laid it on Ephraim’s head, who was the younger, and his left hand on Manasseh’s head, guiding his hands knowingly, for Manasseh was the firstborn.

Genesis 48.15: 15 He blessed Joseph, and said,

“The God before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac walked,

the God who has fed me all my life long to this day,

Genesis 48.16: 16 the angel who has redeemed me from all evil, bless the lads,

and let my name be named on them,

and the name of my fathers Abraham and Isaac.

Let them grow into a multitude upon the earth.”

Genesis 48.17: 17 When Joseph saw that his father laid his right hand on the head of Ephraim, it displeased him. He held up his father’s hand, to remove it from Ephraim’s head to Manasseh’s head.

Genesis 48.18: 18 Joseph said to his father, “Not so, my father, for this is the firstborn. Put your right hand on his head.”

Genesis 48.19: 19 His father refused, and said, “I know, my son, I know. He also will become a people, and he also will be great. However, his younger brother will be greater than he, and his offspring will become a multitude of nations.”

Genesis 48.20: 20 He blessed them that day, saying, “Israel will bless in you, saying, ‘God make you as Ephraim and as Manasseh’” He set Ephraim before Manasseh.

Genesis 48.21: 21 Israel said to Joseph, “Behold, I am dying, but God will be with you, and bring you again to the land of your fathers.

Genesis 48.22: 22 Moreover I have given to you one portion above your brothers, which I took out of the hand of the Amorite with my sword and with my bow.”

Genesis 49.0:

49

Genesis 49.1: 1 Jacob called to his sons, and said: “Gather yourselves together, that I may tell you that which will happen to you in the days to come.

Genesis 49.2: 2 Assemble yourselves, and hear, you sons of Jacob.

Listen to Israel, your father.

Genesis 49.3: 3 “Reuben, you are my firstborn, my might, and the beginning of my strength;

excelling in dignity, and excelling in power.

Genesis 49.4: 4 Boiling over like water, you shall not excel;

because you went up to your father’s bed,

then defiled it. He went up to my couch.

Genesis 49.5: 5 “Simeon and Levi are brothers.

Their swords are weapons of violence.

Genesis 49.6: 6 My soul, don’t come into their council.

My glory, don’t be united to their assembly;

for in their anger they killed men.

In their self-will they hamstrung cattle.

Genesis 49.7: 7 Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce;

and their wrath, for it was cruel.

I will divide them in Jacob,

and scatter them in Israel.

Genesis 49.8: 8 “Judah, your brothers will praise you.

Your hand will be on the neck of your enemies.

Your father’s sons will bow down before you.

Genesis 49.9: 9 Judah is a lion’s cub.

From the prey, my son, you have gone up.

He stooped down, he crouched as a lion,

as a lioness.

Who will rouse him up?

Genesis 49.10: 10 The scepter will not depart from Judah,

nor the ruler’s staff from between his feet,

until he comes to whom it belongs.

To him will the obedience of the peoples be.

Genesis 49.11: 11 Binding his foal to the vine,

his donkey’s colt to the choice vine;

he has washed his garments in wine,

his robes in the blood of grapes.

Genesis 49.12: 12 His eyes will be red with wine,

his teeth white with milk.

Genesis 49.13: 13 “Zebulun will dwell at the haven of the sea.

He will be for a haven of ships.

His border will be on Sidon.

Genesis 49.14: 14 “Issachar is a strong donkey,

lying down between the saddlebags.

Genesis 49.15: 15 He saw a resting place, that it was good,

the land, that it was pleasant.

He bows his shoulder to the burden,

and becomes a servant doing forced labor.

Genesis 49.16: 16 “Dan will judge his people,

as one of the tribes of Israel.

Genesis 49.17: 17 Dan will be a serpent on the trail,

an adder in the path,

that bites the horse’s heels,

so that his rider falls backward.

Genesis 49.18: 18 I have waited for your salvation, Yahweh.

Genesis 49.19: 19 “A troop will press on Gad,

but he will press on their heel.

Genesis 49.20: 20 “Asher’s food will be rich.

He will produce royal dainties.

Genesis 49.21: 21 “Naphtali is a doe set free,

who bears beautiful fawns.

Genesis 49.22: 22 “Joseph is a fruitful vine,

a fruitful vine by a spring.

His branches run over the wall.

Genesis 49.23: 23 The archers have severely grieved him,

shot at him, and persecuted him:

Genesis 49.24: 24 But his bow remained strong.

The arms of his hands were made strong,

by the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob,

(from there is the shepherd, the stone of Israel),

Genesis 49.25: 25 even by the God of your father, who will help you,

by the Almighty, who will bless you,

with blessings of heaven above,

blessings of the deep that lies below,

blessings of the breasts, and of the womb.

Genesis 49.26: 26 The blessings of your father have prevailed above the blessings of your ancestors,

above the boundaries of the ancient hills.

They will be on the head of Joseph,

on the crown of the head of him who is separated from his brothers.

Genesis 49.27: 27 “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf.

In the morning he will devour the prey.

At evening he will divide the plunder.”

Genesis 49.28: 28 All these are the twelve tribes of Israel, and this is what their father spoke to them, and blessed them. He blessed everyone according to his own blessing.

Genesis 49.29: 29 He instructed them, and said to them, “I am to be gathered to my people. Bury me with my fathers in the cave that is in the field of Ephron the Hittite,

Genesis 49.30: 30 in the cave that is in the field of Machpelah, which is before Mamre, in the land of Canaan, which Abraham bought with the field from Ephron the Hittite as a burial place.

Genesis 49.31: 31 There they buried Abraham and Sarah, his wife. There they buried Isaac and Rebekah, his wife, and there I buried Leah:

Genesis 49.32: 32 the field and the cave that is therein, which was purchased from the children of Heth.”

Genesis 49.33: 33 When Jacob finished charging his sons, he gathered up his feet into the bed, breathed his last breath, and was gathered to his people.

Genesis 50.0:

50

Genesis 50.1: 1 Joseph fell on his father’s face, wept on him, and kissed him.

Genesis 50.2: 2 Joseph commanded his servants, the physicians, to embalm his father; and the physicians embalmed Israel.

Genesis 50.3: 3 Forty days were used for him, for that is how many the days it takes to embalm. The Egyptians wept for Israel for seventy days.

Genesis 50.4: 4 When the days of weeping for him were past, Joseph spoke to Pharaoh’s staff, saying, “If now I have found favor in your eyes, please speak in the ears of Pharaoh, saying,

Genesis 50.5: 5 ‘My father made me swear, saying, “Behold, I am dying. Bury me in my grave which I have dug for myself in the land of Canaan.” Now therefore, please let me go up and bury my father, and I will come again.’”

Genesis 50.6: 6 Pharaoh said, “Go up, and bury your father, just like he made you swear.”

Genesis 50.7: 7 Joseph went up to bury his father; and with him went up all the servants of Pharaoh, the elders of his house, all the elders of the land of Egypt,

Genesis 50.8: 8 All the house of Joseph, his brothers, and his father’s house. Only their little ones, their flocks, and their herds, they left in the land of Goshen.

Genesis 50.9: 9 There went up with him both chariots and horsemen. It was a very great company.

Genesis 50.10: 10 They came to the threshing floor of Atad, which is beyond the Jordan, and there they lamented with a very great and severe lamentation. He mourned for his father seven days.

Genesis 50.11: 11 When the inhabitants of the land, the Canaanites, saw the mourning in the floor of Atad, they said, “This is a grievous mourning by the Egyptians.” Therefore its name was called Abel Mizraim, which is beyond the Jordan.

Genesis 50.12: 12 His sons did to him just as he commanded them,

Genesis 50.13: 13 for his sons carried him into the land of Canaan, and buried him in the cave of the field of Machpelah, which Abraham bought with the field, as a possession for a burial site, from Ephron the Hittite, near Mamre.

Genesis 50.14: 14 Joseph returned into Egypt—he, and his brothers, and all that went up with him to bury his father, after he had buried his father.

Genesis 50.15: 15 When Joseph’s brothers saw that their father was dead, they said, “It may be that Joseph will hate us, and will fully pay us back for all the evil which we did to him.”

Genesis 50.16: 16 They sent a message to Joseph, saying, “Your father commanded before he died, saying,

Genesis 50.17: 17 ‘You shall tell Joseph, “Now please forgive the disobedience of your brothers, and their sin, because they did evil to you.”’ Now, please forgive the disobedience of the servants of the God of your father.” Joseph wept when they spoke to him.

Genesis 50.18: 18 His brothers also went and fell down before his face; and they said, “Behold, we are your servants.”

Genesis 50.19: 19 Joseph said to them, “Don’t be afraid, for am I in the place of God?

Genesis 50.20: 20 As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, to save many people alive, as is happening today.

Genesis 50.21: 21 Now therefore don’t be afraid. I will provide for you and your little ones.” He comforted them, and spoke kindly to them.

Genesis 50.22: 22 Joseph lived in Egypt, he, and his father’s house. Joseph lived one hundred ten years.

Genesis 50.23: 23 Joseph saw Ephraim’s children to the third generation. The children also of Machir, the son of Manasseh, were born on Joseph’s knees.

Genesis 50.24: 24 Joseph said to his brothers, “I am dying, but God will surely visit you, and bring you up out of this land to the land which he swore to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob.”

Genesis 50.25: 25 Joseph took an oath from the children of Israel, saying, “God will surely visit you, and you shall carry up my bones from here.”

Genesis 50.26: 26 So Joseph died, being one hundred ten years old, and they embalmed him, and he was put in a coffin in Egypt.

Exodus 0.0:

The Second Book of Moses,

Commonly Called

Exodus

Exodus 1.0:

1

Exodus 1.1: 1 Now these are the names of the sons of Israel, who came into Egypt (every man and his household came with Jacob):

Exodus 1.2: 2 Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah,

Exodus 1.3: 3 Issachar, Zebulun, and Benjamin,

Exodus 1.4: 4 Dan and Naphtali, Gad and Asher.

Exodus 1.5: 5 All the souls who came out of Jacob’s body were seventy souls, and Joseph was in Egypt already.

Exodus 1.6: 6 Joseph died, as did all his brothers, and all that generation.

Exodus 1.7: 7 The children of Israel were fruitful, and increased abundantly, and multiplied, and grew exceedingly mighty; and the land was filled with them.

Exodus 1.8: 8 Now there arose a new king over Egypt, who didn’t know Joseph.

Exodus 1.9: 9 He said to his people, “Behold, the people of the children of Israel are more and mightier than we.

Exodus 1.10: 10 Come, let’s deal wisely with them, lest they multiply, and it happen that when any war breaks out, they also join themselves to our enemies and fight against us, and escape out of the land.”

Exodus 1.11: 11 Therefore they set taskmasters over them to afflict them with their burdens. They built storage cities for Pharaoh: Pithom and Raamses.

Exodus 1.12: 12 But the more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied and the more they spread out. They started to dread the children of Israel.

Exodus 1.13: 13 The Egyptians ruthlessly made the children of Israel serve,

Exodus 1.14: 14 and they made their lives bitter with hard service in mortar and in brick, and in all kinds of service in the field, all their service, in which they ruthlessly made them serve.

Exodus 1.15: 15 The king of Egypt spoke to the Hebrew midwives, of whom the name of the one was Shiphrah, and the name of the other Puah,

Exodus 1.16: 16 and he said, “When you perform the duty of a midwife to the Hebrew women, and see them on the birth stool, if it is a son, then you shall kill him; but if it is a daughter, then she shall live.”

Exodus 1.17: 17 But the midwives feared God, and didn’t do what the king of Egypt commanded them, but saved the baby boys alive.

Exodus 1.18: 18 The king of Egypt called for the midwives, and said to them, “Why have you done this thing and saved the boys alive?”

Exodus 1.19: 19 The midwives said to Pharaoh, “Because the Hebrew women aren’t like the Egyptian women; for they are vigorous and give birth before the midwife comes to them.”

Exodus 1.20: 20 God dealt well with the midwives, and the people multiplied, and grew very mighty.

Exodus 1.21: 21 Because the midwives feared God, he gave them families.

Exodus 1.22: 22 Pharaoh commanded all his people, saying, “You shall cast every son who is born into the river, and every daughter you shall save alive.”

Exodus 2.0:

2

Exodus 2.1: 1 A man of the house of Levi went and took a daughter of Levi as his wife.

Exodus 2.2: 2 The woman conceived and bore a son. When she saw that he was a fine child, she hid him three months.

Exodus 2.3: 3 When she could no longer hide him, she took a papyrus basket for him, and coated it with tar and with pitch. She put the child in it, and laid it in the reeds by the river’s bank.

Exodus 2.4: 4 His sister stood far off, to see what would be done to him.

Exodus 2.5: 5 Pharaoh’s daughter came down to bathe at the river. Her maidens walked along by the riverside. She saw the basket among the reeds, and sent her servant to get it.

Exodus 2.6: 6 She opened it, and saw the child, and behold, the baby cried. She had compassion on him, and said, “This is one of the Hebrews’ children.”

Exodus 2.7: 7 Then his sister said to Pharaoh’s daughter, “Should I go and call a nurse for you from the Hebrew women, that she may nurse the child for you?”

Exodus 2.8: 8 Pharaoh’s daughter said to her, “Go.”

The young woman went and called the child’s mother.

Exodus 2.9: 9 Pharaoh’s daughter said to her, “Take this child away, and nurse him for me, and I will give you your wages.”

The woman took the child, and nursed it.

Exodus 2.10: 10 The child grew, and she brought him to Pharaoh’s daughter, and he became her son. She named him Moses, and said, “Because I drew him out of the water.”

Exodus 2.11: 11 In those days, when Moses had grown up, he went out to his brothers and saw their burdens. He saw an Egyptian striking a Hebrew, one of his brothers.

Exodus 2.12: 12 He looked this way and that way, and when he saw that there was no one, he killed the Egyptian, and hid him in the sand.

Exodus 2.13: 13 He went out the second day, and behold, two men of the Hebrews were fighting with each other. He said to him who did the wrong, “Why do you strike your fellow?”

Exodus 2.14: 14 He said, “Who made you a prince and a judge over us? Do you plan to kill me, as you killed the Egyptian?”

Moses was afraid, and said, “Surely this thing is known.”

Exodus 2.15: 15 Now when Pharaoh heard this thing, he sought to kill Moses. But Moses fled from the face of Pharaoh, and lived in the land of Midian, and he sat down by a well.

Exodus 2.16: 16 Now the priest of Midian had seven daughters. They came and drew water, and filled the troughs to water their father’s flock.

Exodus 2.17: 17 The shepherds came and drove them away; but Moses stood up and helped them, and watered their flock.

Exodus 2.18: 18 When they came to Reuel, their father, he said, “How is it that you have returned so early today?”

Exodus 2.19: 19 They said, “An Egyptian delivered us out of the hand of the shepherds, and moreover he drew water for us, and watered the flock.”

Exodus 2.20: 20 He said to his daughters, “Where is he? Why is it that you have left the man? Call him, that he may eat bread.”

Exodus 2.21: 21 Moses was content to dwell with the man. He gave Moses Zipporah, his daughter.

Exodus 2.22: 22 She bore a son, and he named him Gershom, for he said, “I have lived as a foreigner in a foreign land.”

Exodus 2.23: 23 In the course of those many days, the king of Egypt died, and the children of Israel sighed because of the bondage, and they cried, and their cry came up to God because of the bondage.

Exodus 2.24: 24 God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob.

Exodus 2.25: 25 God saw the children of Israel, and God was concerned about them.

Exodus 3.0:

3

Exodus 3.1: 1 Now Moses was keeping the flock of Jethro, his father-in-law, the priest of Midian, and he led the flock to the back of the wilderness, and came to God’s mountain, to Horeb.

Exodus 3.2: 2 Yahweh’s angel appeared to him in a flame of fire out of the middle of a bush. He looked, and behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed.

Exodus 3.3: 3 Moses said, “I will go now, and see this great sight, why the bush is not burned.”

Exodus 3.4: 4 When Yahweh saw that he came over to see, God called to him out of the middle of the bush, and said, “Moses! Moses!”

He said, “Here I am.”

Exodus 3.5: 5 He said, “Don’t come close. Take off your sandals, for the place you are standing on is holy ground.”

Exodus 3.6: 6 Moreover he said, “I am the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.”

Moses hid his face because he was afraid to look at God.

Exodus 3.7: 7 Yahweh said, “I have surely seen the affliction of my people who are in Egypt, and have heard their cry because of their taskmasters, for I know their sorrows.

Exodus 3.8: 8 I have come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land to a good and large land, to a land flowing with milk and honey; to the place of the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Amorite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite.

Exodus 3.9: 9 Now, behold, the cry of the children of Israel has come to me. Moreover I have seen the oppression with which the Egyptians oppress them.

Exodus 3.10: 10 Come now therefore, and I will send you to Pharaoh, that you may bring my people, the children of Israel, out of Egypt.”

Exodus 3.11: 11 Moses said to God, “Who am I, that I should go to Pharaoh, and that I should bring the children of Israel out of Egypt?”

Exodus 3.12: 12 He said, “Certainly I will be with you. This will be the token to you, that I have sent you: when you have brought the people out of Egypt, you shall serve God on this mountain.”

Exodus 3.13: 13 Moses said to God, “Behold, when I come to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘The God of your fathers has sent me to you,’ and they ask me, ‘What is his name?’ what should I tell them?”

Exodus 3.14: 14 God said to Moses, “I AM WHO I AM,” and he said, “You shall tell the children of Israel this: ‘I AM has sent me to you.’”

Exodus 3.15: 15 God said moreover to Moses, “You shall tell the children of Israel this, ‘Yahweh, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you.’ This is my name forever, and this is my memorial to all generations.

Exodus 3.16: 16 Go and gather the elders of Israel together, and tell them, ‘Yahweh, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, has appeared to me, saying, “I have surely visited you, and seen that which is done to you in Egypt.

Exodus 3.17: 17 I have said, I will bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt to the land of the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Amorite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite, to a land flowing with milk and honey.”’

Exodus 3.18: 18 They will listen to your voice. You shall come, you and the elders of Israel, to the king of Egypt, and you shall tell him, ‘Yahweh, the God of the Hebrews, has met with us. Now please let us go three days’ journey into the wilderness, that we may sacrifice to Yahweh, our God.’

Exodus 3.19: 19 I know that the king of Egypt won’t give you permission to go, no, not by a mighty hand.

Exodus 3.20: 20 I will reach out my hand and strike Egypt with all my wonders which I will do among them, and after that he will let you go.

Exodus 3.21: 21 I will give this people favor in the sight of the Egyptians, and it will happen that when you go, you shall not go empty-handed.

Exodus 3.22: 22 But every woman shall ask of her neighbor, and of her who visits her house, jewels of silver, jewels of gold, and clothing. You shall put them on your sons, and on your daughters. You shall plunder the Egyptians.”

Exodus 4.0:

4

Exodus 4.1: 1 Moses answered, “But, behold, they will not believe me, nor listen to my voice; for they will say, ‘Yahweh has not appeared to you.’”

Exodus 4.2: 2 Yahweh said to him, “What is that in your hand?”

He said, “A rod.”

Exodus 4.3: 3 He said, “Throw it on the ground.”

He threw it on the ground, and it became a snake; and Moses ran away from it.

Exodus 4.4: 4 Yahweh said to Moses, “Stretch out your hand, and take it by the tail.”

He stretched out his hand, and took hold of it, and it became a rod in his hand.

Exodus 4.5: 5 “This is so that they may believe that Yahweh, the God of their fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has appeared to you.”

Exodus 4.6: 6 Yahweh said furthermore to him, “Now put your hand inside your cloak.”

He put his hand inside his cloak, and when he took it out, behold, his hand was leprous, as white as snow.

Exodus 4.7: 7 He said, “Put your hand inside your cloak again.”

He put his hand inside his cloak again, and when he took it out of his cloak, behold, it had turned again as his other flesh.

Exodus 4.8: 8 “It will happen, if they will not believe you or listen to the voice of the first sign, that they will believe the voice of the latter sign.

Exodus 4.9: 9 It will happen, if they will not believe even these two signs or listen to your voice, that you shall take of the water of the river, and pour it on the dry land. The water which you take out of the river will become blood on the dry land.”

Exodus 4.10: 10 Moses said to Yahweh, “O Lord, I am not eloquent, neither before now, nor since you have spoken to your servant; for I am slow of speech, and of a slow tongue.”

Exodus 4.11: 11 Yahweh said to him, “Who made man’s mouth? Or who makes one mute, or deaf, or seeing, or blind? Isn’t it I, Yahweh?

Exodus 4.12: 12 Now therefore go, and I will be with your mouth, and teach you what you shall speak.”

Exodus 4.13: 13 Moses said, “Oh, Lord, please send someone else.”

Exodus 4.14: 14 Yahweh’s anger burned against Moses, and he said, “What about Aaron, your brother, the Levite? I know that he can speak well. Also, behold, he is coming out to meet you. When he sees you, he will be glad in his heart.

Exodus 4.15: 15 You shall speak to him, and put the words in his mouth. I will be with your mouth, and with his mouth, and will teach you what you shall do.

Exodus 4.16: 16 He will be your spokesman to the people. It will happen that he will be to you a mouth, and you will be to him as God.

Exodus 4.17: 17 You shall take this rod in your hand, with which you shall do the signs.”

Exodus 4.18: 18 Moses went and returned to Jethro his father-in-law, and said to him, “Please let me go and return to my brothers who are in Egypt, and see whether they are still alive.”

Jethro said to Moses, “Go in peace.”

Exodus 4.19: 19 Yahweh said to Moses in Midian, “Go, return into Egypt; for all the men who sought your life are dead.”

Exodus 4.20: 20 Moses took his wife and his sons, and set them on a donkey, and he returned to the land of Egypt. Moses took God’s rod in his hand.

Exodus 4.21: 21 Yahweh said to Moses, “When you go back into Egypt, see that you do before Pharaoh all the wonders which I have put in your hand, but I will harden his heart and he will not let the people go.

Exodus 4.22: 22 You shall tell Pharaoh, ‘Yahweh says, Israel is my son, my firstborn,

Exodus 4.23: 23 and I have said to you, “Let my son go, that he may serve me;” and you have refused to let him go. Behold, I will kill your firstborn son.’”

Exodus 4.24: 24 On the way at a lodging place, Yahweh met Moses and wanted to kill him.

Exodus 4.25: 25 Then Zipporah took a flint, and cut off the foreskin of her son, and cast it at his feet; and she said, “Surely you are a bridegroom of blood to me.”

Exodus 4.26: 26 So he let him alone. Then she said, “You are a bridegroom of blood,” because of the circumcision.

Exodus 4.27: 27 Yahweh said to Aaron, “Go into the wilderness to meet Moses.”

He went, and met him on God’s mountain, and kissed him.

Exodus 4.28: 28 Moses told Aaron all Yahweh’s words with which he had sent him, and all the signs with which he had instructed him.

Exodus 4.29: 29 Moses and Aaron went and gathered together all the elders of the children of Israel.

Exodus 4.30: 30 Aaron spoke all the words which Yahweh had spoken to Moses, and did the signs in the sight of the people.

Exodus 4.31: 31 The people believed, and when they heard that Yahweh had visited the children of Israel, and that he had seen their affliction, then they bowed their heads and worshiped.

Exodus 5.0:

5

Exodus 5.1: 1 Afterward Moses and Aaron came, and said to Pharaoh, “This is what Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, ‘Let my people go, that they may hold a feast to me in the wilderness.’”

Exodus 5.2: 2 Pharaoh said, “Who is Yahweh, that I should listen to his voice to let Israel go? I don’t know Yahweh, and moreover I will not let Israel go.”

Exodus 5.3: 3 They said, “The God of the Hebrews has met with us. Please let us go three days’ journey into the wilderness, and sacrifice to Yahweh, our God, lest he fall on us with pestilence, or with the sword.”

Exodus 5.4: 4 The king of Egypt said to them, “Why do you, Moses and Aaron, take the people from their work? Get back to your burdens!”

Exodus 5.5: 5 Pharaoh said, “Behold, the people of the land are now many, and you make them rest from their burdens.”

Exodus 5.6: 6 The same day Pharaoh commanded the taskmasters of the people and their officers, saying,

Exodus 5.7: 7 “You shall no longer give the people straw to make brick, as before. Let them go and gather straw for themselves.

Exodus 5.8: 8 You shall require from them the number of the bricks which they made before. You shall not diminish anything of it, for they are idle. Therefore they cry, saying, ‘Let’s go and sacrifice to our God.’

Exodus 5.9: 9 Let heavier work be laid on the men, that they may labor in it. Don’t let them pay any attention to lying words.”

Exodus 5.10: 10 The taskmasters of the people went out, and their officers, and they spoke to the people, saying, “This is what Pharaoh says: ‘I will not give you straw.

Exodus 5.11: 11 Go yourselves, get straw where you can find it, for nothing of your work shall be diminished.’”

Exodus 5.12: 12 So the people were scattered abroad throughout all the land of Egypt to gather stubble for straw.

Exodus 5.13: 13 The taskmasters were urgent saying, “Fulfill your work quota daily, as when there was straw!”

Exodus 5.14: 14 The officers of the children of Israel, whom Pharaoh’s taskmasters had set over them, were beaten, and were asked, “Why haven’t you fulfilled your quota both yesterday and today, in making brick as before?”

Exodus 5.15: 15 Then the officers of the children of Israel came and cried to Pharaoh, saying, “Why do you deal this way with your servants?

Exodus 5.16: 16 No straw is given to your servants, and they tell us, ‘Make brick!’ and behold, your servants are beaten; but the fault is in your own people.”

Exodus 5.17: 17 But Pharaoh said, “You are idle! You are idle! Therefore you say, ‘Let’s go and sacrifice to Yahweh.’

Exodus 5.18: 18 Go therefore now, and work; for no straw shall be given to you; yet you shall deliver the same number of bricks!”

Exodus 5.19: 19 The officers of the children of Israel saw that they were in trouble when it was said, “You shall not diminish anything from your daily quota of bricks!”

Exodus 5.20: 20 They met Moses and Aaron, who stood along the way, as they came out from Pharaoh.

Exodus 5.21: 21 They said to them, “May Yahweh look at you and judge, because you have made us a stench to be abhorred in the eyes of Pharaoh, and in the eyes of his servants, to put a sword in their hand to kill us!”

Exodus 5.22: 22 Moses returned to Yahweh, and said, “Lord, why have you brought trouble on this people? Why is it that you have sent me?

Exodus 5.23: 23 For since I came to Pharaoh to speak in your name, he has brought trouble on this people. You have not rescued your people at all!”

Exodus 6.0:

6

Exodus 6.1: 1 Yahweh said to Moses, “Now you shall see what I will do to Pharaoh, for by a strong hand he shall let them go, and by a strong hand he shall drive them out of his land.”

Exodus 6.2: 2 God spoke to Moses, and said to him, “I am Yahweh.

Exodus 6.3: 3 I appeared to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, as God Almighty; but by my name Yahweh I was not known to them.

Exodus 6.4: 4 I have also established my covenant with them, to give them the land of Canaan, the land of their travels, in which they lived as aliens.

Exodus 6.5: 5 Moreover I have heard the groaning of the children of Israel, whom the Egyptians keep in bondage, and I have remembered my covenant.

Exodus 6.6: 6 Therefore tell the children of Israel, ‘I am Yahweh, and I will bring you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians, and I will rid you out of their bondage, and I will redeem you with an outstretched arm, and with great judgments.

Exodus 6.7: 7 I will take you to myself for a people. I will be your God; and you shall know that I am Yahweh your God, who brings you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians.

Exodus 6.8: 8 I will bring you into the land which I swore to give to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob; and I will give it to you for a heritage: I am Yahweh.’”

Exodus 6.9: 9 Moses spoke so to the children of Israel, but they didn’t listen to Moses for anguish of spirit, and for cruel bondage.

Exodus 6.10: 10 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 6.11: 11 “Go in, speak to Pharaoh king of Egypt, that he let the children of Israel go out of his land.”

Exodus 6.12: 12 Moses spoke before Yahweh, saying, “Behold, the children of Israel haven’t listened to me. How then shall Pharaoh listen to me, when I have uncircumcised lips?”

Exodus 6.13: 13 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, and gave them a command to the children of Israel, and to Pharaoh king of Egypt, to bring the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt.

Exodus 6.14: 14 These are the heads of their fathers’ houses. The sons of Reuben the firstborn of Israel: Hanoch, and Pallu, Hezron, and Carmi; these are the families of Reuben.

Exodus 6.15: 15 The sons of Simeon: Jemuel, and Jamin, and Ohad, and Jachin, and Zohar, and Shaul the son of a Canaanite woman; these are the families of Simeon.

Exodus 6.16: 16 These are the names of the sons of Levi according to their generations: Gershon, and Kohath, and Merari; and the years of the life of Levi were one hundred thirty-seven years.

Exodus 6.17: 17 The sons of Gershon: Libni and Shimei, according to their families.

Exodus 6.18: 18 The sons of Kohath: Amram, and Izhar, and Hebron, and Uzziel; and the years of the life of Kohath were one hundred thirty-three years.

Exodus 6.19: 19 The sons of Merari: Mahli and Mushi. These are the families of the Levites according to their generations.

Exodus 6.20: 20 Amram took Jochebed his father’s sister to himself as wife; and she bore him Aaron and Moses. The years of the life of Amram were one hundred thirty-seven years.

Exodus 6.21: 21 The sons of Izhar: Korah, and Nepheg, and Zichri.

Exodus 6.22: 22 The sons of Uzziel: Mishael, and Elzaphan, and Sithri.

Exodus 6.23: 23 Aaron took Elisheba, the daughter of Amminadab, the sister of Nahshon, as his wife; and she bore him Nadab and Abihu, Eleazar and Ithamar.

Exodus 6.24: 24 The sons of Korah: Assir, and Elkanah, and Abiasaph; these are the families of the Korahites.

Exodus 6.25: 25 Eleazar Aaron’s son took one of the daughters of Putiel as his wife; and she bore him Phinehas. These are the heads of the fathers’ houses of the Levites according to their families.

Exodus 6.26: 26 These are that Aaron and Moses to whom Yahweh said, “Bring out the children of Israel from the land of Egypt according to their armies.”

Exodus 6.27: 27 These are those who spoke to Pharaoh king of Egypt, to bring out the children of Israel from Egypt. These are that Moses and Aaron.

Exodus 6.28: 28 On the day when Yahweh spoke to Moses in the land of Egypt,

Exodus 6.29: 29 Yahweh said to Moses, “I am Yahweh. Tell Pharaoh king of Egypt all that I tell you.”

Exodus 6.30: 30 Moses said before Yahweh, “Behold, I am of uncircumcised lips, and how shall Pharaoh listen to me?”

Exodus 7.0:

7

Exodus 7.1: 1 Yahweh said to Moses, “Behold, I have made you as God to Pharaoh; and Aaron your brother shall be your prophet.

Exodus 7.2: 2 You shall speak all that I command you; and Aaron your brother shall speak to Pharaoh, that he let the children of Israel go out of his land.

Exodus 7.3: 3 I will harden Pharaoh’s heart, and multiply my signs and my wonders in the land of Egypt.

Exodus 7.4: 4 But Pharaoh will not listen to you, so I will lay my hand on Egypt, and bring out my armies, my people the children of Israel, out of the land of Egypt by great judgments.

Exodus 7.5: 5 The Egyptians shall know that I am Yahweh when I stretch out my hand on Egypt, and bring the children of Israel out from among them.”

Exodus 7.6: 6 Moses and Aaron did so. As Yahweh commanded them, so they did.

Exodus 7.7: 7 Moses was eighty years old, and Aaron eighty-three years old, when they spoke to Pharaoh.

Exodus 7.8: 8 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Exodus 7.9: 9 “When Pharaoh speaks to you, saying, ‘Perform a miracle!’ then you shall tell Aaron, ‘Take your rod, and cast it down before Pharaoh, and it will become a serpent.’”

Exodus 7.10: 10 Moses and Aaron went in to Pharaoh, and they did so, as Yahweh had commanded. Aaron cast down his rod before Pharaoh and before his servants, and it became a serpent.

Exodus 7.11: 11 Then Pharaoh also called for the wise men and the sorcerers. They also, the magicians of Egypt, did the same thing with their enchantments.

Exodus 7.12: 12 For they each cast down their rods, and they became serpents; but Aaron’s rod swallowed up their rods.

Exodus 7.13: 13 Pharaoh’s heart was hardened, and he didn’t listen to them, as Yahweh had spoken.

Exodus 7.14: 14 Yahweh said to Moses, “Pharaoh’s heart is stubborn. He refuses to let the people go.

Exodus 7.15: 15 Go to Pharaoh in the morning. Behold, he is going out to the water. You shall stand by the river’s bank to meet him. You shall take the rod which was turned to a serpent in your hand.

Exodus 7.16: 16 You shall tell him, ‘Yahweh, the God of the Hebrews, has sent me to you, saying, “Let my people go, that they may serve me in the wilderness. Behold, until now you haven’t listened.”

Exodus 7.17: 17 Yahweh says, “In this you shall know that I am Yahweh. Behold: I will strike with the rod that is in my hand on the waters which are in the river, and they shall be turned to blood.

Exodus 7.18: 18 The fish that are in the river will die and the river will become foul. The Egyptians will loathe to drink water from the river.”’”

Exodus 7.19: 19 Yahweh said to Moses, “Tell Aaron, ‘Take your rod, and stretch out your hand over the waters of Egypt, over their rivers, over their streams, and over their pools, and over all their ponds of water, that they may become blood. There will be blood throughout all the land of Egypt, both in vessels of wood and in vessels of stone.’”

Exodus 7.20: 20 Moses and Aaron did so, as Yahweh commanded; and he lifted up the rod, and struck the waters that were in the river, in the sight of Pharaoh, and in the sight of his servants; and all the waters that were in the river were turned to blood.

Exodus 7.21: 21 The fish that were in the river died. The river became foul. The Egyptians couldn’t drink water from the river. The blood was throughout all the land of Egypt.

Exodus 7.22: 22 The magicians of Egypt did the same thing with their enchantments. So Pharaoh’s heart was hardened, and he didn’t listen to them, as Yahweh had spoken.

Exodus 7.23: 23 Pharaoh turned and went into his house, and he didn’t even take this to heart.

Exodus 7.24: 24 All the Egyptians dug around the river for water to drink; for they couldn’t drink the river water.

Exodus 7.25: 25 Seven days were fulfilled, after Yahweh had struck the river.

Exodus 8.0:

8

Exodus 8.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, “Go in to Pharaoh, and tell him, ‘This is what Yahweh says, “Let my people go, that they may serve me.

Exodus 8.2: 2 If you refuse to let them go, behold, I will plague all your borders with frogs.

Exodus 8.3: 3 The river will swarm with frogs, which will go up and come into your house, and into your bedroom, and on your bed, and into the house of your servants, and on your people, and into your ovens, and into your kneading troughs.

Exodus 8.4: 4 The frogs shall come up both on you, and on your people, and on all your servants.”’”

Exodus 8.5: 5 Yahweh said to Moses, “Tell Aaron, ‘Stretch out your hand with your rod over the rivers, over the streams, and over the pools, and cause frogs to come up on the land of Egypt.’”

Exodus 8.6: 6 Aaron stretched out his hand over the waters of Egypt; and the frogs came up, and covered the land of Egypt.

Exodus 8.7: 7 The magicians did the same thing with their enchantments, and brought up frogs on the land of Egypt.

Exodus 8.8: 8 Then Pharaoh called for Moses and Aaron, and said, “Entreat Yahweh, that he take away the frogs from me and from my people; and I will let the people go, that they may sacrifice to Yahweh.”

Exodus 8.9: 9 Moses said to Pharaoh, “I give you the honor of setting the time that I should pray for you, and for your servants, and for your people, that the frogs be destroyed from you and your houses, and remain in the river only.”

Exodus 8.10: 10 Pharaoh said, “Tomorrow.”

Moses said, “Let it be according to your word, that you may know that there is no one like Yahweh our God.

Exodus 8.11: 11 The frogs shall depart from you, and from your houses, and from your servants, and from your people. They shall remain in the river only.”

Exodus 8.12: 12 Moses and Aaron went out from Pharaoh, and Moses cried to Yahweh concerning the frogs which he had brought on Pharaoh.

Exodus 8.13: 13 Yahweh did according to the word of Moses, and the frogs died out of the houses, out of the courts, and out of the fields.

Exodus 8.14: 14 They gathered them together in heaps, and the land stank.

Exodus 8.15: 15 But when Pharaoh saw that there was a respite, he hardened his heart, and didn’t listen to them, as Yahweh had spoken.

Exodus 8.16: 16 Yahweh said to Moses, “Tell Aaron, ‘Stretch out your rod, and strike the dust of the earth, that it may become lice throughout all the land of Egypt.’”

Exodus 8.17: 17 They did so; and Aaron stretched out his hand with his rod, and struck the dust of the earth, and there were lice on man, and on animal; all the dust of the earth became lice throughout all the land of Egypt.

Exodus 8.18: 18 The magicians tried with their enchantments to produce lice, but they couldn’t. There were lice on man, and on animal.

Exodus 8.19: 19 Then the magicians said to Pharaoh, “This is God’s finger;” but Pharaoh’s heart was hardened, and he didn’t listen to them, as Yahweh had spoken.

Exodus 8.20: 20 Yahweh said to Moses, “Rise up early in the morning, and stand before Pharaoh; behold, he comes out to the water; and tell him, ‘This is what Yahweh says, “Let my people go, that they may serve me.

Exodus 8.21: 21 Else, if you will not let my people go, behold, I will send swarms of flies on you, and on your servants, and on your people, and into your houses. The houses of the Egyptians shall be full of swarms of flies, and also the ground they are on.

Exodus 8.22: 22 I will set apart in that day the land of Goshen, in which my people dwell, that no swarms of flies shall be there, to the end you may know that I am Yahweh on the earth.

Exodus 8.23: 23 I will put a division between my people and your people. This sign shall happen by tomorrow.”’”

Exodus 8.24: 24 Yahweh did so; and there came grievous swarms of flies into the house of Pharaoh, and into his servants’ houses. In all the land of Egypt the land was corrupted by reason of the swarms of flies.

Exodus 8.25: 25 Pharaoh called for Moses and for Aaron, and said, “Go, sacrifice to your God in the land!”

Exodus 8.26: 26 Moses said, “It isn’t appropriate to do so; for we shall sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians to Yahweh our God. Behold, if we sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians before their eyes, won’t they stone us?

Exodus 8.27: 27 We will go three days’ journey into the wilderness, and sacrifice to Yahweh our God, as he shall command us.”

Exodus 8.28: 28 Pharaoh said, “I will let you go, that you may sacrifice to Yahweh your God in the wilderness, only you shall not go very far away. Pray for me.”

Exodus 8.29: 29 Moses said, “Behold, I am going out from you. I will pray to Yahweh that the swarms of flies may depart from Pharaoh, from his servants, and from his people, tomorrow; only don’t let Pharaoh deal deceitfully any more in not letting the people go to sacrifice to Yahweh.”

Exodus 8.30: 30 Moses went out from Pharaoh, and prayed to Yahweh.

Exodus 8.31: 31 Yahweh did according to the word of Moses, and he removed the swarms of flies from Pharaoh, from his servants, and from his people. There remained not one.

Exodus 8.32: 32 Pharaoh hardened his heart this time also, and he didn’t let the people go.

Exodus 9.0:

9

Exodus 9.1: 1 Then Yahweh said to Moses, “Go in to Pharaoh, and tell him, ‘This is what Yahweh, the God of the Hebrews, says: “Let my people go, that they may serve me.

Exodus 9.2: 2 For if you refuse to let them go, and hold them still,

Exodus 9.3: 3 behold, Yahweh’s hand is on your livestock which are in the field, on the horses, on the donkeys, on the camels, on the herds, and on the flocks with a very grievous pestilence.

Exodus 9.4: 4 Yahweh will make a distinction between the livestock of Israel and the livestock of Egypt; and nothing shall die of all that belongs to the children of Israel.”’”

Exodus 9.5: 5 Yahweh appointed a set time, saying, “Tomorrow Yahweh shall do this thing in the land.”

Exodus 9.6: 6 Yahweh did that thing on the next day; and all the livestock of Egypt died, but of the livestock of the children of Israel, not one died.

Exodus 9.7: 7 Pharaoh sent, and, behold, there was not so much as one of the livestock of the Israelites dead. But the heart of Pharaoh was stubborn, and he didn’t let the people go.

Exodus 9.8: 8 Yahweh said to Moses and to Aaron, “Take handfuls of ashes of the furnace, and let Moses sprinkle it toward the sky in the sight of Pharaoh.

Exodus 9.9: 9 It shall become small dust over all the land of Egypt, and shall be a boils and blisters breaking out on man and on animal, throughout all the land of Egypt.”

Exodus 9.10: 10 They took ashes of the furnace, and stood before Pharaoh; and Moses sprinkled it up toward the sky; and it became boils and blisters breaking on man and on animal.

Exodus 9.11: 11 The magicians couldn’t stand before Moses because of the boils; for the boils were on the magicians and on all the Egyptians.

Exodus 9.12: 12 Yahweh hardened the heart of Pharaoh, and he didn’t listen to them, as Yahweh had spoken to Moses.

Exodus 9.13: 13 Yahweh said to Moses, “Rise up early in the morning, and stand before Pharaoh, and tell him, ‘This is what Yahweh, the God of the Hebrews, says: “Let my people go, that they may serve me.

Exodus 9.14: 14 For this time I will send all my plagues against your heart, against your officials, and against your people; that you may know that there is no one like me in all the earth.

Exodus 9.15: 15 For now I would have stretched out my hand, and struck you and your people with pestilence, and you would have been cut off from the earth;

Exodus 9.16: 16 but indeed for this cause I have made you stand: to show you my power, and that my name may be declared throughout all the earth,

Exodus 9.17: 17 because you still exalt yourself against my people, that you won’t let them go.

Exodus 9.18: 18 Behold, tomorrow about this time I will cause it to rain a very grievous hail, such as has not been in Egypt since the day it was founded even until now.

Exodus 9.19: 19 Now therefore command that all of your livestock and all that you have in the field be brought into shelter. The hail will come down on every man and animal that is found in the field, and isn’t brought home, and they will die.”’”

Exodus 9.20: 20 Those who feared Yahweh’s word among the servants of Pharaoh made their servants and their livestock flee into the houses.

Exodus 9.21: 21 Whoever didn’t respect Yahweh’s word left his servants and his livestock in the field.

Exodus 9.22: 22 Yahweh said to Moses, “Stretch out your hand toward the sky, that there may be hail in all the land of Egypt, on man, and on animal, and on every herb of the field, throughout the land of Egypt.”

Exodus 9.23: 23 Moses stretched out his rod toward the heavens, and Yahweh sent thunder and hail; and lightning flashed down to the earth. Yahweh rained hail on the land of Egypt.

Exodus 9.24: 24 So there was very severe hail, and lightning mixed with the hail, such as had not been in all the land of Egypt since it became a nation.

Exodus 9.25: 25 The hail struck throughout all the land of Egypt all that was in the field, both man and animal; and the hail struck every herb of the field, and broke every tree of the field.

Exodus 9.26: 26 Only in the land of Goshen, where the children of Israel were, there was no hail.

Exodus 9.27: 27 Pharaoh sent and called for Moses and Aaron, and said to them, “I have sinned this time. Yahweh is righteous, and I and my people are wicked.

Exodus 9.28: 28 Pray to Yahweh; for there has been enough of mighty thunderings and hail. I will let you go, and you shall stay no longer.”

Exodus 9.29: 29 Moses said to him, “As soon as I have gone out of the city, I will spread out my hands to Yahweh. The thunders shall cease, and there will not be any more hail; that you may know that the earth is Yahweh’s.

Exodus 9.30: 30 But as for you and your servants, I know that you don’t yet fear Yahweh God.”

Exodus 9.31: 31 The flax and the barley were struck, for the barley had ripened and the flax was blooming.

Exodus 9.32: 32 But the wheat and the spelt were not struck, for they had not grown up.

Exodus 9.33: 33 Moses went out of the city from Pharaoh, and spread out his hands to Yahweh; and the thunders and hail ceased, and the rain was not poured on the earth.

Exodus 9.34: 34 When Pharaoh saw that the rain and the hail and the thunders had ceased, he sinned yet more, and hardened his heart, he and his servants.

Exodus 9.35: 35 The heart of Pharaoh was hardened, and he didn’t let the children of Israel go, just as Yahweh had spoken through Moses.

Exodus 10.0:

10

Exodus 10.1: 1 Yahweh said to Moses, “Go in to Pharaoh, for I have hardened his heart and the heart of his servants, that I may show these my signs among them;

Exodus 10.2: 2 and that you may tell in the hearing of your son, and of your son’s son, what things I have done to Egypt, and my signs which I have done among them; that you may know that I am Yahweh.”

Exodus 10.3: 3 Moses and Aaron went in to Pharaoh, and said to him, “This is what Yahweh, the God of the Hebrews, says: ‘How long will you refuse to humble yourself before me? Let my people go, that they may serve me.

Exodus 10.4: 4 Or else, if you refuse to let my people go, behold, tomorrow I will bring locusts into your country,

Exodus 10.5: 5 and they shall cover the surface of the earth, so that one won’t be able to see the earth. They shall eat the residue of that which has escaped, which remains to you from the hail, and shall eat every tree which grows for you out of the field.

Exodus 10.6: 6 Your houses shall be filled, and the houses of all your servants, and the houses of all the Egyptians, as neither your fathers nor your fathers’ fathers have seen, since the day that they were on the earth to this day.’” He turned, and went out from Pharaoh.

Exodus 10.7: 7 Pharaoh’s servants said to him, “How long will this man be a snare to us? Let the men go, that they may serve Yahweh, their God. Don’t you yet know that Egypt is destroyed?”

Exodus 10.8: 8 Moses and Aaron were brought again to Pharaoh, and he said to them, “Go, serve Yahweh your God; but who are those who will go?”

Exodus 10.9: 9 Moses said, “We will go with our young and with our old. We will go with our sons and with our daughters, with our flocks and with our herds; for we must hold a feast to Yahweh.”

Exodus 10.10: 10 He said to them, “Yahweh be with you if I let you go with your little ones! See, evil is clearly before your faces.

Exodus 10.11: 11 Not so! Go now you who are men, and serve Yahweh; for that is what you desire!” Then they were driven out from Pharaoh’s presence.

Exodus 10.12: 12 Yahweh said to Moses, “Stretch out your hand over the land of Egypt for the locusts, that they may come up on the land of Egypt, and eat every herb of the land, even all that the hail has left.”

Exodus 10.13: 13 Moses stretched out his rod over the land of Egypt, and Yahweh brought an east wind on the land all that day, and all night; and when it was morning, the east wind brought the locusts.

Exodus 10.14: 14 The locusts went up over all the land of Egypt, and rested in all the borders of Egypt. They were very grievous. Before them there were no such locusts as they, nor will there ever be again.

Exodus 10.15: 15 For they covered the surface of the whole earth, so that the land was darkened, and they ate every herb of the land, and all the fruit of the trees which the hail had left. There remained nothing green, either tree or herb of the field, through all the land of Egypt.

Exodus 10.16: 16 Then Pharaoh called for Moses and Aaron in haste, and he said, “I have sinned against Yahweh your God, and against you.

Exodus 10.17: 17 Now therefore please forgive my sin again, and pray to Yahweh your God, that he may also take away from me this death.”

Exodus 10.18: 18 Moses went out from Pharaoh, and prayed to Yahweh.

Exodus 10.19: 19 Yahweh sent an exceedingly strong west wind, which took up the locusts, and drove them into the Red Sea. There remained not one locust in all the borders of Egypt.

Exodus 10.20: 20 But Yahweh hardened Pharaoh’s heart, and he didn’t let the children of Israel go.

Exodus 10.21: 21 Yahweh said to Moses, “Stretch out your hand toward the sky, that there may be darkness over the land of Egypt, even darkness which may be felt.”

Exodus 10.22: 22 Moses stretched out his hand toward the sky, and there was a thick darkness in all the land of Egypt for three days.

Exodus 10.23: 23 They didn’t see one another, and nobody rose from his place for three days; but all the children of Israel had light in their dwellings.

Exodus 10.24: 24 Pharaoh called to Moses, and said, “Go, serve Yahweh. Only let your flocks and your herds stay behind. Let your little ones also go with you.”

Exodus 10.25: 25 Moses said, “You must also give into our hand sacrifices and burnt offerings, that we may sacrifice to Yahweh our God.

Exodus 10.26: 26 Our livestock also shall go with us. Not a hoof shall be left behind, for of it we must take to serve Yahweh our God; and we don’t know with what we must serve Yahweh, until we come there.”

Exodus 10.27: 27 But Yahweh hardened Pharaoh’s heart, and he wouldn’t let them go.

Exodus 10.28: 28 Pharaoh said to him, “Get away from me! Be careful to see my face no more; for in the day you see my face you shall die!”

Exodus 10.29: 29 Moses said, “You have spoken well. I will see your face again no more.”

Exodus 11.0:

11

Exodus 11.1: 1 Yahweh said to Moses, “I will bring yet one more plague on Pharaoh, and on Egypt; afterwards he will let you go. When he lets you go, he will surely thrust you out altogether.

Exodus 11.2: 2 Speak now in the ears of the people, and let every man ask of his neighbor, and every woman of her neighbor, jewels of silver, and jewels of gold.”

Exodus 11.3: 3 Yahweh gave the people favor in the sight of the Egyptians. Moreover, the man Moses was very great in the land of Egypt, in the sight of Pharaoh’s servants, and in the sight of the people.

Exodus 11.4: 4 Moses said, “This is what Yahweh says: ‘About midnight I will go out into the middle of Egypt,

Exodus 11.5: 5 and all the firstborn in the land of Egypt shall die, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sits on his throne, even to the firstborn of the female servant who is behind the mill, and all the firstborn of livestock.

Exodus 11.6: 6 There will be a great cry throughout all the land of Egypt, such as there has not been, nor will be any more.

Exodus 11.7: 7 But against any of the children of Israel a dog won’t even bark or move its tongue, against man or animal, that you may know that Yahweh makes a distinction between the Egyptians and Israel.

Exodus 11.8: 8 All these servants of yours will come down to me, and bow down themselves to me, saying, “Get out, with all the people who follow you;” and after that I will go out.’” He went out from Pharaoh in hot anger.

Exodus 11.9: 9 Yahweh said to Moses, “Pharaoh won’t listen to you, that my wonders may be multiplied in the land of Egypt.”

Exodus 11.10: 10 Moses and Aaron did all these wonders before Pharaoh, but Yahweh hardened Pharaoh’s heart, and he didn’t let the children of Israel go out of his land.

Exodus 12.0:

12

Exodus 12.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, saying,

Exodus 12.2: 2 “This month shall be to you the beginning of months. It shall be the first month of the year to you.

Exodus 12.3: 3 Speak to all the congregation of Israel, saying, ‘On the tenth day of this month, they shall take to them every man a lamb, according to their fathers’ houses, a lamb for a household;

Exodus 12.4: 4 and if the household is too little for a lamb, then he and his neighbor next to his house shall take one according to the number of the souls. You shall make your count for the lamb according to what everyone can eat.

Exodus 12.5: 5 Your lamb shall be without defect, a male a year old. You shall take it from the sheep, or from the goats.

Exodus 12.6: 6 You shall keep it until the fourteenth day of the same month; and the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel shall kill it at evening.

Exodus 12.7: 7 They shall take some of the blood, and put it on the two door posts and on the lintel, on the houses in which they shall eat it.

Exodus 12.8: 8 They shall eat the meat in that night, roasted with fire, and unleavened bread. They shall eat it with bitter herbs.

Exodus 12.9: 9 Don’t eat it raw, nor boiled at all with water, but roasted with fire; with its head, its legs and its inner parts.

Exodus 12.10: 10 You shall let nothing of it remain until the morning; but that which remains of it until the morning you shall burn with fire.

Exodus 12.11: 11 This is how you shall eat it: with your belt on your waist, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand; and you shall eat it in haste: it is Yahweh’s Passover.

Exodus 12.12: 12 For I will go through the land of Egypt in that night, and will strike all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and animal. I will execute judgments against all the gods of Egypt. I am Yahweh.

Exodus 12.13: 13 The blood shall be to you for a token on the houses where you are. When I see the blood, I will pass over you, and no plague will be on you to destroy you when I strike the land of Egypt.

Exodus 12.14: 14 This day shall be a memorial for you. You shall keep it as a feast to Yahweh. You shall keep it as a feast throughout your generations by an ordinance forever.

Exodus 12.15: 15 “‘Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread; even the first day you shall put away yeast out of your houses, for whoever eats leavened bread from the first day until the seventh day, that soul shall be cut off from Israel.

Exodus 12.16: 16 In the first day there shall be to you a holy convocation, and in the seventh day a holy convocation; no kind of work shall be done in them, except that which every man must eat, only that may be done by you.

Exodus 12.17: 17 You shall observe the feast of unleavened bread; for in this same day I have brought your armies out of the land of Egypt. Therefore you shall observe this day throughout your generations by an ordinance forever.

Exodus 12.18: 18 In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month at evening, you shall eat unleavened bread, until the twenty first day of the month at evening.

Exodus 12.19: 19 There shall be no yeast found in your houses for seven days, for whoever eats that which is leavened, that soul shall be cut off from the congregation of Israel, whether he is a foreigner, or one who is born in the land.

Exodus 12.20: 20 You shall eat nothing leavened. In all your habitations you shall eat unleavened bread.’”

Exodus 12.21: 21 Then Moses called for all the elders of Israel, and said to them, “Draw out, and take lambs according to your families, and kill the Passover.

Exodus 12.22: 22 You shall take a bunch of hyssop, and dip it in the blood that is in the basin, and strike the lintel and the two door posts with the blood that is in the basin. None of you shall go out of the door of his house until the morning.

Exodus 12.23: 23 For Yahweh will pass through to strike the Egyptians; and when he sees the blood on the lintel, and on the two door posts, Yahweh will pass over the door, and will not allow the destroyer to come in to your houses to strike you.

Exodus 12.24: 24 You shall observe this thing for an ordinance to you and to your sons forever.

Exodus 12.25: 25 It shall happen when you have come to the land which Yahweh will give you, as he has promised, that you shall keep this service.

Exodus 12.26: 26 It will happen, when your children ask you, ‘What do you mean by this service?’

Exodus 12.27: 27 that you shall say, ‘It is the sacrifice of Yahweh’s Passover, who passed over the houses of the children of Israel in Egypt, when he struck the Egyptians, and spared our houses.’”

The people bowed their heads and worshiped.

Exodus 12.28: 28 The children of Israel went and did so; as Yahweh had commanded Moses and Aaron, so they did.

Exodus 12.29: 29 At midnight, Yahweh struck all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of the captive who was in the dungeon, and all the firstborn of livestock.

Exodus 12.30: 30 Pharaoh rose up in the night, he, and all his servants, and all the Egyptians; and there was a great cry in Egypt, for there was not a house where there was not one dead.

Exodus 12.31: 31 He called for Moses and Aaron by night, and said, “Rise up, get out from among my people, both you and the children of Israel; and go, serve Yahweh, as you have said!

Exodus 12.32: 32 Take both your flocks and your herds, as you have said, and be gone; and bless me also!”

Exodus 12.33: 33 The Egyptians were urgent with the people, to send them out of the land in haste, for they said, “We are all dead men.”

Exodus 12.34: 34 The people took their dough before it was leavened, their kneading troughs being bound up in their clothes on their shoulders.

Exodus 12.35: 35 The children of Israel did according to the word of Moses; and they asked of the Egyptians jewels of silver, and jewels of gold, and clothing.

Exodus 12.36: 36 Yahweh gave the people favor in the sight of the Egyptians, so that they let them have what they asked. They plundered the Egyptians.

Exodus 12.37: 37 The children of Israel traveled from Rameses to Succoth, about six hundred thousand on foot who were men, in addition to children.

Exodus 12.38: 38 A mixed multitude went up also with them, with flocks, herds, and even very much livestock.

Exodus 12.39: 39 They baked unleavened cakes of the dough which they brought out of Egypt; for it wasn’t leavened, because they were thrust out of Egypt, and couldn’t wait, and they had not prepared any food for themselves.

Exodus 12.40: 40 Now the time that the children of Israel lived in Egypt was four hundred thirty years.

Exodus 12.41: 41 At the end of four hundred thirty years, to the day, all of Yahweh’s armies went out from the land of Egypt.

Exodus 12.42: 42 It is a night to be much observed to Yahweh for bringing them out from the land of Egypt. This is that night of Yahweh, to be much observed by all the children of Israel throughout their generations.

Exodus 12.43: 43 Yahweh said to Moses and Aaron, “This is the ordinance of the Passover. No foreigner shall eat of it,

Exodus 12.44: 44 but every man’s servant who is bought for money, when you have circumcised him, then shall he eat of it.

Exodus 12.45: 45 A foreigner and a hired servant shall not eat of it.

Exodus 12.46: 46 It must be eaten in one house. You shall not carry any of the meat outside of the house. Do not break any of its bones.

Exodus 12.47: 47 All the congregation of Israel shall keep it.

Exodus 12.48: 48 When a stranger lives as a foreigner with you, and would like to keep the Passover to Yahweh, let all his males be circumcised, and then let him come near and keep it. He shall be as one who is born in the land; but no uncircumcised person shall eat of it.

Exodus 12.49: 49 One law shall be to him who is born at home, and to the stranger who lives as a foreigner among you.”

Exodus 12.50: 50 All the children of Israel did so. As Yahweh commanded Moses and Aaron, so they did.

Exodus 12.51: 51 That same day, Yahweh brought the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt by their armies.

Exodus 13.0:

13

Exodus 13.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 13.2: 2 “Sanctify to me all the firstborn, whatever opens the womb among the children of Israel, both of man and of animal. It is mine.”

Exodus 13.3: 3 Moses said to the people, “Remember this day, in which you came out of Egypt, out of the house of bondage; for by strength of hand Yahweh brought you out from this place. No leavened bread shall be eaten.

Exodus 13.4: 4 Today you go out in the month Abib.

Exodus 13.5: 5 It shall be, when Yahweh brings you into the land of the Canaanite, and the Hittite, and the Amorite, and the Hivite, and the Jebusite, which he swore to your fathers to give you, a land flowing with milk and honey, that you shall keep this service in this month.

Exodus 13.6: 6 Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread, and in the seventh day shall be a feast to Yahweh.

Exodus 13.7: 7 Unleavened bread shall be eaten throughout the seven days; and no leavened bread shall be seen with you. No yeast shall be seen with you, within all your borders.

Exodus 13.8: 8 You shall tell your son in that day, saying, ‘It is because of that which Yahweh did for me when I came out of Egypt.’

Exodus 13.9: 9 It shall be for a sign to you on your hand, and for a memorial between your eyes, that Yahweh’s law may be in your mouth; for with a strong hand Yahweh has brought you out of Egypt.

Exodus 13.10: 10 You shall therefore keep this ordinance in its season from year to year.

Exodus 13.11: 11 “It shall be, when Yahweh brings you into the land of the Canaanite, as he swore to you and to your fathers, and will give it you,

Exodus 13.12: 12 that you shall set apart to Yahweh all that opens the womb, and every firstborn that comes from an animal which you have. The males shall be Yahweh’s.

Exodus 13.13: 13 Every firstborn of a donkey you shall redeem with a lamb; and if you will not redeem it, then you shall break its neck; and you shall redeem all the firstborn of man among your sons.

Exodus 13.14: 14 It shall be, when your son asks you in time to come, saying, ‘What is this?’ that you shall tell him, ‘By strength of hand Yahweh brought us out from Egypt, from the house of bondage.

Exodus 13.15: 15 When Pharaoh stubbornly refused to let us go, Yahweh killed all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both the firstborn of man, and the firstborn of livestock. Therefore I sacrifice to Yahweh all that opens the womb, being males; but all the firstborn of my sons I redeem.’

Exodus 13.16: 16 It shall be for a sign on your hand, and for symbols between your eyes; for by strength of hand Yahweh brought us out of Egypt.”

Exodus 13.17: 17 When Pharaoh had let the people go, God didn’t lead them by the way of the land of the Philistines, although that was near; for God said, “Lest perhaps the people change their minds when they see war, and they return to Egypt”;

Exodus 13.18: 18 but God led the people around by the way of the wilderness by the Red Sea; and the children of Israel went up armed out of the land of Egypt.

Exodus 13.19: 19 Moses took the bones of Joseph with him, for he had made the children of Israel swear, saying, “God will surely visit you, and you shall carry up my bones away from here with you.”

Exodus 13.20: 20 They took their journey from Succoth, and encamped in Etham, in the edge of the wilderness.

Exodus 13.21: 21 Yahweh went before them by day in a pillar of cloud, to lead them on their way, and by night in a pillar of fire, to give them light, that they might go by day and by night:

Exodus 13.22: 22 the pillar of cloud by day, and the pillar of fire by night, didn’t depart from before the people.

Exodus 14.0:

14

Exodus 14.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 14.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, that they turn back and encamp before Pihahiroth, between Migdol and the sea, before Baal Zephon. You shall encamp opposite it by the sea.

Exodus 14.3: 3 Pharaoh will say of the children of Israel, ‘They are entangled in the land. The wilderness has shut them in.’

Exodus 14.4: 4 I will harden Pharaoh’s heart, and he will follow after them; and I will get honor over Pharaoh, and over all his armies; and the Egyptians shall know that I am Yahweh.” They did so.

Exodus 14.5: 5 The king of Egypt was told that the people had fled; and the heart of Pharaoh and of his servants was changed toward the people, and they said, “What is this we have done, that we have let Israel go from serving us?”

Exodus 14.6: 6 He prepared his chariot, and took his army with him;

Exodus 14.7: 7 and he took six hundred chosen chariots, and all the chariots of Egypt, with captains over all of them.

Exodus 14.8: 8 Yahweh hardened the heart of Pharaoh king of Egypt, and he pursued the children of Israel; for the children of Israel went out with a high hand.

Exodus 14.9: 9 The Egyptians pursued them. All the horses and chariots of Pharaoh, his horsemen, and his army overtook them encamping by the sea, beside Pihahiroth, before Baal Zephon.

Exodus 14.10: 10 When Pharaoh came near, the children of Israel lifted up their eyes, and behold, the Egyptians were marching after them; and they were very afraid. The children of Israel cried out to Yahweh.

Exodus 14.11: 11 They said to Moses, “Because there were no graves in Egypt, have you taken us away to die in the wilderness? Why have you treated us this way, to bring us out of Egypt?

Exodus 14.12: 12 Isn’t this the word that we spoke to you in Egypt, saying, ‘Leave us alone, that we may serve the Egyptians?’ For it would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die in the wilderness.”

Exodus 14.13: 13 Moses said to the people, “Don’t be afraid. Stand still, and see the salvation of Yahweh, which he will work for you today; for you will never again see the Egyptians whom you have seen today.

Exodus 14.14: 14 Yahweh will fight for you, and you shall be still.”

Exodus 14.15: 15 Yahweh said to Moses, “Why do you cry to me? Speak to the children of Israel, that they go forward.

Exodus 14.16: 16 Lift up your rod, and stretch out your hand over the sea and divide it. Then the children of Israel shall go into the middle of the sea on dry ground.

Exodus 14.17: 17 Behold, I myself will harden the hearts of the Egyptians, and they will go in after them. I will get myself honor over Pharaoh, and over all his armies, over his chariots, and over his horsemen.

Exodus 14.18: 18 The Egyptians shall know that I am Yahweh when I have gotten myself honor over Pharaoh, over his chariots, and over his horsemen.”

Exodus 14.19: 19 The angel of God, who went before the camp of Israel, moved and went behind them; and the pillar of cloud moved from before them, and stood behind them.

Exodus 14.20: 20 It came between the camp of Egypt and the camp of Israel. There was the cloud and the darkness, yet gave it light by night. One didn’t come near the other all night.

Exodus 14.21: 21 Moses stretched out his hand over the sea, and Yahweh caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind all night, and made the sea dry land, and the waters were divided.

Exodus 14.22: 22 The children of Israel went into the middle of the sea on the dry ground, and the waters were a wall to them on their right hand, and on their left.

Exodus 14.23: 23 The Egyptians pursued, and went in after them into the middle of the sea: all of Pharaoh’s horses, his chariots, and his horsemen.

Exodus 14.24: 24 In the morning watch, Yahweh looked out on the Egyptian army through the pillar of fire and of cloud, and confused the Egyptian army.

Exodus 14.25: 25 He took off their chariot wheels, and they drove them heavily; so that the Egyptians said, “Let’s flee from the face of Israel, for Yahweh fights for them against the Egyptians!”

Exodus 14.26: 26 Yahweh said to Moses, “Stretch out your hand over the sea, that the waters may come again on the Egyptians, on their chariots, and on their horsemen.”

Exodus 14.27: 27 Moses stretched out his hand over the sea, and the sea returned to its strength when the morning appeared; and the Egyptians fled against it. Yahweh overthrew the Egyptians in the middle of the sea.

Exodus 14.28: 28 The waters returned, and covered the chariots and the horsemen, even all Pharaoh’s army that went in after them into the sea. There remained not so much as one of them.

Exodus 14.29: 29 But the children of Israel walked on dry land in the middle of the sea, and the waters were a wall to them on their right hand, and on their left.

Exodus 14.30: 30 Thus Yahweh saved Israel that day out of the hand of the Egyptians; and Israel saw the Egyptians dead on the seashore.

Exodus 14.31: 31 Israel saw the great work which Yahweh did to the Egyptians, and the people feared Yahweh; and they believed in Yahweh and in his servant Moses.

Exodus 15.0:

15

Exodus 15.1: 1 Then Moses and the children of Israel sang this song to Yahweh, and said,

“I will sing to Yahweh, for he has triumphed gloriously.

He has thrown the horse and his rider into the sea.

Exodus 15.2: 2 Yah is my strength and song.

He has become my salvation.

This is my God, and I will praise him;

my father’s God, and I will exalt him.

Exodus 15.3: 3 Yahweh is a man of war.

Yahweh is his name.

Exodus 15.4: 4 He has cast Pharaoh’s chariots and his army into the sea.

His chosen captains are sunk in the Red Sea.

Exodus 15.5: 5 The deeps cover them.

They went down into the depths like a stone.

Exodus 15.6: 6 Your right hand, Yahweh, is glorious in power.

Your right hand, Yahweh, dashes the enemy in pieces.

Exodus 15.7: 7 In the greatness of your excellency, you overthrow those who rise up against you.

You send out your wrath. It consumes them as stubble.

Exodus 15.8: 8 With the blast of your nostrils, the waters were piled up.

The floods stood upright as a heap.

The deeps were congealed in the heart of the sea.

Exodus 15.9: 9 The enemy said, ‘I will pursue. I will overtake. I will divide the plunder.

My desire will be satisfied on them.

I will draw my sword. My hand will destroy them.’

Exodus 15.10: 10 You blew with your wind.

The sea covered them.

They sank like lead in the mighty waters.

Exodus 15.11: 11 Who is like you, Yahweh, among the gods?

Who is like you, glorious in holiness,

fearful in praises, doing wonders?

Exodus 15.12: 12 You stretched out your right hand.

The earth swallowed them.

Exodus 15.13: 13 “You, in your loving kindness, have led the people that you have redeemed.

You have guided them in your strength to your holy habitation.

Exodus 15.14: 14 The peoples have heard.

They tremble.

Pangs have taken hold of the inhabitants of Philistia.

Exodus 15.15: 15 Then the chiefs of Edom were dismayed.

Trembling takes hold of the mighty men of Moab.

All the inhabitants of Canaan have melted away.

Exodus 15.16: 16 Terror and dread falls on them.

By the greatness of your arm they are as still as a stone,

until your people pass over, Yahweh,

until the people you have purchased pass over.

Exodus 15.17: 17 You will bring them in, and plant them in the mountain of your inheritance,

the place, Yahweh, which you have made for yourself to dwell in;

the sanctuary, Lord, which your hands have established.

Exodus 15.18: 18 Yahweh will reign forever and ever.”

Exodus 15.19: 19 For the horses of Pharaoh went in with his chariots and with his horsemen into the sea, and Yahweh brought back the waters of the sea on them; but the children of Israel walked on dry land in the middle of the sea.

Exodus 15.20: 20 Miriam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a tambourine in her hand; and all the women went out after her with tambourines and with dances.

Exodus 15.21: 21 Miriam answered them,

“Sing to Yahweh, for he has triumphed gloriously.

The horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea.”

Exodus 15.22: 22 Moses led Israel onward from the Red Sea, and they went out into the wilderness of Shur; and they went three days in the wilderness, and found no water.

Exodus 15.23: 23 When they came to Marah, they couldn’t drink from the waters of Marah, for they were bitter. Therefore its name was called Marah.

Exodus 15.24: 24 The people murmured against Moses, saying, “What shall we drink?”

Exodus 15.25: 25 Then he cried to Yahweh. Yahweh showed him a tree, and he threw it into the waters, and the waters were made sweet. There he made a statute and an ordinance for them, and there he tested them.

Exodus 15.26: 26 He said, “If you will diligently listen to Yahweh your God’s voice, and will do that which is right in his eyes, and will pay attention to his commandments, and keep all his statutes, I will put none of the diseases on you, which I have put on the Egyptians; for I am Yahweh who heals you.”

Exodus 15.27: 27 They came to Elim, where there were twelve springs of water, and seventy palm trees. They encamped there by the waters.

Exodus 16.0:

16

Exodus 16.1: 1 They took their journey from Elim, and all the congregation of the children of Israel came to the wilderness of Sin, which is between Elim and Sinai, on the fifteenth day of the second month after their departing out of the land of Egypt.

Exodus 16.2: 2 The whole congregation of the children of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron in the wilderness;

Exodus 16.3: 3 and the children of Israel said to them, “We wish that we had died by Yahweh’s hand in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the meat pots, when we ate our fill of bread, for you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill this whole assembly with hunger.”

Exodus 16.4: 4 Then Yahweh said to Moses, “Behold, I will rain bread from the sky for you, and the people shall go out and gather a day’s portion every day, that I may test them, whether they will walk in my law or not.

Exodus 16.5: 5 It shall come to pass on the sixth day, that they shall prepare that which they bring in, and it shall be twice as much as they gather daily.”

Exodus 16.6: 6 Moses and Aaron said to all the children of Israel, “At evening, you shall know that Yahweh has brought you out from the land of Egypt.

Exodus 16.7: 7 In the morning, you shall see Yahweh’s glory; because he hears your murmurings against Yahweh. Who are we, that you murmur against us?”

Exodus 16.8: 8 Moses said, “Now Yahweh will give you meat to eat in the evening, and in the morning bread to satisfy you, because Yahweh hears your murmurings which you murmur against him. And who are we? Your murmurings are not against us, but against Yahweh.”

Exodus 16.9: 9 Moses said to Aaron, “Tell all the congregation of the children of Israel, ‘Come close to Yahweh, for he has heard your murmurings.’”

Exodus 16.10: 10 As Aaron spoke to the whole congregation of the children of Israel, they looked toward the wilderness, and behold, Yahweh’s glory appeared in the cloud.

Exodus 16.11: 11 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 16.12: 12 “I have heard the murmurings of the children of Israel. Speak to them, saying, ‘At evening you shall eat meat, and in the morning you shall be filled with bread. Then you will know that I am Yahweh your God.’”

Exodus 16.13: 13 In the evening, quail came up and covered the camp; and in the morning the dew lay around the camp.

Exodus 16.14: 14 When the dew that lay had gone, behold, on the surface of the wilderness was a small round thing, small as the frost on the ground.

Exodus 16.15: 15 When the children of Israel saw it, they said to one another, “What is it?” For they didn’t know what it was. Moses said to them, “It is the bread which Yahweh has given you to eat.

Exodus 16.16: 16 “This is the thing which Yahweh has commanded: ‘Gather of it everyone according to his eating; an omer a head, according to the number of your persons, you shall take it, every man for those who are in his tent.’”

Exodus 16.17: 17 The children of Israel did so, and some gathered more, some less.

Exodus 16.18: 18 When they measured it with an omer, he who gathered much had nothing over, and he who gathered little had no lack. They each gathered according to his eating.

Exodus 16.19: 19 Moses said to them, “Let no one leave of it until the morning.”

Exodus 16.20: 20 Notwithstanding they didn’t listen to Moses, but some of them left of it until the morning, so it bred worms and became foul; and Moses was angry with them.

Exodus 16.21: 21 They gathered it morning by morning, everyone according to his eating. When the sun grew hot, it melted.

Exodus 16.22: 22 On the sixth day, they gathered twice as much bread, two omers for each one; and all the rulers of the congregation came and told Moses.

Exodus 16.23: 23 He said to them, “This is that which Yahweh has spoken, ‘Tomorrow is a solemn rest, a holy Sabbath to Yahweh. Bake that which you want to bake, and boil that which you want to boil; and all that remains over lay up for yourselves to be kept until the morning.’”

Exodus 16.24: 24 They laid it up until the morning, as Moses ordered, and it didn’t become foul, and there were no worms in it.

Exodus 16.25: 25 Moses said, “Eat that today, for today is a Sabbath to Yahweh. Today you shall not find it in the field.

Exodus 16.26: 26 Six days you shall gather it, but on the seventh day is the Sabbath. In it there shall be none.”

Exodus 16.27: 27 On the seventh day, some of the people went out to gather, and they found none.

Exodus 16.28: 28 Yahweh said to Moses, “How long do you refuse to keep my commandments and my laws?

Exodus 16.29: 29 Behold, because Yahweh has given you the Sabbath, therefore he gives you on the sixth day the bread of two days. Everyone stay in his place. Let no one go out of his place on the seventh day.”

Exodus 16.30: 30 So the people rested on the seventh day.

Exodus 16.31: 31 The house of Israel called its name “Manna”, and it was like coriander seed, white; and its taste was like wafers with honey.

Exodus 16.32: 32 Moses said, “This is the thing which Yahweh has commanded, ‘Let an omer-full of it be kept throughout your generations, that they may see the bread with which I fed you in the wilderness, when I brought you out of the land of Egypt.’”

Exodus 16.33: 33 Moses said to Aaron, “Take a pot, and put an omer-full of manna in it, and lay it up before Yahweh, to be kept throughout your generations.”

Exodus 16.34: 34 As Yahweh commanded Moses, so Aaron laid it up before the Testimony, to be kept.

Exodus 16.35: 35 The children of Israel ate the manna forty years, until they came to an inhabited land. They ate the manna until they came to the borders of the land of Canaan.

Exodus 16.36: 36 Now an omer is one tenth of an ephah.

Exodus 17.0:

17

Exodus 17.1: 1 All the congregation of the children of Israel traveled from the wilderness of Sin, starting according to Yahweh’s commandment, and encamped in Rephidim; but there was no water for the people to drink.

Exodus 17.2: 2 Therefore the people quarreled with Moses, and said, “Give us water to drink.”

Moses said to them, “Why do you quarrel with me? Why do you test Yahweh?”

Exodus 17.3: 3 The people were thirsty for water there; so the people murmured against Moses, and said, “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt, to kill us, our children, and our livestock with thirst?”

Exodus 17.4: 4 Moses cried to Yahweh, saying, “What shall I do with these people? They are almost ready to stone me.”

Exodus 17.5: 5 Yahweh said to Moses, “Walk on before the people, and take the elders of Israel with you, and take the rod in your hand with which you struck the Nile, and go.

Exodus 17.6: 6 Behold, I will stand before you there on the rock in Horeb. You shall strike the rock, and water will come out of it, that the people may drink.” Moses did so in the sight of the elders of Israel.

Exodus 17.7: 7 He called the name of the place Massah, and Meribah, because the children of Israel quarreled, and because they tested Yahweh, saying, “Is Yahweh among us, or not?”

Exodus 17.8: 8 Then Amalek came and fought with Israel in Rephidim.

Exodus 17.9: 9 Moses said to Joshua, “Choose men for us, and go out, fight with Amalek. Tomorrow I will stand on the top of the hill with God’s rod in my hand.”

Exodus 17.10: 10 So Joshua did as Moses had told him, and fought with Amalek; and Moses, Aaron, and Hur went up to the top of the hill.

Exodus 17.11: 11 When Moses held up his hand, Israel prevailed. When he let down his hand, Amalek prevailed.

Exodus 17.12: 12 But Moses’ hands were heavy; so they took a stone, and put it under him, and he sat on it. Aaron and Hur held up his hands, the one on the one side, and the other on the other side. His hands were steady until sunset.

Exodus 17.13: 13 Joshua defeated Amalek and his people with the edge of the sword.

Exodus 17.14: 14 Yahweh said to Moses, “Write this for a memorial in a book, and rehearse it in the ears of Joshua: that I will utterly blot out the memory of Amalek from under the sky.”

Exodus 17.15: 15 Moses built an altar, and called its name “Yahweh our Banner”.

Exodus 17.16: 16 He said, “Yah has sworn: ‘Yahweh will have war with Amalek from generation to generation.’”

Exodus 18.0:

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Exodus 18.1: 1 Now Jethro, the priest of Midian, Moses’ father-in-law, heard of all that God had done for Moses, and for Israel his people, how Yahweh had brought Israel out of Egypt.

Exodus 18.2: 2 Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law, received Zipporah, Moses’ wife, after he had sent her away,

Exodus 18.3: 3 and her two sons. The name of one son was Gershom, for Moses said, “I have lived as a foreigner in a foreign land”.

Exodus 18.4: 4 The name of the other was Eliezer, for he said, “My father’s God was my help and delivered me from Pharaoh’s sword.”

Exodus 18.5: 5 Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law, came with Moses’ sons and his wife to Moses into the wilderness where he was encamped, at the Mountain of God.

Exodus 18.6: 6 He said to Moses, “I, your father-in-law Jethro, have come to you with your wife, and her two sons with her.”

Exodus 18.7: 7 Moses went out to meet his father-in-law, and bowed and kissed him. They asked each other of their welfare, and they came into the tent.

Exodus 18.8: 8 Moses told his father-in-law all that Yahweh had done to Pharaoh and to the Egyptians for Israel’s sake, all the hardships that had come on them on the way, and how Yahweh delivered them.

Exodus 18.9: 9 Jethro rejoiced for all the goodness which Yahweh had done to Israel, in that he had delivered them out of the hand of the Egyptians.

Exodus 18.10: 10 Jethro said, “Blessed be Yahweh, who has delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians, and out of the hand of Pharaoh; who has delivered the people from under the hand of the Egyptians.

Exodus 18.11: 11 Now I know that Yahweh is greater than all gods because of the way that they treated people arrogantly.”

Exodus 18.12: 12 Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law, took a burnt offering and sacrifices for God. Aaron came with all the elders of Israel, to eat bread with Moses’ father-in-law before God.

Exodus 18.13: 13 On the next day, Moses sat to judge the people, and the people stood around Moses from the morning to the evening.

Exodus 18.14: 14 When Moses’ father-in-law saw all that he did to the people, he said, “What is this thing that you do for the people? Why do you sit alone, and all the people stand around you from morning to evening?”

Exodus 18.15: 15 Moses said to his father-in-law, “Because the people come to me to inquire of God.

Exodus 18.16: 16 When they have a matter, they come to me, and I judge between a man and his neighbor, and I make them know the statutes of God, and his laws.”

Exodus 18.17: 17 Moses’ father-in-law said to him, “The thing that you do is not good.

Exodus 18.18: 18 You will surely wear away, both you, and this people that is with you; for the thing is too heavy for you. You are not able to perform it yourself alone.

Exodus 18.19: 19 Listen now to my voice. I will give you counsel, and God be with you. You represent the people before God, and bring the causes to God.

Exodus 18.20: 20 You shall teach them the statutes and the laws, and shall show them the way in which they must walk, and the work that they must do.

Exodus 18.21: 21 Moreover you shall provide out of all the people able men which fear God: men of truth, hating unjust gain; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens.

Exodus 18.22: 22 Let them judge the people at all times. It shall be that every great matter they shall bring to you, but every small matter they shall judge themselves. So shall it be easier for you, and they shall share the load with you.

Exodus 18.23: 23 If you will do this thing, and God commands you so, then you will be able to endure, and all these people also will go to their place in peace.”

Exodus 18.24: 24 So Moses listened to the voice of his father-in-law, and did all that he had said.

Exodus 18.25: 25 Moses chose able men out of all Israel, and made them heads over the people, rulers of thousands, rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens.

Exodus 18.26: 26 They judged the people at all times. They brought the hard cases to Moses, but every small matter they judged themselves.

Exodus 18.27: 27 Moses let his father-in-law depart, and he went his way into his own land.

Exodus 19.0:

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Exodus 19.1: 1 In the third month after the children of Israel had gone out of the land of Egypt, on that same day they came into the wilderness of Sinai.

Exodus 19.2: 2 When they had departed from Rephidim, and had come to the wilderness of Sinai, they encamped in the wilderness; and there Israel encamped before the mountain.

Exodus 19.3: 3 Moses went up to God, and Yahweh called to him out of the mountain, saying, “This is what you shall tell the house of Jacob, and tell the children of Israel:

Exodus 19.4: 4 ‘You have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles’ wings, and brought you to myself.

Exodus 19.5: 5 Now therefore, if you will indeed obey my voice, and keep my covenant, then you shall be my own possession from among all peoples; for all the earth is mine;

Exodus 19.6: 6 and you shall be to me a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation.’ These are the words which you shall speak to the children of Israel.”

Exodus 19.7: 7 Moses came and called for the elders of the people, and set before them all these words which Yahweh commanded him.

Exodus 19.8: 8 All the people answered together, and said, “All that Yahweh has spoken we will do.”

Moses reported the words of the people to Yahweh.

Exodus 19.9: 9 Yahweh said to Moses, “Behold, I come to you in a thick cloud, that the people may hear when I speak with you, and may also believe you forever.” Moses told the words of the people to Yahweh.

Exodus 19.10: 10 Yahweh said to Moses, “Go to the people, and sanctify them today and tomorrow, and let them wash their garments,

Exodus 19.11: 11 and be ready for the third day; for on the third day Yahweh will come down in the sight of all the people on Mount Sinai.

Exodus 19.12: 12 You shall set bounds to the people all around, saying, ‘Be careful that you don’t go up onto the mountain, or touch its border. Whoever touches the mountain shall be surely put to death.

Exodus 19.13: 13 No hand shall touch him, but he shall surely be stoned or shot through; whether it is animal or man, he shall not live.’ When the trumpet sounds long, they shall come up to the mountain.”

Exodus 19.14: 14 Moses went down from the mountain to the people, and sanctified the people; and they washed their clothes.

Exodus 19.15: 15 He said to the people, “Be ready by the third day. Don’t have sexual relations with a woman.”

Exodus 19.16: 16 On the third day, when it was morning, there were thunders and lightnings, and a thick cloud on the mountain, and the sound of an exceedingly loud trumpet; and all the people who were in the camp trembled.

Exodus 19.17: 17 Moses led the people out of the camp to meet God; and they stood at the lower part of the mountain.

Exodus 19.18: 18 All of Mount Sinai smoked, because Yahweh descended on it in fire; and its smoke ascended like the smoke of a furnace, and the whole mountain quaked greatly.

Exodus 19.19: 19 When the sound of the trumpet grew louder and louder, Moses spoke, and God answered him by a voice.

Exodus 19.20: 20 Yahweh came down on Mount Sinai, to the top of the mountain. Yahweh called Moses to the top of the mountain, and Moses went up.

Exodus 19.21: 21 Yahweh said to Moses, “Go down, warn the people, lest they break through to Yahweh to gaze, and many of them perish.

Exodus 19.22: 22 Let the priests also, who come near to Yahweh, sanctify themselves, lest Yahweh break out on them.”

Exodus 19.23: 23 Moses said to Yahweh, “The people can’t come up to Mount Sinai, for you warned us, saying, ‘Set bounds around the mountain, and sanctify it.’”

Exodus 19.24: 24 Yahweh said to him, “Go down! You shall bring Aaron up with you, but don’t let the priests and the people break through to come up to Yahweh, lest he break out against them.”

Exodus 19.25: 25 So Moses went down to the people, and told them.

Exodus 20.0:

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Exodus 20.1: 1 God spoke all these words, saying,

Exodus 20.2: 2 “I am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.

Exodus 20.3: 3 “You shall have no other gods before me.

Exodus 20.4: 4 “You shall not make for yourselves an idol, nor any image of anything that is in the heavens above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth:

Exodus 20.5: 5 you shall not bow yourself down to them, nor serve them, for I, Yahweh your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, on the third and on the fourth generation of those who hate me,

Exodus 20.6: 6 and showing loving kindness to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments.

Exodus 20.7: 7 “You shall not misuse the name of Yahweh your God, for Yahweh will not hold him guiltless who misuses his name.

Exodus 20.8: 8 “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.

Exodus 20.9: 9 You shall labor six days, and do all your work,

Exodus 20.10: 10 but the seventh day is a Sabbath to Yahweh your God. You shall not do any work in it, you, nor your son, nor your daughter, your male servant, nor your female servant, nor your livestock, nor your stranger who is within your gates;

Exodus 20.11: 11 for in six days Yahweh made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested the seventh day; therefore Yahweh blessed the Sabbath day, and made it holy.

Exodus 20.12: 12 “Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long in the land which Yahweh your God gives you.

Exodus 20.13: 13 “You shall not murder.

Exodus 20.14: 14 “You shall not commit adultery.

Exodus 20.15: 15 “You shall not steal.

Exodus 20.16: 16 “You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor.

Exodus 20.17: 17 “You shall not covet your neighbor’s house. You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, nor his male servant, nor his female servant, nor his ox, nor his donkey, nor anything that is your neighbor’s.”

Exodus 20.18: 18 All the people perceived the thunderings, the lightnings, the sound of the trumpet, and the mountain smoking. When the people saw it, they trembled, and stayed at a distance.

Exodus 20.19: 19 They said to Moses, “Speak with us yourself, and we will listen; but don’t let God speak with us, lest we die.”

Exodus 20.20: 20 Moses said to the people, “Don’t be afraid, for God has come to test you, and that his fear may be before you, that you won’t sin.”

Exodus 20.21: 21 The people stayed at a distance, and Moses came near to the thick darkness where God was.

Exodus 20.22: 22 Yahweh said to Moses, “This is what you shall tell the children of Israel: ‘You yourselves have seen that I have talked with you from heaven.

Exodus 20.23: 23 You shall most certainly not make gods of silver or gods of gold for yourselves to be alongside me.

Exodus 20.24: 24 You shall make an altar of earth for me, and shall sacrifice on it your burnt offerings and your peace offerings, your sheep and your cattle. In every place where I record my name I will come to you and I will bless you.

Exodus 20.25: 25 If you make me an altar of stone, you shall not build it of cut stones; for if you lift up your tool on it, you have polluted it.

Exodus 20.26: 26 You shall not go up by steps to my altar, that your nakedness may not be exposed to it.’

Exodus 21.0:

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Exodus 21.1: 1 “Now these are the ordinances which you shall set before them:

Exodus 21.2: 2 “If you buy a Hebrew servant, he shall serve six years, and in the seventh he shall go out free without paying anything.

Exodus 21.3: 3 If he comes in by himself, he shall go out by himself. If he is married, then his wife shall go out with him.

Exodus 21.4: 4 If his master gives him a wife and she bears him sons or daughters, the wife and her children shall be her master’s, and he shall go out by himself.

Exodus 21.5: 5 But if the servant shall plainly say, ‘I love my master, my wife, and my children. I will not go out free;’

Exodus 21.6: 6 then his master shall bring him to God, and shall bring him to the door or to the doorpost, and his master shall bore his ear through with an awl, and he shall serve him forever.

Exodus 21.7: 7 “If a man sells his daughter to be a female servant, she shall not go out as the male servants do.

Exodus 21.8: 8 If she doesn’t please her master, who has married her to himself, then he shall let her be redeemed. He shall have no right to sell her to a foreign people, since he has dealt deceitfully with her.

Exodus 21.9: 9 If he marries her to his son, he shall deal with her as a daughter.

Exodus 21.10: 10 If he takes another wife to himself, he shall not diminish her food, her clothing, and her marital rights.

Exodus 21.11: 11 If he doesn’t do these three things for her, she may go free without paying any money.

Exodus 21.12: 12 “One who strikes a man so that he dies shall surely be put to death,

Exodus 21.13: 13 but not if it is unintentional, but God allows it to happen; then I will appoint you a place where he shall flee.

Exodus 21.14: 14 If a man schemes and comes presumptuously on his neighbor to kill him, you shall take him from my altar, that he may die.

Exodus 21.15: 15 “Anyone who attacks his father or his mother shall be surely put to death.

Exodus 21.16: 16 “Anyone who kidnaps someone and sells him, or if he is found in his hand, he shall surely be put to death.

Exodus 21.17: 17 “Anyone who curses his father or his mother shall surely be put to death.

Exodus 21.18: 18 “If men quarrel and one strikes the other with a stone, or with his fist, and he doesn’t die, but is confined to bed;

Exodus 21.19: 19 if he rises again and walks around with his staff, then he who struck him shall be cleared; only he shall pay for the loss of his time, and shall provide for his healing until he is thoroughly healed.

Exodus 21.20: 20 “If a man strikes his servant or his maid with a rod, and he dies under his hand, the man shall surely be punished.

Exodus 21.21: 21 Notwithstanding, if his servant gets up after a day or two, he shall not be punished, for the servant is his property.

Exodus 21.22: 22 “If men fight and hurt a pregnant woman so that she gives birth prematurely, and yet no harm follows, he shall be surely fined as much as the woman’s husband demands and the judges allow.

Exodus 21.23: 23 But if any harm follows, then you must take life for life,

Exodus 21.24: 24 eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot,

Exodus 21.25: 25 burning for burning, wound for wound, and bruise for bruise.

Exodus 21.26: 26 “If a man strikes his servant’s eye, or his maid’s eye, and destroys it, he shall let him go free for his eye’s sake.

Exodus 21.27: 27 If he strikes out his male servant’s tooth, or his female servant’s tooth, he shall let the servant go free for his tooth’s sake.

Exodus 21.28: 28 “If a bull gores a man or a woman to death, the bull shall surely be stoned, and its meat shall not be eaten; but the owner of the bull shall not be held responsible.

Exodus 21.29: 29 But if the bull had a habit of goring in the past, and this has been testified to its owner, and he has not kept it in, but it has killed a man or a woman, the bull shall be stoned, and its owner shall also be put to death.

Exodus 21.30: 30 If a ransom is imposed on him, then he shall give for the redemption of his life whatever is imposed.

Exodus 21.31: 31 Whether it has gored a son or has gored a daughter, according to this judgment it shall be done to him.

Exodus 21.32: 32 If the bull gores a male servant or a female servant, thirty shekels of silver shall be given to their master, and the ox shall be stoned.

Exodus 21.33: 33 “If a man opens a pit, or if a man digs a pit and doesn’t cover it, and a bull or a donkey falls into it,

Exodus 21.34: 34 the owner of the pit shall make it good. He shall give money to its owner, and the dead animal shall be his.

Exodus 21.35: 35 “If one man’s bull injures another’s, so that it dies, then they shall sell the live bull, and divide its price; and they shall also divide the dead animal.

Exodus 21.36: 36 Or if it is known that the bull was in the habit of goring in the past, and its owner has not kept it in, he shall surely pay bull for bull, and the dead animal shall be his own.

Exodus 22.0:

22

Exodus 22.1: 1 “If a man steals an ox or a sheep, and kills it or sells it, he shall pay five oxen for an ox, and four sheep for a sheep.

Exodus 22.2: 2 If the thief is found breaking in, and is struck so that he dies, there shall be no guilt of bloodshed for him.

Exodus 22.3: 3 If the sun has risen on him, he is guilty of bloodshed. He shall make restitution. If he has nothing, then he shall be sold for his theft.

Exodus 22.4: 4 If the stolen property is found in his hand alive, whether it is ox, donkey, or sheep, he shall pay double.

Exodus 22.5: 5 “If a man causes a field or vineyard to be eaten by letting his animal loose, and it grazes in another man’s field, he shall make restitution from the best of his own field, and from the best of his own vineyard.

Exodus 22.6: 6 “If fire breaks out, and catches in thorns so that the shocks of grain, or the standing grain, or the field are consumed; he who kindled the fire shall surely make restitution.

Exodus 22.7: 7 “If a man delivers to his neighbor money or stuff to keep, and it is stolen out of the man’s house, if the thief is found, he shall pay double.

Exodus 22.8: 8 If the thief isn’t found, then the master of the house shall come near to God, to find out whether or not he has put his hand on his neighbor’s goods.

Exodus 22.9: 9 For every matter of trespass, whether it is for ox, for donkey, for sheep, for clothing, or for any kind of lost thing, about which one says, ‘This is mine,’ the cause of both parties shall come before God. He whom God condemns shall pay double to his neighbor.

Exodus 22.10: 10 “If a man delivers to his neighbor a donkey, an ox, a sheep, or any animal to keep, and it dies or is injured, or driven away, no man seeing it;

Exodus 22.11: 11 the oath of Yahweh shall be between them both, he has not put his hand on his neighbor’s goods; and its owner shall accept it, and he shall not make restitution.

Exodus 22.12: 12 But if it is stolen from him, the one who stole shall make restitution to its owner.

Exodus 22.13: 13 If it is torn in pieces, let him bring it for evidence. He shall not make good that which was torn.

Exodus 22.14: 14 “If a man borrows anything of his neighbor’s, and it is injured, or dies, its owner not being with it, he shall surely make restitution.

Exodus 22.15: 15 If its owner is with it, he shall not make it good. If it is a leased thing, it came for its lease.

Exodus 22.16: 16 “If a man entices a virgin who isn’t pledged to be married, and lies with her, he shall surely pay a dowry for her to be his wife.

Exodus 22.17: 17 If her father utterly refuses to give her to him, he shall pay money according to the dowry of virgins.

Exodus 22.18: 18 “You shall not allow a sorceress to live.

Exodus 22.19: 19 “Whoever has sex with an animal shall surely be put to death.

Exodus 22.20: 20 “He who sacrifices to any god, except to Yahweh only, shall be utterly destroyed.

Exodus 22.21: 21 “You shall not wrong an alien or oppress him, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt.

Exodus 22.22: 22 “You shall not take advantage of any widow or fatherless child.

Exodus 22.23: 23 If you take advantage of them at all, and they cry at all to me, I will surely hear their cry;

Exodus 22.24: 24 and my wrath will grow hot, and I will kill you with the sword; and your wives shall be widows, and your children fatherless.

Exodus 22.25: 25 “If you lend money to any of my people with you who is poor, you shall not be to him as a creditor. You shall not charge him interest.

Exodus 22.26: 26 If you take your neighbor’s garment as collateral, you shall restore it to him before the sun goes down,

Exodus 22.27: 27 for that is his only covering, it is his garment for his skin. What would he sleep in? It will happen, when he cries to me, that I will hear, for I am gracious.

Exodus 22.28: 28 “You shall not blaspheme God, nor curse a ruler of your people.

Exodus 22.29: 29 “You shall not delay to offer from your harvest and from the outflow of your presses.

“You shall give the firstborn of your sons to me.

Exodus 22.30: 30 You shall do likewise with your cattle and with your sheep. It shall be with its mother seven days, then on the eighth day you shall give it to me.

Exodus 22.31: 31 “You shall be holy men to me, therefore you shall not eat any meat that is torn by animals in the field. You shall cast it to the dogs.

Exodus 23.0:

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Exodus 23.1: 1 “You shall not spread a false report. Don’t join your hand with the wicked to be a malicious witness.

Exodus 23.2: 2 “You shall not follow a crowd to do evil. You shall not testify in court to side with a multitude to pervert justice.

Exodus 23.3: 3 You shall not favor a poor man in his cause.

Exodus 23.4: 4 “If you meet your enemy’s ox or his donkey going astray, you shall surely bring it back to him again.

Exodus 23.5: 5 If you see the donkey of him who hates you fallen down under his burden, don’t leave him. You shall surely help him with it.

Exodus 23.6: 6 “You shall not deny justice to your poor people in their lawsuits.

Exodus 23.7: 7 “Keep far from a false charge, and don’t kill the innocent and righteous; for I will not justify the wicked.

Exodus 23.8: 8 “You shall take no bribe, for a bribe blinds those who have sight and perverts the words of the righteous.

Exodus 23.9: 9 “You shall not oppress an alien, for you know the heart of an alien, since you were aliens in the land of Egypt.

Exodus 23.10: 10 “For six years you shall sow your land, and shall gather in its increase,

Exodus 23.11: 11 but the seventh year you shall let it rest and lie fallow, that the poor of your people may eat; and what they leave the animal of the field shall eat. In the same way, you shall deal with your vineyard and with your olive grove.

Exodus 23.12: 12 “Six days you shall do your work, and on the seventh day you shall rest, that your ox and your donkey may have rest, and the son of your servant, and the alien may be refreshed.

Exodus 23.13: 13 “Be careful to do all things that I have said to you; and don’t invoke the name of other gods or even let them be heard out of your mouth.

Exodus 23.14: 14 “You shall observe a feast to me three times a year.

Exodus 23.15: 15 You shall observe the feast of unleavened bread. Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread, as I commanded you, at the time appointed in the month Abib (for in it you came out of Egypt), and no one shall appear before me empty.

Exodus 23.16: 16 And the feast of harvest, the first fruits of your labors, which you sow in the field; and the feast of ingathering, at the end of the year, when you gather in your labors out of the field.

Exodus 23.17: 17 Three times in the year all your males shall appear before the Lord Yahweh.

Exodus 23.18: 18 “You shall not offer the blood of my sacrifice with leavened bread. The fat of my feast shall not remain all night until the morning.

Exodus 23.19: 19 You shall bring the first of the first fruits of your ground into the house of Yahweh your God.

“You shall not boil a young goat in its mother’s milk.

Exodus 23.20: 20 “Behold, I send an angel before you, to keep you by the way, and to bring you into the place which I have prepared.

Exodus 23.21: 21 Pay attention to him, and listen to his voice. Don’t provoke him, for he will not pardon your disobedience, for my name is in him.

Exodus 23.22: 22 But if you indeed listen to his voice, and do all that I speak, then I will be an enemy to your enemies, and an adversary to your adversaries.

Exodus 23.23: 23 For my angel shall go before you, and bring you in to the Amorite, the Hittite, the Perizzite, the Canaanite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite; and I will cut them off.

Exodus 23.24: 24 You shall not bow down to their gods, nor serve them, nor follow their practices, but you shall utterly overthrow them and demolish their pillars.

Exodus 23.25: 25 You shall serve Yahweh your God, and he will bless your bread and your water, and I will take sickness away from among you.

Exodus 23.26: 26 No one will miscarry or be barren in your land. I will fulfill the number of your days.

Exodus 23.27: 27 I will send my terror before you, and will confuse all the people to whom you come, and I will make all your enemies turn their backs to you.

Exodus 23.28: 28 I will send the hornet before you, which will drive out the Hivite, the Canaanite, and the Hittite, from before you.

Exodus 23.29: 29 I will not drive them out from before you in one year, lest the land become desolate, and the animals of the field multiply against you.

Exodus 23.30: 30 Little by little I will drive them out from before you, until you have increased and inherit the land.

Exodus 23.31: 31 I will set your border from the Red Sea even to the sea of the Philistines, and from the wilderness to the River; for I will deliver the inhabitants of the land into your hand, and you shall drive them out before you.

Exodus 23.32: 32 You shall make no covenant with them, nor with their gods.

Exodus 23.33: 33 They shall not dwell in your land, lest they make you sin against me, for if you serve their gods, it will surely be a snare to you.”

Exodus 24.0:

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Exodus 24.1: 1 He said to Moses, “Come up to Yahweh, you, and Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel; and worship from a distance.

Exodus 24.2: 2 Moses alone shall come near to Yahweh, but they shall not come near. The people shall not go up with him.”

Exodus 24.3: 3 Moses came and told the people all Yahweh’s words, and all the ordinances; and all the people answered with one voice, and said, “All the words which Yahweh has spoken will we do.”

Exodus 24.4: 4 Moses wrote all Yahweh’s words, then rose up early in the morning and built an altar at the base of the mountain, with twelve pillars for the twelve tribes of Israel.

Exodus 24.5: 5 He sent young men of the children of Israel, who offered burnt offerings and sacrificed peace offerings of cattle to Yahweh.

Exodus 24.6: 6 Moses took half of the blood and put it in basins, and half of the blood he sprinkled on the altar.

Exodus 24.7: 7 He took the book of the covenant and read it in the hearing of the people, and they said, “We will do all that Yahweh has said, and be obedient.”

Exodus 24.8: 8 Moses took the blood, and sprinkled it on the people, and said, “Look, this is the blood of the covenant, which Yahweh has made with you concerning all these words.”

Exodus 24.9: 9 Then Moses, Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel went up.

Exodus 24.10: 10 They saw the God of Israel. Under his feet was like a paved work of sapphire stone, like the skies for clearness.

Exodus 24.11: 11 He didn’t lay his hand on the nobles of the children of Israel. They saw God, and ate and drank.

Exodus 24.12: 12 Yahweh said to Moses, “Come up to me on the mountain, and stay here, and I will give you the stone tablets with the law and the commands that I have written, that you may teach them.”

Exodus 24.13: 13 Moses rose up with Joshua, his servant, and Moses went up onto God’s Mountain.

Exodus 24.14: 14 He said to the elders, “Wait here for us, until we come again to you. Behold, Aaron and Hur are with you. Whoever is involved in a dispute can go to them.”

Exodus 24.15: 15 Moses went up on the mountain, and the cloud covered the mountain.

Exodus 24.16: 16 Yahweh’s glory settled on Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it six days. The seventh day he called to Moses out of the middle of the cloud.

Exodus 24.17: 17 The appearance of Yahweh’s glory was like devouring fire on the top of the mountain in the eyes of the children of Israel.

Exodus 24.18: 18 Moses entered into the middle of the cloud, and went up on the mountain; and Moses was on the mountain forty days and forty nights.

Exodus 25.0:

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Exodus 25.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 25.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, that they take an offering for me. From everyone whose heart makes him willing you shall take my offering.

Exodus 25.3: 3 This is the offering which you shall take from them: gold, silver, bronze,

Exodus 25.4: 4 blue, purple, scarlet, fine linen, goats’ hair,

Exodus 25.5: 5 rams’ skins dyed red, sea cow hides, acacia wood,

Exodus 25.6: 6 oil for the light, spices for the anointing oil and for the sweet incense,

Exodus 25.7: 7 onyx stones, and stones to be set for the ephod and for the breastplate.

Exodus 25.8: 8 Let them make me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them.

Exodus 25.9: 9 According to all that I show you, the pattern of the tabernacle, and the pattern of all of its furniture, even so you shall make it.

Exodus 25.10: 10 “They shall make an ark of acacia wood. Its length shall be two and a half cubits, its width a cubit and a half, and a cubit and a half its height.

Exodus 25.11: 11 You shall overlay it with pure gold. You shall overlay it inside and outside, and you shall make a gold molding around it.

Exodus 25.12: 12 You shall cast four rings of gold for it, and put them in its four feet. Two rings shall be on the one side of it, and two rings on the other side of it.

Exodus 25.13: 13 You shall make poles of acacia wood, and overlay them with gold.

Exodus 25.14: 14 You shall put the poles into the rings on the sides of the ark to carry the ark.

Exodus 25.15: 15 The poles shall be in the rings of the ark. They shall not be taken from it.

Exodus 25.16: 16 You shall put the covenant which I shall give you into the ark.

Exodus 25.17: 17 You shall make a mercy seat of pure gold. Two and a half cubits shall be its length, and a cubit and a half its width.

Exodus 25.18: 18 You shall make two cherubim of hammered gold. You shall make them at the two ends of the mercy seat.

Exodus 25.19: 19 Make one cherub at the one end, and one cherub at the other end. You shall make the cherubim on its two ends of one piece with the mercy seat.

Exodus 25.20: 20 The cherubim shall spread out their wings upward, covering the mercy seat with their wings, with their faces toward one another. The faces of the cherubim shall be toward the mercy seat.

Exodus 25.21: 21 You shall put the mercy seat on top of the ark, and in the ark you shall put the covenant that I will give you.

Exodus 25.22: 22 There I will meet with you, and I will tell you from above the mercy seat, from between the two cherubim which are on the ark of the covenant, all that I command you for the children of Israel.

Exodus 25.23: 23 “You shall make a table of acacia wood. Its length shall be two cubits, and its width a cubit, and its height one and a half cubits.

Exodus 25.24: 24 You shall overlay it with pure gold, and make a gold molding around it.

Exodus 25.25: 25 You shall make a rim of a hand width around it. You shall make a golden molding on its rim around it.

Exodus 25.26: 26 You shall make four rings of gold for it, and put the rings in the four corners that are on its four feet.

Exodus 25.27: 27 the rings shall be close to the rim, for places for the poles to carry the table.

Exodus 25.28: 28 You shall make the poles of acacia wood, and overlay them with gold, that the table may be carried with them.

Exodus 25.29: 29 You shall make its dishes, its spoons, its ladles, and its bowls to pour out offerings with. You shall make them of pure gold.

Exodus 25.30: 30 You shall set bread of the presence on the table before me always.

Exodus 25.31: 31 “You shall make a lamp stand of pure gold. The lamp stand shall be made of hammered work. Its base, its shaft, its cups, its buds, and its flowers shall be of one piece with it.

Exodus 25.32: 32 There shall be six branches going out of its sides: three branches of the lamp stand out of its one side, and three branches of the lamp stand out of its other side;

Exodus 25.33: 33 three cups made like almond blossoms in one branch, a bud and a flower; and three cups made like almond blossoms in the other branch, a bud and a flower, so for the six branches going out of the lamp stand;

Exodus 25.34: 34 and in the lamp stand four cups made like almond blossoms, its buds and its flowers;

Exodus 25.35: 35 and a bud under two branches of one piece with it, and a bud under two branches of one piece with it, and a bud under two branches of one piece with it, for the six branches going out of the lamp stand.

Exodus 25.36: 36 Their buds and their branches shall be of one piece with it, all of it one beaten work of pure gold.

Exodus 25.37: 37 You shall make its lamps seven, and they shall light its lamps to give light to the space in front of it.

Exodus 25.38: 38 Its snuffers and its snuff dishes shall be of pure gold.

Exodus 25.39: 39 It shall be made of a talent of pure gold, with all these accessories.

Exodus 25.40: 40 See that you make them after their pattern, which has been shown to you on the mountain.

Exodus 26.0:

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Exodus 26.1: 1 “Moreover you shall make the tabernacle with ten curtains of fine twined linen, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, with cherubim. You shall make them with the work of a skillful workman.

Exodus 26.2: 2 The length of each curtain shall be twenty-eight cubits, and the width of each curtain four cubits: all the curtains shall have one measure.

Exodus 26.3: 3 Five curtains shall be coupled together to one another, and the other five curtains shall be coupled to one another.

Exodus 26.4: 4 You shall make loops of blue on the edge of the one curtain from the edge in the coupling, and you shall do likewise on the edge of the curtain that is outermost in the second coupling.

Exodus 26.5: 5 You shall make fifty loops in the one curtain, and you shall make fifty loops in the edge of the curtain that is in the second coupling. The loops shall be opposite one another.

Exodus 26.6: 6 You shall make fifty clasps of gold, and couple the curtains to one another with the clasps. The tabernacle shall be a unit.

Exodus 26.7: 7 “You shall make curtains of goats’ hair for a covering over the tabernacle. You shall make eleven curtains.

Exodus 26.8: 8 The length of each curtain shall be thirty cubits, and the width of each curtain four cubits: the eleven curtains shall have one measure.

Exodus 26.9: 9 You shall couple five curtains by themselves, and six curtains by themselves, and shall double over the sixth curtain in the forefront of the tent.

Exodus 26.10: 10 You shall make fifty loops on the edge of the one curtain that is outermost in the coupling, and fifty loops on the edge of the curtain which is outermost in the second coupling.

Exodus 26.11: 11 You shall make fifty clasps of bronze, and put the clasps into the loops, and couple the tent together, that it may be one.

Exodus 26.12: 12 The overhanging part that remains of the curtains of the tent—the half curtain that remains—shall hang over the back of the tabernacle.

Exodus 26.13: 13 The cubit on the one side and the cubit on the other side, of that which remains in the length of the curtains of the tent, shall hang over the sides of the tabernacle on this side and on that side, to cover it.

Exodus 26.14: 14 You shall make a covering for the tent of rams’ skins dyed red, and a covering of sea cow hides above.

Exodus 26.15: 15 “You shall make the boards for the tabernacle of acacia wood, standing upright.

Exodus 26.16: 16 Ten cubits shall be the length of a board, and one and a half cubits the width of each board.

Exodus 26.17: 17 There shall be two tenons in each board, joined to one another: thus you shall make for all the boards of the tabernacle.

Exodus 26.18: 18 You shall make twenty boards for the tabernacle, for the south side southward.

Exodus 26.19: 19 You shall make forty sockets of silver under the twenty boards; two sockets under one board for its two tenons, and two sockets under another board for its two tenons.

Exodus 26.20: 20 For the second side of the tabernacle, on the north side, twenty boards,

Exodus 26.21: 21 and their forty sockets of silver; two sockets under one board, and two sockets under another board.

Exodus 26.22: 22 For the far side of the tabernacle westward you shall make six boards.

Exodus 26.23: 23 You shall make two boards for the corners of the tabernacle in the far side.

Exodus 26.24: 24 They shall be double beneath, and in the same way they shall be whole to its top to one ring: thus shall it be for them both; they shall be for the two corners.

Exodus 26.25: 25 There shall be eight boards, and their sockets of silver, sixteen sockets; two sockets under one board, and two sockets under another board.

Exodus 26.26: 26 “You shall make bars of acacia wood: five for the boards of the one side of the tabernacle,

Exodus 26.27: 27 and five bars for the boards of the other side of the tabernacle, and five bars for the boards of the side of the tabernacle, for the far side westward.

Exodus 26.28: 28 The middle bar in the middle of the boards shall pass through from end to end.

Exodus 26.29: 29 You shall overlay the boards with gold, and make their rings of gold for places for the bars. You shall overlay the bars with gold.

Exodus 26.30: 30 You shall set up the tabernacle according to the way that it was shown to you on the mountain.

Exodus 26.31: 31 “You shall make a veil of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen, with cherubim. It shall be the work of a skillful workman.

Exodus 26.32: 32 You shall hang it on four pillars of acacia overlaid with gold; their hooks shall be of gold, on four sockets of silver.

Exodus 26.33: 33 You shall hang up the veil under the clasps, and shall bring the ark of the covenant in there within the veil. The veil shall separate the holy place from the most holy for you.

Exodus 26.34: 34 You shall put the mercy seat on the ark of the covenant in the most holy place.

Exodus 26.35: 35 You shall set the table outside the veil, and the lamp stand opposite the table on the side of the tabernacle toward the south. You shall put the table on the north side.

Exodus 26.36: 36 “You shall make a screen for the door of the Tent, of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen, the work of the embroiderer.

Exodus 26.37: 37 You shall make for the screen five pillars of acacia, and overlay them with gold. Their hooks shall be of gold. You shall cast five sockets of bronze for them.

Exodus 27.0:

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Exodus 27.1: 1 “You shall make the altar of acacia wood, five cubits long, and five cubits wide. The altar shall be square. Its height shall be three cubits.

Exodus 27.2: 2 You shall make its horns on its four corners. Its horns shall be of one piece with it. You shall overlay it with bronze.

Exodus 27.3: 3 You shall make its pots to take away its ashes; and its shovels, its basins, its meat hooks, and its fire pans. You shall make all its vessels of bronze.

Exodus 27.4: 4 You shall make a grating for it of network of bronze. On the net you shall make four bronze rings in its four corners.

Exodus 27.5: 5 You shall put it under the ledge around the altar beneath, that the net may reach halfway up the altar.

Exodus 27.6: 6 You shall make poles for the altar, poles of acacia wood, and overlay them with bronze.

Exodus 27.7: 7 Its poles shall be put into the rings, and the poles shall be on the two sides of the altar when carrying it.

Exodus 27.8: 8 You shall make it hollow with planks. They shall make it as it has been shown you on the mountain.

Exodus 27.9: 9 “You shall make the court of the tabernacle: for the south side southward there shall be hangings for the court of fine twined linen one hundred cubits long for one side.

Exodus 27.10: 10 Its pillars shall be twenty, and their sockets twenty, of bronze. The hooks of the pillars and their fillets shall be of silver.

Exodus 27.11: 11 Likewise for the length of the north side, there shall be hangings one hundred cubits long, and its pillars twenty, and their sockets twenty, of bronze; the hooks of the pillars, and their fillets, of silver.

Exodus 27.12: 12 For the width of the court on the west side shall be hangings of fifty cubits; their pillars ten, and their sockets ten.

Exodus 27.13: 13 The width of the court on the east side eastward shall be fifty cubits.

Exodus 27.14: 14 The hangings for the one side of the gate shall be fifteen cubits; their pillars three, and their sockets three.

Exodus 27.15: 15 For the other side shall be hangings of fifteen cubits; their pillars three, and their sockets three.

Exodus 27.16: 16 For the gate of the court shall be a screen of twenty cubits, of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen, the work of the embroiderer; their pillars four, and their sockets four.

Exodus 27.17: 17 All the pillars of the court around shall be filleted with silver; their hooks of silver, and their sockets of bronze.

Exodus 27.18: 18 The length of the court shall be one hundred cubits, and the width fifty throughout, and the height five cubits, of fine twined linen, and their sockets of bronze.

Exodus 27.19: 19 All the instruments of the tabernacle in all its service, and all its pins, and all the pins of the court, shall be of bronze.

Exodus 27.20: 20 “You shall command the children of Israel, that they bring to you pure olive oil beaten for the light, to cause a lamp to burn continually.

Exodus 27.21: 21 In the Tent of Meeting, outside the veil which is before the covenant, Aaron and his sons shall keep it in order from evening to morning before Yahweh: it shall be a statute forever throughout their generations on the behalf of the children of Israel.

Exodus 28.0:

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Exodus 28.1: 1 “Bring Aaron your brother, and his sons with him, near to you from among the children of Israel, that he may minister to me in the priest’s office: Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, Eleazar and Ithamar, Aaron’s sons.

Exodus 28.2: 2 You shall make holy garments for Aaron your brother, for glory and for beauty.

Exodus 28.3: 3 You shall speak to all who are wise-hearted, whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom, that they make Aaron’s garments to sanctify him, that he may minister to me in the priest’s office.

Exodus 28.4: 4 These are the garments which they shall make: a breastplate, an ephod, a robe, a fitted tunic, a turban, and a sash. They shall make holy garments for Aaron your brother and his sons, that he may minister to me in the priest’s office.

Exodus 28.5: 5 They shall use the gold, and the blue, and the purple, and the scarlet, and the fine linen.

Exodus 28.6: 6 “They shall make the ephod of gold, blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen, the work of the skillful workman.

Exodus 28.7: 7 It shall have two shoulder straps joined to the two ends of it, that it may be joined together.

Exodus 28.8: 8 The skillfully woven band, which is on it, shall be like its work and of the same piece; of gold, blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen.

Exodus 28.9: 9 You shall take two onyx stones, and engrave on them the names of the children of Israel.

Exodus 28.10: 10 Six of their names on the one stone, and the names of the six that remain on the other stone, in the order of their birth.

Exodus 28.11: 11 With the work of an engraver in stone, like the engravings of a signet, you shall engrave the two stones, according to the names of the children of Israel. You shall make them to be enclosed in settings of gold.

Exodus 28.12: 12 You shall put the two stones on the shoulder straps of the ephod, to be stones of memorial for the children of Israel. Aaron shall bear their names before Yahweh on his two shoulders for a memorial.

Exodus 28.13: 13 You shall make settings of gold,

Exodus 28.14: 14 and two chains of pure gold; you shall make them like cords of braided work. You shall put the braided chains on the settings.

Exodus 28.15: 15 “You shall make a breastplate of judgment, the work of the skillful workman; like the work of the ephod you shall make it; of gold, of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen, you shall make it.

Exodus 28.16: 16 It shall be square and folded double; a span shall be its length, and a span its width.

Exodus 28.17: 17 You shall set in it settings of stones, four rows of stones: a row of ruby, topaz, and beryl shall be the first row;

Exodus 28.18: 18 and the second row a turquoise, a sapphire, and an emerald;

Exodus 28.19: 19 and the third row a jacinth, an agate, and an amethyst;

Exodus 28.20: 20 and the fourth row a chrysolite, an onyx, and a jasper. They shall be enclosed in gold in their settings.

Exodus 28.21: 21 The stones shall be according to the names of the children of Israel, twelve, according to their names; like the engravings of a signet, everyone according to his name, they shall be for the twelve tribes.

Exodus 28.22: 22 You shall make on the breastplate chains like cords, of braided work of pure gold.

Exodus 28.23: 23 You shall make on the breastplate two rings of gold, and shall put the two rings on the two ends of the breastplate.

Exodus 28.24: 24 You shall put the two braided chains of gold in the two rings at the ends of the breastplate.

Exodus 28.25: 25 The other two ends of the two braided chains you shall put on the two settings, and put them on the shoulder straps of the ephod in its forepart.

Exodus 28.26: 26 You shall make two rings of gold, and you shall put them on the two ends of the breastplate, on its edge, which is toward the side of the ephod inward.

Exodus 28.27: 27 You shall make two rings of gold, and shall put them on the two shoulder straps of the ephod underneath, in its forepart, close by its coupling, above the skillfully woven band of the ephod.

Exodus 28.28: 28 They shall bind the breastplate by its rings to the rings of the ephod with a lace of blue, that it may be on the skillfully woven band of the ephod, and that the breastplate may not swing out from the ephod.

Exodus 28.29: 29 Aaron shall bear the names of the children of Israel in the breastplate of judgment on his heart, when he goes in to the holy place, for a memorial before Yahweh continually.

Exodus 28.30: 30 You shall put in the breastplate of judgment the Urim and the Thummim; and they shall be on Aaron’s heart, when he goes in before Yahweh. Aaron shall bear the judgment of the children of Israel on his heart before Yahweh continually.

Exodus 28.31: 31 “You shall make the robe of the ephod all of blue.

Exodus 28.32: 32 It shall have a hole for the head in the middle of it. It shall have a binding of woven work around its hole, as it were the hole of a coat of mail, that it not be torn.

Exodus 28.33: 33 On its hem you shall make pomegranates of blue, and of purple, and of scarlet, all around its hem; with bells of gold between and around them:

Exodus 28.34: 34 a golden bell and a pomegranate, a golden bell and a pomegranate, around the hem of the robe.

Exodus 28.35: 35 It shall be on Aaron to minister: and its sound shall be heard when he goes in to the holy place before Yahweh, and when he comes out, that he not die.

Exodus 28.36: 36 “You shall make a plate of pure gold, and engrave on it, like the engravings of a signet, ‘HOLY TO YAHWEH.’

Exodus 28.37: 37 You shall put it on a lace of blue, and it shall be on the sash. It shall be on the front of the sash.

Exodus 28.38: 38 It shall be on Aaron’s forehead, and Aaron shall bear the iniquity of the holy things, which the children of Israel shall make holy in all their holy gifts; and it shall be always on his forehead, that they may be accepted before Yahweh.

Exodus 28.39: 39 You shall weave the tunic with fine linen. You shall make a turban of fine linen. You shall make a sash, the work of the embroiderer.

Exodus 28.40: 40 “You shall make tunics for Aaron’s sons. You shall make sashes for them. You shall make headbands for them, for glory and for beauty.

Exodus 28.41: 41 You shall put them on Aaron your brother, and on his sons with him, and shall anoint them, and consecrate them, and sanctify them, that they may minister to me in the priest’s office.

Exodus 28.42: 42 You shall make them linen pants to cover their naked flesh. They shall reach from the waist even to the thighs.

Exodus 28.43: 43 They shall be on Aaron and on his sons, when they go in to the Tent of Meeting, or when they come near to the altar to minister in the holy place, that they don’t bear iniquity, and die. This shall be a statute forever to him and to his offspring after him.

Exodus 29.0:

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Exodus 29.1: 1 “This is the thing that you shall do to them to make them holy, to minister to me in the priest’s office: take one young bull and two rams without defect,

Exodus 29.2: 2 unleavened bread, unleavened cakes mixed with oil, and unleavened wafers anointed with oil. You shall make them of fine wheat flour.

Exodus 29.3: 3 You shall put them into one basket, and bring them in the basket, with the bull and the two rams.

Exodus 29.4: 4 You shall bring Aaron and his sons to the door of the Tent of Meeting, and shall wash them with water.

Exodus 29.5: 5 You shall take the garments, and put on Aaron the tunic, the robe of the ephod, the ephod, and the breastplate, and clothe him with the skillfully woven band of the ephod.

Exodus 29.6: 6 You shall set the turban on his head, and put the holy crown on the turban.

Exodus 29.7: 7 Then you shall take the anointing oil, and pour it on his head, and anoint him.

Exodus 29.8: 8 You shall bring his sons, and put tunics on them.

Exodus 29.9: 9 You shall clothe them with belts, Aaron and his sons, and bind headbands on them. They shall have the priesthood by a perpetual statute. You shall consecrate Aaron and his sons.

Exodus 29.10: 10 “You shall bring the bull before the Tent of Meeting; and Aaron and his sons shall lay their hands on the head of the bull.

Exodus 29.11: 11 You shall kill the bull before Yahweh at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Exodus 29.12: 12 You shall take of the blood of the bull, and put it on the horns of the altar with your finger; and you shall pour out all the blood at the base of the altar.

Exodus 29.13: 13 You shall take all the fat that covers the innards, the cover of the liver, the two kidneys, and the fat that is on them, and burn them on the altar.

Exodus 29.14: 14 But the meat of the bull, and its skin, and its dung, you shall burn with fire outside of the camp. It is a sin offering.

Exodus 29.15: 15 “You shall also take the one ram, and Aaron and his sons shall lay their hands on the head of the ram.

Exodus 29.16: 16 You shall kill the ram, and you shall take its blood, and sprinkle it around on the altar.

Exodus 29.17: 17 You shall cut the ram into its pieces, and wash its innards, and its legs, and put them with its pieces, and with its head.

Exodus 29.18: 18 You shall burn the whole ram on the altar: it is a burnt offering to Yahweh; it is a pleasant aroma, an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Exodus 29.19: 19 “You shall take the other ram, and Aaron and his sons shall lay their hands on the head of the ram.

Exodus 29.20: 20 Then you shall kill the ram, and take some of its blood, and put it on the tip of the right ear of Aaron, and on the tip of the right ear of his sons, and on the thumb of their right hand, and on the big toe of their right foot; and sprinkle the blood around on the altar.

Exodus 29.21: 21 You shall take of the blood that is on the altar, and of the anointing oil, and sprinkle it on Aaron, and on his garments, and on his sons, and on the garments of his sons with him: and he shall be made holy, and his garments, and his sons, and his sons’ garments with him.

Exodus 29.22: 22 Also you shall take some of the ram’s fat, the fat tail, the fat that covers the innards, the cover of the liver, the two kidneys, the fat that is on them, and the right thigh (for it is a ram of consecration),

Exodus 29.23: 23 and one loaf of bread, one cake of oiled bread, and one wafer out of the basket of unleavened bread that is before Yahweh.

Exodus 29.24: 24 You shall put all of this in Aaron’s hands, and in his sons’ hands, and shall wave them for a wave offering before Yahweh.

Exodus 29.25: 25 You shall take them from their hands, and burn them on the altar on the burnt offering, for a pleasant aroma before Yahweh: it is an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Exodus 29.26: 26 “You shall take the breast of Aaron’s ram of consecration, and wave it for a wave offering before Yahweh. It shall be your portion.

Exodus 29.27: 27 You shall sanctify the breast of the wave offering and the thigh of the wave offering, which is waved, and which is raised up, of the ram of consecration, even of that which is for Aaron, and of that which is for his sons.

Exodus 29.28: 28 It shall be for Aaron and his sons as their portion forever from the children of Israel; for it is a wave offering. It shall be a wave offering from the children of Israel of the sacrifices of their peace offerings, even their wave offering to Yahweh.

Exodus 29.29: 29 “The holy garments of Aaron shall be for his sons after him, to be anointed in them, and to be consecrated in them.

Exodus 29.30: 30 Seven days shall the son who is priest in his place put them on, when he comes into the Tent of Meeting to minister in the holy place.

Exodus 29.31: 31 “You shall take the ram of consecration and boil its meat in a holy place.

Exodus 29.32: 32 Aaron and his sons shall eat the meat of the ram, and the bread that is in the basket, at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Exodus 29.33: 33 They shall eat those things with which atonement was made, to consecrate and sanctify them; but a stranger shall not eat of it, because they are holy.

Exodus 29.34: 34 If anything of the meat of the consecration, or of the bread, remains to the morning, then you shall burn the remainder with fire. It shall not be eaten, because it is holy.

Exodus 29.35: 35 “You shall do so to Aaron and to his sons, according to all that I have commanded you. You shall consecrate them seven days.

Exodus 29.36: 36 Every day you shall offer the bull of sin offering for atonement. You shall cleanse the altar when you make atonement for it. You shall anoint it, to sanctify it.

Exodus 29.37: 37 Seven days you shall make atonement for the altar, and sanctify it; and the altar shall be most holy. Whatever touches the altar shall be holy.

Exodus 29.38: 38 “Now this is that which you shall offer on the altar: two lambs a year old day by day continually.

Exodus 29.39: 39 The one lamb you shall offer in the morning; and the other lamb you shall offer at evening;

Exodus 29.40: 40 and with the one lamb a tenth part of an ephah of fine flour mixed with the fourth part of a hin of beaten oil, and the fourth part of a hin of wine for a drink offering.

Exodus 29.41: 41 The other lamb you shall offer at evening, and shall do to it according to the meal offering of the morning and according to its drink offering, for a pleasant aroma, an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Exodus 29.42: 42 It shall be a continual burnt offering throughout your generations at the door of the Tent of Meeting before Yahweh, where I will meet with you, to speak there to you.

Exodus 29.43: 43 There I will meet with the children of Israel; and the place shall be sanctified by my glory.

Exodus 29.44: 44 I will sanctify the Tent of Meeting and the altar. I will also sanctify Aaron and his sons to minister to me in the priest’s office.

Exodus 29.45: 45 I will dwell among the children of Israel, and will be their God.

Exodus 29.46: 46 They shall know that I am Yahweh their God, who brought them out of the land of Egypt, that I might dwell among them: I am Yahweh their God.

Exodus 30.0:

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Exodus 30.1: 1 “You shall make an altar to burn incense on. You shall make it of acacia wood.

Exodus 30.2: 2 Its length shall be a cubit, and its width a cubit. It shall be square, and its height shall be two cubits. Its horns shall be of one piece with it.

Exodus 30.3: 3 You shall overlay it with pure gold, its top, its sides around it, and its horns; and you shall make a gold molding around it.

Exodus 30.4: 4 You shall make two golden rings for it under its molding; on its two ribs, on its two sides you shall make them; and they shall be for places for poles with which to bear it.

Exodus 30.5: 5 You shall make the poles of acacia wood, and overlay them with gold.

Exodus 30.6: 6 You shall put it before the veil that is by the ark of the covenant, before the mercy seat that is over the covenant, where I will meet with you.

Exodus 30.7: 7 Aaron shall burn incense of sweet spices on it every morning. When he tends the lamps, he shall burn it.

Exodus 30.8: 8 When Aaron lights the lamps at evening, he shall burn it, a perpetual incense before Yahweh throughout your generations.

Exodus 30.9: 9 You shall offer no strange incense on it, nor burnt offering, nor meal offering; and you shall pour no drink offering on it.

Exodus 30.10: 10 Aaron shall make atonement on its horns once in the year; with the blood of the sin offering of atonement once in the year he shall make atonement for it throughout your generations. It is most holy to Yahweh.”

Exodus 30.11: 11 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 30.12: 12 “When you take a census of the children of Israel, according to those who are counted among them, then each man shall give a ransom for his soul to Yahweh, when you count them; that there be no plague among them when you count them.

Exodus 30.13: 13 They shall give this, everyone who passes over to those who are counted, half a shekel according to the shekel of the sanctuary (the shekel is twenty gerahs); half a shekel for an offering to Yahweh.

Exodus 30.14: 14 Everyone who passes over to those who are counted, from twenty years old and upward, shall give the offering to Yahweh.

Exodus 30.15: 15 The rich shall not give more, and the poor shall not give less, than the half shekel, when they give the offering of Yahweh, to make atonement for your souls.

Exodus 30.16: 16 You shall take the atonement money from the children of Israel, and shall appoint it for the service of the Tent of Meeting; that it may be a memorial for the children of Israel before Yahweh, to make atonement for your souls.”

Exodus 30.17: 17 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 30.18: 18 “You shall also make a basin of bronze, and its base of bronze, in which to wash. You shall put it between the Tent of Meeting and the altar, and you shall put water in it.

Exodus 30.19: 19 Aaron and his sons shall wash their hands and their feet in it.

Exodus 30.20: 20 When they go into the Tent of Meeting, they shall wash with water, that they not die; or when they come near to the altar to minister, to burn an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Exodus 30.21: 21 So they shall wash their hands and their feet, that they not die. This shall be a statute forever to them, even to him and to his descendants throughout their generations.”

Exodus 30.22: 22 Moreover Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 30.23: 23 “Also take fine spices: of liquid myrrh, five hundred shekels; and of fragrant cinnamon half as much, even two hundred and fifty; and of fragrant cane, two hundred and fifty;

Exodus 30.24: 24 and of cassia five hundred, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; and a hin of olive oil.

Exodus 30.25: 25 You shall make it into a holy anointing oil, a perfume compounded after the art of the perfumer: it shall be a holy anointing oil.

Exodus 30.26: 26 You shall use it to anoint the Tent of Meeting, the ark of the covenant,

Exodus 30.27: 27 the table and all its articles, the lamp stand and its accessories, the altar of incense,

Exodus 30.28: 28 the altar of burnt offering with all its utensils, and the basin with its base.

Exodus 30.29: 29 You shall sanctify them, that they may be most holy. Whatever touches them shall be holy.

Exodus 30.30: 30 You shall anoint Aaron and his sons, and sanctify them, that they may minister to me in the priest’s office.

Exodus 30.31: 31 You shall speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘This shall be a holy anointing oil to me throughout your generations.

Exodus 30.32: 32 It shall not be poured on man’s flesh, and do not make any like it, according to its composition. It is holy. It shall be holy to you.

Exodus 30.33: 33 Whoever compounds any like it, or whoever puts any of it on a stranger, he shall be cut off from his people.’”

Exodus 30.34: 34 Yahweh said to Moses, “Take to yourself sweet spices, gum resin, onycha, and galbanum; sweet spices with pure frankincense. There shall be an equal weight of each.

Exodus 30.35: 35 You shall make incense of it, a perfume after the art of the perfumer, seasoned with salt, pure and holy.

Exodus 30.36: 36 You shall beat some of it very small, and put some of it before the covenant in the Tent of Meeting, where I will meet with you. It shall be to you most holy.

Exodus 30.37: 37 The incense which you shall make, according to its composition you shall not make for yourselves: it shall be to you holy for Yahweh.

Exodus 30.38: 38 Whoever shall make any like that, to smell of it, he shall be cut off from his people.”

Exodus 31.0:

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Exodus 31.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 31.2: 2 “Behold, I have called by name Bezalel the son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah.

Exodus 31.3: 3 I have filled him with the Spirit of God, in wisdom, and in understanding, and in knowledge, and in all kinds of workmanship,

Exodus 31.4: 4 to devise skillful works, to work in gold, and in silver, and in bronze,

Exodus 31.5: 5 and in cutting of stones for setting, and in carving of wood, to work in all kinds of workmanship.

Exodus 31.6: 6 Behold, I myself have appointed with him Oholiab, the son of Ahisamach, of the tribe of Dan; and in the heart of all who are wise-hearted I have put wisdom, that they may make all that I have commanded you:

Exodus 31.7: 7 the Tent of Meeting, the ark of the covenant, the mercy seat that is on it, all the furniture of the Tent,

Exodus 31.8: 8 the table and its vessels, the pure lamp stand with all its vessels, the altar of incense,

Exodus 31.9: 9 the altar of burnt offering with all its vessels, the basin and its base,

Exodus 31.10: 10 the finely worked garments—the holy garments for Aaron the priest, the garments of his sons to minister in the priest’s office—

Exodus 31.11: 11 the anointing oil, and the incense of sweet spices for the holy place: according to all that I have commanded you they shall do.”

Exodus 31.12: 12 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 31.13: 13 “Speak also to the children of Israel, saying, ‘Most certainly you shall keep my Sabbaths; for it is a sign between me and you throughout your generations, that you may know that I am Yahweh who sanctifies you.

Exodus 31.14: 14 You shall keep the Sabbath therefore, for it is holy to you. Everyone who profanes it shall surely be put to death; for whoever does any work therein, that soul shall be cut off from among his people.

Exodus 31.15: 15 Six days shall work be done, but on the seventh day is a Sabbath of solemn rest, holy to Yahweh. Whoever does any work on the Sabbath day shall surely be put to death.

Exodus 31.16: 16 Therefore the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, to observe the Sabbath throughout their generations, for a perpetual covenant.

Exodus 31.17: 17 It is a sign between me and the children of Israel forever; for in six days Yahweh made heaven and earth, and on the seventh day he rested, and was refreshed.’”

Exodus 31.18: 18 When he finished speaking with him on Mount Sinai, he gave Moses the two tablets of the covenant, stone tablets, written with God’s finger.

Exodus 32.0:

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Exodus 32.1: 1 When the people saw that Moses delayed coming down from the mountain, the people gathered themselves together to Aaron, and said to him, “Come, make us gods, which shall go before us; for as for this Moses, the man who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we don’t know what has become of him.”

Exodus 32.2: 2 Aaron said to them, “Take off the golden rings, which are in the ears of your wives, of your sons, and of your daughters, and bring them to me.”

Exodus 32.3: 3 All the people took off the golden rings which were in their ears, and brought them to Aaron.

Exodus 32.4: 4 He received what they handed him, fashioned it with an engraving tool, and made it a molded calf. Then they said, “These are your gods, Israel, which brought you up out of the land of Egypt.”

Exodus 32.5: 5 When Aaron saw this, he built an altar before it; and Aaron made a proclamation, and said, “Tomorrow shall be a feast to Yahweh.”

Exodus 32.6: 6 They rose up early on the next day, and offered burnt offerings, and brought peace offerings; and the people sat down to eat and to drink, and rose up to play.

Exodus 32.7: 7 Yahweh spoke to Moses, “Go, get down; for your people, who you brought up out of the land of Egypt, have corrupted themselves!

Exodus 32.8: 8 They have turned away quickly out of the way which I commanded them. They have made themselves a molded calf, and have worshiped it, and have sacrificed to it, and said, ‘These are your gods, Israel, which brought you up out of the land of Egypt.’”

Exodus 32.9: 9 Yahweh said to Moses, “I have seen these people, and behold, they are a stiff-necked people.

Exodus 32.10: 10 Now therefore leave me alone, that my wrath may burn hot against them, and that I may consume them; and I will make of you a great nation.”

Exodus 32.11: 11 Moses begged Yahweh his God, and said, “Yahweh, why does your wrath burn hot against your people, that you have brought out of the land of Egypt with great power and with a mighty hand?

Exodus 32.12: 12 Why should the Egyptians talk, saying, ‘He brought them out for evil, to kill them in the mountains, and to consume them from the surface of the earth?’ Turn from your fierce wrath, and turn away from this evil against your people.

Exodus 32.13: 13 Remember Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, your servants, to whom you swore by your own self, and said to them, ‘I will multiply your offspring as the stars of the sky, and all this land that I have spoken of I will give to your offspring, and they shall inherit it forever.’”

Exodus 32.14: 14 So Yahweh turned away from the evil which he said he would do to his people.

Exodus 32.15: 15 Moses turned, and went down from the mountain, with the two tablets of the covenant in his hand; tablets that were written on both their sides. They were written on one side and on the other.

Exodus 32.16: 16 The tablets were the work of God, and the writing was the writing of God, engraved on the tablets.

Exodus 32.17: 17 When Joshua heard the noise of the people as they shouted, he said to Moses, “There is the noise of war in the camp.”

Exodus 32.18: 18 He said, “It isn’t the voice of those who shout for victory. It is not the voice of those who cry for being overcome; but the noise of those who sing that I hear.”

Exodus 32.19: 19 As soon as he came near to the camp, he saw the calf and the dancing. Then Moses’ anger grew hot, and he threw the tablets out of his hands, and broke them beneath the mountain.

Exodus 32.20: 20 He took the calf which they had made, and burned it with fire, ground it to powder, and scattered it on the water, and made the children of Israel drink it.

Exodus 32.21: 21 Moses said to Aaron, “What did these people do to you, that you have brought a great sin on them?”

Exodus 32.22: 22 Aaron said, “Don’t let the anger of my lord grow hot. You know the people, that they are set on evil.

Exodus 32.23: 23 For they said to me, ‘Make us gods, which shall go before us. As for this Moses, the man who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we don’t know what has become of him.’

Exodus 32.24: 24 I said to them, ‘Whoever has any gold, let them take it off.’ So they gave it to me; and I threw it into the fire, and out came this calf.”

Exodus 32.25: 25 When Moses saw that the people were out of control, (for Aaron had let them lose control, causing derision among their enemies),

Exodus 32.26: 26 then Moses stood in the gate of the camp, and said, “Whoever is on Yahweh’s side, come to me!”

All the sons of Levi gathered themselves together to him.

Exodus 32.27: 27 He said to them, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, ‘Every man put his sword on his thigh, and go back and forth from gate to gate throughout the camp, and every man kill his brother, and every man his companion, and every man his neighbor.’”

Exodus 32.28: 28 The sons of Levi did according to the word of Moses. About three thousand men fell of the people that day.

Exodus 32.29: 29 Moses said, “Consecrate yourselves today to Yahweh, for every man was against his son and against his brother, that he may give you a blessing today.”

Exodus 32.30: 30 On the next day, Moses said to the people, “You have sinned a great sin. Now I will go up to Yahweh. Perhaps I shall make atonement for your sin.”

Exodus 32.31: 31 Moses returned to Yahweh, and said, “Oh, this people have sinned a great sin, and have made themselves gods of gold.

Exodus 32.32: 32 Yet now, if you will, forgive their sin—and if not, please blot me out of your book which you have written.”

Exodus 32.33: 33 Yahweh said to Moses, “Whoever has sinned against me, I will blot him out of my book.

Exodus 32.34: 34 Now go, lead the people to the place of which I have spoken to you. Behold, my angel shall go before you. Nevertheless, in the day when I punish, I will punish them for their sin.”

Exodus 32.35: 35 Yahweh struck the people, because of what they did with the calf, which Aaron made.

Exodus 33.0:

33

Exodus 33.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, “Depart, go up from here, you and the people that you have brought up out of the land of Egypt, to the land of which I swore to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, saying, ‘I will give it to your offspring.’

Exodus 33.2: 2 I will send an angel before you; and I will drive out the Canaanite, the Amorite, and the Hittite, and the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite.

Exodus 33.3: 3 Go to a land flowing with milk and honey; but I will not go up among you, for you are a stiff-necked people, lest I consume you on the way.”

Exodus 33.4: 4 When the people heard this evil news, they mourned; and no one put on his jewelry.

Exodus 33.5: 5 Yahweh had said to Moses, “Tell the children of Israel, ‘You are a stiff-necked people. If I were to go up among you for one moment, I would consume you. Therefore now take off your jewelry from you, that I may know what to do to you.’”

Exodus 33.6: 6 The children of Israel stripped themselves of their jewelry from Mount Horeb onward.

Exodus 33.7: 7 Now Moses used to take the tent and pitch it outside the camp, far away from the camp, and he called it “The Tent of Meeting.” Everyone who sought Yahweh went out to the Tent of Meeting, which was outside the camp.

Exodus 33.8: 8 When Moses went out to the Tent, all the people rose up, and stood, everyone at their tent door, and watched Moses, until he had gone into the Tent.

Exodus 33.9: 9 When Moses entered into the Tent, the pillar of cloud descended, stood at the door of the Tent, and Yahweh spoke with Moses.

Exodus 33.10: 10 All the people saw the pillar of cloud stand at the door of the Tent, and all the people rose up and worshiped, everyone at their tent door.

Exodus 33.11: 11 Yahweh spoke to Moses face to face, as a man speaks to his friend. He turned again into the camp, but his servant Joshua, the son of Nun, a young man, didn’t depart from the Tent.

Exodus 33.12: 12 Moses said to Yahweh, “Behold, you tell me, ‘Bring up this people;’ and you haven’t let me know whom you will send with me. Yet you have said, ‘I know you by name, and you have also found favor in my sight.’

Exodus 33.13: 13 Now therefore, if I have found favor in your sight, please show me your way, now, that I may know you, so that I may find favor in your sight; and consider that this nation is your people.”

Exodus 33.14: 14 He said, “My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.”

Exodus 33.15: 15 Moses said to him, “If your presence doesn’t go with me, don’t carry us up from here.

Exodus 33.16: 16 For how would people know that I have found favor in your sight, I and your people? Isn’t it that you go with us, so that we are separated, I and your people, from all the people who are on the surface of the earth?”

Exodus 33.17: 17 Yahweh said to Moses, “I will do this thing also that you have spoken; for you have found favor in my sight, and I know you by name.”

Exodus 33.18: 18 Moses said, “Please show me your glory.”

Exodus 33.19: 19 He said, “I will make all my goodness pass before you, and will proclaim Yahweh’s name before you. I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will show mercy on whom I will show mercy.”

Exodus 33.20: 20 He said, “You cannot see my face, for man may not see me and live.”

Exodus 33.21: 21 Yahweh also said, “Behold, there is a place by me, and you shall stand on the rock.

Exodus 33.22: 22 It will happen, while my glory passes by, that I will put you in a cleft of the rock, and will cover you with my hand until I have passed by;

Exodus 33.23: 23 then I will take away my hand, and you will see my back; but my face shall not be seen.”

Exodus 34.0:

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Exodus 34.1: 1 Yahweh said to Moses, “Chisel two stone tablets like the first. I will write on the tablets the words that were on the first tablets, which you broke.

Exodus 34.2: 2 Be ready by the morning, and come up in the morning to Mount Sinai, and present yourself there to me on the top of the mountain.

Exodus 34.3: 3 No one shall come up with you or be seen anywhere on the mountain. Do not let the flocks or herds graze in front of that mountain.”

Exodus 34.4: 4 He chiseled two tablets of stone like the first; then Moses rose up early in the morning, and went up to Mount Sinai, as Yahweh had commanded him, and took in his hand two stone tablets.

Exodus 34.5: 5 Yahweh descended in the cloud, and stood with him there, and proclaimed Yahweh’s name.

Exodus 34.6: 6 Yahweh passed by before him, and proclaimed, “Yahweh! Yahweh, a merciful and gracious God, slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness and truth,

Exodus 34.7: 7 keeping loving kindness for thousands, forgiving iniquity and disobedience and sin; and who will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, and on the children’s children, on the third and on the fourth generation.”

Exodus 34.8: 8 Moses hurried and bowed his head toward the earth, and worshiped.

Exodus 34.9: 9 He said, “If now I have found favor in your sight, Lord, please let the Lord go among us, even though this is a stiff-necked people; pardon our iniquity and our sin, and take us for your inheritance.”

Exodus 34.10: 10 He said, “Behold, I make a covenant: before all your people I will do marvels, such as have not been worked in all the earth, nor in any nation; and all the people among whom you are shall see the work of Yahweh; for it is an awesome thing that I do with you.

Exodus 34.11: 11 Observe that which I command you today. Behold, I will drive out before you the Amorite, the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite.

Exodus 34.12: 12 Be careful, lest you make a covenant with the inhabitants of the land where you are going, lest it be for a snare among you;

Exodus 34.13: 13 but you shall break down their altars, and dash in pieces their pillars, and you shall cut down their Asherah poles;

Exodus 34.14: 14 for you shall worship no other god; for Yahweh, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God.

Exodus 34.15: 15 “Don’t make a covenant with the inhabitants of the land, lest they play the prostitute after their gods, and sacrifice to their gods, and one call you and you eat of his sacrifice;

Exodus 34.16: 16 and you take of their daughters to your sons, and their daughters play the prostitute after their gods, and make your sons play the prostitute after their gods.

Exodus 34.17: 17 “You shall make no cast idols for yourselves.

Exodus 34.18: 18 “You shall keep the feast of unleavened bread. Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread, as I commanded you, at the time appointed in the month Abib; for in the month Abib you came out of Egypt.

Exodus 34.19: 19 “All that opens the womb is mine; and all your livestock that is male, the firstborn of cow and sheep.

Exodus 34.20: 20 You shall redeem the firstborn of a donkey with a lamb. If you will not redeem it, then you shall break its neck. You shall redeem all the firstborn of your sons. No one shall appear before me empty.

Exodus 34.21: 21 “Six days you shall work, but on the seventh day you shall rest: in plowing time and in harvest you shall rest.

Exodus 34.22: 22 “You shall observe the feast of weeks with the first fruits of wheat harvest, and the feast of harvest at the year’s end.

Exodus 34.23: 23 Three times in the year all your males shall appear before the Lord Yahweh, the God of Israel.

Exodus 34.24: 24 For I will drive out nations before you and enlarge your borders; neither shall any man desire your land when you go up to appear before Yahweh, your God, three times in the year.

Exodus 34.25: 25 “You shall not offer the blood of my sacrifice with leavened bread. The sacrifice of the feast of the Passover shall not be left to the morning.

Exodus 34.26: 26 “You shall bring the first of the first fruits of your ground to the house of Yahweh your God.

“You shall not boil a young goat in its mother’s milk.”

Exodus 34.27: 27 Yahweh said to Moses, “Write these words; for in accordance with these words I have made a covenant with you and with Israel.”

Exodus 34.28: 28 He was there with Yahweh forty days and forty nights; he neither ate bread, nor drank water. He wrote on the tablets the words of the covenant, the ten commandments.

Exodus 34.29: 29 When Moses came down from Mount Sinai with the two tablets of the covenant in Moses’ hand, when he came down from the mountain, Moses didn’t know that the skin of his face shone by reason of his speaking with him.

Exodus 34.30: 30 When Aaron and all the children of Israel saw Moses, behold, the skin of his face shone; and they were afraid to come near him.

Exodus 34.31: 31 Moses called to them, and Aaron and all the rulers of the congregation returned to him; and Moses spoke to them.

Exodus 34.32: 32 Afterward all the children of Israel came near, and he gave them all the commandments that Yahweh had spoken with him on Mount Sinai.

Exodus 34.33: 33 When Moses was done speaking with them, he put a veil on his face.

Exodus 34.34: 34 But when Moses went in before Yahweh to speak with him, he took the veil off, until he came out; and he came out, and spoke to the children of Israel that which he was commanded.

Exodus 34.35: 35 The children of Israel saw Moses’ face, that the skin of Moses’ face shone; so Moses put the veil on his face again, until he went in to speak with him.

Exodus 35.0:

35

Exodus 35.1: 1 Moses assembled all the congregation of the children of Israel, and said to them, “These are the words which Yahweh has commanded, that you should do them.

Exodus 35.2: 2 ‘Six days shall work be done, but on the seventh day there shall be a holy day for you, a Sabbath of solemn rest to Yahweh: whoever does any work in it shall be put to death.

Exodus 35.3: 3 You shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations on the Sabbath day.’”

Exodus 35.4: 4 Moses spoke to all the congregation of the children of Israel, saying, “This is the thing which Yahweh commanded, saying,

Exodus 35.5: 5 ‘Take from among you an offering to Yahweh. Whoever is of a willing heart, let him bring it as Yahweh’s offering: gold, silver, bronze,

Exodus 35.6: 6 blue, purple, scarlet, fine linen, goats’ hair,

Exodus 35.7: 7 rams’ skins dyed red, sea cow hides, acacia wood,

Exodus 35.8: 8 oil for the light, spices for the anointing oil and for the sweet incense,

Exodus 35.9: 9 onyx stones, and stones to be set for the ephod and for the breastplate.

Exodus 35.10: 10 “‘Let every wise-hearted man among you come, and make all that Yahweh has commanded:

Exodus 35.11: 11 the tabernacle, its outer covering, its roof, its clasps, its boards, its bars, its pillars, and its sockets;

Exodus 35.12: 12 the ark, and its poles, the mercy seat, the veil of the screen;

Exodus 35.13: 13 the table with its poles and all its vessels, and the show bread;

Exodus 35.14: 14 the lamp stand also for the light, with its vessels, its lamps, and the oil for the light;

Exodus 35.15: 15 and the altar of incense with its poles, the anointing oil, the sweet incense, the screen for the door, at the door of the tabernacle;

Exodus 35.16: 16 the altar of burnt offering, with its grating of bronze, its poles, and all its vessels, the basin and its base;

Exodus 35.17: 17 the hangings of the court, its pillars, their sockets, and the screen for the gate of the court;

Exodus 35.18: 18 the pins of the tabernacle, the pins of the court, and their cords;

Exodus 35.19: 19 the finely worked garments for ministering in the holy place—the holy garments for Aaron the priest, and the garments of his sons—to minister in the priest’s office.’”

Exodus 35.20: 20 All the congregation of the children of Israel departed from the presence of Moses.

Exodus 35.21: 21 They came, everyone whose heart stirred him up, and everyone whom his spirit made willing, and brought Yahweh’s offering for the work of the Tent of Meeting, and for all of its service, and for the holy garments.

Exodus 35.22: 22 They came, both men and women, as many as were willing-hearted, and brought brooches, earrings, signet rings, and armlets, all jewels of gold; even every man who offered an offering of gold to Yahweh.

Exodus 35.23: 23 Everyone with whom was found blue, purple, scarlet, fine linen, goats’ hair, rams’ skins dyed red, and sea cow hides, brought them.

Exodus 35.24: 24 Everyone who offered an offering of silver and bronze brought Yahweh’s offering; and everyone with whom was found acacia wood for any work of the service, brought it.

Exodus 35.25: 25 All the women who were wise-hearted spun with their hands, and brought that which they had spun: the blue, the purple, the scarlet, and the fine linen.

Exodus 35.26: 26 All the women whose heart stirred them up in wisdom spun the goats’ hair.

Exodus 35.27: 27 The rulers brought the onyx stones and the stones to be set for the ephod and for the breastplate;

Exodus 35.28: 28 with the spice and the oil for the light, for the anointing oil, and for the sweet incense.

Exodus 35.29: 29 The children of Israel brought a free will offering to Yahweh; every man and woman whose heart made them willing to bring for all the work, which Yahweh had commanded to be made by Moses.

Exodus 35.30: 30 Moses said to the children of Israel, “Behold, Yahweh has called by name Bezalel the son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah.

Exodus 35.31: 31 He has filled him with the Spirit of God, in wisdom, in understanding, in knowledge, and in all kinds of workmanship;

Exodus 35.32: 32 and to make skillful works, to work in gold, in silver, in bronze,

Exodus 35.33: 33 in cutting of stones for setting, and in carving of wood, to work in all kinds of skillful workmanship.

Exodus 35.34: 34 He has put in his heart that he may teach, both he and Oholiab, the son of Ahisamach, of the tribe of Dan.

Exodus 35.35: 35 He has filled them with wisdom of heart to work all kinds of workmanship, of the engraver, of the skillful workman, and of the embroiderer, in blue, in purple, in scarlet, and in fine linen, and of the weaver, even of those who do any workmanship, and of those who make skillful works.

Exodus 36.0:

36

Exodus 36.1: 1 “Bezalel and Oholiab shall work with every wise-hearted man, in whom Yahweh has put wisdom and understanding to know how to do all the work for the service of the sanctuary, according to all that Yahweh has commanded.”

Exodus 36.2: 2 Moses called Bezalel and Oholiab, and every wise-hearted man, in whose heart Yahweh had put wisdom, even everyone whose heart stirred him up to come to the work to do it.

Exodus 36.3: 3 They received from Moses all the offering which the children of Israel had brought for the work of the service of the sanctuary, with which to make it. They kept bringing free will offerings to him every morning.

Exodus 36.4: 4 All the wise men, who performed all the work of the sanctuary, each came from his work which he did.

Exodus 36.5: 5 They spoke to Moses, saying, “The people have brought much more than enough for the service of the work which Yahweh commanded to make.”

Exodus 36.6: 6 Moses gave a commandment, and they caused it to be proclaimed throughout the camp, saying, “Let neither man nor woman make anything else for the offering for the sanctuary.” So the people were restrained from bringing.

Exodus 36.7: 7 For the stuff they had was sufficient to do all the work, and too much.

Exodus 36.8: 8 All the wise-hearted men among those who did the work made the tabernacle with ten curtains of fine twined linen, blue, purple, and scarlet. They made them with cherubim, the work of a skillful workman.

Exodus 36.9: 9 The length of each curtain was twenty-eight cubits, and the width of each curtain four cubits. All the curtains had one measure.

Exodus 36.10: 10 He coupled five curtains to one another, and the other five curtains he coupled to one another.

Exodus 36.11: 11 He made loops of blue on the edge of the one curtain from the edge in the coupling. Likewise he made in the edge of the curtain that was outermost in the second coupling.

Exodus 36.12: 12 He made fifty loops in the one curtain, and he made fifty loops in the edge of the curtain that was in the second coupling. The loops were opposite to one another.

Exodus 36.13: 13 He made fifty clasps of gold, and coupled the curtains to one another with the clasps: so the tabernacle was a unit.

Exodus 36.14: 14 He made curtains of goats’ hair for a covering over the tabernacle. He made them eleven curtains.

Exodus 36.15: 15 The length of each curtain was thirty cubits, and four cubits the width of each curtain. The eleven curtains had one measure.

Exodus 36.16: 16 He coupled five curtains by themselves, and six curtains by themselves.

Exodus 36.17: 17 He made fifty loops on the edge of the curtain that was outermost in the coupling, and he made fifty loops on the edge of the curtain which was outermost in the second coupling.

Exodus 36.18: 18 He made fifty clasps of bronze to couple the tent together, that it might be a unit.

Exodus 36.19: 19 He made a covering for the tent of rams’ skins dyed red, and a covering of sea cow hides above.

Exodus 36.20: 20 He made the boards for the tabernacle of acacia wood, standing up.

Exodus 36.21: 21 Ten cubits was the length of a board, and a cubit and a half the width of each board.

Exodus 36.22: 22 Each board had two tenons, joined to one another. He made all the boards of the tabernacle this way.

Exodus 36.23: 23 He made the boards for the tabernacle, twenty boards for the south side southward.

Exodus 36.24: 24 He made forty sockets of silver under the twenty boards: two sockets under one board for its two tenons, and two sockets under another board for its two tenons.

Exodus 36.25: 25 For the second side of the tabernacle, on the north side, he made twenty boards

Exodus 36.26: 26 and their forty sockets of silver: two sockets under one board, and two sockets under another board.

Exodus 36.27: 27 For the far part of the tabernacle westward he made six boards.

Exodus 36.28: 28 He made two boards for the corners of the tabernacle in the far part.

Exodus 36.29: 29 They were double beneath, and in the same way they were all the way to its top to one ring. He did this to both of them in the two corners.

Exodus 36.30: 30 There were eight boards and their sockets of silver, sixteen sockets—under every board two sockets.

Exodus 36.31: 31 He made bars of acacia wood: five for the boards of the one side of the tabernacle,

Exodus 36.32: 32 and five bars for the boards of the other side of the tabernacle, and five bars for the boards of the tabernacle for the hinder part westward.

Exodus 36.33: 33 He made the middle bar to pass through in the middle of the boards from the one end to the other.

Exodus 36.34: 34 He overlaid the boards with gold, and made their rings of gold as places for the bars, and overlaid the bars with gold.

Exodus 36.35: 35 He made the veil of blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen, with cherubim. He made it the work of a skillful workman.

Exodus 36.36: 36 He made four pillars of acacia for it, and overlaid them with gold. Their hooks were of gold. He cast four sockets of silver for them.

Exodus 36.37: 37 He made a screen for the door of the tent, of blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen, the work of an embroiderer;

Exodus 36.38: 38 and the five pillars of it with their hooks. He overlaid their capitals and their fillets with gold, and their five sockets were of bronze.

Exodus 37.0:

37

Exodus 37.1: 1 Bezalel made the ark of acacia wood. Its length was two and a half cubits, and its width a cubit and a half, and a cubit and a half its height.

Exodus 37.2: 2 He overlaid it with pure gold inside and outside, and made a molding of gold for it around it.

Exodus 37.3: 3 He cast four rings of gold for it, in its four feet—two rings on its one side, and two rings on its other side.

Exodus 37.4: 4 He made poles of acacia wood, and overlaid them with gold.

Exodus 37.5: 5 He put the poles into the rings on the sides of the ark, to bear the ark.

Exodus 37.6: 6 He made a mercy seat of pure gold. Its length was two and a half cubits, and a cubit and a half its width.

Exodus 37.7: 7 He made two cherubim of gold. He made them of beaten work, at the two ends of the mercy seat:

Exodus 37.8: 8 one cherub at the one end, and one cherub at the other end. He made the cherubim of one piece with the mercy seat at its two ends.

Exodus 37.9: 9 The cherubim spread out their wings above, covering the mercy seat with their wings, with their faces toward one another. The faces of the cherubim were toward the mercy seat.

Exodus 37.10: 10 He made the table of acacia wood. Its length was two cubits, and its width was a cubit, and its height was a cubit and a half.

Exodus 37.11: 11 He overlaid it with pure gold, and made a gold molding around it.

Exodus 37.12: 12 He made a border of a hand’s width around it, and made a golden molding on its border around it.

Exodus 37.13: 13 He cast four rings of gold for it, and put the rings in the four corners that were on its four feet.

Exodus 37.14: 14 The rings were close by the border, the places for the poles to carry the table.

Exodus 37.15: 15 He made the poles of acacia wood, and overlaid them with gold, to carry the table.

Exodus 37.16: 16 He made the vessels which were on the table, its dishes, its spoons, its bowls, and its pitchers with which to pour out, of pure gold.

Exodus 37.17: 17 He made the lamp stand of pure gold. He made the lamp stand of beaten work. Its base, its shaft, its cups, its buds, and its flowers were of one piece with it.

Exodus 37.18: 18 There were six branches going out of its sides: three branches of the lamp stand out of its one side, and three branches of the lamp stand out of its other side:

Exodus 37.19: 19 three cups made like almond blossoms in one branch, a bud and a flower, and three cups made like almond blossoms in the other branch, a bud and a flower; so for the six branches going out of the lamp stand.

Exodus 37.20: 20 In the lamp stand were four cups made like almond blossoms, its buds and its flowers;

Exodus 37.21: 21 and a bud under two branches of one piece with it, and a bud under two branches of one piece with it, and a bud under two branches of one piece with it, for the six branches going out of it.

Exodus 37.22: 22 Their buds and their branches were of one piece with it. The whole thing was one beaten work of pure gold.

Exodus 37.23: 23 He made its seven lamps, and its snuffers, and its snuff dishes, of pure gold.

Exodus 37.24: 24 He made it of a talent of pure gold, with all its vessels.

Exodus 37.25: 25 He made the altar of incense of acacia wood. It was square: its length was a cubit, and its width a cubit. Its height was two cubits. Its horns were of one piece with it.

Exodus 37.26: 26 He overlaid it with pure gold: its top, its sides around it, and its horns. He made a gold molding around it.

Exodus 37.27: 27 He made two golden rings for it under its molding crown, on its two ribs, on its two sides, for places for poles with which to carry it.

Exodus 37.28: 28 He made the poles of acacia wood, and overlaid them with gold.

Exodus 37.29: 29 He made the holy anointing oil and the pure incense of sweet spices, after the art of the perfumer.

Exodus 38.0:

38

Exodus 38.1: 1 He made the altar of burnt offering of acacia wood. It was square. Its length was five cubits, its width was five cubits, and its height was three cubits.

Exodus 38.2: 2 He made its horns on its four corners. Its horns were of one piece with it, and he overlaid it with bronze.

Exodus 38.3: 3 He made all the vessels of the altar: the pots, the shovels, the basins, the forks, and the fire pans. He made all its vessels of bronze.

Exodus 38.4: 4 He made for the altar a grating of a network of bronze, under the ledge around it beneath, reaching halfway up.

Exodus 38.5: 5 He cast four rings for the four corners of bronze grating, to be places for the poles.

Exodus 38.6: 6 He made the poles of acacia wood, and overlaid them with bronze.

Exodus 38.7: 7 He put the poles into the rings on the sides of the altar, with which to carry it. He made it hollow with planks.

Exodus 38.8: 8 He made the basin of bronze, and its base of bronze, out of the mirrors of the ministering women who ministered at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Exodus 38.9: 9 He made the court: for the south side southward the hangings of the court were of fine twined linen, one hundred cubits;

Exodus 38.10: 10 their pillars were twenty, and their sockets twenty, of bronze; the hooks of the pillars and their fillets were of silver.

Exodus 38.11: 11 For the north side one hundred cubits, their pillars twenty, and their sockets twenty, of bronze; the hooks of the pillars, and their fillets, of silver.

Exodus 38.12: 12 For the west side were hangings of fifty cubits, their pillars ten, and their sockets ten; the hooks of the pillars, and their fillets, of silver.

Exodus 38.13: 13 For the east side eastward fifty cubits,

Exodus 38.14: 14 the hangings for the one side were fifteen cubits; their pillars three, and their sockets three;

Exodus 38.15: 15 and so for the other side: on this hand and that hand by the gate of the court were hangings of fifteen cubits; their pillars three, and their sockets three.

Exodus 38.16: 16 All the hangings around the court were of fine twined linen.

Exodus 38.17: 17 The sockets for the pillars were of bronze. The hooks of the pillars and their fillets were of silver. Their capitals were overlaid with silver. All the pillars of the court had silver bands.

Exodus 38.18: 18 The screen for the gate of the court was the work of the embroiderer, of blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen. Twenty cubits was the length, and the height along the width was five cubits, like the hangings of the court.

Exodus 38.19: 19 Their pillars were four, and their sockets four, of bronze; their hooks of silver, and the overlaying of their capitals, and their fillets, of silver.

Exodus 38.20: 20 All the pins of the tabernacle, and around the court, were of bronze.

Exodus 38.21: 21 These are the amounts of materials used for the tabernacle, even the Tabernacle of the Testimony, as they were counted, according to the commandment of Moses, for the service of the Levites, by the hand of Ithamar, the son of Aaron the priest.

Exodus 38.22: 22 Bezalel the son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah, made all that Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 38.23: 23 With him was Oholiab, the son of Ahisamach, of the tribe of Dan, an engraver, and a skillful workman, and an embroiderer in blue, in purple, in scarlet, and in fine linen.

Exodus 38.24: 24 All the gold that was used for the work in all the work of the sanctuary, even the gold of the offering, was twenty-nine talents and seven hundred thirty shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary.

Exodus 38.25: 25 The silver of those who were counted of the congregation was one hundred talents and one thousand seven hundred seventy-five shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary:

Exodus 38.26: 26 a beka a head, that is, half a shekel, according to the shekel of the sanctuary, for everyone who passed over to those who were counted, from twenty years old and upward, for six hundred three thousand five hundred fifty men.

Exodus 38.27: 27 The one hundred talents of silver were for casting the sockets of the sanctuary and the sockets of the veil: one hundred sockets for the one hundred talents, one talent per socket.

Exodus 38.28: 28 From the one thousand seven hundred seventy-five shekels he made hooks for the pillars, overlaid their capitals, and made fillets for them.

Exodus 38.29: 29 The bronze of the offering was seventy talents and two thousand four hundred shekels.

Exodus 38.30: 30 With this he made the sockets to the door of the Tent of Meeting, the bronze altar, the bronze grating for it, all the vessels of the altar,

Exodus 38.31: 31 the sockets around the court, the sockets of the gate of the court, all the pins of the tabernacle, and all the pins around the court.

Exodus 39.0:

39

Exodus 39.1: 1 Of the blue, purple, and scarlet, they made finely worked garments for ministering in the holy place, and made the holy garments for Aaron, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 39.2: 2 He made the ephod of gold, blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen.

Exodus 39.3: 3 They beat the gold into thin plates, and cut it into wires, to work it in with the blue, the purple, the scarlet, and the fine linen, the work of the skillful workman.

Exodus 39.4: 4 They made shoulder straps for it, joined together. It was joined together at the two ends.

Exodus 39.5: 5 The skillfully woven band that was on it, with which to fasten it on, was of the same piece, like its work: of gold, of blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 39.6: 6 They worked the onyx stones, enclosed in settings of gold, engraved with the engravings of a signet, according to the names of the children of Israel.

Exodus 39.7: 7 He put them on the shoulder straps of the ephod, to be stones of memorial for the children of Israel, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 39.8: 8 He made the breastplate, the work of a skillful workman, like the work of the ephod: of gold, of blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen.

Exodus 39.9: 9 It was square. They made the breastplate double. Its length was a span, and its width a span, being double.

Exodus 39.10: 10 They set in it four rows of stones. A row of ruby, topaz, and beryl was the first row;

Exodus 39.11: 11 and the second row, a turquoise, a sapphire, and an emerald;

Exodus 39.12: 12 and the third row, a jacinth, an agate, and an amethyst;

Exodus 39.13: 13 and the fourth row, a chrysolite, an onyx, and a jasper. They were enclosed in gold settings.

Exodus 39.14: 14 The stones were according to the names of the children of Israel, twelve, according to their names; like the engravings of a signet, everyone according to his name, for the twelve tribes.

Exodus 39.15: 15 They made on the breastplate chains like cords, of braided work of pure gold.

Exodus 39.16: 16 They made two settings of gold, and two gold rings, and put the two rings on the two ends of the breastplate.

Exodus 39.17: 17 They put the two braided chains of gold in the two rings at the ends of the breastplate.

Exodus 39.18: 18 The other two ends of the two braided chains they put on the two settings, and put them on the shoulder straps of the ephod, in its front.

Exodus 39.19: 19 They made two rings of gold, and put them on the two ends of the breastplate, on its edge, which was toward the side of the ephod inward.

Exodus 39.20: 20 They made two more rings of gold, and put them on the two shoulder straps of the ephod underneath, in its front, close by its coupling, above the skillfully woven band of the ephod.

Exodus 39.21: 21 They bound the breastplate by its rings to the rings of the ephod with a lace of blue, that it might be on the skillfully woven band of the ephod, and that the breastplate might not come loose from the ephod, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 39.22: 22 He made the robe of the ephod of woven work, all of blue.

Exodus 39.23: 23 The opening of the robe in the middle of it was like the opening of a coat of mail, with a binding around its opening, that it should not be torn.

Exodus 39.24: 24 They made on the skirts of the robe pomegranates of blue, purple, scarlet, and twined linen.

Exodus 39.25: 25 They made bells of pure gold, and put the bells between the pomegranates around the skirts of the robe, between the pomegranates;

Exodus 39.26: 26 a bell and a pomegranate, a bell and a pomegranate, around the skirts of the robe, to minister in, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 39.27: 27 They made the tunics of fine linen of woven work for Aaron and for his sons,

Exodus 39.28: 28 the turban of fine linen, the linen headbands of fine linen, the linen trousers of fine twined linen,

Exodus 39.29: 29 the sash of fine twined linen, blue, purple, and scarlet, the work of the embroiderer, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 39.30: 30 They made the plate of the holy crown of pure gold, and wrote on it an inscription, like the engravings of a signet: “HOLY TO YAHWEH”.

Exodus 39.31: 31 They tied to it a lace of blue, to fasten it on the turban above, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 39.32: 32 Thus all the work of the tabernacle of the Tent of Meeting was finished. The children of Israel did according to all that Yahweh commanded Moses; so they did.

Exodus 39.33: 33 They brought the tabernacle to Moses: the tent, with all its furniture, its clasps, its boards, its bars, its pillars, its sockets,

Exodus 39.34: 34 the covering of rams’ skins dyed red, the covering of sea cow hides, the veil of the screen,

Exodus 39.35: 35 the ark of the covenant with its poles, the mercy seat,

Exodus 39.36: 36 the table, all its vessels, the show bread,

Exodus 39.37: 37 the pure lamp stand, its lamps, even the lamps to be set in order, all its vessels, the oil for the light,

Exodus 39.38: 38 the golden altar, the anointing oil, the sweet incense, the screen for the door of the Tent,

Exodus 39.39: 39 the bronze altar, its grating of bronze, its poles, all of its vessels, the basin and its base,

Exodus 39.40: 40 the hangings of the court, its pillars, its sockets, the screen for the gate of the court, its cords, its pins, and all the instruments of the service of the tabernacle, for the Tent of Meeting,

Exodus 39.41: 41 the finely worked garments for ministering in the holy place, the holy garments for Aaron the priest, and the garments of his sons, to minister in the priest’s office.

Exodus 39.42: 42 According to all that Yahweh commanded Moses, so the children of Israel did all the work.

Exodus 39.43: 43 Moses saw all the work, and behold, they had done it as Yahweh had commanded. They had done so; and Moses blessed them.

Exodus 40.0:

40

Exodus 40.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Exodus 40.2: 2 “On the first day of the first month you shall raise up the tabernacle of the Tent of Meeting.

Exodus 40.3: 3 You shall put the ark of the covenant in it, and you shall screen the ark with the veil.

Exodus 40.4: 4 You shall bring in the table, and set in order the things that are on it. You shall bring in the lamp stand, and light its lamps.

Exodus 40.5: 5 You shall set the golden altar for incense before the ark of the covenant, and put the screen of the door to the tabernacle.

Exodus 40.6: 6 “You shall set the altar of burnt offering before the door of the tabernacle of the Tent of Meeting.

Exodus 40.7: 7 You shall set the basin between the Tent of Meeting and the altar, and shall put water therein.

Exodus 40.8: 8 You shall set up the court around it, and hang up the screen of the gate of the court.

Exodus 40.9: 9 “You shall take the anointing oil, and anoint the tabernacle and all that is in it, and shall make it holy, and all its furniture, and it will be holy.

Exodus 40.10: 10 You shall anoint the altar of burnt offering, with all its vessels, and sanctify the altar, and the altar will be most holy.

Exodus 40.11: 11 You shall anoint the basin and its base, and sanctify it.

Exodus 40.12: 12 “You shall bring Aaron and his sons to the door of the Tent of Meeting, and shall wash them with water.

Exodus 40.13: 13 You shall put on Aaron the holy garments; and you shall anoint him, and sanctify him, that he may minister to me in the priest’s office.

Exodus 40.14: 14 You shall bring his sons, and put tunics on them.

Exodus 40.15: 15 You shall anoint them, as you anointed their father, that they may minister to me in the priest’s office. Their anointing shall be to them for an everlasting priesthood throughout their generations.”

Exodus 40.16: 16 Moses did so. According to all that Yahweh commanded him, so he did.

Exodus 40.17: 17 In the first month in the second year, on the first day of the month, the tabernacle was raised up.

Exodus 40.18: 18 Moses raised up the tabernacle, and laid its sockets, and set up its boards, and put in its bars, and raised up its pillars.

Exodus 40.19: 19 He spread the covering over the tent, and put the roof of the tabernacle above on it, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 40.20: 20 He took and put the covenant into the ark, and set the poles on the ark, and put the mercy seat above on the ark.

Exodus 40.21: 21 He brought the ark into the tabernacle, and set up the veil of the screen, and screened the ark of the covenant, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 40.22: 22 He put the table in the Tent of Meeting, on the north side of the tabernacle, outside of the veil.

Exodus 40.23: 23 He set the bread in order on it before Yahweh, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 40.24: 24 He put the lamp stand in the Tent of Meeting, opposite the table, on the south side of the tabernacle.

Exodus 40.25: 25 He lit the lamps before Yahweh, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 40.26: 26 He put the golden altar in the Tent of Meeting before the veil;

Exodus 40.27: 27 and he burned incense of sweet spices on it, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 40.28: 28 He put up the screen of the door to the tabernacle.

Exodus 40.29: 29 He set the altar of burnt offering at the door of the tabernacle of the Tent of Meeting, and offered on it the burnt offering and the meal offering, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 40.30: 30 He set the basin between the Tent of Meeting and the altar, and put water therein, with which to wash.

Exodus 40.31: 31 Moses, Aaron, and his sons washed their hands and their feet there.

Exodus 40.32: 32 When they went into the Tent of Meeting, and when they came near to the altar, they washed, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Exodus 40.33: 33 He raised up the court around the tabernacle and the altar, and set up the screen of the gate of the court. So Moses finished the work.

Exodus 40.34: 34 Then the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and Yahweh’s glory filled the tabernacle.

Exodus 40.35: 35 Moses wasn’t able to enter into the Tent of Meeting, because the cloud stayed on it, and Yahweh’s glory filled the tabernacle.

Exodus 40.36: 36 When the cloud was taken up from over the tabernacle, the children of Israel went onward, throughout all their journeys;

Exodus 40.37: 37 but if the cloud wasn’t taken up, then they didn’t travel until the day that it was taken up.

Exodus 40.38: 38 For the cloud of Yahweh was on the tabernacle by day, and there was fire in the cloud by night, in the sight of all the house of Israel, throughout all their journeys.

Leviticus 0.0:

The Third Book of Moses,

Commonly Called

Leviticus

Leviticus 1.0:

1

Leviticus 1.1: 1 Yahweh called to Moses, and spoke to him from the Tent of Meeting, saying,

Leviticus 1.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘When anyone of you offers an offering to Yahweh, you shall offer your offering of the livestock, from the herd and from the flock.

Leviticus 1.3: 3 “‘If his offering is a burnt offering from the herd, he shall offer a male without defect. He shall offer it at the door of the Tent of Meeting, that he may be accepted before Yahweh.

Leviticus 1.4: 4 He shall lay his hand on the head of the burnt offering, and it shall be accepted for him to make atonement for him.

Leviticus 1.5: 5 He shall kill the bull before Yahweh. Aaron’s sons, the priests, shall present the blood and sprinkle the blood around on the altar that is at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 1.6: 6 He shall skin the burnt offering, and cut it into pieces.

Leviticus 1.7: 7 The sons of Aaron the priest shall put fire on the altar, and lay wood in order on the fire;

Leviticus 1.8: 8 and Aaron’s sons, the priests, shall lay the pieces, the head, and the fat in order on the wood that is on the fire which is on the altar;

Leviticus 1.9: 9 but he shall wash its innards and its legs with water. The priest shall burn all of it on the altar, for a burnt offering, an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 1.10: 10 “‘If his offering is from the flock, from the sheep or from the goats, for a burnt offering, he shall offer a male without defect.

Leviticus 1.11: 11 He shall kill it on the north side of the altar before Yahweh. Aaron’s sons, the priests, shall sprinkle its blood around on the altar.

Leviticus 1.12: 12 He shall cut it into its pieces, with its head and its fat. The priest shall lay them in order on the wood that is on the fire which is on the altar,

Leviticus 1.13: 13 but the innards and the legs he shall wash with water. The priest shall offer the whole, and burn it on the altar. It is a burnt offering, an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 1.14: 14 “‘If his offering to Yahweh is a burnt offering of birds, then he shall offer his offering from turtledoves or of young pigeons.

Leviticus 1.15: 15 The priest shall bring it to the altar, and wring off its head, and burn it on the altar; and its blood shall be drained out on the side of the altar;

Leviticus 1.16: 16 and he shall take away its crop and its feathers, and cast it beside the altar on the east part, in the place of the ashes.

Leviticus 1.17: 17 He shall tear it by its wings, but shall not divide it apart. The priest shall burn it on the altar, on the wood that is on the fire. It is a burnt offering, an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 2.0:

2

Leviticus 2.1: 1 “‘When anyone offers an offering of a meal offering to Yahweh, his offering shall be of fine flour. He shall pour oil on it, and put frankincense on it.

Leviticus 2.2: 2 He shall bring it to Aaron’s sons, the priests. He shall take his handful of its fine flour, and of its oil, with all its frankincense, and the priest shall burn its memorial on the altar, an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 2.3: 3 That which is left of the meal offering shall be Aaron’s and his sons’. It is a most holy part of the offerings of Yahweh made by fire.

Leviticus 2.4: 4 “‘When you offer an offering of a meal offering baked in the oven, it shall be unleavened cakes of fine flour mixed with oil, or unleavened wafers anointed with oil.

Leviticus 2.5: 5 If your offering is a meal offering made on a griddle, it shall be of unleavened fine flour, mixed with oil.

Leviticus 2.6: 6 You shall cut it in pieces, and pour oil on it. It is a meal offering.

Leviticus 2.7: 7 If your offering is a meal offering of the pan, it shall be made of fine flour with oil.

Leviticus 2.8: 8 You shall bring the meal offering that is made of these things to Yahweh. It shall be presented to the priest, and he shall bring it to the altar.

Leviticus 2.9: 9 The priest shall take from the meal offering its memorial, and shall burn it on the altar, an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 2.10: 10 That which is left of the meal offering shall be Aaron’s and his sons’. It is a most holy part of the offerings of Yahweh made by fire.

Leviticus 2.11: 11 “‘No meal offering which you shall offer to Yahweh shall be made with yeast; for you shall burn no yeast, nor any honey, as an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Leviticus 2.12: 12 As an offering of first fruits you shall offer them to Yahweh, but they shall not rise up as a pleasant aroma on the altar.

Leviticus 2.13: 13 Every offering of your meal offering you shall season with salt. You shall not allow the salt of the covenant of your God to be lacking from your meal offering. With all your offerings you shall offer salt.

Leviticus 2.14: 14 “‘If you offer a meal offering of first fruits to Yahweh, you shall offer for the meal offering of your first fruits fresh heads of grain parched with fire and crushed.

Leviticus 2.15: 15 You shall put oil on it and lay frankincense on it. It is a meal offering.

Leviticus 2.16: 16 The priest shall burn as its memorial part of its crushed grain and part of its oil, along with all its frankincense. It is an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Leviticus 3.0:

3

Leviticus 3.1: 1 “‘If his offering is a sacrifice of peace offerings, if he offers it from the herd, whether male or female, he shall offer it without defect before Yahweh.

Leviticus 3.2: 2 He shall lay his hand on the head of his offering, and kill it at the door of the Tent of Meeting. Aaron’s sons, the priests, shall sprinkle the blood around on the altar.

Leviticus 3.3: 3 He shall offer of the sacrifice of peace offerings an offering made by fire to Yahweh. The fat that covers the innards, and all the fat that is on the innards,

Leviticus 3.4: 4 and the two kidneys, and the fat that is on them, which is by the loins, and the cover on the liver, with the kidneys, he shall take away.

Leviticus 3.5: 5 Aaron’s sons shall burn it on the altar on the burnt offering, which is on the wood that is on the fire: it is an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 3.6: 6 “‘If his offering for a sacrifice of peace offerings to Yahweh is from the flock, either male or female, he shall offer it without defect.

Leviticus 3.7: 7 If he offers a lamb for his offering, then he shall offer it before Yahweh;

Leviticus 3.8: 8 and he shall lay his hand on the head of his offering, and kill it before the Tent of Meeting. Aaron’s sons shall sprinkle its blood around on the altar.

Leviticus 3.9: 9 He shall offer from the sacrifice of peace offerings an offering made by fire to Yahweh; its fat, the entire tail fat, he shall take away close to the backbone; and the fat that covers the entrails, and all the fat that is on the entrails,

Leviticus 3.10: 10 and the two kidneys, and the fat that is on them, which is by the loins, and the cover on the liver, with the kidneys, he shall take away.

Leviticus 3.11: 11 The priest shall burn it on the altar: it is the food of the offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Leviticus 3.12: 12 “‘If his offering is a goat, then he shall offer it before Yahweh.

Leviticus 3.13: 13 He shall lay his hand on its head, and kill it before the Tent of Meeting; and the sons of Aaron shall sprinkle its blood around on the altar.

Leviticus 3.14: 14 He shall offer from it as his offering, an offering made by fire to Yahweh; the fat that covers the innards, and all the fat that is on the innards,

Leviticus 3.15: 15 and the two kidneys, and the fat that is on them, which is by the loins, and the cover on the liver, with the kidneys, he shall take away.

Leviticus 3.16: 16 The priest shall burn them on the altar: it is the food of the offering made by fire, for a pleasant aroma; all the fat is Yahweh’s.

Leviticus 3.17: 17 “‘It shall be a perpetual statute throughout your generations in all your dwellings, that you shall eat neither fat nor blood.’”

Leviticus 4.0:

4

Leviticus 4.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 4.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘If anyone sins unintentionally, in any of the things which Yahweh has commanded not to be done, and does any one of them,

Leviticus 4.3: 3 if the anointed priest sins so as to bring guilt on the people, then let him offer for his sin which he has sinned a young bull without defect to Yahweh for a sin offering.

Leviticus 4.4: 4 He shall bring the bull to the door of the Tent of Meeting before Yahweh; and he shall lay his hand on the head of the bull, and kill the bull before Yahweh.

Leviticus 4.5: 5 The anointed priest shall take some of the blood of the bull, and bring it to the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 4.6: 6 The priest shall dip his finger in the blood, and sprinkle some of the blood seven times before Yahweh, before the veil of the sanctuary.

Leviticus 4.7: 7 The priest shall put some of the blood on the horns of the altar of sweet incense before Yahweh, which is in the Tent of Meeting; and he shall pour out the rest of the blood of the bull at the base of the altar of burnt offering, which is at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 4.8: 8 He shall take all the fat of the bull of the sin offering from it: the fat that covers the innards, and all the fat that is on the innards,

Leviticus 4.9: 9 and the two kidneys, and the fat that is on them, which is by the loins, and the cover on the liver, with the kidneys, he shall remove,

Leviticus 4.10: 10 as it is removed from the bull of the sacrifice of peace offerings. The priest shall burn them on the altar of burnt offering.

Leviticus 4.11: 11 He shall carry the bull’s skin, all its meat, with its head, and with its legs, its innards, and its dung

Leviticus 4.12: 12 —all the rest of the bull—outside of the camp to a clean place where the ashes are poured out, and burn it on wood with fire. It shall be burned where the ashes are poured out.

Leviticus 4.13: 13 “‘If the whole congregation of Israel sins, and the thing is hidden from the eyes of the assembly, and they have done any of the things which Yahweh has commanded not to be done, and are guilty;

Leviticus 4.14: 14 when the sin in which they have sinned is known, then the assembly shall offer a young bull for a sin offering, and bring it before the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 4.15: 15 The elders of the congregation shall lay their hands on the head of the bull before Yahweh; and the bull shall be killed before Yahweh.

Leviticus 4.16: 16 The anointed priest shall bring some of the blood of the bull to the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 4.17: 17 The priest shall dip his finger in the blood and sprinkle it seven times before Yahweh, before the veil.

Leviticus 4.18: 18 He shall put some of the blood on the horns of the altar which is before Yahweh, that is in the Tent of Meeting; and the rest of the blood he shall pour out at the base of the altar of burnt offering, which is at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 4.19: 19 All its fat he shall take from it, and burn it on the altar.

Leviticus 4.20: 20 Thus shall he do with the bull; as he did with the bull of the sin offering, so shall he do with this; and the priest shall make atonement for them, and they shall be forgiven.

Leviticus 4.21: 21 He shall carry the bull outside the camp, and burn it as he burned the first bull. It is the sin offering for the assembly.

Leviticus 4.22: 22 “‘When a ruler sins, and unwittingly does any one of all the things which Yahweh his God has commanded not to be done, and is guilty,

Leviticus 4.23: 23 if his sin in which he has sinned is made known to him, he shall bring as his offering a goat, a male without defect.

Leviticus 4.24: 24 He shall lay his hand on the head of the goat, and kill it in the place where they kill the burnt offering before Yahweh. It is a sin offering.

Leviticus 4.25: 25 The priest shall take some of the blood of the sin offering with his finger, and put it on the horns of the altar of burnt offering. He shall pour out the rest of its blood at the base of the altar of burnt offering.

Leviticus 4.26: 26 All its fat he shall burn on the altar, like the fat of the sacrifice of peace offerings; and the priest shall make atonement for him concerning his sin, and he will be forgiven.

Leviticus 4.27: 27 “‘If anyone of the common people sins unwittingly, in doing any of the things which Yahweh has commanded not to be done, and is guilty,

Leviticus 4.28: 28 if his sin which he has sinned is made known to him, then he shall bring for his offering a goat, a female without defect, for his sin which he has sinned.

Leviticus 4.29: 29 He shall lay his hand on the head of the sin offering, and kill the sin offering in the place of burnt offering.

Leviticus 4.30: 30 The priest shall take some of its blood with his finger, and put it on the horns of the altar of burnt offering; and the rest of its blood he shall pour out at the base of the altar.

Leviticus 4.31: 31 All its fat he shall take away, like the fat is taken away from the sacrifice of peace offerings; and the priest shall burn it on the altar for a pleasant aroma to Yahweh; and the priest shall make atonement for him, and he will be forgiven.

Leviticus 4.32: 32 “‘If he brings a lamb as his offering for a sin offering, he shall bring a female without defect.

Leviticus 4.33: 33 He shall lay his hand on the head of the sin offering, and kill it for a sin offering in the place where they kill the burnt offering.

Leviticus 4.34: 34 The priest shall take some of the blood of the sin offering with his finger, and put it on the horns of the altar of burnt offering; and all the rest of its blood he shall pour out at the base of the altar.

Leviticus 4.35: 35 He shall remove all its fat, like the fat of the lamb is removed from the sacrifice of peace offerings. The priest shall burn them on the altar, on the offerings of Yahweh made by fire. The priest shall make atonement for him concerning his sin that he has sinned, and he will be forgiven.

Leviticus 5.0:

5

Leviticus 5.1: 1 “‘If anyone sins, in that he hears a public adjuration to testify, he being a witness, whether he has seen or known, if he doesn’t report it, then he shall bear his iniquity.

Leviticus 5.2: 2 “‘Or if anyone touches any unclean thing, whether it is the carcass of an unclean animal, or the carcass of unclean livestock, or the carcass of unclean creeping things, and it is hidden from him, and he is unclean, then he shall be guilty.

Leviticus 5.3: 3 “‘Or if he touches the uncleanness of man, whatever his uncleanness is with which he is unclean, and it is hidden from him; when he knows of it, then he shall be guilty.

Leviticus 5.4: 4 “‘Or if anyone swears rashly with his lips to do evil or to do good—whatever it is that a man might utter rashly with an oath, and it is hidden from him—when he knows of it, then he will be guilty of one of these.

Leviticus 5.5: 5 It shall be, when he is guilty of one of these, he shall confess that in which he has sinned;

Leviticus 5.6: 6 and he shall bring his trespass offering to Yahweh for his sin which he has sinned: a female from the flock, a lamb or a goat, for a sin offering; and the priest shall make atonement for him concerning his sin.

Leviticus 5.7: 7 “‘If he can’t afford a lamb, then he shall bring his trespass offering for that in which he has sinned, two turtledoves, or two young pigeons, to Yahweh; one for a sin offering, and the other for a burnt offering.

Leviticus 5.8: 8 He shall bring them to the priest, who shall first offer the one which is for the sin offering. He shall wring off its head from its neck, but shall not sever it completely.

Leviticus 5.9: 9 He shall sprinkle some of the blood of the sin offering on the side of the altar; and the rest of the blood shall be drained out at the base of the altar. It is a sin offering.

Leviticus 5.10: 10 He shall offer the second for a burnt offering, according to the ordinance; and the priest shall make atonement for him concerning his sin which he has sinned, and he shall be forgiven.

Leviticus 5.11: 11 “‘But if he can’t afford two turtledoves or two young pigeons, then he shall bring as his offering for that in which he has sinned, one tenth of an ephah of fine flour for a sin offering. He shall put no oil on it, and he shall not put any frankincense on it, for it is a sin offering.

Leviticus 5.12: 12 He shall bring it to the priest, and the priest shall take his handful of it as the memorial portion, and burn it on the altar, on the offerings of Yahweh made by fire. It is a sin offering.

Leviticus 5.13: 13 The priest shall make atonement for him concerning his sin that he has sinned in any of these things, and he will be forgiven; and the rest shall be the priest’s, as the meal offering.’”

Leviticus 5.14: 14 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 5.15: 15 “If anyone commits a trespass, and sins unwittingly regarding Yahweh’s holy things, then he shall bring his trespass offering to Yahweh: a ram without defect from the flock, according to your estimation in silver by shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary, for a trespass offering.

Leviticus 5.16: 16 He shall make restitution for that which he has done wrong regarding the holy thing, and shall add a fifth part to it, and give it to the priest; and the priest shall make atonement for him with the ram of the trespass offering, and he will be forgiven.

Leviticus 5.17: 17 “If anyone sins, doing any of the things which Yahweh has commanded not to be done, though he didn’t know it, he is still guilty, and shall bear his iniquity.

Leviticus 5.18: 18 He shall bring a ram without defect from of the flock, according to your estimation, for a trespass offering, to the priest; and the priest shall make atonement for him concerning the thing in which he sinned and didn’t know it, and he will be forgiven.

Leviticus 5.19: 19 It is a trespass offering. He is certainly guilty before Yahweh.”

Leviticus 6.0:

6

Leviticus 6.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 6.2: 2 “If anyone sins, and commits a trespass against Yahweh, and deals falsely with his neighbor in a matter of deposit, or of bargain, or of robbery, or has oppressed his neighbor,

Leviticus 6.3: 3 or has found that which was lost, and lied about it, and swearing to a lie—in any of these things that a man sins in his actions—

Leviticus 6.4: 4 then it shall be, if he has sinned, and is guilty, he shall restore that which he took by robbery, or the thing which he has gotten by oppression, or the deposit which was committed to him, or the lost thing which he found,

Leviticus 6.5: 5 or any thing about which he has sworn falsely: he shall restore it in full, and shall add a fifth part more to it. He shall return it to him to whom it belongs in the day of his being found guilty.

Leviticus 6.6: 6 He shall bring his trespass offering to Yahweh: a ram without defect from the flock, according to your estimation, for a trespass offering, to the priest.

Leviticus 6.7: 7 The priest shall make atonement for him before Yahweh, and he will be forgiven concerning whatever he does to become guilty.”

Leviticus 6.8: 8 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 6.9: 9 “Command Aaron and his sons, saying, ‘This is the law of the burnt offering: the burnt offering shall be on the hearth on the altar all night until the morning; and the fire of the altar shall be kept burning on it.

Leviticus 6.10: 10 The priest shall put on his linen garment, and he shall put on his linen trousers upon his body; and he shall remove the ashes from where the fire has consumed the burnt offering on the altar, and he shall put them beside the altar.

Leviticus 6.11: 11 He shall take off his garments, and put on other garments, and carry the ashes outside the camp to a clean place.

Leviticus 6.12: 12 The fire on the altar shall be kept burning on it, it shall not go out; and the priest shall burn wood on it every morning. He shall lay the burnt offering in order upon it, and shall burn on it the fat of the peace offerings.

Leviticus 6.13: 13 Fire shall be kept burning on the altar continually; it shall not go out.

Leviticus 6.14: 14 “‘This is the law of the meal offering: the sons of Aaron shall offer it before Yahweh, before the altar.

Leviticus 6.15: 15 He shall take from there his handful of the fine flour of the meal offering, and of its oil, and all the frankincense which is on the meal offering, and shall burn it on the altar for a pleasant aroma, as its memorial portion, to Yahweh.

Leviticus 6.16: 16 That which is left of it Aaron and his sons shall eat. It shall be eaten without yeast in a holy place. They shall eat it in the court of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 6.17: 17 It shall not be baked with yeast. I have given it as their portion of my offerings made by fire. It is most holy, as are the sin offering and the trespass offering.

Leviticus 6.18: 18 Every male among the children of Aaron shall eat of it, as their portion forever throughout your generations, from the offerings of Yahweh made by fire. Whoever touches them shall be holy.’”

Leviticus 6.19: 19 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 6.20: 20 “This is the offering of Aaron and of his sons, which they shall offer to Yahweh in the day when he is anointed: one tenth of an ephah of fine flour for a meal offering perpetually, half of it in the morning, and half of it in the evening.

Leviticus 6.21: 21 It shall be made with oil in a griddle. When it is soaked, you shall bring it in. You shall offer the meal offering in baked pieces for a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 6.22: 22 The anointed priest that will be in his place from among his sons shall offer it. By a statute forever, it shall be wholly burned to Yahweh.

Leviticus 6.23: 23 Every meal offering of a priest shall be wholly burned. It shall not be eaten.”

Leviticus 6.24: 24 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 6.25: 25 “Speak to Aaron and to his sons, saying, ‘This is the law of the sin offering: in the place where the burnt offering is killed, the sin offering shall be killed before Yahweh. It is most holy.

Leviticus 6.26: 26 The priest who offers it for sin shall eat it. It shall be eaten in a holy place, in the court of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 6.27: 27 Whatever shall touch its flesh shall be holy. When there is any of its blood sprinkled on a garment, you shall wash that on which it was sprinkled in a holy place.

Leviticus 6.28: 28 But the earthen vessel in which it is boiled shall be broken; and if it is boiled in a bronze vessel, it shall be scoured, and rinsed in water.

Leviticus 6.29: 29 Every male among the priests shall eat of it. It is most holy.

Leviticus 6.30: 30 No sin offering, of which any of the blood is brought into the Tent of Meeting to make atonement in the Holy Place, shall be eaten. It shall be burned with fire.

Leviticus 7.0:

7

Leviticus 7.1: 1 “‘This is the law of the trespass offering: It is most holy.

Leviticus 7.2: 2 In the place where they kill the burnt offering, he shall kill the trespass offering; and its blood he shall sprinkle around on the altar.

Leviticus 7.3: 3 He shall offer all of its fat: the fat tail, and the fat that covers the innards,

Leviticus 7.4: 4 and he shall take away the two kidneys, and the fat that is on them, which is by the loins, and the cover on the liver, with the kidneys;

Leviticus 7.5: 5 and the priest shall burn them on the altar for an offering made by fire to Yahweh: it is a trespass offering.

Leviticus 7.6: 6 Every male among the priests may eat of it. It shall be eaten in a holy place. It is most holy.

Leviticus 7.7: 7 “‘As is the sin offering, so is the trespass offering; there is one law for them. The priest who makes atonement with them shall have it.

Leviticus 7.8: 8 The priest who offers any man’s burnt offering shall have for himself the skin of the burnt offering which he has offered.

Leviticus 7.9: 9 Every meal offering that is baked in the oven, and all that is prepared in the pan and on the griddle, shall be the priest’s who offers it.

Leviticus 7.10: 10 Every meal offering, mixed with oil or dry, belongs to all the sons of Aaron, one as well as another.

Leviticus 7.11: 11 “‘This is the law of the sacrifice of peace offerings, which one shall offer to Yahweh:

Leviticus 7.12: 12 If he offers it for a thanksgiving, then he shall offer with the sacrifice of thanksgiving unleavened cakes mixed with oil, and unleavened wafers anointed with oil, and cakes mixed with oil.

Leviticus 7.13: 13 He shall offer his offering with the sacrifice of his peace offerings for thanksgiving with cakes of leavened bread.

Leviticus 7.14: 14 Of it he shall offer one out of each offering for a heave offering to Yahweh. It shall be the priest’s who sprinkles the blood of the peace offerings.

Leviticus 7.15: 15 The flesh of the sacrifice of his peace offerings for thanksgiving shall be eaten on the day of his offering. He shall not leave any of it until the morning.

Leviticus 7.16: 16 “‘But if the sacrifice of his offering is a vow, or a free will offering, it shall be eaten on the day that he offers his sacrifice. On the next day what remains of it shall be eaten,

Leviticus 7.17: 17 but what remains of the meat of the sacrifice on the third day shall be burned with fire.

Leviticus 7.18: 18 If any of the meat of the sacrifice of his peace offerings is eaten on the third day, it will not be accepted, and it shall not be credited to him who offers it. It will be an abomination, and the soul who eats any of it will bear his iniquity.

Leviticus 7.19: 19 “‘The meat that touches any unclean thing shall not be eaten. It shall be burned with fire. As for the meat, everyone who is clean may eat it;

Leviticus 7.20: 20 but the soul who eats of the meat of the sacrifice of peace offerings that belongs to Yahweh, having his uncleanness on him, that soul shall be cut off from his people.

Leviticus 7.21: 21 When anyone touches any unclean thing, the uncleanness of man, or an unclean animal, or any unclean abomination, and eats some of the meat of the sacrifice of peace offerings which belong to Yahweh, that soul shall be cut off from his people.’”

Leviticus 7.22: 22 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 7.23: 23 “Speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘You shall eat no fat, of bull, or sheep, or goat.

Leviticus 7.24: 24 The fat of that which dies of itself, and the fat of that which is torn of animals, may be used for any other service, but you shall in no way eat of it.

Leviticus 7.25: 25 For whoever eats the fat of the animal which men offer as an offering made by fire to Yahweh, even the soul who eats it shall be cut off from his people.

Leviticus 7.26: 26 You shall not eat any blood, whether it is of bird or of animal, in any of your dwellings.

Leviticus 7.27: 27 Whoever it is who eats any blood, that soul shall be cut off from his people.’”

Leviticus 7.28: 28 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 7.29: 29 “Speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘He who offers the sacrifice of his peace offerings to Yahweh shall bring his offering to Yahweh out of the sacrifice of his peace offerings.

Leviticus 7.30: 30 With his own hands he shall bring the offerings of Yahweh made by fire. He shall bring the fat with the breast, that the breast may be waved for a wave offering before Yahweh.

Leviticus 7.31: 31 The priest shall burn the fat on the altar, but the breast shall be Aaron’s and his sons’.

Leviticus 7.32: 32 The right thigh you shall give to the priest for a heave offering out of the sacrifices of your peace offerings.

Leviticus 7.33: 33 He among the sons of Aaron who offers the blood of the peace offerings, and the fat, shall have the right thigh for a portion.

Leviticus 7.34: 34 For the waved breast and the heaved thigh I have taken from the children of Israel out of the sacrifices of their peace offerings, and have given them to Aaron the priest and to his sons as their portion forever from the children of Israel.’”

Leviticus 7.35: 35 This is the consecrated portion of Aaron, and the consecrated portion of his sons, out of the offerings of Yahweh made by fire, in the day when he presented them to minister to Yahweh in the priest’s office;

Leviticus 7.36: 36 which Yahweh commanded to be given them of the children of Israel, in the day that he anointed them. It is their portion forever throughout their generations.

Leviticus 7.37: 37 This is the law of the burnt offering, the meal offering, the sin offering, the trespass offering, the consecration, and the sacrifice of peace offerings

Leviticus 7.38: 38 which Yahweh commanded Moses in Mount Sinai in the day that he commanded the children of Israel to offer their offerings to Yahweh, in the wilderness of Sinai.

Leviticus 8.0:

8

Leviticus 8.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 8.2: 2 “Take Aaron and his sons with him, and the garments, and the anointing oil, and the bull of the sin offering, and the two rams, and the basket of unleavened bread;

Leviticus 8.3: 3 and assemble all the congregation at the door of the Tent of Meeting.”

Leviticus 8.4: 4 Moses did as Yahweh commanded him; and the congregation was assembled at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 8.5: 5 Moses said to the congregation, “This is the thing which Yahweh has commanded to be done.”

Leviticus 8.6: 6 Moses brought Aaron and his sons, and washed them with water.

Leviticus 8.7: 7 He put the tunic on him, tied the sash on him, clothed him with the robe, put the ephod on him, and he tied the skillfully woven band of the ephod on him and fastened it to him with it.

Leviticus 8.8: 8 He placed the breastplate on him. He put the Urim and Thummim in the breastplate.

Leviticus 8.9: 9 He set the turban on his head. He set the golden plate, the holy crown, on the front of the turban, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Leviticus 8.10: 10 Moses took the anointing oil, and anointed the tabernacle and all that was in it, and sanctified them.

Leviticus 8.11: 11 He sprinkled it on the altar seven times, and anointed the altar and all its vessels, and the basin and its base, to sanctify them.

Leviticus 8.12: 12 He poured some of the anointing oil on Aaron’s head, and anointed him, to sanctify him.

Leviticus 8.13: 13 Moses brought Aaron’s sons, and clothed them with tunics, and tied sashes on them, and put headbands on them, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Leviticus 8.14: 14 He brought the bull of the sin offering, and Aaron and his sons laid their hands on the head of the bull of the sin offering.

Leviticus 8.15: 15 He killed it; and Moses took the blood, and put it around on the horns of the altar with his finger, and purified the altar, and poured out the blood at the base of the altar, and sanctified it, to make atonement for it.

Leviticus 8.16: 16 He took all the fat that was on the innards, and the cover of the liver, and the two kidneys, and their fat; and Moses burned it on the altar.

Leviticus 8.17: 17 But the bull, and its skin, and its meat, and its dung, he burned with fire outside the camp, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Leviticus 8.18: 18 He presented the ram of the burnt offering. Aaron and his sons laid their hands on the head of the ram.

Leviticus 8.19: 19 He killed it; and Moses sprinkled the blood around on the altar.

Leviticus 8.20: 20 He cut the ram into its pieces; and Moses burned the head, and the pieces, and the fat.

Leviticus 8.21: 21 He washed the innards and the legs with water; and Moses burned the whole ram on the altar. It was a burnt offering for a pleasant aroma. It was an offering made by fire to Yahweh, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Leviticus 8.22: 22 He presented the other ram, the ram of consecration. Aaron and his sons laid their hands on the head of the ram.

Leviticus 8.23: 23 He killed it; and Moses took some of its blood, and put it on the tip of Aaron’s right ear, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the great toe of his right foot.

Leviticus 8.24: 24 He brought Aaron’s sons; and Moses put some of the blood on the tip of their right ear, and on the thumb of their right hand, and on the great toe of their right foot; and Moses sprinkled the blood around on the altar.

Leviticus 8.25: 25 He took the fat, the fat tail, all the fat that was on the innards, the cover of the liver, the two kidneys and their fat, and the right thigh;

Leviticus 8.26: 26 and out of the basket of unleavened bread that was before Yahweh, he took one unleavened cake, one cake of oiled bread, and one wafer, and placed them on the fat and on the right thigh.

Leviticus 8.27: 27 He put all these in Aaron’s hands and in his sons’ hands, and waved them for a wave offering before Yahweh.

Leviticus 8.28: 28 Moses took them from their hands, and burned them on the altar on the burnt offering. They were a consecration offering for a pleasant aroma. It was an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Leviticus 8.29: 29 Moses took the breast, and waved it for a wave offering before Yahweh. It was Moses’ portion of the ram of consecration, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Leviticus 8.30: 30 Moses took some of the anointing oil, and some of the blood which was on the altar, and sprinkled it on Aaron, on his garments, and on his sons, and on his sons’ garments with him, and sanctified Aaron, his garments, and his sons, and his sons’ garments with him.

Leviticus 8.31: 31 Moses said to Aaron and to his sons, “Boil the meat at the door of the Tent of Meeting, and there eat it and the bread that is in the basket of consecration, as I commanded, saying, ‘Aaron and his sons shall eat it.’

Leviticus 8.32: 32 What remains of the meat and of the bread you shall burn with fire.

Leviticus 8.33: 33 You shall not go out from the door of the Tent of Meeting for seven days, until the days of your consecration are fulfilled: for he shall consecrate you seven days.

Leviticus 8.34: 34 What has been done today, so Yahweh has commanded to do, to make atonement for you.

Leviticus 8.35: 35 You shall stay at the door of the Tent of Meeting day and night seven days, and keep Yahweh’s command, that you don’t die: for so I am commanded.”

Leviticus 8.36: 36 Aaron and his sons did all the things which Yahweh commanded by Moses.

Leviticus 9.0:

9

Leviticus 9.1: 1 On the eighth day, Moses called Aaron and his sons, and the elders of Israel;

Leviticus 9.2: 2 and he said to Aaron, “Take a calf from the herd for a sin offering, and a ram for a burnt offering, without defect, and offer them before Yahweh.

Leviticus 9.3: 3 You shall speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘Take a male goat for a sin offering; and a calf and a lamb, both a year old, without defect, for a burnt offering;

Leviticus 9.4: 4 and a bull and a ram for peace offerings, to sacrifice before Yahweh; and a meal offering mixed with oil: for today Yahweh appears to you.’”

Leviticus 9.5: 5 They brought what Moses commanded before the Tent of Meeting. All the congregation came near and stood before Yahweh.

Leviticus 9.6: 6 Moses said, “This is the thing which Yahweh commanded that you should do; and Yahweh’s glory shall appear to you.”

Leviticus 9.7: 7 Moses said to Aaron, “Draw near to the altar, and offer your sin offering, and your burnt offering, and make atonement for yourself, and for the people; and offer the offering of the people, and make atonement for them, as Yahweh commanded.”

Leviticus 9.8: 8 So Aaron came near to the altar, and killed the calf of the sin offering, which was for himself.

Leviticus 9.9: 9 The sons of Aaron presented the blood to him; and he dipped his finger in the blood, and put it on the horns of the altar, and poured out the blood at the base of the altar;

Leviticus 9.10: 10 but the fat, and the kidneys, and the cover from the liver of the sin offering, he burned upon the altar, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Leviticus 9.11: 11 The meat and the skin he burned with fire outside the camp.

Leviticus 9.12: 12 He killed the burnt offering; and Aaron’s sons delivered the blood to him, and he sprinkled it around on the altar.

Leviticus 9.13: 13 They delivered the burnt offering to him, piece by piece, and the head. He burned them upon the altar.

Leviticus 9.14: 14 He washed the innards and the legs, and burned them on the burnt offering on the altar.

Leviticus 9.15: 15 He presented the people’s offering, and took the goat of the sin offering which was for the people, and killed it, and offered it for sin, like the first.

Leviticus 9.16: 16 He presented the burnt offering, and offered it according to the ordinance.

Leviticus 9.17: 17 He presented the meal offering, and filled his hand from there, and burned it upon the altar, in addition to the burnt offering of the morning.

Leviticus 9.18: 18 He also killed the bull and the ram, the sacrifice of peace offerings, which was for the people. Aaron’s sons delivered to him the blood, which he sprinkled around on the altar;

Leviticus 9.19: 19 and the fat of the bull and of the ram, the fat tail, and that which covers the innards, and the kidneys, and the cover of the liver;

Leviticus 9.20: 20 and they put the fat upon the breasts, and he burned the fat on the altar.

Leviticus 9.21: 21 Aaron waved the breasts and the right thigh for a wave offering before Yahweh, as Moses commanded.

Leviticus 9.22: 22 Aaron lifted up his hands toward the people, and blessed them; and he came down from offering the sin offering, and the burnt offering, and the peace offerings.

Leviticus 9.23: 23 Moses and Aaron went into the Tent of Meeting, and came out, and blessed the people; and Yahweh’s glory appeared to all the people.

Leviticus 9.24: 24 Fire came out from before Yahweh, and consumed the burnt offering and the fat upon the altar. When all the people saw it, they shouted, and fell on their faces.

Leviticus 10.0:

10

Leviticus 10.1: 1 Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, each took his censer, and put fire in it, and laid incense on it, and offered strange fire before Yahweh, which he had not commanded them.

Leviticus 10.2: 2 Fire came out from before Yahweh, and devoured them, and they died before Yahweh.

Leviticus 10.3: 3 Then Moses said to Aaron, “This is what Yahweh spoke of, saying,

‘I will show myself holy to those who come near me,

and before all the people I will be glorified.’”

Aaron held his peace.

Leviticus 10.4: 4 Moses called Mishael and Elzaphan, the sons of Uzziel the uncle of Aaron, and said to them, “Draw near, carry your brothers from before the sanctuary out of the camp.”

Leviticus 10.5: 5 So they came near, and carried them in their tunics out of the camp, as Moses had said.

Leviticus 10.6: 6 Moses said to Aaron, and to Eleazar and to Ithamar, his sons, “Don’t let the hair of your heads go loose, and don’t tear your clothes, so that you don’t die, and so that he will not be angry with all the congregation; but let your brothers, the whole house of Israel, bewail the burning which Yahweh has kindled.

Leviticus 10.7: 7 You shall not go out from the door of the Tent of Meeting, lest you die; for the anointing oil of Yahweh is on you.” They did according to the word of Moses.

Leviticus 10.8: 8 Then Yahweh said to Aaron,

Leviticus 10.9: 9 “You and your sons are not to drink wine or strong drink whenever you go into the Tent of Meeting, or you will die. This shall be a statute forever throughout your generations.

Leviticus 10.10: 10 You are to make a distinction between the holy and the common, and between the unclean and the clean.

Leviticus 10.11: 11 You are to teach the children of Israel all the statutes which Yahweh has spoken to them by Moses.”

Leviticus 10.12: 12 Moses spoke to Aaron, and to Eleazar and to Ithamar, his sons who were left, “Take the meal offering that remains of the offerings of Yahweh made by fire, and eat it without yeast beside the altar; for it is most holy;

Leviticus 10.13: 13 and you shall eat it in a holy place, because it is your portion, and your sons’ portion, of the offerings of Yahweh made by fire; for so I am commanded.

Leviticus 10.14: 14 The waved breast and the heaved thigh you shall eat in a clean place, you, and your sons, and your daughters with you: for they are given as your portion, and your sons’ portion, out of the sacrifices of the peace offerings of the children of Israel.

Leviticus 10.15: 15 The heaved thigh and the waved breast they shall bring with the offerings made by fire of the fat, to wave it for a wave offering before Yahweh. It shall be yours, and your sons’ with you, as a portion forever, as Yahweh has commanded.”

Leviticus 10.16: 16 Moses diligently inquired about the goat of the sin offering, and, behold, it was burned. He was angry with Eleazar and with Ithamar, the sons of Aaron who were left, saying,

Leviticus 10.17: 17 “Why haven’t you eaten the sin offering in the place of the sanctuary, since it is most holy, and he has given it to you to bear the iniquity of the congregation, to make atonement for them before Yahweh?

Leviticus 10.18: 18 Behold, its blood was not brought into the inner part of the sanctuary. You certainly should have eaten it in the sanctuary, as I commanded.”

Leviticus 10.19: 19 Aaron spoke to Moses, “Behold, today they have offered their sin offering and their burnt offering before Yahweh; and such things as these have happened to me. If I had eaten the sin offering today, would it have been pleasing in Yahweh’s sight?”

Leviticus 10.20: 20 When Moses heard that, it was pleasing in his sight.

Leviticus 11.0:

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Leviticus 11.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying to them,

Leviticus 11.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘These are the living things which you may eat among all the animals that are on the earth.

Leviticus 11.3: 3 Whatever parts the hoof, and is cloven-footed, and chews the cud among the animals, that you may eat.

Leviticus 11.4: 4 “‘Nevertheless these you shall not eat of those that chew the cud, or of those who part the hoof: the camel, because it chews the cud but doesn’t have a parted hoof, is unclean to you.

Leviticus 11.5: 5 The hyrax, because it chews the cud but doesn’t have a parted hoof, is unclean to you.

Leviticus 11.6: 6 The hare, because it chews the cud but doesn’t have a parted hoof, is unclean to you.

Leviticus 11.7: 7 The pig, because it has a split hoof, and is cloven-footed, but doesn’t chew the cud, is unclean to you.

Leviticus 11.8: 8 You shall not eat their meat. You shall not touch their carcasses. They are unclean to you.

Leviticus 11.9: 9 “‘These you may eat of all that are in the waters: whatever has fins and scales in the waters, in the seas, and in the rivers, that you may eat.

Leviticus 11.10: 10 All that don’t have fins and scales in the seas and rivers, all that move in the waters, and all the living creatures that are in the waters, they are an abomination to you,

Leviticus 11.11: 11 and you shall detest them. You shall not eat of their meat, and you shall detest their carcasses.

Leviticus 11.12: 12 Whatever has no fins nor scales in the waters is an abomination to you.

Leviticus 11.13: 13 “‘You shall detest these among the birds; they shall not be eaten because they are an abomination: the eagle, the vulture, the black vulture,

Leviticus 11.14: 14 the red kite, any kind of black kite,

Leviticus 11.15: 15 any kind of raven,

Leviticus 11.16: 16 the horned owl, the screech owl, the gull, any kind of hawk,

Leviticus 11.17: 17 the little owl, the cormorant, the great owl,

Leviticus 11.18: 18 the white owl, the desert owl, the osprey,

Leviticus 11.19: 19 the stork, any kind of heron, the hoopoe, and the bat.

Leviticus 11.20: 20 “‘All flying insects that walk on all fours are an abomination to you.

Leviticus 11.21: 21 Yet you may eat these: of all winged creeping things that go on all fours, which have long, jointed legs for hopping on the earth.

Leviticus 11.22: 22 Even of these you may eat: any kind of locust, any kind of katydid, any kind of cricket, and any kind of grasshopper.

Leviticus 11.23: 23 But all winged creeping things which have four feet are an abomination to you.

Leviticus 11.24: 24 “‘By these you will become unclean: whoever touches their carcass shall be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 11.25: 25 Whoever carries any part of their carcass shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 11.26: 26 “‘Every animal which has a split hoof that isn’t completely divided, or doesn’t chew the cud, is unclean to you. Everyone who touches them shall be unclean.

Leviticus 11.27: 27 Whatever goes on its paws, among all animals that go on all fours, they are unclean to you. Whoever touches their carcass shall be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 11.28: 28 He who carries their carcass shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the evening. They are unclean to you.

Leviticus 11.29: 29 “‘These are they which are unclean to you among the creeping things that creep on the earth: the weasel, the rat, any kind of great lizard,

Leviticus 11.30: 30 the gecko, and the monitor lizard, the wall lizard, the skink, and the chameleon.

Leviticus 11.31: 31 These are they which are unclean to you among all that creep. Whoever touches them when they are dead shall be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 11.32: 32 Anything they fall on when they are dead shall be unclean; whether it is any vessel of wood, or clothing, or skin, or sack, whatever vessel it is, with which any work is done, it must be put into water, and it shall be unclean until the evening. Then it will be clean.

Leviticus 11.33: 33 Every earthen vessel into which any of them falls and all that is in it shall be unclean. You shall break it.

Leviticus 11.34: 34 All food which may be eaten which is soaked in water shall be unclean. All drink that may be drunk in every such vessel shall be unclean.

Leviticus 11.35: 35 Everything whereupon part of their carcass falls shall be unclean; whether oven, or range for pots, it shall be broken in pieces. They are unclean, and shall be unclean to you.

Leviticus 11.36: 36 Nevertheless a spring or a cistern in which water is gathered shall be clean, but that which touches their carcass shall be unclean.

Leviticus 11.37: 37 If part of their carcass falls on any sowing seed which is to be sown, it is clean.

Leviticus 11.38: 38 But if water is put on the seed, and part of their carcass falls on it, it is unclean to you.

Leviticus 11.39: 39 “‘If any animal of which you may eat dies, he who touches its carcass shall be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 11.40: 40 He who eats of its carcass shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the evening. He also who carries its carcass shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 11.41: 41 “‘Every creeping thing that creeps on the earth is an abomination. It shall not be eaten.

Leviticus 11.42: 42 Whatever goes on its belly, and whatever goes on all fours, or whatever has many feet, even all creeping things that creep on the earth, them you shall not eat; for they are an abomination.

Leviticus 11.43: 43 You shall not make yourselves abominable with any creeping thing that creeps. You shall not make yourselves unclean with them, that you should be defiled by them.

Leviticus 11.44: 44 For I am Yahweh your God. Sanctify yourselves therefore, and be holy; for I am holy. You shall not defile yourselves with any kind of creeping thing that moves on the earth.

Leviticus 11.45: 45 For I am Yahweh who brought you up out of the land of Egypt, to be your God. You shall therefore be holy, for I am holy.

Leviticus 11.46: 46 “‘This is the law of the animal, and of the bird, and of every living creature that moves in the waters, and of every creature that creeps on the earth,

Leviticus 11.47: 47 to make a distinction between the unclean and the clean, and between the living thing that may be eaten and the living thing that may not be eaten.’”

Leviticus 12.0:

12

Leviticus 12.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 12.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘If a woman conceives, and bears a male child, then she shall be unclean seven days; as in the days of her monthly period she shall be unclean.

Leviticus 12.3: 3 In the eighth day the flesh of his foreskin shall be circumcised.

Leviticus 12.4: 4 She shall continue in the blood of purification thirty-three days. She shall not touch any holy thing, nor come into the sanctuary, until the days of her purifying are completed.

Leviticus 12.5: 5 But if she bears a female child, then she shall be unclean two weeks, as in her period; and she shall continue in the blood of purification sixty-six days.

Leviticus 12.6: 6 “‘When the days of her purification are completed for a son or for a daughter, she shall bring to the priest at the door of the Tent of Meeting, a year old lamb for a burnt offering, and a young pigeon or a turtledove, for a sin offering.

Leviticus 12.7: 7 He shall offer it before Yahweh, and make atonement for her; then she shall be cleansed from the fountain of her blood.

“‘This is the law for her who bears, whether a male or a female.

Leviticus 12.8: 8 If she cannot afford a lamb, then she shall take two turtledoves or two young pigeons: the one for a burnt offering, and the other for a sin offering. The priest shall make atonement for her, and she shall be clean.’”

Leviticus 13.0:

13

Leviticus 13.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Leviticus 13.2: 2 “When a man shall have a swelling in his body’s skin, or a scab, or a bright spot, and it becomes in the skin of his body the plague of leprosy, then he shall be brought to Aaron the priest or to one of his sons, the priests.

Leviticus 13.3: 3 The priest shall examine the plague in the skin of the body. If the hair in the plague has turned white, and the appearance of the plague is deeper than the body’s skin, it is the plague of leprosy; so the priest shall examine him and pronounce him unclean.

Leviticus 13.4: 4 If the bright spot is white in the skin of his body, and its appearance isn’t deeper than the skin, and its hair hasn’t turned white, then the priest shall isolate the infected person for seven days.

Leviticus 13.5: 5 The priest shall examine him on the seventh day. Behold, if in his eyes the plague is arrested and the plague hasn’t spread in the skin, then the priest shall isolate him for seven more days.

Leviticus 13.6: 6 The priest shall examine him again on the seventh day. Behold, if the plague has faded and the plague hasn’t spread in the skin, then the priest shall pronounce him clean. It is a scab. He shall wash his clothes, and be clean.

Leviticus 13.7: 7 But if the scab spreads on the skin after he has shown himself to the priest for his cleansing, he shall show himself to the priest again.

Leviticus 13.8: 8 The priest shall examine him; and behold, if the scab has spread on the skin, then the priest shall pronounce him unclean. It is leprosy.

Leviticus 13.9: 9 “When the plague of leprosy is in a man, then he shall be brought to the priest;

Leviticus 13.10: 10 and the priest shall examine him. Behold, if there is a white swelling in the skin, and it has turned the hair white, and there is raw flesh in the swelling,

Leviticus 13.11: 11 it is a chronic leprosy in the skin of his body, and the priest shall pronounce him unclean. He shall not isolate him, for he is already unclean.

Leviticus 13.12: 12 “If the leprosy breaks out all over the skin, and the leprosy covers all the skin of the infected person from his head even to his feet, as far as it appears to the priest,

Leviticus 13.13: 13 then the priest shall examine him. Behold, if the leprosy has covered all his flesh, he shall pronounce him clean of the plague. It has all turned white: he is clean.

Leviticus 13.14: 14 But whenever raw flesh appears in him, he shall be unclean.

Leviticus 13.15: 15 The priest shall examine the raw flesh, and pronounce him unclean: the raw flesh is unclean. It is leprosy.

Leviticus 13.16: 16 Or if the raw flesh turns again, and is changed to white, then he shall come to the priest.

Leviticus 13.17: 17 The priest shall examine him. Behold, if the plague has turned white, then the priest shall pronounce him clean of the plague. He is clean.

Leviticus 13.18: 18 “When the body has a boil on its skin, and it has healed,

Leviticus 13.19: 19 and in the place of the boil there is a white swelling, or a bright spot, reddish-white, then it shall be shown to the priest.

Leviticus 13.20: 20 The priest shall examine it. Behold, if its appearance is deeper than the skin, and its hair has turned white, then the priest shall pronounce him unclean. It is the plague of leprosy. It has broken out in the boil.

Leviticus 13.21: 21 But if the priest examines it, and behold, there are no white hairs in it, and it isn’t deeper than the skin, but is dim, then the priest shall isolate him seven days.

Leviticus 13.22: 22 If it spreads in the skin, then the priest shall pronounce him unclean. It is a plague.

Leviticus 13.23: 23 But if the bright spot stays in its place, and hasn’t spread, it is the scar from the boil; and the priest shall pronounce him clean.

Leviticus 13.24: 24 “Or when the body has a burn from fire on its skin, and the raw flesh of the burn becomes a bright spot, reddish-white, or white,

Leviticus 13.25: 25 then the priest shall examine it; and behold, if the hair in the bright spot has turned white, and its appearance is deeper than the skin, it is leprosy. It has broken out in the burning, and the priest shall pronounce him unclean. It is the plague of leprosy.

Leviticus 13.26: 26 But if the priest examines it, and behold, there is no white hair in the bright spot, and it isn’t deeper than the skin, but has faded, then the priest shall isolate him seven days.

Leviticus 13.27: 27 The priest shall examine him on the seventh day. If it has spread in the skin, then the priest shall pronounce him unclean. It is the plague of leprosy.

Leviticus 13.28: 28 If the bright spot stays in its place, and hasn’t spread in the skin, but is faded, it is the swelling from the burn, and the priest shall pronounce him clean, for it is the scar from the burn.

Leviticus 13.29: 29 “When a man or woman has a plague on the head or on the beard,

Leviticus 13.30: 30 then the priest shall examine the plague; and behold, if its appearance is deeper than the skin, and the hair in it is yellow and thin, then the priest shall pronounce him unclean. It is an itch. It is leprosy of the head or of the beard.

Leviticus 13.31: 31 If the priest examines the plague of itching, and behold, its appearance isn’t deeper than the skin, and there is no black hair in it, then the priest shall isolate the person infected with itching seven days.

Leviticus 13.32: 32 On the seventh day the priest shall examine the plague; and behold, if the itch hasn’t spread, and there is no yellow hair in it, and the appearance of the itch isn’t deeper than the skin,

Leviticus 13.33: 33 then he shall be shaved, but he shall not shave the itch. Then the priest shall isolate the one who has the itch seven more days.

Leviticus 13.34: 34 On the seventh day, the priest shall examine the itch; and behold, if the itch hasn’t spread in the skin, and its appearance isn’t deeper than the skin, then the priest shall pronounce him clean. He shall wash his clothes and be clean.

Leviticus 13.35: 35 But if the itch spreads in the skin after his cleansing,

Leviticus 13.36: 36 then the priest shall examine him; and behold, if the itch has spread in the skin, the priest shall not look for the yellow hair; he is unclean.

Leviticus 13.37: 37 But if in his eyes the itch is arrested and black hair has grown in it, then the itch is healed. He is clean. The priest shall pronounce him clean.

Leviticus 13.38: 38 “When a man or a woman has bright spots in the skin of the body, even white bright spots,

Leviticus 13.39: 39 then the priest shall examine them. Behold, if the bright spots on the skin of their body are a dull white, it is a harmless rash. It has broken out in the skin. He is clean.

Leviticus 13.40: 40 “If a man’s hair has fallen from his head, he is bald. He is clean.

Leviticus 13.41: 41 If his hair has fallen off from the front part of his head, he is forehead bald. He is clean.

Leviticus 13.42: 42 But if a reddish-white plague is in the bald head or the bald forehead, it is leprosy breaking out in his bald head or his bald forehead.

Leviticus 13.43: 43 Then the priest shall examine him. Behold, if the swelling of the plague is reddish-white in his bald head, or in his bald forehead, like the appearance of leprosy in the skin of the body,

Leviticus 13.44: 44 he is a leprous man. He is unclean. The priest shall surely pronounce him unclean. His plague is on his head.

Leviticus 13.45: 45 “The leper in whom the plague is shall wear torn clothes, and the hair of his head shall hang loose. He shall cover his upper lip, and shall cry, ‘Unclean! Unclean!’

Leviticus 13.46: 46 All the days in which the plague is in him he shall be unclean. He is unclean. He shall dwell alone. His dwelling shall be outside of the camp.

Leviticus 13.47: 47 “The garment also that the plague of leprosy is in, whether it is a woolen garment, or a linen garment;

Leviticus 13.48: 48 whether it is in warp or woof; of linen or of wool; whether in a leather, or in anything made of leather;

Leviticus 13.49: 49 if the plague is greenish or reddish in the garment, or in the leather, or in the warp, or in the woof, or in anything made of leather; it is the plague of leprosy, and shall be shown to the priest.

Leviticus 13.50: 50 The priest shall examine the plague, and isolate the plague seven days.

Leviticus 13.51: 51 He shall examine the plague on the seventh day. If the plague has spread in the garment, either in the warp, or in the woof, or in the skin, whatever use the skin is used for, the plague is a destructive mildew. It is unclean.

Leviticus 13.52: 52 He shall burn the garment, whether the warp or the woof, in wool or in linen, or anything of leather, in which the plague is, for it is a destructive mildew. It shall be burned in the fire.

Leviticus 13.53: 53 “If the priest examines it, and behold, the plague hasn’t spread in the garment, either in the warp, or in the woof, or in anything of skin;

Leviticus 13.54: 54 then the priest shall command that they wash the thing that the plague is in, and he shall isolate it seven more days.

Leviticus 13.55: 55 Then the priest shall examine it, after the plague is washed; and behold, if the plague hasn’t changed its color, and the plague hasn’t spread, it is unclean; you shall burn it in the fire. It is a mildewed spot, whether the bareness is inside or outside.

Leviticus 13.56: 56 If the priest looks, and behold, the plague has faded after it is washed, then he shall tear it out of the garment, or out of the skin, or out of the warp, or out of the woof;

Leviticus 13.57: 57 and if it appears again in the garment, either in the warp, or in the woof, or in anything of skin, it is spreading. You shall burn with fire that in which the plague is.

Leviticus 13.58: 58 The garment, either the warp, or the woof, or whatever thing of skin it is, which you shall wash, if the plague has departed from them, then it shall be washed the second time, and it will be clean.”

Leviticus 13.59: 59 This is the law of the plague of mildew in a garment of wool or linen, either in the warp, or the woof, or in anything of skin, to pronounce it clean, or to pronounce it unclean.

Leviticus 14.0:

14

Leviticus 14.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 14.2: 2 “This shall be the law of the leper in the day of his cleansing: He shall be brought to the priest,

Leviticus 14.3: 3 and the priest shall go out of the camp. The priest shall examine him. Behold, if the plague of leprosy is healed in the leper,

Leviticus 14.4: 4 then the priest shall command them to take for him who is to be cleansed two living clean birds, cedar wood, scarlet, and hyssop.

Leviticus 14.5: 5 The priest shall command them to kill one of the birds in an earthen vessel over running water.

Leviticus 14.6: 6 As for the living bird, he shall take it, the cedar wood, the scarlet, and the hyssop, and shall dip them and the living bird in the blood of the bird that was killed over the running water.

Leviticus 14.7: 7 He shall sprinkle on him who is to be cleansed from the leprosy seven times, and shall pronounce him clean, and shall let the living bird go into the open field.

Leviticus 14.8: 8 “He who is to be cleansed shall wash his clothes, and shave off all his hair, and bathe himself in water; and he shall be clean. After that he shall come into the camp, but shall dwell outside his tent seven days.

Leviticus 14.9: 9 It shall be on the seventh day, that he shall shave all his hair off his head and his beard and his eyebrows, even all his hair he shall shave off. He shall wash his clothes, and he shall bathe his body in water. Then he shall be clean.

Leviticus 14.10: 10 “On the eighth day he shall take two male lambs without defect, one ewe lamb a year old without defect, three tenths of an ephah of fine flour for a meal offering, mixed with oil, and one log of oil.

Leviticus 14.11: 11 The priest who cleanses him shall set the man who is to be cleansed, and those things, before Yahweh, at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 14.12: 12 “The priest shall take one of the male lambs, and offer him for a trespass offering, with the log of oil, and wave them for a wave offering before Yahweh.

Leviticus 14.13: 13 He shall kill the male lamb in the place where they kill the sin offering and the burnt offering, in the place of the sanctuary; for as the sin offering is the priest’s, so is the trespass offering. It is most holy.

Leviticus 14.14: 14 The priest shall take some of the blood of the trespass offering, and the priest shall put it on the tip of the right ear of him who is to be cleansed, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the big toe of his right foot.

Leviticus 14.15: 15 The priest shall take some of the log of oil, and pour it into the palm of his own left hand.

Leviticus 14.16: 16 The priest shall dip his right finger in the oil that is in his left hand, and shall sprinkle some of the oil with his finger seven times before Yahweh.

Leviticus 14.17: 17 The priest shall put some of the rest of the oil that is in his hand on the tip of the right ear of him who is to be cleansed, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the big toe of his right foot, upon the blood of the trespass offering.

Leviticus 14.18: 18 The rest of the oil that is in the priest’s hand he shall put on the head of him who is to be cleansed, and the priest shall make atonement for him before Yahweh.

Leviticus 14.19: 19 “The priest shall offer the sin offering, and make atonement for him who is to be cleansed because of his uncleanness. Afterward he shall kill the burnt offering;

Leviticus 14.20: 20 then the priest shall offer the burnt offering and the meal offering on the altar. The priest shall make atonement for him, and he shall be clean.

Leviticus 14.21: 21 “If he is poor, and can’t afford so much, then he shall take one male lamb for a trespass offering to be waved, to make atonement for him, and one tenth of an ephah of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering, and a log of oil;

Leviticus 14.22: 22 and two turtledoves, or two young pigeons, such as he is able to afford; and the one shall be a sin offering, and the other a burnt offering.

Leviticus 14.23: 23 “On the eighth day he shall bring them for his cleansing to the priest, to the door of the Tent of Meeting, before Yahweh.

Leviticus 14.24: 24 The priest shall take the lamb of the trespass offering, and the log of oil, and the priest shall wave them for a wave offering before Yahweh.

Leviticus 14.25: 25 He shall kill the lamb of the trespass offering. The priest shall take some of the blood of the trespass offering and put it on the tip of the right ear of him who is to be cleansed, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the big toe of his right foot.

Leviticus 14.26: 26 The priest shall pour some of the oil into the palm of his own left hand;

Leviticus 14.27: 27 and the priest shall sprinkle with his right finger some of the oil that is in his left hand seven times before Yahweh.

Leviticus 14.28: 28 Then the priest shall put some of the oil that is in his hand on the tip of the right ear of him who is to be cleansed, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the big toe of his right foot, on the place of the blood of the trespass offering.

Leviticus 14.29: 29 The rest of the oil that is in the priest’s hand he shall put on the head of him who is to be cleansed, to make atonement for him before Yahweh.

Leviticus 14.30: 30 He shall offer one of the turtledoves, or of the young pigeons, which ever he is able to afford,

Leviticus 14.31: 31 of the kind he is able to afford, the one for a sin offering, and the other for a burnt offering, with the meal offering. The priest shall make atonement for him who is to be cleansed before Yahweh.”

Leviticus 14.32: 32 This is the law for him in whom is the plague of leprosy, who is not able to afford the sacrifice for his cleansing.

Leviticus 14.33: 33 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Leviticus 14.34: 34 “When you have come into the land of Canaan, which I give to you for a possession, and I put a spreading mildew in a house in the land of your possession,

Leviticus 14.35: 35 then he who owns the house shall come and tell the priest, saying, ‘There seems to me to be some sort of plague in the house.’

Leviticus 14.36: 36 The priest shall command that they empty the house, before the priest goes in to examine the plague, that all that is in the house not be made unclean. Afterward the priest shall go in to inspect the house.

Leviticus 14.37: 37 He shall examine the plague; and behold, if the plague is in the walls of the house with hollow streaks, greenish or reddish, and it appears to be deeper than the wall,

Leviticus 14.38: 38 then the priest shall go out of the house to the door of the house, and shut up the house seven days.

Leviticus 14.39: 39 The priest shall come again on the seventh day, and look. If the plague has spread in the walls of the house,

Leviticus 14.40: 40 then the priest shall command that they take out the stones in which is the plague, and cast them into an unclean place outside of the city.

Leviticus 14.41: 41 He shall cause the inside of the house to be scraped all over. They shall pour out the mortar that they scraped off outside of the city into an unclean place.

Leviticus 14.42: 42 They shall take other stones, and put them in the place of those stones; and he shall take other mortar, and shall plaster the house.

Leviticus 14.43: 43 “If the plague comes again, and breaks out in the house after he has taken out the stones, and after he has scraped the house, and after it was plastered,

Leviticus 14.44: 44 then the priest shall come in and look; and behold, if the plague has spread in the house, it is a destructive mildew in the house. It is unclean.

Leviticus 14.45: 45 He shall break down the house, its stones, and its timber, and all the house’s mortar. He shall carry them out of the city into an unclean place.

Leviticus 14.46: 46 “Moreover he who goes into the house while it is shut up shall be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 14.47: 47 He who lies down in the house shall wash his clothes; and he who eats in the house shall wash his clothes.

Leviticus 14.48: 48 “If the priest shall come in, and examine it, and behold, the plague hasn’t spread in the house, after the house was plastered, then the priest shall pronounce the house clean, because the plague is healed.

Leviticus 14.49: 49 To cleanse the house he shall take two birds, cedar wood, scarlet, and hyssop.

Leviticus 14.50: 50 He shall kill one of the birds in an earthen vessel over running water.

Leviticus 14.51: 51 He shall take the cedar wood, the hyssop, the scarlet, and the living bird, and dip them in the blood of the slain bird, and in the running water, and sprinkle the house seven times.

Leviticus 14.52: 52 He shall cleanse the house with the blood of the bird, and with the running water, with the living bird, with the cedar wood, with the hyssop, and with the scarlet;

Leviticus 14.53: 53 but he shall let the living bird go out of the city into the open field. So shall he make atonement for the house; and it shall be clean.”

Leviticus 14.54: 54 This is the law for any plague of leprosy, and for an itch,

Leviticus 14.55: 55 and for the destructive mildew of a garment, and for a house,

Leviticus 14.56: 56 and for a swelling, and for a scab, and for a bright spot;

Leviticus 14.57: 57 to teach when it is unclean, and when it is clean.

This is the law of leprosy.

Leviticus 15.0:

15

Leviticus 15.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Leviticus 15.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘When any man has a discharge from his body, because of his discharge he is unclean.

Leviticus 15.3: 3 This shall be his uncleanness in his discharge: whether his body runs with his discharge, or his body has stopped from his discharge, it is his uncleanness.

Leviticus 15.4: 4 “‘Every bed on which he who has the discharge lies shall be unclean; and everything he sits on shall be unclean.

Leviticus 15.5: 5 Whoever touches his bed shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.6: 6 He who sits on anything on which the man who has the discharge sat shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.7: 7 “‘He who touches the body of him who has the discharge shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.8: 8 “‘If he who has the discharge spits on him who is clean, then he shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.9: 9 “‘Whatever saddle he who has the discharge rides on shall be unclean.

Leviticus 15.10: 10 Whoever touches anything that was under him shall be unclean until the evening. He who carries those things shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.11: 11 “‘Whomever he who has the discharge touches, without having rinsed his hands in water, he shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.12: 12 “‘The earthen vessel, which he who has the discharge touches, shall be broken; and every vessel of wood shall be rinsed in water.

Leviticus 15.13: 13 “‘When he who has a discharge is cleansed of his discharge, then he shall count to himself seven days for his cleansing, and wash his clothes; and he shall bathe his flesh in running water, and shall be clean.

Leviticus 15.14: 14 “‘On the eighth day he shall take two turtledoves, or two young pigeons, and come before Yahweh to the door of the Tent of Meeting, and give them to the priest.

Leviticus 15.15: 15 The priest shall offer them, the one for a sin offering, and the other for a burnt offering. The priest shall make atonement for him before Yahweh for his discharge.

Leviticus 15.16: 16 “‘If any man has an emission of semen, then he shall bathe all his flesh in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.17: 17 Every garment and every skin which the semen is on shall be washed with water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.18: 18 If a man lies with a woman and there is an emission of semen, they shall both bathe themselves in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.19: 19 “‘If a woman has a discharge, and her discharge in her flesh is blood, she shall be in her impurity seven days. Whoever touches her shall be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.20: 20 “‘Everything that she lies on in her impurity shall be unclean. Everything also that she sits on shall be unclean.

Leviticus 15.21: 21 Whoever touches her bed shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.22: 22 Whoever touches anything that she sits on shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.23: 23 If it is on the bed, or on anything she sits on, when he touches it, he shall be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.24: 24 “‘If any man lies with her, and her monthly flow is on him, he shall be unclean seven days; and every bed he lies on shall be unclean.

Leviticus 15.25: 25 “‘If a woman has a discharge of her blood many days not in the time of her period, or if she has a discharge beyond the time of her period, all the days of the discharge of her uncleanness shall be as in the days of her period. She is unclean.

Leviticus 15.26: 26 Every bed she lies on all the days of her discharge shall be to her as the bed of her period. Everything she sits on shall be unclean, as the uncleanness of her period.

Leviticus 15.27: 27 Whoever touches these things shall be unclean, and shall wash his clothes and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening.

Leviticus 15.28: 28 “‘But if she is cleansed of her discharge, then she shall count to herself seven days, and after that she shall be clean.

Leviticus 15.29: 29 On the eighth day she shall take two turtledoves, or two young pigeons, and bring them to the priest, to the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 15.30: 30 The priest shall offer the one for a sin offering, and the other for a burnt offering; and the priest shall make atonement for her before Yahweh for the uncleanness of her discharge.

Leviticus 15.31: 31 “‘Thus you shall separate the children of Israel from their uncleanness, so they will not die in their uncleanness when they defile my tabernacle that is among them.’”

Leviticus 15.32: 32 This is the law of him who has a discharge, and of him who has an emission of semen, so that he is unclean by it;

Leviticus 15.33: 33 and of her who has her period, and of a man or woman who has a discharge, and of him who lies with her who is unclean.

Leviticus 16.0:

16

Leviticus 16.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses after the death of the two sons of Aaron, when they came near before Yahweh, and died;

Leviticus 16.2: 2 and Yahweh said to Moses, “Tell Aaron your brother not to come at just any time into the Most Holy Place within the veil, before the mercy seat which is on the ark; lest he die; for I will appear in the cloud on the mercy seat.

Leviticus 16.3: 3 “Aaron shall come into the sanctuary with a young bull for a sin offering, and a ram for a burnt offering.

Leviticus 16.4: 4 He shall put on the holy linen tunic. He shall have the linen trousers on his body, and shall put on the linen sash, and he shall be clothed with the linen turban. They are the holy garments. He shall bathe his body in water, and put them on.

Leviticus 16.5: 5 He shall take from the congregation of the children of Israel two male goats for a sin offering, and one ram for a burnt offering.

Leviticus 16.6: 6 “Aaron shall offer the bull of the sin offering, which is for himself, and make atonement for himself and for his house.

Leviticus 16.7: 7 He shall take the two goats, and set them before Yahweh at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Leviticus 16.8: 8 Aaron shall cast lots for the two goats: one lot for Yahweh, and the other lot for the scapegoat.

Leviticus 16.9: 9 Aaron shall present the goat on which the lot fell for Yahweh, and offer him for a sin offering.

Leviticus 16.10: 10 But the goat on which the lot fell for the scapegoat shall be presented alive before Yahweh, to make atonement for him, to send him away as the scapegoat into the wilderness.

Leviticus 16.11: 11 “Aaron shall present the bull of the sin offering, which is for himself, and shall make atonement for himself and for his house, and shall kill the bull of the sin offering which is for himself.

Leviticus 16.12: 12 He shall take a censer full of coals of fire from off the altar before Yahweh, and two handfuls of sweet incense beaten small, and bring it within the veil.

Leviticus 16.13: 13 He shall put the incense on the fire before Yahweh, that the cloud of the incense may cover the mercy seat that is on the covenant, so that he will not die.

Leviticus 16.14: 14 He shall take some of the blood of the bull, and sprinkle it with his finger on the mercy seat on the east; and before the mercy seat he shall sprinkle some of the blood with his finger seven times.

Leviticus 16.15: 15 “Then he shall kill the goat of the sin offering that is for the people, and bring his blood within the veil, and do with his blood as he did with the blood of the bull, and sprinkle it on the mercy seat and before the mercy seat.

Leviticus 16.16: 16 He shall make atonement for the Holy Place, because of the uncleanness of the children of Israel, and because of their transgressions, even all their sins; and so he shall do for the Tent of Meeting that dwells with them in the middle of their uncleanness.

Leviticus 16.17: 17 No one shall be in the Tent of Meeting when he enters to make atonement in the Holy Place, until he comes out, and has made atonement for himself and for his household, and for all the assembly of Israel.

Leviticus 16.18: 18 “He shall go out to the altar that is before Yahweh and make atonement for it, and shall take some of the bull’s blood, and some of the goat’s blood, and put it around on the horns of the altar.

Leviticus 16.19: 19 He shall sprinkle some of the blood on it with his finger seven times, and cleanse it, and make it holy from the uncleanness of the children of Israel.

Leviticus 16.20: 20 “When he has finished atoning for the Holy Place, the Tent of Meeting, and the altar, he shall present the live goat.

Leviticus 16.21: 21 Aaron shall lay both his hands on the head of the live goat, and confess over him all the iniquities of the children of Israel, and all their transgressions, even all their sins; and he shall put them on the head of the goat, and shall send him away into the wilderness by the hand of a man who is ready.

Leviticus 16.22: 22 The goat shall carry all their iniquities on himself to a solitary land, and he shall release the goat in the wilderness.

Leviticus 16.23: 23 “Aaron shall come into the Tent of Meeting, and shall take off the linen garments which he put on when he went into the Holy Place, and shall leave them there.

Leviticus 16.24: 24 Then he shall bathe himself in water in a holy place, put on his garments, and come out and offer his burnt offering and the burnt offering of the people, and make atonement for himself and for the people.

Leviticus 16.25: 25 The fat of the sin offering he shall burn on the altar.

Leviticus 16.26: 26 “He who lets the goat go as the scapegoat shall wash his clothes, and bathe his flesh in water, and afterward he shall come into the camp.

Leviticus 16.27: 27 The bull for the sin offering, and the goat for the sin offering, whose blood was brought in to make atonement in the Holy Place, shall be carried outside the camp; and they shall burn their skins, their flesh, and their dung with fire.

Leviticus 16.28: 28 He who burns them shall wash his clothes, and bathe his flesh in water, and afterward he shall come into the camp.

Leviticus 16.29: 29 “It shall be a statute to you forever: in the seventh month, on the tenth day of the month, you shall afflict your souls, and shall do no kind of work, whether native-born or a stranger who lives as a foreigner among you;

Leviticus 16.30: 30 for on this day shall atonement be made for you, to cleanse you. You shall be clean from all your sins before Yahweh.

Leviticus 16.31: 31 It is a Sabbath of solemn rest to you, and you shall afflict your souls. It is a statute forever.

Leviticus 16.32: 32 The priest, who is anointed and who is consecrated to be priest in his father’s place, shall make the atonement, and shall put on the linen garments, even the holy garments.

Leviticus 16.33: 33 Then he shall make atonement for the Holy Sanctuary; and he shall make atonement for the Tent of Meeting and for the altar; and he shall make atonement for the priests and for all the people of the assembly.

Leviticus 16.34: 34 “This shall be an everlasting statute for you, to make atonement for the children of Israel once in the year because of all their sins.”

It was done as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Leviticus 17.0:

17

Leviticus 17.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 17.2: 2 “Speak to Aaron, and to his sons, and to all the children of Israel, and say to them, ‘This is the thing which Yahweh has commanded:

Leviticus 17.3: 3 Whatever man there is of the house of Israel who kills a bull, or lamb, or goat in the camp, or who kills it outside the camp,

Leviticus 17.4: 4 and hasn’t brought it to the door of the Tent of Meeting to offer it as an offering to Yahweh before Yahweh’s tabernacle: blood shall be imputed to that man. He has shed blood. That man shall be cut off from among his people.

Leviticus 17.5: 5 This is to the end that the children of Israel may bring their sacrifices, which they sacrifice in the open field, that they may bring them to Yahweh, to the door of the Tent of Meeting, to the priest, and sacrifice them for sacrifices of peace offerings to Yahweh.

Leviticus 17.6: 6 The priest shall sprinkle the blood on Yahweh’s altar at the door of the Tent of Meeting, and burn the fat for a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 17.7: 7 They shall no more sacrifice their sacrifices to the goat idols, after which they play the prostitute. This shall be a statute forever to them throughout their generations.’

Leviticus 17.8: 8 “You shall say to them, ‘Any man there is of the house of Israel, or of the strangers who live as foreigners among them, who offers a burnt offering or sacrifice,

Leviticus 17.9: 9 and doesn’t bring it to the door of the Tent of Meeting to sacrifice it to Yahweh, that man shall be cut off from his people.

Leviticus 17.10: 10 “‘Any man of the house of Israel, or of the strangers who live as foreigners among them, who eats any kind of blood, I will set my face against that soul who eats blood, and will cut him off from among his people.

Leviticus 17.11: 11 For the life of the flesh is in the blood. I have given it to you on the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the blood that makes atonement by reason of the life.

Leviticus 17.12: 12 Therefore I have said to the children of Israel, “No person among you may eat blood, nor may any stranger who lives as a foreigner among you eat blood.”

Leviticus 17.13: 13 “‘Whatever man there is of the children of Israel, or of the strangers who live as foreigners among them, who takes in hunting any animal or bird that may be eaten, he shall pour out its blood, and cover it with dust.

Leviticus 17.14: 14 For as to the life of all flesh, its blood is with its life. Therefore I said to the children of Israel, “You shall not eat the blood of any kind of flesh; for the life of all flesh is its blood. Whoever eats it shall be cut off.”

Leviticus 17.15: 15 “‘Every person that eats what dies of itself, or that which is torn by animals, whether he is native-born or a foreigner, shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening. Then he shall be clean.

Leviticus 17.16: 16 But if he doesn’t wash them, or bathe his flesh, then he shall bear his iniquity.’”

Leviticus 18.0:

18

Leviticus 18.1: 1 Yahweh said to Moses,

Leviticus 18.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and say to them, ‘I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 18.3: 3 You shall not do as they do in the land of Egypt, where you lived. You shall not do as they do in the land of Canaan, where I am bringing you. You shall not follow their statutes.

Leviticus 18.4: 4 You shall do my ordinances. You shall keep my statutes and walk in them. I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 18.5: 5 You shall therefore keep my statutes and my ordinances, which if a man does, he shall live in them. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 18.6: 6 “‘None of you shall approach any close relatives, to uncover their nakedness: I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 18.7: 7 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your father, nor the nakedness of your mother: she is your mother. You shall not uncover her nakedness.

Leviticus 18.8: 8 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your father’s wife. It is your father’s nakedness.

Leviticus 18.9: 9 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your sister, the daughter of your father, or the daughter of your mother, whether born at home or born abroad.

Leviticus 18.10: 10 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your son’s daughter, or of your daughter’s daughter, even their nakedness; for theirs is your own nakedness.

Leviticus 18.11: 11 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your father’s wife’s daughter, conceived by your father, since she is your sister.

Leviticus 18.12: 12 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your father’s sister. She is your father’s near kinswoman.

Leviticus 18.13: 13 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your mother’s sister, for she is your mother’s near kinswoman.

Leviticus 18.14: 14 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your father’s brother. You shall not approach his wife. She is your aunt.

Leviticus 18.15: 15 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your daughter-in-law. She is your son’s wife. You shall not uncover her nakedness.

Leviticus 18.16: 16 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your brother’s wife. It is your brother’s nakedness.

Leviticus 18.17: 17 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of a woman and her daughter. You shall not take her son’s daughter, or her daughter’s daughter, to uncover her nakedness. They are near kinswomen. It is wickedness.

Leviticus 18.18: 18 “‘You shall not take a wife in addition to her sister, to be a rival, to uncover her nakedness, while her sister is still alive.

Leviticus 18.19: 19 “‘You shall not approach a woman to uncover her nakedness, as long as she is impure by her uncleanness.

Leviticus 18.20: 20 “‘You shall not lie carnally with your neighbor’s wife, and defile yourself with her.

Leviticus 18.21: 21 “‘You shall not give any of your children as a sacrifice to Molech. You shall not profane the name of your God. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 18.22: 22 “‘You shall not lie with a man as with a woman. That is detestable.

Leviticus 18.23: 23 “‘You shall not lie with any animal to defile yourself with it. No woman may give herself to an animal, to lie down with it: it is a perversion.

Leviticus 18.24: 24 “‘Don’t defile yourselves in any of these things; for in all these the nations which I am casting out before you were defiled.

Leviticus 18.25: 25 The land was defiled. Therefore I punished its iniquity, and the land vomited out her inhabitants.

Leviticus 18.26: 26 You therefore shall keep my statutes and my ordinances, and shall not do any of these abominations; neither the native-born, nor the stranger who lives as a foreigner among you

Leviticus 18.27: 27 (for the men of the land that were before you had done all these abominations, and the land became defiled),

Leviticus 18.28: 28 that the land not vomit you out also, when you defile it, as it vomited out the nation that was before you.

Leviticus 18.29: 29 “‘For whoever shall do any of these abominations, even the souls that do them shall be cut off from among their people.

Leviticus 18.30: 30 Therefore you shall keep my requirements, that you do not practice any of these abominable customs which were practiced before you, and that you do not defile yourselves with them. I am Yahweh your God.’”

Leviticus 19.0:

19

Leviticus 19.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 19.2: 2 “Speak to all the congregation of the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘You shall be holy; for I, Yahweh your God, am holy.

Leviticus 19.3: 3 “‘Each one of you shall respect his mother and his father. You shall keep my Sabbaths. I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 19.4: 4 “‘Don’t turn to idols, nor make molten gods for yourselves. I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 19.5: 5 “‘When you offer a sacrifice of peace offerings to Yahweh, you shall offer it so that you may be accepted.

Leviticus 19.6: 6 It shall be eaten the same day you offer it, and on the next day. If anything remains until the third day, it shall be burned with fire.

Leviticus 19.7: 7 If it is eaten at all on the third day, it is an abomination. It will not be accepted;

Leviticus 19.8: 8 but everyone who eats it shall bear his iniquity, because he has profaned the holy thing of Yahweh, and that soul shall be cut off from his people.

Leviticus 19.9: 9 “‘When you reap the harvest of your land, you shall not wholly reap the corners of your field, neither shall you gather the gleanings of your harvest.

Leviticus 19.10: 10 You shall not glean your vineyard, neither shall you gather the fallen grapes of your vineyard. You shall leave them for the poor and for the foreigner. I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 19.11: 11 “‘You shall not steal.

“‘You shall not lie.

“‘You shall not deceive one another.

Leviticus 19.12: 12 “‘You shall not swear by my name falsely, and profane the name of your God. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 19.13: 13 “‘You shall not oppress your neighbor, nor rob him.

“‘The wages of a hired servant shall not remain with you all night until the morning.

Leviticus 19.14: 14 “‘You shall not curse the deaf, nor put a stumbling block before the blind; but you shall fear your God. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 19.15: 15 “‘You shall do no injustice in judgment. You shall not be partial to the poor, nor show favoritism to the great; but you shall judge your neighbor in righteousness.

Leviticus 19.16: 16 “‘You shall not go around as a slanderer among your people.

“‘You shall not endanger the life of your neighbor. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 19.17: 17 “‘You shall not hate your brother in your heart. You shall surely rebuke your neighbor, and not bear sin because of him.

Leviticus 19.18: 18 “‘You shall not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of your people; but you shall love your neighbor as yourself. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 19.19: 19 “‘You shall keep my statutes.

“‘You shall not cross-breed different kinds of animals.

“‘You shall not sow your field with two kinds of seed;

“‘Don’t wear a garment made of two kinds of material.

Leviticus 19.20: 20 “‘If a man lies carnally with a woman who is a slave girl, pledged to be married to another man, and not ransomed or given her freedom; they shall be punished. They shall not be put to death, because she was not free.

Leviticus 19.21: 21 He shall bring his trespass offering to Yahweh, to the door of the Tent of Meeting, even a ram for a trespass offering.

Leviticus 19.22: 22 The priest shall make atonement for him with the ram of the trespass offering before Yahweh for his sin which he has committed; and the sin which he has committed shall be forgiven him.

Leviticus 19.23: 23 “‘When you come into the land, and have planted all kinds of trees for food, then you shall count their fruit as forbidden. For three years it shall be forbidden to you. It shall not be eaten.

Leviticus 19.24: 24 But in the fourth year all its fruit shall be holy, for giving praise to Yahweh.

Leviticus 19.25: 25 In the fifth year you shall eat its fruit, that it may yield its increase to you. I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 19.26: 26 “‘You shall not eat any meat with the blood still in it. You shall not use enchantments, nor practice sorcery.

Leviticus 19.27: 27 “‘You shall not cut the hair on the sides of your head or clip off the edge of your beard.

Leviticus 19.28: 28 “‘You shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor tattoo any marks on you. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 19.29: 29 “‘Don’t profane your daughter, to make her a prostitute; lest the land fall to prostitution, and the land become full of wickedness.

Leviticus 19.30: 30 “‘You shall keep my Sabbaths, and reverence my sanctuary; I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 19.31: 31 “‘Don’t turn to those who are mediums, nor to the wizards. Don’t seek them out, to be defiled by them. I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 19.32: 32 “‘You shall rise up before the gray head and honor the face of the elderly; and you shall fear your God. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 19.33: 33 “‘If a stranger lives as a foreigner with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong.

Leviticus 19.34: 34 The stranger who lives as a foreigner with you shall be to you as the native-born among you, and you shall love him as yourself; for you lived as foreigners in the land of Egypt. I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 19.35: 35 “‘You shall do no unrighteousness in judgment, in measures of length, of weight, or of quantity.

Leviticus 19.36: 36 You shall have just balances, just weights, a just ephah, and a just hin. I am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt.

Leviticus 19.37: 37 “‘You shall observe all my statutes and all my ordinances, and do them. I am Yahweh.’”

Leviticus 20.0:

20

Leviticus 20.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 20.2: 2 “Moreover, you shall tell the children of Israel, ‘Anyone of the children of Israel, or of the strangers who live as foreigners in Israel, who gives any of his offspring to Molech shall surely be put to death. The people of the land shall stone that person with stones.

Leviticus 20.3: 3 I also will set my face against that person, and will cut him off from among his people, because he has given of his offspring to Molech, to defile my sanctuary, and to profane my holy name.

Leviticus 20.4: 4 If the people of the land all hide their eyes from that person when he gives of his offspring to Molech, and don’t put him to death,

Leviticus 20.5: 5 then I will set my face against that man and against his family, and will cut him off, and all who play the prostitute after him to play the prostitute with Molech, from among their people.

Leviticus 20.6: 6 “‘The person that turns to those who are mediums and wizards, to play the prostitute after them, I will even set my face against that person, and will cut him off from among his people.

Leviticus 20.7: 7 “‘Sanctify yourselves therefore, and be holy; for I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 20.8: 8 You shall keep my statutes, and do them. I am Yahweh who sanctifies you.

Leviticus 20.9: 9 “‘For everyone who curses his father or his mother shall surely be put to death. He has cursed his father or his mother. His blood shall be upon himself.

Leviticus 20.10: 10 “‘The man who commits adultery with another man’s wife, even he who commits adultery with his neighbor’s wife, the adulterer and the adulteress shall surely be put to death.

Leviticus 20.11: 11 “‘The man who lies with his father’s wife has uncovered his father’s nakedness. Both of them shall surely be put to death. Their blood shall be upon themselves.

Leviticus 20.12: 12 “‘If a man lies with his daughter-in-law, both of them shall surely be put to death. They have committed a perversion. Their blood shall be upon themselves.

Leviticus 20.13: 13 “‘If a man lies with a male, as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination. They shall surely be put to death. Their blood shall be upon themselves.

Leviticus 20.14: 14 “‘If a man takes a wife and her mother, it is wickedness. They shall be burned with fire, both he and they, that there may be no wickedness among you.

Leviticus 20.15: 15 “‘If a man lies with an animal, he shall surely be put to death; and you shall kill the animal.

Leviticus 20.16: 16 “‘If a woman approaches any animal and lies with it, you shall kill the woman and the animal. They shall surely be put to death. Their blood shall be upon them.

Leviticus 20.17: 17 “‘If a man takes his sister—his father’s daughter, or his mother’s daughter—and sees her nakedness, and she sees his nakedness, it is a shameful thing. They shall be cut off in the sight of the children of their people. He has uncovered his sister’s nakedness. He shall bear his iniquity.

Leviticus 20.18: 18 “‘If a man lies with a woman having her monthly period, and uncovers her nakedness, he has made her fountain naked, and she has uncovered the fountain of her blood. Both of them shall be cut off from among their people.

Leviticus 20.19: 19 “‘You shall not uncover the nakedness of your mother’s sister, nor of your father’s sister, for he has made his close relative naked. They shall bear their iniquity.

Leviticus 20.20: 20 If a man lies with his uncle’s wife, he has uncovered his uncle’s nakedness. They shall bear their sin. They shall die childless.

Leviticus 20.21: 21 “‘If a man takes his brother’s wife, it is an impurity. He has uncovered his brother’s nakedness. They shall be childless.

Leviticus 20.22: 22 “‘You shall therefore keep all my statutes and all my ordinances, and do them, that the land where I am bringing you to dwell may not vomit you out.

Leviticus 20.23: 23 You shall not walk in the customs of the nation which I am casting out before you; for they did all these things, and therefore I abhorred them.

Leviticus 20.24: 24 But I have said to you, “You shall inherit their land, and I will give it to you to possess it, a land flowing with milk and honey.” I am Yahweh your God, who has separated you from the peoples.

Leviticus 20.25: 25 “‘You shall therefore make a distinction between the clean animal and the unclean, and between the unclean fowl and the clean. You shall not make yourselves abominable by animal, or by bird, or by anything with which the ground teems, which I have separated from you as unclean for you.

Leviticus 20.26: 26 You shall be holy to me, for I, Yahweh, am holy, and have set you apart from the peoples, that you should be mine.

Leviticus 20.27: 27 “‘A man or a woman that is a medium or is a wizard shall surely be put to death. They shall be stoned with stones. Their blood shall be upon themselves.’”

Leviticus 21.0:

21

Leviticus 21.1: 1 Yahweh said to Moses, “Speak to the priests, the sons of Aaron, and say to them, ‘A priest shall not defile himself for the dead among his people,

Leviticus 21.2: 2 except for his relatives that are near to him: for his mother, for his father, for his son, for his daughter, for his brother,

Leviticus 21.3: 3 and for his virgin sister who is near to him, who has had no husband; for her he may defile himself.

Leviticus 21.4: 4 He shall not defile himself, being a chief man among his people, to profane himself.

Leviticus 21.5: 5 “‘They shall not shave their heads or shave off the corners of their beards or make any cuttings in their flesh.

Leviticus 21.6: 6 They shall be holy to their God, and not profane the name of their God, for they offer the offerings of Yahweh made by fire, the bread of their God. Therefore they shall be holy.

Leviticus 21.7: 7 “‘They shall not marry a woman who is a prostitute, or profane. A priest shall not marry a woman divorced from her husband; for he is holy to his God.

Leviticus 21.8: 8 Therefore you shall sanctify him, for he offers the bread of your God. He shall be holy to you, for I Yahweh, who sanctify you, am holy.

Leviticus 21.9: 9 “‘The daughter of any priest, if she profanes herself by playing the prostitute, she profanes her father. She shall be burned with fire.

Leviticus 21.10: 10 “‘He who is the high priest among his brothers, upon whose head the anointing oil is poured, and who is consecrated to put on the garments, shall not let the hair of his head hang loose, or tear his clothes.

Leviticus 21.11: 11 He must not go in to any dead body, or defile himself for his father or for his mother.

Leviticus 21.12: 12 He shall not go out of the sanctuary, nor profane the sanctuary of his God; for the crown of the anointing oil of his God is upon him. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 21.13: 13 “‘He shall take a wife in her virginity.

Leviticus 21.14: 14 He shall not marry a widow, or one divorced, or a woman who has been defiled, or a prostitute. He shall take a virgin of his own people as a wife.

Leviticus 21.15: 15 He shall not profane his offspring among his people, for I am Yahweh who sanctifies him.’”

Leviticus 21.16: 16 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 21.17: 17 “Say to Aaron, ‘None of your offspring throughout their generations who has a defect may approach to offer the bread of his God.

Leviticus 21.18: 18 For whatever man he is that has a defect, he shall not draw near: a blind man, or a lame, or he who has a flat nose, or any deformity,

Leviticus 21.19: 19 or a man who has an injured foot, or an injured hand,

Leviticus 21.20: 20 or hunchbacked, or a dwarf, or one who has a defect in his eye, or an itching disease, or scabs, or who has damaged testicles.

Leviticus 21.21: 21 No man of the offspring of Aaron the priest who has a defect shall come near to offer the offerings of Yahweh made by fire. Since he has a defect, he shall not come near to offer the bread of his God.

Leviticus 21.22: 22 He shall eat the bread of his God, both of the most holy, and of the holy.

Leviticus 21.23: 23 He shall not come near to the veil, nor come near to the altar, because he has a defect; that he may not profane my sanctuaries, for I am Yahweh who sanctifies them.’”

Leviticus 21.24: 24 So Moses spoke to Aaron, and to his sons, and to all the children of Israel.

Leviticus 22.0:

22

Leviticus 22.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 22.2: 2 “Tell Aaron and his sons to separate themselves from the holy things of the children of Israel, which they make holy to me, and that they not profane my holy name. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 22.3: 3 “Tell them, ‘If anyone of all your offspring throughout your generations approaches the holy things which the children of Israel make holy to Yahweh, having his uncleanness on him, that soul shall be cut off from before me. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 22.4: 4 “‘Whoever of the offspring of Aaron is a leper or has a discharge shall not eat of the holy things until he is clean. Whoever touches anything that is unclean by the dead, or a man who has a seminal emission,

Leviticus 22.5: 5 or whoever touches any creeping thing whereby he may be made unclean, or a man from whom he may become unclean, whatever uncleanness he has—

Leviticus 22.6: 6 the person that touches any such shall be unclean until the evening, and shall not eat of the holy things unless he bathes his body in water.

Leviticus 22.7: 7 When the sun is down, he shall be clean; and afterward he shall eat of the holy things, because it is his bread.

Leviticus 22.8: 8 He shall not eat that which dies of itself or is torn by animals, defiling himself by it. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 22.9: 9 “‘They shall therefore follow my commandment, lest they bear sin for it and die in it, if they profane it. I am Yahweh who sanctifies them.

Leviticus 22.10: 10 “‘No stranger shall eat of the holy thing: a foreigner living with the priests, or a hired servant, shall not eat of the holy thing.

Leviticus 22.11: 11 But if a priest buys a slave, purchased by his money, he shall eat of it; and those who are born in his house shall eat of his bread.

Leviticus 22.12: 12 If a priest’s daughter is married to an outsider, she shall not eat of the heave offering of the holy things.

Leviticus 22.13: 13 But if a priest’s daughter is a widow, or divorced, and has no child, and has returned to her father’s house as in her youth, she may eat of her father’s bread; but no stranger shall eat any of it.

Leviticus 22.14: 14 “‘If a man eats something holy unwittingly, then he shall add the fifth part of its value to it, and shall give the holy thing to the priest.

Leviticus 22.15: 15 The priests shall not profane the holy things of the children of Israel, which they offer to Yahweh,

Leviticus 22.16: 16 and so cause them to bear the iniquity that brings guilt when they eat their holy things; for I am Yahweh who sanctifies them.’”

Leviticus 22.17: 17 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 22.18: 18 “Speak to Aaron, and to his sons, and to all the children of Israel, and say to them, ‘Whoever is of the house of Israel, or of the foreigners in Israel, who offers his offering, whether it is any of their vows or any of their free will offerings, which they offer to Yahweh for a burnt offering:

Leviticus 22.19: 19 that you may be accepted, you shall offer a male without defect, of the bulls, of the sheep, or of the goats.

Leviticus 22.20: 20 But you shall not offer whatever has a defect, for it shall not be acceptable for you.

Leviticus 22.21: 21 Whoever offers a sacrifice of peace offerings to Yahweh to accomplish a vow, or for a free will offering of the herd or of the flock, it shall be perfect to be accepted. It shall have no defect.

Leviticus 22.22: 22 You shall not offer what is blind, is injured, is maimed, has a wart, is festering, or has a running sore to Yahweh, nor make an offering by fire of them on the altar to Yahweh.

Leviticus 22.23: 23 Either a bull or a lamb that has any deformity or lacking in his parts, that you may offer for a free will offering; but for a vow it shall not be accepted.

Leviticus 22.24: 24 You must not offer to Yahweh that which has its testicles bruised, crushed, broken, or cut. You must not do this in your land.

Leviticus 22.25: 25 You must not offer any of these as the bread of your God from the hand of a foreigner, because their corruption is in them. There is a defect in them. They shall not be accepted for you.’”

Leviticus 22.26: 26 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 22.27: 27 “When a bull, a sheep, or a goat is born, it shall remain seven days with its mother. From the eighth day on it shall be accepted for the offering of an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Leviticus 22.28: 28 Whether it is a cow or ewe, you shall not kill it and its young both in one day.

Leviticus 22.29: 29 “When you sacrifice a sacrifice of thanksgiving to Yahweh, you shall sacrifice it so that you may be accepted.

Leviticus 22.30: 30 It shall be eaten on the same day; you shall leave none of it until the morning. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 22.31: 31 “Therefore you shall keep my commandments, and do them. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 22.32: 32 You shall not profane my holy name, but I will be made holy among the children of Israel. I am Yahweh who makes you holy,

Leviticus 22.33: 33 who brought you out of the land of Egypt, to be your God. I am Yahweh.”

Leviticus 23.0:

23

Leviticus 23.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 23.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘The set feasts of Yahweh, which you shall proclaim to be holy convocations, even these are my set feasts.

Leviticus 23.3: 3 “‘Six days shall work be done, but on the seventh day is a Sabbath of solemn rest, a holy convocation; you shall do no kind of work. It is a Sabbath to Yahweh in all your dwellings.

Leviticus 23.4: 4 “‘These are the set feasts of Yahweh, even holy convocations, which you shall proclaim in their appointed season.

Leviticus 23.5: 5 In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month in the evening, is Yahweh’s Passover.

Leviticus 23.6: 6 On the fifteenth day of the same month is the feast of unleavened bread to Yahweh. Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread.

Leviticus 23.7: 7 In the first day you shall have a holy convocation. You shall do no regular work.

Leviticus 23.8: 8 But you shall offer an offering made by fire to Yahweh seven days. In the seventh day is a holy convocation. You shall do no regular work.’”

Leviticus 23.9: 9 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 23.10: 10 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘When you have come into the land which I give to you, and shall reap its harvest, then you shall bring the sheaf of the first fruits of your harvest to the priest.

Leviticus 23.11: 11 He shall wave the sheaf before Yahweh, to be accepted for you. On the next day after the Sabbath the priest shall wave it.

Leviticus 23.12: 12 On the day when you wave the sheaf, you shall offer a male lamb without defect a year old for a burnt offering to Yahweh.

Leviticus 23.13: 13 The meal offering with it shall be two tenths of an ephah of fine flour mixed with oil, an offering made by fire to Yahweh for a pleasant aroma; and the drink offering with it shall be of wine, the fourth part of a hin.

Leviticus 23.14: 14 You must not eat bread, or roasted grain, or fresh grain, until this same day, until you have brought the offering of your God. This is a statute forever throughout your generations in all your dwellings.

Leviticus 23.15: 15 “‘You shall count from the next day after the Sabbath, from the day that you brought the sheaf of the wave offering: seven Sabbaths shall be completed.

Leviticus 23.16: 16 The next day after the seventh Sabbath you shall count fifty days; and you shall offer a new meal offering to Yahweh.

Leviticus 23.17: 17 You shall bring out of your habitations two loaves of bread for a wave offering made of two tenths of an ephah of fine flour. They shall be baked with yeast, for first fruits to Yahweh.

Leviticus 23.18: 18 You shall present with the bread seven lambs without defect a year old, one young bull, and two rams. They shall be a burnt offering to Yahweh, with their meal offering and their drink offerings, even an offering made by fire, of a sweet aroma to Yahweh.

Leviticus 23.19: 19 You shall offer one male goat for a sin offering, and two male lambs a year old for a sacrifice of peace offerings.

Leviticus 23.20: 20 The priest shall wave them with the bread of the first fruits for a wave offering before Yahweh, with the two lambs. They shall be holy to Yahweh for the priest.

Leviticus 23.21: 21 You shall make proclamation on the same day that there shall be a holy convocation to you. You shall do no regular work. This is a statute forever in all your dwellings throughout your generations.

Leviticus 23.22: 22 “‘When you reap the harvest of your land, you must not wholly reap into the corners of your field, and you must not gather the gleanings of your harvest. You must leave them for the poor, and for the foreigner. I am Yahweh your God.’”

Leviticus 23.23: 23 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 23.24: 24 “Speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘In the seventh month, on the first day of the month, there shall be a solemn rest for you, a memorial of blowing of trumpets, a holy convocation.

Leviticus 23.25: 25 You shall do no regular work. You shall offer an offering made by fire to Yahweh.’”

Leviticus 23.26: 26 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 23.27: 27 “However on the tenth day of this seventh month is the day of atonement. It shall be a holy convocation to you. You shall afflict yourselves and you shall offer an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Leviticus 23.28: 28 You shall do no kind of work in that same day, for it is a day of atonement, to make atonement for you before Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 23.29: 29 For whoever it is who shall not deny himself in that same day shall be cut off from his people.

Leviticus 23.30: 30 Whoever does any kind of work in that same day, I will destroy that person from among his people.

Leviticus 23.31: 31 You shall do no kind of work: it is a statute forever throughout your generations in all your dwellings.

Leviticus 23.32: 32 It shall be a Sabbath of solemn rest for you, and you shall deny yourselves. In the ninth day of the month at evening, from evening to evening, you shall keep your Sabbath.”

Leviticus 23.33: 33 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 23.34: 34 “Speak to the children of Israel, and say, ‘On the fifteenth day of this seventh month is the feast of booths for seven days to Yahweh.

Leviticus 23.35: 35 On the first day shall be a holy convocation. You shall do no regular work.

Leviticus 23.36: 36 Seven days you shall offer an offering made by fire to Yahweh. On the eighth day shall be a holy convocation to you. You shall offer an offering made by fire to Yahweh. It is a solemn assembly; you shall do no regular work.

Leviticus 23.37: 37 “‘These are the appointed feasts of Yahweh which you shall proclaim to be holy convocations, to offer an offering made by fire to Yahweh, a burnt offering, a meal offering, a sacrifice, and drink offerings, each on its own day—

Leviticus 23.38: 38 in addition to the Sabbaths of Yahweh, and in addition to your gifts, and in addition to all your vows, and in addition to all your free will offerings, which you give to Yahweh.

Leviticus 23.39: 39 “‘So on the fifteenth day of the seventh month, when you have gathered in the fruits of the land, you shall keep the feast of Yahweh seven days. On the first day shall be a solemn rest, and on the eighth day shall be a solemn rest.

Leviticus 23.40: 40 You shall take on the first day the fruit of majestic trees, branches of palm trees, and boughs of thick trees, and willows of the brook; and you shall rejoice before Yahweh your God seven days.

Leviticus 23.41: 41 You shall keep it as a feast to Yahweh seven days in the year. It is a statute forever throughout your generations. You shall keep it in the seventh month.

Leviticus 23.42: 42 You shall dwell in temporary shelters for seven days. All who are native-born in Israel shall dwell in temporary shelters,

Leviticus 23.43: 43 that your generations may know that I made the children of Israel to dwell in temporary shelters when I brought them out of the land of Egypt. I am Yahweh your God.’”

Leviticus 23.44: 44 So Moses declared to the children of Israel the appointed feasts of Yahweh.

Leviticus 24.0:

24

Leviticus 24.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 24.2: 2 “Command the children of Israel, that they bring to you pure olive oil beaten for the light, to cause a lamp to burn continually.

Leviticus 24.3: 3 Outside of the veil of the Testimony, in the Tent of Meeting, Aaron shall keep it in order from evening to morning before Yahweh continually. It shall be a statute forever throughout your generations.

Leviticus 24.4: 4 He shall keep in order the lamps on the pure gold lamp stand before Yahweh continually.

Leviticus 24.5: 5 “You shall take fine flour, and bake twelve cakes of it: two tenths of an ephah shall be in one cake.

Leviticus 24.6: 6 You shall set them in two rows, six on a row, on the pure gold table before Yahweh.

Leviticus 24.7: 7 You shall put pure frankincense on each row, that it may be to the bread for a memorial, even an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Leviticus 24.8: 8 Every Sabbath day he shall set it in order before Yahweh continually. It is an everlasting covenant on the behalf of the children of Israel.

Leviticus 24.9: 9 It shall be for Aaron and his sons. They shall eat it in a holy place; for it is most holy to him of the offerings of Yahweh made by fire by a perpetual statute.”

Leviticus 24.10: 10 The son of an Israelite woman, whose father was an Egyptian, went out among the children of Israel; and the son of the Israelite woman and a man of Israel strove together in the camp.

Leviticus 24.11: 11 The son of the Israelite woman blasphemed the Name, and cursed; and they brought him to Moses. His mother’s name was Shelomith, the daughter of Dibri, of the tribe of Dan.

Leviticus 24.12: 12 They put him in custody until Yahweh’s will should be declared to them.

Leviticus 24.13: 13 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 24.14: 14 “Bring him who cursed out of the camp; and let all who heard him lay their hands on his head, and let all the congregation stone him.

Leviticus 24.15: 15 You shall speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘Whoever curses his God shall bear his sin.

Leviticus 24.16: 16 He who blasphemes Yahweh’s name, he shall surely be put to death. All the congregation shall certainly stone him. The foreigner as well as the native-born shall be put to death when he blasphemes the Name.

Leviticus 24.17: 17 “‘He who strikes any man mortally shall surely be put to death.

Leviticus 24.18: 18 He who strikes an animal mortally shall make it good, life for life.

Leviticus 24.19: 19 If anyone injures his neighbor, it shall be done to him as he has done:

Leviticus 24.20: 20 fracture for fracture, eye for eye, tooth for tooth. It shall be done to him as he has injured someone.

Leviticus 24.21: 21 He who kills an animal shall make it good; and he who kills a man shall be put to death.

Leviticus 24.22: 22 You shall have one kind of law for the foreigner as well as the native-born; for I am Yahweh your God.’”

Leviticus 24.23: 23 Moses spoke to the children of Israel; and they brought him who had cursed out of the camp, and stoned him with stones. The children of Israel did as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Leviticus 25.0:

25

Leviticus 25.1: 1 Yahweh said to Moses in Mount Sinai,

Leviticus 25.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘When you come into the land which I give you, then the land shall keep a Sabbath to Yahweh.

Leviticus 25.3: 3 You shall sow your field six years, and you shall prune your vineyard six years, and gather in its fruits;

Leviticus 25.4: 4 but in the seventh year there shall be a Sabbath of solemn rest for the land, a Sabbath to Yahweh. You shall not sow your field or prune your vineyard.

Leviticus 25.5: 5 What grows of itself in your harvest you shall not reap, and you shall not gather the grapes of your undressed vine. It shall be a year of solemn rest for the land.

Leviticus 25.6: 6 The Sabbath of the land shall be for food for you; for yourself, for your servant, for your maid, for your hired servant, and for your stranger, who lives as a foreigner with you.

Leviticus 25.7: 7 For your livestock also, and for the animals that are in your land, shall all its increase be for food.

Leviticus 25.8: 8 “‘You shall count off seven Sabbaths of years, seven times seven years; and there shall be to you the days of seven Sabbaths of years, even forty-nine years.

Leviticus 25.9: 9 Then you shall sound the loud trumpet on the tenth day of the seventh month. On the Day of Atonement you shall sound the trumpet throughout all your land.

Leviticus 25.10: 10 You shall make the fiftieth year holy, and proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its inhabitants. It shall be a jubilee to you; and each of you shall return to his own property, and each of you shall return to his family.

Leviticus 25.11: 11 That fiftieth year shall be a jubilee to you. In it you shall not sow, neither reap that which grows of itself, nor gather from the undressed vines.

Leviticus 25.12: 12 For it is a jubilee; it shall be holy to you. You shall eat of its increase out of the field.

Leviticus 25.13: 13 “‘In this Year of Jubilee each of you shall return to his property.

Leviticus 25.14: 14 “‘If you sell anything to your neighbor, or buy from your neighbor, you shall not wrong one another.

Leviticus 25.15: 15 According to the number of years after the Jubilee you shall buy from your neighbor. According to the number of years of the crops he shall sell to you.

Leviticus 25.16: 16 According to the length of the years you shall increase its price, and according to the shortness of the years you shall diminish its price; for he is selling the number of the crops to you.

Leviticus 25.17: 17 You shall not wrong one another, but you shall fear your God; for I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 25.18: 18 “‘Therefore you shall do my statutes, and keep my ordinances and do them; and you shall dwell in the land in safety.

Leviticus 25.19: 19 The land shall yield its fruit, and you shall eat your fill, and dwell therein in safety.

Leviticus 25.20: 20 If you said, “What shall we eat the seventh year? Behold, we shall not sow, nor gather in our increase;”

Leviticus 25.21: 21 then I will command my blessing on you in the sixth year, and it shall bear fruit for the three years.

Leviticus 25.22: 22 You shall sow the eighth year, and eat of the fruits from the old store until the ninth year. Until its fruits come in, you shall eat the old store.

Leviticus 25.23: 23 “‘The land shall not be sold in perpetuity, for the land is mine; for you are strangers and live as foreigners with me.

Leviticus 25.24: 24 In all the land of your possession you shall grant a redemption for the land.

Leviticus 25.25: 25 “‘If your brother becomes poor, and sells some of his possessions, then his kinsman who is next to him shall come, and redeem that which his brother has sold.

Leviticus 25.26: 26 If a man has no one to redeem it, and he becomes prosperous and finds sufficient means to redeem it,

Leviticus 25.27: 27 then let him reckon the years since its sale, and restore the surplus to the man to whom he sold it; and he shall return to his property.

Leviticus 25.28: 28 But if he isn’t able to get it back for himself, then what he has sold shall remain in the hand of him who has bought it until the Year of Jubilee. In the Jubilee it shall be released, and he shall return to his property.

Leviticus 25.29: 29 “‘If a man sells a dwelling house in a walled city, then he may redeem it within a whole year after it has been sold. For a full year he shall have the right of redemption.

Leviticus 25.30: 30 If it isn’t redeemed within the space of a full year, then the house that is in the walled city shall be made sure in perpetuity to him who bought it, throughout his generations. It shall not be released in the Jubilee.

Leviticus 25.31: 31 But the houses of the villages which have no wall around them shall be accounted for with the fields of the country: they may be redeemed, and they shall be released in the Jubilee.

Leviticus 25.32: 32 “‘Nevertheless, in the cities of the Levites, the Levites may redeem the houses in the cities of their possession at any time.

Leviticus 25.33: 33 The Levites may redeem the house that was sold, and the city of his possession, and it shall be released in the Jubilee; for the houses of the cities of the Levites are their possession among the children of Israel.

Leviticus 25.34: 34 But the field of the pasture lands of their cities may not be sold, for it is their perpetual possession.

Leviticus 25.35: 35 “‘If your brother has become poor, and his hand can’t support himself among you, then you shall uphold him. He shall live with you like an alien and a temporary resident.

Leviticus 25.36: 36 Take no interest from him or profit; but fear your God, that your brother may live among you.

Leviticus 25.37: 37 You shall not lend him your money at interest, nor give him your food for profit.

Leviticus 25.38: 38 I am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, to give you the land of Canaan, and to be your God.

Leviticus 25.39: 39 “‘If your brother has grown poor among you, and sells himself to you, you shall not make him to serve as a slave.

Leviticus 25.40: 40 As a hired servant, and as a temporary resident, he shall be with you; he shall serve with you until the Year of Jubilee.

Leviticus 25.41: 41 Then he shall go out from you, he and his children with him, and shall return to his own family, and to the possession of his fathers.

Leviticus 25.42: 42 For they are my servants, whom I brought out of the land of Egypt. They shall not be sold as slaves.

Leviticus 25.43: 43 You shall not rule over him with harshness, but shall fear your God.

Leviticus 25.44: 44 “‘As for your male and your female slaves, whom you may have from the nations that are around you, from them you may buy male and female slaves.

Leviticus 25.45: 45 Moreover, of the children of the aliens who live among you, of them you may buy, and of their families who are with you, which they have conceived in your land; and they will be your property.

Leviticus 25.46: 46 You may make them an inheritance for your children after you, to hold for a possession. Of them you may take your slaves forever, but over your brothers the children of Israel you shall not rule, one over another, with harshness.

Leviticus 25.47: 47 “‘If an alien or temporary resident with you becomes rich, and your brother beside him has grown poor, and sells himself to the stranger or foreigner living among you, or to a member of the stranger’s family,

Leviticus 25.48: 48 after he is sold he may be redeemed. One of his brothers may redeem him;

Leviticus 25.49: 49 or his uncle, or his uncle’s son, may redeem him, or any who is a close relative to him of his family may redeem him; or if he has grown rich, he may redeem himself.

Leviticus 25.50: 50 He shall reckon with him who bought him from the year that he sold himself to him to the Year of Jubilee. The price of his sale shall be according to the number of years; he shall be with him according to the time of a hired servant.

Leviticus 25.51: 51 If there are yet many years, according to them he shall give back the price of his redemption out of the money that he was bought for.

Leviticus 25.52: 52 If there remain but a few years to the year of jubilee, then he shall reckon with him; according to his years of service he shall give back the price of his redemption.

Leviticus 25.53: 53 As a servant hired year by year shall he be with him. He shall not rule with harshness over him in your sight.

Leviticus 25.54: 54 If he isn’t redeemed by these means, then he shall be released in the Year of Jubilee: he and his children with him.

Leviticus 25.55: 55 For to me the children of Israel are servants; they are my servants whom I brought out of the land of Egypt. I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 26.0:

26

Leviticus 26.1: 1 “‘You shall make for yourselves no idols, and you shall not raise up a carved image or a pillar, and you shall not place any figured stone in your land, to bow down to it; for I am Yahweh your God.

Leviticus 26.2: 2 “‘You shall keep my Sabbaths, and have reverence for my sanctuary. I am Yahweh.

Leviticus 26.3: 3 “‘If you walk in my statutes and keep my commandments, and do them,

Leviticus 26.4: 4 then I will give you your rains in their season, and the land shall yield its increase, and the trees of the field shall yield their fruit.

Leviticus 26.5: 5 Your threshing shall continue until the vintage, and the vintage shall continue until the sowing time. You shall eat your bread to the full, and dwell in your land safely.

Leviticus 26.6: 6 “‘I will give peace in the land, and you shall lie down, and no one will make you afraid. I will remove evil animals out of the land, neither shall the sword go through your land.

Leviticus 26.7: 7 You shall chase your enemies, and they shall fall before you by the sword.

Leviticus 26.8: 8 Five of you shall chase a hundred, and a hundred of you shall chase ten thousand; and your enemies shall fall before you by the sword.

Leviticus 26.9: 9 “‘I will have respect for you, make you fruitful, multiply you, and will establish my covenant with you.

Leviticus 26.10: 10 You shall eat old supplies long kept, and you shall move out the old because of the new.

Leviticus 26.11: 11 I will set my tent among you, and my soul won’t abhor you.

Leviticus 26.12: 12 I will walk among you, and will be your God, and you will be my people.

Leviticus 26.13: 13 I am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, that you should not be their slaves. I have broken the bars of your yoke, and made you walk upright.

Leviticus 26.14: 14 “‘But if you will not listen to me, and will not do all these commandments,

Leviticus 26.15: 15 and if you shall reject my statutes, and if your soul abhors my ordinances, so that you will not do all my commandments, but break my covenant,

Leviticus 26.16: 16 I also will do this to you: I will appoint terror over you, even consumption and fever, that shall consume the eyes, and make the soul to pine away. You will sow your seed in vain, for your enemies will eat it.

Leviticus 26.17: 17 I will set my face against you, and you will be struck before your enemies. Those who hate you will rule over you; and you will flee when no one pursues you.

Leviticus 26.18: 18 “‘If you in spite of these things will not listen to me, then I will chastise you seven times more for your sins.

Leviticus 26.19: 19 I will break the pride of your power, and I will make your sky like iron, and your soil like bronze.

Leviticus 26.20: 20 Your strength will be spent in vain; for your land won’t yield its increase, neither will the trees of the land yield their fruit.

Leviticus 26.21: 21 “‘If you walk contrary to me, and won’t listen to me, then I will bring seven times more plagues on you according to your sins.

Leviticus 26.22: 22 I will send the wild animals among you, which will rob you of your children, destroy your livestock, and make you few in number. Your roads will become desolate.

Leviticus 26.23: 23 “‘If by these things you won’t be turned back to me, but will walk contrary to me,

Leviticus 26.24: 24 then I will also walk contrary to you; and I will strike you, even I, seven times for your sins.

Leviticus 26.25: 25 I will bring a sword upon you that will execute the vengeance of the covenant. You will be gathered together within your cities, and I will send the pestilence among you. You will be delivered into the hand of the enemy.

Leviticus 26.26: 26 When I break your staff of bread, ten women shall bake your bread in one oven, and they shall deliver your bread again by weight. You shall eat, and not be satisfied.

Leviticus 26.27: 27 “‘If you in spite of this won’t listen to me, but walk contrary to me,

Leviticus 26.28: 28 then I will walk contrary to you in wrath. I will also chastise you seven times for your sins.

Leviticus 26.29: 29 You will eat the flesh of your sons, and you will eat the flesh of your daughters.

Leviticus 26.30: 30 I will destroy your high places, and cut down your incense altars, and cast your dead bodies upon the bodies of your idols; and my soul will abhor you.

Leviticus 26.31: 31 I will lay your cities waste, and will bring your sanctuaries to desolation. I will not take delight in the sweet fragrance of your offerings.

Leviticus 26.32: 32 I will bring the land into desolation, and your enemies that dwell in it will be astonished at it.

Leviticus 26.33: 33 I will scatter you among the nations, and I will draw out the sword after you. Your land will be a desolation, and your cities shall be a waste.

Leviticus 26.34: 34 Then the land will enjoy its Sabbaths as long as it lies desolate and you are in your enemies’ land. Even then the land will rest and enjoy its Sabbaths.

Leviticus 26.35: 35 As long as it lies desolate it shall have rest, even the rest which it didn’t have in your Sabbaths when you lived on it.

Leviticus 26.36: 36 “‘As for those of you who are left, I will send a faintness into their hearts in the lands of their enemies. The sound of a driven leaf will put them to flight; and they shall flee, as one flees from the sword. They will fall when no one pursues.

Leviticus 26.37: 37 They will stumble over one another, as it were before the sword, when no one pursues. You will have no power to stand before your enemies.

Leviticus 26.38: 38 You will perish among the nations. The land of your enemies will eat you up.

Leviticus 26.39: 39 Those of you who are left will pine away in their iniquity in your enemies’ lands; and also in the iniquities of their fathers they shall pine away with them.

Leviticus 26.40: 40 “‘If they confess their iniquity and the iniquity of their fathers, in their trespass which they trespassed against me; and also that because they walked contrary to me,

Leviticus 26.41: 41 I also walked contrary to them, and brought them into the land of their enemies; if then their uncircumcised heart is humbled, and they then accept the punishment of their iniquity,

Leviticus 26.42: 42 then I will remember my covenant with Jacob, my covenant with Isaac, and also my covenant with Abraham; and I will remember the land.

Leviticus 26.43: 43 The land also will be left by them, and will enjoy its Sabbaths while it lies desolate without them; and they will accept the punishment of their iniquity because they rejected my ordinances, and their soul abhorred my statutes.

Leviticus 26.44: 44 Yet for all that, when they are in the land of their enemies, I will not reject them, neither will I abhor them, to destroy them utterly and to break my covenant with them; for I am Yahweh their God.

Leviticus 26.45: 45 But I will for their sake remember the covenant of their ancestors, whom I brought out of the land of Egypt in the sight of the nations, that I might be their God. I am Yahweh.’”

Leviticus 26.46: 46 These are the statutes, ordinances, and laws, which Yahweh made between him and the children of Israel in Mount Sinai by Moses.

Leviticus 27.0:

27

Leviticus 27.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Leviticus 27.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and say to them, ‘When a man consecrates a person to Yahweh in a vow, according to your valuation,

Leviticus 27.3: 3 your valuation of a male from twenty years old to sixty years old shall be fifty shekels of silver, according to the shekel of the sanctuary.

Leviticus 27.4: 4 If she is a female, then your valuation shall be thirty shekels.

Leviticus 27.5: 5 If the person is from five years old to twenty years old, then your valuation shall be for a male twenty shekels, and for a female ten shekels.

Leviticus 27.6: 6 If the person is from a month old to five years old, then your valuation shall be for a male five shekels of silver, and for a female your valuation shall be three shekels of silver.

Leviticus 27.7: 7 If the person is from sixty years old and upward; if he is a male, then your valuation shall be fifteen shekels, and for a female ten shekels.

Leviticus 27.8: 8 But if he is poorer than your valuation, then he shall be set before the priest, and the priest shall assign a value to him. The priest shall assign a value according to his ability to pay.

Leviticus 27.9: 9 “‘If it is an animal of which men offer an offering to Yahweh, all that any man gives of such to Yahweh becomes holy.

Leviticus 27.10: 10 He shall not alter it, nor exchange it, a good for a bad, or a bad for a good. If he shall at all exchange animal for animal, then both it and that for which it is exchanged shall be holy.

Leviticus 27.11: 11 If it is any unclean animal, of which they do not offer as an offering to Yahweh, then he shall set the animal before the priest;

Leviticus 27.12: 12 and the priest shall evaluate it, whether it is good or bad. As the priest evaluates it, so it shall be.

Leviticus 27.13: 13 But if he will indeed redeem it, then he shall add the fifth part of it to its valuation.

Leviticus 27.14: 14 “‘When a man dedicates his house to be holy to Yahweh, then the priest shall evaluate it, whether it is good or bad. As the priest evaluates it, so it shall stand.

Leviticus 27.15: 15 If he who dedicates it will redeem his house, then he shall add the fifth part of the money of your valuation to it, and it shall be his.

Leviticus 27.16: 16 “‘If a man dedicates to Yahweh part of the field of his possession, then your valuation shall be according to the seed for it. The sowing of a homer of barley shall be valued at fifty shekels of silver.

Leviticus 27.17: 17 If he dedicates his field from the Year of Jubilee, according to your valuation it shall stand.

Leviticus 27.18: 18 But if he dedicates his field after the Jubilee, then the priest shall reckon to him the money according to the years that remain to the Year of Jubilee; and an abatement shall be made from your valuation.

Leviticus 27.19: 19 If he who dedicated the field will indeed redeem it, then he shall add the fifth part of the money of your valuation to it, and it shall remain his.

Leviticus 27.20: 20 If he will not redeem the field, or if he has sold the field to another man, it shall not be redeemed any more;

Leviticus 27.21: 21 but the field, when it goes out in the Jubilee, shall be holy to Yahweh, as a devoted field. It shall be owned by the priests.

Leviticus 27.22: 22 “‘If he dedicates a field to Yahweh which he has bought, which is not of the field of his possession,

Leviticus 27.23: 23 then the priest shall reckon to him the worth of your valuation up to the Year of Jubilee; and he shall give your valuation on that day, as a holy thing to Yahweh.

Leviticus 27.24: 24 In the Year of Jubilee the field shall return to him from whom it was bought, even to him to whom the possession of the land belongs.

Leviticus 27.25: 25 All your valuations shall be according to the shekel of the sanctuary: twenty gerahs to the shekel.

Leviticus 27.26: 26 “‘However the firstborn among animals, which belongs to Yahweh as a firstborn, no man may dedicate, whether an ox or a sheep. It is Yahweh’s.

Leviticus 27.27: 27 If it is an unclean animal, then he shall buy it back according to your valuation, and shall add to it the fifth part of it; or if it isn’t redeemed, then it shall be sold according to your valuation.

Leviticus 27.28: 28 “‘Notwithstanding, no devoted thing that a man devotes to Yahweh of all that he has, whether of man or animal, or of the field of his possession, shall be sold or redeemed. Everything that is permanently devoted is most holy to Yahweh.

Leviticus 27.29: 29 “‘No one devoted to destruction, who shall be devoted from among men, shall be ransomed. He shall surely be put to death.

Leviticus 27.30: 30 “‘All the tithe of the land, whether of the seed of the land or of the fruit of the trees, is Yahweh’s. It is holy to Yahweh.

Leviticus 27.31: 31 If a man redeems anything of his tithe, he shall add a fifth part to it.

Leviticus 27.32: 32 All the tithe of the herds or the flocks, whatever passes under the rod, the tenth shall be holy to Yahweh.

Leviticus 27.33: 33 He shall not examine whether it is good or bad, neither shall he exchange it. If he exchanges it at all, then both it and that for which it is exchanged shall be holy. It shall not be redeemed.’”

Leviticus 27.34: 34 These are the commandments which Yahweh commanded Moses for the children of Israel on Mount Sinai.

Numbers 0.0:

The Fourth Book of Moses,

Commonly Called

Numbers

Numbers 1.0:

1

Numbers 1.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses in the wilderness of Sinai, in the Tent of Meeting, on the first day of the second month, in the second year after they had come out of the land of Egypt, saying,

Numbers 1.2: 2 “Take a census of all the congregation of the children of Israel, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, every male, one by one,

Numbers 1.3: 3 from twenty years old and upward, all who are able to go out to war in Israel. You and Aaron shall count them by their divisions.

Numbers 1.4: 4 With you there shall be a man of every tribe, each one head of his fathers’ house.

Numbers 1.5: 5 These are the names of the men who shall stand with you:

Of Reuben: Elizur the son of Shedeur.

Numbers 1.6: 6 Of Simeon: Shelumiel the son of Zurishaddai.

Numbers 1.7: 7 Of Judah: Nahshon the son of Amminadab.

Numbers 1.8: 8 Of Issachar: Nethanel the son of Zuar.

Numbers 1.9: 9 Of Zebulun: Eliab the son of Helon.

Numbers 1.10: 10 Of the children of Joseph: of Ephraim: Elishama the son of Ammihud; of Manasseh: Gamaliel the son of Pedahzur.

Numbers 1.11: 11 Of Benjamin: Abidan the son of Gideoni.

Numbers 1.12: 12 Of Dan: Ahiezer the son of Ammishaddai.

Numbers 1.13: 13 Of Asher: Pagiel the son of Ochran.

Numbers 1.14: 14 Of Gad: Eliasaph the son of Deuel.

Numbers 1.15: 15 Of Naphtali: Ahira the son of Enan.”

Numbers 1.16: 16 These are those who were called of the congregation, the princes of the tribes of their fathers; they were the heads of the thousands of Israel.

Numbers 1.17: 17 Moses and Aaron took these men who are mentioned by name.

Numbers 1.18: 18 They assembled all the congregation together on the first day of the second month; and they declared their ancestry by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, one by one.

Numbers 1.19: 19 As Yahweh commanded Moses, so he counted them in the wilderness of Sinai.

Numbers 1.20: 20 The children of Reuben, Israel’s firstborn, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, one by one, every male from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.21: 21 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Reuben, were forty-six thousand five hundred.

Numbers 1.22: 22 Of the children of Simeon, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, those who were counted of it, according to the number of the names, one by one, every male from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.23: 23 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Simeon, were fifty-nine thousand three hundred.

Numbers 1.24: 24 Of the children of Gad, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.25: 25 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Gad, were forty-five thousand six hundred fifty.

Numbers 1.26: 26 Of the children of Judah, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.27: 27 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Judah, were seventy-four thousand six hundred.

Numbers 1.28: 28 Of the children of Issachar, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.29: 29 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Issachar, were fifty-four thousand four hundred.

Numbers 1.30: 30 Of the children of Zebulun, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.31: 31 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Zebulun, were fifty-seven thousand four hundred.

Numbers 1.32: 32 Of the children of Joseph: of the children of Ephraim, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.33: 33 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Ephraim, were forty thousand five hundred.

Numbers 1.34: 34 Of the children of Manasseh, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.35: 35 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Manasseh, were thirty-two thousand two hundred.

Numbers 1.36: 36 Of the children of Benjamin, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.37: 37 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Benjamin, were thirty-five thousand four hundred.

Numbers 1.38: 38 Of the children of Dan, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.39: 39 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Dan, were sixty-two thousand seven hundred.

Numbers 1.40: 40 Of the children of Asher, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.41: 41 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Asher, were forty-one thousand five hundred.

Numbers 1.42: 42 Of the children of Naphtali, their generations, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of the names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war:

Numbers 1.43: 43 those who were counted of them, of the tribe of Naphtali, were fifty-three thousand four hundred.

Numbers 1.44: 44 These are those who were counted, whom Moses and Aaron counted, and the twelve men who were princes of Israel, each one for his fathers’ house.

Numbers 1.45: 45 So all those who were counted of the children of Israel by their fathers’ houses, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go out to war in Israel—

Numbers 1.46: 46 all those who were counted were six hundred three thousand five hundred fifty.

Numbers 1.47: 47 But the Levites after the tribe of their fathers were not counted among them.

Numbers 1.48: 48 For Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 1.49: 49 “Only the tribe of Levi you shall not count, neither shall you take a census of them among the children of Israel;

Numbers 1.50: 50 but appoint the Levites over the Tabernacle of the Testimony, and over all its furnishings, and over all that belongs to it. They shall carry the tabernacle and all its furnishings; and they shall take care of it, and shall encamp around it.

Numbers 1.51: 51 When the tabernacle is to move, the Levites shall take it down; and when the tabernacle is to be set up, the Levites shall set it up. The stranger who comes near shall be put to death.

Numbers 1.52: 52 The children of Israel shall pitch their tents, every man by his own camp, and every man by his own standard, according to their divisions.

Numbers 1.53: 53 But the Levites shall encamp around the Tabernacle of the Testimony, that there may be no wrath on the congregation of the children of Israel. The Levites shall be responsible for the Tabernacle of the Testimony.”

Numbers 1.54: 54 Thus the children of Israel did. According to all that Yahweh commanded Moses, so they did.

Numbers 2.0:

2

Numbers 2.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Numbers 2.2: 2 “The children of Israel shall encamp every man by his own standard, with the banners of their fathers’ houses. They shall encamp around the Tent of Meeting at a distance from it.”

Numbers 2.3: 3 Those who encamp on the east side toward the sunrise shall be of the standard of the camp of Judah, according to their divisions. The prince of the children of Judah shall be Nahshon the son of Amminadab.

Numbers 2.4: 4 His division, and those who were counted of them, were seventy-four thousand six hundred.

Numbers 2.5: 5 Those who encamp next to him shall be the tribe of Issachar. The prince of the children of Issachar shall be Nethanel the son of Zuar.

Numbers 2.6: 6 His division, and those who were counted of it, were fifty-four thousand four hundred.

Numbers 2.7: 7 The tribe of Zebulun: the prince of the children of Zebulun shall be Eliab the son of Helon.

Numbers 2.8: 8 His division, and those who were counted of it, were fifty-seven thousand four hundred.

Numbers 2.9: 9 All who were counted of the camp of Judah were one hundred eighty-six thousand four hundred, according to their divisions. They shall set out first.

Numbers 2.10: 10 “On the south side shall be the standard of the camp of Reuben according to their divisions. The prince of the children of Reuben shall be Elizur the son of Shedeur.

Numbers 2.11: 11 His division, and those who were counted of it, were forty-six thousand five hundred.

Numbers 2.12: 12 “Those who encamp next to him shall be the tribe of Simeon. The prince of the children of Simeon shall be Shelumiel the son of Zurishaddai.

Numbers 2.13: 13 His division, and those who were counted of them, were fifty-nine thousand three hundred.

Numbers 2.14: 14 “The tribe of Gad: the prince of the children of Gad shall be Eliasaph the son of Reuel.

Numbers 2.15: 15 His division, and those who were counted of them, were forty-five thousand six hundred fifty.

Numbers 2.16: 16 “All who were counted of the camp of Reuben were one hundred fifty-one thousand four hundred fifty, according to their armies. They shall set out second.

Numbers 2.17: 17 “Then the Tent of Meeting shall set out, with the camp of the Levites in the middle of the camps. As they encamp, so shall they set out, every man in his place, by their standards.

Numbers 2.18: 18 “On the west side shall be the standard of the camp of Ephraim according to their divisions. The prince of the children of Ephraim shall be Elishama the son of Ammihud.

Numbers 2.19: 19 His division, and those who were counted of them, were forty thousand five hundred.

Numbers 2.20: 20 “Next to him shall be the tribe of Manasseh. The prince of the children of Manasseh shall be Gamaliel the son of Pedahzur.

Numbers 2.21: 21 His division, and those who were counted of them, were thirty-two thousand two hundred.

Numbers 2.22: 22 “The tribe of Benjamin: the prince of the children of Benjamin shall be Abidan the son of Gideoni.

Numbers 2.23: 23 His army, and those who were counted of them, were thirty-five thousand four hundred.

Numbers 2.24: 24 “All who were counted of the camp of Ephraim were one hundred eight thousand one hundred, according to their divisions. They shall set out third.

Numbers 2.25: 25 “On the north side shall be the standard of the camp of Dan according to their divisions. The prince of the children of Dan shall be Ahiezer the son of Ammishaddai.

Numbers 2.26: 26 His division, and those who were counted of them, were sixty-two thousand seven hundred.

Numbers 2.27: 27 “Those who encamp next to him shall be the tribe of Asher. The prince of the children of Asher shall be Pagiel the son of Ochran.

Numbers 2.28: 28 His division, and those who were counted of them, were forty-one thousand and five hundred.

Numbers 2.29: 29 “The tribe of Naphtali: the prince of the children of Naphtali shall be Ahira the son of Enan.

Numbers 2.30: 30 His division, and those who were counted of them, were fifty-three thousand four hundred.

Numbers 2.31: 31 “All who were counted of the camp of Dan were one hundred fifty-seven thousand six hundred. They shall set out last by their standards.”

Numbers 2.32: 32 These are those who were counted of the children of Israel by their fathers’ houses. All who were counted of the camps according to their armies were six hundred three thousand five hundred fifty.

Numbers 2.33: 33 But the Levites were not counted among the children of Israel, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 2.34: 34 Thus the children of Israel did. According to all that Yahweh commanded Moses, so they encamped by their standards, and so they set out, everyone by their families, according to their fathers’ houses.

Numbers 3.0:

3

Numbers 3.1: 1 Now this is the history of the generations of Aaron and Moses in the day that Yahweh spoke with Moses in Mount Sinai.

Numbers 3.2: 2 These are the names of the sons of Aaron: Nadab the firstborn, and Abihu, Eleazar, and Ithamar.

Numbers 3.3: 3 These are the names of the sons of Aaron, the priests who were anointed, whom he consecrated to minister in the priest’s office.

Numbers 3.4: 4 Nadab and Abihu died before Yahweh when they offered strange fire before Yahweh in the wilderness of Sinai, and they had no children. Eleazar and Ithamar ministered in the priest’s office in the presence of Aaron their father.

Numbers 3.5: 5 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 3.6: 6 “Bring the tribe of Levi near, and set them before Aaron the priest, that they may minister to him.

Numbers 3.7: 7 They shall keep his requirements, and the requirements of the whole congregation before the Tent of Meeting, to do the service of the tabernacle.

Numbers 3.8: 8 They shall keep all the furnishings of the Tent of Meeting, and the obligations of the children of Israel, to do the service of the tabernacle.

Numbers 3.9: 9 You shall give the Levites to Aaron and to his sons. They are wholly given to him on the behalf of the children of Israel.

Numbers 3.10: 10 You shall appoint Aaron and his sons, and they shall keep their priesthood, but the stranger who comes near shall be put to death.”

Numbers 3.11: 11 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 3.12: 12 “Behold, I have taken the Levites from among the children of Israel instead of all the firstborn who open the womb among the children of Israel; and the Levites shall be mine,

Numbers 3.13: 13 for all the firstborn are mine. On the day that I struck down all the firstborn in the land of Egypt I made holy to me all the firstborn in Israel, both man and animal. They shall be mine. I am Yahweh.”

Numbers 3.14: 14 Yahweh spoke to Moses in the wilderness of Sinai, saying,

Numbers 3.15: 15 “Count the children of Levi by their fathers’ houses, by their families. You shall count every male from a month old and upward.”

Numbers 3.16: 16 Moses counted them according to Yahweh’s word, as he was commanded.

Numbers 3.17: 17 These were the sons of Levi by their names: Gershon, Kohath, and Merari.

Numbers 3.18: 18 These are the names of the sons of Gershon by their families: Libni and Shimei.

Numbers 3.19: 19 The sons of Kohath by their families: Amram, Izhar, Hebron, and Uzziel.

Numbers 3.20: 20 The sons of Merari by their families: Mahli and Mushi.

These are the families of the Levites according to their fathers’ houses.

Numbers 3.21: 21 Of Gershon was the family of the Libnites, and the family of the Shimeites. These are the families of the Gershonites.

Numbers 3.22: 22 Those who were counted of them, according to the number of all the males from a month old and upward, even those who were counted of them were seven thousand five hundred.

Numbers 3.23: 23 The families of the Gershonites shall encamp behind the tabernacle westward.

Numbers 3.24: 24 Eliasaph the son of Lael shall be the prince of the fathers’ house of the Gershonites.

Numbers 3.25: 25 The duty of the sons of Gershon in the Tent of Meeting shall be the tabernacle, the tent, its covering, the screen for the door of the Tent of Meeting,

Numbers 3.26: 26 the hangings of the court, the screen for the door of the court which is by the tabernacle and around the altar, and its cords for all of its service.

Numbers 3.27: 27 Of Kohath was the family of the Amramites, the family of the Izharites, the family of the Hebronites, and the family of the Uzzielites. These are the families of the Kohathites.

Numbers 3.28: 28 According to the number of all the males from a month old and upward, there were eight thousand six hundred keeping the requirements of the sanctuary.

Numbers 3.29: 29 The families of the sons of Kohath shall encamp on the south side of the tabernacle.

Numbers 3.30: 30 The prince of the fathers’ house of the families of the Kohathites shall be Elizaphan the son of Uzziel.

Numbers 3.31: 31 Their duty shall be the ark, the table, the lamp stand, the altars, the vessels of the sanctuary with which they minister, the screen, and all its service.

Numbers 3.32: 32 Eleazar the son of Aaron the priest shall be prince of the princes of the Levites, with the oversight of those who keep the requirements of the sanctuary.

Numbers 3.33: 33 Of Merari was the family of the Mahlites and the family of the Mushites. These are the families of Merari.

Numbers 3.34: 34 Those who were counted of them, according to the number of all the males from a month old and upward, were six thousand two hundred.

Numbers 3.35: 35 The prince of the fathers’ house of the families of Merari was Zuriel the son of Abihail. They shall encamp on the north side of the tabernacle.

Numbers 3.36: 36 The appointed duty of the sons of Merari shall be the tabernacle’s boards, its bars, its pillars, its sockets, all its instruments, all its service,

Numbers 3.37: 37 the pillars of the court around it, their sockets, their pins, and their cords.

Numbers 3.38: 38 Those who encamp before the tabernacle eastward, in front of the Tent of Meeting toward the sunrise, shall be Moses, and Aaron and his sons, keeping the requirements of the sanctuary for the duty of the children of Israel. The outsider who comes near shall be put to death.

Numbers 3.39: 39 All who were counted of the Levites, whom Moses and Aaron counted at the commandment of Yahweh, by their families, all the males from a month old and upward, were twenty-two thousand.

Numbers 3.40: 40 Yahweh said to Moses, “Count all the firstborn males of the children of Israel from a month old and upward, and take the number of their names.

Numbers 3.41: 41 You shall take the Levites for me—I am Yahweh—instead of all the firstborn among the children of Israel; and the livestock of the Levites instead of all the firstborn among the livestock of the children of Israel.”

Numbers 3.42: 42 Moses counted, as Yahweh commanded him, all the firstborn among the children of Israel.

Numbers 3.43: 43 All the firstborn males according to the number of names from a month old and upward, of those who were counted of them, were twenty-two thousand two hundred seventy-three.

Numbers 3.44: 44 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 3.45: 45 “Take the Levites instead of all the firstborn among the children of Israel, and the livestock of the Levites instead of their livestock; and the Levites shall be mine. I am Yahweh.

Numbers 3.46: 46 For the redemption of the two hundred seventy-three of the firstborn of the children of Israel who exceed the number of the Levites,

Numbers 3.47: 47 you shall take five shekels apiece for each one; according to the shekel of the sanctuary you shall take them (the shekel is twenty gerahs);

Numbers 3.48: 48 and you shall give the money, with which their remainder is redeemed, to Aaron and to his sons.”

Numbers 3.49: 49 Moses took the redemption money from those who exceeded the number of those who were redeemed by the Levites;

Numbers 3.50: 50 from the firstborn of the children of Israel he took the money, one thousand three hundred sixty-five shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary;

Numbers 3.51: 51 and Moses gave the redemption money to Aaron and to his sons, according to Yahweh’s word, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 4.0:

4

Numbers 4.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Numbers 4.2: 2 “Take a census of the sons of Kohath from among the sons of Levi, by their families, by their fathers’ houses,

Numbers 4.3: 3 from thirty years old and upward even until fifty years old, all who enter into the service to do the work in the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 4.4: 4 “This is the service of the sons of Kohath in the Tent of Meeting, regarding the most holy things.

Numbers 4.5: 5 When the camp moves forward, Aaron shall go in with his sons; and they shall take down the veil of the screen, cover the ark of the Testimony with it,

Numbers 4.6: 6 put a covering of sealskin on it, spread a blue cloth over it, and put in its poles.

Numbers 4.7: 7 “On the table of show bread they shall spread a blue cloth, and put on it the dishes, the spoons, the bowls, and the cups with which to pour out; and the continual bread shall be on it.

Numbers 4.8: 8 They shall spread on them a scarlet cloth, and cover it with a covering of sealskin, and shall put in its poles.

Numbers 4.9: 9 “They shall take a blue cloth and cover the lamp stand of the light, its lamps, its snuffers, its snuff dishes, and all its oil vessels, with which they minister to it.

Numbers 4.10: 10 They shall put it and all its vessels within a covering of sealskin, and shall put it on the frame.

Numbers 4.11: 11 “On the golden altar they shall spread a blue cloth, and cover it with a covering of sealskin, and shall put in its poles.

Numbers 4.12: 12 “They shall take all the vessels of ministry with which they minister in the sanctuary, and put them in a blue cloth, cover them with a covering of sealskin, and shall put them on the frame.

Numbers 4.13: 13 “They shall take away the ashes from the altar, and spread a purple cloth on it.

Numbers 4.14: 14 They shall put on it all its vessels with which they minister about it, the fire pans, the meat hooks, the shovels, and the basins—all the vessels of the altar; and they shall spread on it a covering of sealskin, and put in its poles.

Numbers 4.15: 15 “When Aaron and his sons have finished covering the sanctuary and all the furniture of the sanctuary, as the camp moves forward; after that, the sons of Kohath shall come to carry it; but they shall not touch the sanctuary, lest they die. The sons of Kohath shall carry these things belonging to the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 4.16: 16 “The duty of Eleazar the son of Aaron the priest shall be the oil for the light, the sweet incense, the continual meal offering, and the anointing oil, the requirements of all the tabernacle, and of all that is in it, the sanctuary, and its furnishings.”

Numbers 4.17: 17 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Numbers 4.18: 18 “Don’t cut off the tribe of the families of the Kohathites from among the Levites;

Numbers 4.19: 19 but thus do to them, that they may live, and not die, when they approach the most holy things: Aaron and his sons shall go in and appoint everyone to his service and to his burden;

Numbers 4.20: 20 but they shall not go in to see the sanctuary even for a moment, lest they die.”

Numbers 4.21: 21 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 4.22: 22 “Take a census of the sons of Gershon also, by their fathers’ houses, by their families;

Numbers 4.23: 23 you shall count them from thirty years old and upward until fifty years old: all who enter in to wait on the service, to do the work in the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 4.24: 24 “This is the service of the families of the Gershonites, in serving and in bearing burdens:

Numbers 4.25: 25 they shall carry the curtains of the tabernacle and the Tent of Meeting, its covering, the covering of sealskin that is on it, the screen for the door of the Tent of Meeting,

Numbers 4.26: 26 the hangings of the court, the screen for the door of the gate of the court which is by the tabernacle and around the altar, their cords, and all the instruments of their service, and whatever shall be done with them. They shall serve in there.

Numbers 4.27: 27 At the commandment of Aaron and his sons shall be all the service of the sons of the Gershonites, in all their burden and in all their service; and you shall appoint their duty to them in all their responsibilities.

Numbers 4.28: 28 This is the service of the families of the sons of the Gershonites in the Tent of Meeting. Their duty shall be under the hand of Ithamar the son of Aaron the priest.

Numbers 4.29: 29 “As for the sons of Merari, you shall count them by their families, by their fathers’ houses;

Numbers 4.30: 30 you shall count them from thirty years old and upward even to fifty years old—everyone who enters on the service, to do the work of the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 4.31: 31 This is the duty of their burden, according to all their service in the Tent of Meeting: the tabernacle’s boards, its bars, its pillars, its sockets,

Numbers 4.32: 32 the pillars of the court around it, their sockets, their pins, their cords, with all their instruments, and with all their service. You shall appoint the instruments of the duty of their burden to them by name.

Numbers 4.33: 33 This is the service of the families of the sons of Merari, according to all their service in the Tent of Meeting, under the hand of Ithamar the son of Aaron the priest.”

Numbers 4.34: 34 Moses and Aaron and the princes of the congregation counted the sons of the Kohathites by their families, and by their fathers’ houses,

Numbers 4.35: 35 from thirty years old and upward even to fifty years old, everyone who entered into the service for work in the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 4.36: 36 Those who were counted of them by their families were two thousand seven hundred fifty.

Numbers 4.37: 37 These are those who were counted of the families of the Kohathites, all who served in the Tent of Meeting, whom Moses and Aaron counted according to the commandment of Yahweh by Moses.

Numbers 4.38: 38 Those who were counted of the sons of Gershon, by their families, and by their fathers’ houses,

Numbers 4.39: 39 from thirty years old and upward even to fifty years old—everyone who entered into the service for work in the Tent of Meeting,

Numbers 4.40: 40 even those who were counted of them, by their families, by their fathers’ houses, were two thousand six hundred thirty.

Numbers 4.41: 41 These are those who were counted of the families of the sons of Gershon, all who served in the Tent of Meeting, whom Moses and Aaron counted according to the commandment of Yahweh.

Numbers 4.42: 42 Those who were counted of the families of the sons of Merari, by their families, by their fathers’ houses,

Numbers 4.43: 43 from thirty years old and upward even to fifty years old—everyone who entered into the service for work in the Tent of Meeting,

Numbers 4.44: 44 even those who were counted of them by their families, were three thousand two hundred.

Numbers 4.45: 45 These are those who were counted of the families of the sons of Merari, whom Moses and Aaron counted according to the commandment of Yahweh by Moses.

Numbers 4.46: 46 All those who were counted of the Levites whom Moses and Aaron and the princes of Israel counted, by their families and by their fathers’ houses,

Numbers 4.47: 47 from thirty years old and upward even to fifty years old, everyone who entered in to do the work of service and the work of bearing burdens in the Tent of Meeting,

Numbers 4.48: 48 even those who were counted of them, were eight thousand five hundred eighty.

Numbers 4.49: 49 According to the commandment of Yahweh they were counted by Moses, everyone according to his service and according to his burden. Thus they were counted by him, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 5.0:

5

Numbers 5.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 5.2: 2 “Command the children of Israel that they put out of the camp every leper, everyone who has a discharge, and whoever is unclean by a corpse.

Numbers 5.3: 3 You shall put both male and female outside of the camp so that they don’t defile their camp, in the midst of which I dwell.”

Numbers 5.4: 4 The children of Israel did so, and put them outside of the camp; as Yahweh spoke to Moses, so the children of Israel did.

Numbers 5.5: 5 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 5.6: 6 “Speak to the children of Israel: ‘When a man or woman commits any sin that men commit, so as to trespass against Yahweh, and that soul is guilty,

Numbers 5.7: 7 then he shall confess his sin which he has done; and he shall make restitution for his guilt in full, add to it the fifth part of it, and give it to him in respect of whom he has been guilty.

Numbers 5.8: 8 But if the man has no kinsman to whom restitution may be made for the guilt, the restitution for guilt which is made to Yahweh shall be the priest’s, in addition to the ram of the atonement, by which atonement shall be made for him.

Numbers 5.9: 9 Every heave offering of all the holy things of the children of Israel, which they present to the priest, shall be his.

Numbers 5.10: 10 Every man’s holy things shall be his; whatever any man gives the priest, it shall be his.’”

Numbers 5.11: 11 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 5.12: 12 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them: ‘If any man’s wife goes astray and is unfaithful to him,

Numbers 5.13: 13 and a man lies with her carnally, and it is hidden from the eyes of her husband and this is kept concealed, and she is defiled, there is no witness against her, and she isn’t taken in the act;

Numbers 5.14: 14 and the spirit of jealousy comes on him, and he is jealous of his wife and she is defiled; or if the spirit of jealousy comes on him, and he is jealous of his wife and she isn’t defiled;

Numbers 5.15: 15 then the man shall bring his wife to the priest, and shall bring her offering for her: one tenth of an ephah of barley meal. He shall pour no oil on it, nor put frankincense on it, for it is a meal offering of jealousy, a meal offering of memorial, bringing iniquity to memory.

Numbers 5.16: 16 The priest shall bring her near, and set her before Yahweh.

Numbers 5.17: 17 The priest shall take holy water in an earthen vessel; and the priest shall take some of the dust that is on the floor of the tabernacle and put it into the water.

Numbers 5.18: 18 The priest shall set the woman before Yahweh, and let the hair of the woman’s head go loose, and put the meal offering of memorial in her hands, which is the meal offering of jealousy. The priest shall have in his hand the water of bitterness that brings a curse.

Numbers 5.19: 19 The priest shall cause her to take an oath and shall tell the woman, “If no man has lain with you, and if you haven’t gone aside to uncleanness, being under your husband’s authority, be free from this water of bitterness that brings a curse.

Numbers 5.20: 20 But if you have gone astray, being under your husband’s authority, and if you are defiled, and some man has lain with you besides your husband—”

Numbers 5.21: 21 then the priest shall cause the woman to swear with the oath of cursing, and the priest shall tell the woman, “May Yahweh make you a curse and an oath among your people, when Yahweh allows your thigh to fall away, and your body to swell;

Numbers 5.22: 22 and this water that brings a curse will go into your bowels, and make your body swell, and your thigh fall away.” The woman shall say, “Amen, Amen.”

Numbers 5.23: 23 “‘The priest shall write these curses in a book, and he shall wipe them into the water of bitterness.

Numbers 5.24: 24 He shall make the woman drink the water of bitterness that causes the curse; and the water that causes the curse shall enter into her and become bitter.

Numbers 5.25: 25 The priest shall take the meal offering of jealousy out of the woman’s hand, and shall wave the meal offering before Yahweh, and bring it to the altar.

Numbers 5.26: 26 The priest shall take a handful of the meal offering, as its memorial portion, and burn it on the altar, and afterward shall make the woman drink the water.

Numbers 5.27: 27 When he has made her drink the water, then it shall happen, if she is defiled and has committed a trespass against her husband, that the water that causes the curse will enter into her and become bitter, and her body will swell, and her thigh will fall away; and the woman will be a curse among her people.

Numbers 5.28: 28 If the woman isn’t defiled, but is clean; then she shall be free, and shall conceive offspring.

Numbers 5.29: 29 “‘This is the law of jealousy, when a wife, being under her husband, goes astray, and is defiled,

Numbers 5.30: 30 or when the spirit of jealousy comes on a man, and he is jealous of his wife; then he shall set the woman before Yahweh, and the priest shall execute on her all this law.

Numbers 5.31: 31 The man shall be free from iniquity, and that woman shall bear her iniquity.’”

Numbers 6.0:

6

Numbers 6.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 6.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them: ‘When either man or woman shall make a special vow, the vow of a Nazirite, to separate himself to Yahweh,

Numbers 6.3: 3 he shall separate himself from wine and strong drink. He shall drink no vinegar of wine, or vinegar of fermented drink, neither shall he drink any juice of grapes, nor eat fresh grapes or dried.

Numbers 6.4: 4 All the days of his separation he shall eat nothing that is made of the grapevine, from the seeds even to the skins.

Numbers 6.5: 5 “‘All the days of his vow of separation no razor shall come on his head, until the days are fulfilled in which he separates himself to Yahweh. He shall be holy. He shall let the locks of the hair of his head grow long.

Numbers 6.6: 6 “‘All the days that he separates himself to Yahweh he shall not go near a dead body.

Numbers 6.7: 7 He shall not make himself unclean for his father, or for his mother, for his brother, or for his sister, when they die, because his separation to God is on his head.

Numbers 6.8: 8 All the days of his separation he is holy to Yahweh.

Numbers 6.9: 9 “‘If any man dies very suddenly beside him, and he defiles the head of his separation, then he shall shave his head in the day of his cleansing. On the seventh day he shall shave it.

Numbers 6.10: 10 On the eighth day he shall bring two turtledoves or two young pigeons to the priest, to the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 6.11: 11 The priest shall offer one for a sin offering, and the other for a burnt offering, and make atonement for him, because he sinned by reason of the dead, and shall make his head holy that same day.

Numbers 6.12: 12 He shall separate to Yahweh the days of his separation, and shall bring a male lamb a year old for a trespass offering; but the former days shall be void, because his separation was defiled.

Numbers 6.13: 13 “‘This is the law of the Nazirite: when the days of his separation are fulfilled, he shall be brought to the door of the Tent of Meeting,

Numbers 6.14: 14 and he shall offer his offering to Yahweh: one male lamb a year old without defect for a burnt offering, one ewe lamb a year old without defect for a sin offering, one ram without defect for peace offerings,

Numbers 6.15: 15 a basket of unleavened bread, cakes of fine flour mixed with oil, and unleavened wafers anointed with oil with their meal offering and their drink offerings.

Numbers 6.16: 16 The priest shall present them before Yahweh, and shall offer his sin offering and his burnt offering.

Numbers 6.17: 17 He shall offer the ram for a sacrifice of peace offerings to Yahweh, with the basket of unleavened bread. The priest shall offer also its meal offering and its drink offering.

Numbers 6.18: 18 The Nazirite shall shave the head of his separation at the door of the Tent of Meeting, take the hair of the head of his separation, and put it on the fire which is under the sacrifice of peace offerings.

Numbers 6.19: 19 The priest shall take the boiled shoulder of the ram, one unleavened cake out of the basket, and one unleavened wafer, and shall put them on the hands of the Nazirite after he has shaved the head of his separation;

Numbers 6.20: 20 and the priest shall wave them for a wave offering before Yahweh. They are holy for the priest, together with the breast that is waved and the thigh that is offered. After that the Nazirite may drink wine.

Numbers 6.21: 21 “‘This is the law of the Nazirite who vows and of his offering to Yahweh for his separation, in addition to that which he is able to afford. According to his vow which he vows, so he must do after the law of his separation.’”

Numbers 6.22: 22 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 6.23: 23 “Speak to Aaron and to his sons, saying, ‘This is how you shall bless the children of Israel.’ You shall tell them,

Numbers 6.24: 24 ‘Yahweh bless you, and keep you.

Numbers 6.25: 25 Yahweh make his face to shine on you,

and be gracious to you.

Numbers 6.26: 26 Yahweh lift up his face toward you,

and give you peace.’

Numbers 6.27: 27 “So they shall put my name on the children of Israel; and I will bless them.”

Numbers 7.0:

7

Numbers 7.1: 1 On the day that Moses had finished setting up the tabernacle, and had anointed it and sanctified it with all its furniture, and the altar with all its vessels, and had anointed and sanctified them;

Numbers 7.2: 2 the princes of Israel, the heads of their fathers’ houses, offered. These were the princes of the tribes. These are they who were over those who were counted;

Numbers 7.3: 3 and they brought their offering before Yahweh, six covered wagons and twelve oxen; a wagon for every two of the princes, and for each one an ox. They presented them before the tabernacle.

Numbers 7.4: 4 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 7.5: 5 “Accept these from them, that they may be used in doing the service of the Tent of Meeting; and you shall give them to the Levites, to every man according to his service.”

Numbers 7.6: 6 Moses took the wagons and the oxen, and gave them to the Levites.

Numbers 7.7: 7 He gave two wagons and four oxen to the sons of Gershon, according to their service.

Numbers 7.8: 8 He gave four wagons and eight oxen to the sons of Merari, according to their service, under the direction of Ithamar the son of Aaron the priest.

Numbers 7.9: 9 But to the sons of Kohath he gave none, because the service of the sanctuary belonged to them; they carried it on their shoulders.

Numbers 7.10: 10 The princes gave offerings for the dedication of the altar in the day that it was anointed. The princes gave their offerings before the altar.

Numbers 7.11: 11 Yahweh said to Moses, “They shall offer their offering, each prince on his day, for the dedication of the altar.”

Numbers 7.12: 12 He who offered his offering the first day was Nahshon the son of Amminadab, of the tribe of Judah,

Numbers 7.13: 13 and his offering was:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.14: 14 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.15: 15 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.16: 16 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.17: 17 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Nahshon the son of Amminadab.

Numbers 7.18: 18 On the second day Nethanel the son of Zuar, prince of Issachar, gave his offering.

Numbers 7.19: 19 He offered for his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.20: 20 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.21: 21 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.22: 22 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.23: 23 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Nethanel the son of Zuar.

Numbers 7.24: 24 On the third day Eliab the son of Helon, prince of the children of Zebulun,

Numbers 7.25: 25 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was a hundred and thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.26: 26 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.27: 27 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.28: 28 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.29: 29 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Eliab the son of Helon.

Numbers 7.30: 30 On the fourth day Elizur the son of Shedeur, prince of the children of Reuben,

Numbers 7.31: 31 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.32: 32 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.33: 33 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.34: 34 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.35: 35 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Elizur the son of Shedeur.

Numbers 7.36: 36 On the fifth day Shelumiel the son of Zurishaddai, prince of the children of Simeon,

Numbers 7.37: 37 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.38: 38 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.39: 39 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.40: 40 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.41: 41 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old: this was the offering of Shelumiel the son of Zurishaddai.

Numbers 7.42: 42 On the sixth day, Eliasaph the son of Deuel, prince of the children of Gad,

Numbers 7.43: 43 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.44: 44 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.45: 45 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.46: 46 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.47: 47 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Eliasaph the son of Deuel.

Numbers 7.48: 48 On the seventh day Elishama the son of Ammihud, prince of the children of Ephraim,

Numbers 7.49: 49 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.50: 50 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.51: 51 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.52: 52 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.53: 53 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Elishama the son of Ammihud.

Numbers 7.54: 54 On the eighth day Gamaliel the son of Pedahzur, prince of the children of Manasseh,

Numbers 7.55: 55 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.56: 56 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.57: 57 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.58: 58 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.59: 59 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Gamaliel the son of Pedahzur.

Numbers 7.60: 60 On the ninth day Abidan the son of Gideoni, prince of the children of Benjamin,

Numbers 7.61: 61 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.62: 62 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.63: 63 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.64: 64 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.65: 65 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Abidan the son of Gideoni.

Numbers 7.66: 66 On the tenth day Ahiezer the son of Ammishaddai, prince of the children of Dan,

Numbers 7.67: 67 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.68: 68 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.69: 69 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.70: 70 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.71: 71 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Ahiezer the son of Ammishaddai.

Numbers 7.72: 72 On the eleventh day Pagiel the son of Ochran, prince of the children of Asher,

Numbers 7.73: 73 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.74: 74 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.75: 75 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.76: 76 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.77: 77 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Pagiel the son of Ochran.

Numbers 7.78: 78 On the twelfth day Ahira the son of Enan, prince of the children of Naphtali,

Numbers 7.79: 79 gave his offering:

one silver platter, the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels,

one silver bowl of seventy shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering;

Numbers 7.80: 80 one golden spoon of ten shekels, full of incense;

Numbers 7.81: 81 one young bull,

one ram,

one male lamb a year old, for a burnt offering;

Numbers 7.82: 82 one male goat for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.83: 83 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings, two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old. This was the offering of Ahira the son of Enan.

Numbers 7.84: 84 This was the dedication offering of the altar, on the day when it was anointed, by the princes of Israel: twelve silver platters, twelve silver bowls, twelve golden ladles;

Numbers 7.85: 85 each silver platter weighing one hundred thirty shekels, and each bowl seventy; all the silver of the vessels two thousand four hundred shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary;

Numbers 7.86: 86 the twelve golden ladles, full of incense, weighing ten shekels apiece, according to the shekel of the sanctuary; all the gold of the ladles weighed one hundred twenty shekels;

Numbers 7.87: 87 all the cattle for the burnt offering twelve bulls, the rams twelve, the male lambs a year old twelve, and their meal offering; and twelve male goats for a sin offering;

Numbers 7.88: 88 and all the cattle for the sacrifice of peace offerings: twenty-four bulls, sixty rams, sixty male goats, and sixty male lambs a year old. This was the dedication offering of the altar, after it was anointed.

Numbers 7.89: 89 When Moses went into the Tent of Meeting to speak with Yahweh, he heard his voice speaking to him from above the mercy seat that was on the ark of the Testimony, from between the two cherubim; and he spoke to him.

Numbers 8.0:

8

Numbers 8.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 8.2: 2 “Speak to Aaron, and tell him, ‘When you light the lamps, the seven lamps shall give light in front of the lamp stand.’”

Numbers 8.3: 3 Aaron did so. He lit its lamps to light the area in front of the lamp stand, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 8.4: 4 This was the workmanship of the lamp stand, beaten work of gold. From its base to its flowers, it was beaten work. He made the lamp stand according to the pattern which Yahweh had shown Moses.

Numbers 8.5: 5 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 8.6: 6 “Take the Levites from among the children of Israel, and cleanse them.

Numbers 8.7: 7 You shall do this to them, to cleanse them: sprinkle the water of cleansing on them, let them shave their whole bodies with a razor, let them wash their clothes, and cleanse themselves.

Numbers 8.8: 8 Then let them take a young bull and its meal offering, fine flour mixed with oil; and another young bull you shall take for a sin offering.

Numbers 8.9: 9 You shall present the Levites before the Tent of Meeting. You shall assemble the whole congregation of the children of Israel.

Numbers 8.10: 10 You shall present the Levites before Yahweh. The children of Israel shall lay their hands on the Levites,

Numbers 8.11: 11 and Aaron shall offer the Levites before Yahweh for a wave offering on the behalf of the children of Israel, that it may be theirs to do the service of Yahweh.

Numbers 8.12: 12 “The Levites shall lay their hands on the heads of the bulls, and you shall offer the one for a sin offering and the other for a burnt offering to Yahweh, to make atonement for the Levites.

Numbers 8.13: 13 You shall set the Levites before Aaron and before his sons, and offer them as a wave offering to Yahweh.

Numbers 8.14: 14 Thus you shall separate the Levites from among the children of Israel, and the Levites shall be mine.

Numbers 8.15: 15 “After that, the Levites shall go in to do the service of the Tent of Meeting. You shall cleanse them, and offer them as a wave offering.

Numbers 8.16: 16 For they are wholly given to me from among the children of Israel; instead of all who open the womb, even the firstborn of all the children of Israel, I have taken them to me.

Numbers 8.17: 17 For all the firstborn among the children of Israel are mine, both man and animal. On the day that I struck all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, I sanctified them for myself.

Numbers 8.18: 18 I have taken the Levites instead of all the firstborn among the children of Israel.

Numbers 8.19: 19 I have given the Levites as a gift to Aaron and to his sons from among the children of Israel, to do the service of the children of Israel in the Tent of Meeting, and to make atonement for the children of Israel, so that there will be no plague among the children of Israel when the children of Israel come near to the sanctuary.”

Numbers 8.20: 20 Moses, and Aaron, and all the congregation of the children of Israel did so to the Levites. According to all that Yahweh commanded Moses concerning the Levites, so the children of Israel did to them.

Numbers 8.21: 21 The Levites purified themselves from sin, and they washed their clothes; and Aaron offered them for a wave offering before Yahweh and Aaron made atonement for them to cleanse them.

Numbers 8.22: 22 After that, the Levites went in to do their service in the Tent of Meeting before Aaron and before his sons: as Yahweh had commanded Moses concerning the Levites, so they did to them.

Numbers 8.23: 23 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 8.24: 24 “This is what is assigned to the Levites: from twenty-five years old and upward they shall go in to wait on the service in the work of the Tent of Meeting;

Numbers 8.25: 25 and from the age of fifty years they shall retire from doing the work, and shall serve no more,

Numbers 8.26: 26 but shall assist their brothers in the Tent of Meeting, to perform the duty, and shall perform no service. This is how you shall have the Levites do their duties.”

Numbers 9.0:

9

Numbers 9.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses in the wilderness of Sinai, in the first month of the second year after they had come out of the land of Egypt, saying,

Numbers 9.2: 2 “Let the children of Israel keep the Passover in its appointed season.

Numbers 9.3: 3 On the fourteenth day of this month, at evening, you shall keep it in its appointed season. You shall keep it according to all its statutes and according to all its ordinances.”

Numbers 9.4: 4 Moses told the children of Israel that they should keep the Passover.

Numbers 9.5: 5 They kept the Passover in the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month at evening, in the wilderness of Sinai. According to all that Yahweh commanded Moses, so the children of Israel did.

Numbers 9.6: 6 There were certain men, who were unclean because of the dead body of a man, so that they could not keep the Passover on that day, and they came before Moses and Aaron on that day.

Numbers 9.7: 7 Those men said to him, “We are unclean because of the dead body of a man. Why are we kept back, that we may not offer the offering of Yahweh in its appointed season among the children of Israel?”

Numbers 9.8: 8 Moses answered them, “Wait, that I may hear what Yahweh will command concerning you.”

Numbers 9.9: 9 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 9.10: 10 “Say to the children of Israel, ‘If any man of you or of your generations is unclean by reason of a dead body, or is on a journey far away, he shall still keep the Passover to Yahweh.

Numbers 9.11: 11 In the second month, on the fourteenth day at evening they shall keep it; they shall eat it with unleavened bread and bitter herbs.

Numbers 9.12: 12 They shall leave none of it until the morning, nor break a bone of it. According to all the statute of the Passover they shall keep it.

Numbers 9.13: 13 But the man who is clean, and is not on a journey, and fails to keep the Passover, that soul shall be cut off from his people. Because he didn’t offer the offering of Yahweh in its appointed season, that man shall bear his sin.

Numbers 9.14: 14 “‘If a foreigner lives among you, and desires to keep the Passover to Yahweh, then he shall do so according to the statute of the Passover, and according to its ordinance. You shall have one statute, both for the foreigner, and for him who is born in the land.’”

Numbers 9.15: 15 On the day that the tabernacle was raised up, the cloud covered the tabernacle, even the Tent of the Testimony. At evening it was over the tabernacle, as it were the appearance of fire, until morning.

Numbers 9.16: 16 So it was continually. The cloud covered it, and the appearance of fire by night.

Numbers 9.17: 17 Whenever the cloud was taken up from over the Tent, then after that the children of Israel traveled; and in the place where the cloud remained, there the children of Israel encamped.

Numbers 9.18: 18 At the commandment of Yahweh, the children of Israel traveled, and at the commandment of Yahweh they encamped. As long as the cloud remained on the tabernacle they remained encamped.

Numbers 9.19: 19 When the cloud stayed on the tabernacle many days, then the children of Israel kept Yahweh’s command, and didn’t travel.

Numbers 9.20: 20 Sometimes the cloud was a few days on the tabernacle; then according to the commandment of Yahweh they remained encamped, and according to the commandment of Yahweh they traveled.

Numbers 9.21: 21 Sometimes the cloud was from evening until morning; and when the cloud was taken up in the morning, they traveled; or by day and by night, when the cloud was taken up, they traveled.

Numbers 9.22: 22 Whether it was two days, or a month, or a year that the cloud stayed on the tabernacle, remaining on it, the children of Israel remained encamped, and didn’t travel; but when it was taken up, they traveled.

Numbers 9.23: 23 At the commandment of Yahweh they encamped, and at the commandment of Yahweh they traveled. They kept Yahweh’s command, at the commandment of Yahweh by Moses.

Numbers 10.0:

10

Numbers 10.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 10.2: 2 “Make two trumpets of silver. You shall make them of beaten work. You shall use them for the calling of the congregation, and for the journeying of the camps.

Numbers 10.3: 3 When they blow them, all the congregation shall gather themselves to you at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 10.4: 4 If they blow just one, then the princes, the heads of the thousands of Israel, shall gather themselves to you.

Numbers 10.5: 5 When you blow an alarm, the camps that lie on the east side shall go forward.

Numbers 10.6: 6 When you blow an alarm the second time, the camps that lie on the south side shall go forward. They shall blow an alarm for their journeys.

Numbers 10.7: 7 But when the assembly is to be gathered together, you shall blow, but you shall not sound an alarm.

Numbers 10.8: 8 “The sons of Aaron, the priests, shall blow the trumpets. This shall be to you for a statute forever throughout your generations.

Numbers 10.9: 9 When you go to war in your land against the adversary who oppresses you, then you shall sound an alarm with the trumpets. Then you will be remembered before Yahweh your God, and you will be saved from your enemies.

Numbers 10.10: 10 “Also in the day of your gladness, and in your set feasts, and in the beginnings of your months, you shall blow the trumpets over your burnt offerings, and over the sacrifices of your peace offerings; and they shall be to you for a memorial before your God. I am Yahweh your God.”

Numbers 10.11: 11 In the second year, in the second month, on the twentieth day of the month, the cloud was taken up from over the tabernacle of the covenant.

Numbers 10.12: 12 The children of Israel went forward on their journeys out of the wilderness of Sinai; and the cloud stayed in the wilderness of Paran.

Numbers 10.13: 13 They first went forward according to the commandment of Yahweh by Moses.

Numbers 10.14: 14 First, the standard of the camp of the children of Judah went forward according to their armies. Nahshon the son of Amminadab was over his army.

Numbers 10.15: 15 Nethanel the son of Zuar was over the army of the tribe of the children of Issachar.

Numbers 10.16: 16 Eliab the son of Helon was over the army of the tribe of the children of Zebulun.

Numbers 10.17: 17 The tabernacle was taken down; and the sons of Gershon and the sons of Merari, who bore the tabernacle, went forward.

Numbers 10.18: 18 The standard of the camp of Reuben went forward according to their armies. Elizur the son of Shedeur was over his army.

Numbers 10.19: 19 Shelumiel the son of Zurishaddai was over the army of the tribe of the children of Simeon.

Numbers 10.20: 20 Eliasaph the son of Deuel was over the army of the tribe of the children of Gad.

Numbers 10.21: 21 The Kohathites set forward, bearing the sanctuary. The others set up the tabernacle before they arrived.

Numbers 10.22: 22 The standard of the camp of the children of Ephraim set forward according to their armies. Elishama the son of Ammihud was over his army.

Numbers 10.23: 23 Gamaliel the son of Pedahzur was over the army of the tribe of the children of Manasseh.

Numbers 10.24: 24 Abidan the son of Gideoni was over the army of the tribe of the children of Benjamin.

Numbers 10.25: 25 The standard of the camp of the children of Dan, which was the rear guard of all the camps, set forward according to their armies. Ahiezer the son of Ammishaddai was over his army.

Numbers 10.26: 26 Pagiel the son of Ochran was over the army of the tribe of the children of Asher.

Numbers 10.27: 27 Ahira the son of Enan was over the army of the tribe of the children of Naphtali.

Numbers 10.28: 28 Thus were the travels of the children of Israel according to their armies; and they went forward.

Numbers 10.29: 29 Moses said to Hobab, the son of Reuel the Midianite, Moses’ father-in-law, “We are journeying to the place of which Yahweh said, ‘I will give it to you.’ Come with us, and we will treat you well; for Yahweh has spoken good concerning Israel.”

Numbers 10.30: 30 He said to him, “I will not go; but I will depart to my own land, and to my relatives.”

Numbers 10.31: 31 Moses said, “Don’t leave us, please; because you know how we are to encamp in the wilderness, and you can be our eyes.

Numbers 10.32: 32 It shall be, if you go with us—yes, it shall be—that whatever good Yahweh does to us, we will do the same to you.”

Numbers 10.33: 33 They set forward from the Mount of Yahweh three days’ journey. The ark of Yahweh’s covenant went before them three days’ journey, to seek out a resting place for them.

Numbers 10.34: 34 The cloud of Yahweh was over them by day, when they set forward from the camp.

Numbers 10.35: 35 When the ark went forward, Moses said, “Rise up, Yahweh, and let your enemies be scattered! Let those who hate you flee before you!”

Numbers 10.36: 36 When it rested, he said, “Return, Yahweh, to the ten thousands of the thousands of Israel.”

Numbers 11.0:

11

Numbers 11.1: 1 The people were complaining in the ears of Yahweh. When Yahweh heard it, his anger burned; and Yahweh’s fire burned among them, and consumed some of the outskirts of the camp.

Numbers 11.2: 2 The people cried to Moses; and Moses prayed to Yahweh, and the fire abated.

Numbers 11.3: 3 The name of that place was called Taberah, because Yahweh’s fire burned among them.

Numbers 11.4: 4 The mixed multitude that was among them lusted exceedingly; and the children of Israel also wept again, and said, “Who will give us meat to eat?

Numbers 11.5: 5 We remember the fish, which we ate in Egypt for nothing; the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the garlic;

Numbers 11.6: 6 but now we have lost our appetite. There is nothing at all except this manna to look at.”

Numbers 11.7: 7 The manna was like coriander seed, and it looked like bdellium.

Numbers 11.8: 8 The people went around, gathered it, and ground it in mills, or beat it in mortars, and boiled it in pots, and made cakes of it. Its taste was like the taste of fresh oil.

Numbers 11.9: 9 When the dew fell on the camp in the night, the manna fell on it.

Numbers 11.10: 10 Moses heard the people weeping throughout their families, every man at the door of his tent; and Yahweh’s anger burned greatly; and Moses was displeased.

Numbers 11.11: 11 Moses said to Yahweh, “Why have you treated your servant so badly? Why haven’t I found favor in your sight, that you lay the burden of all this people on me?

Numbers 11.12: 12 Have I conceived all this people? Have I brought them out, that you should tell me, ‘Carry them in your bosom, as a nurse carries a nursing infant, to the land which you swore to their fathers?’

Numbers 11.13: 13 Where could I get meat to give all these people? For they weep before me, saying, ‘Give us meat, that we may eat.’

Numbers 11.14: 14 I am not able to bear all this people alone, because it is too heavy for me.

Numbers 11.15: 15 If you treat me this way, please kill me right now, if I have found favor in your sight; and don’t let me see my wretchedness.”

Numbers 11.16: 16 Yahweh said to Moses, “Gather to me seventy men of the elders of Israel, whom you know to be the elders of the people and officers over them; and bring them to the Tent of Meeting, that they may stand there with you.

Numbers 11.17: 17 I will come down and talk with you there. I will take of the Spirit which is on you, and will put it on them; and they shall bear the burden of the people with you, that you don’t bear it yourself alone.

Numbers 11.18: 18 “Say to the people, ‘Sanctify yourselves in preparation for tomorrow, and you will eat meat; for you have wept in the ears of Yahweh, saying, “Who will give us meat to eat? For it was well with us in Egypt.” Therefore Yahweh will give you meat, and you will eat.

Numbers 11.19: 19 You will not eat just one day, or two days, or five days, or ten days, or twenty days,

Numbers 11.20: 20 but a whole month, until it comes out at your nostrils, and it is loathsome to you; because you have rejected Yahweh who is among you, and have wept before him, saying, “Why did we come out of Egypt?”’”

Numbers 11.21: 21 Moses said, “The people, among whom I am, are six hundred thousand men on foot; and you have said, ‘I will give them meat, that they may eat a whole month.’

Numbers 11.22: 22 Shall flocks and herds be slaughtered for them, to be sufficient for them? Shall all the fish of the sea be gathered together for them, to be sufficient for them?”

Numbers 11.23: 23 Yahweh said to Moses, “Has Yahweh’s hand grown short? Now you will see whether my word will happen to you or not.”

Numbers 11.24: 24 Moses went out, and told the people Yahweh’s words; and he gathered seventy men of the elders of the people, and set them around the Tent.

Numbers 11.25: 25 Yahweh came down in the cloud, and spoke to him, and took of the Spirit that was on him, and put it on the seventy elders. When the Spirit rested on them, they prophesied, but they did so no more.

Numbers 11.26: 26 But two men remained in the camp. The name of one was Eldad, and the name of the other Medad; and the Spirit rested on them. They were of those who were written, but had not gone out to the Tent; and they prophesied in the camp.

Numbers 11.27: 27 A young man ran, and told Moses, and said, “Eldad and Medad are prophesying in the camp!”

Numbers 11.28: 28 Joshua the son of Nun, the servant of Moses, one of his chosen men, answered, “My lord Moses, forbid them!”

Numbers 11.29: 29 Moses said to him, “Are you jealous for my sake? I wish that all Yahweh’s people were prophets, that Yahweh would put his Spirit on them!”

Numbers 11.30: 30 Moses went into the camp, he and the elders of Israel.

Numbers 11.31: 31 A wind from Yahweh went out and brought quails from the sea, and let them fall by the camp, about a day’s journey on this side, and a day’s journey on the other side, around the camp, and about two cubits above the surface of the earth.

Numbers 11.32: 32 The people rose up all that day, and all of that night, and all the next day, and gathered the quails. He who gathered least gathered ten homers; and they spread them all out for themselves around the camp.

Numbers 11.33: 33 While the meat was still between their teeth, before it was chewed, Yahweh’s anger burned against the people, and Yahweh struck the people with a very great plague.

Numbers 11.34: 34 The name of that place was called Kibroth Hattaavah, because there they buried the people who lusted.

Numbers 11.35: 35 From Kibroth Hattaavah the people traveled to Hazeroth; and they stayed at Hazeroth.

Numbers 12.0:

12

Numbers 12.1: 1 Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses because of the Cushite woman whom he had married; for he had married a Cushite woman.

Numbers 12.2: 2 They said, “Has Yahweh indeed spoken only with Moses? Hasn’t he spoken also with us?” And Yahweh heard it.

Numbers 12.3: 3 Now the man Moses was very humble, more than all the men who were on the surface of the earth.

Numbers 12.4: 4 Yahweh spoke suddenly to Moses, to Aaron, and to Miriam, “You three come out to the Tent of Meeting!”

The three of them came out.

Numbers 12.5: 5 Yahweh came down in a pillar of cloud, and stood at the door of the Tent, and called Aaron and Miriam; and they both came forward.

Numbers 12.6: 6 He said, “Now hear my words. If there is a prophet among you, I, Yahweh, will make myself known to him in a vision. I will speak with him in a dream.

Numbers 12.7: 7 My servant Moses is not so. He is faithful in all my house.

Numbers 12.8: 8 With him, I will speak mouth to mouth, even plainly, and not in riddles; and he shall see Yahweh’s form. Why then were you not afraid to speak against my servant, against Moses?”

Numbers 12.9: 9 Yahweh’s anger burned against them; and he departed.

Numbers 12.10: 10 The cloud departed from over the Tent; and behold, Miriam was leprous, as white as snow. Aaron looked at Miriam, and behold, she was leprous.

Numbers 12.11: 11 Aaron said to Moses, “Oh, my lord, please don’t count this sin against us, in which we have done foolishly, and in which we have sinned.

Numbers 12.12: 12 Let her not, I pray, be as one dead, of whom the flesh is half consumed when he comes out of his mother’s womb.”

Numbers 12.13: 13 Moses cried to Yahweh, saying, “Heal her, God, I beg you!”

Numbers 12.14: 14 Yahweh said to Moses, “If her father had but spit in her face, shouldn’t she be ashamed seven days? Let her be shut up outside of the camp seven days, and after that she shall be brought in again.”

Numbers 12.15: 15 Miriam was shut up outside of the camp seven days, and the people didn’t travel until Miriam was brought in again.

Numbers 12.16: 16 Afterward the people traveled from Hazeroth, and encamped in the wilderness of Paran.

Numbers 13.0:

13

Numbers 13.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 13.2: 2 “Send men, that they may spy out the land of Canaan, which I give to the children of Israel. Of every tribe of their fathers, you shall send a man, every one a prince among them.”

Numbers 13.3: 3 Moses sent them from the wilderness of Paran according to the commandment of Yahweh. All of them were men who were heads of the children of Israel.

Numbers 13.4: 4 These were their names:

Of the tribe of Reuben, Shammua the son of Zaccur.

Numbers 13.5: 5 Of the tribe of Simeon, Shaphat the son of Hori.

Numbers 13.6: 6 Of the tribe of Judah, Caleb the son of Jephunneh.

Numbers 13.7: 7 Of the tribe of Issachar, Igal the son of Joseph.

Numbers 13.8: 8 Of the tribe of Ephraim, Hoshea the son of Nun.

Numbers 13.9: 9 Of the tribe of Benjamin, Palti the son of Raphu.

Numbers 13.10: 10 Of the tribe of Zebulun, Gaddiel the son of Sodi.

Numbers 13.11: 11 Of the tribe of Joseph, of the tribe of Manasseh, Gaddi the son of Susi.

Numbers 13.12: 12 Of the tribe of Dan, Ammiel the son of Gemalli.

Numbers 13.13: 13 Of the tribe of Asher, Sethur the son of Michael.

Numbers 13.14: 14 Of the tribe of Naphtali, Nahbi the son of Vophsi.

Numbers 13.15: 15 Of the tribe of Gad, Geuel the son of Machi.

Numbers 13.16: 16 These are the names of the men who Moses sent to spy out the land. Moses called Hoshea the son of Nun Joshua.

Numbers 13.17: 17 Moses sent them to spy out the land of Canaan, and said to them, “Go up this way by the South, and go up into the hill country.

Numbers 13.18: 18 See the land, what it is; and the people who dwell therein, whether they are strong or weak, whether they are few or many;

Numbers 13.19: 19 and what the land is that they dwell in, whether it is good or bad; and what cities they are that they dwell in, whether in camps, or in strongholds;

Numbers 13.20: 20 and what the land is, whether it is fertile or poor, whether there is wood therein, or not. Be courageous, and bring some of the fruit of the land.” Now the time was the time of the first-ripe grapes.

Numbers 13.21: 21 So they went up, and spied out the land from the wilderness of Zin to Rehob, to the entrance of Hamath.

Numbers 13.22: 22 They went up by the South, and came to Hebron; and Ahiman, Sheshai, and Talmai, the children of Anak, were there. (Now Hebron was built seven years before Zoan in Egypt.)

Numbers 13.23: 23 They came to the valley of Eshcol, and cut down from there a branch with one cluster of grapes, and they bore it on a staff between two. They also brought some of the pomegranates and figs.

Numbers 13.24: 24 That place was called the valley of Eshcol, because of the cluster which the children of Israel cut down from there.

Numbers 13.25: 25 They returned from spying out the land at the end of forty days.

Numbers 13.26: 26 They went and came to Moses, to Aaron, and to all the congregation of the children of Israel, to the wilderness of Paran, to Kadesh; and brought back word to them and to all the congregation. They showed them the fruit of the land.

Numbers 13.27: 27 They told him, and said, “We came to the land where you sent us. Surely it flows with milk and honey, and this is its fruit.

Numbers 13.28: 28 However, the people who dwell in the land are strong, and the cities are fortified and very large. Moreover, we saw the children of Anak there.

Numbers 13.29: 29 Amalek dwells in the land of the South. The Hittite, the Jebusite, and the Amorite dwell in the hill country. The Canaanite dwells by the sea, and along the side of the Jordan.”

Numbers 13.30: 30 Caleb stilled the people before Moses, and said, “Let’s go up at once, and possess it; for we are well able to overcome it!”

Numbers 13.31: 31 But the men who went up with him said, “We aren’t able to go up against the people; for they are stronger than we.”

Numbers 13.32: 32 They brought up an evil report of the land which they had spied out to the children of Israel, saying, “The land, through which we have gone to spy it out, is a land that eats up its inhabitants; and all the people who we saw in it are men of great stature.

Numbers 13.33: 33 There we saw the Nephilim, the sons of Anak, who come from the Nephilim. We were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight.”

Numbers 14.0:

14

Numbers 14.1: 1 All the congregation lifted up their voice, and cried; and the people wept that night.

Numbers 14.2: 2 All the children of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron. The whole congregation said to them, “We wish that we had died in the land of Egypt, or that we had died in this wilderness!

Numbers 14.3: 3 Why does Yahweh bring us to this land, to fall by the sword? Our wives and our little ones will be captured or killed! Wouldn’t it be better for us to return into Egypt?”

Numbers 14.4: 4 They said to one another, “Let’s choose a leader, and let’s return into Egypt.”

Numbers 14.5: 5 Then Moses and Aaron fell on their faces before all the assembly of the congregation of the children of Israel.

Numbers 14.6: 6 Joshua the son of Nun and Caleb the son of Jephunneh, who were of those who spied out the land, tore their clothes.

Numbers 14.7: 7 They spoke to all the congregation of the children of Israel, saying, “The land, which we passed through to spy it out, is an exceedingly good land.

Numbers 14.8: 8 If Yahweh delights in us, then he will bring us into this land, and give it to us: a land which flows with milk and honey.

Numbers 14.9: 9 Only don’t rebel against Yahweh, neither fear the people of the land; for they are bread for us. Their defense is removed from over them, and Yahweh is with us. Don’t fear them.”

Numbers 14.10: 10 But all the congregation threatened to stone them with stones.

Yahweh’s glory appeared in the Tent of Meeting to all the children of Israel.

Numbers 14.11: 11 Yahweh said to Moses, “How long will this people despise me? and how long will they not believe in me, for all the signs which I have worked among them?

Numbers 14.12: 12 I will strike them with the pestilence, and disinherit them, and will make of you a nation greater and mightier than they.”

Numbers 14.13: 13 Moses said to Yahweh, “Then the Egyptians will hear it; for you brought up this people in your might from among them.

Numbers 14.14: 14 They will tell it to the inhabitants of this land. They have heard that you Yahweh are among this people; for you Yahweh are seen face to face, and your cloud stands over them, and you go before them, in a pillar of cloud by day, and in a pillar of fire by night.

Numbers 14.15: 15 Now if you killed this people as one man, then the nations which have heard the fame of you will speak, saying,

Numbers 14.16: 16 ‘Because Yahweh was not able to bring this people into the land which he swore to them, therefore he has slain them in the wilderness.’

Numbers 14.17: 17 Now please let the power of the Lord be great, according as you have spoken, saying,

Numbers 14.18: 18 ‘Yahweh is slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness, forgiving iniquity and disobedience; and he will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, on the third and on the fourth generation.’

Numbers 14.19: 19 Please pardon the iniquity of this people according to the greatness of your loving kindness, and just as you have forgiven this people, from Egypt even until now.”

Numbers 14.20: 20 Yahweh said, “I have pardoned according to your word;

Numbers 14.21: 21 but in very deed—as I live, and as all the earth shall be filled with Yahweh’s glory—

Numbers 14.22: 22 because all those men who have seen my glory, and my signs, which I worked in Egypt and in the wilderness, yet have tempted me these ten times, and have not listened to my voice;

Numbers 14.23: 23 surely they shall not see the land which I swore to their fathers, neither shall any of those who despised me see it.

Numbers 14.24: 24 But my servant Caleb, because he had another spirit with him, and has followed me fully, him I will bring into the land into which he went. His offspring shall possess it.

Numbers 14.25: 25 Since the Amalekite and the Canaanite dwell in the valley, tomorrow turn and go into the wilderness by the way to the Red Sea.”

Numbers 14.26: 26 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Numbers 14.27: 27 “How long shall I bear with this evil congregation that complain against me? I have heard the complaints of the children of Israel, which they complain against me.

Numbers 14.28: 28 Tell them, ‘As I live, says Yahweh, surely as you have spoken in my ears, so I will do to you.

Numbers 14.29: 29 Your dead bodies shall fall in this wilderness; and all who were counted of you, according to your whole number, from twenty years old and upward, who have complained against me,

Numbers 14.30: 30 surely you shall not come into the land concerning which I swore that I would make you dwell therein, except Caleb the son of Jephunneh, and Joshua the son of Nun.

Numbers 14.31: 31 But I will bring your little ones that you said should be captured or killed in, and they shall know the land which you have rejected.

Numbers 14.32: 32 But as for you, your dead bodies shall fall in this wilderness.

Numbers 14.33: 33 Your children shall be wanderers in the wilderness forty years, and shall bear your prostitution, until your dead bodies are consumed in the wilderness.

Numbers 14.34: 34 After the number of the days in which you spied out the land, even forty days, for every day a year, you will bear your iniquities, even forty years, and you will know my alienation.’

Numbers 14.35: 35 I, Yahweh, have spoken. I will surely do this to all this evil congregation who are gathered together against me. In this wilderness they shall be consumed, and there they shall die.”

Numbers 14.36: 36 The men whom Moses sent to spy out the land, who returned and made all the congregation to murmur against him by bringing up an evil report against the land,

Numbers 14.37: 37 even those men who brought up an evil report of the land, died by the plague before Yahweh.

Numbers 14.38: 38 But Joshua the son of Nun and Caleb the son of Jephunneh remained alive of those men who went to spy out the land.

Numbers 14.39: 39 Moses told these words to all the children of Israel, and the people mourned greatly.

Numbers 14.40: 40 They rose up early in the morning and went up to the top of the mountain, saying, “Behold, we are here, and will go up to the place which Yahweh has promised; for we have sinned.”

Numbers 14.41: 41 Moses said, “Why now do you disobey the commandment of Yahweh, since it shall not prosper?

Numbers 14.42: 42 Don’t go up, for Yahweh isn’t among you; that way you won’t be struck down before your enemies.

Numbers 14.43: 43 For there the Amalekite and the Canaanite are before you, and you will fall by the sword because you turned back from following Yahweh; therefore Yahweh will not be with you.”

Numbers 14.44: 44 But they presumed to go up to the top of the mountain. Nevertheless, the ark of Yahweh’s covenant and Moses didn’t depart out of the camp.

Numbers 14.45: 45 Then the Amalekites came down, and the Canaanites who lived in that mountain, and struck them and beat them down, even to Hormah.

Numbers 15.0:

15

Numbers 15.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 15.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘When you have come into the land of your habitations, which I give to you,

Numbers 15.3: 3 and will make an offering by fire to Yahweh—a burnt offering, or a sacrifice, to accomplish a vow, or as a free will offering, or in your set feasts, to make a pleasant aroma to Yahweh, of the herd, or of the flock—

Numbers 15.4: 4 then he who offers his offering shall offer to Yahweh a meal offering of one tenth of an ephah of fine flour mixed with one fourth of a hin of oil.

Numbers 15.5: 5 You shall prepare wine for the drink offering, one fourth of a hin, with the burnt offering or for the sacrifice, for each lamb.

Numbers 15.6: 6 “‘For a ram, you shall prepare for a meal offering two tenths of an ephah of fine flour mixed with the third part of a hin of oil;

Numbers 15.7: 7 and for the drink offering you shall offer the third part of a hin of wine, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Numbers 15.8: 8 When you prepare a bull for a burnt offering or for a sacrifice, to accomplish a vow, or for peace offerings to Yahweh,

Numbers 15.9: 9 then he shall offer with the bull a meal offering of three tenths of an ephah of fine flour mixed with half a hin of oil;

Numbers 15.10: 10 and you shall offer for the drink offering half a hin of wine, for an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Numbers 15.11: 11 Thus it shall be done for each bull, for each ram, for each of the male lambs, or of the young goats.

Numbers 15.12: 12 According to the number that you shall prepare, so you shall do to everyone according to their number.

Numbers 15.13: 13 “‘All who are native-born shall do these things in this way, in offering an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Numbers 15.14: 14 If a stranger lives as a foreigner with you, or whoever may be among you throughout your generations, and will offer an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh, as you do, so he shall do.

Numbers 15.15: 15 For the assembly, there shall be one statute for you and for the stranger who lives as a foreigner, a statute forever throughout your generations. As you are, so the foreigner shall be before Yahweh.

Numbers 15.16: 16 One law and one ordinance shall be for you and for the stranger who lives as a foreigner with you.’”

Numbers 15.17: 17 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 15.18: 18 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘When you come into the land where I bring you,

Numbers 15.19: 19 then it shall be that when you eat of the bread of the land, you shall offer up a wave offering to Yahweh.

Numbers 15.20: 20 Of the first of your dough you shall offer up a cake for a wave offering. As the wave offering of the threshing floor, so you shall heave it.

Numbers 15.21: 21 Of the first of your dough, you shall give to Yahweh a wave offering throughout your generations.

Numbers 15.22: 22 “‘When you err, and don’t observe all these commandments which Yahweh has spoken to Moses—

Numbers 15.23: 23 even all that Yahweh has commanded you by Moses, from the day that Yahweh gave commandment and onward throughout your generations—

Numbers 15.24: 24 then it shall be, if it was done unwittingly, without the knowledge of the congregation, that all the congregation shall offer one young bull for a burnt offering, for a pleasant aroma to Yahweh, with its meal offering and its drink offering, according to the ordinance, and one male goat for a sin offering.

Numbers 15.25: 25 The priest shall make atonement for all the congregation of the children of Israel, and they shall be forgiven; for it was an error, and they have brought their offering, an offering made by fire to Yahweh, and their sin offering before Yahweh, for their error.

Numbers 15.26: 26 All the congregation of the children of Israel shall be forgiven, as well as the stranger who lives as a foreigner among them; for with regard to all the people, it was done unwittingly.

Numbers 15.27: 27 “‘If a person sins unwittingly, then he shall offer a female goat a year old for a sin offering.

Numbers 15.28: 28 The priest shall make atonement for the soul who errs when he sins unwittingly before Yahweh. He shall make atonement for him; and he shall be forgiven.

Numbers 15.29: 29 You shall have one law for him who does anything unwittingly, for him who is native-born among the children of Israel, and for the stranger who lives as a foreigner among them.

Numbers 15.30: 30 “‘But the soul who does anything with a high hand, whether he is native-born or a foreigner, blasphemes Yahweh. That soul shall be cut off from among his people.

Numbers 15.31: 31 Because he has despised Yahweh’s word, and has broken his commandment, that soul shall be utterly cut off. His iniquity shall be on him.’”

Numbers 15.32: 32 While the children of Israel were in the wilderness, they found a man gathering sticks on the Sabbath day.

Numbers 15.33: 33 Those who found him gathering sticks brought him to Moses and Aaron, and to all the congregation.

Numbers 15.34: 34 They put him in custody, because it had not been declared what should be done to him.

Numbers 15.35: 35 Yahweh said to Moses, “The man shall surely be put to death. All the congregation shall stone him with stones outside of the camp.”

Numbers 15.36: 36 All the congregation brought him outside of the camp, and stoned him to death with stones, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 15.37: 37 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 15.38: 38 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them that they should make themselves fringes on the borders of their garments throughout their generations, and that they put on the fringe of each border a cord of blue.

Numbers 15.39: 39 It shall be to you for a fringe, that you may see it, and remember all Yahweh’s commandments, and do them; and that you don’t follow your own heart and your own eyes, after which you used to play the prostitute;

Numbers 15.40: 40 so that you may remember and do all my commandments, and be holy to your God.

Numbers 15.41: 41 I am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, to be your God: I am Yahweh your God.”

Numbers 16.0:

16

Numbers 16.1: 1 Now Korah, the son of Izhar, the son of Kohath, the son of Levi, with Dathan and Abiram, the sons of Eliab, and On, the son of Peleth, sons of Reuben, took some men.

Numbers 16.2: 2 They rose up before Moses, with some of the children of Israel, two hundred fifty princes of the congregation, called to the assembly, men of renown.

Numbers 16.3: 3 They assembled themselves together against Moses and against Aaron, and said to them, “You take too much on yourself, since all the congregation are holy, everyone of them, and Yahweh is among them! Why do you lift yourselves up above Yahweh’s assembly?”

Numbers 16.4: 4 When Moses heard it, he fell on his face.

Numbers 16.5: 5 He said to Korah and to all his company, “In the morning, Yahweh will show who are his, and who is holy, and will cause him to come near to him. Even him whom he shall choose, he will cause to come near to him.

Numbers 16.6: 6 Do this: have Korah and all his company take censers,

Numbers 16.7: 7 put fire in them, and put incense on them before Yahweh tomorrow. It shall be that the man whom Yahweh chooses, he shall be holy. You have gone too far, you sons of Levi!”

Numbers 16.8: 8 Moses said to Korah, “Hear now, you sons of Levi!

Numbers 16.9: 9 Is it a small thing to you that the God of Israel has separated you from the congregation of Israel, to bring you near to himself, to do the service of Yahweh’s tabernacle, and to stand before the congregation to minister to them;

Numbers 16.10: 10 and that he has brought you near, and all your brothers the sons of Levi with you? Do you seek the priesthood also?

Numbers 16.11: 11 Therefore you and all your company have gathered together against Yahweh! What is Aaron that you complain against him?”

Numbers 16.12: 12 Moses sent to call Dathan and Abiram, the sons of Eliab; and they said, “We won’t come up!

Numbers 16.13: 13 Is it a small thing that you have brought us up out of a land flowing with milk and honey, to kill us in the wilderness, but you must also make yourself a prince over us?

Numbers 16.14: 14 Moreover you haven’t brought us into a land flowing with milk and honey, nor given us inheritance of fields and vineyards. Will you put out the eyes of these men? We won’t come up.”

Numbers 16.15: 15 Moses was very angry, and said to Yahweh, “Don’t respect their offering. I have not taken one donkey from them, neither have I hurt one of them.”

Numbers 16.16: 16 Moses said to Korah, “You and all your company go before Yahweh, you, and they, and Aaron, tomorrow.

Numbers 16.17: 17 Each man take his censer and put incense on it, and each man bring before Yahweh his censer, two hundred fifty censers; you also, and Aaron, each with his censer.”

Numbers 16.18: 18 They each took his censer, and put fire in it, and laid incense on it, and stood at the door of the Tent of Meeting with Moses and Aaron.

Numbers 16.19: 19 Korah assembled all the congregation opposite them to the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Yahweh’s glory appeared to all the congregation.

Numbers 16.20: 20 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Numbers 16.21: 21 “Separate yourselves from among this congregation, that I may consume them in a moment!”

Numbers 16.22: 22 They fell on their faces, and said, “God, the God of the spirits of all flesh, shall one man sin, and will you be angry with all the congregation?”

Numbers 16.23: 23 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 16.24: 24 “Speak to the congregation, saying, ‘Get away from around the tent of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram!’”

Numbers 16.25: 25 Moses rose up and went to Dathan and Abiram; and the elders of Israel followed him.

Numbers 16.26: 26 He spoke to the congregation, saying, “Depart, please, from the tents of these wicked men, and touch nothing of theirs, lest you be consumed in all their sins!”

Numbers 16.27: 27 So they went away from the tent of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, on every side. Dathan and Abiram came out, and stood at the door of their tents with their wives, their sons, and their little ones.

Numbers 16.28: 28 Moses said, “Hereby you shall know that Yahweh has sent me to do all these works; for they are not from my own mind.

Numbers 16.29: 29 If these men die the common death of all men, or if they experience what all men experience, then Yahweh hasn’t sent me.

Numbers 16.30: 30 But if Yahweh makes a new thing, and the ground opens its mouth, and swallows them up with all that belong to them, and they go down alive into Sheol, then you shall understand that these men have despised Yahweh.”

Numbers 16.31: 31 As he finished speaking all these words, the ground that was under them split apart.

Numbers 16.32: 32 The earth opened its mouth and swallowed them up with their households, all of Korah’s men, and all their goods.

Numbers 16.33: 33 So they, and all that belonged to them went down alive into Sheol. The earth closed on them, and they perished from among the assembly.

Numbers 16.34: 34 All Israel that were around them fled at their cry; for they said, “Lest the earth swallow us up!”

Numbers 16.35: 35 Fire came out from Yahweh, and devoured the two hundred fifty men who offered the incense.

Numbers 16.36: 36 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 16.37: 37 “Speak to Eleazar the son of Aaron the priest, that he take up the censers out of the burning, and scatter the fire away from the camp; for they are holy,

Numbers 16.38: 38 even the censers of those who sinned against their own lives. Let them be beaten into plates for a covering of the altar, for they offered them before Yahweh. Therefore they are holy. They shall be a sign to the children of Israel.”

Numbers 16.39: 39 Eleazar the priest took the bronze censers which those who were burned had offered; and they beat them out for a covering of the altar,

Numbers 16.40: 40 to be a memorial to the children of Israel, to the end that no stranger who isn’t of the offspring of Aaron, would come near to burn incense before Yahweh, that he not be as Korah, and as his company; as Yahweh spoke to him by Moses.

Numbers 16.41: 41 But on the next day all the congregation of the children of Israel complained against Moses and against Aaron, saying, “You have killed Yahweh’s people!”

Numbers 16.42: 42 When the congregation was assembled against Moses and against Aaron, they looked toward the Tent of Meeting. Behold, the cloud covered it, and Yahweh’s glory appeared.

Numbers 16.43: 43 Moses and Aaron came to the front of the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 16.44: 44 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 16.45: 45 “Get away from among this congregation, that I may consume them in a moment!” They fell on their faces.

Numbers 16.46: 46 Moses said to Aaron, “Take your censer, put fire from the altar in it, lay incense on it, carry it quickly to the congregation, and make atonement for them; for wrath has gone out from Yahweh! The plague has begun.”

Numbers 16.47: 47 Aaron did as Moses said, and ran into the middle of the assembly. The plague had already begun among the people. He put on the incense, and made atonement for the people.

Numbers 16.48: 48 He stood between the dead and the living; and the plague was stayed.

Numbers 16.49: 49 Now those who died by the plague were fourteen thousand and seven hundred, in addition to those who died about the matter of Korah.

Numbers 16.50: 50 Aaron returned to Moses to the door of the Tent of Meeting, and the plague was stopped.

Numbers 17.0:

17

Numbers 17.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 17.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, and take rods from them, one for each fathers’ house, of all their princes according to their fathers’ houses, twelve rods. Write each man’s name on his rod.

Numbers 17.3: 3 You shall write Aaron’s name on Levi’s rod. There shall be one rod for each head of their fathers’ houses.

Numbers 17.4: 4 You shall lay them up in the Tent of Meeting before the covenant, where I meet with you.

Numbers 17.5: 5 It shall happen that the rod of the man whom I shall choose shall bud. I will make the murmurings of the children of Israel, which they murmur against you, cease from me.”

Numbers 17.6: 6 Moses spoke to the children of Israel; and all their princes gave him rods, for each prince one, according to their fathers’ houses, a total of twelve rods. Aaron’s rod was among their rods.

Numbers 17.7: 7 Moses laid up the rods before Yahweh in the Tent of the Testimony.

Numbers 17.8: 8 On the next day, Moses went into the Tent of the Testimony; and behold, Aaron’s rod for the house of Levi had sprouted, budded, produced blossoms, and bore ripe almonds.

Numbers 17.9: 9 Moses brought out all the rods from before Yahweh to all the children of Israel. They looked, and each man took his rod.

Numbers 17.10: 10 Yahweh said to Moses, “Put back the rod of Aaron before the covenant, to be kept for a token against the children of rebellion; that you may make an end of their complaining against me, that they not die.”

Numbers 17.11: 11 Moses did so. As Yahweh commanded him, so he did.

Numbers 17.12: 12 The children of Israel spoke to Moses, saying, “Behold, we perish! We are undone! We are all undone!

Numbers 17.13: 13 Everyone who keeps approaching Yahweh’s tabernacle, dies! Will we all perish?”

Numbers 18.0:

18

Numbers 18.1: 1 Yahweh said to Aaron, “You and your sons and your fathers’ house with you shall bear the iniquity of the sanctuary; and you and your sons with you shall bear the iniquity of your priesthood.

Numbers 18.2: 2 Bring your brothers also, the tribe of Levi, the tribe of your father, near with you, that they may be joined to you, and minister to you; but you and your sons with you shall be before the Tent of the Testimony.

Numbers 18.3: 3 They shall keep your commands and the duty of the whole Tent; only they shall not come near to the vessels of the sanctuary and to the altar, that they not die, neither they nor you.

Numbers 18.4: 4 They shall be joined to you and keep the responsibility of the Tent of Meeting, for all the service of the Tent. A stranger shall not come near to you.

Numbers 18.5: 5 “You shall perform the duty of the sanctuary and the duty of the altar, that there be no more wrath on the children of Israel.

Numbers 18.6: 6 Behold, I myself have taken your brothers the Levites from among the children of Israel. They are a gift to you, dedicated to Yahweh, to do the service of the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 18.7: 7 You and your sons with you shall keep your priesthood for everything of the altar, and for that within the veil. You shall serve. I give you the service of the priesthood as a gift. The stranger who comes near shall be put to death.”

Numbers 18.8: 8 Yahweh spoke to Aaron, “Behold, I myself have given you the command of my wave offerings, even all the holy things of the children of Israel. I have given them to you by reason of the anointing, and to your sons, as a portion forever.

Numbers 18.9: 9 This shall be yours of the most holy things from the fire: every offering of theirs, even every meal offering of theirs, and every sin offering of theirs, and every trespass offering of theirs, which they shall render to me, shall be most holy for you and for your sons.

Numbers 18.10: 10 You shall eat of it like the most holy things. Every male shall eat of it. It shall be holy to you.

Numbers 18.11: 11 “This is yours, too: the wave offering of their gift, even all the wave offerings of the children of Israel. I have given them to you, and to your sons and to your daughters with you, as a portion forever. Everyone who is clean in your house shall eat of it.

Numbers 18.12: 12 “I have given to you all the best of the oil, all the best of the vintage, and of the grain, the first fruits of them which they give to Yahweh.

Numbers 18.13: 13 The first-ripe fruits of all that is in their land, which they bring to Yahweh, shall be yours. Everyone who is clean in your house shall eat of it.

Numbers 18.14: 14 “Everything devoted in Israel shall be yours.

Numbers 18.15: 15 Everything that opens the womb, of all flesh which they offer to Yahweh, both of man and animal, shall be yours. Nevertheless, you shall surely redeem the firstborn of man, and you shall redeem the firstborn of unclean animals.

Numbers 18.16: 16 You shall redeem those who are to be redeemed of them from a month old, according to your estimation, for five shekels of money, according to the shekel of the sanctuary, which weighs twenty gerahs.

Numbers 18.17: 17 “But you shall not redeem the firstborn of a cow, or the firstborn of a sheep, or the firstborn of a goat. They are holy. You shall sprinkle their blood on the altar, and shall burn their fat for an offering made by fire, for a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Numbers 18.18: 18 Their meat shall be yours, as the wave offering breast and as the right thigh, it shall be yours.

Numbers 18.19: 19 All the wave offerings of the holy things which the children of Israel offer to Yahweh, I have given you and your sons and your daughters with you, as a portion forever. It is a covenant of salt forever before Yahweh to you and to your offspring with you.”

Numbers 18.20: 20 Yahweh said to Aaron, “You shall have no inheritance in their land, neither shall you have any portion among them. I am your portion and your inheritance among the children of Israel.

Numbers 18.21: 21 “To the children of Levi, behold, I have given all the tithe in Israel for an inheritance, in return for their service which they serve, even the service of the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 18.22: 22 Henceforth the children of Israel shall not come near the Tent of Meeting, lest they bear sin, and die.

Numbers 18.23: 23 But the Levites shall do the service of the Tent of Meeting, and they shall bear their iniquity. It shall be a statute forever throughout your generations. Among the children of Israel, they shall have no inheritance.

Numbers 18.24: 24 For the tithe of the children of Israel, which they offer as a wave offering to Yahweh, I have given to the Levites for an inheritance. Therefore I have said to them, ‘Among the children of Israel they shall have no inheritance.’”

Numbers 18.25: 25 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 18.26: 26 “Moreover you shall speak to the Levites, and tell them, ‘When you take of the children of Israel the tithe which I have given you from them for your inheritance, then you shall offer up a wave offering of it for Yahweh, a tithe of the tithe.

Numbers 18.27: 27 Your wave offering shall be credited to you, as though it were the grain of the threshing floor, and as the fullness of the wine press.

Numbers 18.28: 28 Thus you also shall offer a wave offering to Yahweh of all your tithes, which you receive of the children of Israel; and of it you shall give Yahweh’s wave offering to Aaron the priest.

Numbers 18.29: 29 Out of all your gifts, you shall offer every wave offering to Yahweh, of all its best parts, even the holy part of it.’

Numbers 18.30: 30 “Therefore you shall tell them, ‘When you heave its best from it, then it shall be credited to the Levites as the increase of the threshing floor, and as the increase of the wine press.

Numbers 18.31: 31 You may eat it anywhere, you and your households, for it is your reward in return for your service in the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 18.32: 32 You shall bear no sin by reason of it, when you have heaved from it its best. You shall not profane the holy things of the children of Israel, that you not die.’”

Numbers 19.0:

19

Numbers 19.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying,

Numbers 19.2: 2 “This is the statute of the law which Yahweh has commanded. Tell the children of Israel to bring you a red heifer without spot, in which is no defect, and which was never yoked.

Numbers 19.3: 3 You shall give her to Eleazar the priest, and he shall bring her outside of the camp, and one shall kill her before his face.

Numbers 19.4: 4 Eleazar the priest shall take some of her blood with his finger, and sprinkle her blood toward the front of the Tent of Meeting seven times.

Numbers 19.5: 5 One shall burn the heifer in his sight; her skin, and her meat, and her blood, with her dung, shall he burn.

Numbers 19.6: 6 The priest shall take cedar wood, hyssop, and scarlet, and cast it into the middle of the burning of the heifer.

Numbers 19.7: 7 Then the priest shall wash his clothes, and he shall bathe his flesh in water, and afterward he shall come into the camp, and the priest shall be unclean until the evening.

Numbers 19.8: 8 He who burns her shall wash his clothes in water, and bathe his flesh in water, and shall be unclean until the evening.

Numbers 19.9: 9 “A man who is clean shall gather up the ashes of the heifer, and lay them up outside of the camp in a clean place; and it shall be kept for the congregation of the children of Israel for use in water for cleansing impurity. It is a sin offering.

Numbers 19.10: 10 He who gathers the ashes of the heifer shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the evening. It shall be to the children of Israel, and to the stranger who lives as a foreigner among them, for a statute forever.

Numbers 19.11: 11 “He who touches the dead body of any man shall be unclean seven days.

Numbers 19.12: 12 He shall purify himself with water on the third day, and on the seventh day he shall be clean; but if he doesn’t purify himself the third day, then the seventh day he shall not be clean.

Numbers 19.13: 13 Whoever touches a dead person, the body of a man who has died, and doesn’t purify himself, defiles Yahweh’s tabernacle; and that soul shall be cut off from Israel; because the water for impurity was not sprinkled on him, he shall be unclean. His uncleanness is yet on him.

Numbers 19.14: 14 “This is the law when a man dies in a tent: everyone who comes into the tent, and everyone who is in the tent, shall be unclean seven days.

Numbers 19.15: 15 Every open vessel, which has no covering bound on it, is unclean.

Numbers 19.16: 16 “Whoever in the open field touches one who is slain with a sword, or a dead body, or a bone of a man, or a grave, shall be unclean seven days.

Numbers 19.17: 17 “For the unclean, they shall take of the ashes of the burning of the sin offering; and running water shall be poured on them in a vessel.

Numbers 19.18: 18 A clean person shall take hyssop, dip it in the water, and sprinkle it on the tent, on all the vessels, on the persons who were there, and on him who touched the bone, or the slain, or the dead, or the grave.

Numbers 19.19: 19 The clean person shall sprinkle on the unclean on the third day, and on the seventh day. On the seventh day, he shall purify him. He shall wash his clothes and bathe himself in water, and shall be clean at evening.

Numbers 19.20: 20 But the man who shall be unclean, and shall not purify himself, that soul shall be cut off from among the assembly, because he has defiled the sanctuary of Yahweh. The water for impurity has not been sprinkled on him. He is unclean.

Numbers 19.21: 21 It shall be a perpetual statute to them. He who sprinkles the water for impurity shall wash his clothes, and he who touches the water for impurity shall be unclean until evening.

Numbers 19.22: 22 “Whatever the unclean person touches shall be unclean; and the soul that touches it shall be unclean until evening.”

Numbers 20.0:

20

Numbers 20.1: 1 The children of Israel, even the whole congregation, came into the wilderness of Zin in the first month. The people stayed in Kadesh. Miriam died there, and was buried there.

Numbers 20.2: 2 There was no water for the congregation; and they assembled themselves together against Moses and against Aaron.

Numbers 20.3: 3 The people quarreled with Moses, and spoke, saying, “We wish that we had died when our brothers died before Yahweh!

Numbers 20.4: 4 Why have you brought Yahweh’s assembly into this wilderness, that we should die there, we and our animals?

Numbers 20.5: 5 Why have you made us to come up out of Egypt, to bring us in to this evil place? It is no place of seed, or of figs, or of vines, or of pomegranates; neither is there any water to drink.”

Numbers 20.6: 6 Moses and Aaron went from the presence of the assembly to the door of the Tent of Meeting, and fell on their faces. Yahweh’s glory appeared to them.

Numbers 20.7: 7 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 20.8: 8 “Take the rod, and assemble the congregation, you, and Aaron your brother, and speak to the rock before their eyes, that it pour out its water. You shall bring water to them out of the rock; so you shall give the congregation and their livestock drink.”

Numbers 20.9: 9 Moses took the rod from before Yahweh, as he commanded him.

Numbers 20.10: 10 Moses and Aaron gathered the assembly together before the rock, and he said to them, “Hear now, you rebels! Shall we bring water out of this rock for you?”

Numbers 20.11: 11 Moses lifted up his hand, and struck the rock with his rod twice, and water came out abundantly. The congregation and their livestock drank.

Numbers 20.12: 12 Yahweh said to Moses and Aaron, “Because you didn’t believe in me, to sanctify me in the eyes of the children of Israel, therefore you shall not bring this assembly into the land which I have given them.”

Numbers 20.13: 13 These are the waters of Meribah; because the children of Israel strove with Yahweh, and he was sanctified in them.

Numbers 20.14: 14 Moses sent messengers from Kadesh to the king of Edom, saying:

“Your brother Israel says: You know all the travail that has happened to us;

Numbers 20.15: 15 how our fathers went down into Egypt, and we lived in Egypt a long time. The Egyptians mistreated us and our fathers.

Numbers 20.16: 16 When we cried to Yahweh, he heard our voice, sent an angel, and brought us out of Egypt. Behold, we are in Kadesh, a city in the edge of your border.

Numbers 20.17: 17 “Please let us pass through your land. We will not pass through field or through vineyard, neither will we drink from the water of the wells. We will go along the king’s highway. We will not turn away to the right hand nor to the left, until we have passed your border.”

Numbers 20.18: 18 Edom said to him, “You shall not pass through me, lest I come out with the sword against you.”

Numbers 20.19: 19 The children of Israel said to him, “We will go up by the highway; and if we drink your water, I and my livestock, then I will give its price. Only let me, without doing anything else, pass through on my feet.”

Numbers 20.20: 20 He said, “You shall not pass through.” Edom came out against him with many people, and with a strong hand.

Numbers 20.21: 21 Thus Edom refused to give Israel passage through his border, so Israel turned away from him.

Numbers 20.22: 22 They traveled from Kadesh, and the children of Israel, even the whole congregation, came to Mount Hor.

Numbers 20.23: 23 Yahweh spoke to Moses and Aaron in Mount Hor, by the border of the land of Edom, saying,

Numbers 20.24: 24 “Aaron shall be gathered to his people; for he shall not enter into the land which I have given to the children of Israel, because you rebelled against my word at the waters of Meribah.

Numbers 20.25: 25 Take Aaron and Eleazar his son, and bring them up to Mount Hor;

Numbers 20.26: 26 and strip Aaron of his garments, and put them on Eleazar his son. Aaron shall be gathered, and shall die there.”

Numbers 20.27: 27 Moses did as Yahweh commanded. They went up onto Mount Hor in the sight of all the congregation.

Numbers 20.28: 28 Moses stripped Aaron of his garments, and put them on Eleazar his son. Aaron died there on the top of the mountain, and Moses and Eleazar came down from the mountain.

Numbers 20.29: 29 When all the congregation saw that Aaron was dead, they wept for Aaron thirty days, even all the house of Israel.

Numbers 21.0:

21

Numbers 21.1: 1 The Canaanite, the king of Arad, who lived in the South, heard that Israel came by the way of Atharim. He fought against Israel, and took some of them captive.

Numbers 21.2: 2 Israel vowed a vow to Yahweh, and said, “If you will indeed deliver this people into my hand, then I will utterly destroy their cities.”

Numbers 21.3: 3 Yahweh listened to the voice of Israel, and delivered up the Canaanites; and they utterly destroyed them and their cities. The name of the place was called Hormah.

Numbers 21.4: 4 They traveled from Mount Hor by the way to the Red Sea, to go around the land of Edom. The soul of the people was very discouraged because of the journey.

Numbers 21.5: 5 The people spoke against God and against Moses: “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? For there is no bread, there is no water, and our soul loathes this disgusting food!”

Numbers 21.6: 6 Yahweh sent venomous snakes among the people, and they bit the people. Many people of Israel died.

Numbers 21.7: 7 The people came to Moses, and said, “We have sinned, because we have spoken against Yahweh and against you. Pray to Yahweh, that he take away the serpents from us.” Moses prayed for the people.

Numbers 21.8: 8 Yahweh said to Moses, “Make a venomous snake, and set it on a pole. It shall happen that everyone who is bitten, when he sees it, shall live.”

Numbers 21.9: 9 Moses made a serpent of bronze, and set it on the pole. If a serpent had bitten any man, when he looked at the serpent of bronze, he lived.

Numbers 21.10: 10 The children of Israel traveled, and encamped in Oboth.

Numbers 21.11: 11 They traveled from Oboth, and encamped at Iyeabarim, in the wilderness which is before Moab, toward the sunrise.

Numbers 21.12: 12 From there they traveled, and encamped in the valley of Zered.

Numbers 21.13: 13 From there they traveled, and encamped on the other side of the Arnon, which is in the wilderness that comes out of the border of the Amorites; for the Arnon is the border of Moab, between Moab and the Amorites.

Numbers 21.14: 14 Therefore it is said in the book of the Wars of Yahweh, “Vaheb in Suphah, the valleys of the Arnon,

Numbers 21.15: 15 the slope of the valleys that incline toward the dwelling of Ar, leans on the border of Moab.”

Numbers 21.16: 16 From there they traveled to Beer; that is the well of which Yahweh said to Moses, “Gather the people together, and I will give them water.”

Numbers 21.17: 17 Then Israel sang this song:

“Spring up, well! Sing to it,

Numbers 21.18: 18 the well, which the princes dug,

which the nobles of the people dug,

with the scepter, and with their poles.”

From the wilderness they traveled to Mattanah;

Numbers 21.19: 19 and from Mattanah to Nahaliel; and from Nahaliel to Bamoth;

Numbers 21.20: 20 and from Bamoth to the valley that is in the field of Moab, to the top of Pisgah, which looks down on the desert.

Numbers 21.21: 21 Israel sent messengers to Sihon king of the Amorites, saying,

Numbers 21.22: 22 “Let me pass through your land. We will not turn away into field or vineyard. We will not drink of the water of the wells. We will go by the king’s highway, until we have passed your border.”

Numbers 21.23: 23 Sihon would not allow Israel to pass through his border, but Sihon gathered all his people together, and went out against Israel into the wilderness, and came to Jahaz. He fought against Israel.

Numbers 21.24: 24 Israel struck him with the edge of the sword, and possessed his land from the Arnon to the Jabbok, even to the children of Ammon; for the border of the children of Ammon was fortified.

Numbers 21.25: 25 Israel took all these cities. Israel lived in all the cities of the Amorites, in Heshbon, and in all its villages.

Numbers 21.26: 26 For Heshbon was the city of Sihon the king of the Amorites, who had fought against the former king of Moab, and taken all his land out of his hand, even to the Arnon.

Numbers 21.27: 27 Therefore those who speak in proverbs say,

“Come to Heshbon.

Let the city of Sihon be built and established;

Numbers 21.28: 28 for a fire has gone out of Heshbon,

a flame from the city of Sihon.

It has devoured Ar of Moab,

The lords of the high places of the Arnon.

Numbers 21.29: 29 Woe to you, Moab!

You are undone, people of Chemosh!

He has given his sons as fugitives,

and his daughters into captivity,

to Sihon king of the Amorites.

Numbers 21.30: 30 We have shot at them.

Heshbon has perished even to Dibon.

We have laid waste even to Nophah,

Which reaches to Medeba.”

Numbers 21.31: 31 Thus Israel lived in the land of the Amorites.

Numbers 21.32: 32 Moses sent to spy out Jazer. They took its villages, and drove out the Amorites who were there.

Numbers 21.33: 33 They turned and went up by the way of Bashan. Og the king of Bashan went out against them, he and all his people, to battle at Edrei.

Numbers 21.34: 34 Yahweh said to Moses, “Don’t fear him, for I have delivered him into your hand, with all his people, and his land. You shall do to him as you did to Sihon king of the Amorites, who lived at Heshbon.”

Numbers 21.35: 35 So they struck him, with his sons and all his people, until there were no survivors; and they possessed his land.

Numbers 22.0:

22

Numbers 22.1: 1 The children of Israel traveled, and encamped in the plains of Moab beyond the Jordan at Jericho.

Numbers 22.2: 2 Balak the son of Zippor saw all that Israel had done to the Amorites.

Numbers 22.3: 3 Moab was very afraid of the people, because they were many. Moab was distressed because of the children of Israel.

Numbers 22.4: 4 Moab said to the elders of Midian, “Now this multitude will lick up all that is around us, as the ox licks up the grass of the field.”

Balak the son of Zippor was king of Moab at that time.

Numbers 22.5: 5 He sent messengers to Balaam the son of Beor, to Pethor, which is by the River, to the land of the children of his people, to call him, saying, “Behold, there is a people who came out of Egypt. Behold, they cover the surface of the earth, and they are staying opposite me.

Numbers 22.6: 6 Please come now therefore, and curse this people for me; for they are too mighty for me. Perhaps I shall prevail, that we may strike them, and that I may drive them out of the land; for I know that he whom you bless is blessed, and he whom you curse is cursed.”

Numbers 22.7: 7 The elders of Moab and the elders of Midian departed with the rewards of divination in their hand. They came to Balaam, and spoke to him the words of Balak.

Numbers 22.8: 8 He said to them, “Lodge here this night, and I will bring you word again, as Yahweh shall speak to me.” The princes of Moab stayed with Balaam.

Numbers 22.9: 9 God came to Balaam, and said, “Who are these men with you?”

Numbers 22.10: 10 Balaam said to God, “Balak the son of Zippor, king of Moab, has said to me,

Numbers 22.11: 11 ‘Behold, the people that has come out of Egypt covers the surface of the earth. Now, come curse me them. Perhaps I shall be able to fight against them, and shall drive them out.’”

Numbers 22.12: 12 God said to Balaam, “You shall not go with them. You shall not curse the people, for they are blessed.”

Numbers 22.13: 13 Balaam rose up in the morning, and said to the princes of Balak, “Go to your land; for Yahweh refuses to permit me to go with you.”

Numbers 22.14: 14 The princes of Moab rose up, and they went to Balak, and said, “Balaam refuses to come with us.”

Numbers 22.15: 15 Balak again sent princes, more, and more honorable than they.

Numbers 22.16: 16 They came to Balaam, and said to him, “Balak the son of Zippor says, ‘Please let nothing hinder you from coming to me,

Numbers 22.17: 17 for I will promote you to very great honor, and whatever you say to me I will do. Please come therefore, and curse this people for me.’”

Numbers 22.18: 18 Balaam answered the servants of Balak, “If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold, I can’t go beyond the word of Yahweh my God, to do less or more.

Numbers 22.19: 19 Now therefore please stay here tonight as well, that I may know what else Yahweh will speak to me.”

Numbers 22.20: 20 God came to Balaam at night, and said to him, “If the men have come to call you, rise up, go with them; but only the word which I speak to you, that you shall do.”

Numbers 22.21: 21 Balaam rose up in the morning, and saddled his donkey, and went with the princes of Moab.

Numbers 22.22: 22 God’s anger burned because he went; and Yahweh’s angel placed himself in the way as an adversary against him. Now he was riding on his donkey, and his two servants were with him.

Numbers 22.23: 23 The donkey saw Yahweh’s angel standing in the way, with his sword drawn in his hand; and the donkey turned out of the path, and went into the field. Balaam struck the donkey, to turn her into the path.

Numbers 22.24: 24 Then Yahweh’s angel stood in a narrow path between the vineyards, a wall being on this side, and a wall on that side.

Numbers 22.25: 25 The donkey saw Yahweh’s angel, and she thrust herself to the wall, and crushed Balaam’s foot against the wall. He struck her again.

Numbers 22.26: 26 Yahweh’s angel went further, and stood in a narrow place, where there was no way to turn either to the right hand or to the left.

Numbers 22.27: 27 The donkey saw Yahweh’s angel, and she lay down under Balaam. Balaam’s anger burned, and he struck the donkey with his staff.

Numbers 22.28: 28 Yahweh opened the mouth of the donkey, and she said to Balaam, “What have I done to you, that you have struck me these three times?”

Numbers 22.29: 29 Balaam said to the donkey, “Because you have mocked me, I wish there were a sword in my hand, for now I would have killed you.”

Numbers 22.30: 30 The donkey said to Balaam, “Am I not your donkey, on which you have ridden all your life long until today? Was I ever in the habit of doing so to you?”

He said, “No.”

Numbers 22.31: 31 Then Yahweh opened the eyes of Balaam, and he saw Yahweh’s angel standing in the way, with his sword drawn in his hand; and he bowed his head, and fell on his face.

Numbers 22.32: 32 Yahweh’s angel said to him, “Why have you struck your donkey these three times? Behold, I have come out as an adversary, because your way is perverse before me.

Numbers 22.33: 33 The donkey saw me, and turned away before me these three times. Unless she had turned away from me, surely now I would have killed you, and saved her alive.”

Numbers 22.34: 34 Balaam said to Yahweh’s angel, “I have sinned; for I didn’t know that you stood in the way against me. Now therefore, if it displeases you, I will go back again.”

Numbers 22.35: 35 Yahweh’s angel said to Balaam, “Go with the men; but only the word that I shall speak to you, that you shall speak.”

So Balaam went with the princes of Balak.

Numbers 22.36: 36 When Balak heard that Balaam had come, he went out to meet him to the City of Moab, which is on the border of the Arnon, which is in the utmost part of the border.

Numbers 22.37: 37 Balak said to Balaam, “Didn’t I earnestly send for you to summon you? Why didn’t you come to me? Am I not able indeed to promote you to honor?”

Numbers 22.38: 38 Balaam said to Balak, “Behold, I have come to you. Have I now any power at all to speak anything? The word that God puts in my mouth, that shall I speak.”

Numbers 22.39: 39 Balaam went with Balak, and they came to Kiriath Huzoth.

Numbers 22.40: 40 Balak sacrificed cattle and sheep, and sent to Balaam, and to the princes who were with him.

Numbers 22.41: 41 In the morning, Balak took Balaam, and brought him up into the high places of Baal; and he saw from there part of the people.

Numbers 23.0:

23

Numbers 23.1: 1 Balaam said to Balak, “Build here seven altars for me, and prepare here seven bulls and seven rams for me.”

Numbers 23.2: 2 Balak did as Balaam had spoken; and Balak and Balaam offered on every altar a bull and a ram.

Numbers 23.3: 3 Balaam said to Balak, “Stand by your burnt offering, and I will go. Perhaps Yahweh will come to meet me. Whatever he shows me I will tell you.”

He went to a bare height.

Numbers 23.4: 4 God met Balaam, and he said to him, “I have prepared the seven altars, and I have offered up a bull and a ram on every altar.”

Numbers 23.5: 5 Yahweh put a word in Balaam’s mouth, and said, “Return to Balak, and thus you shall speak.”

Numbers 23.6: 6 He returned to him, and behold, he was standing by his burnt offering, he, and all the princes of Moab.

Numbers 23.7: 7 He took up his parable, and said,

“From Aram has Balak brought me,

the king of Moab from the mountains of the East.

Come, curse Jacob for me.

Come, defy Israel.

Numbers 23.8: 8 How shall I curse whom God has not cursed?

How shall I defy whom Yahweh has not defied?

Numbers 23.9: 9 For from the top of the rocks I see him.

From the hills I see him.

Behold, it is a people that dwells alone,

and shall not be listed among the nations.

Numbers 23.10: 10 Who can count the dust of Jacob,

or count the fourth part of Israel?

Let me die the death of the righteous!

Let my last end be like his!”

Numbers 23.11: 11 Balak said to Balaam, “What have you done to me? I took you to curse my enemies, and behold, you have blessed them altogether.”

Numbers 23.12: 12 He answered and said, “Must I not take heed to speak that which Yahweh puts in my mouth?”

Numbers 23.13: 13 Balak said to him, “Please come with me to another place, where you may see them. You shall see just part of them, and shall not see them all. Curse them from there for me.”

Numbers 23.14: 14 He took him into the field of Zophim, to the top of Pisgah, and built seven altars, and offered up a bull and a ram on every altar.

Numbers 23.15: 15 He said to Balak, “Stand here by your burnt offering, while I meet God over there.”

Numbers 23.16: 16 Yahweh met Balaam, and put a word in his mouth, and said, “Return to Balak, and say this.”

Numbers 23.17: 17 He came to him, and behold, he was standing by his burnt offering, and the princes of Moab with him. Balak said to him, “What has Yahweh spoken?”

Numbers 23.18: 18 He took up his parable, and said,

“Rise up, Balak, and hear!

Listen to me, you son of Zippor.

Numbers 23.19: 19 God is not a man, that he should lie,

nor a son of man, that he should repent.

Has he said, and will he not do it?

Or has he spoken, and will he not make it good?

Numbers 23.20: 20 Behold, I have received a command to bless.

He has blessed, and I can’t reverse it.

Numbers 23.21: 21 He has not seen iniquity in Jacob.

Neither has he seen perverseness in Israel.

Yahweh his God is with him.

The shout of a king is among them.

Numbers 23.22: 22 God brings them out of Egypt.

He has as it were the strength of the wild ox.

Numbers 23.23: 23 Surely there is no enchantment with Jacob;

Neither is there any divination with Israel.

Now it shall be said of Jacob and of Israel,

‘What has God done!’

Numbers 23.24: 24 Behold, a people rises up as a lioness.

As a lion he lifts himself up.

He shall not lie down until he eats of the prey,

and drinks the blood of the slain.”

Numbers 23.25: 25 Balak said to Balaam, “Neither curse them at all, nor bless them at all.”

Numbers 23.26: 26 But Balaam answered Balak, “Didn’t I tell you, saying, ‘All that Yahweh speaks, that I must do?’”

Numbers 23.27: 27 Balak said to Balaam, “Come now, I will take you to another place; perhaps it will please God that you may curse them for me from there.”

Numbers 23.28: 28 Balak took Balaam to the top of Peor, that looks down on the desert.

Numbers 23.29: 29 Balaam said to Balak, “Build seven altars for me here, and prepare seven bulls and seven rams for me here.”

Numbers 23.30: 30 Balak did as Balaam had said, and offered up a bull and a ram on every altar.

Numbers 24.0:

24

Numbers 24.1: 1 When Balaam saw that it pleased Yahweh to bless Israel, he didn’t go, as at the other times, to use divination, but he set his face toward the wilderness.

Numbers 24.2: 2 Balaam lifted up his eyes, and he saw Israel dwelling according to their tribes; and the Spirit of God came on him.

Numbers 24.3: 3 He took up his parable, and said,

“Balaam the son of Beor says,

the man whose eyes are open says;

Numbers 24.4: 4 he says, who hears the words of God,

who sees the vision of the Almighty,

falling down, and having his eyes open:

Numbers 24.5: 5 How goodly are your tents, Jacob,

and your dwellings, Israel!

Numbers 24.6: 6 As valleys they are spread out,

as gardens by the riverside,

as aloes which Yahweh has planted,

as cedar trees beside the waters.

Numbers 24.7: 7 Water shall flow from his buckets.

His seed shall be in many waters.

His king shall be higher than Agag.

His kingdom shall be exalted.

Numbers 24.8: 8 God brings him out of Egypt.

He has as it were the strength of the wild ox.

He shall consume the nations his adversaries,

shall break their bones in pieces,

and pierce them with his arrows.

Numbers 24.9: 9 He couched, he lay down as a lion,

as a lioness;

who shall rouse him up?

Everyone who blesses you is blessed.

Everyone who curses you is cursed.”

Numbers 24.10: 10 Balak’s anger burned against Balaam, and he struck his hands together. Balak said to Balaam, “I called you to curse my enemies, and, behold, you have altogether blessed them these three times.

Numbers 24.11: 11 Therefore, flee to your place, now! I thought to promote you to great honor; but, behold, Yahweh has kept you back from honor.”

Numbers 24.12: 12 Balaam said to Balak, “Didn’t I also tell your messengers whom you sent to me, saying,

Numbers 24.13: 13 ‘If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold, I can’t go beyond Yahweh’s word, to do either good or bad from my own mind. I will say what Yahweh says’?

Numbers 24.14: 14 Now, behold, I go to my people. Come, I will inform you what this people shall do to your people in the latter days.”

Numbers 24.15: 15 He took up his parable, and said,

“Balaam the son of Beor says,

the man whose eyes are open says;

Numbers 24.16: 16 he says, who hears the words of God,

knows the knowledge of the Most High,

and who sees the vision of the Almighty,

Falling down, and having his eyes open:

Numbers 24.17: 17 I see him, but not now.

I see him, but not near.

A star will come out of Jacob.

A scepter will rise out of Israel,

and shall strike through the corners of Moab,

and crush all the sons of Sheth.

Numbers 24.18: 18 Edom shall be a possession.

Seir, his enemies, also shall be a possession,

while Israel does valiantly.

Numbers 24.19: 19 Out of Jacob shall one have dominion,

and shall destroy the remnant from the city.”

Numbers 24.20: 20 He looked at Amalek, and took up his parable, and said,

“Amalek was the first of the nations,

But his latter end shall come to destruction.”

Numbers 24.21: 21 He looked at the Kenite, and took up his parable, and said,

“Your dwelling place is strong.

Your nest is set in the rock.

Numbers 24.22: 22 Nevertheless Kain shall be wasted,

until Asshur carries you away captive.”

Numbers 24.23: 23 He took up his parable, and said,

“Alas, who shall live when God does this?

Numbers 24.24: 24 But ships shall come from the coast of Kittim.

They shall afflict Asshur, and shall afflict Eber.

He also shall come to destruction.”

Numbers 24.25: 25 Balaam rose up, and went and returned to his place; and Balak also went his way.

Numbers 25.0:

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Numbers 25.1: 1 Israel stayed in Shittim; and the people began to play the prostitute with the daughters of Moab;

Numbers 25.2: 2 for they called the people to the sacrifices of their gods. The people ate and bowed down to their gods.

Numbers 25.3: 3 Israel joined himself to Baal Peor, and Yahweh’s anger burned against Israel.

Numbers 25.4: 4 Yahweh said to Moses, “Take all the chiefs of the people, and hang them up to Yahweh before the sun, that the fierce anger of Yahweh may turn away from Israel.”

Numbers 25.5: 5 Moses said to the judges of Israel, “Everyone kill his men who have joined themselves to Baal Peor.”

Numbers 25.6: 6 Behold, one of the children of Israel came and brought to his brothers a Midianite woman in the sight of Moses, and in the sight of all the congregation of the children of Israel, while they were weeping at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

Numbers 25.7: 7 When Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the priest, saw it, he rose up from the middle of the congregation, and took a spear in his hand.

Numbers 25.8: 8 He went after the man of Israel into the pavilion, and thrust both of them through, the man of Israel, and the woman through her body. So the plague was stopped among the children of Israel.

Numbers 25.9: 9 Those who died by the plague were twenty-four thousand.

Numbers 25.10: 10 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 25.11: 11 “Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the priest, has turned my wrath away from the children of Israel, in that he was jealous with my jealousy among them, so that I didn’t consume the children of Israel in my jealousy.

Numbers 25.12: 12 Therefore say, ‘Behold, I give to him my covenant of peace.

Numbers 25.13: 13 It shall be to him, and to his offspring after him, the covenant of an everlasting priesthood, because he was jealous for his God, and made atonement for the children of Israel.’”

Numbers 25.14: 14 Now the name of the man of Israel that was slain, who was slain with the Midianite woman, was Zimri, the son of Salu, a prince of a fathers’ house among the Simeonites.

Numbers 25.15: 15 The name of the Midianite woman who was slain was Cozbi, the daughter of Zur. He was head of the people of a fathers’ house in Midian.

Numbers 25.16: 16 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 25.17: 17 “Harass the Midianites, and strike them;

Numbers 25.18: 18 for they harassed you with their wiles, wherein they have deceived you in the matter of Peor, and in the incident regarding Cozbi, the daughter of the prince of Midian, their sister, who was slain on the day of the plague in the matter of Peor.”

Numbers 26.0:

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Numbers 26.1: 1 After the plague, Yahweh spoke to Moses and to Eleazar the son of Aaron the priest, saying,

Numbers 26.2: 2 “Take a census of all the congregation of the children of Israel, from twenty years old and upward, by their fathers’ houses, all who are able to go out to war in Israel.”

Numbers 26.3: 3 Moses and Eleazar the priest spoke with them in the plains of Moab by the Jordan at Jericho, saying,

Numbers 26.4: 4 “Take a census, from twenty years old and upward, as Yahweh commanded Moses and the children of Israel.”

These are those that came out of the land of Egypt.

Numbers 26.5: 5 Reuben, the firstborn of Israel; the sons of Reuben: of Hanoch, the family of the Hanochites; of Pallu, the family of the Palluites;

Numbers 26.6: 6 of Hezron, the family of the Hezronites; of Carmi, the family of the Carmites.

Numbers 26.7: 7 These are the families of the Reubenites; and those who were counted of them were forty-three thousand seven hundred thirty.

Numbers 26.8: 8 The son of Pallu: Eliab.

Numbers 26.9: 9 The sons of Eliab: Nemuel, Dathan, and Abiram. These are that Dathan and Abiram who were called by the congregation, who rebelled against Moses and against Aaron in the company of Korah when they rebelled against Yahweh;

Numbers 26.10: 10 and the earth opened its mouth, and swallowed them up together with Korah when that company died; at the time the fire devoured two hundred fifty men, and they became a sign.

Numbers 26.11: 11 Notwithstanding, the sons of Korah didn’t die.

Numbers 26.12: 12 The sons of Simeon after their families: of Nemuel, the family of the Nemuelites; of Jamin, the family of the Jaminites; of Jachin, the family of the Jachinites;

Numbers 26.13: 13 of Zerah, the family of the Zerahites; of Shaul, the family of the Shaulites.

Numbers 26.14: 14 These are the families of the Simeonites, twenty-two thousand two hundred.

Numbers 26.15: 15 The sons of Gad after their families: of Zephon, the family of the Zephonites; of Haggi, the family of the Haggites; of Shuni, the family of the Shunites;

Numbers 26.16: 16 of Ozni, the family of the Oznites; of Eri, the family of the Erites;

Numbers 26.17: 17 of Arod, the family of the Arodites; of Areli, the family of the Arelites.

Numbers 26.18: 18 These are the families of the sons of Gad according to those who were counted of them, forty thousand and five hundred.

Numbers 26.19: 19 The sons of Judah: Er and Onan. Er and Onan died in the land of Canaan.

Numbers 26.20: 20 The sons of Judah after their families were: of Shelah, the family of the Shelanites; of Perez, the family of the Perezites; of Zerah, the family of the Zerahites.

Numbers 26.21: 21 The sons of Perez were: of Hezron, the family of the Hezronites; of Hamul, the family of the Hamulites.

Numbers 26.22: 22 These are the families of Judah according to those who were counted of them, seventy-six thousand five hundred.

Numbers 26.23: 23 The sons of Issachar after their families: of Tola, the family of the Tolaites; of Puvah, the family of the Punites;

Numbers 26.24: 24 of Jashub, the family of the Jashubites; of Shimron, the family of the Shimronites.

Numbers 26.25: 25 These are the families of Issachar according to those who were counted of them, sixty-four thousand three hundred.

Numbers 26.26: 26 The sons of Zebulun after their families: of Sered, the family of the Seredites; of Elon, the family of the Elonites; of Jahleel, the family of the Jahleelites.

Numbers 26.27: 27 These are the families of the Zebulunites according to those who were counted of them, sixty thousand five hundred.

Numbers 26.28: 28 The sons of Joseph after their families: Manasseh and Ephraim.

Numbers 26.29: 29 The sons of Manasseh: of Machir, the family of the Machirites; and Machir became the father of Gilead; of Gilead, the family of the Gileadites.

Numbers 26.30: 30 These are the sons of Gilead: of Iezer, the family of the Iezerites; of Helek, the family of the Helekites;

Numbers 26.31: 31 and Asriel, the family of the Asrielites; and Shechem, the family of the Shechemites;

Numbers 26.32: 32 and Shemida, the family of the Shemidaites; and Hepher, the family of the Hepherites.

Numbers 26.33: 33 Zelophehad the son of Hepher had no sons, but daughters: and the names of the daughters of Zelophehad were Mahlah, Noah, Hoglah, Milcah, and Tirzah.

Numbers 26.34: 34 These are the families of Manasseh. Those who were counted of them were fifty-two thousand seven hundred.

Numbers 26.35: 35 These are the sons of Ephraim after their families: of Shuthelah, the family of the Shuthelahites; of Becher, the family of the Becherites; of Tahan, the family of the Tahanites.

Numbers 26.36: 36 These are the sons of Shuthelah: of Eran, the family of the Eranites.

Numbers 26.37: 37 These are the families of the sons of Ephraim according to those who were counted of them, thirty-two thousand five hundred. These are the sons of Joseph after their families.

Numbers 26.38: 38 The sons of Benjamin after their families: of Bela, the family of the Belaites; of Ashbel, the family of the Ashbelites; of Ahiram, the family of the Ahiramites;

Numbers 26.39: 39 of Shephupham, the family of the Shuphamites; of Hupham, the family of the Huphamites.

Numbers 26.40: 40 The sons of Bela were Ard and Naaman: the family of the Ardites; and of Naaman, the family of the Naamites.

Numbers 26.41: 41 These are the sons of Benjamin after their families; and those who were counted of them were forty-five thousand six hundred.

Numbers 26.42: 42 These are the sons of Dan after their families: of Shuham, the family of the Shuhamites. These are the families of Dan after their families.

Numbers 26.43: 43 All the families of the Shuhamites, according to those who were counted of them, were sixty-four thousand four hundred.

Numbers 26.44: 44 The sons of Asher after their families: of Imnah, the family of the Imnites; of Ishvi, the family of the Ishvites; of Beriah, the family of the Berites.

Numbers 26.45: 45 Of the sons of Beriah: of Heber, the family of the Heberites; of Malchiel, the family of the Malchielites.

Numbers 26.46: 46 The name of the daughter of Asher was Serah.

Numbers 26.47: 47 These are the families of the sons of Asher according to those who were counted of them, fifty-three thousand and four hundred.

Numbers 26.48: 48 The sons of Naphtali after their families: of Jahzeel, the family of the Jahzeelites; of Guni, the family of the Gunites;

Numbers 26.49: 49 of Jezer, the family of the Jezerites; of Shillem, the family of the Shillemites.

Numbers 26.50: 50 These are the families of Naphtali according to their families; and those who were counted of them were forty-five thousand four hundred.

Numbers 26.51: 51 These are those who were counted of the children of Israel, six hundred one thousand seven hundred thirty.

Numbers 26.52: 52 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 26.53: 53 “To these the land shall be divided for an inheritance according to the number of names.

Numbers 26.54: 54 To the more you shall give the more inheritance, and to the fewer you shall give the less inheritance. To everyone according to those who were counted of him shall his inheritance be given.

Numbers 26.55: 55 Notwithstanding, the land shall be divided by lot. According to the names of the tribes of their fathers they shall inherit.

Numbers 26.56: 56 According to the lot shall their inheritance be divided between the more and the fewer.”

Numbers 26.57: 57 These are those who were counted of the Levites after their families: of Gershon, the family of the Gershonites; of Kohath, the family of the Kohathites; of Merari, the family of the Merarites.

Numbers 26.58: 58 These are the families of Levi: the family of the Libnites, the family of the Hebronites, the family of the Mahlites, the family of the Mushites, and the family of the Korahites. Kohath became the father of Amram.

Numbers 26.59: 59 The name of Amram’s wife was Jochebed, the daughter of Levi, who was born to Levi in Egypt. She bore to Amram Aaron and Moses, and Miriam their sister.

Numbers 26.60: 60 To Aaron were born Nadab and Abihu, Eleazar and Ithamar.

Numbers 26.61: 61 Nadab and Abihu died when they offered strange fire before Yahweh.

Numbers 26.62: 62 Those who were counted of them were twenty-three thousand, every male from a month old and upward; for they were not counted among the children of Israel, because there was no inheritance given them among the children of Israel.

Numbers 26.63: 63 These are those who were counted by Moses and Eleazar the priest, who counted the children of Israel in the plains of Moab by the Jordan at Jericho.

Numbers 26.64: 64 But among these there was not a man of them who were counted by Moses and Aaron the priest, who counted the children of Israel in the wilderness of Sinai.

Numbers 26.65: 65 For Yahweh had said of them, “They shall surely die in the wilderness.” There was not a man left of them, except Caleb the son of Jephunneh, and Joshua the son of Nun.

Numbers 27.0:

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Numbers 27.1: 1 Then the daughters of Zelophehad, the son of Hepher, the son of Gilead, the son of Machir, the son of Manasseh, of the families of Manasseh the son of Joseph came near. These are the names of his daughters: Mahlah, Noah, Hoglah, Milcah, and Tirzah.

Numbers 27.2: 2 They stood before Moses, before Eleazar the priest, and before the princes and all the congregation, at the door of the Tent of Meeting, saying,

Numbers 27.3: 3 “Our father died in the wilderness. He was not among the company of those who gathered themselves together against Yahweh in the company of Korah, but he died in his own sin. He had no sons.

Numbers 27.4: 4 Why should the name of our father be taken away from among his family, because he had no son? Give to us a possession among the brothers of our father.”

Numbers 27.5: 5 Moses brought their cause before Yahweh.

Numbers 27.6: 6 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 27.7: 7 “The daughters of Zelophehad speak right. You shall surely give them a possession of an inheritance among their father’s brothers. You shall cause the inheritance of their father to pass to them.

Numbers 27.8: 8 You shall speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘If a man dies, and has no son, then you shall cause his inheritance to pass to his daughter.

Numbers 27.9: 9 If he has no daughter, then you shall give his inheritance to his brothers.

Numbers 27.10: 10 If he has no brothers, then you shall give his inheritance to his father’s brothers.

Numbers 27.11: 11 If his father has no brothers, then you shall give his inheritance to his kinsman who is next to him of his family, and he shall possess it. This shall be a statute and ordinance for the children of Israel, as Yahweh commanded Moses.’”

Numbers 27.12: 12 Yahweh said to Moses, “Go up into this mountain of Abarim, and see the land which I have given to the children of Israel.

Numbers 27.13: 13 When you have seen it, you also shall be gathered to your people, as Aaron your brother was gathered;

Numbers 27.14: 14 because in the strife of the congregation, you rebelled against my word in the wilderness of Zin, to honor me as holy at the waters before their eyes.” (These are the waters of Meribah of Kadesh in the wilderness of Zin.)

Numbers 27.15: 15 Moses spoke to Yahweh, saying,

Numbers 27.16: 16 “Let Yahweh, the God of the spirits of all flesh, appoint a man over the congregation,

Numbers 27.17: 17 who may go out before them, and who may come in before them, and who may lead them out, and who may bring them in, that the congregation of Yahweh may not be as sheep which have no shepherd.”

Numbers 27.18: 18 Yahweh said to Moses, “Take Joshua the son of Nun, a man in whom is the Spirit, and lay your hand on him.

Numbers 27.19: 19 Set him before Eleazar the priest, and before all the congregation; and commission him in their sight.

Numbers 27.20: 20 You shall give authority to him, that all the congregation of the children of Israel may obey.

Numbers 27.21: 21 He shall stand before Eleazar the priest, who shall inquire for him by the judgment of the Urim before Yahweh. At his word they shall go out, and at his word they shall come in, both he and all the children of Israel with him, even all the congregation.”

Numbers 27.22: 22 Moses did as Yahweh commanded him. He took Joshua, and set him before Eleazar the priest and before all the congregation.

Numbers 27.23: 23 He laid his hands on him and commissioned him, as Yahweh spoke by Moses.

Numbers 28.0:

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Numbers 28.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 28.2: 2 “Command the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘See that you present my offering, my food for my offerings made by fire, as a pleasant aroma to me, in their due season.’

Numbers 28.3: 3 You shall tell them, ‘This is the offering made by fire which you shall offer to Yahweh: male lambs a year old without defect, two day by day, for a continual burnt offering.

Numbers 28.4: 4 You shall offer the one lamb in the morning, and you shall offer the other lamb at evening,

Numbers 28.5: 5 with one tenth of an ephah of fine flour for a meal offering, mixed with the fourth part of a hin of beaten oil.

Numbers 28.6: 6 It is a continual burnt offering which was ordained in Mount Sinai for a pleasant aroma, an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Numbers 28.7: 7 Its drink offering shall be the fourth part of a hin for each lamb. You shall pour out a drink offering of strong drink to Yahweh in the holy place.

Numbers 28.8: 8 The other lamb you shall offer at evening. As the meal offering of the morning, and as its drink offering, you shall offer it, an offering made by fire, for a pleasant aroma to Yahweh.

Numbers 28.9: 9 “‘On the Sabbath day, you shall offer two male lambs a year old without defect, and two tenths of an ephah of fine flour for a meal offering mixed with oil, and its drink offering:

Numbers 28.10: 10 this is the burnt offering of every Sabbath, in addition to the continual burnt offering and its drink offering.

Numbers 28.11: 11 “‘In the beginnings of your months, you shall offer a burnt offering to Yahweh: two young bulls, one ram, seven male lambs a year old without defect,

Numbers 28.12: 12 and three tenths of an ephah of fine flour for a meal offering mixed with oil, for each bull; and two tenth parts of fine flour for a meal offering mixed with oil, for the one ram;

Numbers 28.13: 13 and one tenth part of fine flour mixed with oil for a meal offering to every lamb, as a burnt offering of a pleasant aroma, an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Numbers 28.14: 14 Their drink offerings shall be half a hin of wine for a bull, the third part of a hin for the ram, and the fourth part of a hin for a lamb. This is the burnt offering of every month throughout the months of the year.

Numbers 28.15: 15 Also, one male goat for a sin offering to Yahweh shall be offered in addition to the continual burnt offering and its drink offering.

Numbers 28.16: 16 “‘In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month, is Yahweh’s Passover.

Numbers 28.17: 17 On the fifteenth day of this month shall be a feast. Unleavened bread shall be eaten for seven days.

Numbers 28.18: 18 In the first day shall be a holy convocation. You shall do no regular work,

Numbers 28.19: 19 but you shall offer an offering made by fire, a burnt offering to Yahweh: two young bulls, one ram, and seven male lambs a year old. They shall be without defect,

Numbers 28.20: 20 with their meal offering, fine flour mixed with oil. You shall offer three tenths for a bull, and two tenths for the ram.

Numbers 28.21: 21 You shall offer one tenth for every lamb of the seven lambs;

Numbers 28.22: 22 and one male goat for a sin offering, to make atonement for you.

Numbers 28.23: 23 You shall offer these in addition to the burnt offering of the morning, which is for a continual burnt offering.

Numbers 28.24: 24 In this way you shall offer daily, for seven days, the food of the offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh. It shall be offered in addition to the continual burnt offering and its drink offering.

Numbers 28.25: 25 On the seventh day you shall have a holy convocation. You shall do no regular work.

Numbers 28.26: 26 “‘Also in the day of the first fruits, when you offer a new meal offering to Yahweh in your feast of weeks, you shall have a holy convocation. You shall do no regular work;

Numbers 28.27: 27 but you shall offer a burnt offering for a pleasant aroma to Yahweh: two young bulls, one ram, seven male lambs a year old;

Numbers 28.28: 28 and their meal offering, fine flour mixed with oil, three tenths for each bull, two tenths for the one ram,

Numbers 28.29: 29 one tenth for every lamb of the seven lambs;

Numbers 28.30: 30 and one male goat, to make atonement for you.

Numbers 28.31: 31 Besides the continual burnt offering and its meal offering, you shall offer them and their drink offerings. See that they are without defect.

Numbers 29.0:

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Numbers 29.1: 1 “‘In the seventh month, on the first day of the month, you shall have a holy convocation; you shall do no regular work. It is a day of blowing of trumpets to you.

Numbers 29.2: 2 You shall offer a burnt offering for a pleasant aroma to Yahweh: one young bull, one ram, seven male lambs a year old without defect;

Numbers 29.3: 3 and their meal offering, fine flour mixed with oil: three tenths for the bull, two tenths for the ram,

Numbers 29.4: 4 and one tenth for every lamb of the seven lambs;

Numbers 29.5: 5 and one male goat for a sin offering, to make atonement for you;

Numbers 29.6: 6 in addition to the burnt offering of the new moon with its meal offering, and the continual burnt offering with its meal offering, and their drink offerings, according to their ordinance, for a pleasant aroma, an offering made by fire to Yahweh.

Numbers 29.7: 7 “‘On the tenth day of this seventh month you shall have a holy convocation. You shall afflict your souls. You shall do no kind of work;

Numbers 29.8: 8 but you shall offer a burnt offering to Yahweh for a pleasant aroma: one young bull, one ram, seven male lambs a year old, all without defect;

Numbers 29.9: 9 and their meal offering, fine flour mixed with oil: three tenths for the bull, two tenths for the one ram,

Numbers 29.10: 10 one tenth for every lamb of the seven lambs;

Numbers 29.11: 11 one male goat for a sin offering, in addition to the sin offering of atonement, and the continual burnt offering, and its meal offering, and their drink offerings.

Numbers 29.12: 12 “‘On the fifteenth day of the seventh month you shall have a holy convocation. You shall do no regular work. You shall keep a feast to Yahweh seven days.

Numbers 29.13: 13 You shall offer a burnt offering, an offering made by fire, of a pleasant aroma to Yahweh: thirteen young bulls, two rams, fourteen male lambs a year old, all without defect;

Numbers 29.14: 14 and their meal offering, fine flour mixed with oil: three tenths for every bull of the thirteen bulls, two tenths for each ram of the two rams,

Numbers 29.15: 15 and one tenth for every lamb of the fourteen lambs;

Numbers 29.16: 16 and one male goat for a sin offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering, its meal offering, and its drink offering.

Numbers 29.17: 17 “‘On the second day you shall offer twelve young bulls, two rams, and fourteen male lambs a year old without defect;

Numbers 29.18: 18 and their meal offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;

Numbers 29.19: 19 and one male goat for a sin offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering, with its meal offering and their drink offerings.

Numbers 29.20: 20 “‘On the third day: eleven bulls, two rams, fourteen male lambs a year old without defect;

Numbers 29.21: 21 and their meal offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;

Numbers 29.22: 22 and one male goat for a sin offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering, and its meal offering, and its drink offering.

Numbers 29.23: 23 “‘On the fourth day ten bulls, two rams, fourteen male lambs a year old without defect;

Numbers 29.24: 24 their meal offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;

Numbers 29.25: 25 and one male goat for a sin offering; in addition to the continual burnt offering, its meal offering, and its drink offering.

Numbers 29.26: 26 “‘On the fifth day: nine bulls, two rams, fourteen male lambs a year old without defect;

Numbers 29.27: 27 and their meal offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance,

Numbers 29.28: 28 and one male goat for a sin offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering, and its meal offering, and its drink offering.

Numbers 29.29: 29 “‘On the sixth day: eight bulls, two rams, fourteen male lambs a year old without defect;

Numbers 29.30: 30 and their meal offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance,

Numbers 29.31: 31 and one male goat for a sin offering; in addition to the continual burnt offering, its meal offering, and the drink offerings of it.

Numbers 29.32: 32 “‘On the seventh day: seven bulls, two rams, fourteen male lambs a year old without defect;

Numbers 29.33: 33 and their meal offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance,

Numbers 29.34: 34 and one male goat for a sin offering; in addition to the continual burnt offering, its meal offering, and its drink offering.

Numbers 29.35: 35 “‘On the eighth day you shall have a solemn assembly. You shall do no regular work;

Numbers 29.36: 36 but you shall offer a burnt offering, an offering made by fire, a pleasant aroma to Yahweh: one bull, one ram, seven male lambs a year old without defect;

Numbers 29.37: 37 their meal offering and their drink offerings for the bull, for the ram, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the ordinance,

Numbers 29.38: 38 and one male goat for a sin offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering, with its meal offering, and its drink offering.

Numbers 29.39: 39 “‘You shall offer these to Yahweh in your set feasts—in addition to your vows and your free will offerings—for your burnt offerings, your meal offerings, your drink offerings, and your peace offerings.’”

Numbers 29.40: 40 Moses told the children of Israel according to all that Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 30.0:

30

Numbers 30.1: 1 Moses spoke to the heads of the tribes of the children of Israel, saying, “This is the thing which Yahweh has commanded.

Numbers 30.2: 2 When a man vows a vow to Yahweh, or swears an oath to bind his soul with a bond, he shall not break his word. He shall do according to all that proceeds out of his mouth.

Numbers 30.3: 3 “Also, when a woman vows a vow to Yahweh and binds herself by a pledge, being in her father’s house, in her youth,

Numbers 30.4: 4 and her father hears her vow and her pledge with which she has bound her soul, and her father says nothing to her, then all her vows shall stand, and every pledge with which she has bound her soul shall stand.

Numbers 30.5: 5 But if her father forbids her in the day that he hears, none of her vows or of her pledges with which she has bound her soul, shall stand. Yahweh will forgive her, because her father has forbidden her.

Numbers 30.6: 6 “If she has a husband, while her vows are on her, or the rash utterance of her lips with which she has bound her soul,

Numbers 30.7: 7 and her husband hears it, and says nothing to her in the day that he hears it; then her vows shall stand, and her pledges with which she has bound her soul shall stand.

Numbers 30.8: 8 But if her husband forbids her in the day that he hears it, then he makes void her vow which is on her and the rash utterance of her lips, with which she has bound her soul. Yahweh will forgive her.

Numbers 30.9: 9 “But the vow of a widow, or of her who is divorced, everything with which she has bound her soul shall stand against her.

Numbers 30.10: 10 “If she vowed in her husband’s house or bound her soul by a bond with an oath,

Numbers 30.11: 11 and her husband heard it, and held his peace at her and didn’t disallow her, then all her vows shall stand, and every pledge with which she bound her soul shall stand.

Numbers 30.12: 12 But if her husband made them null and void in the day that he heard them, then whatever proceeded out of her lips concerning her vows, or concerning the bond of her soul, shall not stand. Her husband has made them void. Yahweh will forgive her.

Numbers 30.13: 13 Every vow, and every binding oath to afflict the soul, her husband may establish it, or her husband may make it void.

Numbers 30.14: 14 But if her husband says nothing to her from day to day, then he establishes all her vows or all her pledges which are on her. He has established them, because he said nothing to her in the day that he heard them.

Numbers 30.15: 15 But if he makes them null and void after he has heard them, then he shall bear her iniquity.”

Numbers 30.16: 16 These are the statutes which Yahweh commanded Moses, between a man and his wife, between a father and his daughter, being in her youth, in her father’s house.

Numbers 31.0:

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Numbers 31.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 31.2: 2 “Avenge the children of Israel on the Midianites. Afterward you shall be gathered to your people.”

Numbers 31.3: 3 Moses spoke to the people, saying, “Arm men from among you for war, that they may go against Midian, to execute Yahweh’s vengeance on Midian.

Numbers 31.4: 4 You shall send one thousand out of every tribe, throughout all the tribes of Israel, to the war.”

Numbers 31.5: 5 So there were delivered, out of the thousands of Israel, a thousand from every tribe, twelve thousand armed for war.

Numbers 31.6: 6 Moses sent them, one thousand of every tribe, to the war with Phinehas the son of Eleazar the priest, to the war, with the vessels of the sanctuary and the trumpets for the alarm in his hand.

Numbers 31.7: 7 They fought against Midian, as Yahweh commanded Moses. They killed every male.

Numbers 31.8: 8 They killed the kings of Midian with the rest of their slain: Evi, Rekem, Zur, Hur, and Reba, the five kings of Midian. They also killed Balaam the son of Beor with the sword.

Numbers 31.9: 9 The children of Israel took the women of Midian captive with their little ones; and all their livestock, all their flocks, and all their goods, they took as plunder.

Numbers 31.10: 10 All their cities in the places in which they lived, and all their encampments, they burned with fire.

Numbers 31.11: 11 They took all the captives, and all the plunder, both of man and of animal.

Numbers 31.12: 12 They brought the captives with the prey and the plunder, to Moses, and to Eleazar the priest, and to the congregation of the children of Israel, to the camp at the plains of Moab, which are by the Jordan at Jericho.

Numbers 31.13: 13 Moses and Eleazar the priest, with all the princes of the congregation, went out to meet them outside of the camp.

Numbers 31.14: 14 Moses was angry with the officers of the army, the captains of thousands and the captains of hundreds, who came from the service of the war.

Numbers 31.15: 15 Moses said to them, “Have you saved all the women alive?

Numbers 31.16: 16 Behold, these caused the children of Israel, through the counsel of Balaam, to commit trespass against Yahweh in the matter of Peor, and so the plague was among the congregation of Yahweh.

Numbers 31.17: 17 Now therefore kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman who has known man by lying with him.

Numbers 31.18: 18 But all the girls, who have not known man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves.

Numbers 31.19: 19 “Encamp outside of the camp for seven days. Whoever has killed any person, and whoever has touched any slain, purify yourselves on the third day and on the seventh day, you and your captives.

Numbers 31.20: 20 You shall purify every garment, and all that is made of skin, and all work of goats’ hair, and all things made of wood.”

Numbers 31.21: 21 Eleazar the priest said to the men of war who went to the battle, “This is the statute of the law which Yahweh has commanded Moses:

Numbers 31.22: 22 however the gold, and the silver, the bronze, the iron, the tin, and the lead,

Numbers 31.23: 23 everything that may withstand the fire, you shall make to go through the fire, and it shall be clean; nevertheless it shall be purified with the water for impurity. All that doesn’t withstand the fire you shall make to go through the water.

Numbers 31.24: 24 You shall wash your clothes on the seventh day, and you shall be clean. Afterward you shall come into the camp.”

Numbers 31.25: 25 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 31.26: 26 “Count the plunder that was taken, both of man and of animal, you, and Eleazar the priest, and the heads of the fathers’ households of the congregation;

Numbers 31.27: 27 and divide the plunder into two parts: between the men skilled in war, who went out to battle, and all the congregation.

Numbers 31.28: 28 Levy a tribute to Yahweh of the men of war who went out to battle: one soul of five hundred; of the persons, of the cattle, of the donkeys, and of the flocks.

Numbers 31.29: 29 Take it from their half, and give it to Eleazar the priest, for Yahweh’s wave offering.

Numbers 31.30: 30 Of the children of Israel’s half, you shall take one drawn out of every fifty, of the persons, of the cattle, of the donkeys, and of the flocks, of all the livestock, and give them to the Levites, who perform the duty of Yahweh’s tabernacle.”

Numbers 31.31: 31 Moses and Eleazar the priest did as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 31.32: 32 Now the plunder, over and above the booty which the men of war took, was six hundred seventy-five thousand sheep,

Numbers 31.33: 33 seventy-two thousand head of cattle,

Numbers 31.34: 34 sixty-one thousand donkeys,

Numbers 31.35: 35 and thirty-two thousand persons in all, of the women who had not known man by lying with him.

Numbers 31.36: 36 The half, which was the portion of those who went out to war, was in number three hundred thirty-seven thousand five hundred sheep;

Numbers 31.37: 37 and Yahweh’s tribute of the sheep was six hundred seventy-five.

Numbers 31.38: 38 The cattle were thirty-six thousand, of which Yahweh’s tribute was seventy-two.

Numbers 31.39: 39 The donkeys were thirty thousand five hundred, of which Yahweh’s tribute was sixty-one.

Numbers 31.40: 40 The persons were sixteen thousand, of whom Yahweh’s tribute was thirty-two persons.

Numbers 31.41: 41 Moses gave the tribute, which was Yahweh’s wave offering, to Eleazar the priest, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 31.42: 42 Of the children of Israel’s half, which Moses divided off from the men who fought

Numbers 31.43: 43 (now the congregation’s half was three hundred thirty-seven thousand five hundred sheep,

Numbers 31.44: 44 thirty-six thousand head of cattle,

Numbers 31.45: 45 thirty thousand five hundred donkeys,

Numbers 31.46: 46 and sixteen thousand persons),

Numbers 31.47: 47 even of the children of Israel’s half, Moses took one drawn out of every fifty, both of man and of animal, and gave them to the Levites, who performed the duty of Yahweh’s tabernacle, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Numbers 31.48: 48 The officers who were over the thousands of the army, the captains of thousands, and the captains of hundreds, came near to Moses.

Numbers 31.49: 49 They said to Moses, “Your servants have taken the sum of the men of war who are under our command, and there lacks not one man of us.

Numbers 31.50: 50 We have brought Yahweh’s offering, what every man found: gold ornaments, armlets, bracelets, signet rings, earrings, and necklaces, to make atonement for our souls before Yahweh.”

Numbers 31.51: 51 Moses and Eleazar the priest took their gold, even all worked jewels.

Numbers 31.52: 52 All the gold of the wave offering that they offered up to Yahweh, of the captains of thousands, and of the captains of hundreds, was sixteen thousand seven hundred fifty shekels.

Numbers 31.53: 53 The men of war had taken booty, every man for himself.

Numbers 31.54: 54 Moses and Eleazar the priest took the gold of the captains of thousands and of hundreds, and brought it into the Tent of Meeting for a memorial for the children of Israel before Yahweh.

Numbers 32.0:

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Numbers 32.1: 1 Now the children of Reuben and the children of Gad had a very great multitude of livestock. They saw the land of Jazer, and the land of Gilead. Behold, the place was a place for livestock.

Numbers 32.2: 2 Then the children of Gad and the children of Reuben came and spoke to Moses, and to Eleazar the priest, and to the princes of the congregation, saying,

Numbers 32.3: 3 “Ataroth, Dibon, Jazer, Nimrah, Heshbon, Elealeh, Sebam, Nebo, and Beon,

Numbers 32.4: 4 the land which Yahweh struck before the congregation of Israel, is a land for livestock; and your servants have livestock.”

Numbers 32.5: 5 They said, “If we have found favor in your sight, let this land be given to your servants for a possession. Don’t bring us over the Jordan.”

Numbers 32.6: 6 Moses said to the children of Gad, and to the children of Reuben, “Shall your brothers go to war while you sit here?

Numbers 32.7: 7 Why do you discourage the heart of the children of Israel from going over into the land which Yahweh has given them?

Numbers 32.8: 8 Your fathers did so when I sent them from Kadesh Barnea to see the land.

Numbers 32.9: 9 For when they went up to the valley of Eshcol, and saw the land, they discouraged the heart of the children of Israel, that they should not go into the land which Yahweh had given them.

Numbers 32.10: 10 Yahweh’s anger burned in that day, and he swore, saying,

Numbers 32.11: 11 ‘Surely none of the men who came up out of Egypt, from twenty years old and upward, shall see the land which I swore to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob; because they have not wholly followed me,

Numbers 32.12: 12 except Caleb the son of Jephunneh the Kenizzite, and Joshua the son of Nun, because they have followed Yahweh completely.’

Numbers 32.13: 13 Yahweh’s anger burned against Israel, and he made them wander back and forth in the wilderness forty years, until all the generation who had done evil in Yahweh’s sight was consumed.

Numbers 32.14: 14 “Behold, you have risen up in your fathers’ place, an increase of sinful men, to increase the fierce anger of Yahweh toward Israel.

Numbers 32.15: 15 For if you turn away from after him, he will yet again leave them in the wilderness; and you will destroy all these people.”

Numbers 32.16: 16 They came near to him, and said, “We will build sheepfolds here for our livestock, and cities for our little ones;

Numbers 32.17: 17 but we ourselves will be ready armed to go before the children of Israel, until we have brought them to their place. Our little ones shall dwell in the fortified cities because of the inhabitants of the land.

Numbers 32.18: 18 We will not return to our houses until the children of Israel have all received their inheritance.

Numbers 32.19: 19 For we will not inherit with them on the other side of the Jordan and beyond, because our inheritance has come to us on this side of the Jordan eastward.”

Numbers 32.20: 20 Moses said to them: “If you will do this thing, if you will arm yourselves to go before Yahweh to the war,

Numbers 32.21: 21 and every one of your armed men will pass over the Jordan before Yahweh until he has driven out his enemies from before him,

Numbers 32.22: 22 and the land is subdued before Yahweh; then afterward you shall return, and be clear of obligation to Yahweh and to Israel. Then this land shall be your possession before Yahweh.

Numbers 32.23: 23 “But if you will not do so, behold, you have sinned against Yahweh; and be sure your sin will find you out.

Numbers 32.24: 24 Build cities for your little ones, and folds for your sheep; and do that which has proceeded out of your mouth.”

Numbers 32.25: 25 The children of Gad and the children of Reuben spoke to Moses, saying, “Your servants will do as my lord commands.

Numbers 32.26: 26 Our little ones, our wives, our flocks, and all our livestock shall be there in the cities of Gilead;

Numbers 32.27: 27 but your servants will pass over, every man who is armed for war, before Yahweh to battle, as my lord says.”

Numbers 32.28: 28 So Moses commanded concerning them to Eleazar the priest, and to Joshua the son of Nun, and to the heads of the fathers’ households of the tribes of the children of Israel.

Numbers 32.29: 29 Moses said to them, “If the children of Gad and the children of Reuben will pass with you over the Jordan, every man who is armed to battle before Yahweh, and the land is subdued before you, then you shall give them the land of Gilead for a possession;

Numbers 32.30: 30 but if they will not pass over with you armed, they shall have possessions among you in the land of Canaan.”

Numbers 32.31: 31 The children of Gad and the children of Reuben answered, saying, “As Yahweh has said to your servants, so will we do.

Numbers 32.32: 32 We will pass over armed before Yahweh into the land of Canaan, and the possession of our inheritance shall remain with us beyond the Jordan.”

Numbers 32.33: 33 Moses gave to them, even to the children of Gad, and to the children of Reuben, and to the half-tribe of Manasseh the son of Joseph, the kingdom of Sihon king of the Amorites, and the kingdom of Og king of Bashan; the land, according to its cities and borders, even the cities of the surrounding land.

Numbers 32.34: 34 The children of Gad built Dibon, Ataroth, Aroer,

Numbers 32.35: 35 Atroth-shophan, Jazer, Jogbehah,

Numbers 32.36: 36 Beth Nimrah, and Beth Haran: fortified cities and folds for sheep.

Numbers 32.37: 37 The children of Reuben built Heshbon, Elealeh, Kiriathaim,

Numbers 32.38: 38 Nebo, and Baal Meon, (their names being changed), and Sibmah. They gave other names to the cities which they built.

Numbers 32.39: 39 The children of Machir the son of Manasseh went to Gilead, took it, and dispossessed the Amorites who were therein.

Numbers 32.40: 40 Moses gave Gilead to Machir the son of Manasseh; and he lived therein.

Numbers 32.41: 41 Jair the son of Manasseh went and took its villages, and called them Havvoth Jair.

Numbers 32.42: 42 Nobah went and took Kenath and its villages, and called it Nobah, after his own name.

Numbers 33.0:

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Numbers 33.1: 1 These are the journeys of the children of Israel, when they went out of the land of Egypt by their armies under the hand of Moses and Aaron.

Numbers 33.2: 2 Moses wrote the starting points of their journeys by the commandment of Yahweh. These are their journeys according to their starting points.

Numbers 33.3: 3 They traveled from Rameses in the first month, on the fifteenth day of the first month; on the next day after the Passover, the children of Israel went out with a high hand in the sight of all the Egyptians,

Numbers 33.4: 4 while the Egyptians were burying all their firstborn, whom Yahweh had struck among them. Yahweh also executed judgments on their gods.

Numbers 33.5: 5 The children of Israel traveled from Rameses, and encamped in Succoth.

Numbers 33.6: 6 They traveled from Succoth, and encamped in Etham, which is in the edge of the wilderness.

Numbers 33.7: 7 They traveled from Etham, and turned back to Pihahiroth, which is before Baal Zephon, and they encamped before Migdol.

Numbers 33.8: 8 They traveled from before Hahiroth, and crossed through the middle of the sea into the wilderness. They went three days’ journey in the wilderness of Etham, and encamped in Marah.

Numbers 33.9: 9 They traveled from Marah, and came to Elim. In Elim, there were twelve springs of water and seventy palm trees, and they encamped there.

Numbers 33.10: 10 They traveled from Elim, and encamped by the Red Sea.

Numbers 33.11: 11 They traveled from the Red Sea, and encamped in the wilderness of Sin.

Numbers 33.12: 12 They traveled from the wilderness of Sin, and encamped in Dophkah.

Numbers 33.13: 13 They traveled from Dophkah, and encamped in Alush.

Numbers 33.14: 14 They traveled from Alush, and encamped in Rephidim, where there was no water for the people to drink.

Numbers 33.15: 15 They traveled from Rephidim, and encamped in the wilderness of Sinai.

Numbers 33.16: 16 They traveled from the wilderness of Sinai, and encamped in Kibroth Hattaavah.

Numbers 33.17: 17 They traveled from Kibroth Hattaavah, and encamped in Hazeroth.

Numbers 33.18: 18 They traveled from Hazeroth, and encamped in Rithmah.

Numbers 33.19: 19 They traveled from Rithmah, and encamped in Rimmon Perez.

Numbers 33.20: 20 They traveled from Rimmon Perez, and encamped in Libnah.

Numbers 33.21: 21 They traveled from Libnah, and encamped in Rissah.

Numbers 33.22: 22 They traveled from Rissah, and encamped in Kehelathah.

Numbers 33.23: 23 They traveled from Kehelathah, and encamped in Mount Shepher.

Numbers 33.24: 24 They traveled from Mount Shepher, and encamped in Haradah.

Numbers 33.25: 25 They traveled from Haradah, and encamped in Makheloth.

Numbers 33.26: 26 They traveled from Makheloth, and encamped in Tahath.

Numbers 33.27: 27 They traveled from Tahath, and encamped in Terah.

Numbers 33.28: 28 They traveled from Terah, and encamped in Mithkah.

Numbers 33.29: 29 They traveled from Mithkah, and encamped in Hashmonah.

Numbers 33.30: 30 They traveled from Hashmonah, and encamped in Moseroth.

Numbers 33.31: 31 They traveled from Moseroth, and encamped in Bene Jaakan.

Numbers 33.32: 32 They traveled from Bene Jaakan, and encamped in Hor Haggidgad.

Numbers 33.33: 33 They traveled from Hor Haggidgad, and encamped in Jotbathah.

Numbers 33.34: 34 They traveled from Jotbathah, and encamped in Abronah.

Numbers 33.35: 35 They traveled from Abronah, and encamped in Ezion Geber.

Numbers 33.36: 36 They traveled from Ezion Geber, and encamped at Kadesh in the wilderness of Zin.

Numbers 33.37: 37 They traveled from Kadesh, and encamped in Mount Hor, in the edge of the land of Edom.

Numbers 33.38: 38 Aaron the priest went up into Mount Hor at the commandment of Yahweh and died there, in the fortieth year after the children of Israel had come out of the land of Egypt, in the fifth month, on the first day of the month.

Numbers 33.39: 39 Aaron was one hundred twenty-three years old when he died in Mount Hor.

Numbers 33.40: 40 The Canaanite king of Arad, who lived in the South in the land of Canaan, heard of the coming of the children of Israel.

Numbers 33.41: 41 They traveled from Mount Hor, and encamped in Zalmonah.

Numbers 33.42: 42 They traveled from Zalmonah, and encamped in Punon.

Numbers 33.43: 43 They traveled from Punon, and encamped in Oboth.

Numbers 33.44: 44 They traveled from Oboth, and encamped in Iye Abarim, in the border of Moab.

Numbers 33.45: 45 They traveled from Iyim, and encamped in Dibon Gad.

Numbers 33.46: 46 They traveled from Dibon Gad, and encamped in Almon Diblathaim.

Numbers 33.47: 47 They traveled from Almon Diblathaim, and encamped in the mountains of Abarim, before Nebo.

Numbers 33.48: 48 They traveled from the mountains of Abarim, and encamped in the plains of Moab by the Jordan at Jericho.

Numbers 33.49: 49 They encamped by the Jordan, from Beth Jeshimoth even to Abel Shittim in the plains of Moab.

Numbers 33.50: 50 Yahweh spoke to Moses in the plains of Moab by the Jordan at Jericho, saying,

Numbers 33.51: 51 Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, “When you pass over the Jordan into the land of Canaan,

Numbers 33.52: 52 then you shall drive out all the inhabitants of the land from before you, destroy all their stone idols, destroy all their molten images, and demolish all their high places.

Numbers 33.53: 53 You shall take possession of the land, and dwell therein; for I have given the land to you to possess it.

Numbers 33.54: 54 You shall inherit the land by lot according to your families; to the more you shall give the more inheritance, and to the fewer you shall give the less inheritance. Wherever the lot falls to any man, that shall be his. You shall inherit according to the tribes of your fathers.

Numbers 33.55: 55 “But if you do not drive out the inhabitants of the land from before you, then those you let remain of them will be like pricks in your eyes and thorns in your sides. They will harass you in the land in which you dwell.

Numbers 33.56: 56 It shall happen that as I thought to do to them, so I will do to you.”

Numbers 34.0:

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Numbers 34.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 34.2: 2 “Command the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘When you come into the land of Canaan (this is the land that shall fall to you for an inheritance, even the land of Canaan according to its borders),

Numbers 34.3: 3 then your south quarter shall be from the wilderness of Zin along by the side of Edom, and your south border shall be from the end of the Salt Sea eastward.

Numbers 34.4: 4 Your border shall turn about southward of the ascent of Akrabbim, and pass along to Zin; and it shall pass southward of Kadesh Barnea; and it shall go from there to Hazar Addar, and pass along to Azmon.

Numbers 34.5: 5 The border shall turn about from Azmon to the brook of Egypt, and it shall end at the sea.

Numbers 34.6: 6 “‘For the western border, you shall have the great sea and its border. This shall be your west border.

Numbers 34.7: 7 “‘This shall be your north border: from the great sea you shall mark out for yourselves Mount Hor.

Numbers 34.8: 8 From Mount Hor you shall mark out to the entrance of Hamath; and the border shall pass by Zedad.

Numbers 34.9: 9 Then the border shall go to Ziphron, and it shall end at Hazar Enan. This shall be your north border.

Numbers 34.10: 10 “‘You shall mark out your east border from Hazar Enan to Shepham.

Numbers 34.11: 11 The border shall go down from Shepham to Riblah, on the east side of Ain. The border shall go down, and shall reach to the side of the sea of Chinnereth eastward.

Numbers 34.12: 12 The border shall go down to the Jordan, and end at the Salt Sea. This shall be your land according to its borders around it.’”

Numbers 34.13: 13 Moses commanded the children of Israel, saying, “This is the land which you shall inherit by lot, which Yahweh has commanded to give to the nine tribes, and to the half-tribe;

Numbers 34.14: 14 for the tribe of the children of Reuben according to their fathers’ houses, the tribe of the children of Gad according to their fathers’ houses, and the half-tribe of Manasseh have received their inheritance.

Numbers 34.15: 15 The two tribes and the half-tribe have received their inheritance beyond the Jordan at Jericho eastward, toward the sunrise.”

Numbers 34.16: 16 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 34.17: 17 “These are the names of the men who shall divide the land to you for inheritance: Eleazar the priest, and Joshua the son of Nun.

Numbers 34.18: 18 You shall take one prince of every tribe, to divide the land for inheritance.

Numbers 34.19: 19 These are the names of the men: Of the tribe of Judah, Caleb the son of Jephunneh.

Numbers 34.20: 20 Of the tribe of the children of Simeon, Shemuel the son of Ammihud.

Numbers 34.21: 21 Of the tribe of Benjamin, Elidad the son of Chislon.

Numbers 34.22: 22 Of the tribe of the children of Dan a prince, Bukki the son of Jogli.

Numbers 34.23: 23 Of the children of Joseph: of the tribe of the children of Manasseh a prince, Hanniel the son of Ephod.

Numbers 34.24: 24 Of the tribe of the children of Ephraim a prince, Kemuel the son of Shiphtan.

Numbers 34.25: 25 Of the tribe of the children of Zebulun a prince, Elizaphan the son of Parnach.

Numbers 34.26: 26 Of the tribe of the children of Issachar a prince, Paltiel the son of Azzan.

Numbers 34.27: 27 Of the tribe of the children of Asher a prince, Ahihud the son of Shelomi.

Numbers 34.28: 28 Of the tribe of the children of Naphtali a prince, Pedahel the son of Ammihud.”

Numbers 34.29: 29 These are they whom Yahweh commanded to divide the inheritance to the children of Israel in the land of Canaan.

Numbers 35.0:

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Numbers 35.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Moses in the plains of Moab by the Jordan at Jericho, saying,

Numbers 35.2: 2 “Command the children of Israel to give to the Levites cities to dwell in out of their inheritance. You shall give pasture lands for the cities around them to the Levites.

Numbers 35.3: 3 They shall have the cities to dwell in. Their pasture lands shall be for their livestock, and for their possessions, and for all their animals.

Numbers 35.4: 4 “The pasture lands of the cities, which you shall give to the Levites, shall be from the wall of the city and outward one thousand cubits around it.

Numbers 35.5: 5 You shall measure outside of the city for the east side two thousand cubits, and for the south side two thousand cubits, and for the west side two thousand cubits, and for the north side two thousand cubits, the city being in the middle. This shall be the pasture lands of their cities.

Numbers 35.6: 6 “The cities which you shall give to the Levites, they shall be the six cities of refuge, which you shall give for the man slayer to flee to. Besides them you shall give forty-two cities.

Numbers 35.7: 7 All the cities which you shall give to the Levites shall be forty-eight cities together with their pasture lands.

Numbers 35.8: 8 Concerning the cities which you shall give of the possession of the children of Israel, from the many you shall take many, and from the few you shall take few. Everyone according to his inheritance which he inherits shall give some of his cities to the Levites.”

Numbers 35.9: 9 Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,

Numbers 35.10: 10 “Speak to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘When you pass over the Jordan into the land of Canaan,

Numbers 35.11: 11 then you shall appoint for yourselves cities to be cities of refuge for you, that the man slayer who kills any person unwittingly may flee there.

Numbers 35.12: 12 The cities shall be for your refuge from the avenger, that the man slayer not die until he stands before the congregation for judgment.

Numbers 35.13: 13 The cities which you shall give shall be for you six cities of refuge.

Numbers 35.14: 14 You shall give three cities beyond the Jordan, and you shall give three cities in the land of Canaan. They shall be cities of refuge.

Numbers 35.15: 15 For the children of Israel, and for the stranger and for the foreigner living among them, shall these six cities be for refuge, that everyone who kills any person unwittingly may flee there.

Numbers 35.16: 16 “‘But if he struck him with an instrument of iron, so that he died, he is a murderer. The murderer shall surely be put to death.

Numbers 35.17: 17 If he struck him with a stone in the hand, by which a man may die, and he died, he is a murderer. The murderer shall surely be put to death.

Numbers 35.18: 18 Or if he struck him with a weapon of wood in the hand, by which a man may die, and he died, he is a murderer. The murderer shall surely be put to death.

Numbers 35.19: 19 The avenger of blood shall himself put the murderer to death. When he meets him, he shall put him to death.

Numbers 35.20: 20 If he shoved him out of hatred, or hurled something at him while lying in wait, so that he died,

Numbers 35.21: 21 or in hostility struck him with his hand, so that he died, he who struck him shall surely be put to death. He is a murderer. The avenger of blood shall put the murderer to death when he meets him.

Numbers 35.22: 22 “‘But if he shoved him suddenly without hostility, or hurled on him anything without lying in wait,

Numbers 35.23: 23 or with any stone, by which a man may die, not seeing him, and cast it on him so that he died, and he was not his enemy and not seeking his harm,

Numbers 35.24: 24 then the congregation shall judge between the striker and the avenger of blood according to these ordinances.

Numbers 35.25: 25 The congregation shall deliver the man slayer out of the hand of the avenger of blood, and the congregation shall restore him to his city of refuge, where he had fled. He shall dwell therein until the death of the high priest, who was anointed with the holy oil.

Numbers 35.26: 26 “‘But if the man slayer shall at any time go beyond the border of his city of refuge where he flees,

Numbers 35.27: 27 and the avenger of blood finds him outside of the border of his city of refuge, and the avenger of blood kills the man slayer, he shall not be guilty of blood,

Numbers 35.28: 28 because he should have remained in his city of refuge until the death of the high priest. But after the death of the high priest, the man slayer shall return into the land of his possession.

Numbers 35.29: 29 “‘These things shall be for a statute and ordinance to you throughout your generations in all your dwellings.

Numbers 35.30: 30 “‘Whoever kills any person, the murderer shall be slain based on the testimony of witnesses; but one witness shall not testify alone against any person so that he dies.

Numbers 35.31: 31 “‘Moreover you shall take no ransom for the life of a murderer who is guilty of death. He shall surely be put to death.

Numbers 35.32: 32 “‘You shall take no ransom for him who has fled to his city of refuge, that he may come again to dwell in the land before the death of the priest.

Numbers 35.33: 33 “‘So you shall not pollute the land where you live; for blood pollutes the land. No atonement can be made for the land, for the blood that is shed in it, but by the blood of him who shed it.

Numbers 35.34: 34 You shall not defile the land which you inhabit, where I dwell; for I, Yahweh, dwell among the children of Israel.’”

Numbers 36.0:

36

Numbers 36.1: 1 The heads of the fathers’ households of the family of the children of Gilead, the son of Machir, the son of Manasseh, of the families of the sons of Joseph, came near, and spoke before Moses and before the princes, the heads of the fathers’ households of the children of Israel.

Numbers 36.2: 2 They said, “Yahweh commanded my lord to give the land for inheritance by lot to the children of Israel. My lord was commanded by Yahweh to give the inheritance of Zelophehad our brother to his daughters.

Numbers 36.3: 3 If they are married to any of the sons of the other tribes of the children of Israel, then their inheritance will be taken away from the inheritance of our fathers, and will be added to the inheritance of the tribe to which they shall belong. So it will be taken away from the lot of our inheritance.

Numbers 36.4: 4 When the jubilee of the children of Israel comes, then their inheritance will be added to the inheritance of the tribe to which they shall belong. So their inheritance will be taken away from the inheritance of the tribe of our fathers.”

Numbers 36.5: 5 Moses commanded the children of Israel according to Yahweh’s word, saying, “The tribe of the sons of Joseph speak what is right.

Numbers 36.6: 6 This is the thing which Yahweh commands concerning the daughters of Zelophehad, saying, ‘Let them be married to whom they think best, only they shall marry into the family of the tribe of their father.

Numbers 36.7: 7 So shall no inheritance of the children of Israel move from tribe to tribe; for the children of Israel shall all keep the inheritance of the tribe of his fathers.

Numbers 36.8: 8 Every daughter who possesses an inheritance in any tribe of the children of Israel shall be wife to one of the family of the tribe of her father, that the children of Israel may each possess the inheritance of his fathers.

Numbers 36.9: 9 So shall no inheritance move from one tribe to another tribe; for the tribes of the children of Israel shall each keep his own inheritance.’”

Numbers 36.10: 10 The daughters of Zelophehad did as Yahweh commanded Moses:

Numbers 36.11: 11 for Mahlah, Tirzah, Hoglah, Milcah, and Noah, the daughters of Zelophehad, were married to their father’s brothers’ sons.

Numbers 36.12: 12 They were married into the families of the sons of Manasseh the son of Joseph. Their inheritance remained in the tribe of the family of their father.

Numbers 36.13: 13 These are the commandments and the ordinances which Yahweh commanded by Moses to the children of Israel in the plains of Moab by the Jordan at Jericho.

Deuteronomy 0.0:

The Fifth Book of Moses,

Commonly Called

Deuteronomy

Deuteronomy 1.0:

1

Deuteronomy 1.1: 1 These are the words which Moses spoke to all Israel beyond the Jordan in the wilderness, in the Arabah opposite Suf, between Paran, Tophel, Laban, Hazeroth, and Dizahab.

Deuteronomy 1.2: 2 It is eleven days’ journey from Horeb by the way of Mount Seir to Kadesh Barnea.

Deuteronomy 1.3: 3 In the fortieth year, in the eleventh month, on the first day of the month, Moses spoke to the children of Israel according to all that Yahweh had given him in commandment to them,

Deuteronomy 1.4: 4 after he had struck Sihon the king of the Amorites who lived in Heshbon, and Og the king of Bashan who lived in Ashtaroth, at Edrei.

Deuteronomy 1.5: 5 Beyond the Jordan, in the land of Moab, Moses began to declare this law, saying,

Deuteronomy 1.6: 6 “Yahweh our God spoke to us in Horeb, saying, ‘You have lived long enough at this mountain.

Deuteronomy 1.7: 7 Turn, and take your journey, and go to the hill country of the Amorites and to all the places near there: in the Arabah, in the hill country, in the lowland, in the South, by the seashore, in the land of the Canaanites, and in Lebanon as far as the great river, the river Euphrates.

Deuteronomy 1.8: 8 Behold, I have set the land before you. Go in and possess the land which Yahweh swore to your fathers—to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob—to give to them and to their offspring after them.’”

Deuteronomy 1.9: 9 I spoke to you at that time, saying, “I am not able to bear you myself alone.

Deuteronomy 1.10: 10 Yahweh your God has multiplied you, and behold, you are today as the stars of the sky for multitude.

Deuteronomy 1.11: 11 Yahweh, the God of your fathers, make you a thousand times as many as you are and bless you, as he has promised you!

Deuteronomy 1.12: 12 How can I myself alone bear your problems, your burdens, and your strife?

Deuteronomy 1.13: 13 Take wise men of understanding who are respected among your tribes, and I will make them heads over you.”

Deuteronomy 1.14: 14 You answered me, and said, “The thing which you have spoken is good to do.”

Deuteronomy 1.15: 15 So I took the heads of your tribes, wise and respected men, and made them heads over you, captains of thousands, captains of hundreds, captains of fifties, captains of tens, and officers, according to your tribes.

Deuteronomy 1.16: 16 I commanded your judges at that time, saying, “Hear cases between your brothers and judge righteously between a man and his brother, and the foreigner who is living with him.

Deuteronomy 1.17: 17 You shall not show partiality in judgment; you shall hear the small and the great alike. You shall not be afraid of the face of man, for the judgment is God’s. The case that is too hard for you, you shall bring to me, and I will hear it.”

Deuteronomy 1.18: 18 I commanded you at that time all the things which you should do.

Deuteronomy 1.19: 19 We traveled from Horeb and went through all that great and terrible wilderness which you saw, by the way to the hill country of the Amorites, as Yahweh our God commanded us; and we came to Kadesh Barnea.

Deuteronomy 1.20: 20 I said to you, “You have come to the hill country of the Amorites, which Yahweh our God gives to us.

Deuteronomy 1.21: 21 Behold, Yahweh your God has set the land before you. Go up, take possession, as Yahweh the God of your fathers has spoken to you. Don’t be afraid, neither be dismayed.”

Deuteronomy 1.22: 22 You came near to me, everyone of you, and said, “Let’s send men before us, that they may search the land for us, and bring back to us word of the way by which we must go up, and the cities to which we shall come.”

Deuteronomy 1.23: 23 The thing pleased me well. I took twelve of your men, one man for every tribe.

Deuteronomy 1.24: 24 They turned and went up into the hill country, and came to the valley of Eshcol, and spied it out.

Deuteronomy 1.25: 25 They took some of the fruit of the land in their hands and brought it down to us, and brought us word again, and said, “It is a good land which Yahweh our God gives to us.”

Deuteronomy 1.26: 26 Yet you wouldn’t go up, but rebelled against the commandment of Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 1.27: 27 You murmured in your tents, and said, “Because Yahweh hated us, he has brought us out of the land of Egypt, to deliver us into the hand of the Amorites to destroy us.

Deuteronomy 1.28: 28 Where are we going up? Our brothers have made our heart melt, saying, ‘The people are greater and taller than we. The cities are great and fortified up to the sky. Moreover we have seen the sons of the Anakim there!’”

Deuteronomy 1.29: 29 Then I said to you, “Don’t be terrified. Don’t be afraid of them.

Deuteronomy 1.30: 30 Yahweh your God, who goes before you, he will fight for you, according to all that he did for you in Egypt before your eyes,

Deuteronomy 1.31: 31 and in the wilderness where you have seen how that Yahweh your God carried you, as a man carries his son, in all the way that you went, until you came to this place.”

Deuteronomy 1.32: 32 Yet in this thing you didn’t believe Yahweh your God,

Deuteronomy 1.33: 33 who went before you on the way, to seek out a place for you to pitch your tents in: in fire by night, to show you by what way you should go, and in the cloud by day.

Deuteronomy 1.34: 34 Yahweh heard the voice of your words and was angry, and swore, saying,

Deuteronomy 1.35: 35 “Surely not one of these men of this evil generation shall see the good land which I swore to give to your fathers,

Deuteronomy 1.36: 36 except Caleb the son of Jephunneh. He shall see it. I will give the land that he has trodden on to him and to his children, because he has wholly followed Yahweh.”

Deuteronomy 1.37: 37 Also Yahweh was angry with me for your sakes, saying, “You also shall not go in there.

Deuteronomy 1.38: 38 Joshua the son of Nun, who stands before you, shall go in there. Encourage him, for he shall cause Israel to inherit it.

Deuteronomy 1.39: 39 Moreover your little ones, whom you said would be captured or killed, your children, who today have no knowledge of good or evil, shall go in there. I will give it to them, and they shall possess it.

Deuteronomy 1.40: 40 But as for you, turn, and take your journey into the wilderness by the way to the Red Sea.”

Deuteronomy 1.41: 41 Then you answered and said to me, “We have sinned against Yahweh. We will go up and fight, according to all that Yahweh our God commanded us.” Every man of you put on his weapons of war, and presumed to go up into the hill country.

Deuteronomy 1.42: 42 Yahweh said to me, “Tell them, ‘Don’t go up and don’t fight; for I am not among you, lest you be struck before your enemies.’”

Deuteronomy 1.43: 43 So I spoke to you, and you didn’t listen; but you rebelled against the commandment of Yahweh, and were presumptuous, and went up into the hill country.

Deuteronomy 1.44: 44 The Amorites, who lived in that hill country, came out against you and chased you as bees do, and beat you down in Seir, even to Hormah.

Deuteronomy 1.45: 45 You returned and wept before Yahweh; but Yahweh didn’t listen to your voice, nor turn his ear to you.

Deuteronomy 1.46: 46 So you stayed in Kadesh many days, according to the days that you remained.

Deuteronomy 2.0:

2

Deuteronomy 2.1: 1 Then we turned, and took our journey into the wilderness by the way to the Red Sea, as Yahweh spoke to me; and we encircled Mount Seir many days.

Deuteronomy 2.2: 2 Yahweh spoke to me, saying,

Deuteronomy 2.3: 3 “You have encircled this mountain long enough. Turn northward.

Deuteronomy 2.4: 4 Command the people, saying, ‘You are to pass through the border of your brothers, the children of Esau, who dwell in Seir; and they will be afraid of you. Therefore be careful.

Deuteronomy 2.5: 5 Don’t contend with them; for I will not give you any of their land, no, not so much as for the sole of the foot to tread on, because I have given Mount Seir to Esau for a possession.

Deuteronomy 2.6: 6 You shall purchase food from them for money, that you may eat. You shall also buy water from them for money, that you may drink.’”

Deuteronomy 2.7: 7 For Yahweh your God has blessed you in all the work of your hands. He has known your walking through this great wilderness. These forty years, Yahweh your God has been with you. You have lacked nothing.

Deuteronomy 2.8: 8 So we passed by from our brothers, the children of Esau, who dwell in Seir, from the way of the Arabah from Elath and from Ezion Geber. We turned and passed by the way of the wilderness of Moab.

Deuteronomy 2.9: 9 Yahweh said to me, “Don’t bother Moab, neither contend with them in battle; for I will not give you any of his land for a possession, because I have given Ar to the children of Lot for a possession.”

Deuteronomy 2.10: 10 (The Emim lived there before, a great and numerous people, and tall as the Anakim.

Deuteronomy 2.11: 11 These also are considered to be Rephaim, as the Anakim; but the Moabites call them Emim.

Deuteronomy 2.12: 12 The Horites also lived in Seir in the past, but the children of Esau succeeded them. They destroyed them from before them, and lived in their place, as Israel did to the land of his possession, which Yahweh gave to them.)

Deuteronomy 2.13: 13 “Now rise up, and cross over the brook Zered.” We went over the brook Zered.

Deuteronomy 2.14: 14 The days in which we came from Kadesh Barnea until we had come over the brook Zered were thirty-eight years: until all the generation of the men of war were consumed from the middle of the camp, as Yahweh swore to them.

Deuteronomy 2.15: 15 Moreover Yahweh’s hand was against them, to destroy them from the middle of the camp, until they were consumed.

Deuteronomy 2.16: 16 So, when all the men of war were consumed and dead from among the people,

Deuteronomy 2.17: 17 Yahweh spoke to me, saying,

Deuteronomy 2.18: 18 “You are to pass over Ar, the border of Moab, today.

Deuteronomy 2.19: 19 When you come near the border of the children of Ammon, don’t bother them, nor contend with them; for I will not give you any of the land of the children of Ammon for a possession, because I have given it to the children of Lot for a possession.”

Deuteronomy 2.20: 20 (That also is considered a land of Rephaim. Rephaim lived there in the past, but the Ammonites call them Zamzummim,

Deuteronomy 2.21: 21 a great people, many, and tall, as the Anakim; but Yahweh destroyed them from before Israel, and they succeeded them, and lived in their place;

Deuteronomy 2.22: 22 as he did for the children of Esau who dwell in Seir, when he destroyed the Horites from before them; and they succeeded them, and lived in their place even to this day.

Deuteronomy 2.23: 23 Then the Avvim, who lived in villages as far as Gaza: the Caphtorim, who came out of Caphtor, destroyed them and lived in their place.)

Deuteronomy 2.24: 24 “Rise up, take your journey, and pass over the valley of the Arnon. Behold, I have given into your hand Sihon the Amorite, king of Heshbon, and his land; begin to possess it, and contend with him in battle.

Deuteronomy 2.25: 25 Today I will begin to put the dread of you and the fear of you on the peoples who are under the whole sky, who shall hear the report of you, and shall tremble and be in anguish because of you.”

Deuteronomy 2.26: 26 I sent messengers out of the wilderness of Kedemoth to Sihon king of Heshbon with words of peace, saying,

Deuteronomy 2.27: 27 “Let me pass through your land. I will go along by the highway. I will turn neither to the right hand nor to the left.

Deuteronomy 2.28: 28 You shall sell me food for money, that I may eat; and give me water for money, that I may drink. Just let me pass through on my feet,

Deuteronomy 2.29: 29 as the children of Esau who dwell in Seir, and the Moabites who dwell in Ar, did to me; until I pass over the Jordan into the land which Yahweh our God gives us.”

Deuteronomy 2.30: 30 But Sihon king of Heshbon would not let us pass by him; for Yahweh your God hardened his spirit and made his heart obstinate, that he might deliver him into your hand, as it is today.

Deuteronomy 2.31: 31 Yahweh said to me, “Behold, I have begun to deliver up Sihon and his land before you. Begin to possess, that you may inherit his land.”

Deuteronomy 2.32: 32 Then Sihon came out against us, he and all his people, to battle at Jahaz.

Deuteronomy 2.33: 33 Yahweh our God delivered him up before us; and we struck him, his sons, and all his people.

Deuteronomy 2.34: 34 We took all his cities at that time, and utterly destroyed every inhabited city, with the women and the little ones. We left no one remaining.

Deuteronomy 2.35: 35 Only the livestock we took for plunder for ourselves, with the plunder of the cities which we had taken.

Deuteronomy 2.36: 36 From Aroer, which is on the edge of the valley of the Arnon, and the city that is in the valley, even to Gilead, there was not a city too high for us. Yahweh our God delivered up all before us.

Deuteronomy 2.37: 37 Only to the land of the children of Ammon you didn’t come near: all the banks of the river Jabbok, and the cities of the hill country, and wherever Yahweh our God forbade us.

Deuteronomy 3.0:

3

Deuteronomy 3.1: 1 Then we turned, and went up the way to Bashan. Og the king of Bashan came out against us, he and all his people, to battle at Edrei.

Deuteronomy 3.2: 2 Yahweh said to me, “Don’t fear him; for I have delivered him, with all his people, and his land, into your hand. You shall do to him as you did to Sihon king of the Amorites, who lived at Heshbon.”

Deuteronomy 3.3: 3 So Yahweh our God delivered into our hand Og also, the king of Bashan, and all his people. We struck him until no one was left to him remaining.

Deuteronomy 3.4: 4 We took all his cities at that time. There was not a city which we didn’t take from them: sixty cities, all the region of Argob, the kingdom of Og in Bashan.

Deuteronomy 3.5: 5 All these were cities fortified with high walls, gates, and bars, in addition to a great many villages without walls.

Deuteronomy 3.6: 6 We utterly destroyed them, as we did to Sihon king of Heshbon, utterly destroying every inhabited city, with the women and the little ones.

Deuteronomy 3.7: 7 But all the livestock, and the plunder of the cities, we took for plunder for ourselves.

Deuteronomy 3.8: 8 We took the land at that time out of the hand of the two kings of the Amorites who were beyond the Jordan, from the valley of the Arnon to Mount Hermon.

Deuteronomy 3.9: 9 (The Sidonians call Hermon Sirion, and the Amorites call it Senir.)

Deuteronomy 3.10: 10 We took all the cities of the plain, and all Gilead, and all Bashan, to Salecah and Edrei, cities of the kingdom of Og in Bashan.

Deuteronomy 3.11: 11 (For only Og king of Bashan remained of the remnant of the Rephaim. Behold, his bedstead was a bedstead of iron. Isn’t it in Rabbah of the children of Ammon? Nine cubits was its length, and four cubits its width, after the cubit of a man.)

Deuteronomy 3.12: 12 This land we took in possession at that time: from Aroer, which is by the valley of the Arnon, and half the hill country of Gilead with its cities, I gave to the Reubenites and to the Gadites;

Deuteronomy 3.13: 13 and the rest of Gilead, and all Bashan, the kingdom of Og, I gave to the half-tribe of Manasseh—all the region of Argob, even all Bashan. (The same is called the land of Rephaim.

Deuteronomy 3.14: 14 Jair the son of Manasseh took all the region of Argob, to the border of the Geshurites and the Maacathites, and called them, even Bashan, after his own name, Havvoth Jair, to this day.)

Deuteronomy 3.15: 15 I gave Gilead to Machir.

Deuteronomy 3.16: 16 To the Reubenites and to the Gadites I gave from Gilead even to the valley of the Arnon, the middle of the valley, and its border, even to the river Jabbok, which is the border of the children of Ammon;

Deuteronomy 3.17: 17 the Arabah also, and the Jordan and its border, from Chinnereth even to the sea of the Arabah, the Salt Sea, under the slopes of Pisgah eastward.

Deuteronomy 3.18: 18 I commanded you at that time, saying, “Yahweh your God has given you this land to possess it. All of you men of valor shall pass over armed before your brothers, the children of Israel.

Deuteronomy 3.19: 19 But your wives, and your little ones, and your livestock, (I know that you have much livestock), shall live in your cities which I have given you,

Deuteronomy 3.20: 20 until Yahweh gives rest to your brothers, as to you, and they also possess the land which Yahweh your God gives them beyond the Jordan. Then you shall each return to his own possession, which I have given you.”

Deuteronomy 3.21: 21 I commanded Joshua at that time, saying, “Your eyes have seen all that Yahweh your God has done to these two kings. So shall Yahweh do to all the kingdoms where you go over.

Deuteronomy 3.22: 22 You shall not fear them; for Yahweh your God himself fights for you.”

Deuteronomy 3.23: 23 I begged Yahweh at that time, saying,

Deuteronomy 3.24: 24 “Lord Yahweh, you have begun to show your servant your greatness, and your strong hand. For what god is there in heaven or in earth that can do works like yours, and mighty acts like yours?

Deuteronomy 3.25: 25 Please let me go over and see the good land that is beyond the Jordan, that fine mountain, and Lebanon.”

Deuteronomy 3.26: 26 But Yahweh was angry with me because of you, and didn’t listen to me. Yahweh said to me, “That is enough! Speak no more to me of this matter.

Deuteronomy 3.27: 27 Go up to the top of Pisgah, and lift up your eyes westward, and northward, and southward, and eastward, and see with your eyes; for you shall not go over this Jordan.

Deuteronomy 3.28: 28 But commission Joshua, and encourage him, and strengthen him; for he shall go over before this people, and he shall cause them to inherit the land which you shall see.”

Deuteronomy 3.29: 29 So we stayed in the valley near Beth Peor.

Deuteronomy 4.0:

4

Deuteronomy 4.1: 1 Now, Israel, listen to the statutes and to the ordinances which I teach you, to do them; that you may live, and go in and possess the land which Yahweh, the God of your fathers, gives you.

Deuteronomy 4.2: 2 You shall not add to the word which I command you, neither shall you take away from it, that you may keep the commandments of Yahweh your God which I command you.

Deuteronomy 4.3: 3 Your eyes have seen what Yahweh did because of Baal Peor; for Yahweh your God has destroyed all the men who followed Baal Peor from among you.

Deuteronomy 4.4: 4 But you who were faithful to Yahweh your God are all alive today.

Deuteronomy 4.5: 5 Behold, I have taught you statutes and ordinances, even as Yahweh my God commanded me, that you should do so in the middle of the land where you go in to possess it.

Deuteronomy 4.6: 6 Keep therefore and do them; for this is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the peoples who shall hear all these statutes and say, “Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people.”

Deuteronomy 4.7: 7 For what great nation is there that has a god so near to them as Yahweh our God is whenever we call on him?

Deuteronomy 4.8: 8 What great nation is there that has statutes and ordinances so righteous as all this law which I set before you today?

Deuteronomy 4.9: 9 Only be careful, and keep your soul diligently, lest you forget the things which your eyes saw, and lest they depart from your heart all the days of your life; but make them known to your children and your children’s children—

Deuteronomy 4.10: 10 the day that you stood before Yahweh your God in Horeb, when Yahweh said to me, “Assemble the people to me, and I will make them hear my words, that they may learn to fear me all the days that they live on the earth, and that they may teach their children.”

Deuteronomy 4.11: 11 You came near and stood under the mountain. The mountain burned with fire to the heart of the sky, with darkness, cloud, and thick darkness.

Deuteronomy 4.12: 12 Yahweh spoke to you out of the middle of the fire: you heard the voice of words, but you saw no form; you only heard a voice.

Deuteronomy 4.13: 13 He declared to you his covenant, which he commanded you to perform, even the ten commandments. He wrote them on two stone tablets.

Deuteronomy 4.14: 14 Yahweh commanded me at that time to teach you statutes and ordinances, that you might do them in the land where you go over to possess it.

Deuteronomy 4.15: 15 Be very careful, for you saw no kind of form on the day that Yahweh spoke to you in Horeb out of the middle of the fire,

Deuteronomy 4.16: 16 lest you corrupt yourselves, and make yourself a carved image in the form of any figure, the likeness of male or female,

Deuteronomy 4.17: 17 the likeness of any animal that is on the earth, the likeness of any winged bird that flies in the sky,

Deuteronomy 4.18: 18 the likeness of anything that creeps on the ground, the likeness of any fish that is in the water under the earth;

Deuteronomy 4.19: 19 and lest you lift up your eyes to the sky, and when you see the sun and the moon and the stars, even all the army of the sky, you are drawn away and worship them, and serve them, which Yahweh your God has allotted to all the peoples under the whole sky.

Deuteronomy 4.20: 20 But Yahweh has taken you, and brought you out of the iron furnace, out of Egypt, to be to him a people of inheritance, as it is today.

Deuteronomy 4.21: 21 Furthermore Yahweh was angry with me for your sakes, and swore that I should not go over the Jordan, and that I should not go in to that good land which Yahweh your God gives you for an inheritance;

Deuteronomy 4.22: 22 but I must die in this land. I must not go over the Jordan, but you shall go over and possess that good land.

Deuteronomy 4.23: 23 Be careful, lest you forget the covenant of Yahweh your God, which he made with you, and make yourselves a carved image in the form of anything which Yahweh your God has forbidden you.

Deuteronomy 4.24: 24 For Yahweh your God is a devouring fire, a jealous God.

Deuteronomy 4.25: 25 When you shall father children and children’s children, and you shall have been long in the land, and shall corrupt yourselves, and make a carved image in the form of anything, and shall do that which is evil in Yahweh your God’s sight to provoke him to anger,

Deuteronomy 4.26: 26 I call heaven and earth to witness against you today, that you will soon utterly perish from off the land which you go over the Jordan to possess it. You will not prolong your days on it, but will utterly be destroyed.

Deuteronomy 4.27: 27 Yahweh will scatter you among the peoples, and you will be left few in number among the nations where Yahweh will lead you away.

Deuteronomy 4.28: 28 There you shall serve gods, the work of men’s hands, wood and stone, which neither see, nor hear, nor eat, nor smell.

Deuteronomy 4.29: 29 But from there you shall seek Yahweh your God, and you shall find him when you search after him with all your heart and with all your soul.

Deuteronomy 4.30: 30 When you are in oppression, and all these things have come on you, in the latter days you shall return to Yahweh your God and listen to his voice.

Deuteronomy 4.31: 31 For Yahweh your God is a merciful God. He will not fail you nor destroy you, nor forget the covenant of your fathers which he swore to them.

Deuteronomy 4.32: 32 For ask now of the days that are past, which were before you, since the day that God created man on the earth, and from the one end of the sky to the other, whether there has been anything as great as this thing is, or has been heard like it?

Deuteronomy 4.33: 33 Did a people ever hear the voice of God speaking out of the middle of the fire, as you have heard, and live?

Deuteronomy 4.34: 34 Or has God tried to go and take a nation for himself from among another nation, by trials, by signs, by wonders, by war, by a mighty hand, by an outstretched arm, and by great terrors, according to all that Yahweh your God did for you in Egypt before your eyes?

Deuteronomy 4.35: 35 It was shown to you so that you might know that Yahweh is God. There is no one else besides him.

Deuteronomy 4.36: 36 Out of heaven he made you to hear his voice, that he might instruct you. On earth he made you to see his great fire; and you heard his words out of the middle of the fire.

Deuteronomy 4.37: 37 Because he loved your fathers, therefore he chose their offspring after them, and brought you out with his presence, with his great power, out of Egypt;

Deuteronomy 4.38: 38 to drive out nations from before you greater and mightier than you, to bring you in, to give you their land for an inheritance, as it is today.

Deuteronomy 4.39: 39 Know therefore today, and take it to heart, that Yahweh himself is God in heaven above and on the earth beneath. There is no one else.

Deuteronomy 4.40: 40 You shall keep his statutes and his commandments which I command you today, that it may go well with you and with your children after you, and that you may prolong your days in the land which Yahweh your God gives you for all time.

Deuteronomy 4.41: 41 Then Moses set apart three cities beyond the Jordan toward the sunrise,

Deuteronomy 4.42: 42 that the man slayer might flee there, who kills his neighbor unintentionally and didn’t hate him in time past, and that fleeing to one of these cities he might live:

Deuteronomy 4.43: 43 Bezer in the wilderness, in the plain country, for the Reubenites; and Ramoth in Gilead for the Gadites; and Golan in Bashan for the Manassites.

Deuteronomy 4.44: 44 This is the law which Moses set before the children of Israel.

Deuteronomy 4.45: 45 These are the testimonies, and the statutes, and the ordinances which Moses spoke to the children of Israel when they came out of Egypt,

Deuteronomy 4.46: 46 beyond the Jordan, in the valley opposite Beth Peor, in the land of Sihon king of the Amorites, who lived at Heshbon, whom Moses and the children of Israel struck when they came out of Egypt.

Deuteronomy 4.47: 47 They took possession of his land and the land of Og king of Bashan, the two kings of the Amorites, who were beyond the Jordan toward the sunrise;

Deuteronomy 4.48: 48 from Aroer, which is on the edge of the valley of the Arnon, even to Mount Sion (also called Hermon),

Deuteronomy 4.49: 49 and all the Arabah beyond the Jordan eastward, even to the sea of the Arabah, under the slopes of Pisgah.

Deuteronomy 5.0:

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Deuteronomy 5.1: 1 Moses called to all Israel, and said to them, “Hear, Israel, the statutes and the ordinances which I speak in your ears today, that you may learn them, and observe to do them.”

Deuteronomy 5.2: 2 Yahweh our God made a covenant with us in Horeb.

Deuteronomy 5.3: 3 Yahweh didn’t make this covenant with our fathers, but with us, even us, who are all of us here alive today.

Deuteronomy 5.4: 4 Yahweh spoke with you face to face on the mountain out of the middle of the fire,

Deuteronomy 5.5: 5 (I stood between Yahweh and you at that time, to show you Yahweh’s word; for you were afraid because of the fire, and didn’t go up onto the mountain) saying,

Deuteronomy 5.6: 6 “I am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.

Deuteronomy 5.7: 7 “You shall have no other gods before me.

Deuteronomy 5.8: 8 “You shall not make a carved image for yourself—any likeness of what is in heaven above, or what is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth.

Deuteronomy 5.9: 9 You shall not bow yourself down to them, nor serve them; for I, Yahweh your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children and on the third and on the fourth generation of those who hate me;

Deuteronomy 5.10: 10 and showing loving kindness to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments.

Deuteronomy 5.11: 11 “You shall not misuse the name of Yahweh your God; for Yahweh will not hold him guiltless who misuses his name.

Deuteronomy 5.12: 12 “Observe the Sabbath day, to keep it holy, as Yahweh your God commanded you.

Deuteronomy 5.13: 13 You shall labor six days, and do all your work;

Deuteronomy 5.14: 14 but the seventh day is a Sabbath to Yahweh your God, in which you shall not do any work— neither you, nor your son, nor your daughter, nor your male servant, nor your female servant, nor your ox, nor your donkey, nor any of your livestock, nor your stranger who is within your gates; that your male servant and your female servant may rest as well as you.

Deuteronomy 5.15: 15 You shall remember that you were a servant in the land of Egypt, and Yahweh your God brought you out of there by a mighty hand and by an outstretched arm. Therefore Yahweh your God commanded you to keep the Sabbath day.

Deuteronomy 5.16: 16 “Honor your father and your mother, as Yahweh your God commanded you; that your days may be long, and that it may go well with you in the land which Yahweh your God gives you.

Deuteronomy 5.17: 17 “You shall not murder.

Deuteronomy 5.18: 18 “You shall not commit adultery.

Deuteronomy 5.19: 19 “You shall not steal.

Deuteronomy 5.20: 20 “You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor.

Deuteronomy 5.21: 21 “You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife. Neither shall you desire your neighbor’s house, his field, or his male servant, or his female servant, his ox, or his donkey, or anything that is your neighbor’s.”

Deuteronomy 5.22: 22 Yahweh spoke these words to all your assembly on the mountain out of the middle of the fire, of the cloud, and of the thick darkness, with a great voice. He added no more. He wrote them on two stone tablets, and gave them to me.

Deuteronomy 5.23: 23 When you heard the voice out of the middle of the darkness, while the mountain was burning with fire, you came near to me, even all the heads of your tribes, and your elders;

Deuteronomy 5.24: 24 and you said, “Behold, Yahweh our God has shown us his glory and his greatness, and we have heard his voice out of the middle of the fire. We have seen today that God does speak with man, and he lives.

Deuteronomy 5.25: 25 Now therefore, why should we die? For this great fire will consume us. If we hear Yahweh our God’s voice any more, then we shall die.

Deuteronomy 5.26: 26 For who is there of all flesh, that has heard the voice of the living God speaking out of the middle of the fire, as we have, and lived?

Deuteronomy 5.27: 27 Go near, and hear all that Yahweh our God shall say, and tell us all that Yahweh our God tells you; and we will hear it, and do it.”

Deuteronomy 5.28: 28 Yahweh heard the voice of your words when you spoke to me; and Yahweh said to me, “I have heard the voice of the words of this people which they have spoken to you. They have well said all that they have spoken.

Deuteronomy 5.29: 29 Oh that there were such a heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my commandments always, that it might be well with them and with their children forever!

Deuteronomy 5.30: 30 “Go tell them, ‘Return to your tents.’

Deuteronomy 5.31: 31 But as for you, stand here by me, and I will tell you all the commandments, and the statutes, and the ordinances, which you shall teach them, that they may do them in the land which I give them to possess.”

Deuteronomy 5.32: 32 You shall observe to do therefore as Yahweh your God has commanded you. You shall not turn away to the right hand or to the left.

Deuteronomy 5.33: 33 You shall walk in all the way which Yahweh your God has commanded you, that you may live and that it may be well with you, and that you may prolong your days in the land which you shall possess.

Deuteronomy 6.0:

6

Deuteronomy 6.1: 1 Now these are the commandments, the statutes, and the ordinances, which Yahweh your God commanded to teach you, that you might do them in the land that you go over to possess;

Deuteronomy 6.2: 2 that you might fear Yahweh your God, to keep all his statutes and his commandments, which I command you—you, your son, and your son’s son, all the days of your life; and that your days may be prolonged.

Deuteronomy 6.3: 3 Hear therefore, Israel, and observe to do it, that it may be well with you, and that you may increase mightily, as Yahweh, the God of your fathers, has promised to you, in a land flowing with milk and honey.

Deuteronomy 6.4: 4 Hear, Israel: Yahweh is our God. Yahweh is one.

Deuteronomy 6.5: 5 You shall love Yahweh your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your might.

Deuteronomy 6.6: 6 These words, which I command you today, shall be on your heart;

Deuteronomy 6.7: 7 and you shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise up.

Deuteronomy 6.8: 8 You shall bind them for a sign on your hand, and they shall be for frontlets between your eyes.

Deuteronomy 6.9: 9 You shall write them on the door posts of your house and on your gates.

Deuteronomy 6.10: 10 It shall be, when Yahweh your God brings you into the land which he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, to give you, great and goodly cities which you didn’t build,

Deuteronomy 6.11: 11 and houses full of all good things which you didn’t fill, and cisterns dug out which you didn’t dig, vineyards and olive trees which you didn’t plant, and you shall eat and be full;

Deuteronomy 6.12: 12 then beware lest you forget Yahweh, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.

Deuteronomy 6.13: 13 You shall fear Yahweh your God; and you shall serve him, and shall swear by his name.

Deuteronomy 6.14: 14 You shall not go after other gods, of the gods of the peoples who are around you,

Deuteronomy 6.15: 15 for Yahweh your God among you is a jealous God, lest the anger of Yahweh your God be kindled against you, and he destroy you from off the face of the earth.

Deuteronomy 6.16: 16 You shall not tempt Yahweh your God, as you tempted him in Massah.

Deuteronomy 6.17: 17 You shall diligently keep the commandments of Yahweh your God, and his testimonies, and his statutes, which he has commanded you.

Deuteronomy 6.18: 18 You shall do that which is right and good in Yahweh’s sight, that it may be well with you and that you may go in and possess the good land which Yahweh swore to your fathers,

Deuteronomy 6.19: 19 to thrust out all your enemies from before you, as Yahweh has spoken.

Deuteronomy 6.20: 20 When your son asks you in time to come, saying, “What do the testimonies, the statutes, and the ordinances, which Yahweh our God has commanded you mean?”

Deuteronomy 6.21: 21 then you shall tell your son, “We were Pharaoh’s slaves in Egypt. Yahweh brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand;

Deuteronomy 6.22: 22 and Yahweh showed great and awesome signs and wonders on Egypt, on Pharaoh, and on all his house, before our eyes;

Deuteronomy 6.23: 23 and he brought us out from there, that he might bring us in, to give us the land which he swore to our fathers.

Deuteronomy 6.24: 24 Yahweh commanded us to do all these statutes, to fear Yahweh our God, for our good always, that he might preserve us alive, as we are today.

Deuteronomy 6.25: 25 It shall be righteousness to us, if we observe to do all these commandments before Yahweh our God, as he has commanded us.”

Deuteronomy 7.0:

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Deuteronomy 7.1: 1 When Yahweh your God brings you into the land where you go to possess it, and casts out many nations before you—the Hittite, the Girgashite, the Amorite, the Canaanite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite—seven nations greater and mightier than you;

Deuteronomy 7.2: 2 and when Yahweh your God delivers them up before you, and you strike them, then you shall utterly destroy them. You shall make no covenant with them, nor show mercy to them.

Deuteronomy 7.3: 3 You shall not make marriages with them. You shall not give your daughter to his son, nor shall you take his daughter for your son.

Deuteronomy 7.4: 4 For that would turn away your sons from following me, that they may serve other gods. So Yahweh’s anger would be kindled against you, and he would destroy you quickly.

Deuteronomy 7.5: 5 But you shall deal with them like this: you shall break down their altars, dash their pillars in pieces, cut down their Asherah poles, and burn their engraved images with fire.

Deuteronomy 7.6: 6 For you are a holy people to Yahweh your God. Yahweh your God has chosen you to be a people for his own possession, above all peoples who are on the face of the earth.

Deuteronomy 7.7: 7 Yahweh didn’t set his love on you nor choose you, because you were more in number than any people; for you were the fewest of all peoples;

Deuteronomy 7.8: 8 but because Yahweh loves you, and because he desires to keep the oath which he swore to your fathers, Yahweh has brought you out with a mighty hand and redeemed you out of the house of bondage, from the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt.

Deuteronomy 7.9: 9 Know therefore that Yahweh your God himself is God, the faithful God, who keeps covenant and loving kindness with them who love him and keep his commandments to a thousand generations,

Deuteronomy 7.10: 10 and repays those who hate him to their face, to destroy them. He will not be slack to him who hates him. He will repay him to his face.

Deuteronomy 7.11: 11 You shall therefore keep the commandments, the statutes, and the ordinances which I command you today, to do them.

Deuteronomy 7.12: 12 It shall happen, because you listen to these ordinances and keep and do them, that Yahweh your God will keep with you the covenant and the loving kindness which he swore to your fathers.

Deuteronomy 7.13: 13 He will love you, bless you, and multiply you. He will also bless the fruit of your body and the fruit of your ground, your grain and your new wine and your oil, the increase of your livestock and the young of your flock, in the land which he swore to your fathers to give you.

Deuteronomy 7.14: 14 You will be blessed above all peoples. There won’t be male or female barren among you, or among your livestock.

Deuteronomy 7.15: 15 Yahweh will take away from you all sickness; and he will put none of the evil diseases of Egypt, which you know, on you, but will lay them on all those who hate you.

Deuteronomy 7.16: 16 You shall consume all the peoples whom Yahweh your God shall deliver to you. Your eye shall not pity them. You shall not serve their gods; for that would be a snare to you.

Deuteronomy 7.17: 17 If you shall say in your heart, “These nations are more than I; how can I dispossess them?”

Deuteronomy 7.18: 18 you shall not be afraid of them. You shall remember well what Yahweh your God did to Pharaoh and to all Egypt:

Deuteronomy 7.19: 19 the great trials which your eyes saw, the signs, the wonders, the mighty hand, and the outstretched arm, by which Yahweh your God brought you out. So shall Yahweh your God do to all the peoples of whom you are afraid.

Deuteronomy 7.20: 20 Moreover Yahweh your God will send the hornet among them, until those who are left, and hide themselves, perish from before you.

Deuteronomy 7.21: 21 You shall not be scared of them; for Yahweh your God is among you, a great and awesome God.

Deuteronomy 7.22: 22 Yahweh your God will cast out those nations before you little by little. You may not consume them at once, lest the animals of the field increase on you.

Deuteronomy 7.23: 23 But Yahweh your God will deliver them up before you, and will confuse them with a great confusion, until they are destroyed.

Deuteronomy 7.24: 24 He will deliver their kings into your hand, and you shall make their name perish from under the sky. No one will be able to stand before you until you have destroyed them.

Deuteronomy 7.25: 25 You shall burn the engraved images of their gods with fire. You shall not covet the silver or the gold that is on them, nor take it for yourself, lest you be snared in it; for it is an abomination to Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 7.26: 26 You shall not bring an abomination into your house and become a devoted thing like it. You shall utterly detest it. You shall utterly abhor it; for it is a devoted thing.

Deuteronomy 8.0:

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Deuteronomy 8.1: 1 You shall observe to do all the commandments which I command you today, that you may live, and multiply, and go in and possess the land which Yahweh swore to your fathers.

Deuteronomy 8.2: 2 You shall remember all the way which Yahweh your God has led you these forty years in the wilderness, that he might humble you, to test you, to know what was in your heart, whether you would keep his commandments or not.

Deuteronomy 8.3: 3 He humbled you, allowed you to be hungry, and fed you with manna, which you didn’t know, neither did your fathers know, that he might teach you that man does not live by bread only, but man lives by every word that proceeds out of Yahweh’s mouth.

Deuteronomy 8.4: 4 Your clothing didn’t grow old on you, neither did your foot swell, these forty years.

Deuteronomy 8.5: 5 You shall consider in your heart that as a man disciplines his son, so Yahweh your God disciplines you.

Deuteronomy 8.6: 6 You shall keep the commandments of Yahweh your God, to walk in his ways, and to fear him.

Deuteronomy 8.7: 7 For Yahweh your God brings you into a good land, a land of brooks of water, of springs, and underground water flowing into valleys and hills;

Deuteronomy 8.8: 8 a land of wheat, barley, vines, fig trees, and pomegranates; a land of olive trees and honey;

Deuteronomy 8.9: 9 a land in which you shall eat bread without scarcity, you shall not lack anything in it; a land whose stones are iron, and out of whose hills you may dig copper.

Deuteronomy 8.10: 10 You shall eat and be full, and you shall bless Yahweh your God for the good land which he has given you.

Deuteronomy 8.11: 11 Beware lest you forget Yahweh your God, in not keeping his commandments, his ordinances, and his statutes, which I command you today;

Deuteronomy 8.12: 12 lest, when you have eaten and are full, and have built fine houses and lived in them;

Deuteronomy 8.13: 13 and when your herds and your flocks multiply, and your silver and your gold is multiplied, and all that you have is multiplied;

Deuteronomy 8.14: 14 then your heart might be lifted up, and you forget Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage;

Deuteronomy 8.15: 15 who led you through the great and terrible wilderness, with venomous snakes and scorpions, and thirsty ground where there was no water; who poured water for you out of the rock of flint;

Deuteronomy 8.16: 16 who fed you in the wilderness with manna, which your fathers didn’t know, that he might humble you, and that he might prove you, to do you good at your latter end;

Deuteronomy 8.17: 17 and lest you say in your heart, “My power and the might of my hand has gotten me this wealth.”

Deuteronomy 8.18: 18 But you shall remember Yahweh your God, for it is he who gives you power to get wealth, that he may establish his covenant which he swore to your fathers, as it is today.

Deuteronomy 8.19: 19 It shall be, if you shall forget Yahweh your God, and walk after other gods, and serve them and worship them, I testify against you today that you shall surely perish.

Deuteronomy 8.20: 20 As the nations that Yahweh makes to perish before you, so you shall perish, because you wouldn’t listen to Yahweh your God’s voice.

Deuteronomy 9.0:

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Deuteronomy 9.1: 1 Hear, Israel! You are to pass over the Jordan today, to go in to dispossess nations greater and mightier than yourself, cities great and fortified up to the sky,

Deuteronomy 9.2: 2 a people great and tall, the sons of the Anakim, whom you know, and of whom you have heard say, “Who can stand before the sons of Anak?”

Deuteronomy 9.3: 3 Know therefore today that Yahweh your God is he who goes over before you as a devouring fire. He will destroy them and he will bring them down before you. So you shall drive them out and make them perish quickly, as Yahweh has spoken to you.

Deuteronomy 9.4: 4 Don’t say in your heart, after Yahweh your God has thrust them out from before you, “For my righteousness Yahweh has brought me in to possess this land;” because Yahweh drives them out before you because of the wickedness of these nations.

Deuteronomy 9.5: 5 Not for your righteousness or for the uprightness of your heart do you go in to possess their land; but for the wickedness of these nations Yahweh your God does drive them out from before you, and that he may establish the word which Yahweh swore to your fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob.

Deuteronomy 9.6: 6 Know therefore that Yahweh your God doesn’t give you this good land to possess for your righteousness, for you are a stiff-necked people.

Deuteronomy 9.7: 7 Remember, and don’t forget, how you provoked Yahweh your God to wrath in the wilderness. From the day that you left the land of Egypt until you came to this place, you have been rebellious against Yahweh.

Deuteronomy 9.8: 8 Also in Horeb you provoked Yahweh to wrath, and Yahweh was angry with you to destroy you.

Deuteronomy 9.9: 9 When I had gone up onto the mountain to receive the stone tablets, even the tablets of the covenant which Yahweh made with you, then I stayed on the mountain forty days and forty nights. I neither ate bread nor drank water.

Deuteronomy 9.10: 10 Yahweh delivered to me the two stone tablets written with God’s finger. On them were all the words which Yahweh spoke with you on the mountain out of the middle of the fire in the day of the assembly.

Deuteronomy 9.11: 11 It came to pass at the end of forty days and forty nights that Yahweh gave me the two stone tablets, even the tablets of the covenant.

Deuteronomy 9.12: 12 Yahweh said to me, “Arise, get down quickly from here; for your people whom you have brought out of Egypt have corrupted themselves. They have quickly turned away from the way which I commanded them. They have made a molten image for themselves!”

Deuteronomy 9.13: 13 Furthermore Yahweh spoke to me, saying, “I have seen this people, and behold, it is a stiff-necked people.

Deuteronomy 9.14: 14 Leave me alone, that I may destroy them, and blot out their name from under the sky; and I will make of you a nation mightier and greater than they.”

Deuteronomy 9.15: 15 So I turned and came down from the mountain, and the mountain was burning with fire. The two tablets of the covenant were in my two hands.

Deuteronomy 9.16: 16 I looked, and behold, you had sinned against Yahweh your God. You had made yourselves a molded calf. You had quickly turned away from the way which Yahweh had commanded you.

Deuteronomy 9.17: 17 I took hold of the two tablets, and threw them out of my two hands, and broke them before your eyes.

Deuteronomy 9.18: 18 I fell down before Yahweh, as at the first, forty days and forty nights. I neither ate bread nor drank water, because of all your sin which you sinned, in doing that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, to provoke him to anger.

Deuteronomy 9.19: 19 For I was afraid of the anger and hot displeasure with which Yahweh was angry against you to destroy you. But Yahweh listened to me that time also.

Deuteronomy 9.20: 20 Yahweh was angry enough with Aaron to destroy him. I prayed for Aaron also at the same time.

Deuteronomy 9.21: 21 I took your sin, the calf which you had made, and burned it with fire, and crushed it, grinding it very small, until it was as fine as dust. I threw its dust into the brook that descended out of the mountain.

Deuteronomy 9.22: 22 At Taberah, at Massah, and at Kibroth Hattaavah you provoked Yahweh to wrath.

Deuteronomy 9.23: 23 When Yahweh sent you from Kadesh Barnea, saying, “Go up and possess the land which I have given you,” you rebelled against the commandment of Yahweh your God, and you didn’t believe him or listen to his voice.

Deuteronomy 9.24: 24 You have been rebellious against Yahweh from the day that I knew you.

Deuteronomy 9.25: 25 So I fell down before Yahweh the forty days and forty nights that I fell down, because Yahweh had said he would destroy you.

Deuteronomy 9.26: 26 I prayed to Yahweh, and said, “Lord Yahweh, don’t destroy your people and your inheritance that you have redeemed through your greatness, that you have brought out of Egypt with a mighty hand.

Deuteronomy 9.27: 27 Remember your servants, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Don’t look at the stubbornness of this people, nor at their wickedness, nor at their sin,

Deuteronomy 9.28: 28 lest the land you brought us out from say, ‘Because Yahweh was not able to bring them into the land which he promised to them, and because he hated them, he has brought them out to kill them in the wilderness.’

Deuteronomy 9.29: 29 Yet they are your people and your inheritance, which you brought out by your great power and by your outstretched arm.”

Deuteronomy 10.0:

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Deuteronomy 10.1: 1 At that time Yahweh said to me, “Cut two stone tablets like the first, and come up to me onto the mountain, and make an ark of wood.

Deuteronomy 10.2: 2 I will write on the tablets the words that were on the first tablets which you broke, and you shall put them in the ark.”

Deuteronomy 10.3: 3 So I made an ark of acacia wood, and cut two stone tablets like the first, and went up onto the mountain, having the two tablets in my hand.

Deuteronomy 10.4: 4 He wrote on the tablets, according to the first writing, the ten commandments, which Yahweh spoke to you on the mountain out of the middle of the fire in the day of the assembly; and Yahweh gave them to me.

Deuteronomy 10.5: 5 I turned and came down from the mountain, and put the tablets in the ark which I had made; and there they are as Yahweh commanded me.

Deuteronomy 10.6: 6 (The children of Israel traveled from Beeroth Bene Jaakan to Moserah. There Aaron died, and there he was buried; and Eleazar his son ministered in the priest’s office in his place.

Deuteronomy 10.7: 7 From there they traveled to Gudgodah; and from Gudgodah to Jotbathah, a land of brooks of water.

Deuteronomy 10.8: 8 At that time Yahweh set apart the tribe of Levi to bear the ark of Yahweh’s covenant, to stand before Yahweh to minister to him, and to bless in his name, to this day.

Deuteronomy 10.9: 9 Therefore Levi has no portion nor inheritance with his brothers; Yahweh is his inheritance, according as Yahweh your God spoke to him.)

Deuteronomy 10.10: 10 I stayed on the mountain, as at the first time, forty days and forty nights; and Yahweh listened to me that time also. Yahweh would not destroy you.

Deuteronomy 10.11: 11 Yahweh said to me, “Arise, take your journey before the people; and they shall go in and possess the land which I swore to their fathers to give to them.”

Deuteronomy 10.12: 12 Now, Israel, what does Yahweh your God require of you, but to fear Yahweh your God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, and to serve Yahweh your God with all your heart and with all your soul,

Deuteronomy 10.13: 13 to keep Yahweh’s commandments and statutes, which I command you today for your good?

Deuteronomy 10.14: 14 Behold, to Yahweh your God belongs heaven, the heaven of heavens, and the earth, with all that is therein.

Deuteronomy 10.15: 15 Only Yahweh had a delight in your fathers to love them, and he chose their offspring after them, even you above all peoples, as it is today.

Deuteronomy 10.16: 16 Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiff-necked.

Deuteronomy 10.17: 17 For Yahweh your God, he is God of gods and Lord of lords, the great God, the mighty, and the awesome, who doesn’t respect persons or take bribes.

Deuteronomy 10.18: 18 He executes justice for the fatherless and widow and loves the foreigner in giving him food and clothing.

Deuteronomy 10.19: 19 Therefore love the foreigner, for you were foreigners in the land of Egypt.

Deuteronomy 10.20: 20 You shall fear Yahweh your God. You shall serve him. You shall cling to him, and you shall swear by his name.

Deuteronomy 10.21: 21 He is your praise, and he is your God, who has done for you these great and awesome things which your eyes have seen.

Deuteronomy 10.22: 22 Your fathers went down into Egypt with seventy persons; and now Yahweh your God has made you as the stars of the sky for multitude.

Deuteronomy 11.0:

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Deuteronomy 11.1: 1 Therefore you shall love Yahweh your God, and keep his instructions, his statutes, his ordinances, and his commandments, always.

Deuteronomy 11.2: 2 Know this day—for I don’t speak with your children who have not known, and who have not seen the chastisement of Yahweh your God, his greatness, his mighty hand, his outstretched arm,

Deuteronomy 11.3: 3 his signs, and his works, which he did in the middle of Egypt to Pharaoh the king of Egypt, and to all his land;

Deuteronomy 11.4: 4 and what he did to the army of Egypt, to their horses, and to their chariots; how he made the water of the Red Sea to overflow them as they pursued you, and how Yahweh has destroyed them to this day;

Deuteronomy 11.5: 5 and what he did to you in the wilderness until you came to this place;

Deuteronomy 11.6: 6 and what he did to Dathan and Abiram, the sons of Eliab, the son of Reuben—how the earth opened its mouth and swallowed them up, with their households, their tents, and every living thing that followed them, in the middle of all Israel;

Deuteronomy 11.7: 7 but your eyes have seen all of Yahweh’s great work which he did.

Deuteronomy 11.8: 8 Therefore you shall keep the entire commandment which I command you today, that you may be strong, and go in and possess the land that you go over to possess;

Deuteronomy 11.9: 9 and that you may prolong your days in the land which Yahweh swore to your fathers to give to them and to their offspring, a land flowing with milk and honey.

Deuteronomy 11.10: 10 For the land, where you go in to possess isn’t like the land of Egypt that you came out of, where you sowed your seed and watered it with your foot, as a garden of herbs;

Deuteronomy 11.11: 11 but the land that you go over to possess is a land of hills and valleys which drinks water from the rain of the sky,

Deuteronomy 11.12: 12 a land which Yahweh your God cares for. Yahweh your God’s eyes are always on it, from the beginning of the year even to the end of the year.

Deuteronomy 11.13: 13 It shall happen, if you shall listen diligently to my commandments which I command you today, to love Yahweh your God, and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul,

Deuteronomy 11.14: 14 that I will give the rain for your land in its season, the early rain and the latter rain, that you may gather in your grain, your new wine, and your oil.

Deuteronomy 11.15: 15 I will give grass in your fields for your livestock, and you shall eat and be full.

Deuteronomy 11.16: 16 Be careful, lest your heart be deceived, and you turn away to serve other gods and worship them;

Deuteronomy 11.17: 17 and Yahweh’s anger be kindled against you, and he shut up the sky so that there is no rain, and the land doesn’t yield its fruit; and you perish quickly from off the good land which Yahweh gives you.

Deuteronomy 11.18: 18 Therefore you shall lay up these words of mine in your heart and in your soul. You shall bind them for a sign on your hand, and they shall be for frontlets between your eyes.

Deuteronomy 11.19: 19 You shall teach them to your children, talking of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up.

Deuteronomy 11.20: 20 You shall write them on the door posts of your house and on your gates;

Deuteronomy 11.21: 21 that your days and your children’s days may be multiplied in the land which Yahweh swore to your fathers to give them, as the days of the heavens above the earth.

Deuteronomy 11.22: 22 For if you shall diligently keep all these commandments which I command you—to do them, to love Yahweh your God, to walk in all his ways, and to cling to him—

Deuteronomy 11.23: 23 then Yahweh will drive out all these nations from before you, and you shall dispossess nations greater and mightier than yourselves.

Deuteronomy 11.24: 24 Every place on which the sole of your foot treads shall be yours: from the wilderness and Lebanon, from the river, the river Euphrates, even to the western sea shall be your border.

Deuteronomy 11.25: 25 No man will be able to stand before you. Yahweh your God will lay the fear of you and the dread of you on all the land that you tread on, as he has spoken to you.

Deuteronomy 11.26: 26 Behold, I set before you today a blessing and a curse:

Deuteronomy 11.27: 27 the blessing, if you listen to the commandments of Yahweh your God, which I command you today;

Deuteronomy 11.28: 28 and the curse, if you do not listen to the commandments of Yahweh your God, but turn away out of the way which I command you today, to go after other gods which you have not known.

Deuteronomy 11.29: 29 It shall happen, when Yahweh your God brings you into the land that you go to possess, that you shall set the blessing on Mount Gerizim, and the curse on Mount Ebal.

Deuteronomy 11.30: 30 Aren’t they beyond the Jordan, behind the way of the going down of the sun, in the land of the Canaanites who dwell in the Arabah near Gilgal, beside the oaks of Moreh?

Deuteronomy 11.31: 31 For you are to pass over the Jordan to go in to possess the land which Yahweh your God gives you, and you shall possess it and dwell in it.

Deuteronomy 11.32: 32 You shall observe to do all the statutes and the ordinances which I set before you today.

Deuteronomy 12.0:

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Deuteronomy 12.1: 1 These are the statutes and the ordinances which you shall observe to do in the land which Yahweh, the God of your fathers, has given you to possess all the days that you live on the earth.

Deuteronomy 12.2: 2 You shall surely destroy all the places in which the nations that you shall dispossess served their gods: on the high mountains, and on the hills, and under every green tree.

Deuteronomy 12.3: 3 You shall break down their altars, dash their pillars in pieces, and burn their Asherah poles with fire. You shall cut down the engraved images of their gods. You shall destroy their name out of that place.

Deuteronomy 12.4: 4 You shall not do so to Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 12.5: 5 But to the place which Yahweh your God shall choose out of all your tribes, to put his name there, you shall seek his habitation, and you shall come there.

Deuteronomy 12.6: 6 You shall bring your burnt offerings, your sacrifices, your tithes, the wave offering of your hand, your vows, your free will offerings, and the firstborn of your herd and of your flock there.

Deuteronomy 12.7: 7 There you shall eat before Yahweh your God, and you shall rejoice in all that you put your hand to, you and your households, in which Yahweh your God has blessed you.

Deuteronomy 12.8: 8 You shall not do all the things that we do here today, every man whatever is right in his own eyes;

Deuteronomy 12.9: 9 for you haven’t yet come to the rest and to the inheritance which Yahweh your God gives you.

Deuteronomy 12.10: 10 But when you go over the Jordan and dwell in the land which Yahweh your God causes you to inherit, and he gives you rest from all your enemies around you, so that you dwell in safety,

Deuteronomy 12.11: 11 then it shall happen that to the place which Yahweh your God shall choose, to cause his name to dwell there, there you shall bring all that I command you: your burnt offerings, your sacrifices, your tithes, the wave offering of your hand, and all your choice vows which you vow to Yahweh.

Deuteronomy 12.12: 12 You shall rejoice before Yahweh your God—you, and your sons, your daughters, your male servants, your female servants, and the Levite who is within your gates, because he has no portion nor inheritance with you.

Deuteronomy 12.13: 13 Be careful that you don’t offer your burnt offerings in every place that you see;

Deuteronomy 12.14: 14 but in the place which Yahweh chooses in one of your tribes, there you shall offer your burnt offerings, and there you shall do all that I command you.

Deuteronomy 12.15: 15 Yet you may kill and eat meat within all your gates, after all the desire of your soul, according to Yahweh your God’s blessing which he has given you. The unclean and the clean may eat of it, as of the gazelle and the deer.

Deuteronomy 12.16: 16 Only you shall not eat the blood. You shall pour it out on the earth like water.

Deuteronomy 12.17: 17 You may not eat within your gates the tithe of your grain, or of your new wine, or of your oil, or the firstborn of your herd or of your flock, nor any of your vows which you vow, nor your free will offerings, nor the wave offering of your hand;

Deuteronomy 12.18: 18 but you shall eat them before Yahweh your God in the place which Yahweh your God shall choose: you, your son, your daughter, your male servant, your female servant, and the Levite who is within your gates. You shall rejoice before Yahweh your God in all that you put your hand to.

Deuteronomy 12.19: 19 Be careful that you don’t forsake the Levite as long as you live in your land.

Deuteronomy 12.20: 20 When Yahweh your God enlarges your border, as he has promised you, and you say, “I want to eat meat,” because your soul desires to eat meat, you may eat meat, after all the desire of your soul.

Deuteronomy 12.21: 21 If the place which Yahweh your God shall choose to put his name is too far from you, then you shall kill of your herd and of your flock, which Yahweh has given you, as I have commanded you; and you may eat within your gates, after all the desire of your soul.

Deuteronomy 12.22: 22 Even as the gazelle and as the deer is eaten, so you shall eat of it. The unclean and the clean may eat of it alike.

Deuteronomy 12.23: 23 Only be sure that you don’t eat the blood; for the blood is the life. You shall not eat the life with the meat.

Deuteronomy 12.24: 24 You shall not eat it. You shall pour it out on the earth like water.

Deuteronomy 12.25: 25 You shall not eat it, that it may go well with you and with your children after you, when you do that which is right in Yahweh’s eyes.

Deuteronomy 12.26: 26 Only your holy things which you have, and your vows, you shall take and go to the place which Yahweh shall choose.

Deuteronomy 12.27: 27 You shall offer your burnt offerings, the meat and the blood, on Yahweh your God’s altar. The blood of your sacrifices shall be poured out on Yahweh your God’s altar, and you shall eat the meat.

Deuteronomy 12.28: 28 Observe and hear all these words which I command you, that it may go well with you and with your children after you forever, when you do that which is good and right in Yahweh your God’s eyes.

Deuteronomy 12.29: 29 When Yahweh your God cuts off the nations from before you where you go in to dispossess them, and you dispossess them and dwell in their land,

Deuteronomy 12.30: 30 be careful that you are not ensnared to follow them after they are destroyed from before you, and that you not inquire after their gods, saying, “How do these nations serve their gods? I will do likewise.”

Deuteronomy 12.31: 31 You shall not do so to Yahweh your God; for every abomination to Yahweh, which he hates, they have done to their gods; for they even burn their sons and their daughters in the fire to their gods.

Deuteronomy 12.32: 32 Whatever thing I command you, that you shall observe to do. You shall not add to it, nor take away from it.

Deuteronomy 13.0:

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Deuteronomy 13.1: 1 If a prophet or a dreamer of dreams arises among you, and he gives you a sign or a wonder,

Deuteronomy 13.2: 2 and the sign or the wonder comes to pass, of which he spoke to you, saying, “Let’s go after other gods” (which you have not known) “and let’s serve them,”

Deuteronomy 13.3: 3 you shall not listen to the words of that prophet, or to that dreamer of dreams; for Yahweh your God is testing you, to know whether you love Yahweh your God with all your heart and with all your soul.

Deuteronomy 13.4: 4 You shall walk after Yahweh your God, fear him, keep his commandments, and obey his voice. You shall serve him, and cling to him.

Deuteronomy 13.5: 5 That prophet, or that dreamer of dreams, shall be put to death, because he has spoken rebellion against Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt and redeemed you out of the house of bondage, to draw you aside out of the way which Yahweh your God commanded you to walk in. So you shall remove the evil from among you.

Deuteronomy 13.6: 6 If your brother, the son of your mother, or your son, or your daughter, or the wife of your bosom, or your friend who is as your own soul, entices you secretly, saying, “Let’s go and serve other gods”—which you have not known, you, nor your fathers;

Deuteronomy 13.7: 7 of the gods of the peoples who are around you, near to you, or far off from you, from the one end of the earth even to the other end of the earth—

Deuteronomy 13.8: 8 you shall not consent to him nor listen to him; neither shall your eye pity him, neither shall you spare, neither shall you conceal him;

Deuteronomy 13.9: 9 but you shall surely kill him. Your hand shall be first on him to put him to death, and afterwards the hands of all the people.

Deuteronomy 13.10: 10 You shall stone him to death with stones, because he has sought to draw you away from Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.

Deuteronomy 13.11: 11 All Israel shall hear, and fear, and shall not do any more wickedness like this among you.

Deuteronomy 13.12: 12 If you hear about one of your cities, which Yahweh your God gives you to dwell there, that

Deuteronomy 13.13: 13 certain wicked fellows have gone out from among you and have drawn away the inhabitants of their city, saying, “Let’s go and serve other gods,” which you have not known,

Deuteronomy 13.14: 14 then you shall inquire, investigate, and ask diligently. Behold, if it is true, and the thing certain, that such abomination was done among you,

Deuteronomy 13.15: 15 you shall surely strike the inhabitants of that city with the edge of the sword, destroying it utterly, with all that is therein and its livestock, with the edge of the sword.

Deuteronomy 13.16: 16 You shall gather all its plunder into the middle of its street, and shall burn with fire the city, with all of its plunder, to Yahweh your God. It shall be a heap forever. It shall not be built again.

Deuteronomy 13.17: 17 Nothing of the devoted thing shall cling to your hand, that Yahweh may turn from the fierceness of his anger and show you mercy, and have compassion on you and multiply you, as he has sworn to your fathers,

Deuteronomy 13.18: 18 when you listen to Yahweh your God’s voice, to keep all his commandments which I command you today, to do that which is right in Yahweh your God’s eyes.

Deuteronomy 14.0:

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Deuteronomy 14.1: 1 You are the children of Yahweh your God. You shall not cut yourselves, nor make any baldness between your eyes for the dead.

Deuteronomy 14.2: 2 For you are a holy people to Yahweh your God, and Yahweh has chosen you to be a people for his own possession, above all peoples who are on the face of the earth.

Deuteronomy 14.3: 3 You shall not eat any abominable thing.

Deuteronomy 14.4: 4 These are the animals which you may eat: the ox, the sheep, the goat,

Deuteronomy 14.5: 5 the deer, the gazelle, the roebuck, the wild goat, the ibex, the antelope, and the chamois.

Deuteronomy 14.6: 6 Every animal that parts the hoof, and has the hoof split in two and chews the cud, among the animals, you may eat.

Deuteronomy 14.7: 7 Nevertheless these you shall not eat of them that chew the cud, or of those who have the hoof split: the camel, the hare, and the rabbit. Because they chew the cud but don’t part the hoof, they are unclean to you.

Deuteronomy 14.8: 8 The pig, because it has a split hoof but doesn’t chew the cud, is unclean to you. You shall not eat their meat. You shall not touch their carcasses.

Deuteronomy 14.9: 9 These you may eat of all that are in the waters: you may eat whatever has fins and scales.

Deuteronomy 14.10: 10 You shall not eat whatever doesn’t have fins and scales. It is unclean to you.

Deuteronomy 14.11: 11 Of all clean birds you may eat.

Deuteronomy 14.12: 12 But these are they of which you shall not eat: the eagle, the vulture, the osprey,

Deuteronomy 14.13: 13 the red kite, the falcon, the kite after its kind,

Deuteronomy 14.14: 14 every raven after its kind,

Deuteronomy 14.15: 15 the ostrich, the owl, the seagull, the hawk after its kind,

Deuteronomy 14.16: 16 the little owl, the great owl, the horned owl,

Deuteronomy 14.17: 17 the pelican, the vulture, the cormorant,

Deuteronomy 14.18: 18 the stork, the heron after its kind, the hoopoe, and the bat.

Deuteronomy 14.19: 19 All winged creeping things are unclean to you. They shall not be eaten.

Deuteronomy 14.20: 20 Of all clean birds you may eat.

Deuteronomy 14.21: 21 You shall not eat of anything that dies of itself. You may give it to the foreigner living among you who is within your gates, that he may eat it; or you may sell it to a foreigner; for you are a holy people to Yahweh your God.

You shall not boil a young goat in its mother’s milk.

Deuteronomy 14.22: 22 You shall surely tithe all the increase of your seed, that which comes out of the field year by year.

Deuteronomy 14.23: 23 You shall eat before Yahweh your God, in the place which he chooses to cause his name to dwell, the tithe of your grain, of your new wine, and of your oil, and the firstborn of your herd and of your flock; that you may learn to fear Yahweh your God always.

Deuteronomy 14.24: 24 If the way is too long for you, so that you are not able to carry it because the place which Yahweh your God shall choose to set his name there is too far from you, when Yahweh your God blesses you,

Deuteronomy 14.25: 25 then you shall turn it into money, bind up the money in your hand, and shall go to the place which Yahweh your God shall choose.

Deuteronomy 14.26: 26 You shall trade the money for whatever your soul desires: for cattle, or for sheep, or for wine, or for strong drink, or for whatever your soul asks of you. You shall eat there before Yahweh your God, and you shall rejoice, you and your household.

Deuteronomy 14.27: 27 You shall not forsake the Levite who is within your gates, for he has no portion nor inheritance with you.

Deuteronomy 14.28: 28 At the end of every three years you shall bring all the tithe of your increase in the same year, and shall store it within your gates.

Deuteronomy 14.29: 29 The Levite, because he has no portion nor inheritance with you, as well as the foreigner living among you, the fatherless, and the widow who are within your gates shall come, and shall eat and be satisfied; that Yahweh your God may bless you in all the work of your hand which you do.

Deuteronomy 15.0:

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Deuteronomy 15.1: 1 At the end of every seven years, you shall cancel debts.

Deuteronomy 15.2: 2 This is the way it shall be done: every creditor shall release that which he has lent to his neighbor. He shall not require payment from his neighbor and his brother, because Yahweh’s release has been proclaimed.

Deuteronomy 15.3: 3 Of a foreigner you may require it; but whatever of yours is with your brother, your hand shall release.

Deuteronomy 15.4: 4 However there will be no poor with you (for Yahweh will surely bless you in the land which Yahweh your God gives you for an inheritance to possess)

Deuteronomy 15.5: 5 if only you diligently listen to Yahweh your God’s voice, to observe to do all this commandment which I command you today.

Deuteronomy 15.6: 6 For Yahweh your God will bless you, as he promised you. You will lend to many nations, but you will not borrow. You will rule over many nations, but they will not rule over you.

Deuteronomy 15.7: 7 If a poor man, one of your brothers, is with you within any of your gates in your land which Yahweh your God gives you, you shall not harden your heart, nor shut your hand from your poor brother;

Deuteronomy 15.8: 8 but you shall surely open your hand to him, and shall surely lend him sufficient for his need, which he lacks.

Deuteronomy 15.9: 9 Beware that there not be a wicked thought in your heart, saying, “The seventh year, the year of release, is at hand,” and your eye be evil against your poor brother and you give him nothing; and he cry to Yahweh against you, and it be sin to you.

Deuteronomy 15.10: 10 You shall surely give, and your heart shall not be grieved when you give to him, because it is for this thing Yahweh your God will bless you in all your work and in all that you put your hand to.

Deuteronomy 15.11: 11 For the poor will never cease out of the land. Therefore I command you to surely open your hand to your brother, to your needy, and to your poor, in your land.

Deuteronomy 15.12: 12 If your brother, a Hebrew man, or a Hebrew woman, is sold to you and serves you six years, then in the seventh year you shall let him go free from you.

Deuteronomy 15.13: 13 When you let him go free from you, you shall not let him go empty.

Deuteronomy 15.14: 14 You shall furnish him liberally out of your flock, out of your threshing floor, and out of your wine press. As Yahweh your God has blessed you, you shall give to him.

Deuteronomy 15.15: 15 You shall remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and Yahweh your God redeemed you. Therefore I command you this thing today.

Deuteronomy 15.16: 16 It shall be, if he tells you, “I will not go out from you,” because he loves you and your house, because he is well with you,

Deuteronomy 15.17: 17 then you shall take an awl, and thrust it through his ear to the door, and he shall be your servant forever. Also to your female servant you shall do likewise.

Deuteronomy 15.18: 18 It shall not seem hard to you when you let him go free from you; for he has been double the value of a hired hand as he served you six years. Yahweh your God will bless you in all that you do.

Deuteronomy 15.19: 19 You shall dedicate all the firstborn males that are born of your herd and of your flock to Yahweh your God. You shall do no work with the firstborn of your herd, nor shear the firstborn of your flock.

Deuteronomy 15.20: 20 You shall eat it before Yahweh your God year by year in the place which Yahweh shall choose, you and your household.

Deuteronomy 15.21: 21 If it has any defect—is lame or blind, or has any defect whatever, you shall not sacrifice it to Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 15.22: 22 You shall eat it within your gates. The unclean and the clean shall eat it alike, as the gazelle and as the deer.

Deuteronomy 15.23: 23 Only you shall not eat its blood. You shall pour it out on the ground like water.

Deuteronomy 16.0:

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Deuteronomy 16.1: 1 Observe the month of Abib, and keep the Passover to Yahweh your God; for in the month of Abib Yahweh your God brought you out of Egypt by night.

Deuteronomy 16.2: 2 You shall sacrifice the Passover to Yahweh your God, of the flock and the herd, in the place which Yahweh shall choose to cause his name to dwell there.

Deuteronomy 16.3: 3 You shall eat no leavened bread with it. You shall eat unleavened bread with it seven days, even the bread of affliction (for you came out of the land of Egypt in haste) that you may remember the day when you came out of the land of Egypt all the days of your life.

Deuteronomy 16.4: 4 No yeast shall be seen with you in all your borders seven days; neither shall any of the meat, which you sacrifice the first day at evening, remain all night until the morning.

Deuteronomy 16.5: 5 You may not sacrifice the Passover within any of your gates which Yahweh your God gives you;

Deuteronomy 16.6: 6 but at the place which Yahweh your God shall choose to cause his name to dwell in, there you shall sacrifice the Passover at evening, at the going down of the sun, at the season that you came out of Egypt.

Deuteronomy 16.7: 7 You shall roast and eat it in the place which Yahweh your God chooses. In the morning you shall return to your tents.

Deuteronomy 16.8: 8 Six days you shall eat unleavened bread. On the seventh day shall be a solemn assembly to Yahweh your God. You shall do no work.

Deuteronomy 16.9: 9 You shall count for yourselves seven weeks. From the time you begin to put the sickle to the standing grain you shall begin to count seven weeks.

Deuteronomy 16.10: 10 You shall keep the feast of weeks to Yahweh your God with a tribute of a free will offering of your hand, which you shall give according to how Yahweh your God blesses you.

Deuteronomy 16.11: 11 You shall rejoice before Yahweh your God: you, your son, your daughter, your male servant, your female servant, the Levite who is within your gates, the foreigner, the fatherless, and the widow who are among you, in the place which Yahweh your God shall choose to cause his name to dwell there.

Deuteronomy 16.12: 12 You shall remember that you were a slave in Egypt. You shall observe and do these statutes.

Deuteronomy 16.13: 13 You shall keep the feast of booths seven days, after you have gathered in from your threshing floor and from your wine press.

Deuteronomy 16.14: 14 You shall rejoice in your feast, you, your son, your daughter, your male servant, your female servant, the Levite, the foreigner, the fatherless, and the widow who are within your gates.

Deuteronomy 16.15: 15 You shall keep a feast to Yahweh your God seven days in the place which Yahweh chooses, because Yahweh your God will bless you in all your increase and in all the work of your hands, and you shall be altogether joyful.

Deuteronomy 16.16: 16 Three times in a year all of your males shall appear before Yahweh your God in the place which he chooses: in the feast of unleavened bread, in the feast of weeks, and in the feast of booths. They shall not appear before Yahweh empty.

Deuteronomy 16.17: 17 Every man shall give as he is able, according to Yahweh your God’s blessing which he has given you.

Deuteronomy 16.18: 18 You shall make judges and officers in all your gates, which Yahweh your God gives you, according to your tribes; and they shall judge the people with righteous judgment.

Deuteronomy 16.19: 19 You shall not pervert justice. You shall not show partiality. You shall not take a bribe, for a bribe blinds the eyes of the wise and perverts the words of the righteous.

Deuteronomy 16.20: 20 You shall follow that which is altogether just, that you may live and inherit the land which Yahweh your God gives you.

Deuteronomy 16.21: 21 You shall not plant for yourselves an Asherah of any kind of tree beside Yahweh your God’s altar, which you shall make for yourselves.

Deuteronomy 16.22: 22 Neither shall you set yourself up a sacred stone which Yahweh your God hates.

Deuteronomy 17.0:

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Deuteronomy 17.1: 1 You shall not sacrifice to Yahweh your God an ox or a sheep in which is a defect or anything evil; for that is an abomination to Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 17.2: 2 If there is found among you, within any of your gates which Yahweh your God gives you, a man or woman who does that which is evil in Yahweh your God’s sight in transgressing his covenant,

Deuteronomy 17.3: 3 and has gone and served other gods and worshiped them, or the sun, or the moon, or any of the stars of the sky, which I have not commanded,

Deuteronomy 17.4: 4 and you are told, and you have heard of it, then you shall inquire diligently. Behold, if it is true, and the thing certain, that such abomination is done in Israel,

Deuteronomy 17.5: 5 then you shall bring out that man or that woman who has done this evil thing to your gates, even that same man or woman; and you shall stone them to death with stones.

Deuteronomy 17.6: 6 At the mouth of two witnesses, or three witnesses, he who is to die shall be put to death. At the mouth of one witness he shall not be put to death.

Deuteronomy 17.7: 7 The hands of the witnesses shall be first on him to put him to death, and afterward the hands of all the people. So you shall remove the evil from among you.

Deuteronomy 17.8: 8 If there arises a matter too hard for you in judgment, between blood and blood, between plea and plea, and between stroke and stroke, being matters of controversy within your gates, then you shall arise, and go up to the place which Yahweh your God chooses.

Deuteronomy 17.9: 9 You shall come to the priests who are Levites and to the judge who shall be in those days. You shall inquire, and they shall give you the verdict.

Deuteronomy 17.10: 10 You shall do according to the decisions of the verdict which they shall give you from that place which Yahweh chooses. You shall observe to do according to all that they shall teach you.

Deuteronomy 17.11: 11 According to the decisions of the law which they shall teach you, and according to the judgment which they shall tell you, you shall do. You shall not turn away from the sentence which they announce to you, to the right hand, nor to the left.

Deuteronomy 17.12: 12 The man who does presumptuously in not listening to the priest who stands to minister there before Yahweh your God, or to the judge, even that man shall die. You shall put away the evil from Israel.

Deuteronomy 17.13: 13 All the people shall hear and fear, and do no more presumptuously.

Deuteronomy 17.14: 14 When you have come to the land which Yahweh your God gives you, and possess it and dwell in it, and say, “I will set a king over me, like all the nations that are around me,”

Deuteronomy 17.15: 15 you shall surely set him whom Yahweh your God chooses as king over yourselves. You shall set as king over you one from among your brothers. You may not put a foreigner over you, who is not your brother.

Deuteronomy 17.16: 16 Only he shall not multiply horses to himself, nor cause the people to return to Egypt, to the end that he may multiply horses; because Yahweh has said to you, “You shall not go back that way again.”

Deuteronomy 17.17: 17 He shall not multiply wives to himself, that his heart not turn away. He shall not greatly multiply to himself silver and gold.

Deuteronomy 17.18: 18 It shall be, when he sits on the throne of his kingdom, that he shall write himself a copy of this law in a book, out of that which is before the Levitical priests.

Deuteronomy 17.19: 19 It shall be with him, and he shall read from it all the days of his life, that he may learn to fear Yahweh his God, to keep all the words of this law and these statutes, to do them;

Deuteronomy 17.20: 20 that his heart not be lifted up above his brothers, and that he not turn away from the commandment to the right hand, or to the left, to the end that he may prolong his days in his kingdom, he and his children, in the middle of Israel.

Deuteronomy 18.0:

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Deuteronomy 18.1: 1 The priests and the Levites—all the tribe of Levi—shall have no portion nor inheritance with Israel. They shall eat the offerings of Yahweh made by fire and his portion.

Deuteronomy 18.2: 2 They shall have no inheritance among their brothers. Yahweh is their inheritance, as he has spoken to them.

Deuteronomy 18.3: 3 This shall be the priests’ due from the people, from those who offer a sacrifice, whether it be ox or sheep, that they shall give to the priest: the shoulder, the two cheeks, and the inner parts.

Deuteronomy 18.4: 4 You shall give him the first fruits of your grain, of your new wine, and of your oil, and the first of the fleece of your sheep.

Deuteronomy 18.5: 5 For Yahweh your God has chosen him out of all your tribes to stand to minister in Yahweh’s name, him and his sons forever.

Deuteronomy 18.6: 6 If a Levite comes from any of your gates out of all Israel where he lives, and comes with all the desire of his soul to the place which Yahweh shall choose,

Deuteronomy 18.7: 7 then he shall minister in the name of Yahweh his God, as all his brothers the Levites do, who stand there before Yahweh.

Deuteronomy 18.8: 8 They shall have like portions to eat, in addition to that which comes from the sale of his family possessions.

Deuteronomy 18.9: 9 When you have come into the land which Yahweh your God gives you, you shall not learn to imitate the abominations of those nations.

Deuteronomy 18.10: 10 There shall not be found with you anyone who makes his son or his daughter to pass through the fire, one who uses divination, one who tells fortunes, or an enchanter, or a sorcerer,

Deuteronomy 18.11: 11 or a charmer, or someone who consults with a familiar spirit, or a wizard, or a necromancer.

Deuteronomy 18.12: 12 For whoever does these things is an abomination to Yahweh. Because of these abominations, Yahweh your God drives them out from before you.

Deuteronomy 18.13: 13 You shall be blameless with Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 18.14: 14 For these nations that you shall dispossess listen to those who practice sorcery and to diviners; but as for you, Yahweh your God has not allowed you so to do.

Deuteronomy 18.15: 15 Yahweh your God will raise up to you a prophet from among you, of your brothers, like me. You shall listen to him.

Deuteronomy 18.16: 16 This is according to all that you desired of Yahweh your God in Horeb in the day of the assembly, saying, “Let me not hear again Yahweh my God’s voice, neither let me see this great fire any more, that I not die.”

Deuteronomy 18.17: 17 Yahweh said to me, “They have well said that which they have spoken.

Deuteronomy 18.18: 18 I will raise them up a prophet from among their brothers, like you. I will put my words in his mouth, and he shall speak to them all that I shall command him.

Deuteronomy 18.19: 19 It shall happen, that whoever will not listen to my words which he shall speak in my name, I will require it of him.

Deuteronomy 18.20: 20 But the prophet who speaks a word presumptuously in my name, which I have not commanded him to speak, or who speaks in the name of other gods, that same prophet shall die.”

Deuteronomy 18.21: 21 You may say in your heart, “How shall we know the word which Yahweh has not spoken?”

Deuteronomy 18.22: 22 When a prophet speaks in Yahweh’s name, if the thing doesn’t follow, nor happen, that is the thing which Yahweh has not spoken. The prophet has spoken it presumptuously. You shall not be afraid of him.

Deuteronomy 19.0:

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Deuteronomy 19.1: 1 When Yahweh your God cuts off the nations whose land Yahweh your God gives you, and you succeed them and dwell in their cities and in their houses,

Deuteronomy 19.2: 2 you shall set apart three cities for yourselves in the middle of your land, which Yahweh your God gives you to possess.

Deuteronomy 19.3: 3 You shall prepare the way, and divide the borders of your land which Yahweh your God causes you to inherit into three parts, that every man slayer may flee there.

Deuteronomy 19.4: 4 This is the case of the man slayer who shall flee there and live: Whoever kills his neighbor unintentionally, and didn’t hate him in time past—

Deuteronomy 19.5: 5 as when a man goes into the forest with his neighbor to chop wood and his hand swings the ax to cut down the tree, and the head slips from the handle and hits his neighbor so that he dies—he shall flee to one of these cities and live.

Deuteronomy 19.6: 6 Otherwise, the avenger of blood might pursue the man slayer while hot anger is in his heart and overtake him, because the way is long, and strike him mortally, even though he was not worthy of death, because he didn’t hate him in time past.

Deuteronomy 19.7: 7 Therefore I command you to set apart three cities for yourselves.

Deuteronomy 19.8: 8 If Yahweh your God enlarges your border, as he has sworn to your fathers, and gives you all the land which he promised to give to your fathers;

Deuteronomy 19.9: 9 and if you keep all this commandment to do it, which I command you today, to love Yahweh your God, and to walk ever in his ways, then you shall add three cities more for yourselves, in addition to these three.

Deuteronomy 19.10: 10 This is so that innocent blood will not be shed in the middle of your land which Yahweh your God gives you for an inheritance, leaving blood guilt on you.

Deuteronomy 19.11: 11 But if any man hates his neighbor, lies in wait for him, rises up against him, strikes him mortally so that he dies, and he flees into one of these cities;

Deuteronomy 19.12: 12 then the elders of his city shall send and bring him there, and deliver him into the hand of the avenger of blood, that he may die.

Deuteronomy 19.13: 13 Your eye shall not pity him, but you shall purge the innocent blood from Israel that it may go well with you.

Deuteronomy 19.14: 14 You shall not remove your neighbor’s landmark, which they of old time have set, in your inheritance which you shall inherit, in the land that Yahweh your God gives you to possess.

Deuteronomy 19.15: 15 One witness shall not rise up against a man for any iniquity, or for any sin that he sins. At the mouth of two witnesses, or at the mouth of three witnesses, shall a matter be established.

Deuteronomy 19.16: 16 If an unrighteous witness rises up against any man to testify against him of wrongdoing,

Deuteronomy 19.17: 17 then both the men, between whom the controversy is, shall stand before Yahweh, before the priests and the judges who shall be in those days;

Deuteronomy 19.18: 18 and the judges shall make diligent inquisition; and behold, if the witness is a false witness, and has testified falsely against his brother,

Deuteronomy 19.19: 19 then you shall do to him as he had thought to do to his brother. So you shall remove the evil from among you.

Deuteronomy 19.20: 20 Those who remain shall hear, and fear, and will never again commit any such evil among you.

Deuteronomy 19.21: 21 Your eyes shall not pity: life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot.

Deuteronomy 20.0:

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Deuteronomy 20.1: 1 When you go out to battle against your enemies, and see horses, chariots, and a people more numerous than you, you shall not be afraid of them; for Yahweh your God is with you, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt.

Deuteronomy 20.2: 2 It shall be, when you draw near to the battle, that the priest shall approach and speak to the people,

Deuteronomy 20.3: 3 and shall tell them, “Hear, Israel, you draw near today to battle against your enemies. Don’t let your heart faint! Don’t be afraid, nor tremble, neither be scared of them;

Deuteronomy 20.4: 4 for Yahweh your God is he who goes with you, to fight for you against your enemies, to save you.”

Deuteronomy 20.5: 5 The officers shall speak to the people, saying, “What man is there who has built a new house, and has not dedicated it? Let him go and return to his house, lest he die in the battle, and another man dedicate it.

Deuteronomy 20.6: 6 What man is there who has planted a vineyard, and has not used its fruit? Let him go and return to his house, lest he die in the battle, and another man use its fruit.

Deuteronomy 20.7: 7 What man is there who has pledged to be married to a wife, and has not taken her? Let him go and return to his house, lest he die in the battle, and another man take her.”

Deuteronomy 20.8: 8 The officers shall speak further to the people, and they shall say, “What man is there who is fearful and faint-hearted? Let him go and return to his house, lest his brother’s heart melt as his heart.”

Deuteronomy 20.9: 9 It shall be, when the officers have finished speaking to the people, that they shall appoint captains of armies at the head of the people.

Deuteronomy 20.10: 10 When you draw near to a city to fight against it, then proclaim peace to it.

Deuteronomy 20.11: 11 It shall be, if it gives you answer of peace and opens to you, then it shall be that all the people who are found therein shall become forced laborers to you, and shall serve you.

Deuteronomy 20.12: 12 If it will make no peace with you, but will make war against you, then you shall besiege it.

Deuteronomy 20.13: 13 When Yahweh your God delivers it into your hand, you shall strike every male of it with the edge of the sword;

Deuteronomy 20.14: 14 but the women, the little ones, the livestock, and all that is in the city, even all its plunder, you shall take for plunder for yourself. You may use the plunder of your enemies, which Yahweh your God has given you.

Deuteronomy 20.15: 15 Thus you shall do to all the cities which are very far off from you, which are not of the cities of these nations.

Deuteronomy 20.16: 16 But of the cities of these peoples that Yahweh your God gives you for an inheritance, you shall save alive nothing that breathes;

Deuteronomy 20.17: 17 but you shall utterly destroy them: the Hittite, the Amorite, the Canaanite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite, as Yahweh your God has commanded you;

Deuteronomy 20.18: 18 that they not teach you to follow all their abominations, which they have done for their gods; so would you sin against Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 20.19: 19 When you shall besiege a city a long time, in making war against it to take it, you shall not destroy its trees by wielding an ax against them; for you may eat of them. You shall not cut them down, for is the tree of the field man, that it should be besieged by you?

Deuteronomy 20.20: 20 Only the trees that you know are not trees for food, you shall destroy and cut them down. You shall build bulwarks against the city that makes war with you, until it falls.

Deuteronomy 21.0:

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Deuteronomy 21.1: 1 If someone is found slain in the land which Yahweh your God gives you to possess, lying in the field, and it isn’t known who has struck him,

Deuteronomy 21.2: 2 then your elders and your judges shall come out, and they shall measure to the cities which are around him who is slain.

Deuteronomy 21.3: 3 It shall be that the elders of the city which is nearest to the slain man shall take a heifer of the herd, which hasn’t been worked with and which has not drawn in the yoke.

Deuteronomy 21.4: 4 The elders of that city shall bring the heifer down to a valley with running water, which is neither plowed nor sown, and shall break the heifer’s neck there in the valley.

Deuteronomy 21.5: 5 The priests the sons of Levi shall come near, for them Yahweh your God has chosen to minister to him, and to bless in Yahweh’s name; and according to their word shall every controversy and every assault be decided.

Deuteronomy 21.6: 6 All the elders of that city which is nearest to the slain man shall wash their hands over the heifer whose neck was broken in the valley.

Deuteronomy 21.7: 7 They shall answer and say, “Our hands have not shed this blood, neither have our eyes seen it.

Deuteronomy 21.8: 8 Forgive, Yahweh, your people Israel, whom you have redeemed, and don’t allow innocent blood among your people Israel.” The blood shall be forgiven them.

Deuteronomy 21.9: 9 So you shall put away the innocent blood from among you, when you shall do that which is right in Yahweh’s eyes.

Deuteronomy 21.10: 10 When you go out to battle against your enemies, and Yahweh your God delivers them into your hands and you carry them away captive,

Deuteronomy 21.11: 11 and see among the captives a beautiful woman, and you are attracted to her, and desire to take her as your wife,

Deuteronomy 21.12: 12 then you shall bring her home to your house. She shall shave her head and trim her nails.

Deuteronomy 21.13: 13 She shall take off the clothing of her captivity, and shall remain in your house, and bewail her father and her mother a full month. After that you shall go in to her and be her husband, and she shall be your wife.

Deuteronomy 21.14: 14 It shall be, if you have no delight in her, then you shall let her go where she desires; but you shall not sell her at all for money. You shall not deal with her as a slave, because you have humbled her.

Deuteronomy 21.15: 15 If a man has two wives, the one beloved and the other hated, and they have borne him children, both the beloved and the hated, and if the firstborn son is hers who was hated,

Deuteronomy 21.16: 16 then it shall be, in the day that he causes his sons to inherit that which he has, that he may not give the son of the beloved the rights of the firstborn before the son of the hated, who is the firstborn;

Deuteronomy 21.17: 17 but he shall acknowledge the firstborn, the son of the hated, by giving him a double portion of all that he has; for he is the beginning of his strength. The right of the firstborn is his.

Deuteronomy 21.18: 18 If a man has a stubborn and rebellious son who will not obey the voice of his father or the voice of his mother, and though they chasten him, will not listen to them,

Deuteronomy 21.19: 19 then his father and his mother shall take hold of him and bring him out to the elders of his city and to the gate of his place.

Deuteronomy 21.20: 20 They shall tell the elders of his city, “This our son is stubborn and rebellious. He will not obey our voice. He is a glutton and a drunkard.”

Deuteronomy 21.21: 21 All the men of his city shall stone him to death with stones. So you shall remove the evil from among you. All Israel shall hear, and fear.

Deuteronomy 21.22: 22 If a man has committed a sin worthy of death, and he is put to death, and you hang him on a tree,

Deuteronomy 21.23: 23 his body shall not remain all night on the tree, but you shall surely bury him the same day; for he who is hanged is accursed of God. Don’t defile your land which Yahweh your God gives you for an inheritance.

Deuteronomy 22.0:

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Deuteronomy 22.1: 1 You shall not see your brother’s ox or his sheep go astray and hide yourself from them. You shall surely bring them again to your brother.

Deuteronomy 22.2: 2 If your brother isn’t near to you, or if you don’t know him, then you shall bring it home to your house, and it shall be with you until your brother comes looking for it, and you shall restore it to him.

Deuteronomy 22.3: 3 So you shall do with his donkey. So you shall do with his garment. So you shall do with every lost thing of your brother’s, which he has lost and you have found. You may not hide yourself.

Deuteronomy 22.4: 4 You shall not see your brother’s donkey or his ox fallen down by the way, and hide yourself from them. You shall surely help him to lift them up again.

Deuteronomy 22.5: 5 A woman shall not wear men’s clothing, neither shall a man put on women’s clothing; for whoever does these things is an abomination to Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 22.6: 6 If you come across a bird’s nest on the way, in any tree or on the ground, with young ones or eggs, and the hen sitting on the young, or on the eggs, you shall not take the hen with the young.

Deuteronomy 22.7: 7 You shall surely let the hen go, but the young you may take for yourself, that it may be well with you, and that you may prolong your days.

Deuteronomy 22.8: 8 When you build a new house, then you shall make a railing around your roof, so that you don’t bring blood on your house if anyone falls from there.

Deuteronomy 22.9: 9 You shall not sow your vineyard with two kinds of seed, lest all the fruit be defiled, the seed which you have sown, and the increase of the vineyard.

Deuteronomy 22.10: 10 You shall not plow with an ox and a donkey together.

Deuteronomy 22.11: 11 You shall not wear clothes of wool and linen woven together.

Deuteronomy 22.12: 12 You shall make yourselves fringes on the four corners of your cloak with which you cover yourself.

Deuteronomy 22.13: 13 If any man takes a wife, and goes in to her, hates her,

Deuteronomy 22.14: 14 accuses her of shameful things, gives her a bad name, and says, “I took this woman, and when I came near to her, I didn’t find in her the tokens of virginity;”

Deuteronomy 22.15: 15 then the young lady’s father and mother shall take and bring the tokens of the young lady’s virginity to the elders of the city in the gate.

Deuteronomy 22.16: 16 The young lady’s father shall tell the elders, “I gave my daughter to this man as his wife, and he hates her.

Deuteronomy 22.17: 17 Behold, he has accused her of shameful things, saying, ‘I didn’t find in your daughter the tokens of virginity;’ and yet these are the tokens of my daughter’s virginity.” They shall spread the cloth before the elders of the city.

Deuteronomy 22.18: 18 The elders of that city shall take the man and chastise him.

Deuteronomy 22.19: 19 They shall fine him one hundred shekels of silver, and give them to the father of the young lady, because he has given a bad name to a virgin of Israel. She shall be his wife. He may not put her away all his days.

Deuteronomy 22.20: 20 But if this thing is true, that the tokens of virginity were not found in the young lady,

Deuteronomy 22.21: 21 then they shall bring out the young lady to the door of her father’s house, and the men of her city shall stone her to death with stones, because she has done folly in Israel, to play the prostitute in her father’s house. So you shall remove the evil from among you.

Deuteronomy 22.22: 22 If a man is found lying with a woman married to a husband, then they shall both die, the man who lay with the woman and the woman. So you shall remove the evil from Israel.

Deuteronomy 22.23: 23 If there is a young lady who is a virgin pledged to be married to a husband, and a man finds her in the city, and lies with her,

Deuteronomy 22.24: 24 then you shall bring them both out to the gate of that city, and you shall stone them to death with stones; the lady, because she didn’t cry, being in the city; and the man, because he has humbled his neighbor’s wife. So you shall remove the evil from among you.

Deuteronomy 22.25: 25 But if the man finds the lady who is pledged to be married in the field, and the man forces her and lies with her, then only the man who lay with her shall die;

Deuteronomy 22.26: 26 but to the lady you shall do nothing. There is in the lady no sin worthy of death; for as when a man rises against his neighbor and kills him, even so is this matter;

Deuteronomy 22.27: 27 for he found her in the field, the pledged to be married lady cried, and there was no one to save her.

Deuteronomy 22.28: 28 If a man finds a lady who is a virgin, who is not pledged to be married, grabs her and lies with her, and they are found,

Deuteronomy 22.29: 29 then the man who lay with her shall give to the lady’s father fifty shekels of silver. She shall be his wife, because he has humbled her. He may not put her away all his days.

Deuteronomy 22.30: 30 A man shall not take his father’s wife, and shall not uncover his father’s skirt.

Deuteronomy 23.0:

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Deuteronomy 23.1: 1 He who is emasculated by crushing or cutting shall not enter into Yahweh’s assembly.

Deuteronomy 23.2: 2 A person born of a forbidden union shall not enter into Yahweh’s assembly; even to the tenth generation shall no one of his enter into Yahweh’s assembly.

Deuteronomy 23.3: 3 An Ammonite or a Moabite shall not enter into Yahweh’s assembly; even to the tenth generation shall no one belonging to them enter into Yahweh’s assembly forever,

Deuteronomy 23.4: 4 because they didn’t meet you with bread and with water on the way when you came out of Egypt, and because they hired against you Balaam the son of Beor from Pethor of Mesopotamia, to curse you.

Deuteronomy 23.5: 5 Nevertheless Yahweh your God wouldn’t listen to Balaam, but Yahweh your God turned the curse into a blessing to you, because Yahweh your God loved you.

Deuteronomy 23.6: 6 You shall not seek their peace nor their prosperity all your days forever.

Deuteronomy 23.7: 7 You shall not abhor an Edomite, for he is your brother. You shall not abhor an Egyptian, because you lived as a foreigner in his land.

Deuteronomy 23.8: 8 The children of the third generation who are born to them may enter into Yahweh’s assembly.

Deuteronomy 23.9: 9 When you go out and camp against your enemies, then you shall keep yourselves from every evil thing.

Deuteronomy 23.10: 10 If there is among you any man who is not clean by reason of that which happens to him by night, then shall he go outside of the camp. He shall not come within the camp;

Deuteronomy 23.11: 11 but it shall be, when evening comes, he shall bathe himself in water. When the sun is down, he shall come within the camp.

Deuteronomy 23.12: 12 You shall have a place also outside of the camp where you go relieve yourself.

Deuteronomy 23.13: 13 You shall have a trowel among your weapons. It shall be, when you relieve yourself, you shall dig with it, and shall turn back and cover your excrement;

Deuteronomy 23.14: 14 for Yahweh your God walks in the middle of your camp, to deliver you, and to give up your enemies before you. Therefore your camp shall be holy, that he may not see an unclean thing in you, and turn away from you.

Deuteronomy 23.15: 15 You shall not deliver to his master a servant who has escaped from his master to you.

Deuteronomy 23.16: 16 He shall dwell with you, among you, in the place which he shall choose within one of your gates, where it pleases him best. You shall not oppress him.

Deuteronomy 23.17: 17 There shall be no prostitute of the daughters of Israel, neither shall there be a sodomite of the sons of Israel.

Deuteronomy 23.18: 18 You shall not bring the hire of a prostitute, or the wages of a male prostitute, into the house of Yahweh your God for any vow; for both of these are an abomination to Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 23.19: 19 You shall not lend on interest to your brother: interest of money, interest of food, interest of anything that is lent on interest.

Deuteronomy 23.20: 20 You may charge a foreigner interest; but you shall not your brother interest, that Yahweh your God may bless you in all that you put your hand to, in the land where you go in to possess it.

Deuteronomy 23.21: 21 When you vow a vow to Yahweh your God, you shall not be slack to pay it, for Yahweh your God will surely require it of you; and it would be sin in you.

Deuteronomy 23.22: 22 But if you refrain from making a vow, it shall be no sin in you.

Deuteronomy 23.23: 23 You shall observe and do that which has gone out of your lips. Whatever you have vowed to Yahweh your God as a free will offering, which you have promised with your mouth, you must do.

Deuteronomy 23.24: 24 When you come into your neighbor’s vineyard, then you may eat your fill of grapes at your own pleasure; but you shall not put any in your container.

Deuteronomy 23.25: 25 When you come into your neighbor’s standing grain, then you may pluck the ears with your hand; but you shall not use a sickle on your neighbor’s standing grain.

Deuteronomy 24.0:

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Deuteronomy 24.1: 1 When a man takes a wife and marries her, then it shall be, if she finds no favor in his eyes because he has found some unseemly thing in her, that he shall write her a certificate of divorce, put it in her hand, and send her out of his house.

Deuteronomy 24.2: 2 When she has departed out of his house, she may go and be another man’s wife.

Deuteronomy 24.3: 3 If the latter husband hates her, and write her a certificate of divorce, puts it in her hand, and sends her out of his house; or if the latter husband dies, who took her to be his wife;

Deuteronomy 24.4: 4 her former husband, who sent her away, may not take her again to be his wife after she is defiled; for that would be an abomination to Yahweh. You shall not cause the land to sin, which Yahweh your God gives you for an inheritance.

Deuteronomy 24.5: 5 When a man takes a new wife, he shall not go out in the army, neither shall he be assigned any business. He shall be free at home one year, and shall cheer his wife whom he has taken.

Deuteronomy 24.6: 6 No man shall take the mill or the upper millstone as a pledge, for he takes a life in pledge.

Deuteronomy 24.7: 7 If a man is found stealing any of his brothers of the children of Israel, and he deals with him as a slave, or sells him, then that thief shall die. So you shall remove the evil from among you.

Deuteronomy 24.8: 8 Be careful in the plague of leprosy, that you observe diligently and do according to all that the Levitical priests teach you. As I commanded them, so you shall observe to do.

Deuteronomy 24.9: 9 Remember what Yahweh your God did to Miriam, by the way as you came out of Egypt.

Deuteronomy 24.10: 10 When you lend your neighbor any kind of loan, you shall not go into his house to get his pledge.

Deuteronomy 24.11: 11 You shall stand outside, and the man to whom you lend shall bring the pledge outside to you.

Deuteronomy 24.12: 12 If he is a poor man, you shall not sleep with his pledge.

Deuteronomy 24.13: 13 You shall surely restore to him the pledge when the sun goes down, that he may sleep in his garment and bless you. It shall be righteousness to you before Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 24.14: 14 You shall not oppress a hired servant who is poor and needy, whether he is one of your brothers or one of the foreigners who are in your land within your gates.

Deuteronomy 24.15: 15 In his day you shall give him his wages, neither shall the sun go down on it; for he is poor and sets his heart on it; lest he cry against you to Yahweh, and it be sin to you.

Deuteronomy 24.16: 16 The fathers shall not be put to death for the children, neither shall the children be put to death for the fathers. Every man shall be put to death for his own sin.

Deuteronomy 24.17: 17 You shall not deprive the foreigner or the fatherless of justice, nor take a widow’s clothing in pledge;

Deuteronomy 24.18: 18 but you shall remember that you were a slave in Egypt, and Yahweh your God redeemed you there. Therefore I command you to do this thing.

Deuteronomy 24.19: 19 When you reap your harvest in your field, and have forgotten a sheaf in the field, you shall not go again to get it. It shall be for the foreigner, for the fatherless, and for the widow, that Yahweh your God may bless you in all the work of your hands.

Deuteronomy 24.20: 20 When you beat your olive tree, you shall not go over the boughs again. It shall be for the foreigner, for the fatherless, and for the widow.

Deuteronomy 24.21: 21 When you harvest your vineyard, you shall not glean it after yourselves. It shall be for the foreigner, for the fatherless, and for the widow.

Deuteronomy 24.22: 22 You shall remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt. Therefore I command you to do this thing.

Deuteronomy 25.0:

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Deuteronomy 25.1: 1 If there is a controversy between men, and they come to judgment and the judges judge them, then they shall justify the righteous and condemn the wicked.

Deuteronomy 25.2: 2 It shall be, if the wicked man is worthy to be beaten, that the judge shall cause him to lie down and to be beaten before his face, according to his wickedness, by number.

Deuteronomy 25.3: 3 He may sentence him to no more than forty stripes. He shall not give more, lest if he should give more and beat him more than that many stripes, then your brother will be degraded in your sight.

Deuteronomy 25.4: 4 You shall not muzzle the ox when he treads out the grain.

Deuteronomy 25.5: 5 If brothers dwell together, and one of them dies and has no son, the wife of the dead shall not be married outside to a stranger. Her husband’s brother shall go in to her, and take her as his wife, and perform the duty of a husband’s brother to her.

Deuteronomy 25.6: 6 It shall be that the firstborn whom she bears shall succeed in the name of his brother who is dead, that his name not be blotted out of Israel.

Deuteronomy 25.7: 7 If the man doesn’t want to take his brother’s wife, then his brother’s wife shall go up to the gate to the elders, and say, “My husband’s brother refuses to raise up to his brother a name in Israel. He will not perform the duty of a husband’s brother to me.”

Deuteronomy 25.8: 8 Then the elders of his city shall call him, and speak to him. If he stands and says, “I don’t want to take her,”

Deuteronomy 25.9: 9 then his brother’s wife shall come to him in the presence of the elders, and loose his sandal from off his foot, and spit in his face. She shall answer and say, “So shall it be done to the man who does not build up his brother’s house.”

Deuteronomy 25.10: 10 His name shall be called in Israel, “The house of him who had his sandal removed.”

Deuteronomy 25.11: 11 When men strive against each other, and the wife of one draws near to deliver her husband out of the hand of him who strikes him, and puts out her hand, and grabs him by his private parts,

Deuteronomy 25.12: 12 then you shall cut off her hand. Your eye shall have no pity.

Deuteronomy 25.13: 13 You shall not have in your bag diverse weights, one heavy and one light.

Deuteronomy 25.14: 14 You shall not have in your house diverse measures, one large and one small.

Deuteronomy 25.15: 15 You shall have a perfect and just weight. You shall have a perfect and just measure, that your days may be long in the land which Yahweh your God gives you.

Deuteronomy 25.16: 16 For all who do such things, all who do unrighteously, are an abomination to Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 25.17: 17 Remember what Amalek did to you by the way as you came out of Egypt;

Deuteronomy 25.18: 18 how he met you by the way, and struck the rearmost of you, all who were feeble behind you, when you were faint and weary; and he didn’t fear God.

Deuteronomy 25.19: 19 Therefore it shall be, when Yahweh your God has given you rest from all your enemies all around, in the land which Yahweh your God gives you for an inheritance to possess it, that you shall blot out the memory of Amalek from under the sky. You shall not forget.

Deuteronomy 26.0:

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Deuteronomy 26.1: 1 It shall be, when you have come in to the land which Yahweh your God gives you for an inheritance, possess it, and dwell in it,

Deuteronomy 26.2: 2 that you shall take some of the first of all the fruit of the ground, which you shall bring in from your land that Yahweh your God gives you. You shall put it in a basket, and shall go to the place which Yahweh your God shall choose to cause his name to dwell there.

Deuteronomy 26.3: 3 You shall come to the priest who shall be in those days, and tell him, “I profess today to Yahweh your God, that I have come to the land which Yahweh swore to our fathers to give us.”

Deuteronomy 26.4: 4 The priest shall take the basket out of your hand, and set it down before Yahweh your God’s altar.

Deuteronomy 26.5: 5 You shall answer and say before Yahweh your God, “My father was a Syrian ready to perish. He went down into Egypt, and lived there, few in number. There he became a great, mighty, and populous nation.

Deuteronomy 26.6: 6 The Egyptians mistreated us, afflicted us, and imposed hard labor on us.

Deuteronomy 26.7: 7 Then we cried to Yahweh, the God of our fathers. Yahweh heard our voice, and saw our affliction, our toil, and our oppression.

Deuteronomy 26.8: 8 Yahweh brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand, with an outstretched arm, with great terror, with signs, and with wonders;

Deuteronomy 26.9: 9 and he has brought us into this place, and has given us this land, a land flowing with milk and honey.

Deuteronomy 26.10: 10 Now, behold, I have brought the first of the fruit of the ground, which you, Yahweh, have given me.” You shall set it down before Yahweh your God, and worship before Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 26.11: 11 You shall rejoice in all the good which Yahweh your God has given to you, and to your house, you, and the Levite, and the foreigner who is among you.

Deuteronomy 26.12: 12 When you have finished tithing all the tithe of your increase in the third year, which is the year of tithing, then you shall give it to the Levite, to the foreigner, to the fatherless, and to the widow, that they may eat within your gates and be filled.

Deuteronomy 26.13: 13 You shall say before Yahweh your God, “I have put away the holy things out of my house, and also have given them to the Levite, to the foreigner, to the fatherless, and to the widow, according to all your commandment which you have commanded me. I have not transgressed any of your commandments, neither have I forgotten them.

Deuteronomy 26.14: 14 I have not eaten of it in my mourning, neither have I removed any of it while I was unclean, nor given of it for the dead. I have listened to Yahweh my God’s voice. I have done according to all that you have commanded me.

Deuteronomy 26.15: 15 Look down from your holy habitation, from heaven, and bless your people Israel, and the ground which you have given us, as you swore to our fathers, a land flowing with milk and honey.”

Deuteronomy 26.16: 16 Today Yahweh your God commands you to do these statutes and ordinances. You shall therefore keep and do them with all your heart and with all your soul.

Deuteronomy 26.17: 17 You have declared today that Yahweh is your God, and that you would walk in his ways, keep his statutes, his commandments, and his ordinances, and listen to his voice.

Deuteronomy 26.18: 18 Yahweh has declared today that you are a people for his own possession, as he has promised you, and that you should keep all his commandments.

Deuteronomy 26.19: 19 He will make you high above all nations that he has made, in praise, in name, and in honor; and that you may be a holy people to Yahweh your God, as he has spoken.

Deuteronomy 27.0:

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Deuteronomy 27.1: 1 Moses and the elders of Israel commanded the people, saying, “Keep all the commandment which I command you today.

Deuteronomy 27.2: 2 It shall be on the day when you shall pass over the Jordan to the land which Yahweh your God gives you, that you shall set yourself up great stones, and coat them with plaster.

Deuteronomy 27.3: 3 You shall write on them all the words of this law, when you have passed over, that you may go in to the land which Yahweh your God gives you, a land flowing with milk and honey, as Yahweh, the God of your fathers, has promised you.

Deuteronomy 27.4: 4 It shall be, when you have crossed over the Jordan, that you shall set up these stones, which I command you today, on Mount Ebal, and you shall coat them with plaster.

Deuteronomy 27.5: 5 There you shall build an altar to Yahweh your God, an altar of stones. You shall not use any iron tool on them.

Deuteronomy 27.6: 6 You shall build Yahweh your God’s altar of uncut stones. You shall offer burnt offerings on it to Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 27.7: 7 You shall sacrifice peace offerings, and shall eat there. You shall rejoice before Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 27.8: 8 You shall write on the stones all the words of this law very plainly.”

Deuteronomy 27.9: 9 Moses and the Levitical priests spoke to all Israel, saying, “Be silent and listen, Israel! Today you have become the people of Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 27.10: 10 You shall therefore obey Yahweh your God’s voice, and do his commandments and his statutes, which I command you today.”

Deuteronomy 27.11: 11 Moses commanded the people the same day, saying,

Deuteronomy 27.12: 12 “These shall stand on Mount Gerizim to bless the people, when you have crossed over the Jordan: Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Joseph, and Benjamin.

Deuteronomy 27.13: 13 These shall stand on Mount Ebal for the curse: Reuben, Gad, Asher, Zebulun, Dan, and Naphtali.

Deuteronomy 27.14: 14 With a loud voice, the Levites shall say to all the men of Israel,

Deuteronomy 27.15: 15 ‘Cursed is the man who makes an engraved or molten image, an abomination to Yahweh, the work of the hands of the craftsman, and sets it up in secret.’

All the people shall answer and say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.16: 16 ‘Cursed is he who dishonors his father or his mother.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.17: 17 ‘Cursed is he who removes his neighbor’s landmark.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.18: 18 ‘Cursed is he who leads the blind astray on the road.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.19: 19 ‘Cursed is he who withholds justice from the foreigner, fatherless, and widow.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.20: 20 ‘Cursed is he who lies with his father’s wife, because he dishonors his father’s bed.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.21: 21 ‘Cursed is he who lies with any kind of animal.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.22: 22 ‘Cursed is he who lies with his sister, his father’s daughter or his mother’s daughter.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.23: 23 ‘Cursed is he who lies with his mother-in-law.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.24: 24 ‘Cursed is he who secretly kills his neighbor.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.25: 25 ‘Cursed is he who takes a bribe to kill an innocent person.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’

Deuteronomy 27.26: 26 ‘Cursed is he who doesn’t uphold the words of this law by doing them.’

All the people shall say, ‘Amen.’”

Deuteronomy 28.0:

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Deuteronomy 28.1: 1 It shall happen, if you shall listen diligently to Yahweh your God’s voice, to observe to do all his commandments which I command you today, that Yahweh your God will set you high above all the nations of the earth.

Deuteronomy 28.2: 2 All these blessings will come upon you, and overtake you, if you listen to Yahweh your God’s voice.

Deuteronomy 28.3: 3 You shall be blessed in the city, and you shall be blessed in the field.

Deuteronomy 28.4: 4 You shall be blessed in the fruit of your body, the fruit of your ground, the fruit of your animals, the increase of your livestock, and the young of your flock.

Deuteronomy 28.5: 5 Your basket and your kneading trough shall be blessed.

Deuteronomy 28.6: 6 You shall be blessed when you come in, and you shall be blessed when you go out.

Deuteronomy 28.7: 7 Yahweh will cause your enemies who rise up against you to be struck before you. They will come out against you one way, and will flee before you seven ways.

Deuteronomy 28.8: 8 Yahweh will command the blessing on you in your barns, and in all that you put your hand to. He will bless you in the land which Yahweh your God gives you.

Deuteronomy 28.9: 9 Yahweh will establish you for a holy people to himself, as he has sworn to you, if you shall keep the commandments of Yahweh your God, and walk in his ways.

Deuteronomy 28.10: 10 All the peoples of the earth shall see that you are called by Yahweh’s name, and they will be afraid of you.

Deuteronomy 28.11: 11 Yahweh will grant you abundant prosperity in the fruit of your body, in the fruit of your livestock, and in the fruit of your ground, in the land which Yahweh swore to your fathers to give you.

Deuteronomy 28.12: 12 Yahweh will open to you his good treasure in the sky, to give the rain of your land in its season, and to bless all the work of your hand. You will lend to many nations, and you will not borrow.

Deuteronomy 28.13: 13 Yahweh will make you the head, and not the tail. You will be above only, and you will not be beneath, if you listen to the commandments of Yahweh your God which I command you today, to observe and to do,

Deuteronomy 28.14: 14 and shall not turn away from any of the words which I command you today, to the right hand or to the left, to go after other gods to serve them.

Deuteronomy 28.15: 15 But it shall come to pass, if you will not listen to Yahweh your God’s voice, to observe to do all his commandments and his statutes which I command you today, that all these curses will come on you and overtake you.

Deuteronomy 28.16: 16 You will be cursed in the city, and you will be cursed in the field.

Deuteronomy 28.17: 17 Your basket and your kneading trough will be cursed.

Deuteronomy 28.18: 18 The fruit of your body, the fruit of your ground, the increase of your livestock, and the young of your flock will be cursed.

Deuteronomy 28.19: 19 You will be cursed when you come in, and you will be cursed when you go out.

Deuteronomy 28.20: 20 Yahweh will send on you cursing, confusion, and rebuke in all that you put your hand to do, until you are destroyed and until you perish quickly, because of the evil of your doings, by which you have forsaken me.

Deuteronomy 28.21: 21 Yahweh will make the pestilence cling to you, until he has consumed you from off the land where you go in to possess it.

Deuteronomy 28.22: 22 Yahweh will strike you with consumption, with fever, with inflammation, with fiery heat, with the sword, with blight, and with mildew. They will pursue you until you perish.

Deuteronomy 28.23: 23 Your sky that is over your head will be bronze, and the earth that is under you will be iron.

Deuteronomy 28.24: 24 Yahweh will make the rain of your land powder and dust. It will come down on you from the sky, until you are destroyed.

Deuteronomy 28.25: 25 Yahweh will cause you to be struck before your enemies. You will go out one way against them, and will flee seven ways before them. You will be tossed back and forth among all the kingdoms of the earth.

Deuteronomy 28.26: 26 Your dead bodies will be food to all birds of the sky, and to the animals of the earth; and there will be no one to frighten them away.

Deuteronomy 28.27: 27 Yahweh will strike you with the boils of Egypt, with the tumors, with the scurvy, and with the itch, of which you can not be healed.

Deuteronomy 28.28: 28 Yahweh will strike you with madness, with blindness, and with astonishment of heart.

Deuteronomy 28.29: 29 You will grope at noonday, as the blind gropes in darkness, and you shall not prosper in your ways. You will only be oppressed and robbed always, and there will be no one to save you.

Deuteronomy 28.30: 30 You will betroth a wife, and another man shall lie with her. You will build a house, and you won’t dwell in it. You will plant a vineyard, and not use its fruit.

Deuteronomy 28.31: 31 Your ox will be slain before your eyes, and you will not eat any of it. Your donkey will be violently taken away from before your face, and will not be restored to you. Your sheep will be given to your enemies, and you will have no one to save you.

Deuteronomy 28.32: 32 Your sons and your daughters will be given to another people. Your eyes will look, and fail with longing for them all day long. There will be no power in your hand.

Deuteronomy 28.33: 33 A nation which you don’t know will eat the fruit of your ground and all of your work. You will only be oppressed and crushed always,

Deuteronomy 28.34: 34 so that the sights that you see with your eyes will drive you mad.

Deuteronomy 28.35: 35 Yahweh will strike you in the knees and in the legs with a sore boil, of which you cannot be healed, from the sole of your foot to the crown of your head.

Deuteronomy 28.36: 36 Yahweh will bring you, and your king whom you will set over yourselves, to a nation that you have not known, you nor your fathers. There you will serve other gods of wood and stone.

Deuteronomy 28.37: 37 You will become an astonishment, a proverb, and a byword among all the peoples where Yahweh will lead you away.

Deuteronomy 28.38: 38 You will carry much seed out into the field, and will gather little in, for the locust will consume it.

Deuteronomy 28.39: 39 You will plant vineyards and dress them, but you will neither drink of the wine, nor harvest, because worms will eat them.

Deuteronomy 28.40: 40 You will have olive trees throughout all your borders, but you won’t anoint yourself with the oil, for your olives will drop off.

Deuteronomy 28.41: 41 You will father sons and daughters, but they will not be yours, for they will go into captivity.

Deuteronomy 28.42: 42 Locusts will consume all of your trees and the fruit of your ground.

Deuteronomy 28.43: 43 The foreigner who is among you will mount up above you higher and higher, and you will come down lower and lower.

Deuteronomy 28.44: 44 He will lend to you, and you won’t lend to him. He will be the head, and you will be the tail.

Deuteronomy 28.45: 45 All these curses will come on you, and will pursue you and overtake you, until you are destroyed, because you didn’t listen to Yahweh your God’s voice, to keep his commandments and his statutes which he commanded you.

Deuteronomy 28.46: 46 They will be for a sign and for a wonder to you and to your offspring forever.

Deuteronomy 28.47: 47 Because you didn’t serve Yahweh your God with joyfulness and with gladness of heart, by reason of the abundance of all things;

Deuteronomy 28.48: 48 therefore you will serve your enemies whom Yahweh sends against you, in hunger, in thirst, in nakedness, and in lack of all things. He will put an iron yoke on your neck until he has destroyed you.

Deuteronomy 28.49: 49 Yahweh will bring a nation against you from far, from the end of the earth, as the eagle flies: a nation whose language you will not understand,

Deuteronomy 28.50: 50 a nation of fierce facial expressions, that doesn’t respect the elderly, nor show favor to the young.

Deuteronomy 28.51: 51 They will eat the fruit of your livestock and the fruit of your ground, until you are destroyed. They also won’t leave you grain, new wine, oil, the increase of your livestock, or the young of your flock, until they have caused you to perish.

Deuteronomy 28.52: 52 They will besiege you in all your gates until your high and fortified walls in which you trusted come down throughout all your land. They will besiege you in all your gates throughout all your land which Yahweh your God has given you.

Deuteronomy 28.53: 53 You will eat the fruit of your own body, the flesh of your sons and of your daughters, whom Yahweh your God has given you, in the siege and in the distress with which your enemies will distress you.

Deuteronomy 28.54: 54 The man who is tender among you, and very delicate, his eye will be evil toward his brother, toward the wife whom he loves, and toward the remnant of his children whom he has remaining,

Deuteronomy 28.55: 55 so that he will not give to any of them of the flesh of his children whom he will eat, because he has nothing left to him, in the siege and in the distress with which your enemy will distress you in all your gates.

Deuteronomy 28.56: 56 The tender and delicate woman among you, who would not venture to set the sole of her foot on the ground for delicateness and tenderness, her eye will be evil toward the husband that she loves, toward her son, toward her daughter,

Deuteronomy 28.57: 57 toward her young one who comes out from between her feet, and toward her children whom she bears; for she will eat them secretly for lack of all things in the siege and in the distress with which your enemy will distress you in your gates.

Deuteronomy 28.58: 58 If you will not observe to do all the words of this law that are written in this book, that you may fear this glorious and fearful name, YAHWEH your God,

Deuteronomy 28.59: 59 then Yahweh will make your plagues and the plagues of your offspring fearful, even great plagues, and of long duration, and severe sicknesses, and of long duration.

Deuteronomy 28.60: 60 He will bring on you again all the diseases of Egypt, which you were afraid of; and they will cling to you.

Deuteronomy 28.61: 61 Also every sickness and every plague which is not written in the book of this law, Yahweh will bring them on you until you are destroyed.

Deuteronomy 28.62: 62 You will be left few in number, even though you were as the stars of the sky for multitude, because you didn’t listen to Yahweh your God’s voice.

Deuteronomy 28.63: 63 It will happen that as Yahweh rejoiced over you to do you good, and to multiply you, so Yahweh will rejoice over you to cause you to perish and to destroy you. You will be plucked from the land that you are going in to possess.

Deuteronomy 28.64: 64 Yahweh will scatter you among all peoples, from one end of the earth to the other end of the earth. There you will serve other gods which you have not known, you nor your fathers, even wood and stone.

Deuteronomy 28.65: 65 Among these nations you will find no ease, and there will be no rest for the sole of your foot; but Yahweh will give you there a trembling heart, failing of eyes, and pining of soul.

Deuteronomy 28.66: 66 Your life will hang in doubt before you. You will be afraid night and day, and will have no assurance of your life.

Deuteronomy 28.67: 67 In the morning you will say, “I wish it were evening!” and at evening you will say, “I wish it were morning!” for the fear of your heart which you will fear, and for the sights which your eyes will see.

Deuteronomy 28.68: 68 Yahweh will bring you into Egypt again with ships, by the way of which I told to you that you would never see it again. There you will offer yourselves to your enemies for male and female slaves, and nobody will buy you.

Deuteronomy 29.0:

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Deuteronomy 29.1: 1 These are the words of the covenant which Yahweh commanded Moses to make with the children of Israel in the land of Moab, in addition to the covenant which he made with them in Horeb.

Deuteronomy 29.2: 2 Moses called to all Israel, and said to them:

Your eyes have seen all that Yahweh did in the land of Egypt to Pharaoh, and to all his servants, and to all his land;

Deuteronomy 29.3: 3 the great trials which your eyes saw, the signs, and those great wonders.

Deuteronomy 29.4: 4 But Yahweh has not given you a heart to know, eyes to see, and ears to hear, to this day.

Deuteronomy 29.5: 5 I have led you forty years in the wilderness. Your clothes have not grown old on you, and your sandals have not grown old on your feet.

Deuteronomy 29.6: 6 You have not eaten bread, neither have you drunk wine or strong drink, that you may know that I am Yahweh your God.

Deuteronomy 29.7: 7 When you came to this place, Sihon the king of Heshbon and Og the king of Bashan came out against us to battle, and we struck them.

Deuteronomy 29.8: 8 We took their land, and gave it for an inheritance to the Reubenites, and to the Gadites, and to the half-tribe of the Manassites.

Deuteronomy 29.9: 9 Therefore keep the words of this covenant and do them, that you may prosper in all that you do.

Deuteronomy 29.10: 10 All of you stand today in the presence of Yahweh your God: your heads, your tribes, your elders, and your officers, even all the men of Israel,

Deuteronomy 29.11: 11 your little ones, your wives, and the foreigners who are in the middle of your camps, from the one who cuts your wood to the one who draws your water,

Deuteronomy 29.12: 12 that you may enter into the covenant of Yahweh your God, and into his oath, which Yahweh your God makes with you today,

Deuteronomy 29.13: 13 that he may establish you today as his people, and that he may be your God, as he spoke to you and as he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob.

Deuteronomy 29.14: 14 Neither do I make this covenant and this oath with you only,

Deuteronomy 29.15: 15 but with those who stand here with us today before Yahweh our God, and also with those who are not here with us today

Deuteronomy 29.16: 16 (for you know how we lived in the land of Egypt, and how we came through the middle of the nations through which you passed;

Deuteronomy 29.17: 17 and you have seen their abominations and their idols of wood, stone, silver, and gold, which were among them);

Deuteronomy 29.18: 18 lest there should be among you man, woman, family, or tribe whose heart turns away today from Yahweh our God, to go to serve the gods of those nations; lest there should be among you a root that produces bitter poison;

Deuteronomy 29.19: 19 and it happen, when he hears the words of this curse, that he bless himself in his heart, saying, “I shall have peace, though I walk in the stubbornness of my heart,” to destroy the moist with the dry.

Deuteronomy 29.20: 20 Yahweh will not pardon him, but then Yahweh’s anger and his jealousy will smoke against that man, and all the curse that is written in this book will fall on him, and Yahweh will blot out his name from under the sky.

Deuteronomy 29.21: 21 Yahweh will set him apart for evil out of all the tribes of Israel, according to all the curses of the covenant written in this book of the law.

Deuteronomy 29.22: 22 The generation to come—your children who will rise up after you, and the foreigner who will come from a far land—will say, when they see the plagues of that land, and the sicknesses with which Yahweh has made it sick,

Deuteronomy 29.23: 23 that all of its land is sulfur, salt, and burning, that it is not sown, doesn’t produce, nor does any grass grow in it, like the overthrow of Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, and Zeboiim, which Yahweh overthrew in his anger, and in his wrath.

Deuteronomy 29.24: 24 Even all the nations will say, “Why has Yahweh done this to this land? What does the heat of this great anger mean?”

Deuteronomy 29.25: 25 Then men will say, “Because they abandoned the covenant of Yahweh, the God of their fathers, which he made with them when he brought them out of the land of Egypt,

Deuteronomy 29.26: 26 and went and served other gods and worshiped them, gods that they didn’t know and that he had not given to them.

Deuteronomy 29.27: 27 Therefore Yahweh’s anger burned against this land, to bring on it all the curses that are written in this book.

Deuteronomy 29.28: 28 Yahweh rooted them out of their land in anger, in wrath, and in great indignation, and thrust them into another land, as it is today.”

Deuteronomy 29.29: 29 The secret things belong to Yahweh our God; but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.

Deuteronomy 30.0:

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Deuteronomy 30.1: 1 It shall happen, when all these things have come on you, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before you, and you shall call them to mind among all the nations where Yahweh your God has driven you,

Deuteronomy 30.2: 2 and return to Yahweh your God and obey his voice according to all that I command you today, you and your children, with all your heart and with all your soul,

Deuteronomy 30.3: 3 that then Yahweh your God will release you from captivity, have compassion on you, and will return and gather you from all the peoples where Yahweh your God has scattered you.

Deuteronomy 30.4: 4 If your outcasts are in the uttermost parts of the heavens, from there Yahweh your God will gather you, and from there he will bring you back.

Deuteronomy 30.5: 5 Yahweh your God will bring you into the land which your fathers possessed, and you will possess it. He will do you good, and increase your numbers more than your fathers.

Deuteronomy 30.6: 6 Yahweh your God will circumcise your heart, and the heart of your offspring, to love Yahweh your God with all your heart and with all your soul, that you may live.

Deuteronomy 30.7: 7 Yahweh your God will put all these curses on your enemies and on those who hate you, who persecuted you.

Deuteronomy 30.8: 8 You shall return and obey Yahweh’s voice, and do all his commandments which I command you today.

Deuteronomy 30.9: 9 Yahweh your God will make you prosperous in all the work of your hand, in the fruit of your body, in the fruit of your livestock, and in the fruit of your ground, for good; for Yahweh will again rejoice over you for good, as he rejoiced over your fathers,

Deuteronomy 30.10: 10 if you will obey Yahweh your God’s voice, to keep his commandments and his statutes which are written in this book of the law; if you turn to Yahweh your God with all your heart and with all your soul.

Deuteronomy 30.11: 11 For this commandment which I command you today is not too hard for you or too distant.

Deuteronomy 30.12: 12 It is not in heaven, that you should say, “Who will go up for us to heaven, bring it to us, and proclaim it to us, that we may do it?”

Deuteronomy 30.13: 13 Neither is it beyond the sea, that you should say, “Who will go over the sea for us, bring it to us, and proclaim it to us, that we may do it?”

Deuteronomy 30.14: 14 But the word is very near to you, in your mouth and in your heart, that you may do it.

Deuteronomy 30.15: 15 Behold, I have set before you today life and prosperity, and death and evil.

Deuteronomy 30.16: 16 For I command you today to love Yahweh your God, to walk in his ways and to keep his commandments, his statutes, and his ordinances, that you may live and multiply, and that Yahweh your God may bless you in the land where you go in to possess it.

Deuteronomy 30.17: 17 But if your heart turns away, and you will not hear, but are drawn away and worship other gods, and serve them,

Deuteronomy 30.18: 18 I declare to you today that you will surely perish. You will not prolong your days in the land where you pass over the Jordan to go in to possess it.

Deuteronomy 30.19: 19 I call heaven and earth to witness against you today that I have set before you life and death, the blessing and the curse. Therefore choose life, that you may live, you and your descendants,

Deuteronomy 30.20: 20 to love Yahweh your God, to obey his voice, and to cling to him; for he is your life, and the length of your days, that you may dwell in the land which Yahweh swore to your fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, to give them.

Deuteronomy 31.0:

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Deuteronomy 31.1: 1 Moses went and spoke these words to all Israel.

Deuteronomy 31.2: 2 He said to them, “I am one hundred twenty years old today. I can no more go out and come in. Yahweh has said to me, ‘You shall not go over this Jordan.’

Deuteronomy 31.3: 3 Yahweh your God himself will go over before you. He will destroy these nations from before you, and you shall dispossess them. Joshua will go over before you, as Yahweh has spoken.

Deuteronomy 31.4: 4 Yahweh will do to them as he did to Sihon and to Og, the kings of the Amorites, and to their land, when he destroyed them.

Deuteronomy 31.5: 5 Yahweh will deliver them up before you, and you shall do to them according to all the commandment which I have commanded you.

Deuteronomy 31.6: 6 Be strong and courageous. Don’t be afraid or scared of them; for Yahweh your God himself is who goes with you. He will not fail you nor forsake you.”

Deuteronomy 31.7: 7 Moses called to Joshua, and said to him in the sight of all Israel, “Be strong and courageous, for you shall go with this people into the land which Yahweh has sworn to their fathers to give them; and you shall cause them to inherit it.

Deuteronomy 31.8: 8 Yahweh himself is who goes before you. He will be with you. He will not fail you nor forsake you. Don’t be afraid. Don’t be discouraged.”

Deuteronomy 31.9: 9 Moses wrote this law and delivered it to the priests the sons of Levi, who bore the ark of Yahweh’s covenant, and to all the elders of Israel.

Deuteronomy 31.10: 10 Moses commanded them, saying, “At the end of every seven years, in the set time of the year of release, in the feast of booths,

Deuteronomy 31.11: 11 when all Israel has come to appear before Yahweh your God in the place which he will choose, you shall read this law before all Israel in their hearing.

Deuteronomy 31.12: 12 Assemble the people, the men and the women and the little ones, and the foreigners who are within your gates, that they may hear, learn, fear Yahweh your God, and observe to do all the words of this law,

Deuteronomy 31.13: 13 and that their children, who have not known, may hear and learn to fear Yahweh your God, as long as you live in the land where you go over the Jordan to possess it.”

Deuteronomy 31.14: 14 Yahweh said to Moses, “Behold, your days approach that you must die. Call Joshua, and present yourselves in the Tent of Meeting, that I may commission him.”

Moses and Joshua went, and presented themselves in the Tent of Meeting.

Deuteronomy 31.15: 15 Yahweh appeared in the Tent in a pillar of cloud, and the pillar of cloud stood over the Tent’s door.

Deuteronomy 31.16: 16 Yahweh said to Moses, “Behold, you shall sleep with your fathers. This people will rise up and play the prostitute after the strange gods of the land where they go to be among them, and will forsake me and break my covenant which I have made with them.

Deuteronomy 31.17: 17 Then my anger shall be kindled against them in that day, and I will forsake them, and I will hide my face from them, and they shall be devoured, and many evils and troubles shall come on them; so that they will say in that day, ‘Haven’t these evils come on us because our God is not among us?’

Deuteronomy 31.18: 18 I will surely hide my face in that day for all the evil which they have done, in that they have turned to other gods.

Deuteronomy 31.19: 19 “Now therefore write this song for yourselves, and teach it to the children of Israel. Put it in their mouths, that this song may be a witness for me against the children of Israel.

Deuteronomy 31.20: 20 For when I have brought them into the land which I swore to their fathers, flowing with milk and honey, and they have eaten and filled themselves, and grown fat, then they will turn to other gods, and serve them, and despise me, and break my covenant.

Deuteronomy 31.21: 21 It will happen, when many evils and troubles have come on them, that this song will testify before them as a witness; for it will not be forgotten out of the mouths of their descendants; for I know their ways and what they are doing today, before I have brought them into the land which I promised them.”

Deuteronomy 31.22: 22 So Moses wrote this song the same day, and taught it to the children of Israel.

Deuteronomy 31.23: 23 He commissioned Joshua the son of Nun, and said, “Be strong and courageous; for you shall bring the children of Israel into the land which I swore to them. I will be with you.”

Deuteronomy 31.24: 24 When Moses had finished writing the words of this law in a book, until they were finished,

Deuteronomy 31.25: 25 Moses commanded the Levites, who bore the ark of Yahweh’s covenant, saying,

Deuteronomy 31.26: 26 “Take this book of the law, and put it by the side of the ark of Yahweh your God’s covenant, that it may be there for a witness against you.

Deuteronomy 31.27: 27 For I know your rebellion and your stiff neck. Behold, while I am yet alive with you today, you have been rebellious against Yahweh. How much more after my death?

Deuteronomy 31.28: 28 Assemble to me all the elders of your tribes and your officers, that I may speak these words in their ears, and call heaven and earth to witness against them.

Deuteronomy 31.29: 29 For I know that after my death you will utterly corrupt yourselves, and turn away from the way which I have commanded you; and evil will happen to you in the latter days, because you will do that which is evil in Yahweh’s sight, to provoke him to anger through the work of your hands.”

Deuteronomy 31.30: 30 Moses spoke in the ears of all the assembly of Israel the words of this song, until they were finished.

Deuteronomy 32.0:

32

Deuteronomy 32.1: 1 Give ear, you heavens, and I will speak.

Let the earth hear the words of my mouth.

Deuteronomy 32.2: 2 My doctrine will drop as the rain.

My speech will condense as the dew,

as the misty rain on the tender grass,

as the showers on the herb.

Deuteronomy 32.3: 3 For I will proclaim Yahweh’s name.

Ascribe greatness to our God!

Deuteronomy 32.4: 4 The Rock: his work is perfect,

for all his ways are just.

A God of faithfulness who does no wrong,

just and right is he.

Deuteronomy 32.5: 5 They have dealt corruptly with him.

They are not his children, because of their defect.

They are a perverse and crooked generation.

Deuteronomy 32.6: 6 Is this the way you repay Yahweh,

foolish and unwise people?

Isn’t he your father who has bought you?

He has made you and established you.

Deuteronomy 32.7: 7 Remember the days of old.

Consider the years of many generations.

Ask your father, and he will show you;

your elders, and they will tell you.

Deuteronomy 32.8: 8 When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance,

when he separated the children of men,

he set the bounds of the peoples

according to the number of the children of Israel.

Deuteronomy 32.9: 9 For Yahweh’s portion is his people.

Jacob is the lot of his inheritance.

Deuteronomy 32.10: 10 He found him in a desert land,

in the waste howling wilderness.

He surrounded him.

He cared for him.

He kept him as the apple of his eye.

Deuteronomy 32.11: 11 As an eagle that stirs up her nest,

that flutters over her young,

he spread abroad his wings,

he took them,

he bore them on his feathers.

Deuteronomy 32.12: 12 Yahweh alone led him.

There was no foreign god with him.

Deuteronomy 32.13: 13 He made him ride on the high places of the earth.

He ate the increase of the field.

He caused him to suck honey out of the rock,

oil out of the flinty rock;

Deuteronomy 32.14: 14 butter from the herd, and milk from the flock,

with fat of lambs,

rams of the breed of Bashan, and goats,

with the finest of the wheat.

From the blood of the grape, you drank wine.

Deuteronomy 32.15: 15 But Jeshurun grew fat, and kicked.

You have grown fat.

You have grown thick.

You have become sleek.

Then he abandoned God who made him,

and rejected the Rock of his salvation.

Deuteronomy 32.16: 16 They moved him to jealousy with strange gods.

They provoked him to anger with abominations.

Deuteronomy 32.17: 17 They sacrificed to demons, not God,

to gods that they didn’t know,

to new gods that came up recently,

which your fathers didn’t dread.

Deuteronomy 32.18: 18 Of the Rock who became your father, you are unmindful,

and have forgotten God who gave you birth.

Deuteronomy 32.19: 19 Yahweh saw and abhorred,

because of the provocation of his sons and his daughters.

Deuteronomy 32.20: 20 He said, “I will hide my face from them.

I will see what their end will be;

for they are a very perverse generation,

children in whom is no faithfulness.

Deuteronomy 32.21: 21 They have moved me to jealousy with that which is not God.

They have provoked me to anger with their vanities.

I will move them to jealousy with those who are not a people.

I will provoke them to anger with a foolish nation.

Deuteronomy 32.22: 22 For a fire is kindled in my anger,

that burns to the lowest Sheol,

devours the earth with its increase,

and sets the foundations of the mountains on fire.

Deuteronomy 32.23: 23 “I will heap evils on them.

I will spend my arrows on them.

Deuteronomy 32.24: 24 They shall be wasted with hunger,

and devoured with burning heat

and bitter destruction.

I will send the teeth of animals on them,

with the venom of vipers that glide in the dust.

Deuteronomy 32.25: 25 Outside the sword will bereave,

and in the rooms,

terror on both young man and virgin,

the nursing infant with the gray-haired man.

Deuteronomy 32.26: 26 I said that I would scatter them afar.

I would make their memory to cease from among men;

Deuteronomy 32.27: 27 were it not that I feared the provocation of the enemy,

lest their adversaries should judge wrongly,

lest they should say, ‘Our hand is exalted,

Yahweh has not done all this.’”

Deuteronomy 32.28: 28 For they are a nation void of counsel.

There is no understanding in them.

Deuteronomy 32.29: 29 Oh that they were wise, that they understood this,

that they would consider their latter end!

Deuteronomy 32.30: 30 How could one chase a thousand,

and two put ten thousand to flight,

unless their Rock had sold them,

and Yahweh had delivered them up?

Deuteronomy 32.31: 31 For their rock is not as our Rock,

even our enemies themselves concede.

Deuteronomy 32.32: 32 For their vine is of the vine of Sodom,

of the fields of Gomorrah.

Their grapes are poison grapes.

Their clusters are bitter.

Deuteronomy 32.33: 33 Their wine is the poison of serpents,

the cruel venom of asps.

Deuteronomy 32.34: 34 “Isn’t this laid up in store with me,

sealed up among my treasures?

Deuteronomy 32.35: 35 Vengeance is mine, and recompense,

at the time when their foot slides;

for the day of their calamity is at hand.

Their doom rushes at them.”

Deuteronomy 32.36: 36 For Yahweh will judge his people,

and have compassion on his servants,

when he sees that their power is gone;

that there is no one remaining, shut up or left at large.

Deuteronomy 32.37: 37 He will say, “Where are their gods,

the rock in which they took refuge;

Deuteronomy 32.38: 38 which ate the fat of their sacrifices,

and drank the wine of their drink offering?

Let them rise up and help you!

Let them be your protection.

Deuteronomy 32.39: 39 “See now that I myself am he.

There is no god with me.

I kill and I make alive.

I wound and I heal.

There is no one who can deliver out of my hand.

Deuteronomy 32.40: 40 For I lift up my hand to heaven and declare,

as I live forever,

Deuteronomy 32.41: 41 if I sharpen my glittering sword,

my hand grasps it in judgment;

I will take vengeance on my adversaries,

and will repay those who hate me.

Deuteronomy 32.42: 42 I will make my arrows drunk with blood.

My sword shall devour flesh with the blood of the slain and the captives,

from the head of the leaders of the enemy.”

Deuteronomy 32.43: 43 Rejoice, you nations, with his people,

for he will avenge the blood of his servants.

He will take vengeance on his adversaries,

and will make atonement for his land and for his people.

Deuteronomy 32.44: 44 Moses came and spoke all the words of this song in the ears of the people, he and Joshua the son of Nun.

Deuteronomy 32.45: 45 Moses finished reciting all these words to all Israel.

Deuteronomy 32.46: 46 He said to them, “Set your heart to all the words which I testify to you today, which you shall command your children to observe to do, all the words of this law.

Deuteronomy 32.47: 47 For it is no vain thing for you, because it is your life, and through this thing you shall prolong your days in the land, where you go over the Jordan to possess it.”

Deuteronomy 32.48: 48 Yahweh spoke to Moses that same day, saying,

Deuteronomy 32.49: 49 “Go up into this mountain of Abarim, to Mount Nebo, which is in the land of Moab, that is across from Jericho; and see the land of Canaan, which I give to the children of Israel for a possession.

Deuteronomy 32.50: 50 Die on the mountain where you go up, and be gathered to your people, as Aaron your brother died on Mount Hor, and was gathered to his people;

Deuteronomy 32.51: 51 because you trespassed against me among the children of Israel at the waters of Meribah of Kadesh, in the wilderness of Zin; because you didn’t uphold my holiness among the children of Israel.

Deuteronomy 32.52: 52 For you shall see the land from a distance; but you shall not go there into the land which I give the children of Israel.”

Deuteronomy 33.0:

33

Deuteronomy 33.1: 1 This is the blessing with which Moses the man of God blessed the children of Israel before his death.

Deuteronomy 33.2: 2 He said,

“Yahweh came from Sinai,

and rose from Seir to them.

He shone from Mount Paran.

He came from the ten thousands of holy ones.

At his right hand was a fiery law for them.

Deuteronomy 33.3: 3 Yes, he loves the people.

All his saints are in your hand.

They sat down at your feet.

Each receives your words.

Deuteronomy 33.4: 4 Moses commanded us a law,

an inheritance for the assembly of Jacob.

Deuteronomy 33.5: 5 He was king in Jeshurun,

when the heads of the people were gathered,

all the tribes of Israel together.

Deuteronomy 33.6: 6 “Let Reuben live, and not die;

Nor let his men be few.”

Deuteronomy 33.7: 7 This is for Judah. He said,

“Hear, Yahweh, the voice of Judah.

Bring him in to his people.

With his hands he contended for himself.

You shall be a help against his adversaries.”

Deuteronomy 33.8: 8 About Levi he said,

“Your Thummim and your Urim are with your godly one,

whom you proved at Massah,

with whom you contended at the waters of Meribah.

Deuteronomy 33.9: 9 He said of his father, and of his mother, ‘I have not seen him.’

He didn’t acknowledge his brothers,

nor did he know his own children;

for they have observed your word,

and keep your covenant.

Deuteronomy 33.10: 10 They shall teach Jacob your ordinances,

and Israel your law.

They shall put incense before you,

and whole burnt offering on your altar.

Deuteronomy 33.11: 11 Yahweh, bless his skills.

Accept the work of his hands.

Strike through the hips of those who rise up against him,

of those who hate him, that they not rise again.”

Deuteronomy 33.12: 12 About Benjamin he said,

“The beloved of Yahweh will dwell in safety by him.

He covers him all day long.

He dwells between his shoulders.”

Deuteronomy 33.13: 13 About Joseph he said,

“His land is blessed by Yahweh,

for the precious things of the heavens, for the dew,

for the deep that couches beneath,

Deuteronomy 33.14: 14 for the precious things of the fruits of the sun,

for the precious things that the moon can yield,

Deuteronomy 33.15: 15 for the best things of the ancient mountains,

for the precious things of the everlasting hills,

Deuteronomy 33.16: 16 for the precious things of the earth and its fullness,

the good will of him who lived in the bush.

Let this come on the head of Joseph,

on the crown of the head of him who was separated from his brothers.

Deuteronomy 33.17: 17 Majesty belongs to the firstborn of his herd.

His horns are the horns of the wild ox.

With them he will push all the peoples to the ends of the earth.

They are the ten thousands of Ephraim.

They are the thousands of Manasseh.”

Deuteronomy 33.18: 18 About Zebulun he said,

“Rejoice, Zebulun, in your going out;

and Issachar, in your tents.

Deuteronomy 33.19: 19 They will call the peoples to the mountain.

There they will offer sacrifices of righteousness,

for they will draw out the abundance of the seas,

the hidden treasures of the sand.”

Deuteronomy 33.20: 20 About Gad he said,

“He who enlarges Gad is blessed.

He dwells as a lioness,

and tears the arm and the crown of the head.

Deuteronomy 33.21: 21 He provided the first part for himself,

for the lawgiver’s portion reserved was reserved for him.

He came with the heads of the people.

He executed the righteousness of Yahweh,

His ordinances with Israel.”

Deuteronomy 33.22: 22 About Dan he said,

“Dan is a lion’s cub

that leaps out of Bashan.”

Deuteronomy 33.23: 23 About Naphtali he said,

“Naphtali, satisfied with favor,

full of Yahweh’s blessing,

Possess the west and the south.”

Deuteronomy 33.24: 24 About Asher he said,

“Asher is blessed with children.

Let him be acceptable to his brothers.

Let him dip his foot in oil.

Deuteronomy 33.25: 25 Your bars will be iron and bronze.

As your days, so your strength will be.

Deuteronomy 33.26: 26 “There is no one like God, Jeshurun,

who rides on the heavens for your help,

in his excellency on the skies.

Deuteronomy 33.27: 27 The eternal God is your dwelling place.

Underneath are the everlasting arms.

He thrust out the enemy from before you,

and said, ‘Destroy!’

Deuteronomy 33.28: 28 Israel dwells in safety,

the fountain of Jacob alone,

In a land of grain and new wine.

Yes, his heavens drop down dew.

Deuteronomy 33.29: 29 You are happy, Israel!

Who is like you, a people saved by Yahweh,

the shield of your help,

the sword of your excellency?

Your enemies will submit themselves to you.

You will tread on their high places.”

Deuteronomy 34.0:

34

Deuteronomy 34.1: 1 Moses went up from the plains of Moab to Mount Nebo, to the top of Pisgah, that is opposite Jericho. Yahweh showed him all the land of Gilead to Dan,

Deuteronomy 34.2: 2 and all Naphtali, and the land of Ephraim and Manasseh, and all the land of Judah, to the Western Sea,

Deuteronomy 34.3: 3 and the south, and the Plain of the valley of Jericho the city of palm trees, to Zoar.

Deuteronomy 34.4: 4 Yahweh said to him, “This is the land which I swore to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, saying, ‘I will give it to your offspring.’ I have caused you to see it with your eyes, but you shall not go over there.”

Deuteronomy 34.5: 5 So Moses the servant of Yahweh died there in the land of Moab, according to Yahweh’s word.

Deuteronomy 34.6: 6 He buried him in the valley in the land of Moab opposite Beth Peor, but no man knows where his tomb is to this day.

Deuteronomy 34.7: 7 Moses was one hundred twenty years old when he died. His eye was not dim, nor his strength gone.

Deuteronomy 34.8: 8 The children of Israel wept for Moses in the plains of Moab thirty days, until the days of weeping in the mourning for Moses were ended.

Deuteronomy 34.9: 9 Joshua the son of Nun was full of the spirit of wisdom, for Moses had laid his hands on him. The children of Israel listened to him, and did as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Deuteronomy 34.10: 10 Since then, there has not arisen a prophet in Israel like Moses, whom Yahweh knew face to face,

Deuteronomy 34.11: 11 in all the signs and the wonders which Yahweh sent him to do in the land of Egypt, to Pharaoh, and to all his servants, and to all his land,

Deuteronomy 34.12: 12 and in all the mighty hand, and in all the awesome deeds, which Moses did in the sight of all Israel.

Joshua 0.0:

The Book of

Joshua

Joshua 1.0:

1

Joshua 1.1: 1 Now after the death of Moses the servant of Yahweh, Yahweh spoke to Joshua the son of Nun, Moses’ servant, saying,

Joshua 1.2: 2 “Moses my servant is dead. Now therefore arise, go across this Jordan, you and all these people, to the land which I am giving to them, even to the children of Israel.

Joshua 1.3: 3 I have given you every place that the sole of your foot will tread on, as I told Moses.

Joshua 1.4: 4 From the wilderness and this Lebanon even to the great river, the river Euphrates, all the land of the Hittites, and to the great sea toward the going down of the sun, shall be your border.

Joshua 1.5: 5 No man will be able to stand before you all the days of your life. As I was with Moses, so I will be with you. I will not fail you nor forsake you.

Joshua 1.6: 6 “Be strong and courageous; for you shall cause this people to inherit the land which I swore to their fathers to give them.

Joshua 1.7: 7 Only be strong and very courageous. Be careful to observe to do according to all the law which Moses my servant commanded you. Don’t turn from it to the right hand or to the left, that you may have good success wherever you go.

Joshua 1.8: 8 This book of the law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, that you may observe to do according to all that is written in it; for then you shall make your way prosperous, and then you shall have good success.

Joshua 1.9: 9 Haven’t I commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Don’t be afraid. Don’t be dismayed, for Yahweh your God is with you wherever you go.”

Joshua 1.10: 10 Then Joshua commanded the officers of the people, saying,

Joshua 1.11: 11 “Pass through the middle of the camp, and command the people, saying, ‘Prepare food; for within three days you are to pass over this Jordan, to go in to possess the land which Yahweh your God gives you to possess.’”

Joshua 1.12: 12 Joshua spoke to the Reubenites, and to the Gadites, and to the half-tribe of Manasseh, saying,

Joshua 1.13: 13 “Remember the word which Moses the servant of Yahweh commanded you, saying, ‘Yahweh your God gives you rest, and will give you this land.

Joshua 1.14: 14 Your wives, your little ones, and your livestock shall live in the land which Moses gave you beyond the Jordan; but you shall pass over before your brothers armed, all the mighty men of valor, and shall help them

Joshua 1.15: 15 until Yahweh has given your brothers rest, as he has given you, and they have also possessed the land which Yahweh your God gives them. Then you shall return to the land of your possession and possess it, which Moses the servant of Yahweh gave you beyond the Jordan toward the sunrise.’”

Joshua 1.16: 16 They answered Joshua, saying, “All that you have commanded us we will do, and wherever you send us we will go.

Joshua 1.17: 17 Just as we listened to Moses in all things, so will we listen to you. Only may Yahweh your God be with you, as he was with Moses.

Joshua 1.18: 18 Whoever rebels against your commandment, and doesn’t listen to your words in all that you command him shall himself be put to death. Only be strong and courageous.”

Joshua 2.0:

2

Joshua 2.1: 1 Joshua the son of Nun secretly sent two men out of Shittim as spies, saying, “Go, view the land, including Jericho.” They went and came into the house of a prostitute whose name was Rahab, and slept there.

Joshua 2.2: 2 The king of Jericho was told, “Behold, men of the children of Israel came in here tonight to spy out the land.”

Joshua 2.3: 3 Jericho’s king sent to Rahab, saying, “Bring out the men who have come to you, who have entered into your house; for they have come to spy out all the land.”

Joshua 2.4: 4 The woman took the two men and hid them. Then she said, “Yes, the men came to me, but I didn’t know where they came from.

Joshua 2.5: 5 About the time of the shutting of the gate, when it was dark, the men went out. Where the men went, I don’t know. Pursue them quickly. You may catch up with them.”

Joshua 2.6: 6 But she had brought them up to the roof, and hidden them under the stalks of flax which she had laid in order on the roof.

Joshua 2.7: 7 The men pursued them along the way to the fords of the Jordan River. As soon as those who pursued them had gone out, they shut the gate.

Joshua 2.8: 8 Before they had lain down, she came up to them on the roof.

Joshua 2.9: 9 She said to the men, “I know that Yahweh has given you the land, and that the fear of you has fallen upon us, and that all the inhabitants of the land melt away before you.

Joshua 2.10: 10 For we have heard how Yahweh dried up the water of the Red Sea before you, when you came out of Egypt; and what you did to the two kings of the Amorites, who were beyond the Jordan, to Sihon and to Og, whom you utterly destroyed.

Joshua 2.11: 11 As soon as we had heard it, our hearts melted, and there wasn’t any more spirit in any man, because of you: for Yahweh your God, he is God in heaven above, and on earth beneath.

Joshua 2.12: 12 Now therefore, please swear to me by Yahweh, since I have dealt kindly with you, that you also will deal kindly with my father’s house, and give me a true sign;

Joshua 2.13: 13 and that you will save alive my father, my mother, my brothers, and my sisters, and all that they have, and will deliver our lives from death.”

Joshua 2.14: 14 The men said to her, “Our life for yours, if you don’t talk about this business of ours; and it shall be, when Yahweh gives us the land, that we will deal kindly and truly with you.”

Joshua 2.15: 15 Then she let them down by a cord through the window; for her house was on the side of the wall, and she lived on the wall.

Joshua 2.16: 16 She said to them, “Go to the mountain, lest the pursuers find you. Hide yourselves there three days, until the pursuers have returned. Afterward, you may go your way.”

Joshua 2.17: 17 The men said to her, “We will be guiltless of this your oath which you’ve made us to swear.

Joshua 2.18: 18 Behold, when we come into the land, tie this line of scarlet thread in the window which you used to let us down. Gather to yourself into the house your father, your mother, your brothers, and all your father’s household.

Joshua 2.19: 19 It shall be that whoever goes out of the doors of your house into the street, his blood will be on his head, and we will be guiltless. Whoever is with you in the house, his blood shall be on our head, if any hand is on him.

Joshua 2.20: 20 But if you talk about this business of ours, then we shall be guiltless of your oath which you’ve made us to swear.”

Joshua 2.21: 21 She said, “Let it be as you have said.” She sent them away, and they departed. Then she tied the scarlet line in the window.

Joshua 2.22: 22 They went and came to the mountain, and stayed there three days, until the pursuers had returned. The pursuers sought them all along the way, but didn’t find them.

Joshua 2.23: 23 Then the two men returned, descended from the mountain, crossed the river, and came to Joshua the son of Nun. They told him all that had happened to them.

Joshua 2.24: 24 They said to Joshua, “Truly Yahweh has delivered all the land into our hands. Moreover, all the inhabitants of the land melt away before us.”

Joshua 3.0:

3

Joshua 3.1: 1 Joshua got up early in the morning; and they moved from Shittim and came to the Jordan, he and all the children of Israel. They camped there before they crossed over.

Joshua 3.2: 2 After three days, the officers went through the middle of the camp;

Joshua 3.3: 3 and they commanded the people, saying, “When you see the ark of Yahweh your God’s covenant, and the Levitical priests bearing it, then leave your place and follow it.

Joshua 3.4: 4 Yet there shall be a space between you and it of about two thousand cubits by measure—don’t come closer to it—that you may know the way by which you must go; for you have not passed this way before.”

Joshua 3.5: 5 Joshua said to the people, “Sanctify yourselves; for tomorrow Yahweh will do wonders among you.”

Joshua 3.6: 6 Joshua spoke to the priests, saying, “Take up the ark of the covenant, and cross over before the people.” They took up the ark of the covenant, and went before the people.

Joshua 3.7: 7 Yahweh said to Joshua, “Today I will begin to magnify you in the sight of all Israel, that they may know that as I was with Moses, so I will be with you.

Joshua 3.8: 8 You shall command the priests who bear the ark of the covenant, saying, ‘When you come to the brink of the waters of the Jordan, you shall stand still in the Jordan.’”

Joshua 3.9: 9 Joshua said to the children of Israel, “Come here, and hear the words of Yahweh your God.”

Joshua 3.10: 10 Joshua said, “By this you shall know that the living God is among you, and that he will without fail drive the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Hivite, the Perizzite, the Girgashite, the Amorite, and the Jebusite out from before you.

Joshua 3.11: 11 Behold, the ark of the covenant of the Lord of all the earth passes over before you into the Jordan.

Joshua 3.12: 12 Now therefore take twelve men out of the tribes of Israel, for every tribe a man.

Joshua 3.13: 13 It shall be that when the soles of the feet of the priests who bear the ark of Yahweh, the Lord of all the earth, rest in the waters of the Jordan, that the waters of the Jordan will be cut off. The waters that come down from above shall stand in one heap.”

Joshua 3.14: 14 When the people moved from their tents to pass over the Jordan, the priests who bore the ark of the covenant being before the people,

Joshua 3.15: 15 and when those who bore the ark had come to the Jordan, and the feet of the priests who bore the ark had dipped in the edge of the water (for the Jordan overflows all its banks all the time of harvest),

Joshua 3.16: 16 the waters which came down from above stood, and rose up in one heap a great way off, at Adam, the city that is beside Zarethan; and those that went down toward the sea of the Arabah, even the Salt Sea, were wholly cut off. Then the people passed over near Jericho.

Joshua 3.17: 17 The priests who bore the ark of Yahweh’s covenant stood firm on dry ground in the middle of the Jordan; and all Israel crossed over on dry ground, until all the nation had passed completely over the Jordan.

Joshua 4.0:

4

Joshua 4.1: 1 When all the nation had completely crossed over the Jordan, Yahweh spoke to Joshua, saying,

Joshua 4.2: 2 “Take twelve men out of the people, a man out of every tribe,

Joshua 4.3: 3 and command them, saying, ‘Take from out of the middle of the Jordan, out of the place where the priests’ feet stood firm, twelve stones, carry them over with you, and lay them down in the place where you’ll camp tonight.’”

Joshua 4.4: 4 Then Joshua called the twelve men whom he had prepared of the children of Israel, a man out of every tribe.

Joshua 4.5: 5 Joshua said to them, “Cross before the ark of Yahweh your God into the middle of the Jordan, and each of you pick up a stone and put it on your shoulder, according to the number of the tribes of the children of Israel;

Joshua 4.6: 6 that this may be a sign among you, that when your children ask in the future, saying, ‘What do you mean by these stones?’

Joshua 4.7: 7 then you shall tell them, ‘Because the waters of the Jordan were cut off before the ark of Yahweh’s covenant. When it crossed over the Jordan, the waters of the Jordan were cut off. These stones shall be for a memorial to the children of Israel forever.’”

Joshua 4.8: 8 The children of Israel did as Joshua commanded, and took up twelve stones out of the middle of the Jordan, as Yahweh spoke to Joshua, according to the number of the tribes of the children of Israel. They carried them over with them to the place where they camped, and laid them down there.

Joshua 4.9: 9 Joshua set up twelve stones in the middle of the Jordan, in the place where the feet of the priests who bore the ark of the covenant stood; and they are there to this day.

Joshua 4.10: 10 For the priests who bore the ark stood in the middle of the Jordan until everything was finished that Yahweh commanded Joshua to speak to the people, according to all that Moses commanded Joshua; and the people hurried and passed over.

Joshua 4.11: 11 When all the people had completely crossed over, Yahweh’s ark crossed over with the priests in the presence of the people.

Joshua 4.12: 12 The children of Reuben, and the children of Gad, and the half-tribe of Manasseh crossed over armed before the children of Israel, as Moses spoke to them.

Joshua 4.13: 13 About forty thousand men, ready and armed for war, passed over before Yahweh to battle, to the plains of Jericho.

Joshua 4.14: 14 On that day, Yahweh magnified Joshua in the sight of all Israel; and they feared him, as they feared Moses, all the days of his life.

Joshua 4.15: 15 Yahweh spoke to Joshua, saying,

Joshua 4.16: 16 “Command the priests who bear the ark of the covenant, that they come up out of the Jordan.”

Joshua 4.17: 17 Joshua therefore commanded the priests, saying, “Come up out of the Jordan!”

Joshua 4.18: 18 When the priests who bore the ark of Yahweh’s covenant had come up out of the middle of the Jordan, and the soles of the priests’ feet had been lifted up to the dry ground, the waters of the Jordan returned to their place, and went over all its banks, as before.

Joshua 4.19: 19 The people came up out of the Jordan on the tenth day of the first month, and encamped in Gilgal, on the east border of Jericho.

Joshua 4.20: 20 Joshua set up those twelve stones, which they took out of the Jordan, in Gilgal.

Joshua 4.21: 21 He spoke to the children of Israel, saying, “When your children ask their fathers in time to come, saying, ‘What do these stones mean?’

Joshua 4.22: 22 Then you shall let your children know, saying, ‘Israel came over this Jordan on dry land.

Joshua 4.23: 23 For Yahweh your God dried up the waters of the Jordan from before you until you had crossed over, as Yahweh your God did to the Red Sea, which he dried up from before us, until we had crossed over,

Joshua 4.24: 24 that all the peoples of the earth may know that Yahweh’s hand is mighty, and that you may fear Yahweh your God forever.’”

Joshua 5.0:

5

Joshua 5.1: 1 When all the kings of the Amorites, who were beyond the Jordan westward, and all the kings of the Canaanites, who were by the sea, heard how Yahweh had dried up the waters of the Jordan from before the children of Israel until we had crossed over, their heart melted, and there was no more spirit in them, because of the children of Israel.

Joshua 5.2: 2 At that time, Yahweh said to Joshua, “Make flint knives, and circumcise again the sons of Israel the second time.”

Joshua 5.3: 3 Joshua made himself flint knives, and circumcised the sons of Israel at the hill of the foreskins.

Joshua 5.4: 4 This is the reason Joshua circumcised them: all the people who came out of Egypt, who were males, even all the men of war, died in the wilderness along the way, after they came out of Egypt.

Joshua 5.5: 5 For all the people who came out were circumcised; but all the people who were born in the wilderness along the way as they came out of Egypt had not been circumcised.

Joshua 5.6: 6 For the children of Israel walked forty years in the wilderness until all the nation, even the men of war who came out of Egypt, were consumed, because they didn’t listen to Yahweh’s voice. Yahweh swore to them that he wouldn’t let them see the land which Yahweh swore to their fathers that he would give us, a land flowing with milk and honey.

Joshua 5.7: 7 Their children, whom he raised up in their place, were circumcised by Joshua, for they were uncircumcised, because they had not circumcised them on the way.

Joshua 5.8: 8 When they were done circumcising the whole nation, they stayed in their places in the camp until they were healed.

Joshua 5.9: 9 Yahweh said to Joshua, “Today I have rolled away the reproach of Egypt from you.” Therefore the name of that place was called Gilgal to this day.

Joshua 5.10: 10 The children of Israel encamped in Gilgal. They kept the Passover on the fourteenth day of the month at evening in the plains of Jericho.

Joshua 5.11: 11 They ate unleavened cakes and parched grain of the produce of the land on the next day after the Passover, in the same day.

Joshua 5.12: 12 The manna ceased on the next day, after they had eaten of the produce of the land. The children of Israel didn’t have manna any more, but they ate of the fruit of the land of Canaan that year.

Joshua 5.13: 13 When Joshua was by Jericho, he lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold, a man stood in front of him with his sword drawn in his hand. Joshua went to him and said to him, “Are you for us, or for our enemies?”

Joshua 5.14: 14 He said, “No; but I have come now as commander of Yahweh’s army.”

Joshua fell on his face to the earth, and worshiped, and asked him, “What does my lord say to his servant?”

Joshua 5.15: 15 The prince of Yahweh’s army said to Joshua, “Take off your sandals, for the place on which you stand is holy.” Joshua did so.

Joshua 6.0:

6

Joshua 6.1: 1 Now Jericho was tightly shut up because of the children of Israel. No one went out, and no one came in.

Joshua 6.2: 2 Yahweh said to Joshua, “Behold, I have given Jericho into your hand, with its king and the mighty men of valor.

Joshua 6.3: 3 All of your men of war shall march around the city, going around the city once. You shall do this six days.

Joshua 6.4: 4 Seven priests shall bear seven trumpets of rams’ horns before the ark. On the seventh day, you shall march around the city seven times, and the priests shall blow the trumpets.

Joshua 6.5: 5 It shall be that when they make a long blast with the ram’s horn, and when you hear the sound of the trumpet, all the people shall shout with a great shout; and the city wall shall fall down flat, and the people shall go up, every man straight in front of him.”

Joshua 6.6: 6 Joshua the son of Nun called the priests, and said to them, “Take up the ark of the covenant, and let seven priests bear seven trumpets of rams’ horns before Yahweh’s ark.”

Joshua 6.7: 7 They said to the people, “Advance! March around the city, and let the armed men pass on before Yahweh’s ark.”

Joshua 6.8: 8 It was so, that when Joshua had spoken to the people, the seven priests bearing the seven trumpets of rams’ horns before Yahweh advanced and blew the trumpets, and the ark of Yahweh’s covenant followed them.

Joshua 6.9: 9 The armed men went before the priests who blew the trumpets, and the ark went after them. The trumpets sounded as they went.

Joshua 6.10: 10 Joshua commanded the people, saying, “You shall not shout nor let your voice be heard, neither shall any word proceed out of your mouth until the day I tell you to shout. Then you shall shout.”

Joshua 6.11: 11 So he caused Yahweh’s ark to go around the city, circling it once. Then they came into the camp, and stayed in the camp.

Joshua 6.12: 12 Joshua rose early in the morning, and the priests took up Yahweh’s ark.

Joshua 6.13: 13 The seven priests bearing the seven trumpets of rams’ horns in front of Yahweh’s ark went on continually, and blew the trumpets. The armed men went in front of them. The rear guard came after Yahweh’s ark. The trumpets sounded as they went.

Joshua 6.14: 14 The second day they marched around the city once, and returned into the camp. They did this six days.

Joshua 6.15: 15 On the seventh day, they rose early at the dawning of the day, and marched around the city in the same way seven times. On this day only they marched around the city seven times.

Joshua 6.16: 16 At the seventh time, when the priests blew the trumpets, Joshua said to the people, “Shout, for Yahweh has given you the city!

Joshua 6.17: 17 The city shall be devoted, even it and all that is in it, to Yahweh. Only Rahab the prostitute shall live, she and all who are with her in the house, because she hid the messengers that we sent.

Joshua 6.18: 18 But as for you, only keep yourselves from what is devoted to destruction, lest when you have devoted it, you take of the devoted thing; so you would make the camp of Israel accursed and trouble it.

Joshua 6.19: 19 But all the silver, gold, and vessels of bronze and iron are holy to Yahweh. They shall come into Yahweh’s treasury.”

Joshua 6.20: 20 So the people shouted and the priests blew the trumpets. When the people heard the sound of the trumpet, the people shouted with a great shout, and the wall fell down flat, so that the people went up into the city, every man straight in front of him, and they took the city.

Joshua 6.21: 21 They utterly destroyed all that was in the city, both man and woman, both young and old, and ox, sheep, and donkey, with the edge of the sword.

Joshua 6.22: 22 Joshua said to the two men who had spied out the land, “Go into the prostitute’s house, and bring the woman and all that she has out from there, as you swore to her.”

Joshua 6.23: 23 The young men who were spies went in, and brought out Rahab with her father, her mother, her brothers, and all that she had. They also brought out all of her relatives, and they set them outside of the camp of Israel.

Joshua 6.24: 24 They burned the city with fire, and all that was in it. Only they put the silver, the gold, and the vessels of bronze and of iron into the treasury of Yahweh’s house.

Joshua 6.25: 25 But Rahab the prostitute, her father’s household, and all that she had, Joshua saved alive. She lives in the middle of Israel to this day, because she hid the messengers whom Joshua sent to spy out Jericho.

Joshua 6.26: 26 Joshua commanded them with an oath at that time, saying, “Cursed is the man before Yahweh who rises up and builds this city Jericho. With the loss of his firstborn he will lay its foundation, and with the loss of his youngest son he will set up its gates.”

Joshua 6.27: 27 So Yahweh was with Joshua; and his fame was in all the land.

Joshua 7.0:

7

Joshua 7.1: 1 But the children of Israel committed a trespass in the devoted things; for Achan, the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, of the tribe of Judah, took some of the devoted things. Therefore Yahweh’s anger burned against the children of Israel.

Joshua 7.2: 2 Joshua sent men from Jericho to Ai, which is beside Beth Aven, on the east side of Bethel, and spoke to them, saying, “Go up and spy out the land.”

The men went up and spied out Ai.

Joshua 7.3: 3 They returned to Joshua, and said to him, “Don’t let all the people go up, but let about two or three thousand men go up and strike Ai. Don’t make all the people to toil there, for there are only a few of them.”

Joshua 7.4: 4 So about three thousand men of the people went up there, and they fled before the men of Ai.

Joshua 7.5: 5 The men of Ai struck about thirty-six men of them. They chased them from before the gate even to Shebarim, and struck them at the descent. The hearts of the people melted, and became like water.

Joshua 7.6: 6 Joshua tore his clothes, and fell to the earth on his face before Yahweh’s ark until the evening, he and the elders of Israel; and they put dust on their heads.

Joshua 7.7: 7 Joshua said, “Alas, Lord Yahweh, why have you brought this people over the Jordan at all, to deliver us into the hand of the Amorites, to cause us to perish? I wish that we had been content and lived beyond the Jordan!

Joshua 7.8: 8 Oh, Lord, what shall I say, after Israel has turned their backs before their enemies?

Joshua 7.9: 9 For the Canaanites and all the inhabitants of the land will hear of it, and will surround us, and cut off our name from the earth. What will you do for your great name?”

Joshua 7.10: 10 Yahweh said to Joshua, “Get up! Why have you fallen on your face like that?

Joshua 7.11: 11 Israel has sinned. Yes, they have even transgressed my covenant which I commanded them. Yes, they have even taken some of the devoted things, and have also stolen, and also deceived. They have even put it among their own stuff.

Joshua 7.12: 12 Therefore the children of Israel can’t stand before their enemies. They turn their backs before their enemies, because they have become devoted for destruction. I will not be with you any more, unless you destroy the devoted things from among you.

Joshua 7.13: 13 Get up! Sanctify the people, and say, ‘Sanctify yourselves for tomorrow, for Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, “There is a devoted thing among you, Israel. You cannot stand before your enemies until you take away the devoted thing from among you.”

Joshua 7.14: 14 In the morning therefore you shall be brought near by your tribes. It shall be that the tribe which Yahweh selects shall come near by families. The family which Yahweh selects shall come near by households. The household which Yahweh selects shall come near man by man.

Joshua 7.15: 15 It shall be, that he who is taken with the devoted thing shall be burned with fire, he and all that he has, because he has transgressed Yahweh’s covenant, and because he has done a disgraceful thing in Israel.’”

Joshua 7.16: 16 So Joshua rose up early in the morning and brought Israel near by their tribes. The tribe of Judah was selected.

Joshua 7.17: 17 He brought near the family of Judah, and he selected the family of the Zerahites. He brought near the family of the Zerahites man by man, and Zabdi was selected.

Joshua 7.18: 18 He brought near his household man by man, and Achan, the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, of the tribe of Judah, was selected.

Joshua 7.19: 19 Joshua said to Achan, “My son, please give glory to Yahweh, the God of Israel, and make confession to him. Tell me now what you have done! Don’t hide it from me!”

Joshua 7.20: 20 Achan answered Joshua, and said, “I have truly sinned against Yahweh, the God of Israel, and this is what I have done.

Joshua 7.21: 21 When I saw among the plunder a beautiful Babylonian robe, two hundred shekels of silver, and a wedge of gold weighing fifty shekels, then I coveted them and took them. Behold, they are hidden in the ground in the middle of my tent, with the silver under it.”

Joshua 7.22: 22 So Joshua sent messengers, and they ran to the tent. Behold, it was hidden in his tent, with the silver under it.

Joshua 7.23: 23 They took them from the middle of the tent, and brought them to Joshua and to all the children of Israel. They laid them down before Yahweh.

Joshua 7.24: 24 Joshua, and all Israel with him, took Achan the son of Zerah, the silver, the robe, the wedge of gold, his sons, his daughters, his cattle, his donkeys, his sheep, his tent, and all that he had; and they brought them up to the valley of Achor.

Joshua 7.25: 25 Joshua said, “Why have you troubled us? Yahweh will trouble you today.” All Israel stoned him with stones, and they burned them with fire and stoned them with stones.

Joshua 7.26: 26 They raised over him a great heap of stones that remains to this day. Yahweh turned from the fierceness of his anger. Therefore the name of that place was called “The valley of Achor” to this day.

Joshua 8.0:

8

Joshua 8.1: 1 Yahweh said to Joshua, “Don’t be afraid, and don’t be dismayed. Take all the warriors with you, and arise, go up to Ai. Behold, I have given into your hand the king of Ai, with his people, his city, and his land.

Joshua 8.2: 2 You shall do to Ai and her king as you did to Jericho and her king, except you shall take its goods and its livestock for yourselves. Set an ambush for the city behind it.”

Joshua 8.3: 3 So Joshua arose, with all the warriors, to go up to Ai. Joshua chose thirty thousand men, the mighty men of valor, and sent them out by night.

Joshua 8.4: 4 He commanded them, saying, “Behold, you shall lie in ambush against the city, behind the city. Don’t go very far from the city, but all of you be ready.

Joshua 8.5: 5 I and all the people who are with me will approach the city. It shall happen, when they come out against us, as at the first, that we will flee before them.

Joshua 8.6: 6 They will come out after us until we have drawn them away from the city; for they will say, ‘They flee before us, like the first time.’ So we will flee before them,

Joshua 8.7: 7 and you shall rise up from the ambush, and take possession of the city; for Yahweh your God will deliver it into your hand.

Joshua 8.8: 8 It shall be, when you have seized the city, that you shall set the city on fire. You shall do this according to Yahweh’s word. Behold, I have commanded you.”

Joshua 8.9: 9 Joshua sent them out; and they went to set up the ambush, and stayed between Bethel and Ai on the west side of Ai; but Joshua stayed among the people that night.

Joshua 8.10: 10 Joshua rose up early in the morning, mustered the people, and went up, he and the elders of Israel, before the people to Ai.

Joshua 8.11: 11 All the people, even the men of war who were with him, went up and came near, and came before the city and encamped on the north side of Ai. Now there was a valley between him and Ai.

Joshua 8.12: 12 He took about five thousand men, and set them in ambush between Bethel and Ai, on the west side of the city.

Joshua 8.13: 13 So they set the people, even all the army who was on the north of the city, and their ambush on the west of the city; and Joshua went that night into the middle of the valley.

Joshua 8.14: 14 When the king of Ai saw it, they hurried and rose up early, and the men of the city went out against Israel to battle, he and all his people, at the time appointed, before the Arabah; but he didn’t know that there was an ambush against him behind the city.

Joshua 8.15: 15 Joshua and all Israel made as if they were beaten before them, and fled by the way of the wilderness.

Joshua 8.16: 16 All the people who were in the city were called together to pursue after them. They pursued Joshua, and were drawn away from the city.

Joshua 8.17: 17 There was not a man left in Ai or Bethel who didn’t go out after Israel. They left the city open, and pursued Israel.

Joshua 8.18: 18 Yahweh said to Joshua, “Stretch out the javelin that is in your hand toward Ai, for I will give it into your hand.”

Joshua stretched out the javelin that was in his hand toward the city.

Joshua 8.19: 19 The ambush arose quickly out of their place, and they ran as soon as he had stretched out his hand and entered into the city and took it. They hurried and set the city on fire.

Joshua 8.20: 20 When the men of Ai looked behind them, they saw, and behold, the smoke of the city ascended up to heaven, and they had no power to flee this way or that way. The people who fled to the wilderness turned back on the pursuers.

Joshua 8.21: 21 When Joshua and all Israel saw that the ambush had taken the city, and that the smoke of the city ascended, then they turned back and killed the men of Ai.

Joshua 8.22: 22 The others came out of the city against them, so they were in the middle of Israel, some on this side, and some on that side. They struck them, so that they let none of them remain or escape.

Joshua 8.23: 23 They captured the king of Ai alive, and brought him to Joshua.

Joshua 8.24: 24 When Israel had finished killing all the inhabitants of Ai in the field, in the wilderness in which they pursued them, and they had all fallen by the edge of the sword until they were consumed, all Israel returned to Ai and struck it with the edge of the sword.

Joshua 8.25: 25 All that fell that day, both of men and women, were twelve thousand, even all the people of Ai.

Joshua 8.26: 26 For Joshua didn’t draw back his hand, with which he stretched out the javelin, until he had utterly destroyed all the inhabitants of Ai.

Joshua 8.27: 27 Israel took for themselves only the livestock and the goods of that city, according to Yahweh’s word which he commanded Joshua.

Joshua 8.28: 28 So Joshua burned Ai and made it a heap forever, even a desolation, to this day.

Joshua 8.29: 29 He hanged the king of Ai on a tree until the evening. At sundown, Joshua commanded, and they took his body down from the tree and threw it at the entrance of the gate of the city, and raised a great heap of stones on it that remains to this day.

Joshua 8.30: 30 Then Joshua built an altar to Yahweh, the God of Israel, on Mount Ebal,

Joshua 8.31: 31 as Moses the servant of Yahweh commanded the children of Israel, as it is written in the book of the law of Moses: an altar of uncut stones, on which no one had lifted up any iron. They offered burnt offerings on it to Yahweh and sacrificed peace offerings.

Joshua 8.32: 32 He wrote there on the stones a copy of Moses’ law, which he wrote in the presence of the children of Israel.

Joshua 8.33: 33 All Israel, with their elders, officers, and judges, stood on both sides of the ark before the Levitical priests, who carried the ark of Yahweh’s covenant, the foreigner as well as the native; half of them in front of Mount Gerizim, and half of them in front of Mount Ebal, as Moses the servant of Yahweh had commanded at the first, that they should bless the people of Israel.

Joshua 8.34: 34 Afterward he read all the words of the law, the blessing and the curse, according to all that is written in the book of the law.

Joshua 8.35: 35 There was not a word of all that Moses commanded which Joshua didn’t read before all the assembly of Israel, with the women, the little ones, and the foreigners who were among them.

Joshua 9.0:

9

Joshua 9.1: 1 When all the kings who were beyond the Jordan, in the hill country, and in the lowland, and on all the shore of the great sea in front of Lebanon, the Hittite, the Amorite, the Canaanite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite, heard of it

Joshua 9.2: 2 they gathered themselves together to fight with Joshua and with Israel, with one accord.

Joshua 9.3: 3 But when the inhabitants of Gibeon heard what Joshua had done to Jericho and to Ai,

Joshua 9.4: 4 they also resorted to a ruse, and went and made as if they had been ambassadors, and took old sacks on their donkeys, and old, torn-up and bound up wine skins,

Joshua 9.5: 5 and old and patched sandals on their feet, and wore old garments. All the bread of their food supply was dry and moldy.

Joshua 9.6: 6 They went to Joshua at the camp at Gilgal, and said to him and to the men of Israel, “We have come from a far country. Now therefore make a covenant with us.”

Joshua 9.7: 7 The men of Israel said to the Hivites, “What if you live among us? How could we make a covenant with you?”

Joshua 9.8: 8 They said to Joshua, “We are your servants.”

Joshua said to them, “Who are you? Where do you come from?”

Joshua 9.9: 9 They said to him, “Your servants have come from a very far country because of the name of Yahweh your God; for we have heard of his fame, all that he did in Egypt,

Joshua 9.10: 10 and all that he did to the two kings of the Amorites who were beyond the Jordan, to Sihon king of Heshbon and to Og king of Bashan, who was at Ashtaroth.

Joshua 9.11: 11 Our elders and all the inhabitants of our country spoke to us, saying, ‘Take supplies in your hand for the journey, and go to meet them. Tell them, “We are your servants. Now make a covenant with us.”’

Joshua 9.12: 12 This our bread we took hot for our supplies out of our houses on the day we went out to go to you; but now, behold, it is dry, and has become moldy.

Joshua 9.13: 13 These wine skins, which we filled, were new; and behold, they are torn. These our garments and our sandals have become old because of the very long journey.”

Joshua 9.14: 14 The men sampled their provisions, and didn’t ask counsel from Yahweh’s mouth.

Joshua 9.15: 15 Joshua made peace with them, and made a covenant with them, to let them live. The princes of the congregation swore to them.

Joshua 9.16: 16 At the end of three days after they had made a covenant with them, they heard that they were their neighbors, and that they lived among them.

Joshua 9.17: 17 The children of Israel traveled and came to their cities on the third day. Now their cities were Gibeon, Chephirah, Beeroth, and Kiriath Jearim.

Joshua 9.18: 18 The children of Israel didn’t strike them, because the princes of the congregation had sworn to them by Yahweh, the God of Israel. All the congregation murmured against the princes.

Joshua 9.19: 19 But all the princes said to all the congregation, “We have sworn to them by Yahweh, the God of Israel. Now therefore we may not touch them.

Joshua 9.20: 20 We will do this to them, and let them live; lest wrath be on us, because of the oath which we swore to them.”

Joshua 9.21: 21 The princes said to them, “Let them live.” So they became wood cutters and drawers of water for all the congregation, as the princes had spoken to them.

Joshua 9.22: 22 Joshua called for them, and he spoke to them, saying, “Why have you deceived us, saying, ‘We are very far from you,’ when you live among us?

Joshua 9.23: 23 Now therefore you are cursed, and some of you will never fail to be slaves, both wood cutters and drawers of water for the house of my God.”

Joshua 9.24: 24 They answered Joshua, and said, “Because your servants were certainly told how Yahweh your God commanded his servant Moses to give you all the land, and to destroy all the inhabitants of the land from before you. Therefore we were very afraid for our lives because of you, and have done this thing.

Joshua 9.25: 25 Now, behold, we are in your hand. Do to us as it seems good and right to you to do.”

Joshua 9.26: 26 He did so to them, and delivered them out of the hand of the children of Israel, so that they didn’t kill them.

Joshua 9.27: 27 That day Joshua made them wood cutters and drawers of water for the congregation and for Yahweh’s altar to this day, in the place which he should choose.

Joshua 10.0:

10

Joshua 10.1: 1 Now when Adoni-Zedek king of Jerusalem heard how Joshua had taken Ai, and had utterly destroyed it; as he had done to Jericho and her king, so he had done to Ai and her king; and how the inhabitants of Gibeon had made peace with Israel, and were among them,

Joshua 10.2: 2 they were very afraid, because Gibeon was a great city, as one of the royal cities, and because it was greater than Ai, and all its men were mighty.

Joshua 10.3: 3 Therefore Adoni-Zedek king of Jerusalem sent to Hoham king of Hebron, Piram king of Jarmuth, Japhia king of Lachish, and Debir king of Eglon, saying,

Joshua 10.4: 4 “Come up to me and help me. Let’s strike Gibeon; for they have made peace with Joshua and with the children of Israel.”

Joshua 10.5: 5 Therefore the five kings of the Amorites, the king of Jerusalem, the king of Hebron, the king of Jarmuth, the king of Lachish, and the king of Eglon, gathered themselves together and went up, they and all their armies, and encamped against Gibeon, and made war against it.

Joshua 10.6: 6 The men of Gibeon sent to Joshua at the camp at Gilgal, saying, “Don’t abandon your servants! Come up to us quickly and save us! Help us; for all the kings of the Amorites that dwell in the hill country have gathered together against us.”

Joshua 10.7: 7 So Joshua went up from Gilgal, he, and the whole army with him, including all the mighty men of valor.

Joshua 10.8: 8 Yahweh said to Joshua, “Don’t fear them, for I have delivered them into your hands. Not a man of them will stand before you.”

Joshua 10.9: 9 Joshua therefore came to them suddenly. He marched from Gilgal all night.

Joshua 10.10: 10 Yahweh confused them before Israel. He killed them with a great slaughter at Gibeon, and chased them by the way of the ascent of Beth Horon, and struck them to Azekah and to Makkedah.

Joshua 10.11: 11 As they fled from before Israel, while they were at the descent of Beth Horon, Yahweh hurled down great stones from the sky on them to Azekah, and they died. There were more who died from the hailstones than those whom the children of Israel killed with the sword.

Joshua 10.12: 12 Then Joshua spoke to Yahweh in the day when Yahweh delivered up the Amorites before the children of Israel. He said in the sight of Israel, “Sun, stand still on Gibeon! You, moon, stop in the valley of Aijalon!”

Joshua 10.13: 13 The sun stood still, and the moon stayed, until the nation had avenged themselves of their enemies. Isn’t this written in the book of Jashar? The sun stayed in the middle of the sky, and didn’t hurry to go down about a whole day.

Joshua 10.14: 14 There was no day like that before it or after it, that Yahweh listened to the voice of a man; for Yahweh fought for Israel.

Joshua 10.15: 15 Joshua returned, and all Israel with him, to the camp to Gilgal.

Joshua 10.16: 16 These five kings fled, and hid themselves in the cave at Makkedah.

Joshua 10.17: 17 Joshua was told, saying, “The five kings have been found, hidden in the cave at Makkedah.”

Joshua 10.18: 18 Joshua said, “Roll large stones to cover the cave’s entrance, and set men by it to guard them;

Joshua 10.19: 19 but don’t stay there. Pursue your enemies, and attack them from the rear. Don’t allow them to enter into their cities; for Yahweh your God has delivered them into your hand.”

Joshua 10.20: 20 When Joshua and the children of Israel had finished killing them with a very great slaughter until they were consumed, and the remnant which remained of them had entered into the fortified cities,

Joshua 10.21: 21 all the people returned to the camp to Joshua at Makkedah in peace. None moved his tongue against any of the children of Israel.

Joshua 10.22: 22 Then Joshua said, “Open the cave entrance, and bring those five kings out of the cave to me.”

Joshua 10.23: 23 They did so, and brought those five kings out of the cave to him: the king of Jerusalem, the king of Hebron, the king of Jarmuth, the king of Lachish, and the king of Eglon.

Joshua 10.24: 24 When they brought those kings out to Joshua, Joshua called for all the men of Israel, and said to the chiefs of the men of war who went with him, “Come near. Put your feet on the necks of these kings.”

They came near, and put their feet on their necks.

Joshua 10.25: 25 Joshua said to them, “Don’t be afraid, nor be dismayed. Be strong and courageous, for Yahweh will do this to all your enemies against whom you fight.”

Joshua 10.26: 26 Afterward Joshua struck them, put them to death, and hanged them on five trees. They were hanging on the trees until the evening.

Joshua 10.27: 27 At the time of the going down of the sun, Joshua commanded, and they took them down off the trees, and threw them into the cave in which they had hidden themselves, and laid great stones on the mouth of the cave, which remain to this very day.

Joshua 10.28: 28 Joshua took Makkedah on that day, and struck it with the edge of the sword, with its king. He utterly destroyed it and all the souls who were in it. He left no one remaining. He did to the king of Makkedah as he had done to the king of Jericho.

Joshua 10.29: 29 Joshua passed from Makkedah, and all Israel with him, to Libnah, and fought against Libnah.

Joshua 10.30: 30 Yahweh delivered it also, with its king, into the hand of Israel. He struck it with the edge of the sword, and all the souls who were in it. He left no one remaining in it. He did to its king as he had done to the king of Jericho.

Joshua 10.31: 31 Joshua passed from Libnah, and all Israel with him, to Lachish, and encamped against it, and fought against it.

Joshua 10.32: 32 Yahweh delivered Lachish into the hand of Israel. He took it on the second day, and struck it with the edge of the sword, with all the souls who were in it, according to all that he had done to Libnah.

Joshua 10.33: 33 Then Horam king of Gezer came up to help Lachish; and Joshua struck him and his people, until he had left him no one remaining.

Joshua 10.34: 34 Joshua passed from Lachish, and all Israel with him, to Eglon; and they encamped against it and fought against it.

Joshua 10.35: 35 They took it on that day, and struck it with the edge of the sword. He utterly destroyed all the souls who were in it that day, according to all that he had done to Lachish.

Joshua 10.36: 36 Joshua went up from Eglon, and all Israel with him, to Hebron; and they fought against it.

Joshua 10.37: 37 They took it, and struck it with the edge of the sword, with its king and all its cities, and all the souls who were in it. He left no one remaining, according to all that he had done to Eglon; but he utterly destroyed it, and all the souls who were in it.

Joshua 10.38: 38 Joshua returned, and all Israel with him, to Debir, and fought against it.

Joshua 10.39: 39 He took it, with its king and all its cities. They struck them with the edge of the sword, and utterly destroyed all the souls who were in it. He left no one remaining. As he had done to Hebron, so he did to Debir, and to its king; as he had done also to Libnah, and to its king.

Joshua 10.40: 40 So Joshua struck all the land, the hill country, the South, the lowland, the slopes, and all their kings. He left no one remaining, but he utterly destroyed all that breathed, as Yahweh, the God of Israel, commanded.

Joshua 10.41: 41 Joshua struck them from Kadesh Barnea even to Gaza, and all the country of Goshen, even to Gibeon.

Joshua 10.42: 42 Joshua took all these kings and their land at one time because Yahweh, the God of Israel, fought for Israel.

Joshua 10.43: 43 Joshua returned, and all Israel with him, to the camp to Gilgal.

Joshua 11.0:

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Joshua 11.1: 1 When Jabin king of Hazor heard of it, he sent to Jobab king of Madon, to the king of Shimron, to the king of Achshaph,

Joshua 11.2: 2 and to the kings who were on the north, in the hill country, in the Arabah south of Chinneroth, in the lowland, and in the heights of Dor on the west,

Joshua 11.3: 3 to the Canaanite on the east and on the west, the Amorite, the Hittite, the Perizzite, the Jebusite in the hill country, and the Hivite under Hermon in the land of Mizpah.

Joshua 11.4: 4 They went out, they and all their armies with them, many people, even as the sand that is on the seashore in multitude, with very many horses and chariots.

Joshua 11.5: 5 All these kings met together; and they came and encamped together at the waters of Merom, to fight with Israel.

Joshua 11.6: 6 Yahweh said to Joshua, “Don’t be afraid because of them; for tomorrow at this time, I will deliver them up all slain before Israel. You shall hamstring their horses and burn their chariots with fire.”

Joshua 11.7: 7 So Joshua came suddenly, with all the warriors, against them by the waters of Merom, and attacked them.

Joshua 11.8: 8 Yahweh delivered them into the hand of Israel, and they struck them, and chased them to great Sidon, and to Misrephoth Maim, and to the valley of Mizpah eastward. They struck them until they left them no one remaining.

Joshua 11.9: 9 Joshua did to them as Yahweh told him. He hamstrung their horses and burned their chariots with fire.

Joshua 11.10: 10 Joshua turned back at that time, and took Hazor, and struck its king with the sword: for Hazor used to be the head of all those kingdoms.

Joshua 11.11: 11 They struck all the souls who were in it with the edge of the sword, utterly destroying them. There was no one left who breathed. He burned Hazor with fire.

Joshua 11.12: 12 Joshua captured all the cities of those kings, with their kings, and he struck them with the edge of the sword, and utterly destroyed them; as Moses the servant of Yahweh commanded.

Joshua 11.13: 13 But as for the cities that stood on their mounds, Israel burned none of them, except Hazor only. Joshua burned that.

Joshua 11.14: 14 The children of Israel took all the plunder of these cities, with the livestock, as plunder for themselves; but every man they struck with the edge of the sword, until they had destroyed them. They didn’t leave any who breathed.

Joshua 11.15: 15 As Yahweh commanded Moses his servant, so Moses commanded Joshua. Joshua did so. He left nothing undone of all that Yahweh commanded Moses.

Joshua 11.16: 16 So Joshua captured all that land, the hill country, all the South, all the land of Goshen, the lowland, the Arabah, the hill country of Israel, and the lowland of the same;

Joshua 11.17: 17 from Mount Halak, that goes up to Seir, even to Baal Gad in the valley of Lebanon under Mount Hermon. He took all their kings, struck them, and put them to death.

Joshua 11.18: 18 Joshua made war a long time with all those kings.

Joshua 11.19: 19 There was not a city that made peace with the children of Israel, except the Hivites, the inhabitants of Gibeon. They took all in battle.

Joshua 11.20: 20 For it was of Yahweh to harden their hearts, to come against Israel in battle, that he might utterly destroy them, that they might have no favor, but that he might destroy them, as Yahweh commanded Moses.

Joshua 11.21: 21 Joshua came at that time, and cut off the Anakim from the hill country, from Hebron, from Debir, from Anab, and from all the hill country of Judah, and from all the hill country of Israel: Joshua utterly destroyed them with their cities.

Joshua 11.22: 22 There were none of the Anakim left in the land of the children of Israel. Only in Gaza, in Gath, and in Ashdod, did some remain.

Joshua 11.23: 23 So Joshua took the whole land, according to all that Yahweh spoke to Moses; and Joshua gave it for an inheritance to Israel according to their divisions by their tribes. Then the land had rest from war.

Joshua 12.0:

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Joshua 12.1: 1 Now these are the kings of the land, whom the children of Israel struck, and possessed their land beyond the Jordan toward the sunrise, from the valley of the Arnon to Mount Hermon, and all the Arabah eastward:

Joshua 12.2: 2 Sihon king of the Amorites, who lived in Heshbon, and ruled from Aroer, which is on the edge of the valley of the Arnon, and the middle of the valley, and half Gilead, even to the river Jabbok, the border of the children of Ammon;

Joshua 12.3: 3 and the Arabah to the sea of Chinneroth, eastward, and to the sea of the Arabah, even the Salt Sea, eastward, the way to Beth Jeshimoth; and on the south, under the slopes of Pisgah:

Joshua 12.4: 4 and the border of Og king of Bashan, of the remnant of the Rephaim, who lived at Ashtaroth and at Edrei,

Joshua 12.5: 5 and ruled in Mount Hermon, and in Salecah, and in all Bashan, to the border of the Geshurites and the Maacathites, and half Gilead, the border of Sihon king of Heshbon.

Joshua 12.6: 6 Moses the servant of Yahweh and the children of Israel struck them. Moses the servant of Yahweh gave it for a possession to the Reubenites, and the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh.

Joshua 12.7: 7 These are the kings of the land whom Joshua and the children of Israel struck beyond the Jordan westward, from Baal Gad in the valley of Lebanon even to Mount Halak, that goes up to Seir. Joshua gave it to the tribes of Israel for a possession according to their divisions;

Joshua 12.8: 8 in the hill country, and in the lowland, and in the Arabah, and in the slopes, and in the wilderness, and in the South; the Hittite, the Amorite, and the Canaanite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite:

Joshua 12.9: 9 the king of Jericho, one;

the king of Ai, which is beside Bethel, one;

Joshua 12.10: 10 the king of Jerusalem, one;

the king of Hebron, one;

Joshua 12.11: 11 the king of Jarmuth, one;

the king of Lachish, one;

Joshua 12.12: 12 the king of Eglon, one;

the king of Gezer, one;

Joshua 12.13: 13 the king of Debir, one;

the king of Geder, one;

Joshua 12.14: 14 the king of Hormah, one;

the king of Arad, one;

Joshua 12.15: 15 the king of Libnah, one;

the king of Adullam, one;

Joshua 12.16: 16 the king of Makkedah, one;

the king of Bethel, one;

Joshua 12.17: 17 the king of Tappuah, one;

the king of Hepher, one;

Joshua 12.18: 18 the king of Aphek, one;

the king of Lassharon, one;

Joshua 12.19: 19 the king of Madon, one;

the king of Hazor, one;

Joshua 12.20: 20 the king of Shimron Meron, one;

the king of Achshaph, one;

Joshua 12.21: 21 the king of Taanach, one;

the king of Megiddo, one;

Joshua 12.22: 22 the king of Kedesh, one;

the king of Jokneam in Carmel, one;

Joshua 12.23: 23 the king of Dor in the height of Dor, one;

the king of Goiim in Gilgal, one;

Joshua 12.24: 24 the king of Tirzah, one:

all the kings thirty-one.

Joshua 13.0:

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Joshua 13.1: 1 Now Joshua was old and well advanced in years. Yahweh said to him, “You are old and advanced in years, and there remains yet very much land to be possessed.

Joshua 13.2: 2 “This is the land that still remains: all the regions of the Philistines, and all the Geshurites;

Joshua 13.3: 3 from the Shihor, which is before Egypt, even to the border of Ekron northward, which is counted as Canaanite; the five lords of the Philistines; the Gazites, and the Ashdodites, the Ashkelonites, the Gittites, and the Ekronites; also the Avvim,

Joshua 13.4: 4 on the south; all the land of the Canaanites, and Mearah that belongs to the Sidonians, to Aphek, to the border of the Amorites;

Joshua 13.5: 5 and the land of the Gebalites, and all Lebanon, toward the sunrise, from Baal Gad under Mount Hermon to the entrance of Hamath;

Joshua 13.6: 6 all the inhabitants of the hill country from Lebanon to Misrephoth Maim, even all the Sidonians. I will drive them out from before the children of Israel. Just allocate it to Israel for an inheritance, as I have commanded you.

Joshua 13.7: 7 Now therefore divide this land for an inheritance to the nine tribes and the half-tribe of Manasseh.”

Joshua 13.8: 8 With him the Reubenites and the Gadites received their inheritance, which Moses gave them, beyond the Jordan eastward, even as Moses the servant of Yahweh gave them:

Joshua 13.9: 9 from Aroer, that is on the edge of the valley of the Arnon, and the city that is in the middle of the valley, and all the plain of Medeba to Dibon;

Joshua 13.10: 10 and all the cities of Sihon king of the Amorites, who reigned in Heshbon, to the border of the children of Ammon;

Joshua 13.11: 11 and Gilead, and the border of the Geshurites and Maacathites, and all Mount Hermon, and all Bashan to Salecah;

Joshua 13.12: 12 all the kingdom of Og in Bashan, who reigned in Ashtaroth and in Edrei (who was left of the remnant of the Rephaim); for Moses attacked these, and drove them out.

Joshua 13.13: 13 Nevertheless the children of Israel didn’t drive out the Geshurites, nor the Maacathites: but Geshur and Maacath live within Israel to this day.

Joshua 13.14: 14 Only he gave no inheritance to the tribe of Levi. The offerings of Yahweh, the God of Israel, made by fire are his inheritance, as he spoke to him.

Joshua 13.15: 15 Moses gave to the tribe of the children of Reuben according to their families.

Joshua 13.16: 16 Their border was from Aroer, that is on the edge of the valley of the Arnon, and the city that is in the middle of the valley, and all the plain by Medeba;

Joshua 13.17: 17 Heshbon, and all its cities that are in the plain; Dibon, Bamoth Baal, Beth Baal Meon,

Joshua 13.18: 18 Jahaz, Kedemoth, Mephaath,

Joshua 13.19: 19 Kiriathaim, Sibmah, Zereth Shahar in the mount of the valley,

Joshua 13.20: 20 Beth Peor, the slopes of Pisgah, Beth Jeshimoth,

Joshua 13.21: 21 all the cities of the plain, and all the kingdom of Sihon king of the Amorites, who reigned in Heshbon, whom Moses struck with the chiefs of Midian, Evi, Rekem, Zur, Hur, and Reba, the princes of Sihon, who lived in the land.

Joshua 13.22: 22 The children of Israel also killed Balaam the son of Beor, the soothsayer, with the sword, among the rest of their slain.

Joshua 13.23: 23 The border of the children of Reuben was the bank of the Jordan. This was the inheritance of the children of Reuben according to their families, the cities and its villages.

Joshua 13.24: 24 Moses gave to the tribe of Gad, to the children of Gad, according to their families.

Joshua 13.25: 25 Their border was Jazer, and all the cities of Gilead, and half the land of the children of Ammon, to Aroer that is near Rabbah;

Joshua 13.26: 26 and from Heshbon to Ramath Mizpeh, and Betonim; and from Mahanaim to the border of Debir;

Joshua 13.27: 27 and in the valley, Beth Haram, Beth Nimrah, Succoth, and Zaphon, the rest of the kingdom of Sihon king of Heshbon, the Jordan’s bank, to the uttermost part of the sea of Chinnereth beyond the Jordan eastward.

Joshua 13.28: 28 This is the inheritance of the children of Gad according to their families, the cities and its villages.

Joshua 13.29: 29 Moses gave an inheritance to the half-tribe of Manasseh. It was for the half-tribe of the children of Manasseh according to their families.

Joshua 13.30: 30 Their border was from Mahanaim, all Bashan, all the kingdom of Og king of Bashan, and all the villages of Jair, which are in Bashan, sixty cities.

Joshua 13.31: 31 Half Gilead, Ashtaroth, and Edrei, the cities of the kingdom of Og in Bashan, were for the children of Machir the son of Manasseh, even for the half of the children of Machir according to their families.

Joshua 13.32: 32 These are the inheritances which Moses distributed in the plains of Moab, beyond the Jordan at Jericho, eastward.

Joshua 13.33: 33 But Moses gave no inheritance to the tribe of Levi. Yahweh, the God of Israel, is their inheritance, as he spoke to them.

Joshua 14.0:

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Joshua 14.1: 1 These are the inheritances which the children of Israel took in the land of Canaan, which Eleazar the priest, Joshua the son of Nun, and the heads of the fathers’ houses of the tribes of the children of Israel, distributed to them,

Joshua 14.2: 2 by the lot of their inheritance, as Yahweh commanded by Moses, for the nine tribes, and for the half-tribe.

Joshua 14.3: 3 For Moses had given the inheritance of the two tribes and the half-tribe beyond the Jordan; but to the Levites he gave no inheritance among them.

Joshua 14.4: 4 For the children of Joseph were two tribes, Manasseh and Ephraim. They gave no portion to the Levites in the land, except cities to dwell in, with their pasture lands for their livestock and for their property.

Joshua 14.5: 5 The children of Israel did as Yahweh commanded Moses, and they divided the land.

Joshua 14.6: 6 Then the children of Judah came near to Joshua in Gilgal. Caleb the son of Jephunneh the Kenizzite said to him, “You know the thing that Yahweh spoke to Moses the man of God concerning me and concerning you in Kadesh Barnea.

Joshua 14.7: 7 I was forty years old when Moses the servant of Yahweh sent me from Kadesh Barnea to spy out the land. I brought him word again as it was in my heart.

Joshua 14.8: 8 Nevertheless, my brothers who went up with me made the heart of the people melt; but I wholly followed Yahweh my God.

Joshua 14.9: 9 Moses swore on that day, saying, ‘Surely the land where you walked shall be an inheritance to you and to your children forever, because you have wholly followed Yahweh my God.’

Joshua 14.10: 10 “Now, behold, Yahweh has kept me alive, as he spoke, these forty-five years, from the time that Yahweh spoke this word to Moses, while Israel walked in the wilderness. Now, behold, I am eighty-five years old, today.

Joshua 14.11: 11 As yet I am as strong today as I was in the day that Moses sent me. As my strength was then, even so is my strength now for war, to go out and to come in.

Joshua 14.12: 12 Now therefore give me this hill country, of which Yahweh spoke in that day; for you heard in that day how the Anakim were there, and great and fortified cities. It may be that Yahweh will be with me, and I shall drive them out, as Yahweh said.”

Joshua 14.13: 13 Joshua blessed him; and he gave Hebron to Caleb the son of Jephunneh for an inheritance.

Joshua 14.14: 14 Therefore Hebron became the inheritance of Caleb the son of Jephunneh the Kenizzite to this day, because he followed Yahweh, the God of Israel wholeheartedly.

Joshua 14.15: 15 Now the name of Hebron before was Kiriath Arba, after the greatest man among the Anakim. Then the land had rest from war.

Joshua 15.0:

15

Joshua 15.1: 1 The lot for the tribe of the children of Judah according to their families was to the border of Edom, even to the wilderness of Zin southward, at the uttermost part of the south.

Joshua 15.2: 2 Their south border was from the uttermost part of the Salt Sea, from the bay that looks southward;

Joshua 15.3: 3 and it went out southward of the ascent of Akrabbim, and passed along to Zin, and went up by the south of Kadesh Barnea, and passed along by Hezron, went up to Addar, and turned toward Karka;

Joshua 15.4: 4 and it passed along to Azmon, went out at the brook of Egypt; and the border ended at the sea. This shall be your south border.

Joshua 15.5: 5 The east border was the Salt Sea, even to the end of the Jordan. The border of the north quarter was from the bay of the sea at the end of the Jordan.

Joshua 15.6: 6 The border went up to Beth Hoglah, and passed along by the north of Beth Arabah; and the border went up to the stone of Bohan the son of Reuben.

Joshua 15.7: 7 The border went up to Debir from the valley of Achor, and so northward, looking toward Gilgal, that faces the ascent of Adummim, which is on the south side of the river. The border passed along to the waters of En Shemesh, and ended at En Rogel.

Joshua 15.8: 8 The border went up by the valley of the son of Hinnom to the side of the Jebusite (also called Jerusalem) southward; and the border went up to the top of the mountain that lies before the valley of Hinnom westward, which is at the farthest part of the valley of Rephaim northward.

Joshua 15.9: 9 The border extended from the top of the mountain to the spring of the waters of Nephtoah, and went out to the cities of Mount Ephron; and the border extended to Baalah (also called Kiriath Jearim);

Joshua 15.10: 10 and the border turned about from Baalah westward to Mount Seir, and passed along to the side of Mount Jearim (also called Chesalon) on the north, and went down to Beth Shemesh, and passed along by Timnah;

Joshua 15.11: 11 and the border went out to the side of Ekron northward; and the border extended to Shikkeron, and passed along to Mount Baalah, and went out at Jabneel; and the goings out of the border were at the sea.

Joshua 15.12: 12 The west border was to the shore of the great sea. This is the border of the children of Judah according to their families.

Joshua 15.13: 13 He gave to Caleb the son of Jephunneh a portion among the children of Judah, according to the commandment of Yahweh to Joshua, even Kiriath Arba, named after the father of Anak (also called Hebron).

Joshua 15.14: 14 Caleb drove out the three sons of Anak: Sheshai, and Ahiman, and Talmai, the children of Anak.

Joshua 15.15: 15 He went up against the inhabitants of Debir: now the name of Debir before was Kiriath Sepher.

Joshua 15.16: 16 Caleb said, “He who strikes Kiriath Sepher, and takes it, to him I will give Achsah my daughter as wife.”

Joshua 15.17: 17 Othniel the son of Kenaz, the brother of Caleb, took it: and he gave him Achsah his daughter as wife.

Joshua 15.18: 18 When she came, she had him ask her father for a field. She got off her donkey, and Caleb said, “What do you want?”

Joshua 15.19: 19 She said, “Give me a blessing. Because you have set me in the land of the South, give me also springs of water.”

So he gave her the upper springs and the lower springs.

Joshua 15.20: 20 This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Judah according to their families.

Joshua 15.21: 21 The farthest cities of the tribe of the children of Judah toward the border of Edom in the South were Kabzeel, Eder, Jagur,

Joshua 15.22: 22 Kinah, Dimonah, Adadah,

Joshua 15.23: 23 Kedesh, Hazor, Ithnan,

Joshua 15.24: 24 Ziph, Telem, Bealoth,

Joshua 15.25: 25 Hazor Hadattah, Kerioth Hezron (also called Hazor),

Joshua 15.26: 26 Amam, Shema, Moladah,

Joshua 15.27: 27 Hazar Gaddah, Heshmon, Beth Pelet,

Joshua 15.28: 28 Hazar Shual, Beersheba, Biziothiah,

Joshua 15.29: 29 Baalah, Iim, Ezem,

Joshua 15.30: 30 Eltolad, Chesil, Hormah,

Joshua 15.31: 31 Ziklag, Madmannah, Sansannah,

Joshua 15.32: 32 Lebaoth, Shilhim, Ain, and Rimmon. All the cities are twenty-nine, with their villages.

Joshua 15.33: 33 In the lowland, Eshtaol, Zorah, Ashnah,

Joshua 15.34: 34 Zanoah, En Gannim, Tappuah, Enam,

Joshua 15.35: 35 Jarmuth, Adullam, Socoh, Azekah,

Joshua 15.36: 36 Shaaraim, Adithaim and Gederah (or Gederothaim); fourteen cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.37: 37 Zenan, Hadashah, Migdal Gad,

Joshua 15.38: 38 Dilean, Mizpah, Joktheel,

Joshua 15.39: 39 Lachish, Bozkath, Eglon,

Joshua 15.40: 40 Cabbon, Lahmam, Chitlish,

Joshua 15.41: 41 Gederoth, Beth Dagon, Naamah, and Makkedah; sixteen cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.42: 42 Libnah, Ether, Ashan,

Joshua 15.43: 43 Iphtah, Ashnah, Nezib,

Joshua 15.44: 44 Keilah, Achzib, and Mareshah; nine cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.45: 45 Ekron, with its towns and its villages;

Joshua 15.46: 46 from Ekron even to the sea, all that were by the side of Ashdod, with their villages.

Joshua 15.47: 47 Ashdod, its towns and its villages; Gaza, its towns and its villages; to the brook of Egypt, and the great sea with its coastline.

Joshua 15.48: 48 In the hill country, Shamir, Jattir, Socoh,

Joshua 15.49: 49 Dannah, Kiriath Sannah (which is Debir),

Joshua 15.50: 50 Anab, Eshtemoh, Anim,

Joshua 15.51: 51 Goshen, Holon, and Giloh; eleven cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.52: 52 Arab, Dumah, Eshan,

Joshua 15.53: 53 Janim, Beth Tappuah, Aphekah,

Joshua 15.54: 54 Humtah, Kiriath Arba (also called Hebron), and Zior; nine cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.55: 55 Maon, Carmel, Ziph, Jutah,

Joshua 15.56: 56 Jezreel, Jokdeam, Zanoah,

Joshua 15.57: 57 Kain, Gibeah, and Timnah; ten cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.58: 58 Halhul, Beth Zur, Gedor,

Joshua 15.59: 59 Maarath, Beth Anoth, and Eltekon; six cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.60: 60 Kiriath Baal (also called Kiriath Jearim), and Rabbah; two cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.61: 61 In the wilderness, Beth Arabah, Middin, Secacah,

Joshua 15.62: 62 Nibshan, the City of Salt, and En Gedi; six cities with their villages.

Joshua 15.63: 63 As for the Jebusites, the inhabitants of Jerusalem, the children of Judah couldn’t drive them out; but the Jebusites live with the children of Judah at Jerusalem to this day.

Joshua 16.0:

16

Joshua 16.1: 1 The lot came out for the children of Joseph from the Jordan at Jericho, at the waters of Jericho on the east, even the wilderness, going up from Jericho through the hill country to Bethel.

Joshua 16.2: 2 It went out from Bethel to Luz, and passed along to the border of the Archites to Ataroth;

Joshua 16.3: 3 and it went down westward to the border of the Japhletites, to the border of Beth Horon the lower, and on to Gezer; and ended at the sea.

Joshua 16.4: 4 The children of Joseph, Manasseh and Ephraim, took their inheritance.

Joshua 16.5: 5 This was the border of the children of Ephraim according to their families. The border of their inheritance eastward was Ataroth Addar, to Beth Horon the upper.

Joshua 16.6: 6 The border went out westward at Michmethath on the north. The border turned about eastward to Taanath Shiloh, and passed along it on the east of Janoah.

Joshua 16.7: 7 It went down from Janoah to Ataroth, to Naarah, reached to Jericho, and went out at the Jordan.

Joshua 16.8: 8 From Tappuah the border went along westward to the brook of Kanah; and ended at the sea. This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Ephraim according to their families;

Joshua 16.9: 9 together with the cities which were set apart for the children of Ephraim in the middle of the inheritance of the children of Manasseh, all the cities with their villages.

Joshua 16.10: 10 They didn’t drive out the Canaanites who lived in Gezer; but the Canaanites dwell in the territory of Ephraim to this day, and have become servants to do forced labor.

Joshua 17.0:

17

Joshua 17.1: 1 This was the lot for the tribe of Manasseh, for he was the firstborn of Joseph. As for Machir the firstborn of Manasseh, the father of Gilead, because he was a man of war, therefore he had Gilead and Bashan.

Joshua 17.2: 2 So this was for the rest of the children of Manasseh according to their families: for the children of Abiezer, for the children of Helek, for the children of Asriel, for the children of Shechem, for the children of Hepher, and for the children of Shemida. These were the male children of Manasseh the son of Joseph according to their families.

Joshua 17.3: 3 But Zelophehad, the son of Hepher, the son of Gilead, the son of Machir, the son of Manasseh, had no sons, but daughters. These are the names of his daughters: Mahlah, Noah, Hoglah, Milcah, and Tirzah.

Joshua 17.4: 4 They came to Eleazar the priest, and to Joshua the son of Nun, and to the princes, saying, “Yahweh commanded Moses to give us an inheritance among our brothers.” Therefore according to the commandment of Yahweh he gave them an inheritance among the brothers of their father.

Joshua 17.5: 5 Ten parts fell to Manasseh, in addition to the land of Gilead and Bashan, which is beyond the Jordan;

Joshua 17.6: 6 because the daughters of Manasseh had an inheritance among his sons. The land of Gilead belonged to the rest of the sons of Manasseh.

Joshua 17.7: 7 The border of Manasseh was from Asher to Michmethath, which is before Shechem. The border went along to the right hand, to the inhabitants of En Tappuah.

Joshua 17.8: 8 The land of Tappuah belonged to Manasseh; but Tappuah on the border of Manasseh belonged to the children of Ephraim.

Joshua 17.9: 9 The border went down to the brook of Kanah, southward of the brook. These cities belonged to Ephraim among the cities of Manasseh. The border of Manasseh was on the north side of the brook, and ended at the sea.

Joshua 17.10: 10 Southward it was Ephraim’s, and northward it was Manasseh’s, and the sea was his border. They reached to Asher on the north, and to Issachar on the east.

Joshua 17.11: 11 Manasseh had three heights in Issachar, in Asher Beth Shean and its towns, and Ibleam and its towns, and the inhabitants of Dor and its towns, and the inhabitants of Endor and its towns, and the inhabitants of Taanach and its towns, and the inhabitants of Megiddo and its towns.

Joshua 17.12: 12 Yet the children of Manasseh couldn’t drive out the inhabitants of those cities; but the Canaanites would dwell in that land.

Joshua 17.13: 13 When the children of Israel had grown strong, they put the Canaanites to forced labor, and didn’t utterly drive them out.

Joshua 17.14: 14 The children of Joseph spoke to Joshua, saying, “Why have you given me just one lot and one part for an inheritance, since we are a numerous people, because Yahweh has blessed us so far?”

Joshua 17.15: 15 Joshua said to them, “If you are a numerous people, go up to the forest, and clear land for yourself there in the land of the Perizzites and of the Rephaim; since the hill country of Ephraim is too narrow for you.”

Joshua 17.16: 16 The children of Joseph said, “The hill country is not enough for us. All the Canaanites who dwell in the land of the valley have chariots of iron, both those who are in Beth Shean and its towns, and those who are in the valley of Jezreel.”

Joshua 17.17: 17 Joshua spoke to the house of Joseph, that is, to Ephraim and to Manasseh, saying, “You are a numerous people, and have great power. You shall not have one lot only;

Joshua 17.18: 18 but the hill country shall be yours. Although it is a forest, you shall cut it down, and it’s farthest extent shall be yours; for you shall drive out the Canaanites, though they have chariots of iron, and though they are strong.”

Joshua 18.0:

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Joshua 18.1: 1 The whole congregation of the children of Israel assembled themselves together at Shiloh, and set up the Tent of Meeting there. The land was subdued before them.

Joshua 18.2: 2 Seven tribes remained among the children of Israel, which had not yet divided their inheritance.

Joshua 18.3: 3 Joshua said to the children of Israel, “How long will you neglect to go in to possess the land, which Yahweh, the God of your fathers, has given you?

Joshua 18.4: 4 Appoint for yourselves three men from each tribe. I will send them, and they shall arise, walk through the land, and describe it according to their inheritance; then they shall come to me.

Joshua 18.5: 5 They shall divide it into seven portions. Judah shall live in his borders on the south, and the house of Joseph shall live in their borders on the north.

Joshua 18.6: 6 You shall survey the land into seven parts, and bring the description here to me; and I will cast lots for you here before Yahweh our God.

Joshua 18.7: 7 However, the Levites have no portion among you; for the priesthood of Yahweh is their inheritance. Gad, Reuben, and the half-tribe of Manasseh have received their inheritance east of the Jordan, which Moses the servant of Yahweh gave them.”

Joshua 18.8: 8 The men arose and went. Joshua commanded those who went to survey the land, saying, “Go walk through the land, survey it, and come again to me. I will cast lots for you here before Yahweh in Shiloh.”

Joshua 18.9: 9 The men went and passed through the land, and surveyed it by cities into seven portions in a book. They came to Joshua to the camp at Shiloh.

Joshua 18.10: 10 Joshua cast lots for them in Shiloh before Yahweh. There Joshua divided the land to the children of Israel according to their divisions.

Joshua 18.11: 11 The lot of the tribe of the children of Benjamin came up according to their families. The border of their lot went out between the children of Judah and the children of Joseph.

Joshua 18.12: 12 Their border on the north quarter was from the Jordan. The border went up to the side of Jericho on the north, and went up through the hill country westward. It ended at the wilderness of Beth Aven.

Joshua 18.13: 13 The border passed along from there to Luz, to the side of Luz (also called Bethel), southward. The border went down to Ataroth Addar, by the mountain that lies on the south of Beth Horon the lower.

Joshua 18.14: 14 The border extended, and turned around on the west quarter southward, from the mountain that lies before Beth Horon southward; and ended at Kiriath Baal (also called Kiriath Jearim), a city of the children of Judah. This was the west quarter.

Joshua 18.15: 15 The south quarter was from the farthest part of Kiriath Jearim. The border went out westward, and went out to the spring of the waters of Nephtoah.

Joshua 18.16: 16 The border went down to the farthest part of the mountain that lies before the valley of the son of Hinnom, which is in the valley of Rephaim northward. It went down to the valley of Hinnom, to the side of the Jebusite southward, and went down to En Rogel.

Joshua 18.17: 17 It extended northward, went out at En Shemesh, and went out to Geliloth, which is opposite the ascent of Adummim. It went down to the stone of Bohan the son of Reuben.

Joshua 18.18: 18 It passed along to the side opposite the Arabah northward, and went down to the Arabah.

Joshua 18.19: 19 The border passed along to the side of Beth Hoglah northward; and the border ended at the north bay of the Salt Sea, at the south end of the Jordan. This was the south border.

Joshua 18.20: 20 The Jordan was its border on the east quarter. This was the inheritance of the children of Benjamin, by the borders around it, according to their families.

Joshua 18.21: 21 Now the cities of the tribe of the children of Benjamin according to their families were Jericho, Beth Hoglah, Emek Keziz,

Joshua 18.22: 22 Beth Arabah, Zemaraim, Bethel,

Joshua 18.23: 23 Avvim, Parah, Ophrah,

Joshua 18.24: 24 Chephar Ammoni, Ophni, and Geba; twelve cities with their villages.

Joshua 18.25: 25 Gibeon, Ramah, Beeroth,

Joshua 18.26: 26 Mizpeh, Chephirah, Mozah,

Joshua 18.27: 27 Rekem, Irpeel, Taralah,

Joshua 18.28: 28 Zelah, Eleph, the Jebusite (also called Jerusalem), Gibeath, and Kiriath; fourteen cities with their villages. This is the inheritance of the children of Benjamin according to their families.

Joshua 19.0:

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Joshua 19.1: 1 The second lot came out for Simeon, even for the tribe of the children of Simeon according to their families. Their inheritance was in the middle of the inheritance of the children of Judah.

Joshua 19.2: 2 They had for their inheritance Beersheba (or Sheba), Moladah,

Joshua 19.3: 3 Hazar Shual, Balah, Ezem,

Joshua 19.4: 4 Eltolad, Bethul, Hormah,

Joshua 19.5: 5 Ziklag, Beth Marcaboth, Hazar Susah,

Joshua 19.6: 6 Beth Lebaoth, and Sharuhen; thirteen cities with their villages;

Joshua 19.7: 7 Ain, Rimmon, Ether, and Ashan; four cities with their villages;

Joshua 19.8: 8 and all the villages that were around these cities to Baalath Beer, Ramah of the South. This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Simeon according to their families.

Joshua 19.9: 9 Out of the part of the children of Judah was the inheritance of the children of Simeon; for the portion of the children of Judah was too much for them. Therefore the children of Simeon had inheritance in the middle of their inheritance.

Joshua 19.10: 10 The third lot came up for the children of Zebulun according to their families. The border of their inheritance was to Sarid.

Joshua 19.11: 11 Their border went up westward, even to Maralah, and reached to Dabbesheth. It reached to the brook that is before Jokneam.

Joshua 19.12: 12 It turned from Sarid eastward toward the sunrise to the border of Chisloth Tabor. It went out to Daberath, and went up to Japhia.

Joshua 19.13: 13 From there it passed along eastward to Gath Hepher, to Ethkazin; and it went out at Rimmon which stretches to Neah.

Joshua 19.14: 14 The border turned around it on the north to Hannathon; and it ended at the valley of Iphtah El;

Joshua 19.15: 15 Kattath, Nahalal, Shimron, Idalah, and Bethlehem: twelve cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.16: 16 This is the inheritance of the children of Zebulun according to their families, these cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.17: 17 The fourth lot came out for Issachar, even for the children of Issachar according to their families.

Joshua 19.18: 18 Their border was to Jezreel, Chesulloth, Shunem,

Joshua 19.19: 19 Hapharaim, Shion, Anaharath,

Joshua 19.20: 20 Rabbith, Kishion, Ebez,

Joshua 19.21: 21 Remeth, Engannim, En Haddah, and Beth Pazzez.

Joshua 19.22: 22 The border reached to Tabor, Shahazumah, and Beth Shemesh. Their border ended at the Jordan: sixteen cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.23: 23 This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Issachar according to their families, the cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.24: 24 The fifth lot came out for the tribe of the children of Asher according to their families.

Joshua 19.25: 25 Their border was Helkath, Hali, Beten, Achshaph,

Joshua 19.26: 26 Allammelech, Amad, Mishal. It reached to Carmel westward, and to Shihorlibnath.

Joshua 19.27: 27 It turned toward the sunrise to Beth Dagon, and reached to Zebulun, and to the valley of Iphtah El northward to Beth Emek and Neiel. It went out to Cabul on the left hand,

Joshua 19.28: 28 and Ebron, Rehob, Hammon, and Kanah, even to great Sidon.

Joshua 19.29: 29 The border turned to Ramah, to the fortified city of Tyre; and the border turned to Hosah. It ended at the sea by the region of Achzib;

Joshua 19.30: 30 Ummah also, and Aphek, and Rehob: twenty-two cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.31: 31 This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Asher according to their families, these cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.32: 32 The sixth lot came out for the children of Naphtali, even for the children of Naphtali according to their families.

Joshua 19.33: 33 Their border was from Heleph, from the oak in Zaanannim, Adami-nekeb, and Jabneel, to Lakkum. It ended at the Jordan.

Joshua 19.34: 34 The border turned westward to Aznoth Tabor, and went out from there to Hukkok. It reached to Zebulun on the south, and reached to Asher on the west, and to Judah at the Jordan toward the sunrise.

Joshua 19.35: 35 The fortified cities were Ziddim, Zer, Hammath, Rakkath, Chinnereth,

Joshua 19.36: 36 Adamah, Ramah, Hazor,

Joshua 19.37: 37 Kedesh, Edrei, En Hazor,

Joshua 19.38: 38 Iron, Migdal El, Horem, Beth Anath, and Beth Shemesh; nineteen cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.39: 39 This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Naphtali according to their families, the cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.40: 40 The seventh lot came out for the tribe of the children of Dan according to their families.

Joshua 19.41: 41 The border of their inheritance was Zorah, Eshtaol, Irshemesh,

Joshua 19.42: 42 Shaalabbin, Aijalon, Ithlah,

Joshua 19.43: 43 Elon, Timnah, Ekron,

Joshua 19.44: 44 Eltekeh, Gibbethon, Baalath,

Joshua 19.45: 45 Jehud, Bene Berak, Gath Rimmon,

Joshua 19.46: 46 Me Jarkon, and Rakkon, with the border opposite Joppa.

Joshua 19.47: 47 The border of the children of Dan went out beyond them; for the children of Dan went up and fought against Leshem, and took it, and struck it with the edge of the sword, and possessed it, and lived therein, and called Leshem, Dan, after the name of Dan their forefather.

Joshua 19.48: 48 This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Dan according to their families, these cities with their villages.

Joshua 19.49: 49 So they finished distributing the land for inheritance by its borders. The children of Israel gave an inheritance to Joshua the son of Nun among them.

Joshua 19.50: 50 According to Yahweh’s commandment, they gave him the city which he asked, even Timnathserah in the hill country of Ephraim; and he built the city, and lived there.

Joshua 19.51: 51 These are the inheritances, which Eleazar the priest, Joshua the son of Nun, and the heads of the fathers’ houses of the tribes of the children of Israel, distributed for inheritance by lot in Shiloh before Yahweh, at the door of the Tent of Meeting. So they finished dividing the land.

Joshua 20.0:

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Joshua 20.1: 1 Yahweh spoke to Joshua, saying,

Joshua 20.2: 2 “Speak to the children of Israel, saying, ‘Assign the cities of refuge, of which I spoke to you by Moses,

Joshua 20.3: 3 that the man slayer who kills any person accidentally or unintentionally may flee there. They shall be to you for a refuge from the avenger of blood.

Joshua 20.4: 4 He shall flee to one of those cities, and shall stand at the entrance of the gate of the city, and declare his case in the ears of the elders of that city. They shall take him into the city with them, and give him a place, that he may live among them.

Joshua 20.5: 5 If the avenger of blood pursues him, then they shall not deliver up the man slayer into his hand; because he struck his neighbor unintentionally, and didn’t hate him before.

Joshua 20.6: 6 He shall dwell in that city until he stands before the congregation for judgment, until the death of the high priest that shall be in those days. Then the man slayer shall return, and come to his own city, and to his own house, to the city he fled from.’”

Joshua 20.7: 7 They set apart Kedesh in Galilee in the hill country of Naphtali, Shechem in the hill country of Ephraim, and Kiriath Arba (also called Hebron) in the hill country of Judah.

Joshua 20.8: 8 Beyond the Jordan at Jericho eastward, they assigned Bezer in the wilderness in the plain out of the tribe of Reuben, Ramoth in Gilead out of the tribe of Gad, and Golan in Bashan out of the tribe of Manasseh.

Joshua 20.9: 9 These were the appointed cities for all the children of Israel, and for the alien who lives among them, that whoever kills any person unintentionally might flee there, and not die by the hand of the avenger of blood, until he stands trial before the congregation.

Joshua 21.0:

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Joshua 21.1: 1 Then the heads of fathers’ houses of the Levites came near to Eleazar the priest, and to Joshua the son of Nun, and to the heads of fathers’ houses of the tribes of the children of Israel.

Joshua 21.2: 2 They spoke to them at Shiloh in the land of Canaan, saying, “Yahweh commanded through Moses to give us cities to dwell in, with their pasture lands for our livestock.”

Joshua 21.3: 3 The children of Israel gave to the Levites out of their inheritance, according to the commandment of Yahweh, these cities with their pasture lands.

Joshua 21.4: 4 The lot came out for the families of the Kohathites. The children of Aaron the priest, who were of the Levites, had thirteen cities by lot out of the tribe of Judah, out of the tribe of the Simeonites, and out of the tribe of Benjamin.

Joshua 21.5: 5 The rest of the children of Kohath had ten cities by lot out of the families of the tribe of Ephraim, out of the tribe of Dan, and out of the half-tribe of Manasseh.

Joshua 21.6: 6 The children of Gershon had thirteen cities by lot out of the families of the tribe of Issachar, out of the tribe of Asher, out of the tribe of Naphtali, and out of the half-tribe of Manasseh in Bashan.

Joshua 21.7: 7 The children of Merari according to their families had twelve cities out of the tribe of Reuben, out of the tribe of Gad, and out of the tribe of Zebulun.

Joshua 21.8: 8 The children of Israel gave these cities with their pasture lands by lot to the Levites, as Yahweh commanded by Moses.

Joshua 21.9: 9 They gave out of the tribe of the children of Judah, and out of the tribe of the children of Simeon, these cities which are mentioned by name:

Joshua 21.10: 10 and they were for the children of Aaron, of the families of the Kohathites, who were of the children of Levi; for theirs was the first lot.

Joshua 21.11: 11 They gave them Kiriath Arba, named after the father of Anak (also called Hebron), in the hill country of Judah, with its pasture lands around it.

Joshua 21.12: 12 But they gave the fields of the city and its villages to Caleb the son of Jephunneh for his possession.

Joshua 21.13: 13 To the children of Aaron the priest they gave Hebron with its pasture lands, the city of refuge for the man slayer, Libnah with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.14: 14 Jattir with its pasture lands, Eshtemoa with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.15: 15 Holon with its pasture lands, Debir with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.16: 16 Ain with its pasture lands, Juttah with its pasture lands, and Beth Shemesh with its pasture lands: nine cities out of those two tribes.

Joshua 21.17: 17 Out of the tribe of Benjamin, Gibeon with its pasture lands, Geba with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.18: 18 Anathoth with its pasture lands, and Almon with its pasture lands: four cities.

Joshua 21.19: 19 All the cities of the children of Aaron, the priests, were thirteen cities with their pasture lands.

Joshua 21.20: 20 The families of the children of Kohath, the Levites, even the rest of the children of Kohath, had the cities of their lot out of the tribe of Ephraim.

Joshua 21.21: 21 They gave them Shechem with its pasture lands in the hill country of Ephraim, the city of refuge for the man slayer, and Gezer with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.22: 22 Kibzaim with its pasture lands, and Beth Horon with its pasture lands: four cities.

Joshua 21.23: 23 Out of the tribe of Dan, Elteke with its pasture lands, Gibbethon with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.24: 24 Aijalon with its pasture lands, Gath Rimmon with its pasture lands: four cities.

Joshua 21.25: 25 Out of the half-tribe of Manasseh, Taanach with its pasture lands, and Gath Rimmon with its pasture lands: two cities.

Joshua 21.26: 26 All the cities of the families of the rest of the children of Kohath were ten with their pasture lands.

Joshua 21.27: 27 They gave to the children of Gershon, of the families of the Levites, out of the half-tribe of Manasseh Golan in Bashan with its pasture lands, the city of refuge for the man slayer, and Be Eshterah with its pasture lands: two cities.

Joshua 21.28: 28 Out of the tribe of Issachar, Kishion with its pasture lands, Daberath with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.29: 29 Jarmuth with its pasture lands, En Gannim with its pasture lands: four cities.

Joshua 21.30: 30 Out of the tribe of Asher, Mishal with its pasture lands, Abdon with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.31: 31 Helkath with its pasture lands, and Rehob with its pasture lands: four cities.

Joshua 21.32: 32 Out of the tribe of Naphtali, Kedesh in Galilee with its pasture lands, the city of refuge for the man slayer, Hammothdor with its pasture lands, and Kartan with its pasture lands: three cities.

Joshua 21.33: 33 All the cities of the Gershonites according to their families were thirteen cities with their pasture lands.

Joshua 21.34: 34 To the families of the children of Merari, the rest of the Levites, out of the tribe of Zebulun, Jokneam with its pasture lands, Kartah with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.35: 35 Dimnah with its pasture lands, and Nahalal with its pasture lands: four cities.

Joshua 21.36: 36 Out of the tribe of Reuben, Bezer with its pasture lands, Jahaz with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.37: 37 Kedemoth with its pasture lands, and Mephaath with its pasture lands: four cities.

Joshua 21.38: 38 Out of the tribe of Gad, Ramoth in Gilead with its pasture lands, the city of refuge for the man slayer, and Mahanaim with its pasture lands,

Joshua 21.39: 39 Heshbon with its pasture lands, Jazer with its pasture lands: four cities in all.

Joshua 21.40: 40 All these were the cities of the children of Merari according to their families, even the rest of the families of the Levites. Their lot was twelve cities.

Joshua 21.41: 41 All the cities of the Levites among the possessions of the children of Israel were forty-eight cities with their pasture lands.

Joshua 21.42: 42 Each of these cities included their pasture lands around them. It was this way with all these cities.

Joshua 21.43: 43 So Yahweh gave to Israel all the land which he swore to give to their fathers. They possessed it, and lived in it.

Joshua 21.44: 44 Yahweh gave them rest all around, according to all that he swore to their fathers. Not a man of all their enemies stood before them. Yahweh delivered all their enemies into their hand.

Joshua 21.45: 45 Nothing failed of any good thing which Yahweh had spoken to the house of Israel. All came to pass.

Joshua 22.0:

22

Joshua 22.1: 1 Then Joshua called the Reubenites, the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh,

Joshua 22.2: 2 and said to them, “You have kept all that Moses the servant of Yahweh commanded you, and have listened to my voice in all that I commanded you.

Joshua 22.3: 3 You have not left your brothers these many days to this day, but have performed the duty of the commandment of Yahweh your God.

Joshua 22.4: 4 Now Yahweh your God has given rest to your brothers, as he spoke to them. Therefore now return and go to your tents, to the land of your possession, which Moses the servant of Yahweh gave you beyond the Jordan.

Joshua 22.5: 5 Only take diligent heed to do the commandment and the law which Moses the servant of Yahweh commanded you, to love Yahweh your God, to walk in all his ways, to keep his commandments, to hold fast to him, and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul.”

Joshua 22.6: 6 So Joshua blessed them, and sent them away; and they went to their tents.

Joshua 22.7: 7 Now to the one half-tribe of Manasseh Moses had given inheritance in Bashan; but Joshua gave to the other half among their brothers beyond the Jordan westward. Moreover when Joshua sent them away to their tents, he blessed them,

Joshua 22.8: 8 and spoke to them, saying, “Return with much wealth to your tents, with very much livestock, with silver, with gold, with bronze, with iron, and with very much clothing. Divide the plunder of your enemies with your brothers.”

Joshua 22.9: 9 The children of Reuben and the children of Gad and the half-tribe of Manasseh returned, and departed from the children of Israel out of Shiloh, which is in the land of Canaan, to go to the land of Gilead, to the land of their possession, which they owned, according to the commandment of Yahweh by Moses.

Joshua 22.10: 10 When they came to the region near the Jordan, that is in the land of Canaan, the children of Reuben and the children of Gad and the half-tribe of Manasseh built an altar there by the Jordan, a great altar to look at.

Joshua 22.11: 11 The children of Israel heard this, “Behold, the children of Reuben and the children of Gad and the half-tribe of Manasseh have built an altar along the border of the land of Canaan, in the region around the Jordan, on the side that belongs to the children of Israel.”

Joshua 22.12: 12 When the children of Israel heard of it, the whole congregation of the children of Israel gathered themselves together at Shiloh, to go up against them to war.

Joshua 22.13: 13 The children of Israel sent to the children of Reuben, and to the children of Gad, and to the half-tribe of Manasseh, into the land of Gilead, Phinehas the son of Eleazar the priest.

Joshua 22.14: 14 With him were ten princes, one prince of a fathers’ house for each of the tribes of Israel; and they were each head of their fathers’ houses among the thousands of Israel.

Joshua 22.15: 15 They came to the children of Reuben, and to the children of Gad, and to the half-tribe of Manasseh, to the land of Gilead, and they spoke with them, saying,

Joshua 22.16: 16 “The whole congregation of Yahweh says, ‘What trespass is this that you have committed against the God of Israel, to turn away today from following Yahweh, in that you have built yourselves an altar, to rebel today against Yahweh?

Joshua 22.17: 17 Is the iniquity of Peor too little for us, from which we have not cleansed ourselves to this day, although there came a plague on the congregation of Yahweh,

Joshua 22.18: 18 that you must turn away today from following Yahweh? It will be, since you rebel today against Yahweh, that tomorrow he will be angry with the whole congregation of Israel.

Joshua 22.19: 19 However, if the land of your possession is unclean, then pass over to the land of the possession of Yahweh, in which Yahweh’s tabernacle dwells, and take possession among us; but don’t rebel against Yahweh, nor rebel against us, in building an altar other than Yahweh our God’s altar.

Joshua 22.20: 20 Didn’t Achan the son of Zerah commit a trespass in the devoted thing, and wrath fell on all the congregation of Israel? That man didn’t perish alone in his iniquity.’”

Joshua 22.21: 21 Then the children of Reuben and the children of Gad and the half-tribe of Manasseh answered, and spoke to the heads of the thousands of Israel,

Joshua 22.22: 22 “The Mighty One, God, Yahweh, the Mighty One, God, Yahweh, he knows; and Israel shall know: if it was in rebellion, or if in trespass against Yahweh (don’t save us today),

Joshua 22.23: 23 that we have built us an altar to turn away from following Yahweh; or if to offer burnt offering or meal offering, or if to offer sacrifices of peace offerings, let Yahweh himself require it.

Joshua 22.24: 24 “If we have not out of concern done this, and for a reason, saying, ‘In time to come your children might speak to our children, saying, “What have you to do with Yahweh, the God of Israel?

Joshua 22.25: 25 For Yahweh has made the Jordan a border between us and you, you children of Reuben and children of Gad. You have no portion in Yahweh.”’ So your children might make our children cease from fearing Yahweh.

Joshua 22.26: 26 “Therefore we said, ‘Let’s now prepare to build ourselves an altar, not for burnt offering, nor for sacrifice;

Joshua 22.27: 27 but it will be a witness between us and you, and between our generations after us, that we may perform the service of Yahweh before him with our burnt offerings, with our sacrifices, and with our peace offerings;’ that your children may not tell our children in time to come, ‘You have no portion in Yahweh.’

Joshua 22.28: 28 “Therefore we said, ‘It shall be, when they tell us or our generations this in time to come, that we shall say, “Behold the pattern of Yahweh’s altar, which our fathers made, not for burnt offering, nor for sacrifice; but it is a witness between us and you.”’

Joshua 22.29: 29 “Far be it from us that we should rebel against Yahweh, and turn away today from following Yahweh, to build an altar for burnt offering, for meal offering, or for sacrifice, besides Yahweh our God’s altar that is before his tabernacle!”

Joshua 22.30: 30 When Phinehas the priest, and the princes of the congregation, even the heads of the thousands of Israel that were with him, heard the words that the children of Reuben and the children of Gad and the children of Manasseh spoke, it pleased them well.

Joshua 22.31: 31 Phinehas the son of Eleazar the priest said to the children of Reuben, to the children of Gad, and to the children of Manasseh, “Today we know that Yahweh is among us, because you have not committed this trespass against Yahweh. Now you have delivered the children of Israel out of Yahweh’s hand.”

Joshua 22.32: 32 Phinehas the son of Eleazar the priest, and the princes, returned from the children of Reuben, and from the children of Gad, out of the land of Gilead, to the land of Canaan, to the children of Israel, and brought them word again.

Joshua 22.33: 33 The thing pleased the children of Israel; and the children of Israel blessed God, and spoke no more of going up against them to war, to destroy the land in which the children of Reuben and the children of Gad lived.

Joshua 22.34: 34 The children of Reuben and the children of Gad named the altar “A Witness Between Us that Yahweh is God.”

Joshua 23.0:

23

Joshua 23.1: 1 After many days, when Yahweh had given rest to Israel from their enemies all around, and Joshua was old and well advanced in years,

Joshua 23.2: 2 Joshua called for all Israel, for their elders and for their heads, and for their judges and for their officers, and said to them, “I am old and well advanced in years.

Joshua 23.3: 3 You have seen all that Yahweh your God has done to all these nations because of you; for it is Yahweh your God who has fought for you.

Joshua 23.4: 4 Behold, I have allotted to you these nations that remain, to be an inheritance for your tribes, from the Jordan, with all the nations that I have cut off, even to the great sea toward the going down of the sun.

Joshua 23.5: 5 Yahweh your God will thrust them out from before you, and drive them from out of your sight. You shall possess their land, as Yahweh your God spoke to you.

Joshua 23.6: 6 “Therefore be very courageous to keep and to do all that is written in the book of the law of Moses, that you not turn away from it to the right hand or to the left;

Joshua 23.7: 7 that you not come among these nations, these that remain among you; neither make mention of the name of their gods, nor cause to swear by them, neither serve them, nor bow down yourselves to them;

Joshua 23.8: 8 but hold fast to Yahweh your God, as you have done to this day.

Joshua 23.9: 9 “For Yahweh has driven great and strong nations out from before you. But as for you, no man has stood before you to this day.

Joshua 23.10: 10 One man of you shall chase a thousand; for it is Yahweh your God who fights for you, as he spoke to you.

Joshua 23.11: 11 Take good heed therefore to yourselves, that you love Yahweh your God.

Joshua 23.12: 12 “But if you do at all go back, and hold fast to the remnant of these nations, even these who remain among you, and make marriages with them, and go in to them, and they to you;

Joshua 23.13: 13 know for a certainty that Yahweh your God will no longer drive these nations from out of your sight; but they shall be a snare and a trap to you, a scourge in your sides, and thorns in your eyes, until you perish from off this good land which Yahweh your God has given you.

Joshua 23.14: 14 “Behold, today I am going the way of all the earth. You know in all your hearts and in all your souls that not one thing has failed of all the good things which Yahweh your God spoke concerning you. All have happened to you. Not one thing has failed of it.

Joshua 23.15: 15 It shall happen that as all the good things have come on you of which Yahweh your God spoke to you, so Yahweh will bring on you all the evil things, until he has destroyed you from off this good land which Yahweh your God has given you,

Joshua 23.16: 16 when you disobey the covenant of Yahweh your God, which he commanded you, and go and serve other gods, and bow down yourselves to them. Then Yahweh’s anger will be kindled against you, and you will perish quickly from off the good land which he has given to you.”

Joshua 24.0:

24

Joshua 24.1: 1 Joshua gathered all the tribes of Israel to Shechem, and called for the elders of Israel, for their heads, for their judges, and for their officers; and they presented themselves before God.

Joshua 24.2: 2 Joshua said to all the people, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, ‘Your fathers lived of old time beyond the River, even Terah, the father of Abraham, and the father of Nahor. They served other gods.

Joshua 24.3: 3 I took your father Abraham from beyond the River, and led him throughout all the land of Canaan, and multiplied his offspring, and gave him Isaac.

Joshua 24.4: 4 I gave to Isaac Jacob and Esau: and I gave to Esau Mount Seir, to possess it. Jacob and his children went down into Egypt.

Joshua 24.5: 5 “‘I sent Moses and Aaron, and I plagued Egypt, according to that which I did among them: and afterward I brought you out.

Joshua 24.6: 6 I brought your fathers out of Egypt: and you came to the sea. The Egyptians pursued your fathers with chariots and with horsemen to the Red Sea.

Joshua 24.7: 7 When they cried out to Yahweh, he put darkness between you and the Egyptians, and brought the sea on them, and covered them; and your eyes saw what I did in Egypt. You lived in the wilderness many days.

Joshua 24.8: 8 “‘I brought you into the land of the Amorites, that lived beyond the Jordan. They fought with you, and I gave them into your hand. You possessed their land, and I destroyed them from before you.

Joshua 24.9: 9 Then Balak the son of Zippor, king of Moab, arose and fought against Israel. He sent and called Balaam the son of Beor to curse you,

Joshua 24.10: 10 but I would not listen to Balaam; therefore he blessed you still. So I delivered you out of his hand.

Joshua 24.11: 11 “‘You went over the Jordan, and came to Jericho. The men of Jericho fought against you, the Amorite, the Perizzite, the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Girgashite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite; and I delivered them into your hand.

Joshua 24.12: 12 I sent the hornet before you, which drove them out from before you, even the two kings of the Amorites; not with your sword, nor with your bow.

Joshua 24.13: 13 I gave you a land on which you had not labored, and cities which you didn’t build, and you live in them. You eat of vineyards and olive groves which you didn’t plant.’

Joshua 24.14: 14 “Now therefore fear Yahweh, and serve him in sincerity and in truth. Put away the gods which your fathers served beyond the River, in Egypt; and serve Yahweh.

Joshua 24.15: 15 If it seems evil to you to serve Yahweh, choose today whom you will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you dwell; but as for me and my house, we will serve Yahweh.”

Joshua 24.16: 16 The people answered, “Far be it from us that we should forsake Yahweh, to serve other gods;

Joshua 24.17: 17 for it is Yahweh our God who brought us and our fathers up out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage, and who did those great signs in our sight, and preserved us in all the way in which we went, and among all the peoples through the middle of whom we passed.

Joshua 24.18: 18 Yahweh drove out from before us all the peoples, even the Amorites who lived in the land. Therefore we also will serve Yahweh; for he is our God.”

Joshua 24.19: 19 Joshua said to the people, “You can’t serve Yahweh, for he is a holy God. He is a jealous God. He will not forgive your disobedience nor your sins.

Joshua 24.20: 20 If you forsake Yahweh, and serve foreign gods, then he will turn and do you evil, and consume you, after he has done you good.”

Joshua 24.21: 21 The people said to Joshua, “No, but we will serve Yahweh.”

Joshua 24.22: 22 Joshua said to the people, “You are witnesses against yourselves that you have chosen Yahweh yourselves, to serve him.”

They said, “We are witnesses.”

Joshua 24.23: 23 “Now therefore put away the foreign gods which are among you, and incline your heart to Yahweh, the God of Israel.”

Joshua 24.24: 24 The people said to Joshua, “We will serve Yahweh our God, and we will listen to his voice.”

Joshua 24.25: 25 So Joshua made a covenant with the people that day, and made for them a statute and an ordinance in Shechem.

Joshua 24.26: 26 Joshua wrote these words in the book of the law of God; and he took a great stone, and set it up there under the oak that was by the sanctuary of Yahweh.

Joshua 24.27: 27 Joshua said to all the people, “Behold, this stone shall be a witness against us, for it has heard all Yahweh’s words which he spoke to us. It shall be therefore a witness against you, lest you deny your God.”

Joshua 24.28: 28 So Joshua sent the people away, each to his own inheritance.

Joshua 24.29: 29 After these things, Joshua the son of Nun, the servant of Yahweh, died, being one hundred ten years old.

Joshua 24.30: 30 They buried him in the border of his inheritance in Timnathserah, which is in the hill country of Ephraim, on the north of the mountain of Gaash.

Joshua 24.31: 31 Israel served Yahweh all the days of Joshua, and all the days of the elders who outlived Joshua, and had known all the work of Yahweh, that he had worked for Israel.

Joshua 24.32: 32 They buried the bones of Joseph, which the children of Israel brought up out of Egypt, in Shechem, in the parcel of ground which Jacob bought from the sons of Hamor the father of Shechem for a hundred pieces of silver. They became the inheritance of the children of Joseph.

Joshua 24.33: 33 Eleazar the son of Aaron died. They buried him in the hill of Phinehas his son, which was given him in the hill country of Ephraim.

Judges 0.0:

The Book of

Judges

Judges 1.0:

1

Judges 1.1: 1 After the death of Joshua, the children of Israel asked of Yahweh, saying, “Who should go up for us first against the Canaanites, to fight against them?”

Judges 1.2: 2 Yahweh said, “Judah shall go up. Behold, I have delivered the land into his hand.”

Judges 1.3: 3 Judah said to Simeon his brother, “Come up with me into my lot, that we may fight against the Canaanites; and I likewise will go with you into your lot.” So Simeon went with him.

Judges 1.4: 4 Judah went up, and Yahweh delivered the Canaanites and the Perizzites into their hand. They struck ten thousand men in Bezek.

Judges 1.5: 5 They found Adoni-Bezek in Bezek, and they fought against him. They struck the Canaanites and the Perizzites.

Judges 1.6: 6 But Adoni-Bezek fled. They pursued him, caught him, and cut off his thumbs and his big toes.

Judges 1.7: 7 Adoni-Bezek said, “Seventy kings, having their thumbs and their big toes cut off, scavenged under my table. As I have done, so God has done to me.” They brought him to Jerusalem, and he died there.

Judges 1.8: 8 The children of Judah fought against Jerusalem, took it, struck it with the edge of the sword, and set the city on fire.

Judges 1.9: 9 After that, the children of Judah went down to fight against the Canaanites who lived in the hill country, and in the South, and in the lowland.

Judges 1.10: 10 Judah went against the Canaanites who lived in Hebron. (The name of Hebron before that was Kiriath Arba.) They struck Sheshai, Ahiman, and Talmai.

Judges 1.11: 11 From there he went against the inhabitants of Debir. (The name of Debir before that was Kiriath Sepher.)

Judges 1.12: 12 Caleb said, “I will give Achsah my daughter as wife to the man who strikes Kiriath Sepher, and takes it.”

Judges 1.13: 13 Othniel the son of Kenaz, Caleb’s younger brother, took it, so he gave him Achsah his daughter as his wife.

Judges 1.14: 14 When she came, she got him to ask her father for a field. She got off her donkey; and Caleb said to her, “What would you like?”

Judges 1.15: 15 She said to him, “Give me a blessing; because you have set me in the land of the South, give me also springs of water.” Then Caleb gave her the upper springs and the lower springs.

Judges 1.16: 16 The children of the Kenite, Moses’ brother-in-law, went up out of the city of palm trees with the children of Judah into the wilderness of Judah, which is in the south of Arad; and they went and lived with the people.

Judges 1.17: 17 Judah went with Simeon his brother, and they struck the Canaanites who inhabited Zephath, and utterly destroyed it. The name of the city was called Hormah.

Judges 1.18: 18 Also Judah took Gaza with its border, and Ashkelon with its border, and Ekron with its border.

Judges 1.19: 19 Yahweh was with Judah, and drove out the inhabitants of the hill country; for he could not drive out the inhabitants of the valley, because they had chariots of iron.

Judges 1.20: 20 They gave Hebron to Caleb, as Moses had said, and he drove the three sons of Anak out of there.

Judges 1.21: 21 The children of Benjamin didn’t drive out the Jebusites who inhabited Jerusalem, but the Jebusites dwell with the children of Benjamin in Jerusalem to this day.

Judges 1.22: 22 The house of Joseph also went up against Bethel, and Yahweh was with them.

Judges 1.23: 23 The house of Joseph sent to spy out Bethel. (The name of the city before that was Luz.)

Judges 1.24: 24 The watchers saw a man come out of the city, and they said to him, “Please show us the entrance into the city, and we will deal kindly with you.”

Judges 1.25: 25 He showed them the entrance into the city, and they struck the city with the edge of the sword; but they let the man and all his family go.

Judges 1.26: 26 The man went into the land of the Hittites, built a city, and called its name Luz, which is its name to this day.

Judges 1.27: 27 Manasseh didn’t drive out the inhabitants of Beth Shean and its towns, nor Taanach and its towns, nor the inhabitants of Dor and its towns, nor the inhabitants of Ibleam and its towns, nor the inhabitants of Megiddo and its towns; but the Canaanites would dwell in that land.

Judges 1.28: 28 When Israel had grown strong, they put the Canaanites to forced labor, and didn’t utterly drive them out.

Judges 1.29: 29 Ephraim didn’t drive out the Canaanites who lived in Gezer, but the Canaanites lived in Gezer among them.

Judges 1.30: 30 Zebulun didn’t drive out the inhabitants of Kitron, nor the inhabitants of Nahalol; but the Canaanites lived among them, and became subject to forced labor.

Judges 1.31: 31 Asher didn’t drive out the inhabitants of Acco, nor the inhabitants of Sidon, nor of Ahlab, nor of Achzib, nor of Helbah, nor of Aphik, nor of Rehob;

Judges 1.32: 32 but the Asherites lived among the Canaanites, the inhabitants of the land, for they didn’t drive them out.

Judges 1.33: 33 Naphtali didn’t drive out the inhabitants of Beth Shemesh, nor the inhabitants of Beth Anath; but he lived among the Canaanites, the inhabitants of the land. Nevertheless the inhabitants of Beth Shemesh and of Beth Anath became subject to forced labor.

Judges 1.34: 34 The Amorites forced the children of Dan into the hill country, for they would not allow them to come down to the valley;

Judges 1.35: 35 but the Amorites would dwell in Mount Heres, in Aijalon, and in Shaalbim. Yet the hand of the house of Joseph prevailed, so that they became subject to forced labor.

Judges 1.36: 36 The border of the Amorites was from the ascent of Akrabbim, from the rock, and upward.

Judges 2.0:

2

Judges 2.1: 1 Yahweh’s angel came up from Gilgal to Bochim. He said, “I brought you out of Egypt, and have brought you to the land which I swore to give your fathers. I said, ‘I will never break my covenant with you.

Judges 2.2: 2 You shall make no covenant with the inhabitants of this land. You shall break down their altars.’ But you have not listened to my voice. Why have you done this?

Judges 2.3: 3 Therefore I also said, ‘I will not drive them out from before you; but they shall be in your sides, and their gods will be a snare to you.’”

Judges 2.4: 4 When Yahweh’s angel spoke these words to all the children of Israel, the people lifted up their voice and wept.

Judges 2.5: 5 They called the name of that place Bochim, and they sacrificed there to Yahweh.

Judges 2.6: 6 Now when Joshua had sent the people away, the children of Israel each went to his inheritance to possess the land.

Judges 2.7: 7 The people served Yahweh all the days of Joshua, and all the days of the elders who outlived Joshua, who had seen all the great work of Yahweh that he had worked for Israel.

Judges 2.8: 8 Joshua the son of Nun, the servant of Yahweh, died, being one hundred ten years old.

Judges 2.9: 9 They buried him in the border of his inheritance in Timnath Heres, in the hill country of Ephraim, on the north of the mountain of Gaash.

Judges 2.10: 10 After all that generation were gathered to their fathers, another generation arose after them who didn’t know Yahweh, nor the work which he had done for Israel.

Judges 2.11: 11 The children of Israel did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and served the Baals.

Judges 2.12: 12 They abandoned Yahweh, the God of their fathers, who brought them out of the land of Egypt, and followed other gods, of the gods of the peoples who were around them, and bowed themselves down to them; and they provoked Yahweh to anger.

Judges 2.13: 13 They abandoned Yahweh, and served Baal and the Ashtaroth.

Judges 2.14: 14 Yahweh’s anger burned against Israel, and he delivered them into the hands of raiders who plundered them. He sold them into the hands of their enemies all around, so that they could no longer stand before their enemies.

Judges 2.15: 15 Wherever they went out, Yahweh’s hand was against them for evil, as Yahweh had spoken, and as Yahweh had sworn to them; and they were very distressed.

Judges 2.16: 16 Yahweh raised up judges, who saved them out of the hand of those who plundered them.

Judges 2.17: 17 Yet they didn’t listen to their judges; for they prostituted themselves to other gods, and bowed themselves down to them. They quickly turned away from the way in which their fathers walked, obeying Yahweh’s commandments. They didn’t do so.

Judges 2.18: 18 When Yahweh raised up judges for them, then Yahweh was with the judge, and saved them out of the hand of their enemies all the days of the judge; for it grieved Yahweh because of their groaning by reason of those who oppressed them and troubled them.

Judges 2.19: 19 But when the judge was dead, they turned back, and dealt more corruptly than their fathers in following other gods to serve them and to bow down to them. They didn’t cease what they were doing, or give up their stubborn ways.

Judges 2.20: 20 Yahweh’s anger burned against Israel; and he said, “Because this nation transgressed my covenant which I commanded their fathers, and has not listened to my voice,

Judges 2.21: 21 I also will no longer drive out any of the nations that Joshua left when he died from before them;

Judges 2.22: 22 that by them I may test Israel, to see if they will keep Yahweh’s way to walk therein, as their fathers kept it, or not.”

Judges 2.23: 23 So Yahweh left those nations, without driving them out hastily. He didn’t deliver them into Joshua’s hand.

Judges 3.0:

3

Judges 3.1: 1 Now these are the nations which Yahweh left, to test Israel by them, even as many as had not known all the wars of Canaan;

Judges 3.2: 2 only that the generations of the children of Israel might know, to teach them war, at least those who knew nothing of it before:

Judges 3.3: 3 the five lords of the Philistines, all the Canaanites, the Sidonians, and the Hivites who lived on Mount Lebanon, from Mount Baal Hermon to the entrance of Hamath.

Judges 3.4: 4 They were left to test Israel by them, to know whether they would listen to Yahweh’s commandments, which he commanded their fathers by Moses.

Judges 3.5: 5 The children of Israel lived among the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Amorites, the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites.

Judges 3.6: 6 They took their daughters to be their wives, and gave their own daughters to their sons and served their gods.

Judges 3.7: 7 The children of Israel did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and forgot Yahweh their God, and served the Baals and the Asheroth.

Judges 3.8: 8 Therefore Yahweh’s anger burned against Israel, and he sold them into the hand of Cushan Rishathaim king of Mesopotamia; and the children of Israel served Cushan Rishathaim eight years.

Judges 3.9: 9 When the children of Israel cried to Yahweh, Yahweh raised up a savior to the children of Israel, who saved them, even Othniel the son of Kenaz, Caleb’s younger brother.

Judges 3.10: 10 Yahweh’s Spirit came on him, and he judged Israel; and he went out to war, and Yahweh delivered Cushan Rishathaim king of Mesopotamia into his hand. His hand prevailed against Cushan Rishathaim.

Judges 3.11: 11 The land had rest forty years, then Othniel the son of Kenaz died.

Judges 3.12: 12 The children of Israel again did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and Yahweh strengthened Eglon the king of Moab against Israel, because they had done that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight.

Judges 3.13: 13 He gathered the children of Ammon and Amalek to himself; and he went and struck Israel, and they possessed the city of palm trees.

Judges 3.14: 14 The children of Israel served Eglon the king of Moab eighteen years.

Judges 3.15: 15 But when the children of Israel cried to Yahweh, Yahweh raised up a savior for them: Ehud the son of Gera, the Benjamite, a left-handed man. The children of Israel sent tribute by him to Eglon the king of Moab.

Judges 3.16: 16 Ehud made himself a sword which had two edges, a cubit in length; and he wore it under his clothing on his right thigh.

Judges 3.17: 17 He offered the tribute to Eglon king of Moab. Now Eglon was a very fat man.

Judges 3.18: 18 When Ehud had finished offering the tribute, he sent away the people who carried the tribute.

Judges 3.19: 19 But he himself turned back from the stone idols that were by Gilgal, and said, “I have a secret message for you, O king.”

The king said, “Keep silence!” All who stood by him left him.

Judges 3.20: 20 Ehud came to him; and he was sitting by himself alone in the cool upper room. Ehud said, “I have a message from God to you.” He arose out of his seat.

Judges 3.21: 21 Ehud put out his left hand, and took the sword from his right thigh, and thrust it into his body.

Judges 3.22: 22 The handle also went in after the blade; and the fat closed on the blade, for he didn’t draw the sword out of his body; and it came out behind.

Judges 3.23: 23 Then Ehud went out onto the porch, and shut the doors of the upper room on him, and locked them.

Judges 3.24: 24 After he had gone, his servants came and saw that the doors of the upper room were locked. They said, “Surely he is covering his feet in the upper room.”

Judges 3.25: 25 They waited until they were ashamed; and behold, he didn’t open the doors of the upper room. Therefore they took the key and opened them, and behold, their lord had fallen down dead on the floor.

Judges 3.26: 26 Ehud escaped while they waited, passed beyond the stone idols, and escaped to Seirah.

Judges 3.27: 27 When he had come, he blew a trumpet in the hill country of Ephraim; and the children of Israel went down with him from the hill country, and he led them.

Judges 3.28: 28 He said to them, “Follow me; for Yahweh has delivered your enemies the Moabites into your hand.” They followed him, and took the fords of the Jordan against the Moabites, and didn’t allow any man to pass over.

Judges 3.29: 29 They struck at that time about ten thousand men of Moab, every strong man and every man of valor. No man escaped.

Judges 3.30: 30 So Moab was subdued that day under the hand of Israel. Then the land had rest eighty years.

Judges 3.31: 31 After him was Shamgar the son of Anath, who struck six hundred men of the Philistines with an ox goad. He also saved Israel.

Judges 4.0:

4

Judges 4.1: 1 The children of Israel again did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, when Ehud was dead.

Judges 4.2: 2 Yahweh sold them into the hand of Jabin king of Canaan, who reigned in Hazor; the captain of whose army was Sisera, who lived in Harosheth of the Gentiles.

Judges 4.3: 3 The children of Israel cried to Yahweh, for he had nine hundred chariots of iron; and he mightily oppressed the children of Israel for twenty years.

Judges 4.4: 4 Now Deborah, a prophetess, the wife of Lappidoth, judged Israel at that time.

Judges 4.5: 5 She lived under Deborah’s palm tree between Ramah and Bethel in the hill country of Ephraim; and the children of Israel came up to her for judgment.

Judges 4.6: 6 She sent and called Barak the son of Abinoam out of Kedesh Naphtali, and said to him, “Hasn’t Yahweh, the God of Israel, commanded, ‘Go and lead the way to Mount Tabor, and take with you ten thousand men of the children of Naphtali and of the children of Zebulun?

Judges 4.7: 7 I will draw to you, to the river Kishon, Sisera, the captain of Jabin’s army, with his chariots and his multitude; and I will deliver him into your hand.’”

Judges 4.8: 8 Barak said to her, “If you will go with me, then I will go; but if you will not go with me, I will not go.”

Judges 4.9: 9 She said, “I will surely go with you. Nevertheless, the journey that you take won’t be for your honor; for Yahweh will sell Sisera into a woman’s hand.” Deborah arose, and went with Barak to Kedesh.

Judges 4.10: 10 Barak called Zebulun and Naphtali together to Kedesh. Ten thousand men followed him; and Deborah went up with him.

Judges 4.11: 11 Now Heber the Kenite had separated himself from the Kenites, even from the children of Hobab, Moses’ brother-in-law, and had pitched his tent as far as the oak in Zaanannim, which is by Kedesh.

Judges 4.12: 12 They told Sisera that Barak the son of Abinoam was gone up to Mount Tabor.

Judges 4.13: 13 Sisera gathered together all his chariots, even nine hundred chariots of iron, and all the people who were with him, from Harosheth of the Gentiles, to the river Kishon.

Judges 4.14: 14 Deborah said to Barak, “Go; for this is the day in which Yahweh has delivered Sisera into your hand. Hasn’t Yahweh gone out before you?” So Barak went down from Mount Tabor, and ten thousand men after him.

Judges 4.15: 15 Yahweh confused Sisera, all his chariots, and all his army, with the edge of the sword before Barak. Sisera abandoned his chariot and fled away on his feet.

Judges 4.16: 16 But Barak pursued the chariots and the army to Harosheth of the Gentiles; and all the army of Sisera fell by the edge of the sword. There was not a man left.

Judges 4.17: 17 However Sisera fled away on his feet to the tent of Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite; for there was peace between Jabin the king of Hazor and the house of Heber the Kenite.

Judges 4.18: 18 Jael went out to meet Sisera, and said to him, “Turn in, my lord, turn in to me; don’t be afraid.” He came in to her into the tent, and she covered him with a rug.

Judges 4.19: 19 He said to her, “Please give me a little water to drink; for I am thirsty.”

She opened a container of milk, and gave him a drink, and covered him.

Judges 4.20: 20 He said to her, “Stand in the door of the tent, and if any man comes and inquires of you, and says, ‘Is there any man here?’ you shall say, ‘No.’”

Judges 4.21: 21 Then Jael Heber’s wife took a tent peg, and took a hammer in her hand, and went softly to him, and struck the pin into his temples, and it pierced through into the ground, for he was in a deep sleep; so he fainted and died.

Judges 4.22: 22 Behold, as Barak pursued Sisera, Jael came out to meet him, and said to him, “Come, and I will show you the man whom you seek.” He came to her; and behold, Sisera lay dead, and the tent peg was in his temples.

Judges 4.23: 23 So God subdued Jabin the king of Canaan before the children of Israel on that day.

Judges 4.24: 24 The hand of the children of Israel prevailed more and more against Jabin the king of Canaan, until they had destroyed Jabin king of Canaan.

Judges 5.0:

5

Judges 5.1: 1 Then Deborah and Barak the son of Abinoam sang on that day, saying,

Judges 5.2: 2 “Because the leaders took the lead in Israel,

because the people offered themselves willingly,

be blessed, Yahweh!

Judges 5.3: 3 “Hear, you kings!

Give ear, you princes!

I, even I, will sing to Yahweh.

I will sing praise to Yahweh, the God of Israel.

Judges 5.4: 4 “Yahweh, when you went out of Seir,

when you marched out of the field of Edom,

the earth trembled, the sky also dropped.

Yes, the clouds dropped water.

Judges 5.5: 5 The mountains quaked Yahweh’s presence,

even Sinai at the presence of Yahweh, the God of Israel.

Judges 5.6: 6 “In the days of Shamgar the son of Anath,

in the days of Jael, the highways were unoccupied.

The travelers walked through byways.

Judges 5.7: 7 The rulers ceased in Israel.

They ceased until I, Deborah, arose;

Until I arose a mother in Israel.

Judges 5.8: 8 They chose new gods.

Then war was in the gates.

Was there a shield or spear seen among forty thousand in Israel?

Judges 5.9: 9 My heart is toward the governors of Israel,

who offered themselves willingly among the people.

Bless Yahweh!

Judges 5.10: 10 “Speak, you who ride on white donkeys,

you who sit on rich carpets,

and you who walk by the way.

Judges 5.11: 11 Far from the noise of archers, in the places of drawing water,

there they will rehearse Yahweh’s righteous acts,

the righteous acts of his rule in Israel.

“Then Yahweh’s people went down to the gates.

Judges 5.12: 12 ‘Awake, awake, Deborah!

Awake, awake, utter a song!

Arise, Barak, and lead away your captives, you son of Abinoam.’

Judges 5.13: 13 “Then a remnant of the nobles and the people came down.

Yahweh came down for me against the mighty.

Judges 5.14: 14 Those whose root is in Amalek came out of Ephraim,

after you, Benjamin, among your peoples.

Governors come down out of Machir.

Those who handle the marshal’s staff came out of Zebulun.

Judges 5.15: 15 The princes of Issachar were with Deborah.

As was Issachar, so was Barak.

They rushed into the valley at his feet.

By the watercourses of Reuben,

there were great resolves of heart.

Judges 5.16: 16 Why did you sit among the sheepfolds?

To hear the whistling for the flocks?

At the watercourses of Reuben,

there were great searchings of heart.

Judges 5.17: 17 Gilead lived beyond the Jordan.

Why did Dan remain in ships?

Asher sat still at the haven of the sea,

and lived by his creeks.

Judges 5.18: 18 Zebulun was a people that jeopardized their lives to the death;

Naphtali also, on the high places of the field.

Judges 5.19: 19 “The kings came and fought,

then the kings of Canaan fought at Taanach by the waters of Megiddo.

They took no plunder of silver.

Judges 5.20: 20 From the sky the stars fought.

From their courses, they fought against Sisera.

Judges 5.21: 21 The river Kishon swept them away,

that ancient river, the river Kishon.

My soul, march on with strength.

Judges 5.22: 22 Then the horse hoofs stamped because of the prancing,

the prancing of their strong ones.

Judges 5.23: 23 ‘Curse Meroz,’ said Yahweh’s angel.

‘Curse bitterly its inhabitants,

because they didn’t come to help Yahweh,

to help Yahweh against the mighty.’

Judges 5.24: 24 “Jael shall be blessed above women,

the wife of Heber the Kenite;

blessed shall she be above women in the tent.

Judges 5.25: 25 He asked for water.

She gave him milk.

She brought him butter in a lordly dish.

Judges 5.26: 26 She put her hand to the tent peg,

and her right hand to the workmen’s hammer.

With the hammer she struck Sisera.

She struck through his head.

Yes, she pierced and struck through his temples.

Judges 5.27: 27 At her feet he bowed, he fell, he lay.

At her feet he bowed, he fell.

Where he bowed, there he fell down dead.

Judges 5.28: 28 “Through the window she looked out, and cried:

Sisera’s mother looked through the lattice.

‘Why is his chariot so long in coming?

Why do the wheels of his chariots wait?’

Judges 5.29: 29 Her wise ladies answered her,

Yes, she returned answer to herself,

Judges 5.30: 30 ‘Have they not found, have they not divided the plunder?

A lady, two ladies to every man;

to Sisera a plunder of dyed garments,

a plunder of dyed garments embroidered,

of dyed garments embroidered on both sides, on the necks of the plunder?’

Judges 5.31: 31 “So let all your enemies perish, Yahweh,

but let those who love him be as the sun when it rises in its strength.”

Then the land had rest forty years.

Judges 6.0:

6

Judges 6.1: 1 The children of Israel did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, so Yahweh delivered them into the hand of Midian seven years.

Judges 6.2: 2 The hand of Midian prevailed against Israel; and because of Midian the children of Israel made themselves the dens which are in the mountains, the caves, and the strongholds.

Judges 6.3: 3 So it was, when Israel had sown, that the Midianites, the Amalekites, and the children of the east came up against them.

Judges 6.4: 4 They encamped against them, and destroyed the increase of the earth, until you come to Gaza. They left no sustenance in Israel, and no sheep, ox, or donkey.

Judges 6.5: 5 For they came up with their livestock and their tents. They came in as locusts for multitude. Both they and their camels were without number; and they came into the land to destroy it.

Judges 6.6: 6 Israel was brought very low because of Midian; and the children of Israel cried to Yahweh.

Judges 6.7: 7 When the children of Israel cried to Yahweh because of Midian,

Judges 6.8: 8 Yahweh sent a prophet to the children of Israel; and he said to them, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, ‘I brought you up from Egypt, and brought you out of the house of bondage.

Judges 6.9: 9 I delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians and out of the hand of all who oppressed you, and drove them out from before you, and gave you their land.

Judges 6.10: 10 I said to you, “I am Yahweh your God. You shall not fear the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you dwell.” But you have not listened to my voice.’”

Judges 6.11: 11 Yahweh’s angel came and sat under the oak which was in Ophrah, that belonged to Joash the Abiezrite. His son Gideon was beating out wheat in the wine press, to hide it from the Midianites.

Judges 6.12: 12 Yahweh’s angel appeared to him, and said to him, “Yahweh is with you, you mighty man of valor!”

Judges 6.13: 13 Gideon said to him, “Oh, my lord, if Yahweh is with us, why then has all this happened to us? Where are all his wondrous works which our fathers told us of, saying, ‘Didn’t Yahweh bring us up from Egypt?’ But now Yahweh has cast us off, and delivered us into the hand of Midian.”

Judges 6.14: 14 Yahweh looked at him, and said, “Go in this your might, and save Israel from the hand of Midian. Haven’t I sent you?”

Judges 6.15: 15 He said to him, “O Lord, how shall I save Israel? Behold, my family is the poorest in Manasseh, and I am the least in my father’s house.”

Judges 6.16: 16 Yahweh said to him, “Surely I will be with you, and you shall strike the Midianites as one man.”

Judges 6.17: 17 He said to him, “If now I have found favor in your sight, then show me a sign that it is you who talk with me.

Judges 6.18: 18 Please don’t go away until I come to you, and bring out my present, and lay it before you.”

He said, “I will wait until you come back.”

Judges 6.19: 19 Gideon went in and prepared a young goat and unleavened cakes of an ephah of meal. He put the meat in a basket and he put the broth in a pot, and brought it out to him under the oak, and presented it.

Judges 6.20: 20 The angel of God said to him, “Take the meat and the unleavened cakes, and lay them on this rock, and pour out the broth.”

He did so.

Judges 6.21: 21 Then Yahweh’s angel stretched out the end of the staff that was in his hand, and touched the meat and the unleavened cakes; and fire went up out of the rock and consumed the meat and the unleavened cakes. Then Yahweh’s angel departed out of his sight.

Judges 6.22: 22 Gideon saw that he was Yahweh’s angel; and Gideon said, “Alas, Lord Yahweh! Because I have seen Yahweh’s angel face to face!”

Judges 6.23: 23 Yahweh said to him, “Peace be to you! Don’t be afraid. You shall not die.”

Judges 6.24: 24 Then Gideon built an altar there to Yahweh, and called it “Yahweh is Peace.” To this day it is still in Ophrah of the Abiezrites.

Judges 6.25: 25 That same night, Yahweh said to him, “Take your father’s bull, even the second bull seven years old, and throw down the altar of Baal that your father has, and cut down the Asherah that is by it.

Judges 6.26: 26 Then build an altar to Yahweh your God on the top of this stronghold, in an orderly way, and take the second bull, and offer a burnt offering with the wood of the Asherah which you shall cut down.”

Judges 6.27: 27 Then Gideon took ten men of his servants, and did as Yahweh had spoken to him. Because he feared his father’s household and the men of the city, he could not do it by day, but he did it by night.

Judges 6.28: 28 When the men of the city arose early in the morning, behold, the altar of Baal was broken down, and the Asherah was cut down that was by it, and the second bull was offered on the altar that was built.

Judges 6.29: 29 They said to one another, “Who has done this thing?”

When they inquired and asked, they said, “Gideon the son of Joash has done this thing.”

Judges 6.30: 30 Then the men of the city said to Joash, “Bring out your son, that he may die, because he has broken down the altar of Baal, and because he has cut down the Asherah that was by it.”

Judges 6.31: 31 Joash said to all who stood against him, “Will you contend for Baal? Or will you save him? He who will contend for him, let him be put to death by morning! If he is a god, let him contend for himself, because someone has broken down his altar!”

Judges 6.32: 32 Therefore on that day he named him Jerub-Baal, saying, “Let Baal contend against him, because he has broken down his altar.”

Judges 6.33: 33 Then all the Midianites and the Amalekites and the children of the east assembled themselves together; and they passed over, and encamped in the valley of Jezreel.

Judges 6.34: 34 But Yahweh’s Spirit came on Gideon, and he blew a trumpet; and Abiezer was gathered together to follow him.

Judges 6.35: 35 He sent messengers throughout all Manasseh, and they also were gathered together to follow him. He sent messengers to Asher, and to Zebulun, and to Naphtali; and they came up to meet them.

Judges 6.36: 36 Gideon said to God, “If you will save Israel by my hand, as you have spoken,

Judges 6.37: 37 behold, I will put a fleece of wool on the threshing floor. If there is dew on the fleece only, and it is dry on all the ground, then I’ll know that you will save Israel by my hand, as you have spoken.”

Judges 6.38: 38 It was so; for he rose up early on the next day, and pressed the fleece together, and wrung the dew out of the fleece, a bowl full of water.

Judges 6.39: 39 Gideon said to God, “Don’t let your anger be kindled against me, and I will speak but this once. Please let me make a trial just this once with the fleece. Let it now be dry only on the fleece, and on all the ground let there be dew.”

Judges 6.40: 40 God did so that night; for it was dry on the fleece only, and there was dew on all the ground.

Judges 7.0:

7

Judges 7.1: 1 Then Jerubbaal, who is Gideon, and all the people who were with him, rose up early and encamped beside the spring of Harod. Midian’s camp was on the north side of them, by the hill of Moreh, in the valley.

Judges 7.2: 2 Yahweh said to Gideon, “The people who are with you are too many for me to give the Midianites into their hand, lest Israel brag against me, saying, ‘My own hand has saved me.’

Judges 7.3: 3 Now therefore proclaim in the ears of the people, saying, ‘Whoever is fearful and trembling, let him return and depart from Mount Gilead.’” So twenty-two thousand of the people returned, and ten thousand remained.

Judges 7.4: 4 Yahweh said to Gideon, “There are still too many people. Bring them down to the water, and I will test them for you there. It shall be, that those whom I tell you, ‘This shall go with you,’ shall go with you; and whoever I tell you, ‘This shall not go with you,’ shall not go.”

Judges 7.5: 5 So he brought down the people to the water; and Yahweh said to Gideon, “Everyone who laps of the water with his tongue, like a dog laps, you shall set him by himself; likewise everyone who bows down on his knees to drink.”

Judges 7.6: 6 The number of those who lapped, putting their hand to their mouth, was three hundred men; but all the rest of the people bowed down on their knees to drink water.

Judges 7.7: 7 Yahweh said to Gideon, “I will save you by the three hundred men who lapped, and deliver the Midianites into your hand. Let all the other people go, each to his own place.”

Judges 7.8: 8 So the people took food in their hand, and their trumpets; and he sent all the rest of the men of Israel to their own tents, but retained the three hundred men; and the camp of Midian was beneath him in the valley.

Judges 7.9: 9 That same night, Yahweh said to him, “Arise, go down into the camp, for I have delivered it into your hand.

Judges 7.10: 10 But if you are afraid to go down, go with Purah your servant down to the camp.

Judges 7.11: 11 You will hear what they say; and afterward your hands will be strengthened to go down into the camp.” Then went he down with Purah his servant to the outermost part of the armed men who were in the camp.

Judges 7.12: 12 The Midianites and the Amalekites and all the children of the east lay along in the valley like locusts for multitude; and their camels were without number, as the sand which is on the seashore for multitude.

Judges 7.13: 13 When Gideon had come, behold, there was a man telling a dream to his fellow. He said, “Behold, I dreamed a dream; and behold, a cake of barley bread tumbled into the camp of Midian, came to the tent, and struck it so that it fell, and turned it upside down, so that the tent lay flat.”

Judges 7.14: 14 His fellow answered, “This is nothing other than the sword of Gideon the son of Joash, a man of Israel. God has delivered Midian into his hand, with all the army.”

Judges 7.15: 15 It was so, when Gideon heard the telling of the dream and its interpretation, that he worshiped. Then he returned into the camp of Israel and said, “Arise, for Yahweh has delivered the army of Midian into your hand!”

Judges 7.16: 16 He divided the three hundred men into three companies, and he put into the hands of all them trumpets and empty pitchers, with torches within the pitchers.

Judges 7.17: 17 He said to them, “Watch me, and do likewise. Behold, when I come to the outermost part of the camp, it shall be that, as I do, so you shall do.

Judges 7.18: 18 When I blow the trumpet, I and all who are with me, then blow the trumpets also on every side of all the camp, and shout, ‘For Yahweh and for Gideon!’”

Judges 7.19: 19 So Gideon and the hundred men who were with him came to the outermost part of the camp in the beginning of the middle watch, when they had but newly set the watch. Then they blew the trumpets and broke in pieces the pitchers that were in their hands.

Judges 7.20: 20 The three companies blew the trumpets, broke the pitchers, and held the torches in their left hands and the trumpets in their right hands with which to blow; and they shouted, “The sword of Yahweh and of Gideon!”

Judges 7.21: 21 They each stood in his place around the camp, and all the army ran; and they shouted, and put them to flight.

Judges 7.22: 22 They blew the three hundred trumpets, and Yahweh set every man’s sword against his fellow and against all the army; and the army fled as far as Beth Shittah toward Zererah, as far as the border of Abel Meholah, by Tabbath.

Judges 7.23: 23 The men of Israel were gathered together out of Naphtali, out of Asher, and out of all Manasseh, and pursued Midian.

Judges 7.24: 24 Gideon sent messengers throughout all the hill country of Ephraim, saying, “Come down against Midian and take the waters before them as far as Beth Barah, even the Jordan!” So all the men of Ephraim were gathered together and took the waters as far as Beth Barah, even the Jordan.

Judges 7.25: 25 They took the two princes of Midian, Oreb and Zeeb. They killed Oreb at Oreb’s rock, and Zeeb they killed at Zeeb’s wine press, as they pursued Midian. Then they brought the heads of Oreb and Zeeb to Gideon beyond the Jordan.

Judges 8.0:

8

Judges 8.1: 1 The men of Ephraim said to him, “Why have you treated us this way, that you didn’t call us when you went to fight with Midian?” They rebuked him sharply.

Judges 8.2: 2 He said to them, “What have I now done in comparison with you? Isn’t the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim better than the vintage of Abiezer?

Judges 8.3: 3 God has delivered into your hand the princes of Midian, Oreb and Zeeb! What was I able to do in comparison with you?” Then their anger was abated toward him when he had said that.

Judges 8.4: 4 Gideon came to the Jordan and passed over, he and the three hundred men who were with him, faint, yet pursuing.

Judges 8.5: 5 He said to the men of Succoth, “Please give loaves of bread to the people who follow me; for they are faint, and I am pursuing after Zebah and Zalmunna, the kings of Midian.”

Judges 8.6: 6 The princes of Succoth said, “Are the hands of Zebah and Zalmunna now in your hand, that we should give bread to your army?”

Judges 8.7: 7 Gideon said, “Therefore when Yahweh has delivered Zebah and Zalmunna into my hand, then I will tear your flesh with the thorns of the wilderness and with briers.”

Judges 8.8: 8 He went up there to Penuel, and spoke to them in the same way; and the men of Penuel answered him as the men of Succoth had answered.

Judges 8.9: 9 He spoke also to the men of Penuel, saying, “When I come again in peace, I will break down this tower.”

Judges 8.10: 10 Now Zebah and Zalmunna were in Karkor, and their armies with them, about fifteen thousand men, all who were left of all the army of the children of the east; for there fell one hundred twenty thousand men who drew sword.

Judges 8.11: 11 Gideon went up by the way of those who lived in tents on the east of Nobah and Jogbehah, and struck the army; for the army felt secure.

Judges 8.12: 12 Zebah and Zalmunna fled and he pursued them. He took the two kings of Midian, Zebah and Zalmunna, and confused all the army.

Judges 8.13: 13 Gideon the son of Joash returned from the battle from the ascent of Heres.

Judges 8.14: 14 He caught a young man of the men of Succoth, and inquired of him; and he described for him the princes of Succoth, and its elders, seventy-seven men.

Judges 8.15: 15 He came to the men of Succoth, and said, “See Zebah and Zalmunna, concerning whom you taunted me, saying, ‘Are the hands of Zebah and Zalmunna now in your hand, that we should give bread to your men who are weary?’”

Judges 8.16: 16 He took the elders of the city, and thorns of the wilderness and briers, and with them he taught the men of Succoth.

Judges 8.17: 17 He broke down the tower of Penuel, and killed the men of the city.

Judges 8.18: 18 Then he said to Zebah and Zalmunna, “What kind of men were they whom you killed at Tabor?”

They answered, “They were like you. They all resembled the children of a king.”

Judges 8.19: 19 He said, “They were my brothers, the sons of my mother. As Yahweh lives, if you had saved them alive, I would not kill you.”

Judges 8.20: 20 He said to Jether his firstborn, “Get up and kill them!” But the youth didn’t draw his sword; for he was afraid, because he was yet a youth.

Judges 8.21: 21 Then Zebah and Zalmunna said, “You rise and fall on us; for as the man is, so is his strength.” Gideon arose, and killed Zebah and Zalmunna, and took the crescents that were on their camels’ necks.

Judges 8.22: 22 Then the men of Israel said to Gideon, “Rule over us, both you, your son, and your son’s son also; for you have saved us out of the hand of Midian.”

Judges 8.23: 23 Gideon said to them, “I will not rule over you, neither shall my son rule over you. Yahweh shall rule over you.”

Judges 8.24: 24 Gideon said to them, “I do have a request: that you would each give me the earrings of his plunder.” (For they had golden earrings, because they were Ishmaelites.)

Judges 8.25: 25 They answered, “We will willingly give them.” They spread a garment, and every man threw the earrings of his plunder into it.

Judges 8.26: 26 The weight of the golden earrings that he requested was one thousand and seven hundred shekels of gold, in addition to the crescents, and the pendants, and the purple clothing that was on the kings of Midian, and in addition to the chains that were about their camels’ necks.

Judges 8.27: 27 Gideon made an ephod out of it, and put it in Ophrah, his city. Then all Israel played the prostitute with it there; and it became a snare to Gideon and to his house.

Judges 8.28: 28 So Midian was subdued before the children of Israel, and they lifted up their heads no more. The land had rest forty years in the days of Gideon.

Judges 8.29: 29 Jerubbaal the son of Joash went and lived in his own house.

Judges 8.30: 30 Gideon had seventy sons conceived from his body, for he had many wives.

Judges 8.31: 31 His concubine who was in Shechem also bore him a son, and he named him Abimelech.

Judges 8.32: 32 Gideon the son of Joash died in a good old age, and was buried in the tomb of Joash his father, in Ophrah of the Abiezrites.

Judges 8.33: 33 As soon as Gideon was dead, the children of Israel turned again and played the prostitute following the Baals, and made Baal Berith their god.

Judges 8.34: 34 The children of Israel didn’t remember Yahweh their God, who had delivered them out of the hand of all their enemies on every side;

Judges 8.35: 35 neither did they show kindness to the house of Jerubbaal, that is, Gideon, according to all the goodness which he had shown to Israel.

Judges 9.0:

9

Judges 9.1: 1 Abimelech the son of Jerubbaal went to Shechem to his mother’s brothers, and spoke with them and with all the family of the house of his mother’s father, saying,

Judges 9.2: 2 “Please speak in the ears of all the men of Shechem, ‘Is it better for you that all the sons of Jerubbaal, who are seventy persons, rule over you, or that one rule over you?’ Remember also that I am your bone and your flesh.”

Judges 9.3: 3 His mother’s brothers spoke of him in the ears of all the men of Shechem all these words. Their hearts inclined to follow Abimelech; for they said, “He is our brother.”

Judges 9.4: 4 They gave him seventy pieces of silver out of the house of Baal Berith, with which Abimelech hired vain and reckless fellows who followed him.

Judges 9.5: 5 He went to his father’s house at Ophrah, and killed his brothers the sons of Jerubbaal, being seventy persons, on one stone; but Jotham the youngest son of Jerubbaal was left, for he hid himself.

Judges 9.6: 6 All the men of Shechem assembled themselves together with all the house of Millo, and went and made Abimelech king by the oak of the pillar that was in Shechem.

Judges 9.7: 7 When they told it to Jotham, he went and stood on the top of Mount Gerizim and lifted up his voice, cried out, and said to them, “Listen to me, you men of Shechem, that God may listen to you.

Judges 9.8: 8 The trees set out to anoint a king over themselves. They said to the olive tree, ‘Reign over us.’

Judges 9.9: 9 “But the olive tree said to them, ‘Should I stop producing my oil, with which they honor God and man by me, and go to wave back and forth over the trees?’

Judges 9.10: 10 “The trees said to the fig tree, ‘Come and reign over us.’

Judges 9.11: 11 “But the fig tree said to them, ‘Should I leave my sweetness, and my good fruit, and go to wave back and forth over the trees?’

Judges 9.12: 12 “The trees said to the vine, ‘Come and reign over us.’

Judges 9.13: 13 “The vine said to them, ‘Should I leave my new wine, which cheers God and man, and go to wave back and forth over the trees?’

Judges 9.14: 14 “Then all the trees said to the bramble, ‘Come and reign over us.’

Judges 9.15: 15 “The bramble said to the trees, ‘If in truth you anoint me king over you, then come and take refuge in my shade; and if not, let fire come out of the bramble, and devour the cedars of Lebanon.’

Judges 9.16: 16 “Now therefore, if you have dealt truly and righteously, in that you have made Abimelech king, and if you have dealt well with Jerubbaal and his house, and have done to him according to the deserving of his hands

Judges 9.17: 17 (for my father fought for you, risked his life, and delivered you out of the hand of Midian;

Judges 9.18: 18 and you have risen up against my father’s house today and have slain his sons, seventy persons, on one stone, and have made Abimelech, the son of his female servant, king over the men of Shechem, because he is your brother);

Judges 9.19: 19 if you then have dealt truly and righteously with Jerubbaal and with his house today, then rejoice in Abimelech, and let him also rejoice in you;

Judges 9.20: 20 but if not, let fire come out from Abimelech and devour the men of Shechem and the house of Millo; and let fire come out from the men of Shechem and from the house of Millo and devour Abimelech.”

Judges 9.21: 21 Jotham ran away and fled, and went to Beer and lived there, for fear of Abimelech his brother.

Judges 9.22: 22 Abimelech was prince over Israel three years.

Judges 9.23: 23 Then God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously with Abimelech,

Judges 9.24: 24 that the violence done to the seventy sons of Jerubbaal might come, and that their blood might be laid on Abimelech their brother who killed them, and on the men of Shechem who strengthened his hands to kill his brothers.

Judges 9.25: 25 The men of Shechem set an ambush for him on the tops of the mountains, and they robbed all who came along that way by them; and Abimelech was told about it.

Judges 9.26: 26 Gaal the son of Ebed came with his brothers and went over to Shechem; and the men of Shechem put their trust in him.

Judges 9.27: 27 They went out into the field, harvested their vineyards, trod the grapes, celebrated, and went into the house of their god and ate and drank, and cursed Abimelech.

Judges 9.28: 28 Gaal the son of Ebed said, “Who is Abimelech, and who is Shechem, that we should serve him? Isn’t he the son of Jerubbaal? Isn’t Zebul his officer? Serve the men of Hamor the father of Shechem, but why should we serve him?

Judges 9.29: 29 I wish that this people were under my hand! Then I would remove Abimelech.” He said to Abimelech, “Increase your army and come out!”

Judges 9.30: 30 When Zebul the ruler of the city heard the words of Gaal the son of Ebed, his anger burned.

Judges 9.31: 31 He sent messengers to Abimelech craftily, saying, “Behold, Gaal the son of Ebed and his brothers have come to Shechem; and behold, they incite the city against you.

Judges 9.32: 32 Now therefore, go up by night, you and the people who are with you, and lie in wait in the field.

Judges 9.33: 33 It shall be that in the morning, as soon as the sun is up, you shall rise early and rush on the city. Behold, when he and the people who are with him come out against you, then may you do to them as you shall find occasion.”

Judges 9.34: 34 Abimelech rose up, and all the people who were with him, by night, and they laid wait against Shechem in four companies.

Judges 9.35: 35 Gaal the son of Ebed went out, and stood in the entrance of the gate of the city. Abimelech rose up, and the people who were with him, from the ambush.

Judges 9.36: 36 When Gaal saw the people, he said to Zebul, “Behold, people are coming down from the tops of the mountains.”

Zebul said to him, “You see the shadows of the mountains as if they were men.”

Judges 9.37: 37 Gaal spoke again and said, “Behold, people are coming down by the middle of the land, and one company comes by the way of the oak of Meonenim.”

Judges 9.38: 38 Then Zebul said to him, “Now where is your mouth, that you said, ‘Who is Abimelech, that we should serve him?’ Isn’t this the people that you have despised? Please go out now and fight with them.”

Judges 9.39: 39 Gaal went out before the men of Shechem, and fought with Abimelech.

Judges 9.40: 40 Abimelech chased him, and he fled before him, and many fell wounded, even to the entrance of the gate.

Judges 9.41: 41 Abimelech lived at Arumah; and Zebul drove out Gaal and his brothers, that they should not dwell in Shechem.

Judges 9.42: 42 On the next day, the people went out into the field; and they told Abimelech.

Judges 9.43: 43 He took the people and divided them into three companies, and laid wait in the field; and he looked, and behold, the people came out of the city. So, he rose up against them and struck them.

Judges 9.44: 44 Abimelech and the companies that were with him rushed forward and stood in the entrance of the gate of the city; and the two companies rushed on all who were in the field and struck them.

Judges 9.45: 45 Abimelech fought against the city all that day; and he took the city and killed the people in it. He beat down the city and sowed it with salt.

Judges 9.46: 46 When all the men of the tower of Shechem heard of it, they entered into the stronghold of the house of Elberith.

Judges 9.47: 47 Abimelech was told that all the men of the tower of Shechem were gathered together.

Judges 9.48: 48 Abimelech went up to Mount Zalmon, he and all the people who were with him; and Abimelech took an ax in his hand, and cut down a bough from the trees, and took it up, and laid it on his shoulder. Then he said to the people who were with him, “What you have seen me do, make haste, and do as I have done!”

Judges 9.49: 49 All the people likewise each cut down his bough, followed Abimelech, and put them at the base of the stronghold, and set the stronghold on fire over them, so that all the people of the tower of Shechem died also, about a thousand men and women.

Judges 9.50: 50 Then Abimelech went to Thebez and encamped against Thebez, and took it.

Judges 9.51: 51 But there was a strong tower within the city, and all the men and women of the city fled there, and shut themselves in, and went up to the roof of the tower.

Judges 9.52: 52 Abimelech came to the tower and fought against it, and came near to the door of the tower to burn it with fire.

Judges 9.53: 53 A certain woman cast an upper millstone on Abimelech’s head, and broke his skull.

Judges 9.54: 54 Then he called hastily to the young man, his armor bearer, and said to him, “Draw your sword and kill me, that men not say of me, ‘A woman killed him.’ His young man thrust him through, and he died.”

Judges 9.55: 55 When the men of Israel saw that Abimelech was dead, they each departed to his place.

Judges 9.56: 56 Thus God repaid the wickedness of Abimelech, which he did to his father in killing his seventy brothers;

Judges 9.57: 57 and God repaid all the wickedness of the men of Shechem on their heads; and the curse of Jotham the son of Jerubbaal came on them.

Judges 10.0:

10

Judges 10.1: 1 After Abimelech, Tola the son of Puah, the son of Dodo, a man of Issachar, arose to save Israel. He lived in Shamir in the hill country of Ephraim.

Judges 10.2: 2 He judged Israel twenty-three years, and died, and was buried in Shamir.

Judges 10.3: 3 After him Jair, the Gileadite, arose. He judged Israel twenty-two years.

Judges 10.4: 4 He had thirty sons who rode on thirty donkey colts. They had thirty cities, which are called Havvoth Jair to this day, which are in the land of Gilead.

Judges 10.5: 5 Jair died, and was buried in Kamon.

Judges 10.6: 6 The children of Israel again did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and served the Baals, the Ashtaroth, the gods of Syria, the gods of Sidon, the gods of Moab, the gods of the children of Ammon, and the gods of the Philistines. They abandoned Yahweh, and didn’t serve him.

Judges 10.7: 7 Yahweh’s anger burned against Israel, and he sold them into the hand of the Philistines and into the hand of the children of Ammon.

Judges 10.8: 8 They troubled and oppressed the children of Israel that year. For eighteen years they oppressed all the children of Israel that were beyond the Jordan in the land of the Amorites, which is in Gilead.

Judges 10.9: 9 The children of Ammon passed over the Jordan to fight also against Judah, and against Benjamin, and against the house of Ephraim, so that Israel was very distressed.

Judges 10.10: 10 The children of Israel cried to Yahweh, saying, “We have sinned against you, even because we have forsaken our God, and have served the Baals.”

Judges 10.11: 11 Yahweh said to the children of Israel, “Didn’t I save you from the Egyptians, and from the Amorites, from the children of Ammon, and from the Philistines?

Judges 10.12: 12 The Sidonians also, and the Amalekites, and the Maonites, oppressed you; and you cried to me, and I saved you out of their hand.

Judges 10.13: 13 Yet you have forsaken me and served other gods. Therefore I will save you no more.

Judges 10.14: 14 Go and cry to the gods which you have chosen. Let them save you in the time of your distress!”

Judges 10.15: 15 The children of Israel said to Yahweh, “We have sinned! Do to us whatever seems good to you; only deliver us, please, today.”

Judges 10.16: 16 They put away the foreign gods from among them and served Yahweh; and his soul was grieved for the misery of Israel.

Judges 10.17: 17 Then the children of Ammon were gathered together and encamped in Gilead. The children of Israel assembled themselves together and encamped in Mizpah.

Judges 10.18: 18 The people, the princes of Gilead, said to one another, “Who is the man who will begin to fight against the children of Ammon? He shall be head over all the inhabitants of Gilead.”

Judges 11.0:

11

Judges 11.1: 1 Now Jephthah the Gileadite was a mighty man of valor. He was the son of a prostitute. Gilead became the father of Jephthah.

Judges 11.2: 2 Gilead’s wife bore him sons. When his wife’s sons grew up, they drove Jephthah out and said to him, “You will not inherit in our father’s house, for you are the son of another woman.”

Judges 11.3: 3 Then Jephthah fled from his brothers and lived in the land of Tob. Outlaws joined up with Jephthah, and they went out with him.

Judges 11.4: 4 After a while, the children of Ammon made war against Israel.

Judges 11.5: 5 When the children of Ammon made war against Israel, the elders of Gilead went to get Jephthah out of the land of Tob.

Judges 11.6: 6 They said to Jephthah, “Come and be our chief, that we may fight with the children of Ammon.”

Judges 11.7: 7 Jephthah said to the elders of Gilead, “Didn’t you hate me, and drive me out of my father’s house? Why have you come to me now when you are in distress?”

Judges 11.8: 8 The elders of Gilead said to Jephthah, “Therefore we have turned again to you now, that you may go with us and fight with the children of Ammon. You will be our head over all the inhabitants of Gilead.”

Judges 11.9: 9 Jephthah said to the elders of Gilead, “If you bring me home again to fight with the children of Ammon, and Yahweh delivers them before me, will I be your head?”

Judges 11.10: 10 The elders of Gilead said to Jephthah, “Yahweh will be witness between us. Surely we will do what you say.”

Judges 11.11: 11 Then Jephthah went with the elders of Gilead, and the people made him head and chief over them. Jephthah spoke all his words before Yahweh in Mizpah.

Judges 11.12: 12 Jephthah sent messengers to the king of the children of Ammon, saying, “What do you have to do with me, that you have come to me to fight against my land?”

Judges 11.13: 13 The king of the children of Ammon answered the messengers of Jephthah, “Because Israel took away my land when he came up out of Egypt, from the Arnon even to the Jabbok, and to the Jordan. Now therefore restore that territory again peaceably.”

Judges 11.14: 14 Jephthah sent messengers again to the king of the children of Ammon;

Judges 11.15: 15 and he said to him, “Jephthah says: Israel didn’t take away the land of Moab, nor the land of the children of Ammon;

Judges 11.16: 16 but when they came up from Egypt, and Israel went through the wilderness to the Red Sea, and came to Kadesh,

Judges 11.17: 17 then Israel sent messengers to the king of Edom, saying, ‘Please let me pass through your land;’ but the king of Edom didn’t listen. In the same way, he sent to the king of Moab, but he refused; so Israel stayed in Kadesh.

Judges 11.18: 18 Then they went through the wilderness, and went around the land of Edom, and the land of Moab, and came by the east side of the land of Moab, and they encamped on the other side of the Arnon; but they didn’t come within the border of Moab, for the Arnon was the border of Moab.

Judges 11.19: 19 Israel sent messengers to Sihon king of the Amorites, the king of Heshbon; and Israel said to him, ‘Please let us pass through your land to my place.’

Judges 11.20: 20 But Sihon didn’t trust Israel to pass through his border; but Sihon gathered all his people together, and encamped in Jahaz, and fought against Israel.

Judges 11.21: 21 Yahweh, the God of Israel, delivered Sihon and all his people into the hand of Israel, and they struck them. So Israel possessed all the land of the Amorites, the inhabitants of that country.

Judges 11.22: 22 They possessed all the border of the Amorites, from the Arnon even to the Jabbok, and from the wilderness even to the Jordan.

Judges 11.23: 23 So now Yahweh, the God of Israel, has dispossessed the Amorites from before his people Israel, and should you possess them?

Judges 11.24: 24 Won’t you possess that which Chemosh your god gives you to possess? So whoever Yahweh our God has dispossessed from before us, them will we possess.

Judges 11.25: 25 Now are you anything better than Balak the son of Zippor, king of Moab? Did he ever strive against Israel, or did he ever fight against them?

Judges 11.26: 26 Israel lived in Heshbon and its towns, and in Aroer and its towns, and in all the cities that are along the side of the Arnon for three hundred years! Why didn’t you recover them within that time?

Judges 11.27: 27 Therefore I have not sinned against you, but you do me wrong to war against me. May Yahweh the Judge be judge today between the children of Israel and the children of Ammon.”

Judges 11.28: 28 However, the king of the children of Ammon didn’t listen to the words of Jephthah which he sent him.

Judges 11.29: 29 Then Yahweh’s Spirit came on Jephthah, and he passed over Gilead and Manasseh, and passed over Mizpah of Gilead, and from Mizpah of Gilead he passed over to the children of Ammon.

Judges 11.30: 30 Jephthah vowed a vow to Yahweh, and said, “If you will indeed deliver the children of Ammon into my hand,

Judges 11.31: 31 then it shall be, that whatever comes out of the doors of my house to meet me when I return in peace from the children of Ammon, it shall be Yahweh’s, and I will offer it up for a burnt offering.”

Judges 11.32: 32 So Jephthah passed over to the children of Ammon to fight against them; and Yahweh delivered them into his hand.

Judges 11.33: 33 He struck them from Aroer until you come to Minnith, even twenty cities, and to Abelcheramim, with a very great slaughter. So the children of Ammon were subdued before the children of Israel.

Judges 11.34: 34 Jephthah came to Mizpah to his house; and behold, his daughter came out to meet him with tambourines and with dances. She was his only child. Besides her he had neither son nor daughter.

Judges 11.35: 35 When he saw her, he tore his clothes, and said, “Alas, my daughter! You have brought me very low, and you are one of those who trouble me; for I have opened my mouth to Yahweh, and I can’t go back.”

Judges 11.36: 36 She said to him, “My father, you have opened your mouth to Yahweh; do to me according to that which has proceeded out of your mouth, because Yahweh has taken vengeance for you on your enemies, even on the children of Ammon.”

Judges 11.37: 37 Then she said to her father, “Let this thing be done for me. Leave me alone two months, that I may depart and go down on the mountains, and bewail my virginity, I and my companions.”

Judges 11.38: 38 He said, “Go.” He sent her away for two months; and she departed, she and her companions, and mourned her virginity on the mountains.

Judges 11.39: 39 At the end of two months, she returned to her father, who did with her according to his vow which he had vowed. She was a virgin. It became a custom in Israel

Judges 11.40: 40 that the daughters of Israel went yearly to celebrate the daughter of Jephthah the Gileadite four days in a year.

Judges 12.0:

12

Judges 12.1: 1 The men of Ephraim were gathered together, and passed northward; and they said to Jephthah, “Why did you pass over to fight against the children of Ammon, and didn’t call us to go with you? We will burn your house around you with fire!”

Judges 12.2: 2 Jephthah said to them, “I and my people were at great strife with the children of Ammon; and when I called you, you didn’t save me out of their hand.

Judges 12.3: 3 When I saw that you didn’t save me, I put my life in my hand, and passed over against the children of Ammon, and Yahweh delivered them into my hand. Why then have you come up to me today, to fight against me?”

Judges 12.4: 4 Then Jephthah gathered together all the men of Gilead, and fought with Ephraim. The men of Gilead struck Ephraim, because they said, “You are fugitives of Ephraim, you Gileadites, in the middle of Ephraim, and in the middle of Manasseh.”

Judges 12.5: 5 The Gileadites took the fords of the Jordan against the Ephraimites. Whenever a fugitive of Ephraim said, “Let me go over,” the men of Gilead said to him, “Are you an Ephraimite?” If he said, “No;”

Judges 12.6: 6 then they said to him, “Now say ‘Shibboleth;’” and he said “Sibboleth”; for he couldn’t manage to pronounce it correctly, then they seized him and killed him at the fords of the Jordan. At that time, forty-two thousand of Ephraim fell.

Judges 12.7: 7 Jephthah judged Israel six years. Then Jephthah the Gileadite died, and was buried in the cities of Gilead.

Judges 12.8: 8 After him Ibzan of Bethlehem judged Israel.

Judges 12.9: 9 He had thirty sons. He sent his thirty daughters outside his clan, and he brought in thirty daughters from outside his clan for his sons. He judged Israel seven years.

Judges 12.10: 10 Ibzan died, and was buried at Bethlehem.

Judges 12.11: 11 After him, Elon the Zebulunite judged Israel; and he judged Israel ten years.

Judges 12.12: 12 Elon the Zebulunite died, and was buried in Aijalon in the land of Zebulun.

Judges 12.13: 13 After him, Abdon the son of Hillel the Pirathonite judged Israel.

Judges 12.14: 14 He had forty sons and thirty sons’ sons who rode on seventy donkey colts. He judged Israel eight years.

Judges 12.15: 15 Abdon the son of Hillel the Pirathonite died, and was buried in Pirathon in the land of Ephraim, in the hill country of the Amalekites.

Judges 13.0:

13

Judges 13.1: 1 The children of Israel again did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight; and Yahweh delivered them into the hand of the Philistines forty years.

Judges 13.2: 2 There was a certain man of Zorah, of the family of the Danites, whose name was Manoah; and his wife was barren, and childless.

Judges 13.3: 3 Yahweh’s angel appeared to the woman, and said to her, “See now, you are barren and childless; but you shall conceive and bear a son.

Judges 13.4: 4 Now therefore please beware and drink no wine nor strong drink, and don’t eat any unclean thing;

Judges 13.5: 5 for, behold, you shall conceive and give birth to a son. No razor shall come on his head, for the child shall be a Nazirite to God from the womb. He shall begin to save Israel out of the hand of the Philistines.”

Judges 13.6: 6 Then the woman came and told her husband, saying, “A man of God came to me, and his face was like the face of the angel of God, very awesome. I didn’t ask him where he was from, neither did he tell me his name;

Judges 13.7: 7 but he said to me, ‘Behold, you shall conceive and bear a son; and now drink no wine nor strong drink. Don’t eat any unclean thing, for the child shall be a Nazirite to God from the womb to the day of his death.’”

Judges 13.8: 8 Then Manoah entreated Yahweh, and said, “Oh, Lord, please let the man of God whom you sent come again to us, and teach us what we should do to the child who shall be born.”

Judges 13.9: 9 God listened to the voice of Manoah, and the angel of God came again to the woman as she sat in the field; but Manoah, her husband, wasn’t with her.

Judges 13.10: 10 The woman hurried and ran, and told her husband, saying to him, “Behold, the man who came to me that day has appeared to me,”

Judges 13.11: 11 Manoah arose and followed his wife, and came to the man, and said to him, “Are you the man who spoke to my wife?”

He said, “I am.”

Judges 13.12: 12 Manoah said, “Now let your words happen. What shall the child’s way of life and mission be?”

Judges 13.13: 13 Yahweh’s angel said to Manoah, “Of all that I said to the woman let her beware.

Judges 13.14: 14 She may not eat of anything that comes of the vine, neither let her drink wine or strong drink, nor eat any unclean thing. Let her observe all that I commanded her.”

Judges 13.15: 15 Manoah said to Yahweh’s angel, “Please stay with us, that we may make a young goat ready for you.”

Judges 13.16: 16 Yahweh’s angel said to Manoah, “Though you detain me, I won’t eat your bread. If you will prepare a burnt offering, you must offer it to Yahweh.” For Manoah didn’t know that he was Yahweh’s angel.

Judges 13.17: 17 Manoah said to Yahweh’s angel, “What is your name, that when your words happen, we may honor you?”

Judges 13.18: 18 Yahweh’s angel said to him, “Why do you ask about my name, since it is incomprehensible?”

Judges 13.19: 19 So Manoah took the young goat with the meal offering, and offered it on the rock to Yahweh. Then the angel did an amazing thing as Manoah and his wife watched.

Judges 13.20: 20 For when the flame went up toward the sky from off the altar, Yahweh’s angel ascended in the flame of the altar. Manoah and his wife watched; and they fell on their faces to the ground.

Judges 13.21: 21 But Yahweh’s angel didn’t appear to Manoah or to his wife any more. Then Manoah knew that he was Yahweh’s angel.

Judges 13.22: 22 Manoah said to his wife, “We shall surely die, because we have seen God.”

Judges 13.23: 23 But his wife said to him, “If Yahweh were pleased to kill us, he wouldn’t have received a burnt offering and a meal offering at our hand, and he wouldn’t have shown us all these things, nor would he have told us such things as these at this time.”

Judges 13.24: 24 The woman bore a son and named him Samson. The child grew, and Yahweh blessed him.

Judges 13.25: 25 Yahweh’s Spirit began to move him in Mahaneh Dan, between Zorah and Eshtaol.

Judges 14.0:

14

Judges 14.1: 1 Samson went down to Timnah, and saw a woman in Timnah of the daughters of the Philistines.

Judges 14.2: 2 He came up, and told his father and his mother, saying, “I have seen a woman in Timnah of the daughters of the Philistines. Now therefore get her for me as my wife.”

Judges 14.3: 3 Then his father and his mother said to him, “Isn’t there a woman among your brothers’ daughters, or among all my people, that you go to take a wife of the uncircumcised Philistines?”

Samson said to his father, “Get her for me, for she pleases me well.”

Judges 14.4: 4 But his father and his mother didn’t know that it was of Yahweh; for he sought an occasion against the Philistines. Now at that time the Philistines ruled over Israel.

Judges 14.5: 5 Then Samson went down to Timnah with his father and his mother, and came to the vineyards of Timnah; and behold, a young lion roared at him.

Judges 14.6: 6 Yahweh’s Spirit came mightily on him, and he tore him as he would have torn a young goat with his bare hands, but he didn’t tell his father or his mother what he had done.

Judges 14.7: 7 He went down and talked with the woman, and she pleased Samson well.

Judges 14.8: 8 After a while he returned to take her, and he went over to see the carcass of the lion; and behold, there was a swarm of bees in the body of the lion, and honey.

Judges 14.9: 9 He took it into his hands, and went on, eating as he went. He came to his father and mother and gave to them, and they ate, but he didn’t tell them that he had taken the honey out of the lion’s body.

Judges 14.10: 10 His father went down to the woman; and Samson made a feast there, for the young men used to do so.

Judges 14.11: 11 When they saw him, they brought thirty companions to be with him.

Judges 14.12: 12 Samson said to them, “Let me tell you a riddle now. If you can tell me the answer within the seven days of the feast, and find it out, then I will give you thirty linen garments and thirty changes of clothing;

Judges 14.13: 13 but if you can’t tell me the answer, then you shall give me thirty linen garments and thirty changes of clothing.”

They said to him, “Tell us your riddle, that we may hear it.”

Judges 14.14: 14 He said to them,

“Out of the eater came out food.

Out of the strong came out sweetness.”

They couldn’t in three days declare the riddle.

Judges 14.15: 15 On the seventh day, they said to Samson’s wife, “Entice your husband, that he may declare to us the riddle, lest we burn you and your father’s house with fire. Have you called us to impoverish us? Isn’t that so?”

Judges 14.16: 16 Samson’s wife wept before him, and said, “You just hate me, and don’t love me. You’ve told a riddle to the children of my people, and haven’t told it to me.”

He said to her, “Behold, I haven’t told my father or my mother, so why should I tell you?”

Judges 14.17: 17 She wept before him the seven days, while their feast lasted; and on the seventh day, he told her, because she pressed him severely; and she told the riddle to the children of her people.

Judges 14.18: 18 The men of the city said to him on the seventh day before the sun went down, “What is sweeter than honey? What is stronger than a lion?”

He said to them,

“If you hadn’t plowed with my heifer,

you wouldn’t have found out my riddle.”

Judges 14.19: 19 Yahweh’s Spirit came mightily on him, and he went down to Ashkelon and struck thirty men of them. He took their plunder, then gave the changes of clothing to those who declared the riddle. His anger burned, and he went up to his father’s house.

Judges 14.20: 20 But Samson’s wife was given to his companion, who had been his friend.

Judges 15.0:

15

Judges 15.1: 1 But after a while, in the time of wheat harvest, Samson visited his wife with a young goat. He said, “I will go in to my wife’s room.”

But her father wouldn’t allow him to go in.

Judges 15.2: 2 Her father said, “I most certainly thought that you utterly hated her; therefore I gave her to your companion. Isn’t her younger sister more beautiful than she? Please, take her instead.”

Judges 15.3: 3 Samson said to them, “This time I will be blameless in the case of the Philistines when I harm them.”

Judges 15.4: 4 Samson went and caught three hundred foxes, and took torches, and turned tail to tail, and put a torch in the middle between every two tails.

Judges 15.5: 5 When he had set the torches on fire, he let them go into the standing grain of the Philistines, and burned up both the shocks and the standing grain, and also the olive groves.

Judges 15.6: 6 Then the Philistines said, “Who has done this?”

They said, “Samson, the son-in-law of the Timnite, because he has taken his wife and given her to his companion.” The Philistines came up, and burned her and her father with fire.

Judges 15.7: 7 Samson said to them, “If you behave like this, surely I will take revenge on you, and after that I will cease.”

Judges 15.8: 8 He struck them hip and thigh with a great slaughter; and he went down and lived in the cave in Etam’s rock.

Judges 15.9: 9 Then the Philistines went up, encamped in Judah, and spread themselves in Lehi.

Judges 15.10: 10 The men of Judah said, “Why have you come up against us?”

They said, “We have come up to bind Samson, to do to him as he has done to us.”

Judges 15.11: 11 Then three thousand men of Judah went down to the cave in Etam’s rock, and said to Samson, “Don’t you know that the Philistines are rulers over us? What then is this that you have done to us?”

He said to them, “As they did to me, so I have done to them.”

Judges 15.12: 12 They said to him, “We have come down to bind you, that we may deliver you into the hand of the Philistines.”

Samson said to them, “Swear to me that you will not attack me yourselves.”

Judges 15.13: 13 They spoke to him, saying, “No, but we will bind you securely and deliver you into their hands; but surely we will not kill you.” They bound him with two new ropes, and brought him up from the rock.

Judges 15.14: 14 When he came to Lehi, the Philistines shouted as they met him. Then Yahweh’s Spirit came mightily on him, and the ropes that were on his arms became as flax that was burned with fire; and his bands dropped from off his hands.

Judges 15.15: 15 He found a fresh jawbone of a donkey, put out his hand, took it, and struck a thousand men with it.

Judges 15.16: 16 Samson said, “With the jawbone of a donkey, heaps on heaps; with the jawbone of a donkey I have struck a thousand men.”

Judges 15.17: 17 When he had finished speaking, he threw the jawbone out of his hand; and that place was called Ramath Lehi.

Judges 15.18: 18 He was very thirsty, and called on Yahweh and said, “You have given this great deliverance by the hand of your servant; and now shall I die of thirst, and fall into the hands of the uncircumcised?”

Judges 15.19: 19 But God split the hollow place that is in Lehi, and water came out of it. When he had drunk, his spirit came again, and he revived. Therefore its name was called En Hakkore, which is in Lehi, to this day.

Judges 15.20: 20 He judged Israel twenty years in the days of the Philistines.

Judges 16.0:

16

Judges 16.1: 1 Samson went to Gaza, and saw there a prostitute, and went in to her.

Judges 16.2: 2 The Gazites were told, “Samson is here!” They surrounded him and laid wait for him all night in the gate of the city, and were quiet all the night, saying, “Wait until morning light; then we will kill him.”

Judges 16.3: 3 Samson lay until midnight, then arose at midnight and took hold of the doors of the gate of the city, with the two posts, and plucked them up, bar and all, and put them on his shoulders and carried them up to the top of the mountain that is before Hebron.

Judges 16.4: 4 It came to pass afterward that he loved a woman in the valley of Sorek, whose name was Delilah.

Judges 16.5: 5 The lords of the Philistines came up to her and said to her, “Entice him, and see in which his great strength lies, and by what means we may prevail against him, that we may bind him to afflict him; and we will each give you eleven hundred pieces of silver.”

Judges 16.6: 6 Delilah said to Samson, “Please tell me where your great strength lies, and what you might be bound to afflict you.”

Judges 16.7: 7 Samson said to her, “If they bind me with seven green cords that were never dried, then shall I become weak, and be as another man.”

Judges 16.8: 8 Then the lords of the Philistines brought up to her seven green cords which had not been dried, and she bound him with them.

Judges 16.9: 9 Now she had an ambush waiting in the inner room. She said to him, “The Philistines are on you, Samson!” He broke the cords as a flax thread is broken when it touches the fire. So his strength was not known.

Judges 16.10: 10 Delilah said to Samson, “Behold, you have mocked me, and told me lies. Now please tell me how you might be bound.”

Judges 16.11: 11 He said to her, “If they only bind me with new ropes with which no work has been done, then shall I become weak, and be as another man.”

Judges 16.12: 12 So Delilah took new ropes and bound him with them, then said to him, “The Philistines are on you, Samson!” The ambush was waiting in the inner room. He broke them off his arms like a thread.

Judges 16.13: 13 Delilah said to Samson, “Until now, you have mocked me and told me lies. Tell me with what you might be bound.”

He said to her, “If you weave the seven locks of my head with the fabric on the loom.”

Judges 16.14: 14 She fastened it with the pin, and said to him, “The Philistines are on you, Samson!” He awakened out of his sleep, and plucked away the pin of the beam and the fabric.

Judges 16.15: 15 She said to him, “How can you say, ‘I love you,’ when your heart is not with me? You have mocked me these three times, and have not told me where your great strength lies.”

Judges 16.16: 16 When she pressed him daily with her words and urged him, his soul was troubled to death.

Judges 16.17: 17 He told her all his heart and said to her, “No razor has ever come on my head; for I have been a Nazirite to God from my mother’s womb. If I am shaved, then my strength will go from me and I will become weak, and be like any other man.”

Judges 16.18: 18 When Delilah saw that he had told her all his heart, she sent and called for the lords of the Philistines, saying, “Come up this once, for he has told me all his heart.” Then the lords of the Philistines came up to her and brought the money in their hand.

Judges 16.19: 19 She made him sleep on her knees; and she called for a man and shaved off the seven locks of his head; and she began to afflict him, and his strength went from him.

Judges 16.20: 20 She said, “The Philistines are upon you, Samson!”

He awoke out of his sleep, and said, “I will go out as at other times, and shake myself free.” But he didn’t know that Yahweh had departed from him.

Judges 16.21: 21 The Philistines laid hold on him and put out his eyes; and they brought him down to Gaza and bound him with fetters of bronze; and he ground at the mill in the prison.

Judges 16.22: 22 However, the hair of his head began to grow again after he was shaved.

Judges 16.23: 23 The lords of the Philistines gathered together to offer a great sacrifice to Dagon their god, and to rejoice; for they said, “Our god has delivered Samson our enemy into our hand.”

Judges 16.24: 24 When the people saw him, they praised their god; for they said, “Our god has delivered our enemy and the destroyer of our country, who has slain many of us, into our hand.”

Judges 16.25: 25 When their hearts were merry, they said, “Call for Samson, that he may entertain us.” They called for Samson out of the prison; and he performed before them. They set him between the pillars;

Judges 16.26: 26 and Samson said to the boy who held him by the hand, “Allow me to feel the pillars on which the house rests, that I may lean on them.”

Judges 16.27: 27 Now the house was full of men and women; and all the lords of the Philistines were there; and there were on the roof about three thousand men and women, who saw while Samson performed.

Judges 16.28: 28 Samson called to Yahweh, and said, “Lord Yahweh, remember me, please, and strengthen me, please, only this once, God, that I may be at once avenged of the Philistines for my two eyes.”

Judges 16.29: 29 Samson took hold of the two middle pillars on which the house rested and leaned on them, the one with his right hand and the other with his left.

Judges 16.30: 30 Samson said, “Let me die with the Philistines!” He bowed himself with all his might; and the house fell on the lords, and on all the people who were in it. So the dead that he killed at his death were more than those who he killed in his life.

Judges 16.31: 31 Then his brothers and all the house of his father came down and took him, and brought him up and buried him between Zorah and Eshtaol in the burial site of Manoah his father. He judged Israel twenty years.

Judges 17.0:

17

Judges 17.1: 1 There was a man of the hill country of Ephraim, whose name was Micah.

Judges 17.2: 2 He said to his mother, “The eleven hundred pieces of silver that were taken from you, about which you uttered a curse, and also spoke it in my ears—behold, the silver is with me. I took it.”

His mother said, “May Yahweh bless my son!”

Judges 17.3: 3 He restored the eleven hundred pieces of silver to his mother, then his mother said, “I most certainly dedicate the silver to Yahweh from my hand for my son, to make a carved image and a molten image. Now therefore I will restore it to you.”

Judges 17.4: 4 When he restored the money to his mother, his mother took two hundred pieces of silver, and gave them to a silversmith, who made a carved image and a molten image out of it. It was in the house of Micah.

Judges 17.5: 5 The man Micah had a house of gods, and he made an ephod, and teraphim, and consecrated one of his sons, who became his priest.

Judges 17.6: 6 In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did that which was right in his own eyes.

Judges 17.7: 7 There was a young man out of Bethlehem Judah, of the family of Judah, who was a Levite; and he lived there.

Judges 17.8: 8 The man departed out of the city, out of Bethlehem Judah, to live where he could find a place, and he came to the hill country of Ephraim, to the house of Micah, as he traveled.

Judges 17.9: 9 Micah said to him, “Where did you come from?”

He said to him, “I am a Levite of Bethlehem Judah, and I am looking for a place to live.”

Judges 17.10: 10 Micah said to him, “Dwell with me, and be to me a father and a priest, and I will give you ten pieces of silver per year, a suit of clothing, and your food.” So the Levite went in.

Judges 17.11: 11 The Levite was content to dwell with the man; and the young man was to him as one of his sons.

Judges 17.12: 12 Micah consecrated the Levite, and the young man became his priest, and was in the house of Micah.

Judges 17.13: 13 Then Micah said, “Now I know that Yahweh will do good to me, since I have a Levite as my priest.”

Judges 18.0:

18

Judges 18.1: 1 In those days there was no king in Israel. In those days the tribe of the Danites sought an inheritance to dwell in; for to that day, their inheritance had not fallen to them among the tribes of Israel.

Judges 18.2: 2 The children of Dan sent five men of their family from their whole number, men of valor, from Zorah and from Eshtaol, to spy out the land and to search it. They said to them, “Go, explore the land!”

They came to the hill country of Ephraim, to the house of Micah, and lodged there.

Judges 18.3: 3 When they were by the house of Micah, they knew the voice of the young man the Levite; so they went over there and said to him, “Who brought you here? What do you do in this place? What do you have here?”

Judges 18.4: 4 He said to them, “Thus and thus has Micah dealt with me, and he has hired me, and I have become his priest.”

Judges 18.5: 5 They said to him, “Please ask counsel of God, that we may know whether our way which we go shall be prosperous.”

Judges 18.6: 6 The priest said to them, “Go in peace. Your way in which you go is before Yahweh.”

Judges 18.7: 7 Then the five men departed and came to Laish and saw the people who were there, how they lived in safety, in the way of the Sidonians, quiet and secure; for there was no one in the land possessing authority, that might put them to shame in anything, and they were far from the Sidonians, and had no dealings with anyone else.

Judges 18.8: 8 They came to their brothers at Zorah and Eshtaol; and their brothers asked them, “What do you say?”

Judges 18.9: 9 They said, “Arise, and let’s go up against them; for we have seen the land, and behold, it is very good. Do you stand still? Don’t be slothful to go and to enter in to possess the land.

Judges 18.10: 10 When you go, you will come to an unsuspecting people, and the land is large; for God has given it into your hand, a place where there is no lack of anything that is in the earth.”

Judges 18.11: 11 The family of the Danites set out from Zorah and Eshtaol with six hundred men armed with weapons of war.

Judges 18.12: 12 They went up and encamped in Kiriath Jearim in Judah. Therefore they call that place Mahaneh Dan to this day. Behold, it is behind Kiriath Jearim.

Judges 18.13: 13 They passed from there to the hill country of Ephraim, and came to the house of Micah.

Judges 18.14: 14 Then the five men who went to spy out the country of Laish answered and said to their brothers, “Do you know that there is in these houses an ephod, and teraphim, and a carved image, and a molten image? Now therefore consider what you have to do.”

Judges 18.15: 15 They went over there and came to the house of the young Levite man, even to the house of Micah, and asked him how he was doing.

Judges 18.16: 16 The six hundred men armed with their weapons of war, who were of the children of Dan, stood by the entrance of the gate.

Judges 18.17: 17 The five men who went to spy out the land went up, and came in there, and took the engraved image, the ephod, the teraphim, and the molten image; and the priest stood by the entrance of the gate with the six hundred men armed with weapons of war.

Judges 18.18: 18 When these went into Micah’s house, and took the engraved image, the ephod, the teraphim, and the molten image, the priest said to them, “What are you doing?”

Judges 18.19: 19 They said to him, “Hold your peace, put your hand on your mouth, and go with us. Be a father and a priest to us. Is it better for you to be priest to the house of one man, or to be priest to a tribe and a family in Israel?”

Judges 18.20: 20 The priest’s heart was glad, and he took the ephod, the teraphim, and the engraved image, and went with the people.

Judges 18.21: 21 So they turned and departed, and put the little ones, the livestock, and the goods before them.

Judges 18.22: 22 When they were a good way from the house of Micah, the men who were in the houses near Micah’s house gathered together and overtook the children of Dan.

Judges 18.23: 23 As they called to the children of Dan, they turned their faces, and said to Micah, “What ails you, that you come with such a company?”

Judges 18.24: 24 He said, “You have taken away my gods which I made, and the priest, and have gone away! What more do I have? How can you ask me, ‘What ails you?’”

Judges 18.25: 25 The children of Dan said to him, “Don’t let your voice be heard among us, lest angry fellows fall on you, and you lose your life, with the lives of your household.”

Judges 18.26: 26 The children of Dan went their way; and when Micah saw that they were too strong for him, he turned and went back to his house.

Judges 18.27: 27 They took that which Micah had made, and the priest whom he had, and came to Laish, to a people quiet and unsuspecting, and struck them with the edge of the sword; then they burned the city with fire.

Judges 18.28: 28 There was no deliverer, because it was far from Sidon, and they had no dealings with anyone else; and it was in the valley that lies by Beth Rehob. They built the city and lived in it.

Judges 18.29: 29 They called the name of the city Dan, after the name of Dan their father, who was born to Israel; however the name of the city used to be Laish.

Judges 18.30: 30 The children of Dan set up for themselves the engraved image; and Jonathan, the son of Gershom, the son of Moses, and his sons were priests to the tribe of the Danites until the day of the captivity of the land.

Judges 18.31: 31 So they set up for themselves Micah’s engraved image which he made, and it remained all the time that God’s house was in Shiloh.

Judges 19.0:

19

Judges 19.1: 1 In those days, when there was no king in Israel, there was a certain Levite living on the farther side of the hill country of Ephraim, who took for himself a concubine out of Bethlehem Judah.

Judges 19.2: 2 His concubine played the prostitute against him, and went away from him to her father’s house to Bethlehem Judah, and was there for four months.

Judges 19.3: 3 Her husband arose and went after her to speak kindly to her, to bring her again, having his servant with him and a couple of donkeys. She brought him into her father’s house; and when the father of the young lady saw him, he rejoiced to meet him.

Judges 19.4: 4 His father-in-law, the young lady’s father, kept him there; and he stayed with him three days. So they ate and drank, and stayed there.

Judges 19.5: 5 On the fourth day, they got up early in the morning, and he rose up to depart. The young lady’s father said to his son-in-law, “Strengthen your heart with a morsel of bread, and afterward you shall go your way.”

Judges 19.6: 6 So they sat down, ate, and drank, both of them together. Then the young lady’s father said to the man, “Please be pleased to stay all night, and let your heart be merry.”

Judges 19.7: 7 The man rose up to depart; but his father-in-law urged him, and he stayed there again.

Judges 19.8: 8 He arose early in the morning on the fifth day to depart; and the young lady’s father said, “Please strengthen your heart and stay until the day declines;” and they both ate.

Judges 19.9: 9 When the man rose up to depart, he, and his concubine, and his servant, his father-in-law, the young lady’s father, said to him, “Behold, now the day draws toward evening, please stay all night. Behold, the day is ending. Stay here, that your heart may be merry; and tomorrow go on your way early, that you may go home.”

Judges 19.10: 10 But the man wouldn’t stay that night, but he rose up and went near Jebus (also called Jerusalem). With him were a couple of saddled donkeys. His concubine also was with him.

Judges 19.11: 11 When they were by Jebus, the day was far spent; and the servant said to his master, “Please come and let’s enter into this city of the Jebusites, and stay in it.”

Judges 19.12: 12 His master said to him, “We won’t enter into the city of a foreigner that is not of the children of Israel; but we will pass over to Gibeah.”

Judges 19.13: 13 He said to his servant, “Come and let’s draw near to one of these places; and we will lodge in Gibeah, or in Ramah.”

Judges 19.14: 14 So they passed on and went their way; and the sun went down on them near Gibeah, which belongs to Benjamin.

Judges 19.15: 15 They went over there, to go in to stay in Gibeah. He went in, and sat down in the street of the city; for there was no one who took them into his house to stay.

Judges 19.16: 16 Behold, an old man came from his work out of the field at evening. Now the man was from the hill country of Ephraim, and he lived in Gibeah; but the men of the place were Benjamites.

Judges 19.17: 17 He lifted up his eyes, and saw the wayfaring man in the street of the city; and the old man said, “Where are you going? Where did you come from?”

Judges 19.18: 18 He said to him, “We are passing from Bethlehem Judah to the farther side of the hill country of Ephraim. I am from there, and I went to Bethlehem Judah. I am going to Yahweh’s house; and there is no one who has taken me into his house.

Judges 19.19: 19 Yet there is both straw and feed for our donkeys; and there is bread and wine also for me, and for your servant, and for the young man who is with your servants. There is no lack of anything.”

Judges 19.20: 20 The old man said, “Peace be to you! Just let me supply all your needs, but don’t sleep in the street.”

Judges 19.21: 21 So he brought him into his house, and gave the donkeys fodder. Then they washed their feet, and ate and drank.

Judges 19.22: 22 As they were making their hearts merry, behold, the men of the city, certain wicked fellows, surrounded the house, beating at the door; and they spoke to the master of the house, the old man, saying, “Bring out the man who came into your house, that we can have sex with him!”

Judges 19.23: 23 The man, the master of the house, went out to them, and said to them, “No, my brothers, please don’t act so wickedly; since this man has come into my house, don’t do this folly.

Judges 19.24: 24 Behold, here is my virgin daughter and his concubine. I will bring them out now. Humble them, and do with them what seems good to you; but to this man don’t do any such folly.”

Judges 19.25: 25 But the men wouldn’t listen to him; so the man grabbed his concubine, and brought her out to them; and they had sex with her, and abused her all night until the morning. When the day began to dawn, they let her go.

Judges 19.26: 26 Then the woman came in the dawning of the day, and fell down at the door of the man’s house where her lord was, until it was light.

Judges 19.27: 27 Her lord rose up in the morning and opened the doors of the house, and went out to go his way; and behold, the woman his concubine had fallen down at the door of the house, with her hands on the threshold.

Judges 19.28: 28 He said to her, “Get up, and let’s get going!” but no one answered. Then he took her up on the donkey; and the man rose up, and went to his place.

Judges 19.29: 29 When he had come into his house, he took a knife and cut up his concubine, and divided her, limb by limb, into twelve pieces, and sent her throughout all the borders of Israel.

Judges 19.30: 30 It was so, that all who saw it said, “Such a deed has not been done or seen from the day that the children of Israel came up out of the land of Egypt to this day! Consider it, take counsel, and speak.”

Judges 20.0:

20

Judges 20.1: 1 Then all the children of Israel went out, and the congregation was assembled as one man, from Dan even to Beersheba, with the land of Gilead, to Yahweh at Mizpah.

Judges 20.2: 2 The chiefs of all the people, even of all the tribes of Israel, presented themselves in the assembly of the people of God, four hundred thousand footmen who drew sword.

Judges 20.3: 3 (Now the children of Benjamin heard that the children of Israel had gone up to Mizpah.) The children of Israel said, “Tell us, how did this wickedness happen?”

Judges 20.4: 4 The Levite, the husband of the woman who was murdered, answered, “I came into Gibeah that belongs to Benjamin, I and my concubine, to spend the night.

Judges 20.5: 5 The men of Gibeah rose against me, and surrounded the house by night. They intended to kill me and they raped my concubine, and she is dead.

Judges 20.6: 6 I took my concubine and cut her in pieces, and sent her throughout all the country of the inheritance of Israel; for they have committed lewdness and folly in Israel.

Judges 20.7: 7 Behold, you children of Israel, all of you, give here your advice and counsel.”

Judges 20.8: 8 All the people arose as one man, saying, “None of us will go to his tent, neither will any of us turn to his house.

Judges 20.9: 9 But now this is the thing which we will do to Gibeah: we will go up against it by lot;

Judges 20.10: 10 and we will take ten men of one hundred throughout all the tribes of Israel, and one hundred of one thousand, and a thousand out of ten thousand to get food for the people, that they may do, when they come to Gibeah of Benjamin, according to all the folly that the men of Gibeah have done in Israel.”

Judges 20.11: 11 So all the men of Israel were gathered against the city, knit together as one man.

Judges 20.12: 12 The tribes of Israel sent men through all the tribe of Benjamin, saying, “What wickedness is this that has happened among you?

Judges 20.13: 13 Now therefore deliver up the men, the wicked fellows who are in Gibeah, that we may put them to death and put away evil from Israel.”

But Benjamin would not listen to the voice of their brothers, the children of Israel.

Judges 20.14: 14 The children of Benjamin gathered themselves together out of the cities to Gibeah, to go out to battle against the children of Israel.

Judges 20.15: 15 The children of Benjamin were counted on that day out of the cities twenty-six thousand men who drew the sword, in addition to the inhabitants of Gibeah, who were counted seven hundred chosen men.

Judges 20.16: 16 Among all these soldiers there were seven hundred chosen men who were left-handed. Every one of them could sling a stone at a hair and not miss.

Judges 20.17: 17 The men of Israel, besides Benjamin, were counted four hundred thousand men who drew sword. All these were men of war.

Judges 20.18: 18 The children of Israel arose, went up to Bethel, and asked counsel of God. They asked, “Who shall go up for us first to battle against the children of Benjamin?”

Yahweh said, “Judah first.”

Judges 20.19: 19 The children of Israel rose up in the morning and encamped against Gibeah.

Judges 20.20: 20 The men of Israel went out to battle against Benjamin; and the men of Israel set the battle in array against them at Gibeah.

Judges 20.21: 21 The children of Benjamin came out of Gibeah, and on that day destroyed twenty-two thousand of the Israelite men down to the ground.

Judges 20.22: 22 The people, the men of Israel, encouraged themselves, and set the battle again in array in the place where they set themselves in array the first day.

Judges 20.23: 23 The children of Israel went up and wept before Yahweh until evening; and they asked of Yahweh, saying, “Shall I again draw near to battle against the children of Benjamin my brother?”

Yahweh said, “Go up against him.”

Judges 20.24: 24 The children of Israel came near against the children of Benjamin the second day.

Judges 20.25: 25 Benjamin went out against them out of Gibeah the second day, and destroyed down to the ground of the children of Israel again eighteen thousand men. All these drew the sword.

Judges 20.26: 26 Then all the children of Israel and all the people went up, and came to Bethel, and wept, and sat there before Yahweh, and fasted that day until evening; then they offered burnt offerings and peace offerings before Yahweh.

Judges 20.27: 27 The children of Israel asked Yahweh (for the ark of the covenant of God was there in those days,

Judges 20.28: 28 and Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron, stood before it in those days), saying, “Shall I yet again go out to battle against the children of Benjamin my brother, or shall I cease?”

Yahweh said, “Go up; for tomorrow I will deliver him into your hand.”

Judges 20.29: 29 Israel set ambushes all around Gibeah.

Judges 20.30: 30 The children of Israel went up against the children of Benjamin on the third day, and set themselves in array against Gibeah, as at other times.

Judges 20.31: 31 The children of Benjamin went out against the people, and were drawn away from the city; and they began to strike and kill of the people as at other times, in the highways, of which one goes up to Bethel and the other to Gibeah, in the field, about thirty men of Israel.

Judges 20.32: 32 The children of Benjamin said, “They are struck down before us, as at the first.” But the children of Israel said, “Let’s flee, and draw them away from the city to the highways.”

Judges 20.33: 33 All the men of Israel rose up out of their place and set themselves in array at Baal Tamar. Then the ambushers of Israel broke out of their place, even out of Maareh Geba.

Judges 20.34: 34 Ten thousand chosen men out of all Israel came over against Gibeah, and the battle was severe; but they didn’t know that disaster was close to them.

Judges 20.35: 35 Yahweh struck Benjamin before Israel; and the children of Israel destroyed of Benjamin that day twenty-five thousand one hundred men. All these drew the sword.

Judges 20.36: 36 So the children of Benjamin saw that they were struck, for the men of Israel yielded to Benjamin because they trusted the ambushers whom they had set against Gibeah.

Judges 20.37: 37 The ambushers hurried, and rushed on Gibeah; then the ambushers spread out, and struck all the city with the edge of the sword.

Judges 20.38: 38 Now the appointed sign between the men of Israel and the ambushers was that they should make a great cloud of smoke rise up out of the city.

Judges 20.39: 39 The men of Israel turned in the battle, and Benjamin began to strike and kill of the men of Israel about thirty persons; for they said, “Surely they are struck down before us, as in the first battle.”

Judges 20.40: 40 But when the cloud began to arise up out of the city in a pillar of smoke, the Benjamites looked behind them; and behold, the whole city went up in smoke to the sky.

Judges 20.41: 41 The men of Israel turned, and the men of Benjamin were dismayed; for they saw that disaster had come on them.

Judges 20.42: 42 Therefore they turned their backs before the men of Israel to the way of the wilderness, but the battle followed hard after them; and those who came out of the cities destroyed them in the middle of it.

Judges 20.43: 43 They surrounded the Benjamites, chased them, and trod them down at their resting place, as far as near Gibeah toward the sunrise.

Judges 20.44: 44 Eighteen thousand men of Benjamin fell; all these were men of valor.

Judges 20.45: 45 They turned and fled toward the wilderness to the rock of Rimmon. They gleaned five thousand men of them in the highways, and followed hard after them to Gidom, and struck two thousand men of them.

Judges 20.46: 46 So that all who fell that day of Benjamin were twenty-five thousand men who drew the sword. All these were men of valor.

Judges 20.47: 47 But six hundred men turned and fled toward the wilderness to the rock of Rimmon, and stayed in the rock of Rimmon four months.

Judges 20.48: 48 The men of Israel turned again on the children of Benjamin, and struck them with the edge of the sword—including the entire city, the livestock, and all that they found. Moreover they set all the cities which they found on fire.

Judges 21.0:

21

Judges 21.1: 1 Now the men of Israel had sworn in Mizpah, saying, “None of us will give his daughter to Benjamin as a wife.”

Judges 21.2: 2 The people came to Bethel and sat there until evening before God, and lifted up their voices, and wept severely.

Judges 21.3: 3 They said, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, why has this happened in Israel, that there should be one tribe lacking in Israel today?”

Judges 21.4: 4 On the next day, the people rose early and built an altar there, and offered burnt offerings and peace offerings.

Judges 21.5: 5 The children of Israel said, “Who is there among all the tribes of Israel who didn’t come up in the assembly to Yahweh?” For they had made a great oath concerning him who didn’t come up to Yahweh to Mizpah, saying, “He shall surely be put to death.”

Judges 21.6: 6 The children of Israel grieved for Benjamin their brother, and said, “There is one tribe cut off from Israel today.

Judges 21.7: 7 How shall we provide wives for those who remain, since we have sworn by Yahweh that we will not give them of our daughters to wives?”

Judges 21.8: 8 They said, “What one is there of the tribes of Israel who didn’t come up to Yahweh to Mizpah?” Behold, no one came from Jabesh Gilead to the camp to the assembly.

Judges 21.9: 9 For when the people were counted, behold, there were none of the inhabitants of Jabesh Gilead there.

Judges 21.10: 10 The congregation sent twelve thousand of the most valiant men there, and commanded them, saying, “Go and strike the inhabitants of Jabesh Gilead with the edge of the sword, with the women and the little ones.

Judges 21.11: 11 This is the thing that you shall do: you shall utterly destroy every male, and every woman who has lain with a man.”

Judges 21.12: 12 They found among the inhabitants of Jabesh Gilead four hundred young virgins who had not known man by lying with him; and they brought them to the camp to Shiloh, which is in the land of Canaan.

Judges 21.13: 13 The whole congregation sent and spoke to the children of Benjamin who were in the rock of Rimmon, and proclaimed peace to them.

Judges 21.14: 14 Benjamin returned at that time; and they gave them the women whom they had saved alive of the women of Jabesh Gilead. There still weren’t enough for them.

Judges 21.15: 15 The people grieved for Benjamin, because Yahweh had made a breach in the tribes of Israel.

Judges 21.16: 16 Then the elders of the congregation said, “How shall we provide wives for those who remain, since the women are destroyed out of Benjamin?”

Judges 21.17: 17 They said, “There must be an inheritance for those who are escaped of Benjamin, that a tribe not be blotted out from Israel.

Judges 21.18: 18 However, we may not give them wives of our daughters, for the children of Israel had sworn, saying, ‘Cursed is he who gives a wife to Benjamin.’”

Judges 21.19: 19 They said, “Behold, there is a feast of Yahweh from year to year in Shiloh, which is on the north of Bethel, on the east side of the highway that goes up from Bethel to Shechem, and on the south of Lebonah.”

Judges 21.20: 20 They commanded the children of Benjamin, saying, “Go and lie in wait in the vineyards,

Judges 21.21: 21 and see, and behold, if the daughters of Shiloh come out to dance in the dances, then come out of the vineyards, and each man catch his wife of the daughters of Shiloh, and go to the land of Benjamin.

Judges 21.22: 22 It shall be, when their fathers or their brothers come to complain to us, that we will say to them, ‘Grant them graciously to us, because we didn’t take for each man his wife in battle, neither did you give them to them; otherwise you would now be guilty.’”

Judges 21.23: 23 The children of Benjamin did so, and took wives for themselves according to their number, of those who danced, whom they carried off. They went and returned to their inheritance, built the cities, and lived in them.

Judges 21.24: 24 The children of Israel departed from there at that time, every man to his tribe and to his family, and they each went out from there to his own inheritance.

Judges 21.25: 25 In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did that which was right in his own eyes.

Ruth 0.0:

The Book of

Ruth

Ruth 1.0:

1

Ruth 1.1: 1 In the days when the judges judged, there was a famine in the land. A certain man of Bethlehem Judah went to live in the country of Moab with his wife and his two sons.

Ruth 1.2: 2 The name of the man was Elimelech, and the name of his wife Naomi. The names of his two sons were Mahlon and Chilion, Ephrathites of Bethlehem Judah. They came into the country of Moab and lived there.

Ruth 1.3: 3 Elimelech, Naomi’s husband, died; and she was left with her two sons.

Ruth 1.4: 4 They took for themselves wives of the women of Moab. The name of the one was Orpah, and the name of the other was Ruth. They lived there about ten years.

Ruth 1.5: 5 Mahlon and Chilion both died, and the woman was bereaved of her two children and of her husband.

Ruth 1.6: 6 Then she arose with her daughters-in-law, that she might return from the country of Moab; for she had heard in the country of Moab how Yahweh had visited his people in giving them bread.

Ruth 1.7: 7 She went out of the place where she was, and her two daughters-in-law with her. They went on the way to return to the land of Judah.

Ruth 1.8: 8 Naomi said to her two daughters-in-law, “Go, return each of you to her mother’s house. May Yahweh deal kindly with you, as you have dealt with the dead and with me.

Ruth 1.9: 9 May Yahweh grant you that you may find rest, each of you in the house of her husband.”

Then she kissed them, and they lifted up their voices, and wept.

Ruth 1.10: 10 They said to her, “No, but we will return with you to your people.”

Ruth 1.11: 11 Naomi said, “Go back, my daughters. Why do you want to go with me? Do I still have sons in my womb, that they may be your husbands?

Ruth 1.12: 12 Go back, my daughters, go your way; for I am too old to have a husband. If I should say, ‘I have hope,’ if I should even have a husband tonight, and should also bear sons,

Ruth 1.13: 13 would you then wait until they were grown? Would you then refrain from having husbands? No, my daughters, for it grieves me seriously for your sakes, for Yahweh’s hand has gone out against me.”

Ruth 1.14: 14 They lifted up their voices and wept again; then Orpah kissed her mother-in-law, but Ruth stayed with her.

Ruth 1.15: 15 She said, “Behold, your sister-in-law has gone back to her people and to her god. Follow your sister-in-law.”

Ruth 1.16: 16 Ruth said, “Don’t urge me to leave you, and to return from following you, for where you go, I will go; and where you stay, I will stay. Your people will be my people, and your God my God.

Ruth 1.17: 17 Where you die, I will die, and there I will be buried. May Yahweh do so to me, and more also, if anything but death parts you and me.”

Ruth 1.18: 18 When Naomi saw that she was determined to go with her, she stopped urging her.

Ruth 1.19: 19 So they both went until they came to Bethlehem. When they had come to Bethlehem, all the city was excited about them, and they asked, “Is this Naomi?”

Ruth 1.20: 20 She said to them, “Don’t call me Naomi. Call me Mara, for the Almighty has dealt very bitterly with me.

Ruth 1.21: 21 I went out full, and Yahweh has brought me home again empty. Why do you call me Naomi, since Yahweh has testified against me, and the Almighty has afflicted me?”

Ruth 1.22: 22 So Naomi returned, and Ruth the Moabitess, her daughter-in-law, with her, who returned out of the country of Moab. They came to Bethlehem in the beginning of barley harvest.

Ruth 2.0:

2

Ruth 2.1: 1 Naomi had a relative of her husband’s, a mighty man of wealth, of the family of Elimelech, and his name was Boaz.

Ruth 2.2: 2 Ruth the Moabitess said to Naomi, “Let me now go to the field, and glean among the ears of grain after him in whose sight I find favor.”

She said to her, “Go, my daughter.”

Ruth 2.3: 3 She went, and came and gleaned in the field after the reapers; and she happened to come to the portion of the field belonging to Boaz, who was of the family of Elimelech.

Ruth 2.4: 4 Behold, Boaz came from Bethlehem, and said to the reapers, “May Yahweh be with you.”

They answered him, “May Yahweh bless you.”

Ruth 2.5: 5 Then Boaz said to his servant who was set over the reapers, “Whose young lady is this?”

Ruth 2.6: 6 The servant who was set over the reapers answered, “It is the Moabite lady who came back with Naomi out of the country of Moab.

Ruth 2.7: 7 She said, ‘Please let me glean and gather after the reapers among the sheaves.’ So she came, and has continued even from the morning until now, except that she rested a little in the house.”

Ruth 2.8: 8 Then Boaz said to Ruth, “Listen, my daughter. Don’t go to glean in another field, and don’t go from here, but stay here close to my maidens.

Ruth 2.9: 9 Let your eyes be on the field that they reap, and go after them. Haven’t I commanded the young men not to touch you? When you are thirsty, go to the vessels, and drink from that which the young men have drawn.”

Ruth 2.10: 10 Then she fell on her face and bowed herself to the ground, and said to him, “Why have I found favor in your sight, that you should take knowledge of me, since I am a foreigner?”

Ruth 2.11: 11 Boaz answered her, “I have been told all about what you have done for your mother-in-law since the death of your husband, and how you have left your father, your mother, and the land of your birth, and have come to a people that you didn’t know before.

Ruth 2.12: 12 May Yahweh repay your work, and a full reward be given to you from Yahweh, the God of Israel, under whose wings you have come to take refuge.”

Ruth 2.13: 13 Then she said, “Let me find favor in your sight, my lord, because you have comforted me, and because you have spoken kindly to your servant, though I am not as one of your servants.”

Ruth 2.14: 14 At meal time Boaz said to her, “Come here, and eat some bread, and dip your morsel in the vinegar.”

She sat beside the reapers, and they passed her parched grain. She ate, was satisfied, and left some of it.

Ruth 2.15: 15 When she had risen up to glean, Boaz commanded his young men, saying, “Let her glean even among the sheaves, and don’t reproach her.

Ruth 2.16: 16 Also pull out some for her from the bundles, and leave it. Let her glean, and don’t rebuke her.”

Ruth 2.17: 17 So she gleaned in the field until evening; and she beat out that which she had gleaned, and it was about an ephah of barley.

Ruth 2.18: 18 She took it up, and went into the city. Then her mother-in-law saw what she had gleaned; and she brought out and gave to her that which she had left after she had enough.

Ruth 2.19: 19 Her mother-in-law said to her, “Where have you gleaned today? Where have you worked? Blessed be he who noticed you.”

She told her mother-in-law with whom she had worked, “The man’s name with whom I worked today is Boaz.”

Ruth 2.20: 20 Naomi said to her daughter-in-law, “May he be blessed by Yahweh, who has not abandoned his kindness to the living and to the dead.” Naomi said to her, “The man is a close relative to us, one of our near kinsmen.”

Ruth 2.21: 21 Ruth the Moabitess said, “Yes, he said to me, ‘You shall stay close to my young men until they have finished all my harvest.’”

Ruth 2.22: 22 Naomi said to Ruth her daughter-in-law, “It is good, my daughter, that you go out with his maidens, and that they not meet you in any other field.”

Ruth 2.23: 23 So she stayed close to the maidens of Boaz, to glean to the end of barley harvest and of wheat harvest; and she lived with her mother-in-law.

Ruth 3.0:

3

Ruth 3.1: 1 Naomi her mother-in-law said to her, “My daughter, shall I not seek rest for you, that it may be well with you?

Ruth 3.2: 2 Now isn’t Boaz our kinsman, with whose maidens you were? Behold, he will be winnowing barley tonight on the threshing floor.

Ruth 3.3: 3 Therefore wash yourself, anoint yourself, get dressed, and go down to the threshing floor; but don’t make yourself known to the man until he has finished eating and drinking.

Ruth 3.4: 4 It shall be, when he lies down, that you shall note the place where he is lying. Then you shall go in, uncover his feet, and lay down. Then he will tell you what to do.”

Ruth 3.5: 5 She said to her, “All that you say, I will do.”

Ruth 3.6: 6 She went down to the threshing floor, and did everything that her mother-in-law told her.

Ruth 3.7: 7 When Boaz had eaten and drunk, and his heart was merry, he went to lie down at the end of the heap of grain. She came softly, uncovered his feet, and laid down.

Ruth 3.8: 8 At midnight, the man was startled and turned himself; and behold, a woman lay at his feet.

Ruth 3.9: 9 He said, “Who are you?”

She answered, “I am Ruth your servant. Therefore spread the corner of your garment over your servant; for you are a near kinsman.”

Ruth 3.10: 10 He said, “You are blessed by Yahweh, my daughter. You have shown more kindness in the latter end than at the beginning, because you didn’t follow young men, whether poor or rich.

Ruth 3.11: 11 Now, my daughter, don’t be afraid. I will do to you all that you say; for all the city of my people knows that you are a worthy woman.

Ruth 3.12: 12 Now it is true that I am a near kinsman. However, there is a kinsman nearer than I.

Ruth 3.13: 13 Stay this night, and in the morning, if he will perform for you the part of a kinsman, good. Let him do the kinsman’s duty. But if he will not do the duty of a kinsman for you, then I will do the duty of a kinsman for you, as Yahweh lives. Lie down until the morning.”

Ruth 3.14: 14 She lay at his feet until the morning, then she rose up before one could discern another. For he said, “Let it not be known that the woman came to the threshing floor.”

Ruth 3.15: 15 He said, “Bring the mantle that is on you, and hold it.” She held it; and he measured six measures of barley, and laid it on her; then he went into the city.

Ruth 3.16: 16 When she came to her mother-in-law, she said, “How did it go, my daughter?”

She told her all that the man had done for her.

Ruth 3.17: 17 She said, “He gave me these six measures of barley; for he said, ‘Don’t go empty to your mother-in-law.’”

Ruth 3.18: 18 Then she said, “Wait, my daughter, until you know what will happen; for the man will not rest until he has settled this today.”

Ruth 4.0:

4

Ruth 4.1: 1 Now Boaz went up to the gate and sat down there. Behold, the near kinsman of whom Boaz spoke came by. Boaz said to him, “Come over here, friend, and sit down!” He came over, and sat down.

Ruth 4.2: 2 Boaz took ten men of the elders of the city, and said, “Sit down here,” and they sat down.

Ruth 4.3: 3 He said to the near kinsman, “Naomi, who has come back out of the country of Moab, is selling the parcel of land, which was our brother Elimelech’s.

Ruth 4.4: 4 I thought I should tell you, saying, ‘Buy it before those who sit here, and before the elders of my people.’ If you will redeem it, redeem it; but if you will not redeem it, then tell me, that I may know. For there is no one to redeem it besides you; and I am after you.”

He said, “I will redeem it.”

Ruth 4.5: 5 Then Boaz said, “On the day you buy the field from the hand of Naomi, you must buy it also from Ruth the Moabitess, the wife of the dead, to raise up the name of the dead on his inheritance.”

Ruth 4.6: 6 The near kinsman said, “I can’t redeem it for myself, lest I endanger my own inheritance. Take my right of redemption for yourself; for I can’t redeem it.”

Ruth 4.7: 7 Now this was the custom in former time in Israel concerning redeeming and concerning exchanging, to confirm all things: a man took off his sandal, and gave it to his neighbor; and this was the way of formalizing transactions in Israel.

Ruth 4.8: 8 So the near kinsman said to Boaz, “Buy it for yourself,” then he took off his sandal.

Ruth 4.9: 9 Boaz said to the elders and to all the people, “You are witnesses today, that I have bought all that was Elimelech’s, and all that was Chilion’s and Mahlon’s, from the hand of Naomi.

Ruth 4.10: 10 Moreover, Ruth the Moabitess, the wife of Mahlon, I have purchased to be my wife, to raise up the name of the dead on his inheritance, that the name of the dead may not be cut off from among his brothers and from the gate of his place. You are witnesses today.”

Ruth 4.11: 11 All the people who were in the gate, and the elders, said, “We are witnesses. May Yahweh make the woman who has come into your house like Rachel and like Leah, which both built the house of Israel; and treat you worthily in Ephrathah, and be famous in Bethlehem.

Ruth 4.12: 12 Let your house be like the house of Perez, whom Tamar bore to Judah, of the offspring which Yahweh will give you by this young woman.”

Ruth 4.13: 13 So Boaz took Ruth and she became his wife; and he went in to her, and Yahweh enabled her to conceive, and she bore a son.

Ruth 4.14: 14 The women said to Naomi, “Blessed be Yahweh, who has not left you today without a near kinsman. Let his name be famous in Israel.

Ruth 4.15: 15 He shall be to you a restorer of life and sustain you in your old age; for your daughter-in-law, who loves you, who is better to you than seven sons, has given birth to him.”

Ruth 4.16: 16 Naomi took the child, laid him in her bosom, and became nurse to him.

Ruth 4.17: 17 The women, her neighbors, gave him a name, saying, “A son is born to Naomi”. They named him Obed. He is the father of Jesse, the father of David.

Ruth 4.18: 18 Now this is the history of the generations of Perez: Perez became the father of Hezron,

Ruth 4.19: 19 and Hezron became the father of Ram, and Ram became the father of Amminadab,

Ruth 4.20: 20 and Amminadab became the father of Nahshon, and Nahshon became the father of Salmon,

Ruth 4.21: 21 and Salmon became the father of Boaz, and Boaz became the father of Obed,

Ruth 4.22: 22 and Obed became the father of Jesse, and Jesse became the father of David.

1 Samuel 0.0:

The First Book of Samuel

1 Samuel 1.0:

1

1 Samuel 1.1: 1 Now there was a certain man of Ramathaim Zophim, of the hill country of Ephraim, and his name was Elkanah, the son of Jeroham, the son of Elihu, the son of Tohu, the son of Zuph, an Ephraimite.

1 Samuel 1.2: 2 He had two wives. The name of one was Hannah, and the name of the other Peninnah. Peninnah had children, but Hannah had no children.

1 Samuel 1.3: 3 This man went up out of his city from year to year to worship and to sacrifice to Yahweh of Armies in Shiloh. The two sons of Eli, Hophni and Phinehas, priests to Yahweh, were there.

1 Samuel 1.4: 4 When the day came that Elkanah sacrificed, he gave to Peninnah his wife, and to all her sons and her daughters, portions;

1 Samuel 1.5: 5 but to Hannah he gave a double portion, for he loved Hannah, but Yahweh had shut up her womb.

1 Samuel 1.6: 6 Her rival provoked her severely, to irritate her, because Yahweh had shut up her womb.

1 Samuel 1.7: 7 So year by year, when she went up to Yahweh’s house, her rival provoked her. Therefore she wept, and didn’t eat.

1 Samuel 1.8: 8 Elkanah her husband said to her, “Hannah, why do you weep? Why don’t you eat? Why is your heart grieved? Am I not better to you than ten sons?”

1 Samuel 1.9: 9 So Hannah rose up after they had finished eating and drinking in Shiloh. Now Eli the priest was sitting on his seat by the doorpost of Yahweh’s temple.

1 Samuel 1.10: 10 She was in bitterness of soul, and prayed to Yahweh, weeping bitterly.

1 Samuel 1.11: 11 She vowed a vow, and said, “Yahweh of Armies, if you will indeed look at the affliction of your servant and remember me, and not forget your servant, but will give to your servant a boy, then I will give him to Yahweh all the days of his life, and no razor shall come on his head.”

1 Samuel 1.12: 12 As she continued praying before Yahweh, Eli saw her mouth.

1 Samuel 1.13: 13 Now Hannah spoke in her heart. Only her lips moved, but her voice was not heard. Therefore Eli thought she was drunk.

1 Samuel 1.14: 14 Eli said to her, “How long will you be drunk? Get rid of your wine!”

1 Samuel 1.15: 15 Hannah answered, “No, my lord, I am a woman of a sorrowful spirit. I have not been drinking wine or strong drink, but I poured out my soul before Yahweh.

1 Samuel 1.16: 16 Don’t consider your servant a wicked woman; for I have been speaking out of the abundance of my complaint and my provocation.”

1 Samuel 1.17: 17 Then Eli answered, “Go in peace; and may the God of Israel grant your petition that you have asked of him.”

1 Samuel 1.18: 18 She said, “Let your servant find favor in your sight.” So the woman went her way and ate; and her facial expression wasn’t sad any more.

1 Samuel 1.19: 19 They rose up in the morning early and worshiped Yahweh, then returned and came to their house to Ramah. Then Elkanah knew Hannah his wife; and Yahweh remembered her.

1 Samuel 1.20: 20 When the time had come, Hannah conceived, and bore a son; and she named him Samuel, saying, “Because I have asked him of Yahweh.”

1 Samuel 1.21: 21 The man Elkanah, and all his house, went up to offer to Yahweh the yearly sacrifice and his vow.

1 Samuel 1.22: 22 But Hannah didn’t go up, for she said to her husband, “Not until the child is weaned; then I will bring him, that he may appear before Yahweh, and stay there forever.”

1 Samuel 1.23: 23 Elkanah her husband said to her, “Do what seems good to you. Wait until you have weaned him; only may Yahweh establish his word.”

So the woman waited and nursed her son until she weaned him.

1 Samuel 1.24: 24 When she had weaned him, she took him up with her, with three bulls, and one ephah of meal, and a container of wine, and brought him to Yahweh’s house in Shiloh. The child was young.

1 Samuel 1.25: 25 They killed the bull, and brought the child to Eli.

1 Samuel 1.26: 26 She said, “Oh, my lord, as your soul lives, my lord, I am the woman who stood by you here, praying to Yahweh.

1 Samuel 1.27: 27 I prayed for this child, and Yahweh has given me my petition which I asked of him.

1 Samuel 1.28: 28 Therefore I have also given him to Yahweh. As long as he lives he is given to Yahweh.” He worshiped Yahweh there.

1 Samuel 2.0:

2

1 Samuel 2.1: 1 Hannah prayed, and said:

“My heart exults in Yahweh!

My horn is exalted in Yahweh.

My mouth is enlarged over my enemies,

because I rejoice in your salvation.

1 Samuel 2.2: 2 There is no one as holy as Yahweh,

for there is no one besides you,

nor is there any rock like our God.

1 Samuel 2.3: 3 “Don’t keep talking so exceedingly proudly.

Don’t let arrogance come out of your mouth,

for Yahweh is a God of knowledge.

By him actions are weighed.

1 Samuel 2.4: 4 “The bows of the mighty men are broken.

Those who stumbled are armed with strength.

1 Samuel 2.5: 5 Those who were full have hired themselves out for bread.

Those who were hungry are satisfied.

Yes, the barren has borne seven.

She who has many children languishes.

1 Samuel 2.6: 6 “Yahweh kills and makes alive.

He brings down to Sheol and brings up.

1 Samuel 2.7: 7 Yahweh makes poor and makes rich.

He brings low, he also lifts up.

1 Samuel 2.8: 8 He raises up the poor out of the dust.

He lifts up the needy from the dunghill

to make them sit with princes

and inherit the throne of glory.

For the pillars of the earth are Yahweh’s.

He has set the world on them.

1 Samuel 2.9: 9 He will keep the feet of his holy ones,

but the wicked will be put to silence in darkness;

for no man will prevail by strength.

1 Samuel 2.10: 10 Those who strive with Yahweh shall be broken to pieces.

He will thunder against them in the sky.

“Yahweh will judge the ends of the earth.

He will give strength to his king,

and exalt the horn of his anointed.”

1 Samuel 2.11: 11 Elkanah went to Ramah to his house. The child served Yahweh before Eli the priest.

1 Samuel 2.12: 12 Now the sons of Eli were wicked men. They didn’t know Yahweh.

1 Samuel 2.13: 13 The custom of the priests with the people was that when anyone offered a sacrifice, the priest’s servant came while the meat was boiling, with a fork of three teeth in his hand;

1 Samuel 2.14: 14 and he stabbed it into the pan, or kettle, or cauldron, or pot. The priest took all that the fork brought up for himself. They did this to all the Israelites who came there to Shiloh.

1 Samuel 2.15: 15 Yes, before they burned the fat, the priest’s servant came, and said to the man who sacrificed, “Give meat to roast for the priest; for he will not accept boiled meat from you, but raw.”

1 Samuel 2.16: 16 If the man said to him, “Let the fat be burned first, and then take as much as your soul desires;” then he would say, “No, but you shall give it to me now; and if not, I will take it by force.”

1 Samuel 2.17: 17 The sin of the young men was very great before Yahweh; for the men despised Yahweh’s offering.

1 Samuel 2.18: 18 But Samuel ministered before Yahweh, being a child, clothed with a linen ephod.

1 Samuel 2.19: 19 Moreover his mother made him a little robe, and brought it to him from year to year when she came up with her husband to offer the yearly sacrifice.

1 Samuel 2.20: 20 Eli blessed Elkanah and his wife, and said, “May Yahweh give you offspring from this woman for the petition which was asked of Yahweh.” Then they went to their own home.

1 Samuel 2.21: 21 Yahweh visited Hannah, and she conceived and bore three sons and two daughters. The child Samuel grew before Yahweh.

1 Samuel 2.22: 22 Now Eli was very old; and he heard all that his sons did to all Israel, and how that they slept with the women who served at the door of the Tent of Meeting.

1 Samuel 2.23: 23 He said to them, “Why do you do such things? For I hear of your evil dealings from all these people.

1 Samuel 2.24: 24 No, my sons; for it is not a good report that I hear! You make Yahweh’s people disobey.

1 Samuel 2.25: 25 If one man sins against another, God will judge him; but if a man sins against Yahweh, who will intercede for him?” Notwithstanding, they didn’t listen to the voice of their father, because Yahweh intended to kill them.

1 Samuel 2.26: 26 The child Samuel grew on, and increased in favor both with Yahweh and also with men.

1 Samuel 2.27: 27 A man of God came to Eli and said to him, “Yahweh says, ‘Did I reveal myself to the house of your father when they were in Egypt in bondage to Pharaoh’s house?

1 Samuel 2.28: 28 Didn’t I choose him out of all the tribes of Israel to be my priest, to go up to my altar, to burn incense, to wear an ephod before me? Didn’t I give to the house of your father all the offerings of the children of Israel made by fire?

1 Samuel 2.29: 29 Why do you kick at my sacrifice and at my offering, which I have commanded in my habitation, and honor your sons above me, to make yourselves fat with the best of all the offerings of Israel my people?’

1 Samuel 2.30: 30 “Therefore Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, ‘I said indeed that your house and the house of your father should walk before me forever.’ But now Yahweh says, ‘Far be it from me; for those who honor me I will honor, and those who despise me will be cursed.

1 Samuel 2.31: 31 Behold, the days come that I will cut off your arm and the arm of your father’s house, that there will not be an old man in your house.

1 Samuel 2.32: 32 You will see the affliction of my habitation, in all the wealth which I will give Israel. There shall not be an old man in your house forever.

1 Samuel 2.33: 33 The man of yours whom I don’t cut off from my altar will consume your eyes and grieve your heart. All the increase of your house will die in the flower of their age.

1 Samuel 2.34: 34 This will be the sign to you that will come on your two sons, on Hophni and Phinehas: in one day they will both die.

1 Samuel 2.35: 35 I will raise up a faithful priest for myself who will do according to that which is in my heart and in my mind. I will build him a sure house. He will walk before my anointed forever.

1 Samuel 2.36: 36 It will happen that everyone who is left in your house will come and bow down to him for a piece of silver and a loaf of bread, and will say, “Please put me into one of the priests’ offices, that I may eat a morsel of bread.”’”

1 Samuel 3.0:

3

1 Samuel 3.1: 1 The child Samuel ministered to Yahweh before Eli. Yahweh’s word was rare in those days. There were not many visions, then.

1 Samuel 3.2: 2 At that time, when Eli was laid down in his place (now his eyes had begun to grow dim, so that he could not see),

1 Samuel 3.3: 3 and God’s lamp hadn’t yet gone out, and Samuel had laid down in Yahweh’s temple where God’s ark was,

1 Samuel 3.4: 4 Yahweh called Samuel. He said, “Here I am.”

1 Samuel 3.5: 5 He ran to Eli and said, “Here I am; for you called me.”

He said, “I didn’t call. Lie down again.”

He went and lay down.

1 Samuel 3.6: 6 Yahweh called yet again, “Samuel!”

Samuel arose and went to Eli and said, “Here I am; for you called me.”

He answered, “I didn’t call, my son. Lie down again.”

1 Samuel 3.7: 7 Now Samuel didn’t yet know Yahweh, neither was Yahweh’s word yet revealed to him.

1 Samuel 3.8: 8 Yahweh called Samuel again the third time. He arose and went to Eli and said, “Here I am; for you called me.”

Eli perceived that Yahweh had called the child.

1 Samuel 3.9: 9 Therefore Eli said to Samuel, “Go, lie down. It shall be, if he calls you, that you shall say, ‘Speak, Yahweh; for your servant hears.’” So Samuel went and lay down in his place.

1 Samuel 3.10: 10 Yahweh came, and stood, and called as at other times, “Samuel! Samuel!”

Then Samuel said, “Speak; for your servant hears.”

1 Samuel 3.11: 11 Yahweh said to Samuel, “Behold, I will do a thing in Israel at which both the ears of everyone who hears it will tingle.

1 Samuel 3.12: 12 In that day I will perform against Eli all that I have spoken concerning his house, from the beginning even to the end.

1 Samuel 3.13: 13 For I have told him that I will judge his house forever for the iniquity which he knew, because his sons brought a curse on themselves, and he didn’t restrain them.

1 Samuel 3.14: 14 Therefore I have sworn to the house of Eli that the iniquity of Eli’s house shall not be removed with sacrifice or offering forever.”

1 Samuel 3.15: 15 Samuel lay until the morning, and opened the doors of Yahweh’s house. Samuel was afraid to show Eli the vision.

1 Samuel 3.16: 16 Then Eli called Samuel and said, “Samuel, my son!”

He said, “Here I am.”

1 Samuel 3.17: 17 He said, “What is the thing that he has spoken to you? Please don’t hide it from me. God do so to you, and more also, if you hide anything from me of all the things that he spoke to you.”

1 Samuel 3.18: 18 Samuel told him every bit, and hid nothing from him.

He said, “It is Yahweh. Let him do what seems good to him.”

1 Samuel 3.19: 19 Samuel grew, and Yahweh was with him and let none of his words fall to the ground.

1 Samuel 3.20: 20 All Israel from Dan even to Beersheba knew that Samuel was established to be a prophet of Yahweh.

1 Samuel 3.21: 21 Yahweh appeared again in Shiloh; for Yahweh revealed himself to Samuel in Shiloh by Yahweh’s word.

1 Samuel 4.0:

4

1 Samuel 4.1: 1 The word of Samuel came to all Israel.

Now Israel went out against the Philistines to battle, and encamped beside Ebenezer; and the Philistines encamped in Aphek.

1 Samuel 4.2: 2 The Philistines put themselves in array against Israel. When they joined battle, Israel was defeated by the Philistines, who killed about four thousand men of the army in the field.

1 Samuel 4.3: 3 When the people had come into the camp, the elders of Israel said, “Why has Yahweh defeated us today before the Philistines? Let’s get the ark of Yahweh’s covenant out of Shiloh and bring it to us, that it may come among us and save us out of the hand of our enemies.”

1 Samuel 4.4: 4 So the people sent to Shiloh, and they brought from there the ark of the covenant of Yahweh of Armies, who sits above the cherubim; and the two sons of Eli, Hophni and Phinehas, were there with the ark of the covenant of God.

1 Samuel 4.5: 5 When the ark of Yahweh’s covenant came into the camp, all Israel shouted with a great shout, so that the earth resounded.

1 Samuel 4.6: 6 When the Philistines heard the noise of the shout, they said, “What does the noise of this great shout in the camp of the Hebrews mean?” They understood that Yahweh’s ark had come into the camp.

1 Samuel 4.7: 7 The Philistines were afraid, for they said, “God has come into the camp.” They said, “Woe to us! For there has not been such a thing before.

1 Samuel 4.8: 8 Woe to us! Who shall deliver us out of the hand of these mighty gods? These are the gods that struck the Egyptians with all kinds of plagues in the wilderness.

1 Samuel 4.9: 9 Be strong and behave like men, O you Philistines, that you not be servants to the Hebrews, as they have been to you. Strengthen yourselves like men, and fight!”

1 Samuel 4.10: 10 The Philistines fought, and Israel was defeated, and each man fled to his tent. There was a very great slaughter; for thirty thousand footmen of Israel fell.

1 Samuel 4.11: 11 God’s ark was taken; and the two sons of Eli, Hophni and Phinehas, were slain.

1 Samuel 4.12: 12 A man of Benjamin ran out of the army and came to Shiloh the same day, with his clothes torn and with dirt on his head.

1 Samuel 4.13: 13 When he came, behold, Eli was sitting on his seat by the road watching, for his heart trembled for God’s ark. When the man came into the city and told about it, all the city cried out.

1 Samuel 4.14: 14 When Eli heard the noise of the crying, he said, “What does the noise of this tumult mean?”

The man hurried, and came and told Eli.

1 Samuel 4.15: 15 Now Eli was ninety-eight years old. His eyes were set, so that he could not see.

1 Samuel 4.16: 16 The man said to Eli, “I am he who came out of the army, and I fled today out of the army.”

He said, “How did the matter go, my son?”

1 Samuel 4.17: 17 He who brought the news answered, “Israel has fled before the Philistines, and there has been also a great slaughter among the people. Your two sons also, Hophni and Phinehas, are dead, and God’s ark has been captured.”

1 Samuel 4.18: 18 When he made mention of God’s ark, Eli fell from off his seat backward by the side of the gate; and his neck broke, and he died, for he was an old man and heavy. He had judged Israel forty years.

1 Samuel 4.19: 19 His daughter-in-law, Phinehas’ wife, was with child, near to giving birth. When she heard the news that God’s ark was taken and that her father-in-law and her husband were dead, she bowed herself and gave birth; for her pains came on her.

1 Samuel 4.20: 20 About the time of her death the women who stood by her said to her, “Don’t be afraid, for you have given birth to a son.” But she didn’t answer, neither did she regard it.

1 Samuel 4.21: 21 She named the child Ichabod, saying, “The glory has departed from Israel!” because God’s ark was taken, and because of her father-in-law and her husband.

1 Samuel 4.22: 22 She said, “The glory has departed from Israel; for God’s ark has been taken.”

1 Samuel 5.0:

5

1 Samuel 5.1: 1 Now the Philistines had taken God’s ark, and they brought it from Ebenezer to Ashdod.

1 Samuel 5.2: 2 The Philistines took God’s ark, and brought it into the house of Dagon and set it by Dagon.

1 Samuel 5.3: 3 When the people of Ashdod arose early on the next day, behold, Dagon had fallen on his face to the ground before Yahweh’s ark. They took Dagon and set him in his place again.

1 Samuel 5.4: 4 When they arose early on the following morning, behold, Dagon had fallen on his face to the ground before Yahweh’s ark; and the head of Dagon and both the palms of his hands were cut off on the threshold. Only Dagon’s torso was intact.

1 Samuel 5.5: 5 Therefore neither the priests of Dagon nor any who come into Dagon’s house step on the threshold of Dagon in Ashdod to this day.

1 Samuel 5.6: 6 But Yahweh’s hand was heavy on the people of Ashdod, and he destroyed them and struck them with tumors, even Ashdod and its borders.

1 Samuel 5.7: 7 When the men of Ashdod saw that it was so, they said, “The ark of the God of Israel shall not stay with us, for his hand is severe on us and on Dagon our god.”

1 Samuel 5.8: 8 They sent therefore and gathered together all the lords of the Philistines, and said, “What shall we do with the ark of the God of Israel?”

They answered, “Let the ark of the God of Israel be carried over to Gath.” They carried the ark of the God of Israel there.

1 Samuel 5.9: 9 It was so, that after they had carried it there, Yahweh’s hand was against the city with a very great confusion; and he struck the men of the city, both small and great, so that tumors broke out on them.

1 Samuel 5.10: 10 So they sent God’s ark to Ekron.

As God’s ark came to Ekron, the Ekronites cried out, saying, “They have brought the ark of the God of Israel here to us, to kill us and our people.”

1 Samuel 5.11: 11 They sent therefore and gathered together all the lords of the Philistines, and they said, “Send the ark of the God of Israel away, and let it go again to its own place, that it not kill us and our people.” For there was a deadly panic throughout all the city. The hand of God was very heavy there.

1 Samuel 5.12: 12 The men who didn’t die were struck with the tumors; and the cry of the city went up to heaven.

1 Samuel 6.0:

6

1 Samuel 6.1: 1 Yahweh’s ark was in the country of the Philistines seven months.

1 Samuel 6.2: 2 The Philistines called for the priests and the diviners, saying, “What shall we do with Yahweh’s ark? Show us how we should send it to its place.”

1 Samuel 6.3: 3 They said, “If you send away the ark of the God of Israel, don’t send it empty; but by all means return a trespass offering to him. Then you will be healed, and it will be known to you why his hand is not removed from you.”

1 Samuel 6.4: 4 Then they said, “What should the trespass offering be which we shall return to him?”

They said, “Five golden tumors and five golden mice, for the number of the lords of the Philistines; for one plague was on you all, and on your lords.

1 Samuel 6.5: 5 Therefore you shall make images of your tumors and images of your mice that mar the land; and you shall give glory to the God of Israel. Perhaps he will release his hand from you, from your gods, and from your land.

1 Samuel 6.6: 6 Why then do you harden your hearts as the Egyptians and Pharaoh hardened their hearts? When he had worked wonderfully among them, didn’t they let the people go, and they departed?

1 Samuel 6.7: 7 “Now therefore take and prepare yourselves a new cart and two milk cows on which there has come no yoke; and tie the cows to the cart, and bring their calves home from them;

1 Samuel 6.8: 8 and take Yahweh’s ark and lay it on the cart. Put the jewels of gold, which you return him for a trespass offering, in a box by its side; and send it away, that it may go.

1 Samuel 6.9: 9 Behold, if it goes up by the way of its own border to Beth Shemesh, then he has done us this great evil; but if not, then we shall know that it is not his hand that struck us. It was a chance that happened to us.”

1 Samuel 6.10: 10 The men did so, and took two milk cows and tied them to the cart, and shut up their calves at home.

1 Samuel 6.11: 11 They put Yahweh’s ark on the cart, and the box with the golden mice and the images of their tumors.

1 Samuel 6.12: 12 The cows took the straight way by the way to Beth Shemesh. They went along the highway, lowing as they went, and didn’t turn away to the right hand or to the left; and the lords of the Philistines went after them to the border of Beth Shemesh.

1 Samuel 6.13: 13 The people of Beth Shemesh were reaping their wheat harvest in the valley; and they lifted up their eyes and saw the ark, and rejoiced to see it.

1 Samuel 6.14: 14 The cart came into the field of Joshua of Beth Shemesh, and stood there, where there was a great stone. Then they split the wood of the cart and offered up the cows for a burnt offering to Yahweh.

1 Samuel 6.15: 15 The Levites took down Yahweh’s ark and the box that was with it, in which the jewels of gold were, and put them on the great stone; and the men of Beth Shemesh offered burnt offerings and sacrificed sacrifices the same day to Yahweh.

1 Samuel 6.16: 16 When the five lords of the Philistines had seen it, they returned to Ekron the same day.

1 Samuel 6.17: 17 These are the golden tumors which the Philistines returned for a trespass offering to Yahweh: for Ashdod one, for Gaza one, for Ashkelon one, for Gath one, for Ekron one;

1 Samuel 6.18: 18 and the golden mice, according to the number of all the cities of the Philistines belonging to the five lords, both of fortified cities and of country villages, even to the great stone on which they set down Yahweh’s ark. That stone remains to this day in the field of Joshua of Beth Shemesh.

1 Samuel 6.19: 19 He struck of the men of Beth Shemesh, because they had looked into Yahweh’s ark, he struck fifty thousand seventy of the men. Then the people mourned, because Yahweh had struck the people with a great slaughter.

1 Samuel 6.20: 20 The men of Beth Shemesh said, “Who is able to stand before Yahweh, this holy God? To whom shall he go up from us?”

1 Samuel 6.21: 21 They sent messengers to the inhabitants of Kiriath Jearim, saying, “The Philistines have brought back Yahweh’s ark. Come down and bring it up to yourselves.”

1 Samuel 7.0:

7

1 Samuel 7.1: 1 The men of Kiriath Jearim came and took Yahweh’s ark, and brought it into Abinadab’s house on the hill, and consecrated Eleazar his son to keep Yahweh’s ark.

1 Samuel 7.2: 2 From the day that the ark stayed in Kiriath Jearim, the time was long; for it was twenty years; and all the house of Israel lamented after Yahweh.

1 Samuel 7.3: 3 Samuel spoke to all the house of Israel, saying, “If you are returning to Yahweh with all your heart, then put away the foreign gods and the Ashtaroth from among you, and direct your hearts to Yahweh, and serve him only; and he will deliver you out of the hand of the Philistines.”

1 Samuel 7.4: 4 Then the children of Israel removed the Baals and the Ashtaroth, and served Yahweh only.

1 Samuel 7.5: 5 Samuel said, “Gather all Israel to Mizpah, and I will pray to Yahweh for you.”

1 Samuel 7.6: 6 They gathered together to Mizpah, and drew water, and poured it out before Yahweh, and fasted on that day, and said there, “We have sinned against Yahweh.” Samuel judged the children of Israel in Mizpah.

1 Samuel 7.7: 7 When the Philistines heard that the children of Israel were gathered together at Mizpah, the lords of the Philistines went up against Israel. When the children of Israel heard it, they were afraid of the Philistines.

1 Samuel 7.8: 8 The children of Israel said to Samuel, “Don’t stop crying to Yahweh our God for us, that he will save us out of the hand of the Philistines.”

1 Samuel 7.9: 9 Samuel took a suckling lamb, and offered it for a whole burnt offering to Yahweh. Samuel cried to Yahweh for Israel; and Yahweh answered him.

1 Samuel 7.10: 10 As Samuel was offering up the burnt offering, the Philistines came near to battle against Israel; but Yahweh thundered with a great thunder on that day on the Philistines, and confused them; and they were struck down before Israel.

1 Samuel 7.11: 11 The men of Israel went out of Mizpah, and pursued the Philistines, and struck them, until they came under Beth Kar.

1 Samuel 7.12: 12 Then Samuel took a stone, and set it between Mizpah and Shen, and called its name Ebenezer, saying, “Yahweh helped us until now.”

1 Samuel 7.13: 13 So the Philistines were subdued, and they stopped coming within the border of Israel. Yahweh’s hand was against the Philistines all the days of Samuel.

1 Samuel 7.14: 14 The cities which the Philistines had taken from Israel were restored to Israel, from Ekron even to Gath; and Israel recovered its border out of the hand of the Philistines. There was peace between Israel and the Amorites.

1 Samuel 7.15: 15 Samuel judged Israel all the days of his life.

1 Samuel 7.16: 16 He went from year to year in a circuit to Bethel, Gilgal, and Mizpah; and he judged Israel in all those places.

1 Samuel 7.17: 17 His return was to Ramah, for his house was there; and he judged Israel there; and he built an altar to Yahweh there.

1 Samuel 8.0:

8

1 Samuel 8.1: 1 When Samuel was old, he made his sons judges over Israel.

1 Samuel 8.2: 2 Now the name of his firstborn was Joel; and the name of his second, Abijah. They were judges in Beersheba.

1 Samuel 8.3: 3 His sons didn’t walk in his ways, but turned away after dishonest gain, took bribes, and perverted justice.

1 Samuel 8.4: 4 Then all the elders of Israel gathered themselves together and came to Samuel to Ramah.

1 Samuel 8.5: 5 They said to him, “Behold, you are old, and your sons don’t walk in your ways. Now make us a king to judge us like all the nations.”

1 Samuel 8.6: 6 But the thing displeased Samuel, when they said, “Give us a king to judge us.”

Samuel prayed to Yahweh.

1 Samuel 8.7: 7 Yahweh said to Samuel, “Listen to the voice of the people in all that they tell you; for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected me as the king over them.

1 Samuel 8.8: 8 According to all the works which they have done since the day that I brought them up out of Egypt even to this day, in that they have forsaken me, and served other gods, so they also do to you.

1 Samuel 8.9: 9 Now therefore listen to their voice. However you shall protest solemnly to them, and shall show them the way of the king who will reign over them.”

1 Samuel 8.10: 10 Samuel told all Yahweh’s words to the people who asked him for a king.

1 Samuel 8.11: 11 He said, “This will be the way of the king who shall reign over you: he will take your sons, and appoint them as his servants, for his chariots, and to be his horsemen; and they will run before his chariots.

1 Samuel 8.12: 12 He will appoint them to him for captains of thousands, and captains of fifties; and he will assign some to plow his ground, and to reap his harvest, and to make his instruments of war, and the instruments of his chariots.

1 Samuel 8.13: 13 He will take your daughters to be perfumers, to be cooks, and to be bakers.

1 Samuel 8.14: 14 He will take your fields, your vineyards, and your olive groves, even their best, and give them to his servants.

1 Samuel 8.15: 15 He will take one tenth of your seed, and of your vineyards, and give it to his officers, and to his servants.

1 Samuel 8.16: 16 He will take your male servants, your female servants, your best young men, and your donkeys, and assign them to his own work.

1 Samuel 8.17: 17 He will take one tenth of your flocks; and you will be his servants.

1 Samuel 8.18: 18 You will cry out in that day because of your king whom you will have chosen for yourselves; and Yahweh will not answer you in that day.”

1 Samuel 8.19: 19 But the people refused to listen to the voice of Samuel; and they said, “No; but we will have a king over us,

1 Samuel 8.20: 20 that we also may be like all the nations, and that our king may judge us, and go out before us, and fight our battles.”

1 Samuel 8.21: 21 Samuel heard all the words of the people, and he rehearsed them in the ears of Yahweh.

1 Samuel 8.22: 22 Yahweh said to Samuel, “Listen to their voice, and make them a king.”

Samuel said to the men of Israel, “Everyone go to your own city.”

1 Samuel 9.0:

9

1 Samuel 9.1: 1 Now there was a man of Benjamin, whose name was Kish, the son of Abiel, the son of Zeror, the son of Becorath, the son of Aphiah, the son of a Benjamite, a mighty man of valor.

1 Samuel 9.2: 2 He had a son, whose name was Saul, an impressive young man; and there was not among the children of Israel a better person than he. From his shoulders and upward he was taller than any of the people.

1 Samuel 9.3: 3 The donkeys of Kish, Saul’s father, were lost. Kish said to Saul his son, “Now take one of the servants with you, and arise, go look for the donkeys.”

1 Samuel 9.4: 4 He passed through the hill country of Ephraim, and passed through the land of Shalishah, but they didn’t find them. Then they passed through the land of Shaalim, and they weren’t there. Then he passed through the land of the Benjamites, but they didn’t find them.

1 Samuel 9.5: 5 When they had come to the land of Zuph, Saul said to his servant who was with him, “Come! Let’s return, lest my father stop caring about the donkeys, and be anxious for us.”

1 Samuel 9.6: 6 The servant said to him, “Behold now, there is a man of God in this city, and he is a man who is held in honor. All that he says surely happens. Now let’s go there. Perhaps he can tell us which way to go.”

1 Samuel 9.7: 7 Then Saul said to his servant, “But, behold, if we go, what should we bring the man? For the bread is spent in our sacks, and there is not a present to bring to the man of God. What do we have?”

1 Samuel 9.8: 8 The servant answered Saul again, and said, “Behold, I have in my hand the fourth part of a shekel of silver. I will give that to the man of God, to tell us our way.”

1 Samuel 9.9: 9 (In earlier times in Israel, when a man went to inquire of God, he said, “Come! Let’s go to the seer;” for he who is now called a prophet was before called a seer.)

1 Samuel 9.10: 10 Then Saul said to his servant, “Well said. Come! Let’s go.” So they went to the city where the man of God was.

1 Samuel 9.11: 11 As they went up the ascent to the city, they found young maidens going out to draw water, and said to them, “Is the seer here?”

1 Samuel 9.12: 12 They answered them, and said, “He is. Behold, he is before you. Hurry now, for he has come today into the city; for the people have a sacrifice today in the high place.

1 Samuel 9.13: 13 As soon as you have come into the city, you will immediately find him, before he goes up to the high place to eat; for the people will not eat until he comes, because he blesses the sacrifice. Afterwards those who are invited eat. Now therefore go up; for at this time you will find him.”

1 Samuel 9.14: 14 They went up to the city. As they came within the city, behold, Samuel came out toward them, to go up to the high place.

1 Samuel 9.15: 15 Now Yahweh had revealed to Samuel a day before Saul came, saying,

1 Samuel 9.16: 16 “Tomorrow about this time I will send you a man out of the land of Benjamin, and you shall anoint him to be prince over my people Israel. He will save my people out of the hand of the Philistines; for I have looked upon my people, because their cry has come to me.”

1 Samuel 9.17: 17 When Samuel saw Saul, Yahweh said to him, “Behold, the man of whom I spoke to you! He will have authority over my people.”

1 Samuel 9.18: 18 Then Saul approached Samuel in the gateway, and said, “Please tell me where the seer’s house is.”

1 Samuel 9.19: 19 Samuel answered Saul, and said, “I am the seer. Go up before me to the high place, for you are to eat with me today. In the morning I will let you go, and will tell you all that is in your heart.

1 Samuel 9.20: 20 As for your donkeys who were lost three days ago, don’t set your mind on them; for they have been found. For whom is all that is desirable in Israel? Is it not for you, and for all your father’s house?”

1 Samuel 9.21: 21 Saul answered, “Am I not a Benjamite, of the smallest of the tribes of Israel? And my family the least of all the families of the tribe of Benjamin? Why then do you speak to me like this?”

1 Samuel 9.22: 22 Samuel took Saul and his servant, and brought them into the guest room, and made them sit in the best place among those who were invited, who were about thirty persons.

1 Samuel 9.23: 23 Samuel said to the cook, “Bring the portion which I gave you, of which I said to you, ‘Set it aside.’”

1 Samuel 9.24: 24 The cook took up the thigh, and that which was on it, and set it before Saul. Samuel said, “Behold, that which has been reserved! Set it before yourself and eat; because it has been kept for you for the appointed time, for I said, ‘I have invited the people.’” So Saul ate with Samuel that day.

1 Samuel 9.25: 25 When they had come down from the high place into the city, he talked with Saul on the housetop.

1 Samuel 9.26: 26 They arose early; and about daybreak, Samuel called to Saul on the housetop, saying, “Get up, that I may send you away.” Saul arose, and they both went outside, he and Samuel, together.

1 Samuel 9.27: 27 As they were going down at the end of the city, Samuel said to Saul, “Tell the servant to go on ahead of us.” He went ahead, then Samuel said, “But stand still first, that I may cause you to hear God’s message.”

1 Samuel 10.0:

10

1 Samuel 10.1: 1 Then Samuel took the vial of oil, and poured it on his head, and kissed him, and said, “Hasn’t Yahweh anointed you to be prince over his inheritance?

1 Samuel 10.2: 2 When you have departed from me today, then you will find two men by Rachel’s tomb, on the border of Benjamin at Zelzah. They will tell you, ‘The donkeys which you went to look for have been found; and behold, your father has stopped caring about the donkeys, and is anxious for you, saying, “What shall I do for my son?”’

1 Samuel 10.3: 3 “Then you will go on forward from there, and you will come to the oak of Tabor. Three men will meet you there going up to God to Bethel, one carrying three young goats, and another carrying three loaves of bread, and another carrying a container of wine.

1 Samuel 10.4: 4 They will greet you, and give you two loaves of bread, which you shall receive from their hand.

1 Samuel 10.5: 5 “After that you will come to the hill of God, where the garrison of the Philistines is; and it will happen, when you have come there to the city, that you will meet a band of prophets coming down from the high place with a lute, a tambourine, a pipe, and a harp before them; and they will be prophesying.

1 Samuel 10.6: 6 Then Yahweh’s Spirit will come mightily on you, and you will prophesy with them, and will be turned into another man.

1 Samuel 10.7: 7 Let it be, when these signs have come to you, that you do what is appropriate for the occasion; for God is with you.

1 Samuel 10.8: 8 “Go down ahead of me to Gilgal; and behold, I will come down to you, to offer burnt offerings, and to sacrifice sacrifices of peace offerings. Wait seven days, until I come to you, and show you what you are to do.”

1 Samuel 10.9: 9 It was so, that when he had turned his back to go from Samuel, God gave him another heart; and all those signs happened that day.

1 Samuel 10.10: 10 When they came there to the hill, behold, a band of prophets met him; and the Spirit of God came mightily on him, and he prophesied among them.

1 Samuel 10.11: 11 When all who knew him before saw that, behold, he prophesied with the prophets, then the people said to one another, “What is this that has come to the son of Kish? Is Saul also among the prophets?”

1 Samuel 10.12: 12 One of the same place answered, “Who is their father?” Therefore it became a proverb, “Is Saul also among the prophets?”

1 Samuel 10.13: 13 When he had finished prophesying, he came to the high place.

1 Samuel 10.14: 14 Saul’s uncle said to him and to his servant, “Where did you go?”

He said, “To seek the donkeys. When we saw that they were not found, we came to Samuel.”

1 Samuel 10.15: 15 Saul’s uncle said, “Please tell me what Samuel said to you.”

1 Samuel 10.16: 16 Saul said to his uncle, “He told us plainly that the donkeys were found.” But concerning the matter of the kingdom, of which Samuel spoke, he didn’t tell him.

1 Samuel 10.17: 17 Samuel called the people together to Yahweh to Mizpah;

1 Samuel 10.18: 18 and he said to the children of Israel, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, says ‘I brought Israel up out of Egypt, and I delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians, and out of the hand of all the kingdoms that oppressed you.’

1 Samuel 10.19: 19 But you have today rejected your God, who himself saves you out of all your calamities and your distresses; and you have said to him, ‘No! Set a king over us.’ Now therefore present yourselves before Yahweh by your tribes, and by your thousands.”

1 Samuel 10.20: 20 So Samuel brought all the tribes of Israel near, and the tribe of Benjamin was chosen.

1 Samuel 10.21: 21 He brought the tribe of Benjamin near by their families; and the family of the Matrites was chosen. Then Saul the son of Kish was chosen; but when they looked for him, he could not be found.

1 Samuel 10.22: 22 Therefore they asked of Yahweh further, “Is there yet a man to come here?”

Yahweh answered, “Behold, he has hidden himself among the baggage.”

1 Samuel 10.23: 23 They ran and got him there. When he stood among the people, he was higher than any of the people from his shoulders and upward.

1 Samuel 10.24: 24 Samuel said to all the people, “Do you see him whom Yahweh has chosen, that there is no one like him among all the people?”

All the people shouted, and said, “Long live the king!”

1 Samuel 10.25: 25 Then Samuel told the people the regulations of the kingdom, and wrote it in a book, and laid it up before Yahweh. Samuel sent all the people away, every man to his house.

1 Samuel 10.26: 26 Saul also went to his house to Gibeah; and the army went with him, whose hearts God had touched.

1 Samuel 10.27: 27 But certain worthless fellows said, “How could this man save us?” They despised him, and brought him no present. But he held his peace.

1 Samuel 11.0:

11

1 Samuel 11.1: 1 Then Nahash the Ammonite came up, and encamped against Jabesh Gilead: and all the men of Jabesh said to Nahash, “Make a covenant with us, and we will serve you.”

1 Samuel 11.2: 2 Nahash the Ammonite said to them, “On this condition I will make it with you, that all your right eyes be gouged out. I will make this dishonor all Israel.”

1 Samuel 11.3: 3 The elders of Jabesh said to him, “Give us seven days, that we may send messengers to all the borders of Israel; and then, if there is no one to save us, we will come out to you.”

1 Samuel 11.4: 4 Then the messengers came to Gibeah of Saul, and spoke these words in the ears of the people, then all the people lifted up their voice, and wept.

1 Samuel 11.5: 5 Behold, Saul came following the oxen out of the field; and Saul said, “What ails the people that they weep?” They told him the words of the men of Jabesh.

1 Samuel 11.6: 6 God’s Spirit came mightily on Saul when he heard those words, and his anger burned hot.

1 Samuel 11.7: 7 He took a yoke of oxen, and cut them in pieces, and sent them throughout all the borders of Israel by the hand of messengers, saying, “Whoever doesn’t come out after Saul and after Samuel, so shall it be done to his oxen.” The dread of Yahweh fell on the people, and they came out as one man.

1 Samuel 11.8: 8 He counted them in Bezek; and the children of Israel were three hundred thousand, and the men of Judah thirty thousand.

1 Samuel 11.9: 9 They said to the messengers who came, “Tell the men of Jabesh Gilead, ‘Tomorrow, by the time the sun is hot, you will be rescued.’” The messengers came and told the men of Jabesh; and they were glad.

1 Samuel 11.10: 10 Therefore the men of Jabesh said, “Tomorrow we will come out to you, and you shall do with us all that seems good to you.”

1 Samuel 11.11: 11 On the next day, Saul put the people in three companies; and they came into the middle of the camp in the morning watch, and struck the Ammonites until the heat of the day. Those who remained were scattered, so that no two of them were left together.

1 Samuel 11.12: 12 The people said to Samuel, “Who is he who said, ‘Shall Saul reign over us?’ Bring those men, that we may put them to death!”

1 Samuel 11.13: 13 Saul said, “No man shall be put to death today; for today Yahweh has rescued Israel.”

1 Samuel 11.14: 14 Then Samuel said to the people, “Come! Let’s go to Gilgal, and renew the kingdom there.”

1 Samuel 11.15: 15 All the people went to Gilgal; and there they made Saul king before Yahweh in Gilgal. There they offered sacrifices of peace offerings before Yahweh; and there Saul and all the men of Israel rejoiced greatly.

1 Samuel 12.0:

12

1 Samuel 12.1: 1 Samuel said to all Israel, “Behold, I have listened to your voice in all that you said to me, and have made a king over you.

1 Samuel 12.2: 2 Now, behold, the king walks before you. I am old and gray-headed. Behold, my sons are with you. I have walked before you from my youth to this day.

1 Samuel 12.3: 3 Here I am. Witness against me before Yahweh, and before his anointed. Whose ox have I taken? Whose donkey have I taken? Whom have I defrauded? Whom have I oppressed? Of whose hand have I taken a bribe to make me blind my eyes? I will restore it to you.”

1 Samuel 12.4: 4 They said, “You have not defrauded us, nor oppressed us, neither have you taken anything from anyone’s hand.”

1 Samuel 12.5: 5 He said to them, “Yahweh is witness against you, and his anointed is witness today, that you have not found anything in my hand.”

They said, “He is witness.”

1 Samuel 12.6: 6 Samuel said to the people, “It is Yahweh who appointed Moses and Aaron, and that brought your fathers up out of the land of Egypt.

1 Samuel 12.7: 7 Now therefore stand still, that I may plead with you before Yahweh concerning all the righteous acts of Yahweh, which he did to you and to your fathers.

1 Samuel 12.8: 8 “When Jacob had come into Egypt, and your fathers cried to Yahweh, then Yahweh sent Moses and Aaron, who brought your fathers out of Egypt, and made them to dwell in this place.

1 Samuel 12.9: 9 “But they forgot Yahweh their God; and he sold them into the hand of Sisera, captain of the army of Hazor, and into the hand of the Philistines, and into the hand of the king of Moab; and they fought against them.

1 Samuel 12.10: 10 They cried to Yahweh, and said, ‘We have sinned, because we have forsaken Yahweh, and have served the Baals and the Ashtaroth: but now deliver us out of the hand of our enemies, and we will serve you.’

1 Samuel 12.11: 11 Yahweh sent Jerubbaal, Bedan, Jephthah, and Samuel, and delivered you out of the hand of your enemies on every side; and you lived in safety.

1 Samuel 12.12: 12 “When you saw that Nahash the king of the children of Ammon came against you, you said to me, ‘No, but a king shall reign over us;’ when Yahweh your God was your king.

1 Samuel 12.13: 13 Now therefore see the king whom you have chosen, and whom you have asked for. Behold, Yahweh has set a king over you.

1 Samuel 12.14: 14 If you will fear Yahweh, and serve him, and listen to his voice, and not rebel against the commandment of Yahweh, then both you and also the king who reigns over you are followers of Yahweh your God.

1 Samuel 12.15: 15 But if you will not listen to Yahweh’s voice, but rebel against the commandment of Yahweh, then Yahweh’s hand will be against you, as it was against your fathers.

1 Samuel 12.16: 16 “Now therefore stand still and see this great thing, which Yahweh will do before your eyes.

1 Samuel 12.17: 17 Isn’t it wheat harvest today? I will call to Yahweh, that he may send thunder and rain; and you will know and see that your wickedness is great, which you have done in Yahweh’s sight, in asking for a king.”

1 Samuel 12.18: 18 So Samuel called to Yahweh; and Yahweh sent thunder and rain that day. Then all the people greatly feared Yahweh and Samuel.

1 Samuel 12.19: 19 All the people said to Samuel, “Pray for your servants to Yahweh your God, that we not die; for we have added to all our sins this evil, to ask for a king.”

1 Samuel 12.20: 20 Samuel said to the people, “Don’t be afraid. You have indeed done all this evil; yet don’t turn away from following Yahweh, but serve Yahweh with all your heart.

1 Samuel 12.21: 21 Don’t turn away to go after vain things which can’t profit or deliver, for they are vain.

1 Samuel 12.22: 22 For Yahweh will not forsake his people for his great name’s sake, because it has pleased Yahweh to make you a people for himself.

1 Samuel 12.23: 23 Moreover as for me, far be it from me that I should sin against Yahweh in ceasing to pray for you: but I will instruct you in the good and the right way.

1 Samuel 12.24: 24 Only fear Yahweh, and serve him in truth with all your heart; for consider what great things he has done for you.

1 Samuel 12.25: 25 But if you keep doing evil, you will be consumed, both you and your king.”

1 Samuel 13.0:

13

1 Samuel 13.1: 1 Saul was thirty years old when he became king, and he reigned over Israel forty-two years.

1 Samuel 13.2: 2 Saul chose for himself three thousand men of Israel, of which two thousand were with Saul in Michmash and in the Mount of Bethel, and one thousand were with Jonathan in Gibeah of Benjamin. He sent the rest of the people to their own tents.

1 Samuel 13.3: 3 Jonathan struck the garrison of the Philistines that was in Geba, and the Philistines heard of it. Saul blew the trumpet throughout all the land, saying, “Let the Hebrews hear!”

1 Samuel 13.4: 4 All Israel heard that Saul had struck the garrison of the Philistines, and also that Israel was considered an abomination to the Philistines. The people were gathered together after Saul to Gilgal.

1 Samuel 13.5: 5 The Philistines assembled themselves together to fight with Israel, thirty thousand chariots, and six thousand horsemen, and people as the sand which is on the seashore in multitude. They came up and encamped in Michmash, eastward of Beth Aven.

1 Samuel 13.6: 6 When the men of Israel saw that they were in trouble (for the people were distressed), then the people hid themselves in caves, in thickets, in rocks, in tombs, and in pits.

1 Samuel 13.7: 7 Now some of the Hebrews had gone over the Jordan to the land of Gad and Gilead; but as for Saul, he was yet in Gilgal, and all the people followed him trembling.

1 Samuel 13.8: 8 He stayed seven days, according to the time set by Samuel; but Samuel didn’t come to Gilgal, and the people were scattering from him.

1 Samuel 13.9: 9 Saul said, “Bring the burnt offering to me here, and the peace offerings.” He offered the burnt offering.

1 Samuel 13.10: 10 It came to pass that as soon as he had finished offering the burnt offering, behold, Samuel came; and Saul went out to meet him, that he might greet him.

1 Samuel 13.11: 11 Samuel said, “What have you done?”

Saul said, “Because I saw that the people were scattered from me, and that you didn’t come within the days appointed, and that the Philistines assembled themselves together at Michmash;

1 Samuel 13.12: 12 therefore I said, ‘Now the Philistines will come down on me to Gilgal, and I haven’t entreated the favor of Yahweh.’ I forced myself therefore, and offered the burnt offering.”

1 Samuel 13.13: 13 Samuel said to Saul, “You have done foolishly. You have not kept the commandment of Yahweh your God, which he commanded you; for now Yahweh would have established your kingdom on Israel forever.

1 Samuel 13.14: 14 But now your kingdom will not continue. Yahweh has sought for himself a man after his own heart, and Yahweh has appointed him to be prince over his people, because you have not kept that which Yahweh commanded you.”

1 Samuel 13.15: 15 Samuel arose, and went from Gilgal to Gibeah of Benjamin. Saul counted the people who were present with him, about six hundred men.

1 Samuel 13.16: 16 Saul, and Jonathan his son, and the people who were present with them, stayed in Geba of Benjamin; but the Philistines encamped in Michmash.

1 Samuel 13.17: 17 The raiders came out of the camp of the Philistines in three companies: one company turned to the way that leads to Ophrah, to the land of Shual;

1 Samuel 13.18: 18 another company turned the way to Beth Horon; and another company turned the way of the border that looks down on the valley of Zeboim toward the wilderness.

1 Samuel 13.19: 19 Now there was no blacksmith found throughout all the land of Israel; for the Philistines said, “Lest the Hebrews make themselves swords or spears”;

1 Samuel 13.20: 20 but all the Israelites went down to the Philistines, each man to sharpen his own plowshare, mattock, ax, and sickle.

1 Samuel 13.21: 21 The price was one payim each to sharpen mattocks, plowshares, pitchforks, axes, and goads.

1 Samuel 13.22: 22 So it came to pass in the day of battle, that neither sword nor spear was found in the hand of any of the people who were with Saul and Jonathan; but Saul and Jonathan his son had them.

1 Samuel 13.23: 23 The garrison of the Philistines went out to the pass of Michmash.

1 Samuel 14.0:

14

1 Samuel 14.1: 1 Now it fell on a day, that Jonathan the son of Saul said to the young man who bore his armor, “Come! Let’s go over to the Philistines’ garrison that is on the other side.” But he didn’t tell his father.

1 Samuel 14.2: 2 Saul stayed in the uttermost part of Gibeah under the pomegranate tree which is in Migron: and the people who were with him were about six hundred men;

1 Samuel 14.3: 3 including Ahijah, the son of Ahitub, Ichabod’s brother, the son of Phinehas, the son of Eli, the priest of Yahweh in Shiloh, wearing an ephod. The people didn’t know that Jonathan was gone.

1 Samuel 14.4: 4 Between the passes, by which Jonathan sought to go over to the Philistines’ garrison, there was a rocky crag on the one side, and a rocky crag on the other side: and the name of the one was Bozez, and the name of the other Seneh.

1 Samuel 14.5: 5 The one crag rose up on the north in front of Michmash, and the other on the south in front of Geba.

1 Samuel 14.6: 6 Jonathan said to the young man who bore his armor, “Come! Let’s go over to the garrison of these uncircumcised. It may be that Yahweh will work for us; for there is no restraint on Yahweh to save by many or by few.”

1 Samuel 14.7: 7 His armor bearer said to him, “Do all that is in your heart. Turn and, behold, I am with you according to your heart.”

1 Samuel 14.8: 8 Then Jonathan said, “Behold, we will pass over to the men, and we will reveal ourselves to them.

1 Samuel 14.9: 9 If they say this to us, ‘Wait until we come to you!’ then we will stand still in our place, and will not go up to them.

1 Samuel 14.10: 10 But if they say this, ‘Come up to us!’ then we will go up; for Yahweh has delivered them into our hand. This shall be the sign to us.”

1 Samuel 14.11: 11 Both of them revealed themselves to the garrison of the Philistines: and the Philistines said, “Behold, the Hebrews are coming out of the holes where they had hidden themselves!”

1 Samuel 14.12: 12 The men of the garrison answered Jonathan and his armor bearer, and said, “Come up to us, and we will show you something!”

Jonathan said to his armor bearer, “Come up after me; for Yahweh has delivered them into the hand of Israel.”

1 Samuel 14.13: 13 Jonathan climbed up on his hands and on his feet, and his armor bearer after him: and they fell before Jonathan; and his armor bearer killed them after him.

1 Samuel 14.14: 14 That first slaughter, which Jonathan and his armor bearer made, was about twenty men, within as it were half a furrow’s length in an acre of land.

1 Samuel 14.15: 15 There was a trembling in the camp, in the field, and among all the people; the garrison, and the raiders, also trembled; and the earth quaked, so there was an exceedingly great trembling.

1 Samuel 14.16: 16 The watchmen of Saul in Gibeah of Benjamin looked; and behold, the multitude melted away and scattered.

1 Samuel 14.17: 17 Then Saul said to the people who were with him, “Count now, and see who is missing from us.” When they had counted, behold, Jonathan and his armor bearer were not there.

1 Samuel 14.18: 18 Saul said to Ahijah, “Bring God’s ark here.” For God’s ark was with the children of Israel at that time.

1 Samuel 14.19: 19 While Saul talked to the priest, the tumult that was in the camp of the Philistines went on and increased; and Saul said to the priest, “Withdraw your hand!”

1 Samuel 14.20: 20 Saul and all the people who were with him were gathered together, and came to the battle; and behold, they were all striking each other with their swords in very great confusion.

1 Samuel 14.21: 21 Now the Hebrews who were with the Philistines before, and who went up with them into the camp, from all around, even they also turned to be with the Israelites who were with Saul and Jonathan.

1 Samuel 14.22: 22 Likewise all the men of Israel who had hidden themselves in the hill country of Ephraim, when they heard that the Philistines fled, even they also followed hard after them in the battle.

1 Samuel 14.23: 23 So Yahweh saved Israel that day; and the battle passed over by Beth Aven.

1 Samuel 14.24: 24 The men of Israel were distressed that day; for Saul had adjured the people, saying, “Cursed is the man who eats any food until it is evening, and I am avenged of my enemies.” So none of the people tasted food.

1 Samuel 14.25: 25 All the people came into the forest; and there was honey on the ground.

1 Samuel 14.26: 26 When the people had come to the forest, behold, honey was dripping, but no one put his hand to his mouth; for the people feared the oath.

1 Samuel 14.27: 27 But Jonathan didn’t hear when his father commanded the people with the oath. Therefore he put out the end of the rod that was in his hand, and dipped it in the honeycomb, and put his hand to his mouth; and his eyes brightened.

1 Samuel 14.28: 28 Then one of the people answered, and said, “Your father directly commanded the people with an oath, saying, ‘Cursed is the man who eats food today.’” So the people were faint.

1 Samuel 14.29: 29 Then Jonathan said, “My father has troubled the land. Please look how my eyes have brightened, because I tasted a little of this honey.

1 Samuel 14.30: 30 How much more, if perhaps the people had eaten freely today of the plunder of their enemies which they found? For now there has been no great slaughter among the Philistines.”

1 Samuel 14.31: 31 They struck the Philistines that day from Michmash to Aijalon. The people were very faint;

1 Samuel 14.32: 32 and the people pounced on the plunder, and took sheep, cattle, and calves, and killed them on the ground; and the people ate them with the blood.

1 Samuel 14.33: 33 Then they told Saul, saying, “Behold, the people are sinning against Yahweh, in that they eat meat with the blood.”

He said, “You have dealt treacherously. Roll a large stone to me today!”

1 Samuel 14.34: 34 Saul said, “Disperse yourselves among the people, and tell them, ‘Every man bring me here his ox, and every man his sheep, and kill them here, and eat; and don’t sin against Yahweh in eating meat with the blood.’” All the people brought every man his ox with him that night, and killed them there.

1 Samuel 14.35: 35 Saul built an altar to Yahweh. This was the first altar that he built to Yahweh.

1 Samuel 14.36: 36 Saul said, “Let’s go down after the Philistines by night, and take plunder among them until the morning light, and let’s not leave a man of them.”

They said, “Do whatever seems good to you.”

Then the priest said, “Let’s draw near here to God.”

1 Samuel 14.37: 37 Saul asked counsel of God, “Shall I go down after the Philistines? Will you deliver them into the hand of Israel?” But he didn’t answer him that day.

1 Samuel 14.38: 38 Saul said, “Draw near here, all you chiefs of the people; and know and see in which this sin has been today.

1 Samuel 14.39: 39 For, as Yahweh lives, who saves Israel, though it is in Jonathan my son, he shall surely die.” But there was not a man among all the people who answered him.

1 Samuel 14.40: 40 Then he said to all Israel, “You be on one side, and I and Jonathan my son will be on the other side.”

The people said to Saul, “Do what seems good to you.”

1 Samuel 14.41: 41 Therefore Saul said to Yahweh, the God of Israel, “Show the right.”

Jonathan and Saul were chosen, but the people escaped.

1 Samuel 14.42: 42 Saul said, “Cast lots between me and Jonathan my son.”

Jonathan was selected.

1 Samuel 14.43: 43 Then Saul said to Jonathan, “Tell me what you have done!”

Jonathan told him, and said, “I certainly did taste a little honey with the end of the rod that was in my hand; and behold, I must die.”

1 Samuel 14.44: 44 Saul said, “God do so and more also; for you shall surely die, Jonathan.”

1 Samuel 14.45: 45 The people said to Saul, “Shall Jonathan die, who has worked this great salvation in Israel? Far from it! As Yahweh lives, there shall not one hair of his head fall to the ground; for he has worked with God today!” So the people rescued Jonathan, that he didn’t die.

1 Samuel 14.46: 46 Then Saul went up from following the Philistines; and the Philistines went to their own place.

1 Samuel 14.47: 47 Now when Saul had taken the kingdom over Israel, he fought against all his enemies on every side, against Moab, and against the children of Ammon, and against Edom, and against the kings of Zobah, and against the Philistines. Wherever he turned himself, he defeated them.

1 Samuel 14.48: 48 He did valiantly, and struck the Amalekites, and delivered Israel out of the hands of those who plundered them.

1 Samuel 14.49: 49 Now the sons of Saul were Jonathan, Ishvi, and Malchishua; and the names of his two daughters were these: the name of the firstborn Merab, and the name of the younger Michal.

1 Samuel 14.50: 50 The name of Saul’s wife was Ahinoam the daughter of Ahimaaz. The name of the captain of his army was Abner the son of Ner, Saul’s uncle.

1 Samuel 14.51: 51 Kish was the father of Saul; and Ner the father of Abner was the son of Abiel.

1 Samuel 14.52: 52 There was severe war against the Philistines all the days of Saul; and when Saul saw any mighty man, or any valiant man, he took him into his service.

1 Samuel 15.0:

15

1 Samuel 15.1: 1 Samuel said to Saul, “Yahweh sent me to anoint you to be king over his people, over Israel. Now therefore listen to the voice of Yahweh’s words.

1 Samuel 15.2: 2 Yahweh of Armies says, ‘I remember what Amalek did to Israel, how he set himself against him on the way, when he came up out of Egypt.

1 Samuel 15.3: 3 Now go and strike Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and don’t spare them; but kill both man and woman, infant and nursing baby, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.’”

1 Samuel 15.4: 4 Saul summoned the people, and counted them in Telaim, two hundred thousand footmen, and ten thousand men of Judah.

1 Samuel 15.5: 5 Saul came to the city of Amalek, and set an ambush in the valley.

1 Samuel 15.6: 6 Saul said to the Kenites, “Go, depart, go down from among the Amalekites, lest I destroy you with them; for you showed kindness to all the children of Israel, when they came up out of Egypt.” So the Kenites departed from among the Amalekites.

1 Samuel 15.7: 7 Saul struck the Amalekites, from Havilah as you go to Shur, that is before Egypt.

1 Samuel 15.8: 8 He took Agag the king of the Amalekites alive, and utterly destroyed all the people with the edge of the sword.

1 Samuel 15.9: 9 But Saul and the people spared Agag, and the best of the sheep, of the cattle, and of the fat calves, and the lambs, and all that was good, and were not willing to utterly destroy them; but everything that was vile and refuse, that they destroyed utterly.

1 Samuel 15.10: 10 Then Yahweh’s word came to Samuel, saying,

1 Samuel 15.11: 11 “It grieves me that I have set up Saul to be king; for he has turned back from following me, and has not performed my commandments.” Samuel was angry; and he cried to Yahweh all night.

1 Samuel 15.12: 12 Samuel rose early to meet Saul in the morning; and Samuel was told, saying, “Saul came to Carmel, and behold, he set up a monument for himself, and turned, and passed on, and went down to Gilgal.”

1 Samuel 15.13: 13 Samuel came to Saul; and Saul said to him, “You are blessed by Yahweh! I have performed the commandment of Yahweh.”

1 Samuel 15.14: 14 Samuel said, “Then what does this bleating of the sheep in my ears, and the lowing of the cattle which I hear mean?”

1 Samuel 15.15: 15 Saul said, “They have brought them from the Amalekites; for the people spared the best of the sheep and of the cattle, to sacrifice to Yahweh your God. We have utterly destroyed the rest.”

1 Samuel 15.16: 16 Then Samuel said to Saul, “Stay, and I will tell you what Yahweh said to me last night.”

He said to him, “Say on.”

1 Samuel 15.17: 17 Samuel said, “Though you were little in your own sight, weren’t you made the head of the tribes of Israel? Yahweh anointed you king over Israel;

1 Samuel 15.18: 18 and Yahweh sent you on a journey, and said, ‘Go, and utterly destroy the sinners the Amalekites, and fight against them until they are consumed.’

1 Samuel 15.19: 19 Why then didn’t you obey Yahweh’s voice, but took the plunder, and did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight?”

1 Samuel 15.20: 20 Saul said to Samuel, “But I have obeyed Yahweh’s voice, and have gone the way which Yahweh sent me, and have brought Agag the king of Amalek, and have utterly destroyed the Amalekites.

1 Samuel 15.21: 21 But the people took of the plunder, sheep and cattle, the chief of the devoted things, to sacrifice to Yahweh your God in Gilgal.”

1 Samuel 15.22: 22 Samuel said, “Has Yahweh as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying Yahweh’s voice? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to listen than the fat of rams.

1 Samuel 15.23: 23 For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as idolatry and teraphim. Because you have rejected Yahweh’s word, he has also rejected you from being king.”

1 Samuel 15.24: 24 Saul said to Samuel, “I have sinned; for I have transgressed the commandment of Yahweh, and your words, because I feared the people, and obeyed their voice.

1 Samuel 15.25: 25 Now therefore, please pardon my sin, and turn again with me, that I may worship Yahweh.”

1 Samuel 15.26: 26 Samuel said to Saul, “I will not return with you; for you have rejected Yahweh’s word, and Yahweh has rejected you from being king over Israel.”

1 Samuel 15.27: 27 As Samuel turned around to go away, Saul grabbed the skirt of his robe, and it tore.

1 Samuel 15.28: 28 Samuel said to him, “Yahweh has torn the kingdom of Israel from you today, and has given it to a neighbor of yours who is better than you.

1 Samuel 15.29: 29 Also the Strength of Israel will not lie nor repent; for he is not a man, that he should repent.”

1 Samuel 15.30: 30 Then he said, “I have sinned; yet please honor me now before the elders of my people, and before Israel, and come back with me, that I may worship Yahweh your God.”

1 Samuel 15.31: 31 So Samuel went back with Saul; and Saul worshiped Yahweh.

1 Samuel 15.32: 32 Then Samuel said, “Bring Agag the king of the Amalekites here to me!”

Agag came to him cheerfully. Agag said, “Surely the bitterness of death is past.”

1 Samuel 15.33: 33 Samuel said, “As your sword has made women childless, so your mother will be childless among women!” Then Samuel cut Agag in pieces before Yahweh in Gilgal.

1 Samuel 15.34: 34 Then Samuel went to Ramah; and Saul went up to his house to Gibeah of Saul.

1 Samuel 15.35: 35 Samuel came no more to see Saul until the day of his death; for Samuel mourned for Saul: and Yahweh grieved that he had made Saul king over Israel.

1 Samuel 16.0:

16

1 Samuel 16.1: 1 Yahweh said to Samuel, “How long will you mourn for Saul, since I have rejected him from being king over Israel? Fill your horn with oil, and go. I will send you to Jesse the Bethlehemite; for I have provided a king for myself among his sons.”

1 Samuel 16.2: 2 Samuel said, “How can I go? If Saul hears it, he will kill me.”

Yahweh said, “Take a heifer with you, and say, I have come to sacrifice to Yahweh.

1 Samuel 16.3: 3 Call Jesse to the sacrifice, and I will show you what you shall do. You shall anoint to me him whom I name to you.”

1 Samuel 16.4: 4 Samuel did that which Yahweh spoke, and came to Bethlehem. The elders of the city came to meet him trembling, and said, “Do you come peaceably?”

1 Samuel 16.5: 5 He said, “Peaceably; I have come to sacrifice to Yahweh. Sanctify yourselves, and come with me to the sacrifice.” He sanctified Jesse and his sons, and called them to the sacrifice.

1 Samuel 16.6: 6 When they had come, he looked at Eliab, and said, “Surely Yahweh’s anointed is before him.”

1 Samuel 16.7: 7 But Yahweh said to Samuel, “Don’t look on his face, or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him; for I don’t see as man sees. For man looks at the outward appearance, but Yahweh looks at the heart.”

1 Samuel 16.8: 8 Then Jesse called Abinadab, and made him pass before Samuel. He said, “Yahweh has not chosen this one, either.”

1 Samuel 16.9: 9 Then Jesse made Shammah to pass by. He said, “Yahweh has not chosen this one, either.”

1 Samuel 16.10: 10 Jesse made seven of his sons to pass before Samuel. Samuel said to Jesse, “Yahweh has not chosen these.”

1 Samuel 16.11: 11 Samuel said to Jesse, “Are all your children here?”

He said, “There remains yet the youngest. Behold, he is keeping the sheep.”

Samuel said to Jesse, “Send and get him, for we will not sit down until he comes here.”

1 Samuel 16.12: 12 He sent, and brought him in. Now he was ruddy, with a handsome face and good appearance. Yahweh said, “Arise! Anoint him, for this is he.”

1 Samuel 16.13: 13 Then Samuel took the horn of oil, and anointed him in the middle of his brothers. Then Yahweh’s Spirit came mightily on David from that day forward. So Samuel rose up and went to Ramah.

1 Samuel 16.14: 14 Now Yahweh’s Spirit departed from Saul, and an evil spirit from Yahweh troubled him.

1 Samuel 16.15: 15 Saul’s servants said to him, “See now, an evil spirit from God troubles you.

1 Samuel 16.16: 16 Let our lord now command your servants who are in front of you to seek out a man who is a skillful player on the harp. Then when the evil spirit from God is on you, he will play with his hand, and you will be well.”

1 Samuel 16.17: 17 Saul said to his servants, “Provide me now a man who can play well, and bring him to me.”

1 Samuel 16.18: 18 Then one of the young men answered, and said, “Behold, I have seen a son of Jesse the Bethlehemite who is skillful in playing, a mighty man of valor, a man of war, prudent in speech, and a handsome person; and Yahweh is with him.”

1 Samuel 16.19: 19 Therefore Saul sent messengers to Jesse, and said, “Send me David your son, who is with the sheep.”

1 Samuel 16.20: 20 Jesse took a donkey loaded with bread, and a container of wine, and a young goat, and sent them by David his son to Saul.

1 Samuel 16.21: 21 David came to Saul, and stood before him. He loved him greatly; and he became his armor bearer.

1 Samuel 16.22: 22 Saul sent to Jesse, saying, “Please let David stand before me; for he has found favor in my sight.”

1 Samuel 16.23: 23 When the spirit from God was on Saul, David took the harp, and played with his hand; so Saul was refreshed, and was well, and the evil spirit departed from him.

1 Samuel 17.0:

17

1 Samuel 17.1: 1 Now the Philistines gathered together their armies to battle; and they were gathered together at Socoh, which belongs to Judah, and encamped between Socoh and Azekah, in Ephesdammim.

1 Samuel 17.2: 2 Saul and the men of Israel were gathered together, and encamped in the valley of Elah, and set the battle in array against the Philistines.

1 Samuel 17.3: 3 The Philistines stood on the mountain on the one side, and Israel stood on the mountain on the other side: and there was a valley between them.

1 Samuel 17.4: 4 A champion out of the camp of the Philistines named Goliath, of Gath, whose height was six cubits and a span went out.

1 Samuel 17.5: 5 He had a helmet of bronze on his head, and he wore a coat of mail; and the weight of the coat was five thousand shekels of bronze.

1 Samuel 17.6: 6 He had bronze shin armor on his legs, and a bronze javelin between his shoulders.

1 Samuel 17.7: 7 The staff of his spear was like a weaver’s beam; and his spear’s head weighed six hundred shekels of iron. His shield bearer went before him.

1 Samuel 17.8: 8 He stood and cried to the armies of Israel, and said to them, “Why have you come out to set your battle in array? Am I not a Philistine, and you servants to Saul? Choose a man for yourselves, and let him come down to me.

1 Samuel 17.9: 9 If he is able to fight with me and kill me, then will we be your servants; but if I prevail against him and kill him, then you will be our servants and serve us.”

1 Samuel 17.10: 10 The Philistine said, “I defy the armies of Israel today! Give me a man, that we may fight together!”

1 Samuel 17.11: 11 When Saul and all Israel heard those words of the Philistine, they were dismayed, and greatly afraid.

1 Samuel 17.12: 12 Now David was the son of that Ephrathite of Bethlehem Judah, whose name was Jesse; and he had eight sons. The man was an elderly old man in the days of Saul.

1 Samuel 17.13: 13 The three oldest sons of Jesse had gone after Saul to the battle: and the names of his three sons who went to the battle were Eliab the firstborn, and next to him Abinadab, and the third Shammah.

1 Samuel 17.14: 14 David was the youngest; and the three oldest followed Saul.

1 Samuel 17.15: 15 Now David went back and forth from Saul to feed his father’s sheep at Bethlehem.

1 Samuel 17.16: 16 The Philistine came near morning and evening, and presented himself forty days.

1 Samuel 17.17: 17 Jesse said to David his son, “Now take for your brothers an ephah of this parched grain, and these ten loaves, and carry them quickly to the camp to your brothers;

1 Samuel 17.18: 18 and bring these ten cheeses to the captain of their thousand, and see how your brothers are doing, and bring back news.”

1 Samuel 17.19: 19 Now Saul, and they, and all the men of Israel, were in the valley of Elah, fighting with the Philistines.

1 Samuel 17.20: 20 David rose up early in the morning, and left the sheep with a keeper, and took and went, as Jesse had commanded him. He came to the place of the wagons, as the army which was going out to the fight shouted for the battle.

1 Samuel 17.21: 21 Israel and the Philistines put the battle in array, army against army.

1 Samuel 17.22: 22 David left his baggage in the hand of the keeper of the baggage, and ran to the army, and came and greeted his brothers.

1 Samuel 17.23: 23 As he talked with them, behold, the champion, the Philistine of Gath, Goliath by name, came up out of the ranks of the Philistines, and said the same words; and David heard them.

1 Samuel 17.24: 24 All the men of Israel, when they saw the man, fled from him, and were terrified.

1 Samuel 17.25: 25 The men of Israel said, “Have you seen this man who has come up? He has surely come up to defy Israel. The king will give great riches to the man who kills him, and will give him his daughter, and make his father’s house free in Israel.”

1 Samuel 17.26: 26 David spoke to the men who stood by him, saying, “What shall be done to the man who kills this Philistine, and takes away the reproach from Israel? For who is this uncircumcised Philistine, that he should defy the armies of the living God?”

1 Samuel 17.27: 27 The people answered him in this way, saying, “So shall it be done to the man who kills him.”

1 Samuel 17.28: 28 Eliab his oldest brother heard when he spoke to the men; and Eliab’s anger burned against David, and he said, “Why have you come down? With whom have you left those few sheep in the wilderness? I know your pride, and the naughtiness of your heart; for you have come down that you might see the battle.”

1 Samuel 17.29: 29 David said, “What have I now done? Is there not a cause?”

1 Samuel 17.30: 30 He turned away from him toward another, and spoke like that again; and the people answered him again the same way.

1 Samuel 17.31: 31 When the words were heard which David spoke, they rehearsed them before Saul; and he sent for him.

1 Samuel 17.32: 32 David said to Saul, “Let no man’s heart fail because of him. Your servant will go and fight with this Philistine.”

1 Samuel 17.33: 33 Saul said to David, “You are not able to go against this Philistine to fight with him; for you are but a youth, and he a man of war from his youth.”

1 Samuel 17.34: 34 David said to Saul, “Your servant was keeping his father’s sheep; and when a lion or a bear came, and took a lamb out of the flock,

1 Samuel 17.35: 35 I went out after him, and struck him, and rescued it out of his mouth. When he arose against me, I caught him by his beard, and struck him, and killed him.

1 Samuel 17.36: 36 Your servant struck both the lion and the bear. This uncircumcised Philistine shall be as one of them, since he has defied the armies of the living God.”

1 Samuel 17.37: 37 David said, “Yahweh who delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the paw of the bear, he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine.”

Saul said to David, “Go! Yahweh will be with you.”

1 Samuel 17.38: 38 Saul dressed David with his clothing. He put a helmet of bronze on his head, and he clad him with a coat of mail.

1 Samuel 17.39: 39 David strapped his sword on his clothing, and he tried to move; for he had not tested it. David said to Saul, “I can’t go with these; for I have not tested them.” Then David took them off.

1 Samuel 17.40: 40 He took his staff in his hand, and chose for himself five smooth stones out of the brook, and put them in the pouch of his shepherd’s bag which he had. His sling was in his hand; and he came near to the Philistine.

1 Samuel 17.41: 41 The Philistine walked and came near to David; and the man who bore the shield went before him.

1 Samuel 17.42: 42 When the Philistine looked around, and saw David, he disdained him; for he was but a youth, and ruddy, and had a good looking face.

1 Samuel 17.43: 43 The Philistine said to David, “Am I a dog, that you come to me with sticks?” The Philistine cursed David by his gods.

1 Samuel 17.44: 44 The Philistine said to David, “Come to me, and I will give your flesh to the birds of the sky, and to the animals of the field.”

1 Samuel 17.45: 45 Then David said to the Philistine, “You come to me with a sword, with a spear, and with a javelin; but I come to you in the name of Yahweh of Armies, the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied.

1 Samuel 17.46: 46 Today, Yahweh will deliver you into my hand. I will strike you, and take your head from off you. I will give the dead bodies of the army of the Philistines today to the birds of the sky, and to the wild animals of the earth; that all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel,

1 Samuel 17.47: 47 and that all this assembly may know that Yahweh doesn’t save with sword and spear; for the battle is Yahweh’s, and he will give you into our hand.”

1 Samuel 17.48: 48 When the Philistine arose, and walked and came near to meet David, David hurried, and ran toward the army to meet the Philistine.

1 Samuel 17.49: 49 David put his hand in his bag, took a stone, and slung it, and struck the Philistine in his forehead. The stone sank into his forehead, and he fell on his face to the earth.

1 Samuel 17.50: 50 So David prevailed over the Philistine with a sling and with a stone, and struck the Philistine, and killed him; but there was no sword in the hand of David.

1 Samuel 17.51: 51 Then David ran, stood over the Philistine, took his sword, drew it out of its sheath, killed him, and cut off his head with it. When the Philistines saw that their champion was dead, they fled.

1 Samuel 17.52: 52 The men of Israel and of Judah arose and shouted, and pursued the Philistines as far as Gai and to the gates of Ekron. The wounded of the Philistines fell down by the way to Shaaraim, even to Gath and to Ekron.

1 Samuel 17.53: 53 The children of Israel returned from chasing after the Philistines and they plundered their camp.

1 Samuel 17.54: 54 David took the head of the Philistine, and brought it to Jerusalem; but he put his armor in his tent.

1 Samuel 17.55: 55 When Saul saw David go out against the Philistine, he said to Abner, the captain of the army, “Abner, whose son is this youth?”

Abner said, “As your soul lives, O king, I can’t tell.”

1 Samuel 17.56: 56 The king said, “Inquire whose son the young man is!”

1 Samuel 17.57: 57 As David returned from the slaughter of the Philistine, Abner took him and brought him before Saul with the head of the Philistine in his hand.

1 Samuel 17.58: 58 Saul said to him, “Whose son are you, you young man?”

David answered, “I am the son of your servant Jesse the Bethlehemite.”

1 Samuel 18.0:

18

1 Samuel 18.1: 1 When he had finished speaking to Saul, the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul.

1 Samuel 18.2: 2 Saul took him that day, and wouldn’t let him go home to his father’s house any more.

1 Samuel 18.3: 3 Then Jonathan and David made a covenant, because he loved him as his own soul.

1 Samuel 18.4: 4 Jonathan stripped himself of the robe that was on him, and gave it to David, and his clothing, even including his sword, his bow, and his sash.

1 Samuel 18.5: 5 David went out wherever Saul sent him, and behaved himself wisely; and Saul set him over the men of war. It was good in the sight of all the people, and also in the sight of Saul’s servants.

1 Samuel 18.6: 6 As they came, when David returned from the slaughter of the Philistine, the women came out of all the cities of Israel, singing and dancing, to meet king Saul, with tambourines, with joy, and with instruments of music.

1 Samuel 18.7: 7 The women sang to one another as they played, and said,

“Saul has slain his thousands,

and David his ten thousands.”

1 Samuel 18.8: 8 Saul was very angry, and this saying displeased him. He said, “They have creditd David with ten thousands, and they have only credited me with thousands. What can he have more but the kingdom?”

1 Samuel 18.9: 9 Saul watched David from that day and forward.

1 Samuel 18.10: 10 On the next day, an evil spirit from God came mightily on Saul, and he prophesied in the middle of the house. David played with his hand, as he did day by day. Saul had his spear in his hand;

1 Samuel 18.11: 11 and Saul threw the spear, for he said, “I will pin David to the wall!” David escaped from his presence twice.

1 Samuel 18.12: 12 Saul was afraid of David, because Yahweh was with him, and had departed from Saul.

1 Samuel 18.13: 13 Therefore Saul removed him from his presence, and made him his captain over a thousand; and he went out and came in before the people.

1 Samuel 18.14: 14 David behaved himself wisely in all his ways; and Yahweh was with him.

1 Samuel 18.15: 15 When Saul saw that he behaved himself very wisely, he stood in awe of him.

1 Samuel 18.16: 16 But all Israel and Judah loved David; for he went out and came in before them.

1 Samuel 18.17: 17 Saul said to David, “Behold, my elder daughter Merab, I will give her to you as wife. Only be valiant for me, and fight Yahweh’s battles.” For Saul said, “Don’t let my hand be on him, but let the hand of the Philistines be on him.”

1 Samuel 18.18: 18 David said to Saul, “Who am I, and what is my life, or my father’s family in Israel, that I should be son-in-law to the king?”

1 Samuel 18.19: 19 But at the time when Merab, Saul’s daughter, should have been given to David, she was given to Adriel the Meholathite as wife.

1 Samuel 18.20: 20 Michal, Saul’s daughter, loved David; and they told Saul, and the thing pleased him.

1 Samuel 18.21: 21 Saul said, I will give her to him, that she may be a snare to him, and that the hand of the Philistines may be against him. Therefore Saul said to David, “You shall today be my son-in-law a second time.”

1 Samuel 18.22: 22 Saul commanded his servants, “Talk with David secretly, and say, ‘Behold, the king has delight in you, and all his servants love you. Now therefore be the king’s son-in-law.’”

1 Samuel 18.23: 23 Saul’s servants spoke those words in the ears of David. David said, “Does it seem to you a light thing to be the king’s son-in-law, since I am a poor man, and little known?”

1 Samuel 18.24: 24 The servants of Saul told him, saying, “David spoke like this.”

1 Samuel 18.25: 25 Saul said, “Tell David, ‘The king desires no dowry except one hundred foreskins of the Philistines, to be avenged of the king’s enemies.’” Now Saul thought he would make David fall by the hand of the Philistines.

1 Samuel 18.26: 26 When his servants told David these words, it pleased David well to be the king’s son-in-law. Before the deadline,

1 Samuel 18.27: 27 David arose and went, he and his men, and killed two hundred men of the Philistines. Then David brought their foreskins, and they gave them in full number to the king, that he might be the king’s son-in-law. Then Saul gave him Michal his daughter as wife.

1 Samuel 18.28: 28 Saul saw and knew that Yahweh was with David; and Michal, Saul’s daughter, loved him.

1 Samuel 18.29: 29 Saul was even more afraid of David; and Saul was David’s enemy continually.

1 Samuel 18.30: 30 Then the princes of the Philistines went out; and as often as they went out, David behaved himself more wisely than all the servants of Saul, so that his name was highly esteemed.

1 Samuel 19.0:

19

1 Samuel 19.1: 1 Saul spoke to Jonathan his son, and to all his servants, that they should kill David. But Jonathan, Saul’s son, greatly delighted in David.

1 Samuel 19.2: 2 Jonathan told David, saying, “Saul my father seeks to kill you. Now therefore, please take care of yourself in the morning, and live in a secret place, and hide yourself.

1 Samuel 19.3: 3 I will go out and stand beside my father in the field where you are, and I will talk with my father about you; and if I see anything, I will tell you.”

1 Samuel 19.4: 4 Jonathan spoke good of David to Saul his father, and said to him, “Don’t let the king sin against his servant, against David; because he has not sinned against you, and because his works have been very good toward you;

1 Samuel 19.5: 5 for he put his life in his hand, and struck the Philistine, and Yahweh worked a great victory for all Israel. You saw it, and rejoiced. Why then will you sin against innocent blood, to kill David without a cause?”

1 Samuel 19.6: 6 Saul listened to the voice of Jonathan: and Saul swore, “As Yahweh lives, he shall not be put to death.”

1 Samuel 19.7: 7 Jonathan called David, and Jonathan showed him all those things. Then Jonathan brought David to Saul, and he was in his presence, as before.

1 Samuel 19.8: 8 There was war again. David went out, and fought with the Philistines, and killed them with a great slaughter; and they fled before him.

1 Samuel 19.9: 9 An evil spirit from Yahweh was on Saul, as he sat in his house with his spear in his hand; and David was playing with his hand.

1 Samuel 19.10: 10 Saul sought to pin David to the wall with the spear; but he slipped away out of Saul’s presence, and he stuck the spear into the wall. David fled, and escaped that night.

1 Samuel 19.11: 11 Saul sent messengers to David’s house, to watch him, and to kill him in the morning. Michal, David’s wife, told him, saying, “If you don’t save your life tonight, tomorrow you will be killed.”

1 Samuel 19.12: 12 So Michal let David down through the window. He went away, fled, and escaped.

1 Samuel 19.13: 13 Michal took the teraphim, and laid it in the bed, and put a pillow of goats’ hair at its head, and covered it with clothes.

1 Samuel 19.14: 14 When Saul sent messengers to take David, she said, “He is sick.”

1 Samuel 19.15: 15 Saul sent the messengers to see David, saying, “Bring him up to me in the bed, that I may kill him.”

1 Samuel 19.16: 16 When the messengers came in, behold, the teraphim was in the bed, with the pillow of goats’ hair at its head.

1 Samuel 19.17: 17 Saul said to Michal, “Why have you deceived me like this and let my enemy go, so that he has escaped?”

Michal answered Saul, “He said to me, ‘Let me go! Why should I kill you?’”

1 Samuel 19.18: 18 Now David fled and escaped, and came to Samuel at Ramah, and told him all that Saul had done to him. He and Samuel went and lived in Naioth.

1 Samuel 19.19: 19 Saul was told, saying, “Behold, David is at Naioth in Ramah.”

1 Samuel 19.20: 20 Saul sent messengers to seize David: and when they saw the company of the prophets prophesying, and Samuel standing as head over them, God’s Spirit came on Saul’s messengers, and they also prophesied.

1 Samuel 19.21: 21 When Saul was told, he sent other messengers, and they also prophesied. Saul sent messengers again the third time, and they also prophesied.

1 Samuel 19.22: 22 Then he also went to Ramah, and came to the great well that is in Secu: and he asked, “Where are Samuel and David?”

One said, “Behold, they are at Naioth in Ramah.”

1 Samuel 19.23: 23 He went there to Naioth in Ramah. Then God’s Spirit came on him also, and he went on, and prophesied, until he came to Naioth in Ramah.

1 Samuel 19.24: 24 He also stripped off his clothes, and he also prophesied before Samuel, and lay down naked all that day and all that night. Therefore they say, “Is Saul also among the prophets?”

1 Samuel 20.0:

20

1 Samuel 20.1: 1 David fled from Naioth in Ramah, and came and said before Jonathan, “What have I done? What is my iniquity? What is my sin before your father, that he seeks my life?”

1 Samuel 20.2: 2 He said to him, “Far from it; you will not die. Behold, my father does nothing either great or small, but that he discloses it to me. Why would my father hide this thing from me? It is not so.”

1 Samuel 20.3: 3 David swore moreover, and said, “Your father knows well that I have found favor in your eyes; and he says, ‘Don’t let Jonathan know this, lest he be grieved;’ but truly as Yahweh lives, and as your soul lives, there is but a step between me and death.”

1 Samuel 20.4: 4 Then Jonathan said to David, “Whatever your soul desires, I will even do it for you.”

1 Samuel 20.5: 5 David said to Jonathan, “Behold, tomorrow is the new moon, and I should not fail to dine with the king; but let me go, that I may hide myself in the field to the third day at evening.

1 Samuel 20.6: 6 If your father misses me at all, then say, ‘David earnestly asked leave of me that he might run to Bethlehem his city; for it is the yearly sacrifice there for all the family.’

1 Samuel 20.7: 7 If he says, ‘It is well,’ your servant shall have peace; but if he is angry, then know that evil is determined by him.

1 Samuel 20.8: 8 Therefore deal kindly with your servant; for you have brought your servant into a covenant of Yahweh with you; but if there is iniquity in me, kill me yourself; for why should you bring me to your father?”

1 Samuel 20.9: 9 Jonathan said, “Far be it from you; for if I should at all know that evil were determined by my father to come on you, then wouldn’t I tell you that?”

1 Samuel 20.10: 10 Then David said to Jonathan, “Who will tell me if your father answers you roughly?”

1 Samuel 20.11: 11 Jonathan said to David, “Come! Let’s go out into the field.” They both went out into the field.

1 Samuel 20.12: 12 Jonathan said to David, “By Yahweh, the God of Israel, when I have sounded my father about this time tomorrow, or the third day, behold, if there is good toward David, won’t I then send to you, and disclose it to you?

1 Samuel 20.13: 13 Yahweh do so to Jonathan, and more also, should it please my father to do you evil, if I don’t disclose it to you, and send you away, that you may go in peace. May Yahweh be with you, as he has been with my father.

1 Samuel 20.14: 14 You shall not only show me the loving kindness of Yahweh while I still live, that I not die;

1 Samuel 20.15: 15 but you shall also not cut off your kindness from my house forever; no, not when Yahweh has cut off every one of the enemies of David from the surface of the earth.”

1 Samuel 20.16: 16 So Jonathan made a covenant with David’s house, saying, “Yahweh will require it at the hand of David’s enemies.”

1 Samuel 20.17: 17 Jonathan caused David to swear again, for the love that he had to him; for he loved him as he loved his own soul.

1 Samuel 20.18: 18 Then Jonathan said to him, “Tomorrow is the new moon, and you will be missed, because your seat will be empty.

1 Samuel 20.19: 19 When you have stayed three days, go down quickly, and come to the place where you hid yourself when this started, and remain by the stone Ezel.

1 Samuel 20.20: 20 I will shoot three arrows on its side, as though I shot at a mark.

1 Samuel 20.21: 21 Behold, I will send the boy, saying, ‘Go, find the arrows!’ If I tell the boy, ‘Behold, the arrows are on this side of you. Take them;’ then come; for there is peace to you and no danger, as Yahweh lives.

1 Samuel 20.22: 22 But if I say this to the boy, ‘Behold, the arrows are beyond you;’ then go your way; for Yahweh has sent you away.

1 Samuel 20.23: 23 Concerning the matter which you and I have spoken of, behold, Yahweh is between you and me forever.”

1 Samuel 20.24: 24 So David hid himself in the field. When the new moon had come, the king sat himself down to eat food.

1 Samuel 20.25: 25 The king sat on his seat, as at other times, even on the seat by the wall; and Jonathan stood up, and Abner sat by Saul’s side, but David’s place was empty.

1 Samuel 20.26: 26 Nevertheless Saul didn’t say anything that day, for he thought, “Something has happened to him. He is not clean. Surely he is not clean.”

1 Samuel 20.27: 27 On the next day after the new moon, the second day, David’s place was empty. Saul said to Jonathan his son, “Why doesn’t the son of Jesse come to eat, either yesterday, or today?”

1 Samuel 20.28: 28 Jonathan answered Saul, “David earnestly asked permission of me to go to Bethlehem.

1 Samuel 20.29: 29 He said, ‘Please let me go, for our family has a sacrifice in the city. My brother has commanded me to be there. Now, if I have found favor in your eyes, please let me go away and see my brothers.’ Therefore he has not come to the king’s table.”

1 Samuel 20.30: 30 Then Saul’s anger burned against Jonathan, and he said to him, “You son of a perverse rebellious woman, don’t I know that you have chosen the son of Jesse to your own shame, and to the shame of your mother’s nakedness?

1 Samuel 20.31: 31 For as long as the son of Jesse lives on the earth, you will not be established, nor will your kingdom. Therefore now send and bring him to me, for he shall surely die!”

1 Samuel 20.32: 32 Jonathan answered Saul his father, and said to him, “Why should he be put to death? What has he done?”

1 Samuel 20.33: 33 Saul cast his spear at him to strike him. By this Jonathan knew that his father was determined to put David to death.

1 Samuel 20.34: 34 So Jonathan arose from the table in fierce anger, and ate no food the second day of the month; for he was grieved for David, because his father had treated him shamefully.

1 Samuel 20.35: 35 In the morning, Jonathan went out into the field at the time appointed with David, and a little boy with him.

1 Samuel 20.36: 36 He said to his boy, “Run, find now the arrows which I shoot.” As the boy ran, he shot an arrow beyond him.

1 Samuel 20.37: 37 When the boy had come to the place of the arrow which Jonathan had shot, Jonathan cried after the boy, and said, “Isn’t the arrow beyond you?”

1 Samuel 20.38: 38 Jonathan cried after the boy, “Go fast! Hurry! Don’t delay!” Jonathan’s boy gathered up the arrows, and came to his master.

1 Samuel 20.39: 39 But the boy didn’t know anything. Only Jonathan and David knew the matter.

1 Samuel 20.40: 40 Jonathan gave his weapons to his boy, and said to him, “Go, carry them to the city.”

1 Samuel 20.41: 41 As soon as the boy was gone, David arose out of the south, and fell on his face to the ground, and bowed himself three times. They kissed one another, and wept one with another, and David wept the most.

1 Samuel 20.42: 42 Jonathan said to David, “Go in peace, because we have both sworn in Yahweh’s name, saying, ‘Yahweh is between me and you, and between my offspring and your offspring, forever.’” He arose and departed; and Jonathan went into the city.

1 Samuel 21.0:

21

1 Samuel 21.1: 1 Then David came to Nob to Ahimelech the priest. Ahimelech came to meet David trembling, and said to him, “Why are you alone, and no man with you?”

1 Samuel 21.2: 2 David said to Ahimelech the priest, “The king has commanded me to do something, and has said to me, ‘Let no one know anything about the business about which I send you, and what I have commanded you. I have sent the young men to a certain place.’

1 Samuel 21.3: 3 Now therefore what is under your hand? Please give me five loaves of bread in my hand, or whatever is available.”

1 Samuel 21.4: 4 The priest answered David, and said, “I have no common bread, but there is holy bread; if only the young men have kept themselves from women.”

1 Samuel 21.5: 5 David answered the priest, and said to him, “Truly, women have been kept from us as usual these three days. When I came out, the vessels of the young men were holy, though it was only a common journey. How much more then today shall their vessels be holy?”

1 Samuel 21.6: 6 So the priest gave him holy bread; for there was no bread there but the show bread that was taken from before Yahweh, to put hot bread in the day when it was taken away.

1 Samuel 21.7: 7 Now a certain man of the servants of Saul was there that day, detained before Yahweh; and his name was Doeg the Edomite, the best of the herdsmen who belonged to Saul.

1 Samuel 21.8: 8 David said to Ahimelech, “Isn’t there here under your hand spear or sword? For I have neither brought my sword nor my weapons with me, because the king’s business required haste.”

1 Samuel 21.9: 9 The priest said, “Behold, the sword of Goliath the Philistine, whom you killed in the valley of Elah, is here wrapped in a cloth behind the ephod. If you would like to take that, take it; for there is no other except that here.”

David said, “There is none like that. Give it to me.”

1 Samuel 21.10: 10 David arose, and fled that day for fear of Saul, and went to Achish the king of Gath.

1 Samuel 21.11: 11 The servants of Achish said to him, “Isn’t this David the king of the land? Didn’t they sing to one another about him in dances, saying,

‘Saul has slain his thousands,

and David his ten thousands?’”

1 Samuel 21.12: 12 David laid up these words in his heart, and was very afraid of Achish the king of Gath.

1 Samuel 21.13: 13 He changed his behavior before them, and pretended to be insane in their hands, and scribbled on the doors of the gate, and let his spittle fall down on his beard.

1 Samuel 21.14: 14 Then Achish said to his servants, “Look, you see the man is insane. Why then have you brought him to me?

1 Samuel 21.15: 15 Do I lack madmen, that you have brought this fellow to play the madman in my presence? Should this fellow come into my house?”

1 Samuel 22.0:

22

1 Samuel 22.1: 1 David therefore departed from there, and escaped to Adullam’s cave. When his brothers and all his father’s house heard it, they went down there to him.

1 Samuel 22.2: 2 Everyone who was in distress, everyone who was in debt, and everyone who was discontented, gathered themselves to him; and he became captain over them. There were with him about four hundred men.

1 Samuel 22.3: 3 David went from there to Mizpeh of Moab, and he said to the king of Moab, “Please let my father and my mother come out with you, until I know what God will do for me.”

1 Samuel 22.4: 4 He brought them before the king of Moab; and they lived with him all the time that David was in the stronghold.

1 Samuel 22.5: 5 The prophet Gad said to David, “Don’t stay in the stronghold. Depart, and go into the land of Judah.”

Then David departed, and came into the forest of Hereth.

1 Samuel 22.6: 6 Saul heard that David was discovered, with the men who were with him. Now Saul was sitting in Gibeah, under the tamarisk tree in Ramah, with his spear in his hand, and all his servants were standing around him.

1 Samuel 22.7: 7 Saul said to his servants who stood around him, “Hear now, you Benjamites! Will the son of Jesse give everyone of you fields and vineyards? Will he make you all captains of thousands and captains of hundreds,

1 Samuel 22.8: 8 that all of you have conspired against me, and there is no one who discloses to me when my son makes a treaty with the son of Jesse, and there is none of you who is sorry for me, or discloses to me that my son has stirred up my servant against me, to lie in wait, as it is today?”

1 Samuel 22.9: 9 Then Doeg the Edomite, who stood by the servants of Saul, answered and said, “I saw the son of Jesse coming to Nob, to Ahimelech the son of Ahitub.

1 Samuel 22.10: 10 He inquired of Yahweh for him, gave him food, and gave him the sword of Goliath the Philistine.”

1 Samuel 22.11: 11 Then the king sent to call Ahimelech the priest, the son of Ahitub, and all his father’s house, the priests who were in Nob; and they all came to the king.

1 Samuel 22.12: 12 Saul said, “Hear now, you son of Ahitub.”

He answered, “Here I am, my lord.”

1 Samuel 22.13: 13 Saul said to him, “Why have you conspired against me, you and the son of Jesse, in that you have given him bread, and a sword, and have inquired of God for him, that he should rise against me, to lie in wait, as it is today?”

1 Samuel 22.14: 14 Then Ahimelech answered the king, and said, “Who among all your servants is so faithful as David, who is the king’s son-in-law, captain of your body guard, and honored in your house?

1 Samuel 22.15: 15 Have I today begun to inquire of God for him? Be it far from me! Don’t let the king impute anything to his servant, nor to all the house of my father; for your servant knows nothing of all this, less or more.”

1 Samuel 22.16: 16 The king said, “You shall surely die, Ahimelech, you, and all your father’s house.”

1 Samuel 22.17: 17 The king said to the guard who stood about him, “Turn, and kill the priests of Yahweh; because their hand also is with David, and because they knew that he fled, and didn’t disclose it to me.” But the servants of the king wouldn’t put out their hand to fall on the priests of Yahweh.

1 Samuel 22.18: 18 The king said to Doeg, “Turn and attack the priests!”

Doeg the Edomite turned, and he attacked the priests, and he killed on that day eighty-five people who wore a linen ephod.

1 Samuel 22.19: 19 He struck Nob, the city of the priests, with the edge of the sword, both men and women, children and nursing babies, and cattle and donkeys and sheep, with the edge of the sword.

1 Samuel 22.20: 20 One of the sons of Ahimelech, the son of Ahitub, named Abiathar, escaped, and fled after David.

1 Samuel 22.21: 21 Abiathar told David that Saul had slain Yahweh’s priests.

1 Samuel 22.22: 22 David said to Abiathar, “I knew on that day, when Doeg the Edomite was there, that he would surely tell Saul. I am responsible for the death of all the persons of your father’s house.

1 Samuel 22.23: 23 Stay with me. Don’t be afraid, for he who seeks my life seeks your life. For you will be safe with me.”

1 Samuel 23.0:

23

1 Samuel 23.1: 1 David was told, “Behold, the Philistines are fighting against Keilah, and are robbing the threshing floors.”

1 Samuel 23.2: 2 Therefore David inquired of Yahweh, saying, “Shall I go and strike these Philistines?”

Yahweh said to David, “Go strike the Philistines, and save Keilah.”

1 Samuel 23.3: 3 David’s men said to him, “Behold, we are afraid here in Judah. How much more then if we go to Keilah against the armies of the Philistines?”

1 Samuel 23.4: 4 Then David inquired of Yahweh yet again. Yahweh answered him, and said, “Arise, go down to Keilah; for I will deliver the Philistines into your hand.”

1 Samuel 23.5: 5 David and his men went to Keilah, and fought with the Philistines, and brought away their livestock, and killed them with a great slaughter. So David saved the inhabitants of Keilah.

1 Samuel 23.6: 6 When Abiathar the son of Ahimelech fled to David to Keilah, he came down with an ephod in his hand.

1 Samuel 23.7: 7 Saul was told that David had come to Keilah. Saul said, “God has delivered him into my hand; for he is shut in by entering into a town that has gates and bars.”

1 Samuel 23.8: 8 Saul summoned all the people to war, to go down to Keilah, to besiege David and his men.

1 Samuel 23.9: 9 David knew that Saul was devising mischief against him; and he said to Abiathar the priest, “Bring the ephod here.”

1 Samuel 23.10: 10 Then David said, “O Yahweh, the God of Israel, your servant has surely heard that Saul seeks to come to Keilah, to destroy the city for my sake.

1 Samuel 23.11: 11 Will the men of Keilah deliver me up into his hand? Will Saul come down, as your servant has heard? Yahweh, the God of Israel, I beg you, tell your servant.”

Yahweh said, “He will come down.”

1 Samuel 23.12: 12 Then David said, “Will the men of Keilah deliver me and my men into the hand of Saul?”

Yahweh said, “They will deliver you up.”

1 Samuel 23.13: 13 Then David and his men, who were about six hundred, arose and departed out of Keilah, and went wherever they could go. Saul was told that David was escaped from Keilah; and he gave up going there.

1 Samuel 23.14: 14 David stayed in the wilderness in the strongholds, and remained in the hill country in the wilderness of Ziph. Saul sought him every day, but God didn’t deliver him into his hand.

1 Samuel 23.15: 15 David saw that Saul had come out to seek his life. David was in the wilderness of Ziph in the wood.

1 Samuel 23.16: 16 Jonathan, Saul’s son, arose, and went to David into the woods, and strengthened his hand in God.

1 Samuel 23.17: 17 He said to him, “Don’t be afraid; for the hand of Saul my father won’t find you; and you will be king over Israel, and I will be next to you; and Saul my father knows that also.”

1 Samuel 23.18: 18 They both made a covenant before Yahweh. Then David stayed in the woods, and Jonathan went to his house.

1 Samuel 23.19: 19 Then the Ziphites came up to Saul to Gibeah, saying, “Doesn’t David hide himself with us in the strongholds in the woods, in the hill of Hachilah, which is on the south of the desert?

1 Samuel 23.20: 20 Now therefore, O king, come down. According to all the desire of your soul to come down; and our part will be to deliver him up into the king’s hand.”

1 Samuel 23.21: 21 Saul said, “You are blessed by Yahweh; for you have had compassion on me.

1 Samuel 23.22: 22 Please go make yet more sure, and know and see his place where his haunt is, and who has seen him there; for I have been told that he is very cunning.

1 Samuel 23.23: 23 See therefore, and take knowledge of all the lurking places where he hides himself, and come again to me with certainty, and I will go with you. It shall happen, if he is in the land, that I will search him out among all the thousands of Judah.”

1 Samuel 23.24: 24 They arose, and went to Ziph before Saul: but David and his men were in the wilderness of Maon, in the Arabah on the south of the desert.

1 Samuel 23.25: 25 Saul and his men went to seek him. When David was told, he went down to the rock, and stayed in the wilderness of Maon. When Saul heard that, he pursued David in the wilderness of Maon.

1 Samuel 23.26: 26 Saul went on this side of the mountain, and David and his men on that side of the mountain; and David hurried to get away for fear of Saul; for Saul and his men surrounded David and his men to take them.

1 Samuel 23.27: 27 But a messenger came to Saul, saying, “Hurry and come; for the Philistines have made a raid on the land!”

1 Samuel 23.28: 28 So Saul returned from pursuing David, and went against the Philistines. Therefore they called that place Sela Hammahlekoth.

1 Samuel 23.29: 29 David went up from there, and lived in the strongholds of En Gedi.

1 Samuel 24.0:

24

1 Samuel 24.1: 1 When Saul had returned from following the Philistines, he was told, “Behold, David is in the wilderness of En Gedi.”

1 Samuel 24.2: 2 Then Saul took three thousand chosen men out of all Israel, and went to seek David and his men on the rocks of the wild goats.

1 Samuel 24.3: 3 He came to the sheep pens by the way, where there was a cave; and Saul went in to relieve himself. Now David and his men were staying in the innermost parts of the cave.

1 Samuel 24.4: 4 David’s men said to him, “Behold, the day of which Yahweh said to you, ‘Behold, I will deliver your enemy into your hand, and you shall do to him as it shall seem good to you.’” Then David arose, and cut off the skirt of Saul’s robe secretly.

1 Samuel 24.5: 5 Afterward, David’s heart struck him, because he had cut off Saul’s skirt.

1 Samuel 24.6: 6 He said to his men, “Yahweh forbid that I should do this thing to my lord, Yahweh’s anointed, to stretch out my hand against him, since he is Yahweh’s anointed.”

1 Samuel 24.7: 7 So David checked his men with these words, and didn’t allow them to rise against Saul. Saul rose up out of the cave, and went on his way.

1 Samuel 24.8: 8 David also arose afterward, and went out of the cave, and cried after Saul, saying, “My lord the king!”

When Saul looked behind him, David bowed with his face to the earth, and showed respect.

1 Samuel 24.9: 9 David said to Saul, “Why do you listen to men’s words, saying, ‘Behold, David seeks to harm you?’

1 Samuel 24.10: 10 Behold, today your eyes have seen how Yahweh had delivered you today into my hand in the cave. Some urged me to kill you; but I spared you; and I said, I will not stretch out my hand against my lord; for he is Yahweh’s anointed.

1 Samuel 24.11: 11 Moreover, my father, behold, yes, see the skirt of your robe in my hand; for in that I cut off the skirt of your robe, and didn’t kill you, know and see that there is neither evil nor disobedience in my hand, and I have not sinned against you, though you hunt for my life to take it.

1 Samuel 24.12: 12 May Yahweh judge between me and you, and may Yahweh avenge me of you; but my hand will not be on you.

1 Samuel 24.13: 13 As the proverb of the ancients says, ‘Out of the wicked comes wickedness;’ but my hand will not be on you.

1 Samuel 24.14: 14 Against whom has the king of Israel come out? Whom do you pursue? A dead dog? A flea?

1 Samuel 24.15: 15 May Yahweh therefore be judge, and give sentence between me and you, and see, and plead my cause, and deliver me out of your hand.”

1 Samuel 24.16: 16 It came to pass, when David had finished speaking these words to Saul, that Saul said, “Is that your voice, my son David?” Saul lifted up his voice, and wept.

1 Samuel 24.17: 17 He said to David, “You are more righteous than I; for you have done good to me, whereas I have done evil to you.

1 Samuel 24.18: 18 You have declared today how you have dealt well with me, because when Yahweh had delivered me up into your hand, you didn’t kill me.

1 Samuel 24.19: 19 For if a man finds his enemy, will he let him go away unharmed? Therefore may Yahweh reward you good for that which you have done to me today.

1 Samuel 24.20: 20 Now, behold, I know that you will surely be king, and that the kingdom of Israel will be established in your hand.

1 Samuel 24.21: 21 Swear now therefore to me by Yahweh, that you will not cut off my offspring after me, and that you will not destroy my name out of my father’s house.”

1 Samuel 24.22: 22 David swore to Saul. Saul went home, but David and his men went up to the stronghold.

1 Samuel 25.0:

25

1 Samuel 25.1: 1 Samuel died; and all Israel gathered themselves together, and mourned for him, and buried him at his house at Ramah.

Then David arose, and went down to the wilderness of Paran.

1 Samuel 25.2: 2 There was a man in Maon, whose possessions were in Carmel; and the man was very great. He had three thousand sheep and a thousand goats; and he was shearing his sheep in Carmel.

1 Samuel 25.3: 3 Now the name of the man was Nabal; and the name of his wife Abigail. This woman was intelligent and had a beautiful face; but the man was surly and evil in his doings. He was of the house of Caleb.

1 Samuel 25.4: 4 David heard in the wilderness that Nabal was shearing his sheep.

1 Samuel 25.5: 5 David sent ten young men, and David said to the young men, “Go up to Carmel, and go to Nabal, and greet him in my name.

1 Samuel 25.6: 6 Tell him, ‘Long life to you! Peace be to you! Peace be to your house! Peace be to all that you have!

1 Samuel 25.7: 7 Now I have heard that you have shearers. Your shepherds have now been with us, and we didn’t harm them. Nothing was missing from them all the time they were in Carmel.

1 Samuel 25.8: 8 Ask your young men, and they will tell you. Therefore let the young men find favor in your eyes; for we come on a good day. Please give whatever comes to your hand, to your servants, and to your son David.’”

1 Samuel 25.9: 9 When David’s young men came, they spoke to Nabal all those words in the name of David, and waited.

1 Samuel 25.10: 10 Nabal answered David’s servants, and said, “Who is David? Who is the son of Jesse? There are many servants who break away from their masters these days.

1 Samuel 25.11: 11 Shall I then take my bread, my water, and my meat that I have killed for my shearers, and give it to men who I don’t know where they come from?”

1 Samuel 25.12: 12 So David’s young men turned on their way, and went back, and came and told him all these words.

1 Samuel 25.13: 13 David said to his men, “Every man put on his sword!”

Every man put on his sword. David also put on his sword. About four hundred men followed David, and two hundred stayed by the baggage.

1 Samuel 25.14: 14 But one of the young men told Abigail, Nabal’s wife, saying, “Behold, David sent messengers out of the wilderness to Greet our master; and he insulted them.

1 Samuel 25.15: 15 But the men were very good to us, and we were not harmed, and we didn’t miss anything, as long as we went with them, when we were in the fields.

1 Samuel 25.16: 16 They were a wall to us both by night and by day, all the while we were with them keeping the sheep.

1 Samuel 25.17: 17 Now therefore know and consider what you will do; for evil is determined against our master, and against all his house; for he is such a worthless fellow that one can’t speak to him.”

1 Samuel 25.18: 18 Then Abigail hurried and took two hundred loaves of bread, two containers of wine, five sheep ready dressed, five seahs of parched grain, one hundred clusters of raisins, and two hundred cakes of figs, and laid them on donkeys.

1 Samuel 25.19: 19 She said to her young men, “Go on before me. Behold, I am coming after you.” But she didn’t tell her husband, Nabal.

1 Samuel 25.20: 20 As she rode on her donkey, and came down by the covert of the mountain, that behold, David and his men came down toward her, and she met them.

1 Samuel 25.21: 21 Now David had said, “Surely in vain I have kept all that this fellow has in the wilderness, so that nothing was missed of all that pertained to him. He has returned me evil for good.

1 Samuel 25.22: 22 God do so to the enemies of David, and more also, if I leave of all that belongs to him by the morning light so much as one who urinates on a wall.”

1 Samuel 25.23: 23 When Abigail saw David, she hurried and got off her donkey, and fell before David on her face, and bowed herself to the ground.

1 Samuel 25.24: 24 She fell at his feet, and said, “On me, my lord, on me be the blame! Please let your servant speak in your ears. Hear the words of your servant.

1 Samuel 25.25: 25 Please don’t let my lord pay attention to this worthless fellow, Nabal; for as his name is, so is he. Nabal is his name, and folly is with him; but I, your servant, didn’t see my lord’s young men, whom you sent.

1 Samuel 25.26: 26 Now therefore, my lord, as Yahweh lives, and as your soul lives, since Yahweh has withheld you from blood guiltiness, and from avenging yourself with your own hand, now therefore let your enemies, and those who seek evil to my lord, be as Nabal.

1 Samuel 25.27: 27 Now this present which your servant has brought to my lord, let it be given to the young men who follow my lord.

1 Samuel 25.28: 28 Please forgive the trespass of your servant. For Yahweh will certainly make my lord a sure house, because my lord fights Yahweh’s battles. Evil will not be found in you all your days.

1 Samuel 25.29: 29 Though men may rise up to pursue you, and to seek your soul, yet the soul of my lord will be bound in the bundle of life with Yahweh your God. He will sling out the souls of your enemies, as from the hollow of a sling.

1 Samuel 25.30: 30 It will come to pass, when Yahweh has done to my lord according to all the good that he has spoken concerning you, and has appointed you prince over Israel,

1 Samuel 25.31: 31 that this shall be no grief to you, nor offense of heart to my lord, either that you have shed blood without cause, or that my lord has avenged himself. When Yahweh has dealt well with my lord, then remember your servant.”

1 Samuel 25.32: 32 David said to Abigail, “Blessed is Yahweh, the God of Israel, who sent you today to meet me!

1 Samuel 25.33: 33 Blessed is your discretion, and blessed are you, who have kept me today from blood guiltiness, and from avenging myself with my own hand.

1 Samuel 25.34: 34 For indeed, as Yahweh, the God of Israel, lives, who has withheld me from harming you, unless you had hurried and come to meet me, surely there wouldn’t have been left to Nabal by the morning light so much as one who urinates on a wall.”

1 Samuel 25.35: 35 So David received from her hand that which she had brought him. Then he said to her, “Go up in peace to your house. Behold, I have listened to your voice, and have granted your request.”

1 Samuel 25.36: 36 Abigail came to Nabal; and behold, he held a feast in his house, like the feast of a king. Nabal’s heart was merry within him, for he was very drunk. Therefore she told him nothing until the morning light.

1 Samuel 25.37: 37 In the morning, when the wine had gone out of Nabal, his wife told him these things, and his heart died within him, and he became as a stone.

1 Samuel 25.38: 38 About ten days later, Yahweh struck Nabal, so that he died.

1 Samuel 25.39: 39 When David heard that Nabal was dead, he said, “Blessed is Yahweh, who has pleaded the cause of my reproach from the hand of Nabal, and has kept back his servant from evil. Yahweh has returned the evildoing of Nabal on his own head.” David sent and spoke concerning Abigail, to take her to himself as wife.

1 Samuel 25.40: 40 When David’s servants had come to Abigail to Carmel, they spoke to her, saying, “David has sent us to you, to take you to him as wife.”

1 Samuel 25.41: 41 She arose, and bowed herself with her face to the earth, and said, “Behold, your servant is a servant to wash the feet of the servants of my lord.”

1 Samuel 25.42: 42 Abigail hurried, and arose, and rode on a donkey, with five ladies of hers who followed her; and she went after the messengers of David, and became his wife.

1 Samuel 25.43: 43 David also took Ahinoam of Jezreel; and they both became his wives.

1 Samuel 25.44: 44 Now Saul had given Michal his daughter, David’s wife, to Palti the son of Laish, who was of Gallim.

1 Samuel 26.0:

26

1 Samuel 26.1: 1 The Ziphites came to Saul to Gibeah, saying, “Doesn’t David hide himself in the hill of Hachilah, which is before the desert?”

1 Samuel 26.2: 2 Then Saul arose, and went down to the wilderness of Ziph, having three thousand chosen men of Israel with him, to seek David in the wilderness of Ziph.

1 Samuel 26.3: 3 Saul encamped in the hill of Hachilah, which is before the desert, by the way. But David stayed in the wilderness, and he saw that Saul came after him into the wilderness.

1 Samuel 26.4: 4 David therefore sent out spies, and understood that Saul had certainly come.

1 Samuel 26.5: 5 Then David arose, and came to the place where Saul had encamped; and David saw the place where Saul lay, with Abner the son of Ner, the captain of his army. Saul lay within the place of the wagons, and the people were encamped around him.

1 Samuel 26.6: 6 Then David answered and said to Ahimelech the Hittite, and to Abishai the son of Zeruiah, brother of Joab, saying, “Who will go down with me to Saul to the camp?”

Abishai said, “I will go down with you.”

1 Samuel 26.7: 7 So David and Abishai came to the people by night: and, behold, Saul lay sleeping within the place of the wagons, with his spear stuck in the ground at his head; and Abner and the people lay around him.

1 Samuel 26.8: 8 Then Abishai said to David, “God has delivered up your enemy into your hand today. Now therefore please let me strike him with the spear to the earth at one stroke, and I will not strike him the second time.”

1 Samuel 26.9: 9 David said to Abishai, “Don’t destroy him; for who can stretch out his hand against Yahweh’s anointed, and be guiltless?”

1 Samuel 26.10: 10 David said, “As Yahweh lives, Yahweh will strike him; or his day shall come to die; or he shall go down into battle and perish.

1 Samuel 26.11: 11 Yahweh forbid that I should stretch out my hand against Yahweh’s anointed; but now please take the spear that is at his head, and the jar of water, and let’s go.”

1 Samuel 26.12: 12 So David took the spear and the jar of water from Saul’s head; and they went away: and no man saw it, or knew it, nor did any awake; for they were all asleep, because a deep sleep from Yahweh had fallen on them.

1 Samuel 26.13: 13 Then David went over to the other side, and stood on the top of the mountain afar off; a great space being between them;

1 Samuel 26.14: 14 and David cried to the people, and to Abner the son of Ner, saying, “Don’t you answer, Abner?”

Then Abner answered, “Who are you who cries to the king?”

1 Samuel 26.15: 15 David said to Abner, “Aren’t you a man? Who is like you in Israel? Why then have you not kept watch over your lord, the king? For one of the people came in to destroy the king your lord.

1 Samuel 26.16: 16 This thing isn’t good that you have done. As Yahweh lives, you are worthy to die, because you have not kept watch over your lord, Yahweh’s anointed. Now see where the king’s spear is, and the jar of water that was at his head.”

1 Samuel 26.17: 17 Saul knew David’s voice, and said, “Is this your voice, my son David?”

David said, “It is my voice, my lord, O king.”

1 Samuel 26.18: 18 He said, “Why does my lord pursue his servant? For what have I done? What evil is in my hand?

1 Samuel 26.19: 19 Now therefore, please let my lord the king hear the words of his servant. If it is so that Yahweh has stirred you up against me, let him accept an offering. But if it is the children of men, they are cursed before Yahweh; for they have driven me out today that I shouldn’t cling to Yahweh’s inheritance, saying, ‘Go, serve other gods!’

1 Samuel 26.20: 20 Now therefore, don’t let my blood fall to the earth away from the presence of Yahweh; for the king of Israel has come out to seek a flea, as when one hunts a partridge in the mountains.”

1 Samuel 26.21: 21 Then Saul said, “I have sinned. Return, my son David; for I will no more do you harm, because my life was precious in your eyes today. Behold, I have played the fool, and have erred exceedingly.”

1 Samuel 26.22: 22 David answered, “Behold the spear, O king! Then let one of the young men come over and get it.

1 Samuel 26.23: 23 Yahweh will render to every man his righteousness and his faithfulness; because Yahweh delivered you into my hand today, and I wouldn’t stretch out my hand against Yahweh’s anointed.

1 Samuel 26.24: 24 Behold, as your life was respected today in my eyes, so let my life be respected in Yahweh’s eyes, and let him deliver me out of all oppression.”

1 Samuel 26.25: 25 Then Saul said to David, “You are blessed, my son David. You will both do mightily, and will surely prevail.” So David went his way, and Saul returned to his place.

1 Samuel 27.0:

27

1 Samuel 27.1: 1 David said in his heart, “I will now perish one day by the hand of Saul. There is nothing better for me than that I should escape into the land of the Philistines; and Saul will despair of me, to seek me any more in all the borders of Israel. So shall I escape out of his hand.”

1 Samuel 27.2: 2 David arose, and passed over, he and the six hundred men who were with him, to Achish the son of Maoch, king of Gath.

1 Samuel 27.3: 3 David lived with Achish at Gath, he and his men, every man with his household, even David with his two wives, Ahinoam the Jezreelitess, and Abigail the Carmelitess, Nabal’s wife.

1 Samuel 27.4: 4 Saul was told that David had fled to Gath: and he sought no more again for him.

1 Samuel 27.5: 5 David said to Achish, “If now I have found favor in your eyes, let them give me a place in one of the cities in the country, that I may dwell there. For why should your servant dwell in the royal city with you?”

1 Samuel 27.6: 6 Then Achish gave him Ziklag that day: therefore Ziklag belongs to the kings of Judah to this day.

1 Samuel 27.7: 7 The number of the days that David lived in the country of the Philistines was a full year and four months.

1 Samuel 27.8: 8 David and his men went up and raided the Geshurites, the Girzites, and the Amalekites; for those were the inhabitants of the land, who were of old, on the way to Shur, even to the land of Egypt.

1 Samuel 27.9: 9 David struck the land, and saved no man or woman alive, and took away the sheep, the cattle, the donkeys, the camels, and the clothing. Then he returned, and came to Achish.

1 Samuel 27.10: 10 Achish said, “Against whom have you made a raid today?”

David said, “Against the South of Judah, against the South of the Jerahmeelites, and against the South of the Kenites.”

1 Samuel 27.11: 11 David saved neither man nor woman alive, to bring them to Gath, saying, “Lest they should tell about us, saying, ‘David did this, and this has been his way all the time he has lived in the country of the Philistines.’”

1 Samuel 27.12: 12 Achish believed David, saying, “He has made his people Israel utterly to abhor him. Therefore he will be my servant forever.”

1 Samuel 28.0:

28

1 Samuel 28.1: 1 In those days, the Philistines gathered their armies together for warfare, to fight with Israel. Achish said to David, “Know assuredly that you will go out with me in the army, you and your men.”

1 Samuel 28.2: 2 David said to Achish, “Therefore you will know what your servant can do.”

Achish said to David, “Therefore I will make you my bodyguard forever.”

1 Samuel 28.3: 3 Now Samuel was dead, and all Israel had mourned for him, and buried him in Ramah, even in his own city. Saul had sent away those who had familiar spirits and the wizards out of the land.

1 Samuel 28.4: 4 The Philistines gathered themselves together, and came and encamped in Shunem; and Saul gathered all Israel together, and they encamped in Gilboa.

1 Samuel 28.5: 5 When Saul saw the army of the Philistines, he was afraid, and his heart trembled greatly.

1 Samuel 28.6: 6 When Saul inquired of Yahweh, Yahweh didn’t answer him by dreams, by Urim, or by prophets.

1 Samuel 28.7: 7 Then Saul said to his servants, “Seek for me a woman who has a familiar spirit, that I may go to her, and inquire of her.”

His servants said to him, “Behold, there is a woman who has a familiar spirit at Endor.”

1 Samuel 28.8: 8 Saul disguised himself and put on other clothing, and went, he and two men with him, and they came to the woman by night. Then he said, “Please consult for me by the familiar spirit, and bring me up whomever I shall name to you.”

1 Samuel 28.9: 9 The woman said to him, “Behold, you know what Saul has done, how he has cut off those who have familiar spirits, and the wizards, out of the land. Why then do you lay a snare for my life, to cause me to die?”

1 Samuel 28.10: 10 Saul swore to her by Yahweh, saying, “As Yahweh lives, no punishment will happen to you for this thing.”

1 Samuel 28.11: 11 Then the woman said, “Whom shall I bring up to you?”

He said, “Bring Samuel up for me.”

1 Samuel 28.12: 12 When the woman saw Samuel, she cried with a loud voice; and the woman spoke to Saul, saying, “Why have you deceived me? For you are Saul!”

1 Samuel 28.13: 13 The king said to her, “Don’t be afraid! What do you see?”

The woman said to Saul, “I see a god coming up out of the earth.”

1 Samuel 28.14: 14 He said to her, “What does he look like?”

She said, “An old man comes up. He is covered with a robe.” Saul perceived that it was Samuel, and he bowed with his face to the ground, and showed respect.

1 Samuel 28.15: 15 Samuel said to Saul, “Why have you disturbed me, to bring me up?”

Saul answered, “I am very distressed; for the Philistines make war against me, and God has departed from me, and answers me no more, by prophets, or by dreams. Therefore I have called you, that you may make known to me what I shall do.”

1 Samuel 28.16: 16 Samuel said, “Why then do you ask me, since Yahweh has departed from you and has become your adversary?

1 Samuel 28.17: 17 Yahweh has done to you as he spoke by me. Yahweh has torn the kingdom out of your hand, and given it to your neighbor, even to David.

1 Samuel 28.18: 18 Because you didn’t obey Yahweh’s voice, and didn’t execute his fierce wrath on Amalek, therefore Yahweh has done this thing to you today.

1 Samuel 28.19: 19 Moreover Yahweh will deliver Israel also with you into the hand of the Philistines; and tomorrow you and your sons will be with me. Yahweh will deliver the army of Israel also into the hand of the Philistines.”

1 Samuel 28.20: 20 Then Saul fell immediately his full length on the earth, and was terrified, because of Samuel’s words. There was no strength in him; for he had eaten no bread all day long or all night long.

1 Samuel 28.21: 21 The woman came to Saul, and saw that he was very troubled, and said to him, “Behold, your servant has listened to your voice, and I have put my life in my hand, and have listened to your words which you spoke to me.

1 Samuel 28.22: 22 Now therefore, please listen also to the voice of your servant, and let me set a morsel of bread before you. Eat, that you may have strength, when you go on your way.”

1 Samuel 28.23: 23 But he refused, and said, “I will not eat.” But his servants, together with the woman, constrained him; and he listened to their voice. So he arose from the earth and sat on the bed.

1 Samuel 28.24: 24 The woman had a fattened calf in the house. She hurried and killed it; and she took flour, and kneaded it, and baked unleavened bread of it.

1 Samuel 28.25: 25 She brought it before Saul, and before his servants; and they ate. Then they rose up, and went away that night.

1 Samuel 29.0:

29

1 Samuel 29.1: 1 Now the Philistines gathered together all their armies to Aphek; and the Israelites encamped by the spring which is in Jezreel.

1 Samuel 29.2: 2 The lords of the Philistines passed on by hundreds and by thousands; and David and his men passed on in the rear with Achish.

1 Samuel 29.3: 3 Then the princes of the Philistines said, “What about these Hebrews?”

Achish said to the princes of the Philistines, “Isn’t this David, the servant of Saul the king of Israel, who has been with me these days, or rather these years? I have found no fault in him since he fell away until today.”

1 Samuel 29.4: 4 But the princes of the Philistines were angry with him; and the princes of the Philistines said to him, “Make the man return, that he may go back to his place where you have appointed him, and let him not go down with us to battle, lest in the battle he become an adversary to us. For with what should this fellow reconcile himself to his lord? Should it not be with the heads of these men?

1 Samuel 29.5: 5 Isn’t this David, of whom people sang to one another in dances, saying,

‘Saul has slain his thousands,

and David his ten thousands?’”

1 Samuel 29.6: 6 Then Achish called David, and said to him, “As Yahweh lives, you have been upright, and your going out and your coming in with me in the army is good in my sight; for I have not found evil in you since the day of your coming to me to this day. Nevertheless, the lords don’t favor you.

1 Samuel 29.7: 7 Therefore now return, and go in peace, that you not displease the lords of the Philistines.”

1 Samuel 29.8: 8 David said to Achish, “But what have I done? What have you found in your servant so long as I have been before you to this day, that I may not go and fight against the enemies of my lord the king?”

1 Samuel 29.9: 9 Achish answered David, “I know that you are good in my sight, as an angel of God. Notwithstanding the princes of the Philistines have said, ‘He shall not go up with us to the battle.’

1 Samuel 29.10: 10 Therefore now rise up early in the morning with the servants of your lord who have come with you; and as soon as you are up early in the morning, and have light, depart.”

1 Samuel 29.11: 11 So David rose up early, he and his men, to depart in the morning, to return into the land of the Philistines, and the Philistines went up to Jezreel.

1 Samuel 30.0:

30

1 Samuel 30.1: 1 When David and his men had come to Ziklag on the third day, the Amalekites had made a raid on the South, and on Ziklag, and had struck Ziklag, and burned it with fire,

1 Samuel 30.2: 2 and had taken captive the women and all who were in it, both small and great. They didn’t kill any, but carried them off, and went their way.

1 Samuel 30.3: 3 When David and his men came to the city, behold, it was burned with fire; and their wives, their sons, and their daughters were taken captive.

1 Samuel 30.4: 4 Then David and the people who were with him lifted up their voice and wept until they had no more power to weep.

1 Samuel 30.5: 5 David’s two wives were taken captive, Ahinoam the Jezreelitess, and Abigail the wife of Nabal the Carmelite.

1 Samuel 30.6: 6 David was greatly distressed; for the people spoke of stoning him, because the souls of all the people were grieved, every man for his sons and for his daughters; but David strengthened himself in Yahweh his God.

1 Samuel 30.7: 7 David said to Abiathar the priest, the son of Ahimelech, “Please bring the ephod here to me.”

Abiathar brought the ephod to David.

1 Samuel 30.8: 8 David inquired of Yahweh, saying, “If I pursue after this troop, will I overtake them?”

He answered him, “Pursue; for you will surely overtake them, and will without fail recover all.”

1 Samuel 30.9: 9 So David went, he and the six hundred men who were with him, and came to the brook Besor, where those who were left behind stayed.

1 Samuel 30.10: 10 But David pursued, he and four hundred men; for two hundred stayed behind, who were so faint that they couldn’t go over the brook Besor.

1 Samuel 30.11: 11 They found an Egyptian in the field, and brought him to David, and gave him bread, and he ate; and they gave him water to drink.

1 Samuel 30.12: 12 They gave him a piece of a cake of figs, and two clusters of raisins. When he had eaten, his spirit came again to him; for he had eaten no bread, and drank no water for three days and three nights.

1 Samuel 30.13: 13 David asked him, “To whom do you belong? Where are you from?”

He said, “I am a young man of Egypt, servant to an Amalekite; and my master left me, because three days ago I got sick.

1 Samuel 30.14: 14 We made a raid on the South of the Cherethites, and on that which belongs to Judah, and on the South of Caleb; and we burned Ziklag with fire.”

1 Samuel 30.15: 15 David said to him, “Will you bring me down to this troop?”

He said, “Swear to me by God that you will not kill me and not deliver me up into the hands of my master, and I will bring you down to this troop.”

1 Samuel 30.16: 16 When he had brought him down, behold, they were spread around over all the ground, eating, drinking, and dancing, because of all the great plunder that they had taken out of the land of the Philistines, and out of the land of Judah.

1 Samuel 30.17: 17 David struck them from the twilight even to the evening of the next day. Not a man of them escaped from there, except four hundred young men, who rode on camels and fled.

1 Samuel 30.18: 18 David recovered all that the Amalekites had taken, and David rescued his two wives.

1 Samuel 30.19: 19 There was nothing lacking to them, neither small nor great, neither sons nor daughters, neither plunder, nor anything that they had taken to them. David brought back all.

1 Samuel 30.20: 20 David took all the flocks and the herds, which they drove before those other livestock, and said, “This is David’s plunder.”

1 Samuel 30.21: 21 David came to the two hundred men, who were so faint that they could not follow David, whom also they had made to stay at the brook Besor; and they went out to meet David, and to meet the people who were with him. When David came near to the people, he greeted them.

1 Samuel 30.22: 22 Then all the wicked men and worthless fellows, of those who went with David, answered and said, “Because they didn’t go with us, we will not give them anything of the plunder that we have recovered, except to every man his wife and his children, that he may lead them away, and depart.”

1 Samuel 30.23: 23 Then David said, “Do not do so, my brothers, with that which Yahweh has given to us, who has preserved us, and delivered the troop that came against us into our hand.

1 Samuel 30.24: 24 Who will listen to you in this matter? For as his share is who goes down to the battle, so shall his share be who stays with the baggage. They shall share alike.”

1 Samuel 30.25: 25 It was so from that day forward, that he made it a statute and an ordinance for Israel to this day.

1 Samuel 30.26: 26 When David came to Ziklag, he sent some of the plunder to the elders of Judah, even to his friends, saying, “Behold, a present for you from the plunder of Yahweh’s enemies.”

1 Samuel 30.27: 27 He sent it to those who were in Bethel, to those who were in Ramoth of the South, to those who were in Jattir,

1 Samuel 30.28: 28 to those who were in Aroer, to those who were in Siphmoth, to those who were in Eshtemoa,

1 Samuel 30.29: 29 to those who were in Racal, to those who were in the cities of the Jerahmeelites, to those who were in the cities of the Kenites,

1 Samuel 30.30: 30 to those who were in Hormah, to those who were in Borashan, to those who were in Athach,

1 Samuel 30.31: 31 to those who were in Hebron, and to all the places where David himself and his men used to stay.

1 Samuel 31.0:

31

1 Samuel 31.1: 1 Now the Philistines fought against Israel; and the men of Israel fled from before the Philistines, and fell down slain on Mount Gilboa.

1 Samuel 31.2: 2 The Philistines overtook Saul and on his sons; and the Philistines killed Jonathan, Abinadab, and Malchishua, the sons of Saul.

1 Samuel 31.3: 3 The battle went hard against Saul, and the archers overtook him; and he was greatly distressed by reason of the archers.

1 Samuel 31.4: 4 Then Saul said to his armor bearer, “Draw your sword, and thrust me through with it, lest these uncircumcised come and thrust me through, and abuse me!” But his armor bearer would not; for he was terrified. Therefore Saul took his sword, and fell on it.

1 Samuel 31.5: 5 When his armor bearer saw that Saul was dead, he likewise fell on his sword, and died with him.

1 Samuel 31.6: 6 So Saul died, and his three sons, and his armor bearer, and all his men, that same day together.

1 Samuel 31.7: 7 When the men of Israel who were on the other side of the valley, and those who were beyond the Jordan, saw that the men of Israel fled, and that Saul and his sons were dead, they abandoned the cities and fled; and the Philistines came and lived in them.

1 Samuel 31.8: 8 On the next day, when the Philistines came to strip the slain, they found Saul and his three sons fallen on Mount Gilboa.

1 Samuel 31.9: 9 They cut off his head, stripped off his armor, and sent into the land of the Philistines all around, to carry the news to the house of their idols, and to the people.

1 Samuel 31.10: 10 They put his armor in the house of the Ashtaroth, and they fastened his body to the wall of Beth Shan.

1 Samuel 31.11: 11 When the inhabitants of Jabesh Gilead heard what the Philistines had done to Saul,

1 Samuel 31.12: 12 all the valiant men arose, went all night, and took the body of Saul and the bodies of his sons from the wall of Beth Shan; and they came to Jabesh, and burned them there.

1 Samuel 31.13: 13 They took their bones and buried them under the tamarisk tree in Jabesh, and fasted seven days.

2 Samuel 0.0:

The Second Book of Samuel

2 Samuel 1.0:

1

2 Samuel 1.1: 1 After the death of Saul, when David had returned from the slaughter of the Amalekites, and David had stayed two days in Ziklag;

2 Samuel 1.2: 2 on the third day, behold, a man came out of the camp from Saul, with his clothes torn, and earth on his head. When he came to David, he fell to the earth, and showed respect.

2 Samuel 1.3: 3 David said to him, “Where do you come from?”

He said to him, “I have escaped out of the camp of Israel.”

2 Samuel 1.4: 4 David said to him, “How did it go? Please tell me.”

He answered, “The people have fled from the battle, and many of the people also have fallen and are dead. Saul and Jonathan his son are dead also.”

2 Samuel 1.5: 5 David said to the young man who told him, “How do you know that Saul and Jonathan his son are dead?”

2 Samuel 1.6: 6 The young man who told him said, “As I happened by chance on Mount Gilboa, behold, Saul was leaning on his spear; and behold, the chariots and the horsemen followed close behind him.

2 Samuel 1.7: 7 When he looked behind him, he saw me, and called to me. I answered, ‘Here I am.’

2 Samuel 1.8: 8 He said to me, ‘Who are you?’ I answered him, ‘I am an Amalekite.’

2 Samuel 1.9: 9 He said to me, ‘Please stand beside me, and kill me; for anguish has taken hold of me, because my life lingers in me.’

2 Samuel 1.10: 10 So I stood beside him and killed him, because I was sure that he could not live after he had fallen. I took the crown that was on his head and the bracelet that was on his arm, and have brought them here to my lord.”

2 Samuel 1.11: 11 Then David took hold on his clothes, and tore them; and all the men who were with him did likewise.

2 Samuel 1.12: 12 They mourned, wept, and fasted until evening, for Saul, and for Jonathan his son, and for the people of Yahweh, and for the house of Israel; because they had fallen by the sword.

2 Samuel 1.13: 13 David said to the young man who told him, “Where are you from?”

He answered, “I am the son of a foreigner, an Amalekite.”

2 Samuel 1.14: 14 David said to him, “Why were you not afraid to stretch out your hand to destroy Yahweh’s anointed?”

2 Samuel 1.15: 15 David called one of the young men, and said, “Go near, and cut him down!” He struck him so that he died.

2 Samuel 1.16: 16 David said to him, “Your blood be on your head; for your mouth has testified against you, saying, ‘I have slain Yahweh’s anointed.’”

2 Samuel 1.17: 17 David lamented with this lamentation over Saul and over Jonathan his son

2 Samuel 1.18: 18 (and he commanded them to teach the children of Judah the song of the bow; behold, it is written in the book of Jashar):

2 Samuel 1.19: 19 “Your glory, Israel, was slain on your high places!

How the mighty have fallen!

2 Samuel 1.20: 20 Don’t tell it in Gath.

Don’t publish it in the streets of Ashkelon,

lest the daughters of the Philistines rejoice,

lest the daughters of the uncircumcised triumph.

2 Samuel 1.21: 21 You mountains of Gilboa,

let there be no dew or rain on you, and no fields of offerings;

For there the shield of the mighty was defiled and cast away,

The shield of Saul was not anointed with oil.

2 Samuel 1.22: 22 From the blood of the slain,

from the fat of the mighty,

Jonathan’s bow didn’t turn back.

Saul’s sword didn’t return empty.

2 Samuel 1.23: 23 Saul and Jonathan were lovely and pleasant in their lives.

In their death, they were not divided.

They were swifter than eagles.

They were stronger than lions.

2 Samuel 1.24: 24 You daughters of Israel, weep over Saul,

who clothed you delicately in scarlet,

who put ornaments of gold on your clothing.

2 Samuel 1.25: 25 How the mighty have fallen in the middle of the battle!

Jonathan was slain on your high places.

2 Samuel 1.26: 26 I am distressed for you, my brother Jonathan.

You have been very pleasant to me.

Your love to me was wonderful,

passing the love of women.

2 Samuel 1.27: 27 How the mighty have fallen,

and the weapons of war have perished!”

2 Samuel 2.0:

2

2 Samuel 2.1: 1 After this, David inquired of Yahweh, saying, “Shall I go up into any of the cities of Judah?”

Yahweh said to him, “Go up.”

David said, “Where shall I go up?”

He said, “To Hebron.”

2 Samuel 2.2: 2 So David went up there with his two wives, Ahinoam the Jezreelitess, and Abigail the wife of Nabal the Carmelite.

2 Samuel 2.3: 3 David brought up his men who were with him, every man with his household. They lived in the cities of Hebron.

2 Samuel 2.4: 4 The men of Judah came, and there they anointed David king over the house of Judah. They told David, “The men of Jabesh Gilead were those who buried Saul.”

2 Samuel 2.5: 5 David sent messengers to the men of Jabesh Gilead, and said to them, “Blessed are you by Yahweh, that you have shown this kindness to your lord, even to Saul, and have buried him.

2 Samuel 2.6: 6 Now may Yahweh show loving kindness and truth to you. I also will reward you for this kindness, because you have done this thing.

2 Samuel 2.7: 7 Now therefore let your hands be strong, and be valiant; for Saul your lord is dead, and also the house of Judah have anointed me king over them.”

2 Samuel 2.8: 8 Now Abner the son of Ner, captain of Saul’s army, had taken Ishbosheth the son of Saul, and brought him over to Mahanaim;

2 Samuel 2.9: 9 and he made him king over Gilead, and over the Ashurites, and over Jezreel, and over Ephraim, and over Benjamin, and over all Israel.

2 Samuel 2.10: 10 Ishbosheth, Saul’s son, was forty years old when he began to reign over Israel, and he reigned two years. But the house of Judah followed David.

2 Samuel 2.11: 11 The time that David was king in Hebron over the house of Judah was seven years and six months.

2 Samuel 2.12: 12 Abner the son of Ner, and the servants of Ishbosheth the son of Saul, went out from Mahanaim to Gibeon.

2 Samuel 2.13: 13 Joab the son of Zeruiah and David’s servants went out, and met them by the pool of Gibeon; and they sat down, the one on the one side of the pool, and the other on the other side of the pool.

2 Samuel 2.14: 14 Abner said to Joab, “Please let the young men arise and play before us!”

Joab said, “Let them arise!”

2 Samuel 2.15: 15 Then they arose and went over by number: twelve for Benjamin and for Ishbosheth the son of Saul, and twelve of David’s servants.

2 Samuel 2.16: 16 They each caught his opponent by the head, and thrust his sword in his fellow’s side; so they fell down together: therefore that place in Gibeon was called Helkath Hazzurim.

2 Samuel 2.17: 17 The battle was very severe that day; and Abner was beaten, and the men of Israel, before David’s servants.

2 Samuel 2.18: 18 The three sons of Zeruiah were there, Joab, and Abishai, and Asahel: and Asahel was as light of foot as a wild gazelle.

2 Samuel 2.19: 19 Asahel pursued Abner; and in going he didn’t turn to the right hand or to the left from following Abner.

2 Samuel 2.20: 20 Then Abner looked behind him, and said, “Is that you, Asahel?”

He answered, “It is.”

2 Samuel 2.21: 21 Abner said to him, “Turn away to your right hand or to your left, and grab one of the young men, and take his armor.” But Asahel would not turn away from following him.

2 Samuel 2.22: 22 Abner said again to Asahel, “Turn away from following me. Why should I strike you to the ground? How then could I look Joab your brother in the face?”

2 Samuel 2.23: 23 However he refused to turn away. Therefore Abner with the back end of the spear struck him in the body, so that the spear came out behind him; and he fell down there, and died in the same place. As many as came to the place where Asahel fell down and died stood still.

2 Samuel 2.24: 24 But Joab and Abishai pursued Abner. The sun went down when they had come to the hill of Ammah, that lies before Giah by the way of the wilderness of Gibeon.

2 Samuel 2.25: 25 The children of Benjamin gathered themselves together after Abner, and became one band, and stood on the top of a hill.

2 Samuel 2.26: 26 Then Abner called to Joab, and said, “Shall the sword devour forever? Don’t you know that it will be bitterness in the latter end? How long will it be then, before you ask the people to return from following their brothers?”

2 Samuel 2.27: 27 Joab said, “As God lives, if you had not spoken, surely then in the morning the people would have gone away, and not each followed his brother.”

2 Samuel 2.28: 28 So Joab blew the trumpet; and all the people stood still, and pursued Israel no more, and they fought no more.

2 Samuel 2.29: 29 Abner and his men went all that night through the Arabah; and they passed over the Jordan, and went through all Bithron, and came to Mahanaim.

2 Samuel 2.30: 30 Joab returned from following Abner; and when he had gathered all the people together, nineteen men of David’s and Asahel were missing.

2 Samuel 2.31: 31 But David’s servants had struck Benjamin and of Abner’s men so that three hundred sixty men died.

2 Samuel 2.32: 32 They took up Asahel, and buried him in the tomb of his father, which was in Bethlehem. Joab and his men went all night, and the day broke on them at Hebron.

2 Samuel 3.0:

3

2 Samuel 3.1: 1 Now there was long war between Saul’s house and David’s house. David grew stronger and stronger, but Saul’s house grew weaker and weaker.

2 Samuel 3.2: 2 Sons were born to David in Hebron. His firstborn was Amnon, of Ahinoam the Jezreelitess;

2 Samuel 3.3: 3 and his second, Chileab, of Abigail the wife of Nabal the Carmelite; and the third, Absalom the son of Maacah the daughter of Talmai king of Geshur;

2 Samuel 3.4: 4 and the fourth, Adonijah the son of Haggith; and the fifth, Shephatiah the son of Abital;

2 Samuel 3.5: 5 and the sixth, Ithream, of Eglah, David’s wife. These were born to David in Hebron.

2 Samuel 3.6: 6 While there was war between Saul’s house and David’s house, Abner made himself strong in Saul’s house.

2 Samuel 3.7: 7 Now Saul had a concubine, whose name was Rizpah, the daughter of Aiah; and Ishbosheth said to Abner, “Why have you gone in to my father’s concubine?”

2 Samuel 3.8: 8 Then Abner was very angry about Ishbosheth’s words, and said, “Am I a dog’s head that belongs to Judah? Today I show kindness to Saul’s house your father, to his brothers, and to his friends, and have not delivered you into the hand of David; and yet you charge me today with a fault concerning this woman!

2 Samuel 3.9: 9 God do so to Abner, and more also, if, as Yahweh has sworn to David, I don’t do even so to him;

2 Samuel 3.10: 10 to transfer the kingdom from Saul’s house, and to set up David’s throne over Israel and over Judah, from Dan even to Beersheba.”

2 Samuel 3.11: 11 He could not answer Abner another word, because he was afraid of him.

2 Samuel 3.12: 12 Abner sent messengers to David on his behalf, saying, “Whose is the land?” and saying, “Make your alliance with me, and behold, my hand will be with you, to bring all Israel around to you.”

2 Samuel 3.13: 13 He said, “Good. I will make a treaty with you, but one thing I require of you. That is, you will not see my face unless you first bring Michal, Saul’s daughter, when you come to see my face.”

2 Samuel 3.14: 14 David sent messengers to Ishbosheth, Saul’s son, saying, “Deliver me my wife Michal, whom I was given to marry for one hundred foreskins of the Philistines.”

2 Samuel 3.15: 15 Ishbosheth sent and took her from her husband, even from Paltiel the son of Laish.

2 Samuel 3.16: 16 Her husband went with her, weeping as he went, and followed her to Bahurim. Then Abner said to him, “Go! Return!” and he returned.

2 Samuel 3.17: 17 Abner had communication with the elders of Israel, saying, “In times past, you sought for David to be king over you.

2 Samuel 3.18: 18 Now then do it; for Yahweh has spoken of David, saying, ‘By the hand of my servant David, I will save my people Israel out of the hand of the Philistines, and out of the hand of all their enemies.’”

2 Samuel 3.19: 19 Abner also spoke in the ears of Benjamin: and Abner went also to speak in the ears of David in Hebron all that seemed good to Israel, and to the whole house of Benjamin.

2 Samuel 3.20: 20 So Abner came to David to Hebron, and twenty men with him. David made Abner and the men who were with him a feast.

2 Samuel 3.21: 21 Abner said to David, “I will arise and go, and will gather all Israel to my lord the king, that they may make a covenant with you, and that you may reign over all that your soul desires.” David sent Abner away; and he went in peace.

2 Samuel 3.22: 22 Behold, David’s servants and Joab came from a raid, and brought in a great plunder with them; but Abner was not with David in Hebron; for he had sent him away, and he had gone in peace.

2 Samuel 3.23: 23 When Joab and all the army who was with him had come, they told Joab, “Abner the son of Ner came to the king, and he has sent him away, and he has gone in peace.”

2 Samuel 3.24: 24 Then Joab came to the king, and said, “What have you done? Behold, Abner came to you. Why is it that you have sent him away, and he is already gone?

2 Samuel 3.25: 25 You know Abner the son of Ner. He came to deceive you, and to know your going out and your coming in, and to know all that you do.”

2 Samuel 3.26: 26 When Joab had come out from David, he sent messengers after Abner, and they brought him back from the well of Sirah; but David didn’t know it.

2 Samuel 3.27: 27 When Abner was returned to Hebron, Joab took him aside into the middle of the gate to speak with him quietly, and struck him there in the body, so that he died, for the blood of Asahel his brother.

2 Samuel 3.28: 28 Afterward, when David heard it, he said, “I and my kingdom are guiltless before Yahweh forever of the blood of Abner the son of Ner.

2 Samuel 3.29: 29 Let it fall on the head of Joab, and on all his father’s house. Let there not fail from the house of Joab one who has a discharge, or who is a leper, or who leans on a staff, or who falls by the sword, or who lacks bread.”

2 Samuel 3.30: 30 So Joab and Abishai his brother killed Abner, because he had killed their brother Asahel at Gibeon in the battle.

2 Samuel 3.31: 31 David said to Joab, and to all the people who were with him, “Tear your clothes, and clothe yourselves with sackcloth, and mourn in front of Abner.” King David followed the bier.

2 Samuel 3.32: 32 They buried Abner in Hebron; and the king lifted up his voice, and wept at Abner’s grave; and all the people wept.

2 Samuel 3.33: 33 The king lamented for Abner, and said, “Should Abner die as a fool dies?

2 Samuel 3.34: 34 Your hands weren’t bound, and your feet weren’t put into fetters. As a man falls before the children of iniquity, so you fell.”

All the people wept again over him.

2 Samuel 3.35: 35 All the people came to urge David to eat bread while it was yet day; but David swore, saying, “God do so to me, and more also, if I taste bread, or anything else, until the sun goes down.”

2 Samuel 3.36: 36 All the people took notice of it, and it pleased them; as whatever the king did pleased all the people.

2 Samuel 3.37: 37 So all the people and all Israel understood that day that it was not of the king to kill Abner the son of Ner.

2 Samuel 3.38: 38 The king said to his servants, “Don’t you know that a prince and a great man has fallen today in Israel?

2 Samuel 3.39: 39 I am weak today, though anointed king. These men, the sons of Zeruiah are too hard for me. May Yahweh reward the evildoer according to his wickedness.”

2 Samuel 4.0:

4

2 Samuel 4.1: 1 When Saul’s son heard that Abner was dead in Hebron, his hands became feeble, and all the Israelites were troubled.

2 Samuel 4.2: 2 Saul’s son had two men who were captains of raiding bands. The name of one was Baanah, and the name of the other Rechab, the sons of Rimmon the Beerothite, of the children of Benjamin (for Beeroth also is considered a part of Benjamin:

2 Samuel 4.3: 3 and the Beerothites fled to Gittaim, and have lived as foreigners there until today).

2 Samuel 4.4: 4 Now Jonathan, Saul’s son, had a son who was lame in his feet. He was five years old when the news came about Saul and Jonathan out of Jezreel; and his nurse picked him up and fled. As she hurried to flee, he fell and became lame. His name was Mephibosheth.

2 Samuel 4.5: 5 The sons of Rimmon the Beerothite, Rechab and Baanah, went and came at about the heat of the day to the house of Ishbosheth, as he took his rest at noon.

2 Samuel 4.6: 6 They came there into the middle of the house, as though they would have fetched wheat; and they struck him in the body: and Rechab and Baanah his brother escaped.

2 Samuel 4.7: 7 Now when they came into the house, as he lay on his bed in his bedroom, they struck him, killed him, beheaded him, and took his head, and went by the way of the Arabah all night.

2 Samuel 4.8: 8 They brought the head of Ishbosheth to David to Hebron, and said to the king, “Behold, the head of Ishbosheth, the son of Saul, your enemy, who sought your life! Yahweh has avenged my lord the king today of Saul, and of his offspring.”

2 Samuel 4.9: 9 David answered Rechab and Baanah his brother, the sons of Rimmon the Beerothite, and said to them, “As Yahweh lives, who has redeemed my soul out of all adversity,

2 Samuel 4.10: 10 when someone told me, ‘Behold, Saul is dead,’ thinking that he brought good news, I seized him and killed him in Ziklag, which was the reward I gave him for his news.

2 Samuel 4.11: 11 How much more, when wicked men have slain a righteous person in his own house on his bed, should I not now require his blood from your hand, and rid the earth of you?”

2 Samuel 4.12: 12 David commanded his young men, and they killed them, cut off their hands and their feet, and hanged them up beside the pool in Hebron. But they took the head of Ishbosheth, and buried it in Abner’s grave in Hebron.

2 Samuel 5.0:

5

2 Samuel 5.1: 1 Then all the tribes of Israel came to David at Hebron, and spoke, saying, “Behold, we are your bone and your flesh.

2 Samuel 5.2: 2 In times past, when Saul was king over us, it was you who led Israel out and in. Yahweh said to you, ‘You will be shepherd of my people Israel, and you will be prince over Israel.’”

2 Samuel 5.3: 3 So all the elders of Israel came to the king to Hebron, and king David made a covenant with them in Hebron before Yahweh; and they anointed David king over Israel.

2 Samuel 5.4: 4 David was thirty years old when he began to reign, and he reigned forty years.

2 Samuel 5.5: 5 In Hebron he reigned over Judah seven years and six months; and in Jerusalem he reigned thirty-three years over all Israel and Judah.

2 Samuel 5.6: 6 The king and his men went to Jerusalem against the Jebusites, the inhabitants of the land, who spoke to David, saying, “The blind and the lame will keep you out of here;” thinking, “David can’t come in here.”

2 Samuel 5.7: 7 Nevertheless David took the stronghold of Zion. This is David’s city.

2 Samuel 5.8: 8 David said on that day, “Whoever strikes the Jebusites, let him go up to the watercourse and strike those lame and blind, who are hated by David’s soul.” Therefore they say, “The blind and the lame can’t come into the house.”

2 Samuel 5.9: 9 David lived in the stronghold, and called it David’s city. David built around from Millo and inward.

2 Samuel 5.10: 10 David grew greater and greater; for Yahweh, the God of Armies, was with him.

2 Samuel 5.11: 11 Hiram king of Tyre sent messengers to David, with cedar trees, carpenters, and masons; and they built David a house.

2 Samuel 5.12: 12 David perceived that Yahweh had established him king over Israel, and that he had exalted his kingdom for his people Israel’s sake.

2 Samuel 5.13: 13 David took more concubines and wives for himself out of Jerusalem, after he had come from Hebron; and more sons and daughters were born to David.

2 Samuel 5.14: 14 These are the names of those who were born to him in Jerusalem: Shammua, Shobab, Nathan, Solomon,

2 Samuel 5.15: 15 Ibhar, Elishua, Nepheg, Japhia,

2 Samuel 5.16: 16 Elishama, Eliada, and Eliphelet.

2 Samuel 5.17: 17 When the Philistines heard that they had anointed David king over Israel, all the Philistines went up to seek David, but David heard about it and went down to the stronghold.

2 Samuel 5.18: 18 Now the Philistines had come and spread themselves in the valley of Rephaim.

2 Samuel 5.19: 19 David inquired of Yahweh, saying, “Shall I go up against the Philistines? Will you deliver them into my hand?”

Yahweh said to David, “Go up; for I will certainly deliver the Philistines into your hand.”

2 Samuel 5.20: 20 David came to Baal Perazim, and David struck them there. Then he said, “Yahweh has broken my enemies before me, like the breach of waters.” Therefore he called the name of that place Baal Perazim.

2 Samuel 5.21: 21 They left their images there; and David and his men took them away.

2 Samuel 5.22: 22 The Philistines came up yet again, and spread themselves in the valley of Rephaim.

2 Samuel 5.23: 23 When David inquired of Yahweh, he said, “You shall not go up. Circle around behind them, and attack them in front of the mulberry trees.

2 Samuel 5.24: 24 When you hear the sound of marching in the tops of the mulberry trees, then stir yourself up; for then Yahweh has gone out before you to strike the army of the Philistines.”

2 Samuel 5.25: 25 David did so, as Yahweh commanded him, and struck the Philistines all the way from Geba to Gezer.

2 Samuel 6.0:

6

2 Samuel 6.1: 1 David again gathered together all the chosen men of Israel, thirty thousand.

2 Samuel 6.2: 2 David arose, and went with all the people who were with him, from Baale Judah, to bring up from there God’s ark, which is called by the Name, even the name of Yahweh of Armies who sits above the cherubim.

2 Samuel 6.3: 3 They set God’s ark on a new cart, and brought it out of Abinadab’s house that was on the hill; and Uzzah and Ahio, the sons of Abinadab, drove the new cart.

2 Samuel 6.4: 4 They brought it out of Abinadab’s house, which was in the hill, with God’s ark; and Ahio went before the ark.

2 Samuel 6.5: 5 David and all the house of Israel played before Yahweh with all kinds of instruments made of cypress wood, with harps, with stringed instruments, with tambourines, with castanets, and with cymbals.

2 Samuel 6.6: 6 When they came to the threshing floor of Nacon, Uzzah reached for God’s ark, and took hold of it; for the cattle stumbled.

2 Samuel 6.7: 7 Yahweh’s anger burned against Uzzah; and God struck him there for his error; and he died there by God’s ark.

2 Samuel 6.8: 8 David was displeased, because Yahweh had broken out against Uzzah; and he called that place Perez Uzzah, to this day.

2 Samuel 6.9: 9 David was afraid of Yahweh that day; and he said, “How could Yahweh’s ark come to me?”

2 Samuel 6.10: 10 So David would not move Yahweh’s ark to be with him in David’s city; but David carried it aside into Obed-Edom the Gittite’s house.

2 Samuel 6.11: 11 Yahweh’s ark remained in Obed-Edom the Gittite’s house three months; and Yahweh blessed Obed-Edom and all his house.

2 Samuel 6.12: 12 King David was told, “Yahweh has blessed the house of Obed-Edom, and all that belongs to him, because of God’s ark.”

So David went and brought up God’s ark from the house of Obed-Edom into David’s city with joy.

2 Samuel 6.13: 13 When those who bore Yahweh’s ark had gone six paces, he sacrificed an ox and a fattened calf.

2 Samuel 6.14: 14 David danced before Yahweh with all his might; and David was clothed in a linen ephod.

2 Samuel 6.15: 15 So David and all the house of Israel brought up Yahweh’s ark with shouting, and with the sound of the trumpet.

2 Samuel 6.16: 16 As Yahweh’s ark came into David’s city, Michal the daughter of Saul looked out through the window, and saw king David leaping and dancing before Yahweh; and she despised him in her heart.

2 Samuel 6.17: 17 They brought in Yahweh’s ark, and set it in its place, in the middle of the tent that David had pitched for it; and David offered burnt offerings and peace offerings before Yahweh.

2 Samuel 6.18: 18 When David had finished offering the burnt offering and the peace offerings, he blessed the people in the name of Yahweh of Armies.

2 Samuel 6.19: 19 He gave to all the people, even among the whole multitude of Israel, both to men and women, to everyone a portion of bread, dates, and raisins. So all the people departed, each to his own house.

2 Samuel 6.20: 20 Then David returned to bless his household. Michal the daughter of Saul came out to meet David, and said, “How glorious the king of Israel was today, who uncovered himself today in the eyes of his servants’ maids, as one of the vain fellows shamelessly uncovers himself!”

2 Samuel 6.21: 21 David said to Michal, “It was before Yahweh, who chose me above your father, and above all his house, to appoint me prince over the people of Yahweh, over Israel. Therefore I will celebrate before Yahweh.

2 Samuel 6.22: 22 I will be yet more vile than this, and will be worthless in my own sight. But the maids of whom you have spoken will honor me.”

2 Samuel 6.23: 23 Michal the daughter of Saul had no child to the day of her death.

2 Samuel 7.0:

7

2 Samuel 7.1: 1 When the king lived in his house, and Yahweh had given him rest from all his enemies all around,

2 Samuel 7.2: 2 the king said to Nathan the prophet, “See now, I dwell in a house of cedar, but God’s ark dwells within curtains.”

2 Samuel 7.3: 3 Nathan said to the king, “Go, do all that is in your heart; for Yahweh is with you.”

2 Samuel 7.4: 4 That same night, Yahweh’s word came to Nathan, saying,

2 Samuel 7.5: 5 “Go and tell my servant David, ‘Yahweh says, “Should you build me a house for me to dwell in?

2 Samuel 7.6: 6 For I have not lived in a house since the day that I brought the children of Israel up out of Egypt, even to this day, but have moved around in a tent and in a tabernacle.

2 Samuel 7.7: 7 In all places in which I have walked with all the children of Israel, did I say a word to any of the tribes of Israel, whom I commanded to be shepherd of my people Israel, saying, ‘Why have you not built me a house of cedar?’”’

2 Samuel 7.8: 8 Now therefore tell my servant David this, ‘Yahweh of Armies says, “I took you from the sheep pen, from following the sheep, to be prince over my people, over Israel.

2 Samuel 7.9: 9 I have been with you wherever you went, and have cut off all your enemies from before you. I will make you a great name, like the name of the great ones who are in the earth.

2 Samuel 7.10: 10 I will appoint a place for my people Israel, and will plant them, that they may dwell in their own place, and be moved no more. The children of wickedness will not afflict them any more, as at the first,

2 Samuel 7.11: 11 and as from the day that I commanded judges to be over my people Israel. I will cause you to rest from all your enemies. Moreover Yahweh tells you that Yahweh will make you a house.

2 Samuel 7.12: 12 When your days are fulfilled, and you sleep with your fathers, I will set up your offspring after you, who will proceed out of your body, and I will establish his kingdom.

2 Samuel 7.13: 13 He will build a house for my name, and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever.

2 Samuel 7.14: 14 I will be his father, and he will be my son. If he commits iniquity, I will chasten him with the rod of men, and with the stripes of the children of men;

2 Samuel 7.15: 15 but my loving kindness will not depart from him, as I took it from Saul, whom I put away before you.

2 Samuel 7.16: 16 Your house and your kingdom will be made sure forever before you. Your throne will be established forever.”’”

2 Samuel 7.17: 17 Nathan spoke to David all these words, and according to all this vision.

2 Samuel 7.18: 18 Then David the king went in, and sat before Yahweh; and he said, “Who am I, Lord Yahweh, and what is my house, that you have brought me this far?

2 Samuel 7.19: 19 This was yet a small thing in your eyes, Lord Yahweh; but you have spoken also of your servant’s house for a great while to come; and this among men, Lord Yahweh!

2 Samuel 7.20: 20 What more can David say to you? For you know your servant, Lord Yahweh.

2 Samuel 7.21: 21 For your word’s sake, and according to your own heart, you have worked all this greatness, to make your servant know it.

2 Samuel 7.22: 22 Therefore you are great, Yahweh God. For there is no one like you, neither is there any God besides you, according to all that we have heard with our ears.

2 Samuel 7.23: 23 What one nation in the earth is like your people, even like Israel, whom God went to redeem to himself for a people, and to make himself a name, and to do great things for you, and awesome things for your land, before your people, whom you redeemed to yourself out of Egypt, from the nations and their gods?

2 Samuel 7.24: 24 You established for yourself your people Israel to be your people forever; and you, Yahweh, became their God.

2 Samuel 7.25: 25 Now, Yahweh God, the word that you have spoken concerning your servant, and concerning his house, confirm it forever, and do as you have spoken.

2 Samuel 7.26: 26 Let your name be magnified forever, saying, ‘Yahweh of Armies is God over Israel; and the house of your servant David will be established before you.’

2 Samuel 7.27: 27 For you, Yahweh of Armies, the God of Israel, have revealed to your servant, saying, ‘I will build you a house.’ Therefore your servant has found in his heart to pray this prayer to you.

2 Samuel 7.28: 28 “Now, O Lord Yahweh, you are God, and your words are truth, and you have promised this good thing to your servant.

2 Samuel 7.29: 29 Now therefore let it please you to bless the house of your servant, that it may continue forever before you; for you, Lord Yahweh, have spoken it. Let the house of your servant be blessed forever with your blessing.”

2 Samuel 8.0:

8

2 Samuel 8.1: 1 After this, David struck the Philistines and subdued them; and David took the bridle of the mother city out of the hand of the Philistines.

2 Samuel 8.2: 2 He struck Moab, and measured them with the line, making them to lie down on the ground; and he measured two lines to put to death, and one full line to keep alive. The Moabites became servants to David, and brought tribute.

2 Samuel 8.3: 3 David struck also Hadadezer the son of Rehob, king of Zobah, as he went to recover his dominion at the River.

2 Samuel 8.4: 4 David took from him one thousand seven hundred horsemen and twenty thousand footmen. David hamstrung all the chariot horses, but reserved of them for one hundred chariots.

2 Samuel 8.5: 5 When the Syrians of Damascus came to help Hadadezer king of Zobah, David struck twenty two thousand men of the Syrians.

2 Samuel 8.6: 6 Then David put garrisons in Syria of Damascus; and the Syrians became servants to David, and brought tribute. Yahweh gave victory to David wherever he went.

2 Samuel 8.7: 7 David took the shields of gold that were on the servants of Hadadezer, and brought them to Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 8.8: 8 From Betah and from Berothai, cities of Hadadezer, king David took a great quantity of bronze.

2 Samuel 8.9: 9 When Toi king of Hamath heard that David had struck all the army of Hadadezer,

2 Samuel 8.10: 10 then Toi sent Joram his son to king David, to greet him, and to bless him, because he had fought against Hadadezer and struck him; for Hadadezer had wars with Toi. Joram brought with him vessels of silver, vessels of gold, and vessels of bronze.

2 Samuel 8.11: 11 King David also dedicated these to Yahweh, with the silver and gold that he dedicated of all the nations which he subdued;

2 Samuel 8.12: 12 of Syria, of Moab, of the children of Ammon, of the Philistines, of Amalek, and of the plunder of Hadadezer, son of Rehob, king of Zobah.

2 Samuel 8.13: 13 David earned a reputation when he returned from striking down eighteen thousand men of the Syrians in the Valley of Salt.

2 Samuel 8.14: 14 He put garrisons in Edom. Throughout all Edom, he put garrisons, and all the Edomites became servants to David. Yahweh gave victory to David wherever he went.

2 Samuel 8.15: 15 David reigned over all Israel; and David executed justice and righteousness for all his people.

2 Samuel 8.16: 16 Joab the son of Zeruiah was over the army, Jehoshaphat the son of Ahilud was recorder,

2 Samuel 8.17: 17 Zadok the son of Ahitub and Ahimelech the son of Abiathar were priests, Seraiah was scribe,

2 Samuel 8.18: 18 Benaiah the son of Jehoiada was over the Cherethites and the Pelethites, and David’s sons were chief ministers.

2 Samuel 9.0:

9

2 Samuel 9.1: 1 David said, “Is there yet any who is left of Saul’s house, that I may show him kindness for Jonathan’s sake?”

2 Samuel 9.2: 2 There was of Saul’s house a servant whose name was Ziba, and they called him to David; and the king said to him, “Are you Ziba?”

He said, “I am your servant.”

2 Samuel 9.3: 3 The king said, “Is there not yet any of Saul’s house, that I may show the kindness of God to him?”

Ziba said to the king, “Jonathan still has a son, who is lame in his feet.”

2 Samuel 9.4: 4 The king said to him, “Where is he?”

Ziba said to the king, “Behold, he is in the house of Machir the son of Ammiel, in Lo Debar.”

2 Samuel 9.5: 5 Then king David sent, and brought him out of the house of Machir the son of Ammiel, from Lo Debar.

2 Samuel 9.6: 6 Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan, the son of Saul, came to David, and fell on his face, and showed respect. David said, “Mephibosheth.”

He answered, “Behold, your servant!”

2 Samuel 9.7: 7 David said to him, “Don’t be afraid; for I will surely show you kindness for Jonathan your father’s sake, and will restore to you all the land of Saul your father. You will eat bread at my table continually.”

2 Samuel 9.8: 8 He bowed down, and said, “What is your servant, that you should look at such a dead dog as I am?”

2 Samuel 9.9: 9 Then the king called to Ziba, Saul’s servant, and said to him, “All that belonged to Saul and to all his house I have given to your master’s son.

2 Samuel 9.10: 10 Till the land for him, you, your sons, and your servants. Bring in the harvest, that your master’s son may have bread to eat; but Mephibosheth your master’s son will always eat bread at my table.”

Now Ziba had fifteen sons and twenty servants.

2 Samuel 9.11: 11 Then Ziba said to the king, “According to all that my lord the king commands his servant, so your servant will do.” So Mephibosheth ate at the king’s table, like one of the king’s sons.

2 Samuel 9.12: 12 Mephibosheth had a young son, whose name was Mica. All that lived in Ziba’s house were servants to Mephibosheth.

2 Samuel 9.13: 13 So Mephibosheth lived in Jerusalem; for he ate continually at the king’s table. He was lame in both his feet.

2 Samuel 10.0:

10

2 Samuel 10.1: 1 After this, the king of the children of Ammon died, and Hanun his son reigned in his place.

2 Samuel 10.2: 2 David said, “I will show kindness to Hanun the son of Nahash, as his father showed kindness to me.” So David sent by his servants to comfort him concerning his father. David’s servants came into the land of the children of Ammon.

2 Samuel 10.3: 3 But the princes of the children of Ammon said to Hanun their lord, “Do you think that David honors your father, in that he has sent comforters to you? Hasn’t David sent his servants to you to search the city, to spy it out, and to overthrow it?”

2 Samuel 10.4: 4 So Hanun took David’s servants, shaved off one half of their beards, and cut off their garments in the middle, even to their buttocks, and sent them away.

2 Samuel 10.5: 5 When they told David this, he sent to meet them, for the men were greatly ashamed. The king said, “Wait at Jericho until your beards have grown, and then return.”

2 Samuel 10.6: 6 When the children of Ammon saw that they had become odious to David, the children of Ammon sent and hired the Syrians of Beth Rehob, and the Syrians of Zobah, twenty thousand footmen, and the king of Maacah with one thousand men, and the men of Tob twelve thousand men.

2 Samuel 10.7: 7 When David heard of it, he sent Joab, and all the army of the mighty men.

2 Samuel 10.8: 8 The children of Ammon came out, and put the battle in array at the entrance of the gate. The Syrians of Zobah and of Rehob, and the men of Tob and Maacah, were by themselves in the field.

2 Samuel 10.9: 9 Now when Joab saw that the battle was set against him before and behind, he chose of all the choice men of Israel, and put them in array against the Syrians.

2 Samuel 10.10: 10 The rest of the people he committed into the hand of Abishai his brother; and he put them in array against the children of Ammon.

2 Samuel 10.11: 11 He said, “If the Syrians are too strong for me, then you shall help me; but if the children of Ammon are too strong for you, then I will come and help you.

2 Samuel 10.12: 12 Be courageous, and let’s be strong for our people, and for the cities of our God; and may Yahweh do what seems good to him.”

2 Samuel 10.13: 13 So Joab and the people who were with him came near to the battle against the Syrians, and they fled before him.

2 Samuel 10.14: 14 When the children of Ammon saw that the Syrians had fled, they likewise fled before Abishai, and entered into the city. Then Joab returned from the children of Ammon, and came to Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 10.15: 15 When the Syrians saw that they were defeated by Israel, they gathered themselves together.

2 Samuel 10.16: 16 Hadadezer sent, and brought out the Syrians who were beyond the River: and they came to Helam, with Shobach the captain of the army of Hadadezer at their head.

2 Samuel 10.17: 17 David was told that; and he gathered all Israel together, passed over the Jordan, and came to Helam. The Syrians set themselves in array against David, and fought with him.

2 Samuel 10.18: 18 The Syrians fled before Israel; and David killed seven hundred charioteers of the Syrians, and forty thousand horsemen, and struck Shobach the captain of their army, so that he died there.

2 Samuel 10.19: 19 When all the kings who were servants to Hadadezer saw that they were defeated before Israel, they made peace with Israel, and served them. So the Syrians were afraid to help the children of Ammon any more.

2 Samuel 11.0:

11

2 Samuel 11.1: 1 At the return of the year, at the time when kings go out, David sent Joab, and his servants with him, and all Israel; and they destroyed the children of Ammon, and besieged Rabbah. But David stayed at Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 11.2: 2 At evening, David arose from his bed and walked on the roof of the king’s house. From the roof, he saw a woman bathing, and the woman was very beautiful to look at.

2 Samuel 11.3: 3 David sent and inquired after the woman. One said, “Isn’t this Bathsheba, the daughter of Eliam, Uriah the Hittite’s wife?”

2 Samuel 11.4: 4 David sent messengers, and took her; and she came in to him, and he lay with her (for she was purified from her uncleanness); and she returned to her house.

2 Samuel 11.5: 5 The woman conceived; and she sent and told David, and said, “I am with child.”

2 Samuel 11.6: 6 David sent to Joab, “Send me Uriah the Hittite.” Joab sent Uriah to David.

2 Samuel 11.7: 7 When Uriah had come to him, David asked him how Joab did, and how the people fared, and how the war prospered.

2 Samuel 11.8: 8 David said to Uriah, “Go down to your house and wash your feet.” Uriah departed out of the king’s house, and a gift from the king was sent after him.

2 Samuel 11.9: 9 But Uriah slept at the door of the king’s house with all the servants of his lord, and didn’t go down to his house.

2 Samuel 11.10: 10 When they had told David, saying, “Uriah didn’t go down to his house,” David said to Uriah, “Haven’t you come from a journey? Why didn’t you go down to your house?”

2 Samuel 11.11: 11 Uriah said to David, “The ark, Israel, and Judah, are staying in tents; and my lord Joab and the servants of my lord, are encamped in the open field. Shall I then go into my house to eat and to drink, and to lie with my wife? As you live, and as your soul lives, I will not do this thing!”

2 Samuel 11.12: 12 David said to Uriah, “Stay here today also, and tomorrow I will let you depart.” So Uriah stayed in Jerusalem that day, and the next day.

2 Samuel 11.13: 13 When David had called him, he ate and drank before him; and he made him drunk. At evening, he went out to lie on his bed with the servants of his lord, but didn’t go down to his house.

2 Samuel 11.14: 14 In the morning, David wrote a letter to Joab, and sent it by the hand of Uriah.

2 Samuel 11.15: 15 He wrote in the letter, saying, “Send Uriah to the forefront of the hottest battle, and retreat from him, that he may be struck, and die.”

2 Samuel 11.16: 16 When Joab kept watch on the city, he assigned Uriah to the place where he knew that valiant men were.

2 Samuel 11.17: 17 The men of the city went out, and fought with Joab. Some of the people fell, even of David’s servants; and Uriah the Hittite died also.

2 Samuel 11.18: 18 Then Joab sent and told David all the things concerning the war;

2 Samuel 11.19: 19 and he commanded the messenger, saying, “When you have finished telling all the things concerning the war to the king,

2 Samuel 11.20: 20 it shall be that, if the king’s wrath arise, and he asks you, ‘Why did you go so near to the city to fight? Didn’t you know that they would shoot from the wall?

2 Samuel 11.21: 21 Who struck Abimelech the son of Jerubbesheth? Didn’t a woman cast an upper millstone on him from the wall, so that he died at Thebez? Why did you go so near the wall?’ then you shall say, ‘Your servant Uriah the Hittite is also dead.’”

2 Samuel 11.22: 22 So the messenger went, and came and showed David all that Joab had sent him for.

2 Samuel 11.23: 23 The messenger said to David, “The men prevailed against us, and came out to us into the field, and we were on them even to the entrance of the gate.

2 Samuel 11.24: 24 The shooters shot at your servants from off the wall; and some of the king’s servants are dead, and your servant Uriah the Hittite is also dead.”

2 Samuel 11.25: 25 Then David said to the messenger, “Tell Joab, ‘Don’t let this thing displease you, for the sword devours one as well as another. Make your battle stronger against the city, and overthrow it.’ Encourage him.”

2 Samuel 11.26: 26 When Uriah’s wife heard that Uriah her husband was dead, she mourned for her husband.

2 Samuel 11.27: 27 When the mourning was past, David sent and took her home to his house, and she became his wife, and bore him a son. But the thing that David had done displeased Yahweh.

2 Samuel 12.0:

12

2 Samuel 12.1: 1 Yahweh sent Nathan to David. He came to him, and said to him, “There were two men in one city; the one rich, and the other poor.

2 Samuel 12.2: 2 The rich man had very many flocks and herds,

2 Samuel 12.3: 3 but the poor man had nothing, except one little ewe lamb, which he had bought and raised. It grew up together with him, and with his children. It ate of his own food, drank of his own cup, and lay in his bosom, and was like a daughter to him.

2 Samuel 12.4: 4 A traveler came to the rich man, and he spared to take of his own flock and of his own herd, to prepare for the wayfaring man who had come to him, but took the poor man’s lamb, and prepared it for the man who had come to him.”

2 Samuel 12.5: 5 David’s anger burned hot against the man, and he said to Nathan, “As Yahweh lives, the man who has done this deserves to die!

2 Samuel 12.6: 6 He must restore the lamb fourfold, because he did this thing, and because he had no pity!”

2 Samuel 12.7: 7 Nathan said to David, “You are the man. This is what Yahweh, the God of Israel, says: ‘I anointed you king over Israel, and I delivered you out of the hand of Saul.

2 Samuel 12.8: 8 I gave you your master’s house, and your master’s wives into your bosom, and gave you the house of Israel and of Judah; and if that would have been too little, I would have added to you many more such things.

2 Samuel 12.9: 9 Why have you despised Yahweh’s word, to do that which is evil in his sight? You have struck Uriah the Hittite with the sword, and have taken his wife to be your wife, and have slain him with the sword of the children of Ammon.

2 Samuel 12.10: 10 Now therefore the sword will never depart from your house, because you have despised me, and have taken Uriah the Hittite’s wife to be your wife.’

2 Samuel 12.11: 11 “This is what Yahweh says: ‘Behold, I will raise up evil against you out of your own house; and I will take your wives before your eyes, and give them to your neighbor, and he will lie with your wives in the sight of this sun.

2 Samuel 12.12: 12 For you did this secretly, but I will do this thing before all Israel, and before the sun.’”

2 Samuel 12.13: 13 David said to Nathan, “I have sinned against Yahweh.”

Nathan said to David, “Yahweh also has put away your sin. You will not die.

2 Samuel 12.14: 14 However, because by this deed you have given great occasion to Yahweh’s enemies to blaspheme, the child also who is born to you will surely die.”

2 Samuel 12.15: 15 Nathan departed to his house.

Yahweh struck the child that Uriah’s wife bore to David, and it was very sick.

2 Samuel 12.16: 16 David therefore begged God for the child; and David fasted, and went in, and lay all night on the ground.

2 Samuel 12.17: 17 The elders of his house arose beside him, to raise him up from the earth: but he would not, and he didn’t eat bread with them.

2 Samuel 12.18: 18 On the seventh day, the child died. David’s servants were afraid to tell him that the child was dead, for they said, “Behold, while the child was yet alive, we spoke to him, and he didn’t listen to our voice. How will he then harm himself, if we tell him that the child is dead?”

2 Samuel 12.19: 19 But when David saw that his servants were whispering together, David perceived that the child was dead; and David said to his servants, “Is the child dead?”

They said, “He is dead.”

2 Samuel 12.20: 20 Then David arose from the earth, and washed, and anointed himself, and changed his clothing; and he came into Yahweh’s house, and worshiped. Then he came to his own house; and when he requested, they set bread before him, and he ate.

2 Samuel 12.21: 21 Then his servants said to him, “What is this that you have done? You fasted and wept for the child while he was alive, but when the child was dead, you rose up and ate bread.”

2 Samuel 12.22: 22 He said, “While the child was yet alive, I fasted and wept; for I said, ‘Who knows whether Yahweh will not be gracious to me, that the child may live?’

2 Samuel 12.23: 23 But now he is dead, why should I fast? Can I bring him back again? I will go to him, but he will not return to me.”

2 Samuel 12.24: 24 David comforted Bathsheba his wife, and went in to her, and lay with her. She bore a son, and he called his name Solomon. Yahweh loved him;

2 Samuel 12.25: 25 and he sent by the hand of Nathan the prophet, and he named him Jedidiah, for Yahweh’s sake.

2 Samuel 12.26: 26 Now Joab fought against Rabbah of the children of Ammon, and took the royal city.

2 Samuel 12.27: 27 Joab sent messengers to David, and said, “I have fought against Rabbah. Yes, I have taken the city of waters.

2 Samuel 12.28: 28 Now therefore gather the rest of the people together, and encamp against the city, and take it; lest I take the city, and it be called by my name.”

2 Samuel 12.29: 29 David gathered all the people together, and went to Rabbah, and fought against it, and took it.

2 Samuel 12.30: 30 He took the crown of their king from off his head; and its weight was a talent of gold, and in it were precious stones; and it was set on David’s head. He brought a great quantity of plunder out of the city.

2 Samuel 12.31: 31 He brought out the people who were in it, and put them under saws, under iron picks, under axes of iron, and made them pass through the brick kiln; and he did so to all the cities of the children of Ammon. Then David and all the people returned to Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 13.0:

13

2 Samuel 13.1: 1 After this, Absalom the son of David had a beautiful sister, whose name was Tamar; and Amnon the son of David loved her.

2 Samuel 13.2: 2 Amnon was so troubled that he became sick because of his sister Tamar; for she was a virgin; and it seemed hard to Amnon to do anything to her.

2 Samuel 13.3: 3 But Amnon had a friend, whose name was Jonadab, the son of Shimeah, David’s brother; and Jonadab was a very subtle man.

2 Samuel 13.4: 4 He said to him, “Why, son of the king, are you so sad from day to day? Won’t you tell me?”

Amnon said to him, “I love Tamar, my brother Absalom’s sister.”

2 Samuel 13.5: 5 Jonadab said to him, “Lay down on your bed, and pretend to be sick. When your father comes to see you, tell him, ‘Please let my sister Tamar come and give me bread to eat, and prepare the food in my sight, that I may see it, and eat it from her hand.’”

2 Samuel 13.6: 6 So Amnon lay down and faked being sick. When the king came to see him, Amnon said to the king, “Please let my sister Tamar come, and make me a couple of cakes in my sight, that I may eat from her hand.”

2 Samuel 13.7: 7 Then David sent home to Tamar, saying, “Go now to your brother Amnon’s house, and prepare food for him.”

2 Samuel 13.8: 8 So Tamar went to her brother Amnon’s house; and he was lying down. She took dough, and kneaded it, made cakes in his sight, and baked the cakes.

2 Samuel 13.9: 9 She took the pan, and poured them out before him; but he refused to eat. Amnon said, “Have all men leave me.” Then every man went out from him.

2 Samuel 13.10: 10 Amnon said to Tamar, “Bring the food into the room, that I may eat from your hand.” Tamar took the cakes which she had made, and brought them into the room to Amnon her brother.

2 Samuel 13.11: 11 When she had brought them near to him to eat, he took hold of her, and said to her, “Come, lie with me, my sister!”

2 Samuel 13.12: 12 She answered him, “No, my brother, do not force me! For no such thing ought to be done in Israel. Don’t you do this folly.

2 Samuel 13.13: 13 As for me, where would I carry my shame? And as for you, you will be as one of the fools in Israel. Now therefore, please speak to the king; for he will not withhold me from you.”

2 Samuel 13.14: 14 However he would not listen to her voice; but being stronger than she, he forced her, and lay with her.

2 Samuel 13.15: 15 Then Amnon hated her with exceedingly great hatred; for the hatred with which he hated her was greater than the love with which he had loved her. Amnon said to her, “Arise, be gone!”

2 Samuel 13.16: 16 She said to him, “Not so, because this great wrong in sending me away is worse than the other that you did to me!”

But he would not listen to her.

2 Samuel 13.17: 17 Then he called his servant who ministered to him, and said, “Now put this woman out from me, and bolt the door after her.”

2 Samuel 13.18: 18 She had a garment of various colors on her; for the king’s daughters who were virgins dressed in such robes. Then his servant brought her out and bolted the door after her.

2 Samuel 13.19: 19 Tamar put ashes on her head, and tore her garment of various colors that was on her; and she laid her hand on her head, and went her way, crying aloud as she went.

2 Samuel 13.20: 20 Absalom her brother said to her, “Has Amnon your brother been with you? But now hold your peace, my sister. He is your brother. Don’t take this thing to heart.”

So Tamar remained desolate in her brother Absalom’s house.

2 Samuel 13.21: 21 But when king David heard of all these things, he was very angry.

2 Samuel 13.22: 22 Absalom spoke to Amnon neither good nor bad; for Absalom hated Amnon, because he had forced his sister Tamar.

2 Samuel 13.23: 23 After two full years, Absalom had sheep shearers in Baal Hazor, which is beside Ephraim: and Absalom invited all the king’s sons.

2 Samuel 13.24: 24 Absalom came to the king, and said, “See now, your servant has sheep shearers. Please let the king and his servants go with your servant.”

2 Samuel 13.25: 25 The king said to Absalom, “No, my son, let’s not all go, lest we be burdensome to you.” He pressed him; however he would not go, but blessed him.

2 Samuel 13.26: 26 Then Absalom said, “If not, please let my brother Amnon go with us.”

The king said to him, “Why should he go with you?”

2 Samuel 13.27: 27 But Absalom pressed him, and he let Amnon and all the king’s sons go with him.

2 Samuel 13.28: 28 Absalom commanded his servants, saying, “Mark now, when Amnon’s heart is merry with wine; and when I tell you, ‘Strike Amnon,’ then kill him. Don’t be afraid. Haven’t I commanded you? Be courageous, and be valiant!”

2 Samuel 13.29: 29 The servants of Absalom did to Amnon as Absalom had commanded. Then all the king’s sons arose, and every man got up on his mule, and fled.

2 Samuel 13.30: 30 While they were on the way, the news came to David, saying, “Absalom has slain all the king’s sons, and there is not one of them left!”

2 Samuel 13.31: 31 Then the king arose, and tore his garments, and lay on the earth; and all his servants stood by with their clothes torn.

2 Samuel 13.32: 32 Jonadab, the son of Shimeah, David’s brother, answered, “Don’t let my lord suppose that they have killed all the young men the king’s sons; for Amnon only is dead; for by the appointment of Absalom this has been determined from the day that he forced his sister Tamar.

2 Samuel 13.33: 33 Now therefore don’t let my lord the king take the thing to his heart, to think that all the king’s sons are dead; for only Amnon is dead.”

2 Samuel 13.34: 34 But Absalom fled. The young man who kept the watch lifted up his eyes, and looked, and behold, many people were coming by way of the hillside behind him.

2 Samuel 13.35: 35 Jonadab said to the king, “Behold, the king’s sons are coming! It is as your servant said.”

2 Samuel 13.36: 36 As soon as he had finished speaking, behold, the king’s sons came, and lifted up their voice, and wept. The king also and all his servants wept bitterly.

2 Samuel 13.37: 37 But Absalom fled, and went to Talmai the son of Ammihur, king of Geshur. David mourned for his son every day.

2 Samuel 13.38: 38 So Absalom fled, and went to Geshur, and was there three years.

2 Samuel 13.39: 39 King David longed to go out to Absalom; for he was comforted concerning Amnon, since he was dead.

2 Samuel 14.0:

14

2 Samuel 14.1: 1 Now Joab the son of Zeruiah perceived that the king’s heart was toward Absalom.

2 Samuel 14.2: 2 Joab sent to Tekoa, and brought a wise woman from there, and said to her, “Please act like a mourner, and put on mourning clothing, please, and don’t anoint yourself with oil, but be as a woman who has mourned a long time for the dead.

2 Samuel 14.3: 3 Go in to the king, and speak like this to him.” So Joab put the words in her mouth.

2 Samuel 14.4: 4 When the woman of Tekoa spoke to the king, she fell on her face to the ground, showed respect, and said, “Help, O king!”

2 Samuel 14.5: 5 The king said to her, “What ails you?”

She answered, “Truly I am a widow, and my husband is dead.

2 Samuel 14.6: 6 Your servant had two sons, and they both fought together in the field, and there was no one to part them, but the one struck the other, and killed him.

2 Samuel 14.7: 7 Behold, the whole family has risen against your servant, and they say, ‘Deliver him who struck his brother, that we may kill him for the life of his brother whom he killed, and so destroy the heir also.’ Thus they would quench my coal which is left, and would leave to my husband neither name nor remainder on the surface of the earth.”

2 Samuel 14.8: 8 The king said to the woman, “Go to your house, and I will give a command concerning you.”

2 Samuel 14.9: 9 The woman of Tekoa said to the king, “My lord, O king, may the iniquity be on me, and on my father’s house; and may the king and his throne be guiltless.”

2 Samuel 14.10: 10 The king said, “Whoever says anything to you, bring him to me, and he will not bother you any more.”

2 Samuel 14.11: 11 Then she said, “Please let the king remember Yahweh your God, that the avenger of blood destroy not any more, lest they destroy my son.”

He said, “As Yahweh lives, not one hair of your son shall fall to the earth.”

2 Samuel 14.12: 12 Then the woman said, “Please let your servant speak a word to my lord the king.”

He said, “Say on.”

2 Samuel 14.13: 13 The woman said, “Why then have you devised such a thing against the people of God? For in speaking this word the king is as one who is guilty, in that the king does not bring home again his banished one.

2 Samuel 14.14: 14 For we must die, and are like water spilled on the ground, which can’t be gathered up again; neither does God take away life, but devises means, that he who is banished not be an outcast from him.

2 Samuel 14.15: 15 Now therefore seeing that I have come to speak this word to my lord the king, it is because the people have made me afraid. Your servant said, ‘I will now speak to the king; it may be that the king will perform the request of his servant.’

2 Samuel 14.16: 16 For the king will hear, to deliver his servant out of the hand of the man who would destroy me and my son together out of the inheritance of God.

2 Samuel 14.17: 17 Then your servant said, ‘Please let the word of my lord the king bring rest; for as an angel of God, so is my lord the king to discern good and bad. May Yahweh, your God, be with you.’”

2 Samuel 14.18: 18 Then the king answered the woman, “Please don’t hide anything from me that I ask you.”

The woman said, “Let my lord the king now speak.”

2 Samuel 14.19: 19 The king said, “Is the hand of Joab with you in all this?”

The woman answered, “As your soul lives, my lord the king, no one can turn to the right hand or to the left from anything that my lord the king has spoken; for your servant Joab urged me, and he put all these words in the mouth of your servant.

2 Samuel 14.20: 20 Your servant Joab has done this thing to change the face of the matter. My lord is wise, according to the wisdom of an angel of God, to know all things that are in the earth.”

2 Samuel 14.21: 21 The king said to Joab, “Behold now, I have done this thing. Go therefore, and bring the young man Absalom back.”

2 Samuel 14.22: 22 Joab fell to the ground on his face, showed respect, and blessed the king. Joab said, “Today your servant knows that I have found favor in your sight, my lord, king, in that the king has performed the request of his servant.”

2 Samuel 14.23: 23 So Joab arose and went to Geshur, and brought Absalom to Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 14.24: 24 The king said, “Let him return to his own house, but let him not see my face.” So Absalom returned to his own house, and didn’t see the king’s face.

2 Samuel 14.25: 25 Now in all Israel there was no one to be so much praised as Absalom for his beauty. From the sole of his foot even to the crown of his head there was no defect in him.

2 Samuel 14.26: 26 When he cut the hair of his head (now it was at every year’s end that he cut it; because it was heavy on him, therefore he cut it); he weighed the hair of his head at two hundred shekels, after the king’s weight.

2 Samuel 14.27: 27 Three sons were born to Absalom, and one daughter, whose name was Tamar. She was a woman with a beautiful face.

2 Samuel 14.28: 28 Absalom lived two full years in Jerusalem, and he didn’t see the king’s face.

2 Samuel 14.29: 29 Then Absalom sent for Joab, to send him to the king, but he would not come to him. Then he sent again a second time, but he would not come.

2 Samuel 14.30: 30 Therefore he said to his servants, “Behold, Joab’s field is near mine, and he has barley there. Go and set it on fire.” So Absalom’s servants set the field on fire.

2 Samuel 14.31: 31 Then Joab arose, and came to Absalom to his house, and said to him, “Why have your servants set my field on fire?”

2 Samuel 14.32: 32 Absalom answered Joab, “Behold, I sent to you, saying, ‘Come here, that I may send you to the king, to say, “Why have I come from Geshur? It would be better for me to be there still. Now therefore let me see the king’s face, and if there is iniquity in me, let him kill me.”’”

2 Samuel 14.33: 33 So Joab came to the king, and told him; and when he had called for Absalom, he came to the king, and bowed himself on his face to the ground before the king; and the king kissed Absalom.

2 Samuel 15.0:

15

2 Samuel 15.1: 1 After this, Absalom prepared a chariot and horses for himself, and fifty men to run before him.

2 Samuel 15.2: 2 Absalom rose up early, and stood beside the way of the gate. When any man had a suit which should come to the king for judgment, then Absalom called to him, and said, “What city are you from?”

He said, “Your servant is of one of the tribes of Israel.”

2 Samuel 15.3: 3 Absalom said to him, “Behold, your matters are good and right; but there is no man deputized by the king to hear you.”

2 Samuel 15.4: 4 Absalom said moreover, “Oh that I were made judge in the land, that every man who has any suit or cause might come to me, and I would do him justice!”

2 Samuel 15.5: 5 It was so, that when any man came near to bow down to him, he stretched out his hand, and took hold of him, and kissed him.

2 Samuel 15.6: 6 Absalom did this sort of thing to all Israel who came to the king for judgment. So Absalom stole the hearts of the men of Israel.

2 Samuel 15.7: 7 At the end of forty years, Absalom said to the king, “Please let me go and pay my vow, which I have vowed to Yahweh, in Hebron.

2 Samuel 15.8: 8 For your servant vowed a vow while I stayed at Geshur in Syria, saying, ‘If Yahweh shall indeed bring me again to Jerusalem, then I will serve Yahweh.’”

2 Samuel 15.9: 9 The king said to him, “Go in peace.”

So he arose, and went to Hebron.

2 Samuel 15.10: 10 But Absalom sent spies throughout all the tribes of Israel, saying, “As soon as you hear the sound of the trumpet, then you shall say, ‘Absalom is king in Hebron!’”

2 Samuel 15.11: 11 Two hundred men went with Absalom out of Jerusalem, who were invited, and went in their simplicity; and they didn’t know anything.

2 Samuel 15.12: 12 Absalom sent for Ahithophel the Gilonite, David’s counselor, from his city, even from Giloh, while he was offering the sacrifices. The conspiracy was strong; for the people increased continually with Absalom.

2 Samuel 15.13: 13 A messenger came to David, saying, “The hearts of the men of Israel are after Absalom.”

2 Samuel 15.14: 14 David said to all his servants who were with him at Jerusalem, “Arise! Let’s flee; or else none of us will escape from Absalom. Hurry to depart, lest he overtake us quickly, and bring down evil on us, and strike the city with the edge of the sword.”

2 Samuel 15.15: 15 The king’s servants said to the king, “Behold, your servants are ready to do whatever my lord the king chooses.”

2 Samuel 15.16: 16 The king went out, and all his household after him. The king left ten women, who were concubines, to keep the house.

2 Samuel 15.17: 17 The king went out, and all the people after him; and they stayed in Beth Merhak.

2 Samuel 15.18: 18 All his servants passed on beside him; and all the Cherethites, and all the Pelethites, and all the Gittites, six hundred men who came after him from Gath, passed on before the king.

2 Samuel 15.19: 19 Then the king said to Ittai the Gittite, “Why do you also go with us? Return, and stay with the king; for you are a foreigner, and also an exile. Return to your own place.

2 Samuel 15.20: 20 Whereas you came but yesterday, should I today make you go up and down with us, since I go where I may? Return, and take back your brothers. Mercy and truth be with you.”

2 Samuel 15.21: 21 Ittai answered the king, and said, “As Yahweh lives, and as my lord the king lives, surely in what place my lord the king is, whether for death or for life, your servant will be there also.”

2 Samuel 15.22: 22 David said to Ittai, “Go and pass over.” Ittai the Gittite passed over, and all his men, and all the little ones who were with him.

2 Samuel 15.23: 23 All the country wept with a loud voice, and all the people passed over. The king also himself passed over the brook Kidron, and all the people passed over, toward the way of the wilderness.

2 Samuel 15.24: 24 Behold, Zadok also came, and all the Levites with him, bearing the ark of the covenant of God; and they set down God’s ark; and Abiathar went up, until all the people finished passing out of the city.

2 Samuel 15.25: 25 The king said to Zadok, “Carry God’s ark back into the city. If I find favor in Yahweh’s eyes, he will bring me again, and show me both it, and his habitation;

2 Samuel 15.26: 26 but if he says, ‘I have no delight in you;’ behold, here I am. Let him do to me as seems good to him.”

2 Samuel 15.27: 27 The king said also to Zadok the priest, “Aren’t you a seer? Return into the city in peace, and your two sons with you, Ahimaaz your son, and Jonathan the son of Abiathar.

2 Samuel 15.28: 28 Behold, I will stay at the fords of the wilderness, until word comes from you to inform me.”

2 Samuel 15.29: 29 Zadok therefore and Abiathar carried God’s ark to Jerusalem again; and they stayed there.

2 Samuel 15.30: 30 David went up by the ascent of the Mount of Olives, and wept as he went up; and he had his head covered, and went barefoot. All the people who were with him each covered his head, and they went up, weeping as they went up.

2 Samuel 15.31: 31 Someone told David, saying, “Ahithophel is among the conspirators with Absalom.”

David said, “Yahweh, please turn the counsel of Ahithophel into foolishness.”

2 Samuel 15.32: 32 When David had come to the top, where God was worshiped, behold, Hushai the Archite came to meet him with his tunic torn, and earth on his head.

2 Samuel 15.33: 33 David said to him, “If you pass on with me, then you will be a burden to me;

2 Samuel 15.34: 34 but if you return to the city, and tell Absalom, ‘I will be your servant, O king. As I have been your father’s servant in time past, so I will now be your servant; then will you defeat for me the counsel of Ahithophel.’

2 Samuel 15.35: 35 Don’t you have Zadok and Abiathar the priests there with you? Therefore whatever you hear out of the king’s house, tell it to Zadok and Abiathar the priests.

2 Samuel 15.36: 36 Behold, they have there with them their two sons, Ahimaaz, Zadok’s son, and Jonathan, Abiathar’s son. Send to me everything that you shall hear by them.”

2 Samuel 15.37: 37 So Hushai, David’s friend, came into the city; and Absalom came into Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 16.0:

16

2 Samuel 16.1: 1 When David was a little past the top, behold, Ziba the servant of Mephibosheth met him with a couple of donkeys saddled, and on them two hundred loaves of bread, and one hundred clusters of raisins, and one hundred summer fruits, and a container of wine.

2 Samuel 16.2: 2 The king said to Ziba, “What do you mean by these?”

Ziba said, “The donkeys are for the king’s household to ride on; and the bread and summer fruit for the young men to eat; and the wine, that those who are faint in the wilderness may drink.”

2 Samuel 16.3: 3 The king said, “Where is your master’s son?”

Ziba said to the king, “Behold, he is staying in Jerusalem; for he said, ‘Today the house of Israel will restore me the kingdom of my father.’”

2 Samuel 16.4: 4 Then the king said to Ziba, “Behold, all that belongs to Mephibosheth is yours.”

Ziba said, “I bow down. Let me find favor in your sight, my lord, O king.”

2 Samuel 16.5: 5 When king David came to Bahurim, behold, a man of the family of Saul’s house came out, whose name was Shimei, the son of Gera. He came out and cursed as he came.

2 Samuel 16.6: 6 He cast stones at David, and at all the servants of king David, and all the people and all the mighty men were on his right hand and on his left.

2 Samuel 16.7: 7 Shimei said when he cursed, “Be gone, be gone, you man of blood, and wicked fellow!

2 Samuel 16.8: 8 Yahweh has returned on you all the blood of Saul’s house, in whose place you have reigned! Yahweh has delivered the kingdom into the hand of Absalom your son! Behold, you are caught by your own mischief, because you are a man of blood!”

2 Samuel 16.9: 9 Then Abishai the son of Zeruiah said to the king, “Why should this dead dog curse my lord the king? Please let me go over and take off his head.”

2 Samuel 16.10: 10 The king said, “What have I to do with you, you sons of Zeruiah? Because he curses, and because Yahweh has said to him, ‘Curse David;’ who then shall say, ‘Why have you done so?’”

2 Samuel 16.11: 11 David said to Abishai, and to all his servants, “Behold, my son, who came out of my bowels, seeks my life. How much more this Benjamite, now? Leave him alone, and let him curse; for Yahweh has invited him.

2 Samuel 16.12: 12 It may be that Yahweh will look on the wrong done to me, and that Yahweh will repay me good for the cursing of me today.”

2 Samuel 16.13: 13 So David and his men went by the way; and Shimei went along on the hillside opposite him, and cursed as he went, threw stones at him, and threw dust.

2 Samuel 16.14: 14 The king, and all the people who were with him, came weary; and he refreshed himself there.

2 Samuel 16.15: 15 Absalom and all the people, the men of Israel, came to Jerusalem, and Ahithophel with him.

2 Samuel 16.16: 16 When Hushai the Archite, David’s friend, had come to Absalom, Hushai said to Absalom, “Long live the king! Long live the king!”

2 Samuel 16.17: 17 Absalom said to Hushai, “Is this your kindness to your friend? Why didn’t you go with your friend?”

2 Samuel 16.18: 18 Hushai said to Absalom, “No; but whomever Yahweh, and this people, and all the men of Israel have chosen, I will be his, and I will stay with him.

2 Samuel 16.19: 19 Again, whom should I serve? Shouldn’t I serve in the presence of his son? As I have served in your father’s presence, so I will be in your presence.”

2 Samuel 16.20: 20 Then Absalom said to Ahithophel, “Give your counsel what we shall do.”

2 Samuel 16.21: 21 Ahithophel said to Absalom, “Go in to your father’s concubines that he has left to keep the house. Then all Israel will hear that you are abhorred by your father. Then the hands of all who are with you will be strong.”

2 Samuel 16.22: 22 So they spread a tent for Absalom on the top of the house, and Absalom went in to his father’s concubines in the sight of all Israel.

2 Samuel 16.23: 23 The counsel of Ahithophel, which he gave in those days, was as if a man inquired at the inner sanctuary of God. All the counsel of Ahithophel both was like this with David and with Absalom.

2 Samuel 17.0:

17

2 Samuel 17.1: 1 Moreover Ahithophel said to Absalom, “Let me now choose twelve thousand men, and I will arise and pursue after David tonight.

2 Samuel 17.2: 2 I will come on him while he is weary and exhausted, and will make him afraid. All the people who are with him will flee. I will strike the king only,

2 Samuel 17.3: 3 and I will bring back all the people to you. The man whom you seek is as if all returned. All the people shall be in peace.”

2 Samuel 17.4: 4 The saying pleased Absalom well, and all the elders of Israel.

2 Samuel 17.5: 5 Then Absalom said, “Now call Hushai the Archite also, and let’s hear likewise what he says.”

2 Samuel 17.6: 6 When Hushai had come to Absalom, Absalom spoke to him, saying, “Ahithophel has spoken like this. Shall we do what he says? If not, speak up.”

2 Samuel 17.7: 7 Hushai said to Absalom, “The counsel that Ahithophel has given this time is not good.”

2 Samuel 17.8: 8 Hushai said moreover, “You know your father and his men, that they are mighty men, and they are fierce in their minds, like a bear robbed of her cubs in the field. Your father is a man of war, and will not lodge with the people.

2 Samuel 17.9: 9 Behold, he is now hidden in some pit, or in some other place. It will happen, when some of them have fallen at the first, that whoever hears it will say, ‘There is a slaughter among the people who follow Absalom!’

2 Samuel 17.10: 10 Even he who is valiant, whose heart is as the heart of a lion, will utterly melt; for all Israel knows that your father is a mighty man, and those who are with him are valiant men.

2 Samuel 17.11: 11 But I counsel that all Israel be gathered together to you, from Dan even to Beersheba, as the sand that is by the sea for multitude; and that you go to battle in your own person.

2 Samuel 17.12: 12 So we will come on him in some place where he will be found, and we will light on him as the dew falls on the ground, then we will not leave so much as one of him and of all the men who are with him.

2 Samuel 17.13: 13 Moreover, if he has gone into a city, then all Israel will bring ropes to that city, and we will draw it into the river, until there isn’t one small stone found there.”

2 Samuel 17.14: 14 Absalom and all the men of Israel said, “The counsel of Hushai the Archite is better than the counsel of Ahithophel.” For Yahweh had ordained to defeat the good counsel of Ahithophel, to the intent that Yahweh might bring evil on Absalom.

2 Samuel 17.15: 15 Then Hushai said to Zadok and to Abiathar the priests, “Ahithophel counseled Absalom and the elders of Israel that way; and I have counseled this way.

2 Samuel 17.16: 16 Now therefore send quickly, and tell David, saying, ‘Don’t lodge tonight at the fords of the wilderness, but by all means pass over; lest the king be swallowed up, and all the people who are with him.’”

2 Samuel 17.17: 17 Now Jonathan and Ahimaaz were staying by En Rogel; and a female servant used to go and tell them; and they went and told king David. For they might not be seen to come into the city.

2 Samuel 17.18: 18 But a boy saw them, and told Absalom. Then they both went away quickly, and came to the house of a man in Bahurim, who had a well in his court; and they went down there.

2 Samuel 17.19: 19 The woman took and spread the covering over the well’s mouth, and spread out crushed grain on it; and nothing was known.

2 Samuel 17.20: 20 Absalom’s servants came to the woman to the house; and they said, “Where are Ahimaaz and Jonathan?”

The woman said to them, “They have gone over the brook of water.”

When they had sought and could not find them, they returned to Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 17.21: 21 After they had departed, they came up out of the well, and went and told king David; and they said to David, “Arise and pass quickly over the water; for thus has Ahithophel counseled against you.”

2 Samuel 17.22: 22 Then David arose, and all the people who were with him, and they passed over the Jordan. By the morning light there lacked not one of them who had not gone over the Jordan.

2 Samuel 17.23: 23 When Ahithophel saw that his counsel was not followed, he saddled his donkey, arose, and went home, to his city, and set his house in order, and hanged himself; and he died, and was buried in the tomb of his father.

2 Samuel 17.24: 24 Then David came to Mahanaim. Absalom passed over the Jordan, he and all the men of Israel with him.

2 Samuel 17.25: 25 Absalom set Amasa over the army instead of Joab. Now Amasa was the son of a man whose name was Ithra the Israelite, who went in to Abigail the daughter of Nahash, sister to Zeruiah, Joab’s mother.

2 Samuel 17.26: 26 Israel and Absalom encamped in the land of Gilead.

2 Samuel 17.27: 27 When David had come to Mahanaim, Shobi the son of Nahash of Rabbah of the children of Ammon, and Machir the son of Ammiel of Lodebar, and Barzillai the Gileadite of Rogelim,

2 Samuel 17.28: 28 brought beds, basins, earthen vessels, wheat, barley, meal, parched grain, beans, lentils, roasted grain,

2 Samuel 17.29: 29 honey, butter, sheep, and cheese of the herd, for David, and for the people who were with him, to eat; for they said, “The people are hungry, weary, and thirsty in the wilderness.”

2 Samuel 18.0:

18

2 Samuel 18.1: 1 David counted the people who were with him, and set captains of thousands and captains of hundreds over them.

2 Samuel 18.2: 2 David sent the people out, a third part under the hand of Joab, and a third part under the hand of Abishai the son of Zeruiah, Joab’s brother, and a third part under the hand of Ittai the Gittite. The king said to the people, “I will also surely go out with you myself.”

2 Samuel 18.3: 3 But the people said, “You shall not go out; for if we flee away, they will not care for us; neither if half of us die, will they care for us. But you are worth ten thousand of us. Therefore now it is better that you are ready to help us out of the city.”

2 Samuel 18.4: 4 The king said to them, “I will do what seems best to you.”

The king stood beside the gate, and all the people went out by hundreds and by thousands.

2 Samuel 18.5: 5 The king commanded Joab and Abishai and Ittai, saying, “Deal gently for my sake with the young man, even with Absalom.” All the people heard when the king commanded all the captains concerning Absalom.

2 Samuel 18.6: 6 So the people went out into the field against Israel; and the battle was in the forest of Ephraim.

2 Samuel 18.7: 7 The people of Israel were struck there before David’s servants, and there was a great slaughter there that day of twenty thousand men.

2 Samuel 18.8: 8 For the battle was there spread over the surface of all the country, and the forest devoured more people that day than the sword devoured.

2 Samuel 18.9: 9 Absalom happened to meet David’s servants. Absalom was riding on his mule, and the mule went under the thick boughs of a great oak, and his head caught hold of the oak, and he was taken up between the sky and earth; and the mule that was under him went on.

2 Samuel 18.10: 10 A certain man saw it, and told Joab, and said, “Behold, I saw Absalom hanging in an oak.”

2 Samuel 18.11: 11 Joab said to the man who told him, “Behold, you saw it, and why didn’t you strike him there to the ground? I would have given you ten pieces of silver, and a sash.”

2 Samuel 18.12: 12 The man said to Joab, “Though I should receive a thousand pieces of silver in my hand, I still wouldn’t stretch out my hand against the king’s son; for in our hearing the king commanded you and Abishai and Ittai, saying, ‘Beware that no one touch the young man Absalom.’

2 Samuel 18.13: 13 Otherwise if I had dealt falsely against his life (and there is no matter hidden from the king), then you yourself would have set yourself against me.”

2 Samuel 18.14: 14 Then Joab said, “I’m not going to wait like this with you.” He took three darts in his hand, and thrust them through the heart of Absalom, while he was yet alive in the middle of the oak.

2 Samuel 18.15: 15 Ten young men who bore Joab’s armor surrounded and struck Absalom, and killed him.

2 Samuel 18.16: 16 Joab blew the trumpet, and the people returned from pursuing after Israel; for Joab held the people back.

2 Samuel 18.17: 17 They took Absalom and cast him into a great pit in the forest, and raised over him a very great heap of stones. Then all Israel fled, each to his own tent.

2 Samuel 18.18: 18 Now Absalom in his lifetime had taken and reared up for himself the pillar which is in the king’s valley, for he said, “I have no son to keep my name in memory.” He called the pillar after his own name. It is called Absalom’s monument, to this day.

2 Samuel 18.19: 19 Then Ahimaaz the son of Zadok said, “Let me now run and carry the king news, how Yahweh has avenged him of his enemies.”

2 Samuel 18.20: 20 Joab said to him, “You must not be the bearer of news today, but you must carry news another day. But today you must carry no news, because the king’s son is dead.”

2 Samuel 18.21: 21 Then Joab said to the Cushite, “Go, tell the king what you have seen!” The Cushite bowed himself to Joab, and ran.

2 Samuel 18.22: 22 Then Ahimaaz the son of Zadok said yet again to Joab, “But come what may, please let me also run after the Cushite.”

Joab said, “Why do you want to run, my son, since you will have no reward for the news?”

2 Samuel 18.23: 23 “But come what may,” he said, “I will run.”

He said to him, “Run!” Then Ahimaaz ran by the way of the Plain, and outran the Cushite.

2 Samuel 18.24: 24 Now David was sitting between the two gates; and the watchman went up to the roof of the gate to the wall, and lifted up his eyes, and looked, and, behold, a man running alone.

2 Samuel 18.25: 25 The watchman cried, and told the king. The king said, “If he is alone, there is news in his mouth.” He came closer and closer.

2 Samuel 18.26: 26 The watchman saw another man running; and the watchman called to the gatekeeper, and said, “Behold, a man running alone!”

The king said, “He also brings news.”

2 Samuel 18.27: 27 The watchman said, “I think the running of the first one is like the running of Ahimaaz the son of Zadok.”

The king said, “He is a good man, and comes with good news.”

2 Samuel 18.28: 28 Ahimaaz called, and said to the king, “All is well.” He bowed himself before the king with his face to the earth, and said, “Blessed is Yahweh your God, who has delivered up the men who lifted up their hand against my lord the king!”

2 Samuel 18.29: 29 The king said, “Is it well with the young man Absalom?”

Ahimaaz answered, “When Joab sent the king’s servant, even me your servant, I saw a great tumult, but I don’t know what it was.”

2 Samuel 18.30: 30 The king said, “Come and stand here.” He came, and stood still.

2 Samuel 18.31: 31 Behold, the Cushite came. The Cushite said, “News for my lord the king, for Yahweh has avenged you today of all those who rose up against you.”

2 Samuel 18.32: 32 The king said to the Cushite, “Is it well with the young man Absalom?”

The Cushite answered, “May the enemies of my lord the king, and all who rise up against you to do you harm, be as that young man is.”

2 Samuel 18.33: 33 The king was much moved, and went up to the room over the gate, and wept. As he went, he said, “My son Absalom! My son, my son Absalom! I wish I had died for you, Absalom, my son, my son!”

2 Samuel 19.0:

19

2 Samuel 19.1: 1 Joab was told, “Behold, the king weeps and mourns for Absalom.”

2 Samuel 19.2: 2 The victory that day was turned into mourning among all the people; for the people heard it said that day, “The king grieves for his son.”

2 Samuel 19.3: 3 The people sneaked into the city that day, as people who are ashamed steal away when they flee in battle.

2 Samuel 19.4: 4 The king covered his face, and the king cried with a loud voice, “My son Absalom, Absalom, my son, my son!”

2 Samuel 19.5: 5 Joab came into the house to the king, and said, “Today you have shamed the faces of all your servants, who today have saved your life, and the lives of your sons and of your daughters, and the lives of your wives, and the lives of your concubines;

2 Samuel 19.6: 6 in that you love those who hate you, and hate those who love you. For you have declared today that princes and servants are nothing to you. For today I perceive that if Absalom had lived, and all we had died today, then it would have pleased you well.

2 Samuel 19.7: 7 Now therefore arise, go out, and speak to comfort your servants; for I swear by Yahweh, if you don’t go out, not a man will stay with you this night. That would be worse to you than all the evil that has happened to you from your youth until now.”

2 Samuel 19.8: 8 Then the king arose, and sat in the gate. They told to all the people, saying, “Behold, the king is sitting in the gate.” All the people came before the king. Now Israel had fled every man to his tent.

2 Samuel 19.9: 9 All the people were at strife throughout all the tribes of Israel, saying, “The king delivered us out of the hand of our enemies, and he saved us out of the hand of the Philistines; and now he has fled out of the land from Absalom.

2 Samuel 19.10: 10 Absalom, whom we anointed over us, is dead in battle. Now therefore why don’t you speak a word of bringing the king back?”

2 Samuel 19.11: 11 King David sent to Zadok and to Abiathar the priests, saying, “Speak to the elders of Judah, saying, ‘Why are you the last to bring the king back to his house? Since the speech of all Israel has come to the king, to return him to his house.

2 Samuel 19.12: 12 You are my brothers. You are my bone and my flesh. Why then are you the last to bring back the king?’

2 Samuel 19.13: 13 Say to Amasa, ‘Aren’t you my bone and my flesh? God do so to me, and more also, if you aren’t captain of the army before me continually instead of Joab.’”

2 Samuel 19.14: 14 He bowed the heart of all the men of Judah, even as one man; so that they sent to the king, saying, “Return, you and all your servants.”

2 Samuel 19.15: 15 So the king returned, and came to the Jordan. Judah came to Gilgal, to go to meet the king, to bring the king over the Jordan.

2 Samuel 19.16: 16 Shimei the son of Gera, the Benjamite, who was of Bahurim, hurried and came down with the men of Judah to meet king David.

2 Samuel 19.17: 17 There were a thousand men of Benjamin with him, and Ziba the servant of Saul’s house, and his fifteen sons and his twenty servants with him; and they went through the Jordan in the presence of the king.

2 Samuel 19.18: 18 A ferry boat went to bring over the king’s household, and to do what he thought good. Shimei the son of Gera fell down before the king, when he had come over the Jordan.

2 Samuel 19.19: 19 He said to the king, “Don’t let my lord impute iniquity to me, or remember that which your servant did perversely the day that my lord the king went out of Jerusalem, that the king should take it to his heart.

2 Samuel 19.20: 20 For your servant knows that I have sinned. Therefore behold, I have come today as the first of all the house of Joseph to go down to meet my lord the king.”

2 Samuel 19.21: 21 But Abishai the son of Zeruiah answered, “Shouldn’t Shimei be put to death for this, because he cursed Yahweh’s anointed?”

2 Samuel 19.22: 22 David said, “What have I to do with you, you sons of Zeruiah, that you should be adversaries to me today? Shall any man be put to death today in Israel? For don’t I know that I am king over Israel today?”

2 Samuel 19.23: 23 The king said to Shimei, “You will not die.” The king swore to him.

2 Samuel 19.24: 24 Mephibosheth the son of Saul came down to meet the king; and he had neither groomed his feet, nor trimmed his beard, nor washed his clothes, from the day the king departed until the day he came home in peace.

2 Samuel 19.25: 25 When he had come to Jerusalem to meet the king, the king said to him, “Why didn’t you go with me, Mephibosheth?”

2 Samuel 19.26: 26 He answered, “My lord, O king, my servant deceived me. For your servant said, ‘I will saddle a donkey for myself, that I may ride on it and go with the king,’ because your servant is lame.

2 Samuel 19.27: 27 He has slandered your servant to my lord the king, but my lord the king is as an angel of God. Therefore do what is good in your eyes.

2 Samuel 19.28: 28 For all my father’s house were but dead men before my lord the king; yet you set your servant among those who ate at your own table. What right therefore have I yet that I should cry any more to the king?”

2 Samuel 19.29: 29 The king said to him, “Why do you speak any more of your matters? I say, you and Ziba divide the land.”

2 Samuel 19.30: 30 Mephibosheth said to the king, “Yes, let him take all, because my lord the king has come in peace to his own house.”

2 Samuel 19.31: 31 Barzillai the Gileadite came down from Rogelim; and he went over the Jordan with the king, to conduct him over the Jordan.

2 Samuel 19.32: 32 Now Barzillai was a very aged man, even eighty years old. He had provided the king with sustenance while he stayed at Mahanaim; for he was a very great man.

2 Samuel 19.33: 33 The king said to Barzillai, “Come over with me, and I will sustain you with me in Jerusalem.”

2 Samuel 19.34: 34 Barzillai said to the king, “How many are the days of the years of my life, that I should go up with the king to Jerusalem?

2 Samuel 19.35: 35 I am eighty years old, today. Can I discern between good and bad? Can your servant taste what I eat or what I drink? Can I hear the voice of singing men and singing women any more? Why then should your servant be a burden to my lord the king?

2 Samuel 19.36: 36 Your servant would but just go over the Jordan with the king. Why should the king repay me with such a reward?

2 Samuel 19.37: 37 Please let your servant turn back again, that I may die in my own city, by the grave of my father and my mother. But behold, your servant Chimham; let him go over with my lord the king; and do to him what shall seem good to you.”

2 Samuel 19.38: 38 The king answered, “Chimham shall go over with me, and I will do to him that which shall seem good to you. Whatever you request of me, that I will do for you.”

2 Samuel 19.39: 39 All the people went over the Jordan, and the king went over. Then the king kissed Barzillai, and blessed him; and he returned to his own place.

2 Samuel 19.40: 40 So the king went over to Gilgal, and Chimham went over with him. All the people of Judah brought the king over, and also half the people of Israel.

2 Samuel 19.41: 41 Behold, all the men of Israel came to the king, and said to the king, “Why have our brothers the men of Judah stolen you away, and brought the king, and his household, over the Jordan, and all David’s men with him?”

2 Samuel 19.42: 42 All the men of Judah answered the men of Israel, “Because the king is a close relative to us. Why then are you angry about this matter? Have we eaten at all at the king’s cost? Or has he given us any gift?”

2 Samuel 19.43: 43 The men of Israel answered the men of Judah, and said, “We have ten parts in the king, and we have also more claim to David than you. Why then did you despise us, that our advice should not be first had in bringing back our king?” The words of the men of Judah were fiercer than the words of the men of Israel.

2 Samuel 20.0:

20

2 Samuel 20.1: 1 There happened to be there a wicked fellow, whose name was Sheba, the son of Bichri, a Benjamite; and he blew the trumpet, and said, “We have no portion in David, neither have we inheritance in the son of Jesse. Every man to his tents, Israel!”

2 Samuel 20.2: 2 So all the men of Israel went up from following David, and followed Sheba the son of Bichri; but the men of Judah joined with their king, from the Jordan even to Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 20.3: 3 David came to his house at Jerusalem; and the king took the ten women his concubines, whom he had left to keep the house, and put them in custody, and provided them with sustenance, but didn’t go in to them. So they were shut up to the day of their death, living in widowhood.

2 Samuel 20.4: 4 Then the king said to Amasa, “Call me the men of Judah together within three days, and be here present.”

2 Samuel 20.5: 5 So Amasa went to call the men of Judah together; but he stayed longer than the set time which he had appointed him.

2 Samuel 20.6: 6 David said to Abishai, “Now Sheba the son of Bichri will do us more harm than Absalom did. Take your lord’s servants, and pursue after him, lest he get himself fortified cities, and escape out of our sight.”

2 Samuel 20.7: 7 Joab’s men went out after him, and the Cherethites and the Pelethites, and all the mighty men; and they went out of Jerusalem, to pursue Sheba the son of Bichri.

2 Samuel 20.8: 8 When they were at the great stone which is in Gibeon, Amasa came to meet them. Joab was clothed in his apparel of war that he had put on, and on it was a sash with a sword fastened on his waist in its sheath; and as he went along it fell out.

2 Samuel 20.9: 9 Joab said to Amasa, “Is it well with you, my brother?” Joab took Amasa by the beard with his right hand to kiss him.

2 Samuel 20.10: 10 But Amasa took no heed to the sword that was in Joab’s hand. So he struck him with it in the body, and shed out his bowels to the ground, and didn’t strike him again; and he died. Joab and Abishai his brother pursued Sheba the son of Bichri.

2 Samuel 20.11: 11 One of Joab’s young men stood by him, and said, “He who favors Joab, and he who is for David, let him follow Joab!”

2 Samuel 20.12: 12 Amasa lay wallowing in his blood in the middle of the highway. When the man saw that all the people stood still, he carried Amasa out of the highway into the field, and cast a garment over him, when he saw that everyone who came by him stood still.

2 Samuel 20.13: 13 When he was removed out of the highway, all the people went on after Joab, to pursue Sheba the son of Bichri.

2 Samuel 20.14: 14 He went through all the tribes of Israel to Abel, and to Beth Maacah, and all the Berites. They were gathered together, and went also after him.

2 Samuel 20.15: 15 They came and besieged him in Abel of Beth Maacah, and they cast up a mound against the city, and it stood against the rampart; and all the people who were with Joab battered the wall, to throw it down.

2 Samuel 20.16: 16 Then a wise woman cried out of the city, “Hear, hear! Please say to Joab, ‘Come near here, that I may speak with you.’”

2 Samuel 20.17: 17 He came near to her; and the woman said, “Are you Joab?”

He answered, “I am.”

Then she said to him, “Hear the words of your servant.”

He answered, “I’m listening.”

2 Samuel 20.18: 18 Then she spoke, saying, “They used to say in old times, ‘They shall surely ask counsel at Abel;’ and so they settled a matter.

2 Samuel 20.19: 19 I am among those who are peaceable and faithful in Israel. You seek to destroy a city and a mother in Israel. Why will you swallow up Yahweh’s inheritance?”

2 Samuel 20.20: 20 Joab answered, “Far be it, far be it from me, that I should swallow up or destroy.

2 Samuel 20.21: 21 The matter is not so. But a man of the hill country of Ephraim, Sheba the son of Bichri by name, has lifted up his hand against the king, even against David. Just deliver him, and I will depart from the city.”

The woman said to Joab, “Behold, his head will be thrown to you over the wall.”

2 Samuel 20.22: 22 Then the woman went to all the people in her wisdom. They cut off the head of Sheba the son of Bichri, and threw it out to Joab. He blew the trumpet, and they were dispersed from the city, every man to his tent. Then Joab returned to Jerusalem to the king.

2 Samuel 20.23: 23 Now Joab was over all the army of Israel, Benaiah the son of Jehoiada was over the Cherethites and over the Pelethites,

2 Samuel 20.24: 24 Adoram was over the men subject to forced labor, Jehoshaphat the son of Ahilud was the recorder,

2 Samuel 20.25: 25 Sheva was scribe, and Zadok and Abiathar were priests,

2 Samuel 20.26: 26 and Ira the Jairite was chief minister to David.

2 Samuel 21.0:

21

2 Samuel 21.1: 1 There was a famine in the days of David for three years, year after year; and David sought the face of Yahweh. Yahweh said, “It is for Saul, and for his bloody house, because he put the Gibeonites to death.”

2 Samuel 21.2: 2 The king called the Gibeonites, and said to them (now the Gibeonites were not of the children of Israel, but of the remnant of the Amorites, and the children of Israel had sworn to them; and Saul sought to kill them in his zeal for the children of Israel and Judah);

2 Samuel 21.3: 3 and David said to the Gibeonites, “What should I do for you? And with what should I make atonement, that you may bless Yahweh’s inheritance?”

2 Samuel 21.4: 4 The Gibeonites said to him, “It is no matter of silver or gold between us and Saul, or his house; neither is it for us to put any man to death in Israel.”

He said, “I will do for you whatever you say.”

2 Samuel 21.5: 5 They said to the king, “The man who consumed us, and who devised against us, that we should be destroyed from remaining in any of the borders of Israel,

2 Samuel 21.6: 6 let seven men of his sons be delivered to us, and we will hang them up to Yahweh in Gibeah of Saul, the chosen of Yahweh.”

The king said, “I will give them.”

2 Samuel 21.7: 7 But the king spared Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan the son of Saul, because of Yahweh’s oath that was between them, between David and Jonathan the son of Saul.

2 Samuel 21.8: 8 But the king took the two sons of Rizpah the daughter of Aiah, whom she bore to Saul, Armoni and Mephibosheth; and the five sons of Michal the daughter of Saul, whom she bore to Adriel the son of Barzillai the Meholathite.

2 Samuel 21.9: 9 He delivered them into the hands of the Gibeonites, and they hanged them on the mountain before Yahweh, and all seven of them fell together. They were put to death in the days of harvest, in the first days, at the beginning of barley harvest.

2 Samuel 21.10: 10 Rizpah the daughter of Aiah took sackcloth, and spread it for herself on the rock, from the beginning of harvest until water poured on them from the sky. She allowed neither the birds of the sky to rest on them by day, nor the animals of the field by night.

2 Samuel 21.11: 11 David was told what Rizpah the daughter of Aiah, the concubine of Saul, had done.

2 Samuel 21.12: 12 So David went and took the bones of Saul and the bones of Jonathan his son from the men of Jabesh Gilead, who had stolen them from the street of Beth Shan, where the Philistines had hanged them, in the day that the Philistines killed Saul in Gilboa;

2 Samuel 21.13: 13 and he brought up from there the bones of Saul and the bones of Jonathan his son. They also gathered the bones of those who were hanged.

2 Samuel 21.14: 14 They buried the bones of Saul and Jonathan his son in the country of Benjamin in Zela, in the tomb of Kish his father: and they performed all that the king commanded. After that, God answered prayer for the land.

2 Samuel 21.15: 15 The Philistines had war again with Israel; and David went down, and his servants with him, and fought against the Philistines. David grew faint;

2 Samuel 21.16: 16 and Ishbibenob, who was of the sons of the giant, the weight of whose spear was three hundred shekels of bronze in weight, he being armed with a new sword, thought he would kill David.

2 Samuel 21.17: 17 But Abishai the son of Zeruiah helped him, and struck the Philistine, and killed him. Then the men of David swore to him, saying, “Don’t go out with us to battle any more, so that you don’t quench the lamp of Israel.”

2 Samuel 21.18: 18 After this, there was again war with the Philistines at Gob. Then Sibbecai the Hushathite killed Saph, who was of the sons of the giant.

2 Samuel 21.19: 19 There was again war with the Philistines at Gob; and Elhanan the son of Jaare-Oregim the Bethlehemite killed Goliath the Gittite’s brother, the staff of whose spear was like a weaver’s beam.

2 Samuel 21.20: 20 There was again war at Gath, where there was a man of great stature, who had six fingers on every hand, and six toes on every foot, twenty four in count; and he also was born to the giant.

2 Samuel 21.21: 21 When he defied Israel, Jonathan the son of Shimei, David’s brother, killed him.

2 Samuel 21.22: 22 These four were born to the giant in Gath; and they fell by the hand of David, and by the hand of his servants.

2 Samuel 22.0:

22

2 Samuel 22.1: 1 David spoke to Yahweh the words of this song in the day that Yahweh delivered him out of the hand of all his enemies, and out of the hand of Saul,

2 Samuel 22.2: 2 and he said:

“Yahweh is my rock,

my fortress,

and my deliverer, even mine;

2 Samuel 22.3: 3 God is my rock in whom I take refuge;

my shield, and the horn of my salvation,

my high tower, and my refuge.

My savior, you save me from violence.

2 Samuel 22.4: 4 I call on Yahweh, who is worthy to be praised;

So shall I be saved from my enemies.

2 Samuel 22.5: 5 For the waves of death surrounded me.

The floods of ungodliness made me afraid.

2 Samuel 22.6: 6 The cords of Sheol were around me.

The snares of death caught me.

2 Samuel 22.7: 7 In my distress, I called on Yahweh.

Yes, I called to my God.

He heard my voice out of his temple.

My cry came into his ears.

2 Samuel 22.8: 8 Then the earth shook and trembled.

The foundations of heaven quaked and were shaken,

because he was angry.

2 Samuel 22.9: 9 Smoke went up out of his nostrils.

Consuming fire came out of his mouth.

Coals were kindled by it.

2 Samuel 22.10: 10 He bowed the heavens also, and came down.

Thick darkness was under his feet.

2 Samuel 22.11: 11 He rode on a cherub, and flew.

Yes, he was seen on the wings of the wind.

2 Samuel 22.12: 12 He made darkness a shelter around himself:

gathering of waters, and thick clouds of the skies.

2 Samuel 22.13: 13 At the brightness before him,

coals of fire were kindled.

2 Samuel 22.14: 14 Yahweh thundered from heaven.

The Most High uttered his voice.

2 Samuel 22.15: 15 He sent out arrows, and scattered them;

lightning, and confused them.

2 Samuel 22.16: 16 Then the channels of the sea appeared.

The foundations of the world were laid bare by Yahweh’s rebuke,

at the blast of the breath of his nostrils.

2 Samuel 22.17: 17 He sent from on high and he took me.

He drew me out of many waters.

2 Samuel 22.18: 18 He delivered me from my strong enemy,

from those who hated me, for they were too mighty for me.

2 Samuel 22.19: 19 They came on me in the day of my calamity,

but Yahweh was my support.

2 Samuel 22.20: 20 He also brought me out into a large place.

He delivered me, because he delighted in me.

2 Samuel 22.21: 21 Yahweh rewarded me according to my righteousness.

He rewarded me according to the cleanness of my hands.

2 Samuel 22.22: 22 For I have kept Yahweh’s ways,

and have not wickedly departed from my God.

2 Samuel 22.23: 23 For all his ordinances were before me.

As for his statutes, I didn’t depart from them.

2 Samuel 22.24: 24 I was also perfect toward him.

I kept myself from my iniquity.

2 Samuel 22.25: 25 Therefore Yahweh has rewarded me according to my righteousness,

According to my cleanness in his eyesight.

2 Samuel 22.26: 26 With the merciful you will show yourself merciful.

With the perfect man you will show yourself perfect.

2 Samuel 22.27: 27 With the pure you will show yourself pure.

With the crooked you will show yourself shrewd.

2 Samuel 22.28: 28 You will save the afflicted people,

But your eyes are on the arrogant, that you may bring them down.

2 Samuel 22.29: 29 For you are my lamp, Yahweh.

Yahweh will light up my darkness.

2 Samuel 22.30: 30 For by you, I run against a troop.

By my God, I leap over a wall.

2 Samuel 22.31: 31 As for God, his way is perfect.

Yahweh’s word is tested.

He is a shield to all those who take refuge in him.

2 Samuel 22.32: 32 For who is God, besides Yahweh?

Who is a rock, besides our God?

2 Samuel 22.33: 33 God is my strong fortress.

He makes my way perfect.

2 Samuel 22.34: 34 He makes his feet like hinds’ feet,

and sets me on my high places.

2 Samuel 22.35: 35 He teaches my hands to war,

so that my arms bend a bow of bronze.

2 Samuel 22.36: 36 You have also given me the shield of your salvation.

Your gentleness has made me great.

2 Samuel 22.37: 37 You have enlarged my steps under me.

My feet have not slipped.

2 Samuel 22.38: 38 I have pursued my enemies and destroyed them.

I didn’t turn again until they were consumed.

2 Samuel 22.39: 39 I have consumed them,

and struck them through,

so that they can’t arise.

Yes, they have fallen under my feet.

2 Samuel 22.40: 40 For you have armed me with strength for the battle.

You have subdued under me those who rose up against me.

2 Samuel 22.41: 41 You have also made my enemies turn their backs to me,

that I might cut off those who hate me.

2 Samuel 22.42: 42 They looked, but there was no one to save;

even to Yahweh, but he didn’t answer them.

2 Samuel 22.43: 43 Then I beat them as small as the dust of the earth.

I crushed them as the mire of the streets, and spread them abroad.

2 Samuel 22.44: 44 You also have delivered me from the strivings of my people.

You have kept me to be the head of the nations.

A people whom I have not known will serve me.

2 Samuel 22.45: 45 The foreigners will submit themselves to me.

As soon as they hear of me, they will obey me.

2 Samuel 22.46: 46 The foreigners will fade away,

and will come trembling out of their close places.

2 Samuel 22.47: 47 Yahweh lives!

Blessed be my rock!

Exalted be God, the rock of my salvation,

2 Samuel 22.48: 48 even the God who executes vengeance for me,

who brings down peoples under me,

2 Samuel 22.49: 49 who brings me away from my enemies.

Yes, you lift me up above those who rise up against me.

You deliver me from the violent man.

2 Samuel 22.50: 50 Therefore I will give thanks to you, Yahweh, among the nations,

and will sing praises to your name.

2 Samuel 22.51: 51 He gives great deliverance to his king,

and shows loving kindness to his anointed,

to David and to his offspring, forever more.”

2 Samuel 23.0:

23

2 Samuel 23.1: 1 Now these are the last words of David.

David the son of Jesse says,

the man who was raised on high says,

the anointed of the God of Jacob,

the sweet psalmist of Israel:

2 Samuel 23.2: 2 “Yahweh’s Spirit spoke by me.

His word was on my tongue.

2 Samuel 23.3: 3 The God of Israel said,

the Rock of Israel spoke to me,

‘One who rules over men righteously,

who rules in the fear of God,

2 Samuel 23.4: 4 shall be as the light of the morning, when the sun rises,

a morning without clouds,

when the tender grass springs out of the earth,

through clear shining after rain.’

2 Samuel 23.5: 5 Isn’t my house so with God?

Yet he has made with me an everlasting covenant,

ordered in all things, and sure,

for it is all my salvation, and all my desire,

although he doesn’t make it grow.

2 Samuel 23.6: 6 But all the ungodly will be as thorns to be thrust away,

because they can’t be taken with the hand,

2 Samuel 23.7: 7 But the man who touches them must be armed with iron and the staff of a spear.

They will be utterly burned with fire in their place.”

2 Samuel 23.8: 8 These are the names of the mighty men whom David had: Josheb Basshebeth a Tahchemonite, chief of the captains; he was called Adino the Eznite, who killed eight hundred at one time.

2 Samuel 23.9: 9 After him was Eleazar the son of Dodai the son of an Ahohite, one of the three mighty men with David, when they defied the Philistines who were there gathered together to battle, and the men of Israel had gone away.

2 Samuel 23.10: 10 He arose and struck the Philistines until his hand was weary, and his hand froze to the sword; and Yahweh worked a great victory that day; and the people returned after him only to take plunder.

2 Samuel 23.11: 11 After him was Shammah the son of Agee a Hararite. The Philistines had gathered together into a troop, where there was a plot of ground full of lentils; and the people fled from the Philistines.

2 Samuel 23.12: 12 But he stood in the middle of the plot and defended it, and killed the Philistines; and Yahweh worked a great victory.

2 Samuel 23.13: 13 Three of the thirty chief men went down, and came to David in the harvest time to the cave of Adullam; and the troop of the Philistines was encamped in the valley of Rephaim.

2 Samuel 23.14: 14 David was then in the stronghold; and the garrison of the Philistines was then in Bethlehem.

2 Samuel 23.15: 15 David longed, and said, “Oh that someone would give me water to drink from the well of Bethlehem, which is by the gate!”

2 Samuel 23.16: 16 The three mighty men broke through the army of the Philistines, and drew water out of the well of Bethlehem that was by the gate, and took it and brought it to David; but he would not drink of it, but poured it out to Yahweh.

2 Samuel 23.17: 17 He said, “Be it far from me, Yahweh, that I should do this! Isn’t this the blood of the men who risked their lives to go?” Therefore he would not drink it. The three mighty men did these things.

2 Samuel 23.18: 18 Abishai, the brother of Joab, the son of Zeruiah, was chief of the three. He lifted up his spear against three hundred and killed them, and had a name among the three.

2 Samuel 23.19: 19 Wasn’t he most honorable of the three? Therefore he was made their captain. However he wasn’t included as one of the three.

2 Samuel 23.20: 20 Benaiah the son of Jehoiada, the son of a valiant man of Kabzeel, who had done mighty deeds, killed the two sons of Ariel of Moab. He also went down and killed a lion in the middle of a pit in a time of snow.

2 Samuel 23.21: 21 He killed a huge Egyptian, and the Egyptian had a spear in his hand; but he went down to him with a staff, and plucked the spear out of the Egyptian’s hand, and killed him with his own spear.

2 Samuel 23.22: 22 Benaiah the son of Jehoiada did these things, and had a name among the three mighty men.

2 Samuel 23.23: 23 He was more honorable than the thirty, but he didn’t attain to the three. David set him over his guard.

2 Samuel 23.24: 24 Asahel the brother of Joab was one of the thirty: Elhanan the son of Dodo of Bethlehem,

2 Samuel 23.25: 25 Shammah the Harodite, Elika the Harodite,

2 Samuel 23.26: 26 Helez the Paltite, Ira the son of Ikkesh the Tekoite,

2 Samuel 23.27: 27 Abiezer the Anathothite, Mebunnai the Hushathite,

2 Samuel 23.28: 28 Zalmon the Ahohite, Maharai the Netophathite,

2 Samuel 23.29: 29 Heleb the son of Baanah the Netophathite, Ittai the son of Ribai of Gibeah of the children of Benjamin,

2 Samuel 23.30: 30 Benaiah a Pirathonite, Hiddai of the brooks of Gaash.

2 Samuel 23.31: 31 Abialbon the Arbathite, Azmaveth the Barhumite,

2 Samuel 23.32: 32 Eliahba the Shaalbonite, the sons of Jashen, Jonathan,

2 Samuel 23.33: 33 Shammah the Hararite, Ahiam the son of Sharar the Ararite,

2 Samuel 23.34: 34 Eliphelet the son of Ahasbai, the son of the Maacathite, Eliam the son of Ahithophel the Gilonite,

2 Samuel 23.35: 35 Hezro the Carmelite, Paarai the Arbite,

2 Samuel 23.36: 36 Igal the son of Nathan of Zobah, Bani the Gadite,

2 Samuel 23.37: 37 Zelek the Ammonite, Naharai the Beerothite, armor bearers to Joab the son of Zeruiah,

2 Samuel 23.38: 38 Ira the Ithrite, Gareb the Ithrite,

2 Samuel 23.39: 39 and Uriah the Hittite: thirty-seven in all.

2 Samuel 24.0:

24

2 Samuel 24.1: 1 Again Yahweh’s anger burned against Israel, and he moved David against them, saying, “Go, count Israel and Judah.”

2 Samuel 24.2: 2 The king said to Joab the captain of the army, who was with him, “Now go back and forth through all the tribes of Israel, from Dan even to Beersheba, and count the people, that I may know the sum of the people.”

2 Samuel 24.3: 3 Joab said to the king, “Now may Yahweh your God add to the people, however many they may be, one hundred times; and may the eyes of my lord the king see it. But why does my lord the king delight in this thing?”

2 Samuel 24.4: 4 Notwithstanding, the king’s word prevailed against Joab, and against the captains of the army. Joab and the captains of the army went out from the presence of the king to count the people of Israel.

2 Samuel 24.5: 5 They passed over the Jordan, and encamped in Aroer, on the right side of the city that is in the middle of the valley of Gad, and to Jazer;

2 Samuel 24.6: 6 then they came to Gilead, and to the land of Tahtim Hodshi; and they came to Dan Jaan, and around to Sidon,

2 Samuel 24.7: 7 and came to the stronghold of Tyre, and to all the cities of the Hivites, and of the Canaanites; and they went out to the south of Judah, at Beersheba.

2 Samuel 24.8: 8 So when they had gone back and forth through all the land, they came to Jerusalem at the end of nine months and twenty days.

2 Samuel 24.9: 9 Joab gave up the sum of the counting of the people to the king: and there were in Israel eight hundred thousand valiant men who drew the sword; and the men of Judah were five hundred thousand men.

2 Samuel 24.10: 10 David’s heart struck him after he had counted the people. David said to Yahweh, “I have sinned greatly in that which I have done. But now, Yahweh, put away, I beg you, the iniquity of your servant; for I have done very foolishly.”

2 Samuel 24.11: 11 When David rose up in the morning, Yahweh’s word came to the prophet Gad, David’s seer, saying,

2 Samuel 24.12: 12 “Go and speak to David, ‘Yahweh says, “I offer you three things. Choose one of them, that I may do it to you.”’”

2 Samuel 24.13: 13 So Gad came to David, and told him, and said to him, “Shall seven years of famine come to you in your land? Or will you flee three months before your foes while they pursue you? Or shall there be three days’ pestilence in your land? Now answer, and consider what answer I shall return to him who sent me.”

2 Samuel 24.14: 14 David said to Gad, “I am in distress. Let us fall now into Yahweh’s hand; for his mercies are great. Let me not fall into man’s hand.”

2 Samuel 24.15: 15 So Yahweh sent a pestilence on Israel from the morning even to the appointed time; and seventy thousand men died of the people from Dan even to Beersheba.

2 Samuel 24.16: 16 When the angel stretched out his hand toward Jerusalem to destroy it, Yahweh relented of the disaster, and said to the angel who destroyed the people, “It is enough. Now withdraw your hand.” Yahweh’s angel was by the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite.

2 Samuel 24.17: 17 David spoke to Yahweh when he saw the angel who struck the people, and said, “Behold, I have sinned, and I have done perversely; but these sheep, what have they done? Please let your hand be against me, and against my father’s house.”

2 Samuel 24.18: 18 Gad came that day to David, and said to him, “Go up, build an altar to Yahweh on the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite.”

2 Samuel 24.19: 19 David went up according to the saying of Gad, as Yahweh commanded.

2 Samuel 24.20: 20 Araunah looked out, and saw the king and his servants coming on toward him. Then Araunah went out, and bowed himself before the king with his face to the ground.

2 Samuel 24.21: 21 Araunah said, “Why has my lord the king come to his servant?”

David said, “To buy your threshing floor, to build an altar to Yahweh, that the plague may be stopped from afflicting the people.”

2 Samuel 24.22: 22 Araunah said to David, “Let my lord the king take and offer up what seems good to him. Behold, the cattle for the burnt offering, and the threshing instruments and the yokes of the oxen for the wood.

2 Samuel 24.23: 23 All this, O king, does Araunah give to the king.” Araunah said to the king, “May Yahweh your God accept you.”

2 Samuel 24.24: 24 The king said to Araunah, “No; but I will most certainly buy it from you for a price. I will not offer burnt offerings to Yahweh my God which cost me nothing.” So David bought the threshing floor and the oxen for fifty shekels of silver.

2 Samuel 24.25: 25 David built an altar to Yahweh there, and offered burnt offerings and peace offerings. So Yahweh was entreated for the land, and the plague was removed from Israel.

1 Kings 0.0:

The First Book of Kings

1 Kings 1.0:

1

1 Kings 1.1: 1 Now king David was old and advanced in years; and they covered him with clothes, but he couldn’t keep warm.

1 Kings 1.2: 2 Therefore his servants said to him, “Let a young virgin be sought for my lord the king. Let her stand before the king, and cherish him; and let her lie in your bosom, that my lord the king may keep warm.”

1 Kings 1.3: 3 So they sought for a beautiful young lady throughout all the borders of Israel, and found Abishag the Shunammite, and brought her to the king.

1 Kings 1.4: 4 The young lady was very beautiful; and she cherished the king, and served him; but the king didn’t know her intimately.

1 Kings 1.5: 5 Then Adonijah the son of Haggith exalted himself, saying, “I will be king.” Then he prepared him chariots and horsemen, and fifty men to run before him.

1 Kings 1.6: 6 His father had not displeased him at any time in saying, “Why have you done so?” and he was also a very handsome man; and he was born after Absalom.

1 Kings 1.7: 7 He conferred with Joab the son of Zeruiah, and with Abiathar the priest; and they followed Adonijah and helped him.

1 Kings 1.8: 8 But Zadok the priest, Benaiah the son of Jehoiada, Nathan the prophet, Shimei, Rei, and the mighty men who belonged to David, were not with Adonijah.

1 Kings 1.9: 9 Adonijah killed sheep, cattle, and fatlings by the stone of Zoheleth, which is beside En Rogel; and he called all his brothers, the king’s sons, and all the men of Judah, the king’s servants;

1 Kings 1.10: 10 but he didn’t call Nathan the prophet, and Benaiah, and the mighty men, and Solomon his brother.

1 Kings 1.11: 11 Then Nathan spoke to Bathsheba the mother of Solomon, saying, “Haven’t you heard that Adonijah the son of Haggith reigns, and David our lord doesn’t know it?

1 Kings 1.12: 12 Now therefore come, please let me give you counsel, that you may save your own life, and your son Solomon’s life.

1 Kings 1.13: 13 Go in to king David, and tell him, ‘Didn’t you, my lord, king, swear to your servant, saying, “Assuredly Solomon your son shall reign after me, and he shall sit on my throne?” Why then does Adonijah reign?’

1 Kings 1.14: 14 Behold, while you are still talking there with the king, I will also come in after you and confirm your words.”

1 Kings 1.15: 15 Bathsheba went in to the king in his room. The king was very old; and Abishag the Shunammite was serving the king.

1 Kings 1.16: 16 Bathsheba bowed, and showed respect to the king. The king said, “What would you like?”

1 Kings 1.17: 17 She said to him, “My lord, you swore by Yahweh your God to your servant, ‘Assuredly Solomon your son shall reign after me, and he shall sit on my throne.’

1 Kings 1.18: 18 Now, behold, Adonijah reigns; and you, my lord the king, don’t know it.

1 Kings 1.19: 19 He has slain cattle and fatlings and sheep in abundance, and has called all the sons of the king, Abiathar the priest, and Joab the captain of the army; but he hasn’t called Solomon your servant.

1 Kings 1.20: 20 You, my lord the king, the eyes of all Israel are on you, that you should tell them who will sit on the throne of my lord the king after him.

1 Kings 1.21: 21 Otherwise it will happen, when my lord the king sleeps with his fathers, that I and my son Solomon will be considered criminals.”

1 Kings 1.22: 22 Behold, while she was still talking with the king, Nathan the prophet came in.

1 Kings 1.23: 23 They told the king, saying, “Behold, Nathan the prophet!”

When he had come in before the king, he bowed himself before the king with his face to the ground.

1 Kings 1.24: 24 Nathan said, “My lord, king, have you said, ‘Adonijah shall reign after me, and he shall sit on my throne?’

1 Kings 1.25: 25 For he has gone down today, and has slain cattle, fatlings, and sheep in abundance, and has called all the king’s sons, the captains of the army, and Abiathar the priest. Behold, they are eating and drinking before him, and saying, ‘Long live king Adonijah!’

1 Kings 1.26: 26 But he hasn’t called me, even me your servant, Zadok the priest, Benaiah the son of Jehoiada, and your servant Solomon.

1 Kings 1.27: 27 Was this thing done by my lord the king, and you haven’t shown to your servants who should sit on the throne of my lord the king after him?”

1 Kings 1.28: 28 Then king David answered, “Call Bathsheba in to me.” She came into the king’s presence and stood before the king.

1 Kings 1.29: 29 The king swore, and said, “As Yahweh lives, who has redeemed my soul out of all adversity,

1 Kings 1.30: 30 most certainly as I swore to you by Yahweh, the God of Israel, saying, ‘Assuredly Solomon your son shall reign after me, and he shall sit on my throne in my place;’ I will most certainly do this today.”

1 Kings 1.31: 31 Then Bathsheba bowed with her face to the earth, and showed respect to the king, and said, “Let my lord king David live forever!”

1 Kings 1.32: 32 King David said, “Call to me Zadok the priest, Nathan the prophet, and Benaiah the son of Jehoiada.” They came before the king.

1 Kings 1.33: 33 The king said to them, “Take with you the servants of your lord, and cause Solomon my son to ride on my own mule, and bring him down to Gihon.

1 Kings 1.34: 34 Let Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anoint him there king over Israel. Blow the trumpet, and say, ‘Long live king Solomon!’

1 Kings 1.35: 35 Then come up after him, and he shall come and sit on my throne; for he shall be king in my place. I have appointed him to be prince over Israel and over Judah.”

1 Kings 1.36: 36 Benaiah the son of Jehoiada answered the king, and said, “Amen. May Yahweh, the God of my lord the king, say so.

1 Kings 1.37: 37 As Yahweh has been with my lord the king, even so may he be with Solomon, and make his throne greater than the throne of my lord king David.”

1 Kings 1.38: 38 So Zadok the priest, Nathan the prophet, Benaiah the son of Jehoiada, and the Cherethites and the Pelethites went down and had Solomon ride on king David’s mule, and brought him to Gihon.

1 Kings 1.39: 39 Zadok the priest took the horn of oil from the Tent, and anointed Solomon. They blew the trumpet; and all the people said, “Long live king Solomon!”

1 Kings 1.40: 40 All the people came up after him, and the people piped with pipes, and rejoiced with great joy, so that the earth shook with their sound.

1 Kings 1.41: 41 Adonijah and all the guests who were with him heard it as they had finished eating. When Joab heard the sound of the trumpet, he said, “Why is this noise of the city being in an uproar?”

1 Kings 1.42: 42 While he yet spoke, behold, Jonathan the son of Abiathar the priest came; and Adonijah said, “Come in; for you are a worthy man, and bring good news.”

1 Kings 1.43: 43 Jonathan answered Adonijah, “Most certainly our lord king David has made Solomon king.

1 Kings 1.44: 44 The king has sent with him Zadok the priest, Nathan the prophet, Benaiah the son of Jehoiada, and the Cherethites and the Pelethites; and they have caused him to ride on the king’s mule.

1 Kings 1.45: 45 Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet have anointed him king in Gihon. They have come up from there rejoicing, so that the city rang again. This is the noise that you have heard.

1 Kings 1.46: 46 Also, Solomon sits on the throne of the kingdom.

1 Kings 1.47: 47 Moreover the king’s servants came to bless our lord king David, saying, ‘May your God make the name of Solomon better than your name, and make his throne greater than your throne;’ and the king bowed himself on the bed.

1 Kings 1.48: 48 Also thus said the king, ‘Blessed be Yahweh, the God of Israel, who has given one to sit on my throne today, my eyes even seeing it.’”

1 Kings 1.49: 49 All the guests of Adonijah were afraid, and rose up, and each man went his way.

1 Kings 1.50: 50 Adonijah was afraid because of Solomon; and he arose, and went, and hung onto the horns of the altar.

1 Kings 1.51: 51 Solomon was told, “Behold, Adonijah fears king Solomon; for, behold, he is hanging onto the horns of the altar, saying, ‘Let king Solomon swear to me first that he will not kill his servant with the sword.’”

1 Kings 1.52: 52 Solomon said, “If he shows himself a worthy man, not a hair of his shall fall to the earth; but if wickedness is found in him, he shall die.”

1 Kings 1.53: 53 So king Solomon sent, and they brought him down from the altar. He came and bowed down to king Solomon; and Solomon said to him, “Go to your house.”

1 Kings 2.0:

2

1 Kings 2.1: 1 Now the days of David came near that he should die; and he commanded Solomon his son, saying,

1 Kings 2.2: 2 “I am going the way of all the earth. You be strong therefore, and show yourself a man;

1 Kings 2.3: 3 and keep the instruction of Yahweh your God, to walk in his ways, to keep his statutes, his commandments, his ordinances, and his testimonies, according to that which is written in the law of Moses, that you may prosper in all that you do, and wherever you turn yourself.

1 Kings 2.4: 4 Then Yahweh may establish his word which he spoke concerning me, saying, ‘If your children are careful of their way, to walk before me in truth with all their heart and with all their soul, there shall not fail you,’ he said, ‘a man on the throne of Israel.’

1 Kings 2.5: 5 “Moreover you know also what Joab the son of Zeruiah did to me, even what he did to the two captains of the armies of Israel, to Abner the son of Ner, and to Amasa the son of Jether, whom he killed, and shed the blood of war in peace, and put the blood of war on his sash that was around his waist, and in his sandals that were on his feet.

1 Kings 2.6: 6 Do therefore according to your wisdom, and don’t let his gray head go down to Sheol in peace.

1 Kings 2.7: 7 But show kindness to the sons of Barzillai the Gileadite, and let them be among those who eat at your table; for so they came to me when I fled from Absalom your brother.

1 Kings 2.8: 8 “Behold, there is with you Shimei the son of Gera, the Benjamite, of Bahurim, who cursed me with a grievous curse in the day when I went to Mahanaim; but he came down to meet me at the Jordan, and I swore to him by Yahweh, saying, ‘I will not put you to death with the sword.’

1 Kings 2.9: 9 Now therefore don’t hold him guiltless, for you are a wise man; and you will know what you ought to do to him, and you shall bring his gray head down to Sheol with blood.”

1 Kings 2.10: 10 David slept with his fathers, and was buried in David’s city.

1 Kings 2.11: 11 The days that David reigned over Israel were forty years; he reigned seven years in Hebron, and he reigned thirty-three years in Jerusalem.

1 Kings 2.12: 12 Solomon sat on David his father’s throne; and his kingdom was firmly established.

1 Kings 2.13: 13 Then Adonijah the son of Haggith came to Bathsheba the mother of Solomon. She said, “Do you come peaceably?”

He said, “Peaceably.

1 Kings 2.14: 14 He said moreover, I have something to tell you.”

She said, “Say on.”

1 Kings 2.15: 15 He said, “You know that the kingdom was mine, and that all Israel set their faces on me, that I should reign. However the kingdom is turned around, and has become my brother’s; for it was his from Yahweh.

1 Kings 2.16: 16 Now I ask one petition of you. Don’t deny me.”

She said to him, “Say on.”

1 Kings 2.17: 17 He said, “Please speak to Solomon the king (for he will not tell you ‘no’), that he give me Abishag the Shunammite as wife.”

1 Kings 2.18: 18 Bathsheba said, “All right. I will speak for you to the king.”

1 Kings 2.19: 19 Bathsheba therefore went to king Solomon, to speak to him for Adonijah. The king rose up to meet her, and bowed himself to her, and sat down on his throne, and caused a throne to be set for the king’s mother; and she sat on his right hand.

1 Kings 2.20: 20 Then she said, “I ask one small petition of you; don’t deny me.”

The king said to her, “Ask on, my mother; for I will not deny you.”

1 Kings 2.21: 21 She said, “Let Abishag the Shunammite be given to Adonijah your brother as wife.”

1 Kings 2.22: 22 King Solomon answered his mother, “Why do you ask Abishag the Shunammite for Adonijah? Ask for him the kingdom also; for he is my elder brother; even for him, and for Abiathar the priest, and for Joab the son of Zeruiah.”

1 Kings 2.23: 23 Then king Solomon swore by Yahweh, saying, “God do so to me, and more also, if Adonijah has not spoken this word against his own life.

1 Kings 2.24: 24 Now therefore as Yahweh lives, who has established me, and set me on my father David’s throne, and who has made me a house as he promised, surely Adonijah shall be put to death today.”

1 Kings 2.25: 25 King Solomon sent Benaiah the son of Jehoiada; and he fell on him, so that he died.

1 Kings 2.26: 26 To Abiathar the priest the king said, “Go to Anathoth, to your own fields; for you are worthy of death. But I will not at this time put you to death, because you bore the Lord Yahweh’s ark before David my father, and because you were afflicted in all in which my father was afflicted.”

1 Kings 2.27: 27 So Solomon thrust Abiathar out from being priest to Yahweh, that he might fulfill Yahweh’s word, which he spoke concerning the house of Eli in Shiloh.

1 Kings 2.28: 28 This news came to Joab; for Joab had followed Adonijah, although he didn’t follow Absalom. Joab fled to Yahweh’s Tent, and held onto the horns of the altar.

1 Kings 2.29: 29 King Solomon was told, “Joab has fled to Yahweh’s Tent, and behold, he is by the altar.” Then Solomon sent Benaiah the son of Jehoiada, saying, “Go, fall on him.”

1 Kings 2.30: 30 Benaiah came to Yahweh’s Tent, and said to him, “The king says, ‘Come out!’”

He said, “No; but I will die here.”

Benaiah brought the king word again, saying, “This is what Joab said, and this is how he answered me.”

1 Kings 2.31: 31 The king said to him, “Do as he has said, and fall on him, and bury him; that you may take away the blood, which Joab shed without cause, from me and from my father’s house.

1 Kings 2.32: 32 Yahweh will return his blood on his own head, because he fell on two men more righteous and better than he, and killed them with the sword, and my father David didn’t know it: Abner the son of Ner, captain of the army of Israel, and Amasa the son of Jether, captain of the army of Judah.

1 Kings 2.33: 33 So their blood will return on the head of Joab, and on the head of his offspring forever. But for David, for his offspring, for his house, and for his throne, there will be peace forever from Yahweh.”

1 Kings 2.34: 34 Then Benaiah the son of Jehoiada went up and fell on him, and killed him; and he was buried in his own house in the wilderness.

1 Kings 2.35: 35 The king put Benaiah the son of Jehoiada in his place over the army; and the king put Zadok the priest in the place of Abiathar.

1 Kings 2.36: 36 The king sent and called for Shimei, and said to him, “Build yourself a house in Jerusalem, and live there, and don’t go anywhere else.

1 Kings 2.37: 37 For on the day you go out and pass over the brook Kidron, know for certain that you will surely die. Your blood will be on your own head.”

1 Kings 2.38: 38 Shimei said to the king, “What you say is good. As my lord the king has said, so will your servant do.” Shimei lived in Jerusalem many days.

1 Kings 2.39: 39 At the end of three years, two of Shimei’s slaves ran away to Achish, son of Maacah, king of Gath. They told Shimei, saying, “Behold, your slaves are in Gath.”

1 Kings 2.40: 40 Shimei arose, saddled his donkey, and went to Gath to Achish, to seek his slaves; and Shimei went, and brought his slaves from Gath.

1 Kings 2.41: 41 Solomon was told that Shimei had gone from Jerusalem to Gath, and had come again.

1 Kings 2.42: 42 The king sent and called for Shimei, and said to him, “Didn’t I adjure you by Yahweh, and warn you, saying, ‘Know for certain, that on the day you go out, and walk anywhere else, you shall surely die?’ You said to me, ‘The saying that I have heard is good.’

1 Kings 2.43: 43 Why then have you not kept the oath of Yahweh, and the commandment that I have instructed you with?”

1 Kings 2.44: 44 The king said moreover to Shimei, “You know in your heart all the wickedness that you did to David my father. Therefore Yahweh will return your wickedness on your own head.

1 Kings 2.45: 45 But king Solomon will be blessed, and David’s throne will be established before Yahweh forever.”

1 Kings 2.46: 46 So the king commanded Benaiah the son of Jehoiada; and he went out, and fell on him, so that he died. The kingdom was established in the hand of Solomon.

1 Kings 3.0:

3

1 Kings 3.1: 1 Solomon made an alliance with Pharaoh king of Egypt, and took Pharaoh’s daughter, and brought her into David’s city, until he had finished building his own house, Yahweh’s house, and the wall around Jerusalem.

1 Kings 3.2: 2 However the people sacrificed in the high places, because there was not yet a house built for Yahweh’s name.

1 Kings 3.3: 3 Solomon loved Yahweh, walking in the statutes of David his father; except that he sacrificed and burned incense in the high places.

1 Kings 3.4: 4 The king went to Gibeon to sacrifice there; for that was the great high place. Solomon offered a thousand burnt offerings on that altar.

1 Kings 3.5: 5 In Gibeon, Yahweh appeared to Solomon in a dream by night; and God said, “Ask for what I should give you.”

1 Kings 3.6: 6 Solomon said, “You have shown to your servant David my father great loving kindness, because he walked before you in truth, in righteousness, and in uprightness of heart with you. You have kept for him this great loving kindness, that you have given him a son to sit on his throne, as it is today.

1 Kings 3.7: 7 Now, Yahweh my God, you have made your servant king instead of David my father. I am just a little child. I don’t know how to go out or come in.

1 Kings 3.8: 8 Your servant is among your people which you have chosen, a great people, that can’t be numbered or counted for multitude.

1 Kings 3.9: 9 Give your servant therefore an understanding heart to judge your people, that I may discern between good and evil; for who is able to judge this great people of yours?”

1 Kings 3.10: 10 This request pleased the Lord, that Solomon had asked this thing.

1 Kings 3.11: 11 God said to him, “Because you have asked this thing, and have not asked for yourself long life, nor have you asked for riches for yourself, nor have you asked for the life of your enemies, but have asked for yourself understanding to discern justice;

1 Kings 3.12: 12 behold, I have done according to your word. Behold, I have given you a wise and understanding heart; so that there has been no one like you before you, and after you none will arise like you.

1 Kings 3.13: 13 I have also given you that which you have not asked, both riches and honor, so that there will not be any among the kings like you for all your days.

1 Kings 3.14: 14 If you will walk in my ways, to keep my statutes and my commandments, as your father David walked, then I will lengthen your days.”

1 Kings 3.15: 15 Solomon awoke; and behold, it was a dream. Then he came to Jerusalem, and stood before the ark of Yahweh’s covenant, and offered up burnt offerings, offered peace offerings, and made a feast for all his servants.

1 Kings 3.16: 16 Then two women who were prostitutes came to the king, and stood before him.

1 Kings 3.17: 17 The one woman said, “Oh, my lord, I and this woman dwell in one house. I delivered a child with her in the house.

1 Kings 3.18: 18 The third day after I delivered, this woman delivered also. We were together. There was no stranger with us in the house, just us two in the house.

1 Kings 3.19: 19 This woman’s child died in the night, because she lay on it.

1 Kings 3.20: 20 She arose at midnight, and took my son from beside me, while your servant slept, and laid it in her bosom, and laid her dead child in my bosom.

1 Kings 3.21: 21 When I rose in the morning to nurse my child, behold, it was dead; but when I had looked at it in the morning, behold, it was not my son, whom I bore.”

1 Kings 3.22: 22 The other woman said, “No; but the living one is my son, and the dead one is your son.”

The first one said, “No; but the dead one is your son, and the living one is my son.” They argued like this before the king.

1 Kings 3.23: 23 Then the king said, “One says, ‘This is my son who lives, and your son is the dead;’ and the other says, ‘No; but your son is the dead one, and my son is the living one.’”

1 Kings 3.24: 24 The king said, “Get me a sword.” So they brought a sword before the king.

1 Kings 3.25: 25 The king said, “Divide the living child in two, and give half to the one, and half to the other.”

1 Kings 3.26: 26 Then the woman whose the living child was spoke to the king, for her heart yearned over her son, and she said, “Oh, my lord, give her the living child, and in no way kill him!”

But the other said, “He shall be neither mine nor yours. Divide him.”

1 Kings 3.27: 27 Then the king answered, “Give her the living child, and definitely do not kill him. She is his mother.”

1 Kings 3.28: 28 All Israel heard of the judgment which the king had judged; and they feared the king; for they saw that the wisdom of God was in him, to do justice.

1 Kings 4.0:

4

1 Kings 4.1: 1 King Solomon was king over all Israel.

1 Kings 4.2: 2 These were the princes whom he had: Azariah the son of Zadok, the priest;

1 Kings 4.3: 3 Elihoreph and Ahijah, the sons of Shisha, scribes; Jehoshaphat the son of Ahilud, the recorder;

1 Kings 4.4: 4 Benaiah the son of Jehoiada was over the army; Zadok and Abiathar were priests;

1 Kings 4.5: 5 Azariah the son of Nathan was over the officers; Zabud the son of Nathan was chief minister, the king’s friend;

1 Kings 4.6: 6 Ahishar was over the household; and Adoniram the son of Abda was over the men subject to forced labor.

1 Kings 4.7: 7 Solomon had twelve officers over all Israel, who provided food for the king and his household. Each man had to make provision for a month in the year.

1 Kings 4.8: 8 These are their names: Ben Hur, in the hill country of Ephraim;

1 Kings 4.9: 9 Ben Deker, in Makaz, in Shaalbim, Beth Shemesh, and Elon Beth Hanan;

1 Kings 4.10: 10 Ben Hesed, in Arubboth (Socoh and all the land of Hepher belonged to him);

1 Kings 4.11: 11 Ben Abinadab, in all the height of Dor (he had Taphath, Solomon’s daughter, as wife);

1 Kings 4.12: 12 Baana the son of Ahilud, in Taanach and Megiddo, and all Beth Shean which is beside Zarethan, beneath Jezreel, from Beth Shean to Abel Meholah, as far as beyond Jokmeam;

1 Kings 4.13: 13 Ben Geber, in Ramoth Gilead (the towns of Jair the son of Manasseh, which are in Gilead, belonged to him; and the region of Argob, which is in Bashan, sixty great cities with walls and bronze bars, belonged to him);

1 Kings 4.14: 14 Ahinadab the son of Iddo, in Mahanaim;

1 Kings 4.15: 15 Ahimaaz, in Naphtali (he also took Basemath the daughter of Solomon as wife);

1 Kings 4.16: 16 Baana the son of Hushai, in Asher and Bealoth;

1 Kings 4.17: 17 Jehoshaphat the son of Paruah, in Issachar;

1 Kings 4.18: 18 Shimei the son of Ela, in Benjamin;

1 Kings 4.19: 19 Geber the son of Uri, in the land of Gilead, the country of Sihon king of the Amorites and of Og king of Bashan; and he was the only officer who was in the land.

1 Kings 4.20: 20 Judah and Israel were numerous as the sand which is by the sea in multitude, eating and drinking and making merry.

1 Kings 4.21: 21 Solomon ruled over all the kingdoms from the River to the land of the Philistines, and to the border of Egypt. They brought tribute and served Solomon all the days of his life.

1 Kings 4.22: 22 Solomon’s provision for one day was thirty cors of fine flour, sixty measures of meal,

1 Kings 4.23: 23 ten head of fat cattle, twenty head of cattle out of the pastures, and one hundred sheep, in addition to deer, and gazelles, and roebucks, and fattened fowl.

1 Kings 4.24: 24 For he had dominion over all on this side the River, from Tiphsah even to Gaza, over all the kings on this side the River: and he had peace on all sides around him.

1 Kings 4.25: 25 Judah and Israel lived safely, every man under his vine and under his fig tree, from Dan even to Beersheba, all the days of Solomon.

1 Kings 4.26: 26 Solomon had forty thousand stalls of horses for his chariots, and twelve thousand horsemen.

1 Kings 4.27: 27 Those officers provided food for king Solomon, and for all who came to king Solomon’s table, every man in his month. They let nothing be lacking.

1 Kings 4.28: 28 They also brought Barley and straw for the horses and swift steeds to the place where the officers were, each man according to his duty.

1 Kings 4.29: 29 God gave Solomon abundant wisdom and understanding, and very great understanding, even as the sand that is on the seashore.

1 Kings 4.30: 30 Solomon’s wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the children of the east and all the wisdom of Egypt.

1 Kings 4.31: 31 For he was wiser than all men; than Ethan the Ezrahite, Heman, Calcol, and Darda, the sons of Mahol: and his fame was in all the nations all around.

1 Kings 4.32: 32 He spoke three thousand proverbs; and his songs numbered one thousand five.

1 Kings 4.33: 33 He spoke of trees, from the cedar that is in Lebanon even to the hyssop that grows out of the wall; he also spoke of animals, of birds, of creeping things, and of fish.

1 Kings 4.34: 34 People of all nations came to hear the wisdom of Solomon, sent by all kings of the earth, who had heard of his wisdom.

1 Kings 5.0:

5

1 Kings 5.1: 1 Hiram king of Tyre sent his servants to Solomon; for he had heard that they had anointed him king in the place of his father, and Hiram had always loved David.

1 Kings 5.2: 2 Solomon sent to Hiram, saying,

1 Kings 5.3: 3 “You know that David my father could not build a house for the name of Yahweh his God because of the wars which were around him on every side, until Yahweh put his enemies under the soles of his feet.

1 Kings 5.4: 4 But now Yahweh my God has given me rest on every side. There is no enemy and no evil occurrence.

1 Kings 5.5: 5 Behold, I intend to build a house for the name of Yahweh my God, as Yahweh spoke to David my father, saying, ‘Your son, whom I will set on your throne in your place shall build the house for my name.’

1 Kings 5.6: 6 Now therefore command that cedar trees be cut for me out of Lebanon. My servants will be with your servants; and I will give you wages for your servants according to all that you say. For you know that there is nobody among us who knows how to cut timber like the Sidonians.”

1 Kings 5.7: 7 When Hiram heard the words of Solomon, he rejoiced greatly, and said, “Blessed is Yahweh today, who has given to David a wise son to rule over this great people.”

1 Kings 5.8: 8 Hiram sent to Solomon, saying, “I have heard the message which you have sent to me. I will do all your desire concerning timber of cedar, and concerning cypress timber.

1 Kings 5.9: 9 My servants will bring them down from Lebanon to the sea. I will make them into rafts to go by sea to the place that you specify to me, and will cause them to be broken up there, and you will receive them. You will accomplish my desire, in giving food for my household.”

1 Kings 5.10: 10 So Hiram gave Solomon cedar timber and cypress timber according to all his desire.

1 Kings 5.11: 11 Solomon gave Hiram twenty thousand cors of wheat for food to his household, and twenty cors of pure oil. Solomon gave this to Hiram year by year.

1 Kings 5.12: 12 Yahweh gave Solomon wisdom, as he promised him. There was peace between Hiram and Solomon, and the two of them made a treaty together.

1 Kings 5.13: 13 King Solomon raised a levy out of all Israel; and the levy was thirty thousand men.

1 Kings 5.14: 14 He sent them to Lebanon, ten thousand a month by courses; for a month they were in Lebanon, and two months at home; and Adoniram was over the men subject to forced labor.

1 Kings 5.15: 15 Solomon had seventy thousand who bore burdens, and eighty thousand who were stone cutters in the mountains;

1 Kings 5.16: 16 besides Solomon’s chief officers who were over the work, three thousand and three hundred, who ruled over the people who labored in the work.

1 Kings 5.17: 17 The king commanded, and they cut out large stones, costly stones, to lay the foundation of the house with worked stone.

1 Kings 5.18: 18 Solomon’s builders and Hiram’s builders and the Gebalites cut them, and prepared the timber and the stones to build the house.

1 Kings 6.0:

6

1 Kings 6.1: 1 In the four hundred and eightieth year after the children of Israel had come out of the land of Egypt, in the fourth year of Solomon’s reign over Israel, in the month Ziv, which is the second month, he began to build Yahweh’s house.

1 Kings 6.2: 2 The house which king Solomon built for Yahweh had a length of sixty cubits, and its width twenty, and its height thirty cubits.

1 Kings 6.3: 3 The porch in front of the temple of the house had a length of twenty cubits, which was along the width of the house. Ten cubits was its width in front of the house.

1 Kings 6.4: 4 He made windows of fixed lattice work for the house.

1 Kings 6.5: 5 Against the wall of the house, he built floors all around, against the walls of the house all around, both of the temple and of the inner sanctuary; and he made side rooms all around.

1 Kings 6.6: 6 The lowest floor was five cubits wide, and the middle was six cubits wide, and the third was seven cubits wide; for on the outside he made offsets in the wall of the house all around, that the beams should not be inserted into the walls of the house.

1 Kings 6.7: 7 The house, when it was under construction, was built of stone prepared at the quarry; and no hammer or ax or any tool of iron was heard in the house while it was under construction.

1 Kings 6.8: 8 The door for the middle side rooms was in the right side of the house. They went up by winding stairs into the middle floor, and out of the middle into the third.

1 Kings 6.9: 9 So he built the house, and finished it; and he covered the house with beams and planks of cedar.

1 Kings 6.10: 10 He built the floors all along the house, each five cubits high; and they rested on the house with timber of cedar.

1 Kings 6.11: 11 Yahweh’s word came to Solomon, saying,

1 Kings 6.12: 12 “Concerning this house which you are building, if you will walk in my statutes, and execute my ordinances, and keep all my commandments to walk in them; then I will establish my word with you, which I spoke to David your father.

1 Kings 6.13: 13 I will dwell among the children of Israel, and will not forsake my people Israel.”

1 Kings 6.14: 14 So Solomon built the house, and finished it.

1 Kings 6.15: 15 He built the walls of the house within with boards of cedar: from the floor of the house to the walls of the ceiling, he covered them on the inside with wood; and he covered the floor of the house with cypress boards.

1 Kings 6.16: 16 He built twenty cubits on the back part of the house with boards of cedar from the floor to the ceiling. He built them for it within, for an inner sanctuary, even for the most holy place.

1 Kings 6.17: 17 In front of the temple sanctuary was forty cubits.

1 Kings 6.18: 18 There was cedar on the house within, carved with buds and open flowers. All was cedar. No stone was visible.

1 Kings 6.19: 19 He prepared an inner sanctuary in the middle of the house within, to set the ark of Yahweh’s covenant there.

1 Kings 6.20: 20 Within the inner sanctuary was twenty cubits in length, and twenty cubits in width, and twenty cubits in its height; and he overlaid it with pure gold; and he covered the altar with cedar.

1 Kings 6.21: 21 So Solomon overlaid the house within with pure gold. He drew chains of gold across before the inner sanctuary, and he overlaid it with gold.

1 Kings 6.22: 22 He overlaid the whole house with gold, until all the house was finished. He also overlaid the whole altar that belonged to the inner sanctuary with gold.

1 Kings 6.23: 23 In the inner sanctuary he made two cherubim of olive wood, each ten cubits high.

1 Kings 6.24: 24 Five cubits was the one wing of the cherub, and five cubits the other wing of the cherub. From the tip of one wing to the tip of the other was ten cubits.

1 Kings 6.25: 25 The other cherub was ten cubits. Both the cherubim were of one measure and one form.

1 Kings 6.26: 26 One cherub was ten cubits high, and so was the other cherub.

1 Kings 6.27: 27 He set the cherubim within the inner house. The wings of the cherubim were stretched out, so that the wing of the one touched the one wall, and the wing of the other cherub touched the other wall; and their wings touched one another in the middle of the house.

1 Kings 6.28: 28 He overlaid the cherubim with gold.

1 Kings 6.29: 29 He carved all the walls of the house around with carved figures of cherubim, palm trees, and open flowers, inside and outside.

1 Kings 6.30: 30 He overlaid the floor of the house with gold, inside and outside.

1 Kings 6.31: 31 For the entrance of the inner sanctuary, he made doors of olive wood. The lintel and door posts were a fifth part of the wall.

1 Kings 6.32: 32 So he made two doors of olive wood; and he carved on them carvings of cherubim, palm trees, and open flowers, and overlaid them with gold. He spread the gold on the cherubim and on the palm trees.

1 Kings 6.33: 33 He also did so for the entrance of the temple door posts of olive wood, out of a fourth part of the wall;

1 Kings 6.34: 34 and two doors of cypress wood. The two leaves of the one door were folding, and the two leaves of the other door were folding.

1 Kings 6.35: 35 He carved cherubim, palm trees, and open flowers; and he overlaid them with gold fitted on the engraved work.

1 Kings 6.36: 36 He built the inner court with three courses of cut stone and a course of cedar beams.

1 Kings 6.37: 37 The foundation of Yahweh’s house was laid in the fourth year, in the month Ziv.

1 Kings 6.38: 38 In the eleventh year, in the month Bul, which is the eighth month, the house was finished throughout all its parts, and according to all its specifications. So he spent seven years building it.

1 Kings 7.0:

7

1 Kings 7.1: 1 Solomon was building his own house thirteen years, and he finished all his house.

1 Kings 7.2: 2 For he built the House of the Forest of Lebanon. Its length was one hundred cubits, its width fifty cubits, and its height thirty cubits, on four rows of cedar pillars, with cedar beams on the pillars.

1 Kings 7.3: 3 It was covered with cedar above over the forty-five beams, that were on the pillars, fifteen in a row.

1 Kings 7.4: 4 There were beams in three rows, and window was facing window in three ranks.

1 Kings 7.5: 5 All the doors and posts were made square with beams: and window was facing window in three ranks.

1 Kings 7.6: 6 He made the porch of pillars. Its length was fifty cubits and its width thirty cubits; with a porch before them, and pillars and a threshold before them.

1 Kings 7.7: 7 He made the porch of the throne where he was to judge, even the porch of judgment; and it was covered with cedar from floor to floor.

1 Kings 7.8: 8 His house where he was to dwell, the other court within the porch, was of the like work. He made also a house for Pharaoh’s daughter (whom Solomon had taken as wife), like this porch.

1 Kings 7.9: 9 All these were of costly stones, even of cut stone, according to measure, sawed with saws, inside and outside, even from the foundation to the coping, and so on the outside to the great court.

1 Kings 7.10: 10 The foundation was of costly stones, even great stones, stones of ten cubits, and stones of eight cubits.

1 Kings 7.11: 11 Above were costly stones, even cut stone, according to measure, and cedar wood.

1 Kings 7.12: 12 The great court around had three courses of cut stone, and a course of cedar beams; like the inner court of Yahweh’s house and the porch of the house.

1 Kings 7.13: 13 King Solomon sent and brought Hiram out of Tyre.

1 Kings 7.14: 14 He was the son of a widow of the tribe of Naphtali, and his father was a man of Tyre, a worker in bronze; and he was filled with wisdom and understanding and skill, to work all works in bronze. He came to king Solomon, and performed all his work.

1 Kings 7.15: 15 For he fashioned the two pillars of bronze, eighteen cubits high apiece; and a line of twelve cubits encircled either of them.

1 Kings 7.16: 16 He made two capitals of molten bronze, to set on the tops of the pillars. The height of the one capital was five cubits, and the height of the other capital was five cubits.

1 Kings 7.17: 17 There were nets of checker work, and wreaths of chain work, for the capitals which were on the top of the pillars; seven for the one capital, and seven for the other capital.

1 Kings 7.18: 18 So he made the pillars; and there were two rows around on the one network, to cover the capitals that were on the top of the pillars: and he did so for the other capital.

1 Kings 7.19: 19 The capitals that were on the top of the pillars in the porch were of lily work, four cubits.

1 Kings 7.20: 20 There were capitals above also on the two pillars, close by the belly which was beside the network. There were two hundred pomegranates in rows around the other capital.

1 Kings 7.21: 21 He set up the pillars at the porch of the temple. He set up the right pillar, and called its name Jachin; and he set up the left pillar, and called its name Boaz.

1 Kings 7.22: 22 On the top of the pillars was lily work: so the work of the pillars was finished.

1 Kings 7.23: 23 He made the molten sea of ten cubits from brim to brim, round in shape. Its height was five cubits; and a line of thirty cubits encircled it.

1 Kings 7.24: 24 Under its brim around there were buds which encircled it for ten cubits, encircling the sea. The buds were in two rows, cast when it was cast.

1 Kings 7.25: 25 It stood on twelve oxen, three looking toward the north, and three looking toward the west, and three looking toward the south, and three looking toward the east; and the sea was set on them above, and all their hindquarters were inward.

1 Kings 7.26: 26 It was a hand width thick. Its brim was worked like the brim of a cup, like the flower of a lily. It held two thousand baths.

1 Kings 7.27: 27 He made the ten bases of bronze. The length of one base was four cubits, four cubits its width, and three cubits its height.

1 Kings 7.28: 28 The work of the bases was like this: they had panels; and there were panels between the ledges;

1 Kings 7.29: 29 and on the panels that were between the ledges were lions, oxen, and cherubim; and on the ledges there was a pedestal above; and beneath the lions and oxen were wreaths of hanging work.

1 Kings 7.30: 30 Every base had four bronze wheels, and axles of bronze; and the four feet of it had supports. The supports were cast beneath the basin, with wreaths at the side of each.

1 Kings 7.31: 31 Its mouth within the capital and above was a cubit. Its mouth was round after the work of a pedestal, a cubit and a half; and also on its mouth were engravings, and their panels were square, not round.

1 Kings 7.32: 32 The four wheels were underneath the panels; and the axles of the wheels were in the base. The height of a wheel was a cubit and half a cubit.

1 Kings 7.33: 33 The work of the wheels was like the work of a chariot wheel. Their axles, and their rims, and their spokes, and their naves, were all of cast metal.

1 Kings 7.34: 34 There were four supports at the four corners of each base. Its supports were of the base itself.

1 Kings 7.35: 35 In the top of the base there was a round band half a cubit high; and on the top of the base its supports and its panels were the same.

1 Kings 7.36: 36 On the plates of its supports, and on its panels, he engraved cherubim, lions, and palm trees, each in its space, with wreaths all around.

1 Kings 7.37: 37 He made the ten bases in this way: all of them had one casting, one measure, and one form.

1 Kings 7.38: 38 He made ten basins of bronze. One basin contained forty baths; and every basin was four cubits; and on every one of the ten bases one basin.

1 Kings 7.39: 39 He set the bases, five on the right side of the house, and five on the left side of the house. He set the sea on the right side of the house eastward and toward the south.

1 Kings 7.40: 40 Hiram made the pots, the shovels, and the basins. So Hiram finished doing all the work that he worked for king Solomon in Yahweh’s house:

1 Kings 7.41: 41 the two pillars; the two bowls of the capitals that were on the top of the pillars; the two networks to cover the two bowls of the capitals that were on the top of the pillars;

1 Kings 7.42: 42 the four hundred pomegranates for the two networks; two rows of pomegranates for each network, to cover the two bowls of the capitals that were on the pillars;

1 Kings 7.43: 43 the ten bases; the ten basins on the bases;

1 Kings 7.44: 44 the one sea; the twelve oxen under the sea;

1 Kings 7.45: 45 the pots; the shovels; and the basins: even all these vessels, which Hiram made for king Solomon, in Yahweh’s house, were of burnished bronze.

1 Kings 7.46: 46 The king cast them in the plain of the Jordan, in the clay ground between Succoth and Zarethan.

1 Kings 7.47: 47 Solomon left all the vessels unweighed, because there were so many of them. The weight of the bronze could not be determined.

1 Kings 7.48: 48 Solomon made all the vessels that were in Yahweh’s house: the golden altar and the table that the show bread was on, of gold;

1 Kings 7.49: 49 and the lamp stands, five on the right side, and five on the left, before the inner sanctuary, of pure gold; and the flowers, the lamps, and the tongs, of gold;

1 Kings 7.50: 50 the cups, the snuffers, the basins, the spoons, and the fire pans, of pure gold; and the hinges, both for the doors of the inner house, the most holy place, and for the doors of the house, of the temple, of gold.

1 Kings 7.51: 51 Thus all the work that king Solomon did in Yahweh’s house was finished. Solomon brought in the things which David his father had dedicated, the silver, the gold, and the vessels, and put them in the treasuries of Yahweh’s house.

1 Kings 8.0:

8

1 Kings 8.1: 1 Then Solomon assembled the elders of Israel, with all the heads of the tribes, the princes of the fathers’ households of the children of Israel, to king Solomon in Jerusalem, to bring up the ark of Yahweh’s covenant out of David’s city, which is Zion.

1 Kings 8.2: 2 All the men of Israel assembled themselves to king Solomon at the feast, in the month Ethanim, which is the seventh month.

1 Kings 8.3: 3 All the elders of Israel came, and the priests picked up the ark.

1 Kings 8.4: 4 They brought up Yahweh’s ark, the Tent of Meeting, and all the holy vessels that were in the Tent. The priests and the Levites brought these up.

1 Kings 8.5: 5 King Solomon and all the congregation of Israel, who were assembled to him, were with him before the ark, sacrificing sheep and cattle, that could not be counted or numbered for multitude.

1 Kings 8.6: 6 The priests brought in the ark of Yahweh’s covenant to its place, into the inner sanctuary of the house, to the most holy place, even under the cherubim’s wings.

1 Kings 8.7: 7 For the cherubim spread their wings out over the place of the ark, and the cherubim covered the ark and its poles above.

1 Kings 8.8: 8 The poles were so long that the ends of the poles were seen from the holy place before the inner sanctuary; but they were not seen outside. They are there to this day.

1 Kings 8.9: 9 There was nothing in the ark except the two stone tablets which Moses put there at Horeb, when Yahweh made a covenant with the children of Israel, when they came out of the land of Egypt.

1 Kings 8.10: 10 It came to pass, when the priests had come out of the holy place, that the cloud filled Yahweh’s house,

1 Kings 8.11: 11 so that the priests could not stand to minister by reason of the cloud; for Yahweh’s glory filled Yahweh’s house.

1 Kings 8.12: 12 Then Solomon said, “Yahweh has said that he would dwell in the thick darkness.

1 Kings 8.13: 13 I have surely built you a house of habitation, a place for you to dwell in forever.”

1 Kings 8.14: 14 The king turned his face around, and blessed all the assembly of Israel; and all the assembly of Israel stood.

1 Kings 8.15: 15 He said, “Blessed is Yahweh, the God of Israel, who spoke with his mouth to David your father, and has with his hand fulfilled it, saying,

1 Kings 8.16: 16 ‘Since the day that I brought my people Israel out of Egypt, I chose no city out of all the tribes of Israel to build a house, that my name might be there; but I chose David to be over my people Israel.’

1 Kings 8.17: 17 “Now it was in the heart of David my father to build a house for the name of Yahweh, the God of Israel.

1 Kings 8.18: 18 But Yahweh said to David my father, ‘Whereas it was in your heart to build a house for my name, you did well that it was in your heart.

1 Kings 8.19: 19 Nevertheless, you shall not build the house; but your son who shall come out of your body, he shall build the house for my name.’

1 Kings 8.20: 20 Yahweh has established his word that he spoke; for I have risen up in the place of David my father, and I sit on the throne of Israel, as Yahweh promised, and have built the house for the name of Yahweh, the God of Israel.

1 Kings 8.21: 21 There I have set a place for the ark, in which is Yahweh’s covenant, which he made with our fathers, when he brought them out of the land of Egypt.”

1 Kings 8.22: 22 Solomon stood before Yahweh’s altar in the presence of all the assembly of Israel, and spread out his hands toward heaven;

1 Kings 8.23: 23 and he said, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, there is no God like you, in heaven above, or on earth beneath; who keeps covenant and loving kindness with your servants, who walk before you with all their heart;

1 Kings 8.24: 24 who has kept with your servant David my father that which you promised him. Yes, you spoke with your mouth, and have fulfilled it with your hand, as it is today.

1 Kings 8.25: 25 Now therefore, may Yahweh, the God of Israel, keep with your servant David my father that which you have promised him, saying, ‘There shall not fail from you a man in my sight to sit on the throne of Israel, if only your children take heed to their way, to walk before me as you have walked before me.’

1 Kings 8.26: 26 “Now therefore, God of Israel, please let your word be verified, which you spoke to your servant David my father.

1 Kings 8.27: 27 But will God in very deed dwell on the earth? Behold, heaven and the heaven of heavens can’t contain you; how much less this house that I have built!

1 Kings 8.28: 28 Yet have respect for the prayer of your servant, and for his supplication, Yahweh my God, to listen to the cry and to the prayer which your servant prays before you today;

1 Kings 8.29: 29 that your eyes may be open toward this house night and day, even toward the place of which you have said, ‘My name shall be there;’ to listen to the prayer which your servant prays toward this place.

1 Kings 8.30: 30 Listen to the supplication of your servant, and of your people Israel, when they pray toward this place. Yes, hear in heaven, your dwelling place; and when you hear, forgive.

1 Kings 8.31: 31 “If a man sins against his neighbor, and an oath is laid on him to cause him to swear, and he comes and swears before your altar in this house;

1 Kings 8.32: 32 then hear in heaven, and act, and judge your servants, condemning the wicked, to bring his way on his own head, and justifying the righteous, to give him according to his righteousness.

1 Kings 8.33: 33 “When your people Israel are struck down before the enemy, because they have sinned against you; if they turn again to you, and confess your name, and pray and make supplication to you in this house;

1 Kings 8.34: 34 then hear in heaven, and forgive the sin of your people Israel, and bring them again to the land which you gave to their fathers.

1 Kings 8.35: 35 “When the sky is shut up, and there is no rain, because they have sinned against you; if they pray toward this place, and confess your name, and turn from their sin, when you afflict them,

1 Kings 8.36: 36 then hear in heaven, and forgive the sin of your servants, and of your people Israel, when you teach them the good way in which they should walk; and send rain on your land, which you have given to your people for an inheritance.

1 Kings 8.37: 37 “If there is famine in the land, if there is pestilence, if there is blight, mildew, locust or caterpillar; if their enemy besieges them in the land of their cities; whatever plague, whatever sickness there is;

1 Kings 8.38: 38 whatever prayer and supplication is made by any man, or by all your people Israel, who shall each know the plague of his own heart, and spread out his hands toward this house,

1 Kings 8.39: 39 then hear in heaven, your dwelling place, and forgive, and act, and give to every man according to all his ways, whose heart you know (for you, even you only, know the hearts of all the children of men);

1 Kings 8.40: 40 that they may fear you all the days that they live in the land which you gave to our fathers.

1 Kings 8.41: 41 “Moreover concerning the foreigner, who is not of your people Israel, when he comes out of a far country for your name’s sake

1 Kings 8.42: 42 (for they shall hear of your great name, and of your mighty hand, and of your outstretched arm); when he comes and prays toward this house;

1 Kings 8.43: 43 hear in heaven, your dwelling place, and do according to all that the foreigner calls to you for; that all the peoples of the earth may know your name, to fear you, as do your people Israel, and that they may know that this house which I have built is called by your name.

1 Kings 8.44: 44 “If your people go out to battle against their enemy, by whatever way you shall send them, and they pray to Yahweh toward the city which you have chosen, and toward the house which I have built for your name;

1 Kings 8.45: 45 then hear in heaven their prayer and their supplication, and maintain their cause.

1 Kings 8.46: 46 If they sin against you (for there is no man who doesn’t sin), and you are angry with them, and deliver them to the enemy, so that they carry them away captive to the land of the enemy, far off or near;

1 Kings 8.47: 47 yet if they repent in the land where they are carried captive, and turn again, and make supplication to you in the land of those who carried them captive, saying, ‘We have sinned, and have done perversely; we have dealt wickedly;’

1 Kings 8.48: 48 if they return to you with all their heart and with all their soul in the land of their enemies, who carried them captive, and pray to you toward their land, which you gave to their fathers, the city which you have chosen, and the house which I have built for your name;

1 Kings 8.49: 49 then hear their prayer and their supplication in heaven, your dwelling place, and maintain their cause;

1 Kings 8.50: 50 and forgive your people who have sinned against you, and all their transgressions in which they have transgressed against you; and give them compassion before those who carried them captive, that they may have compassion on them

1 Kings 8.51: 51 (for they are your people, and your inheritance, which you brought out of Egypt, from the middle of the iron furnace);

1 Kings 8.52: 52 that your eyes may be open to the supplication of your servant, and to the supplication of your people Israel, to listen to them whenever they cry to you.

1 Kings 8.53: 53 For you separated them from among all the peoples of the earth, to be your inheritance, as you spoke by Moses your servant, when you brought our fathers out of Egypt, Lord Yahweh.”

1 Kings 8.54: 54 It was so, that when Solomon had finished praying all this prayer and supplication to Yahweh, he arose from before Yahweh’s altar, from kneeling on his knees with his hands spread out toward heaven.

1 Kings 8.55: 55 He stood, and blessed all the assembly of Israel with a loud voice, saying,

1 Kings 8.56: 56 “Blessed be Yahweh, who has given rest to his people Israel, according to all that he promised. There has not failed one word of all his good promise, which he promised by Moses his servant.

1 Kings 8.57: 57 May Yahweh our God be with us, as he was with our fathers. Let him not leave us or forsake us;

1 Kings 8.58: 58 that he may incline our hearts to him, to walk in all his ways, and to keep his commandments, and his statutes, and his ordinances, which he commanded our fathers.

1 Kings 8.59: 59 Let these my words, with which I have made supplication before Yahweh, be near to Yahweh our God day and night, that he may maintain the cause of his servant, and the cause of his people Israel, as every day requires;

1 Kings 8.60: 60 that all the peoples of the earth may know that Yahweh himself is God. There is no one else.

1 Kings 8.61: 61 “Let your heart therefore be perfect with Yahweh our God, to walk in his statutes, and to keep his commandments, as it is today.”

1 Kings 8.62: 62 The king, and all Israel with him, offered sacrifice before Yahweh.

1 Kings 8.63: 63 Solomon offered for the sacrifice of peace offerings, which he offered to Yahweh, twenty two thousand head of cattle, and one hundred twenty thousand sheep. So the king and all the children of Israel dedicated Yahweh’s house.

1 Kings 8.64: 64 The same day the king made the middle of the court holy that was before Yahweh’s house; for there he offered the burnt offering, and the meal offering, and the fat of the peace offerings, because the bronze altar that was before Yahweh was too little to receive the burnt offering, the meal offering, and the fat of the peace offerings.

1 Kings 8.65: 65 So Solomon held the feast at that time, and all Israel with him, a great assembly, from the entrance of Hamath to the brook of Egypt, before Yahweh our God, seven days and seven more days, even fourteen days.

1 Kings 8.66: 66 On the eighth day he sent the people away; and they blessed the king, and went to their tents joyful and glad in their hearts for all the goodness that Yahweh had shown to David his servant, and to Israel his people.

1 Kings 9.0:

9

1 Kings 9.1: 1 When Solomon had finished the building of Yahweh’s house, the king’s house, and all Solomon’s desire which he was pleased to do,

1 Kings 9.2: 2 Yahweh appeared to Solomon the second time, as he had appeared to him at Gibeon.

1 Kings 9.3: 3 Yahweh said to him, “I have heard your prayer and your supplication, that you have made before me. I have made this house holy, which you have built, to put my name there forever; and my eyes and my heart shall be there perpetually.

1 Kings 9.4: 4 As for you, if you will walk before me, as David your father walked, in integrity of heart, and in uprightness, to do according to all that I have commanded you, and will keep my statutes and my ordinances;

1 Kings 9.5: 5 then I will establish the throne of your kingdom over Israel forever, as I promised to David your father, saying, ‘There shall not fail from you a man on the throne of Israel.’

1 Kings 9.6: 6 But if you turn away from following me, you or your children, and not keep my commandments and my statutes which I have set before you, but go and serve other gods, and worship them;

1 Kings 9.7: 7 then I will cut off Israel out of the land which I have given them; and I will cast this house, which I have made holy for my name, out of my sight; and Israel will be a proverb and a byword among all peoples.

1 Kings 9.8: 8 Though this house is so high, yet everyone who passes by it will be astonished and hiss; and they will say, ‘Why has Yahweh done this to this land, and to this house?’

1 Kings 9.9: 9 and they will answer, ‘Because they abandoned Yahweh their God, who brought their fathers out of the land of Egypt, and embraced other gods, and worshiped them, and served them. Therefore Yahweh has brought all this evil on them.’”

1 Kings 9.10: 10 At the end of twenty years, in which Solomon had built the two houses, Yahweh’s house and the king’s house

1 Kings 9.11: 11 (now Hiram the king of Tyre had furnished Solomon with cedar trees and cypress trees, and with gold, according to all his desire), King Solomon gave Hiram twenty cities in the land of Galilee.

1 Kings 9.12: 12 Hiram came out of Tyre to see the cities which Solomon had given him; and they didn’t please him.

1 Kings 9.13: 13 He said, “What cities are these which you have given me, my brother?” He called them the land of Cabul to this day.

1 Kings 9.14: 14 Hiram sent to the king one hundred twenty talents of gold.

1 Kings 9.15: 15 This is the reason of the levy which king Solomon raised, to build Yahweh’s house, his own house, Millo, Jerusalem’s wall, Hazor, Megiddo, and Gezer.

1 Kings 9.16: 16 Pharaoh king of Egypt had gone up, taken Gezer, burned it with fire, killed the Canaanites who lived in the city, and given it for a wedding gift to his daughter, Solomon’s wife.

1 Kings 9.17: 17 Solomon built in the land Gezer, Beth Horon the lower,

1 Kings 9.18: 18 Baalath, Tamar in the wilderness,

1 Kings 9.19: 19 all the storage cities that Solomon had, the cities for his chariots, the cities for his horsemen, and that which Solomon desired to build for his pleasure in Jerusalem, and in Lebanon, and in all the land of his dominion.

1 Kings 9.20: 20 As for all the people who were left of the Amorites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites, who were not of the children of Israel;

1 Kings 9.21: 21 their children who were left after them in the land, whom the children of Israel were not able utterly to destroy, of them Solomon raised a levy of bondservants to this day.

1 Kings 9.22: 22 But of the children of Israel Solomon made no bondservants; but they were the men of war, his servants, his princes, his captains, and rulers of his chariots and of his horsemen.

1 Kings 9.23: 23 These were the five hundred fifty chief officers who were over Solomon’s work, who ruled over the people who labored in the work.

1 Kings 9.24: 24 But Pharaoh’s daughter came up out of David’s city to her house which Solomon had built for her. Then he built Millo.

1 Kings 9.25: 25 Solomon offered burnt offerings and peace offerings on the altar which he built to Yahweh three times per year, burning incense with them, on the altar that was before Yahweh. So he finished the house.

1 Kings 9.26: 26 King Solomon made a fleet of ships in Ezion Geber, which is beside Eloth, on the shore of the Red Sea, in the land of Edom.

1 Kings 9.27: 27 Hiram sent in the fleet his servants, sailors who had knowledge of the sea, with the servants of Solomon.

1 Kings 9.28: 28 They came to Ophir, and fetched from there gold, four hundred and twenty talents, and brought it to king Solomon.

1 Kings 10.0:

10

1 Kings 10.1: 1 When the queen of Sheba heard of the fame of Solomon concerning Yahweh’s name, she came to test him with hard questions.

1 Kings 10.2: 2 She came to Jerusalem with a very great caravan, with camels that bore spices, very much gold, and precious stones; and when she had come to Solomon, she talked with him about all that was in her heart.

1 Kings 10.3: 3 Solomon answered all her questions. There wasn’t anything hidden from the king which he didn’t tell her.

1 Kings 10.4: 4 When the queen of Sheba had seen all the wisdom of Solomon, the house that he had built,

1 Kings 10.5: 5 the food of his table, the sitting of his servants, the attendance of his officials, their clothing, his cup bearers, and his ascent by which he went up to Yahweh’s house; there was no more spirit in her.

1 Kings 10.6: 6 She said to the king, “It was a true report that I heard in my own land of your acts, and of your wisdom.

1 Kings 10.7: 7 However I didn’t believe the words until I came and my eyes had seen it. Behold, not even half was told me! Your wisdom and prosperity exceed the fame which I heard.

1 Kings 10.8: 8 Happy are your men, happy are these your servants, who stand continually before you, who hear your wisdom.

1 Kings 10.9: 9 Blessed is Yahweh your God, who delighted in you, to set you on the throne of Israel. Because Yahweh loved Israel forever, therefore he made you king, to do justice and righteousness.”

1 Kings 10.10: 10 She gave the king one hundred twenty talents of gold, and a very great quantity of spices, and precious stones. Never again was there such an abundance of spices as these which the queen of Sheba gave to king Solomon.

1 Kings 10.11: 11 The fleet of Hiram that brought gold from Ophir, also brought in from Ophir great quantities of almug trees and precious stones.

1 Kings 10.12: 12 The king made of the almug trees pillars for Yahweh’s house, and for the king’s house, harps also and stringed instruments for the singers; no such almug trees came or were seen, to this day.

1 Kings 10.13: 13 King Solomon gave to the queen of Sheba all her desire, whatever she asked, in addition to that which Solomon gave her of his royal bounty. So she turned and went to her own land, she and her servants.

1 Kings 10.14: 14 Now the weight of gold that came to Solomon in one year was six hundred sixty-six talents of gold,

1 Kings 10.15: 15 in addition to that which the traders brought, and the traffic of the merchants, and of all the kings of the mixed people, and of the governors of the country.

1 Kings 10.16: 16 King Solomon made two hundred bucklers of beaten gold; six hundred shekels of gold went to one buckler.

1 Kings 10.17: 17 he made three hundred shields of beaten gold; three minas of gold went to one shield; and the king put them in the House of the Forest of Lebanon.

1 Kings 10.18: 18 Moreover the king made a great throne of ivory, and overlaid it with the finest gold.

1 Kings 10.19: 19 There were six steps to the throne, and the top of the throne was round behind; and there were armrests on either side by the place of the seat, and two lions standing beside the armrests.

1 Kings 10.20: 20 Twelve lions stood there on the one side and on the other on the six steps. Nothing like it was made in any kingdom.

1 Kings 10.21: 21 All king Solomon’s drinking vessels were of gold, and all the vessels of the House of the Forest of Lebanon were of pure gold. None were of silver, because it was considered of little value in the days of Solomon.

1 Kings 10.22: 22 For the king had a fleet of Tarshish at sea with Hiram’s fleet. Once every three years the fleet of Tarshish came, bringing gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks.

1 Kings 10.23: 23 So king Solomon exceeded all the kings of the earth in riches and in wisdom.

1 Kings 10.24: 24 All the earth sought the presence of Solomon, to hear his wisdom, which God had put in his heart.

1 Kings 10.25: 25 Year after year, every man brought his tribute, vessels of silver, vessels of gold, clothing, armor, spices, horses, and mules.

1 Kings 10.26: 26 Solomon gathered together chariots and horsemen. He had one thousand four hundred chariots, and twelve thousand horsemen, that he kept in the chariot cities and with the king at Jerusalem.

1 Kings 10.27: 27 The king made silver as common as stones in Jerusalem, and cedars as common as the sycamore trees that are in the lowland.

1 Kings 10.28: 28 The horses which Solomon had were brought out of Egypt. The king’s merchants received them in droves, each drove at a price.

1 Kings 10.29: 29 A chariot came up and went out of Egypt for six hundred shekels of silver, and a horse for one hundred fifty shekels; and so they exported them to all the kings of the Hittites, and to the kings of Syria.

1 Kings 11.0:

11

1 Kings 11.1: 1 Now king Solomon loved many foreign women, together with the daughter of Pharaoh, women of the Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, Sidonians, and Hittites;

1 Kings 11.2: 2 of the nations concerning which Yahweh said to the children of Israel, “You shall not go among them, neither shall they come among you; for surely they will turn away your heart after their gods.” Solomon joined to these in love.

1 Kings 11.3: 3 He had seven hundred wives, princesses, and three hundred concubines. His wives turned his heart away.

1 Kings 11.4: 4 When Solomon was old, his wives turned away his heart after other gods; and his heart was not perfect with Yahweh his God, as the heart of David his father was.

1 Kings 11.5: 5 For Solomon went after Ashtoreth the goddess of the Sidonians, and after Milcom the abomination of the Ammonites.

1 Kings 11.6: 6 Solomon did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and didn’t go fully after Yahweh, as David his father did.

1 Kings 11.7: 7 Then Solomon built a high place for Chemosh the abomination of Moab, on the mountain that is before Jerusalem, and for Molech the abomination of the children of Ammon.

1 Kings 11.8: 8 So he did for all his foreign wives, who burned incense and sacrificed to their gods.

1 Kings 11.9: 9 Yahweh was angry with Solomon, because his heart was turned away from Yahweh, the God of Israel, who had appeared to him twice,

1 Kings 11.10: 10 and had commanded him concerning this thing, that he should not go after other gods; but he didn’t keep that which Yahweh commanded.

1 Kings 11.11: 11 Therefore Yahweh said to Solomon, “Because this is done by you, and you have not kept my covenant and my statutes, which I have commanded you, I will surely tear the kingdom from you, and will give it to your servant.

1 Kings 11.12: 12 Nevertheless, I will not do it in your days, for David your father’s sake; but I will tear it out of your son’s hand.

1 Kings 11.13: 13 However I will not tear away all the kingdom; but I will give one tribe to your son, for David my servant’s sake, and for Jerusalem’s sake which I have chosen.”

1 Kings 11.14: 14 Yahweh raised up an adversary to Solomon: Hadad the Edomite. He was one of the king’s offspring in Edom.

1 Kings 11.15: 15 For when David was in Edom, and Joab the captain of the army had gone up to bury the slain, and had struck every male in Edom

1 Kings 11.16: 16 (for Joab and all Israel remained there six months, until he had cut off every male in Edom);

1 Kings 11.17: 17 Hadad fled, he and certain Edomites of his father’s servants with him, to go into Egypt, when Hadad was still a little child.

1 Kings 11.18: 18 They arose out of Midian, and came to Paran; and they took men with them out of Paran, and they came to Egypt, to Pharaoh king of Egypt, who gave him a house, and appointed him food, and gave him land.

1 Kings 11.19: 19 Hadad found great favor in the sight of Pharaoh, so that he gave him as wife the sister of his own wife, the sister of Tahpenes the queen.

1 Kings 11.20: 20 The sister of Tahpenes bore him Genubath his son, whom Tahpenes weaned in Pharaoh’s house; and Genubath was in Pharaoh’s house among the sons of Pharaoh.

1 Kings 11.21: 21 When Hadad heard in Egypt that David slept with his fathers, and that Joab the captain of the army was dead, Hadad said to Pharaoh, “Let me depart, that I may go to my own country.”

1 Kings 11.22: 22 Then Pharaoh said to him, “But what have you lacked with me, that behold, you seek to go to your own country?”

He answered, “Nothing, however only let me depart.”

1 Kings 11.23: 23 God raised up an adversary to him, Rezon the son of Eliada, who had fled from his lord Hadadezer king of Zobah.

1 Kings 11.24: 24 He gathered men to himself, and became captain over a troop, when David killed them of Zobah. They went to Damascus, and lived there, and reigned in Damascus.

1 Kings 11.25: 25 He was an adversary to Israel all the days of Solomon, in addition to the mischief of Hadad. He abhorred Israel, and reigned over Syria.

1 Kings 11.26: 26 Jeroboam the son of Nebat, an Ephraimite of Zeredah, a servant of Solomon, whose mother’s name was Zeruah, a widow, also lifted up his hand against the king.

1 Kings 11.27: 27 This was the reason why he lifted up his hand against the king: Solomon built Millo, and repaired the breach of his father David’s city.

1 Kings 11.28: 28 The man Jeroboam was a mighty man of valor; and Solomon saw the young man that he was industrious, and he put him in charge of all the labor of the house of Joseph.

1 Kings 11.29: 29 At that time, when Jeroboam went out of Jerusalem, the prophet Ahijah the Shilonite found him on the way. Now Ahijah had clad himself with a new garment; and the two of them were alone in the field.

1 Kings 11.30: 30 Ahijah took the new garment that was on him, and tore it in twelve pieces.

1 Kings 11.31: 31 He said to Jeroboam, “Take ten pieces; for Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, ‘Behold, I will tear the kingdom out of the hand of Solomon, and will give ten tribes to you

1 Kings 11.32: 32 (but he shall have one tribe, for my servant David’s sake and for Jerusalem’s sake, the city which I have chosen out of all the tribes of Israel);

1 Kings 11.33: 33 because that they have forsaken me, and have worshiped Ashtoreth the goddess of the Sidonians, Chemosh the god of Moab, and Milcom the god of the children of Ammon. They have not walked in my ways, to do that which is right in my eyes, and to keep my statutes and my ordinances, as David his father did.

1 Kings 11.34: 34 “‘However I will not take the whole kingdom out of his hand; but I will make him prince all the days of his life, for David my servant’s sake whom I chose, who kept my commandments and my statutes;

1 Kings 11.35: 35 but I will take the kingdom out of his son’s hand, and will give it to you, even ten tribes.

1 Kings 11.36: 36 I will give one tribe to his son, that David my servant may have a lamp always before me in Jerusalem, the city which I have chosen for myself to put my name there.

1 Kings 11.37: 37 I will take you, and you shall reign according to all that your soul desires, and shall be king over Israel.

1 Kings 11.38: 38 It shall be, if you will listen to all that I command you, and will walk in my ways, and do that which is right in my eyes, to keep my statutes and my commandments, as David my servant did; that I will be with you, and will build you a sure house, as I built for David, and will give Israel to you.

1 Kings 11.39: 39 I will afflict the offspring of David for this, but not forever.’”

1 Kings 11.40: 40 Therefore Solomon sought to kill Jeroboam; but Jeroboam arose, and fled into Egypt, to Shishak king of Egypt, and was in Egypt until the death of Solomon.

1 Kings 11.41: 41 Now the rest of the acts of Solomon, and all that he did, and his wisdom, aren’t they written in the book of the acts of Solomon?

1 Kings 11.42: 42 The time that Solomon reigned in Jerusalem over all Israel was forty years.

1 Kings 11.43: 43 Solomon slept with his fathers, and was buried in his father David’s city; and Rehoboam his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 12.0:

12

1 Kings 12.1: 1 Rehoboam went to Shechem, for all Israel had come to Shechem to make him king.

1 Kings 12.2: 2 When Jeroboam the son of Nebat heard of it (for he was yet in Egypt, where he had fled from the presence of king Solomon, and Jeroboam lived in Egypt,

1 Kings 12.3: 3 and they sent and called him), Jeroboam and all the assembly of Israel came, and spoke to Rehoboam, saying,

1 Kings 12.4: 4 “Your father made our yoke difficult. Now therefore make the hard service of your father, and his heavy yoke which he put on us, lighter, and we will serve you.”

1 Kings 12.5: 5 He said to them, “Depart for three days, then come back to me.”

So the people departed.

1 Kings 12.6: 6 King Rehoboam took counsel with the old men, who had stood before Solomon his father while he yet lived, saying, “What counsel do you give me to answer these people?”

1 Kings 12.7: 7 They replied, “If you will be a servant to this people today, and will serve them, and answer them with good words, then they will be your servants forever.”

1 Kings 12.8: 8 But he abandoned the counsel of the old men which they had given him, and took counsel with the young men who had grown up with him, who stood before him.

1 Kings 12.9: 9 He said to them, “What counsel do you give, that we may answer these people, who have spoken to me, saying, ‘Make the yoke that your father put on us lighter?’”

1 Kings 12.10: 10 The young men who had grown up with him said to him, “Tell these people who spoke to you, saying, ‘Your father made our yoke heavy, but make it lighter to us;’ tell them, ‘My little finger is thicker than my father’s waist.

1 Kings 12.11: 11 Now my father burdened you with a heavy yoke, but I will add to your yoke. My father chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with scorpions.’”

1 Kings 12.12: 12 So Jeroboam and all the people came to Rehoboam the third day, as the king asked, saying, “Come to me again the third day.”

1 Kings 12.13: 13 The king answered the people roughly, and abandoned the counsel of the old men which they had given him,

1 Kings 12.14: 14 and spoke to them according to the counsel of the young men, saying, “My father made your yoke heavy, but I will add to your yoke. My father chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with scorpions.”

1 Kings 12.15: 15 So the king didn’t listen to the people; for it was a thing brought about from Yahweh, that he might establish his word, which Yahweh spoke by Ahijah the Shilonite to Jeroboam the son of Nebat.

1 Kings 12.16: 16 When all Israel saw that the king didn’t listen to them, the people answered the king, saying, “What portion have we in David? We don’t have an inheritance in the son of Jesse. To your tents, Israel! Now see to your own house, David.” So Israel departed to their tents.

1 Kings 12.17: 17 But as for the children of Israel who lived in the cities of Judah, Rehoboam reigned over them.

1 Kings 12.18: 18 Then king Rehoboam sent Adoram, who was over the men subject to forced labor; and all Israel stoned him to death with stones. King Rehoboam hurried to get himself up to his chariot, to flee to Jerusalem.

1 Kings 12.19: 19 So Israel rebelled against David’s house to this day.

1 Kings 12.20: 20 When all Israel heard that Jeroboam had returned, they sent and called him to the congregation, and made him king over all Israel. There was no one who followed David’s house, except for the tribe of Judah only.

1 Kings 12.21: 21 When Rehoboam had come to Jerusalem, he assembled all the house of Judah and the tribe of Benjamin, a hundred and eighty thousand chosen men, who were warriors, to fight against the house of Israel, to bring the kingdom again to Rehoboam the son of Solomon.

1 Kings 12.22: 22 But the word of God came to Shemaiah the man of God, saying,

1 Kings 12.23: 23 “Speak to Rehoboam the son of Solomon, king of Judah, and to all the house of Judah and Benjamin, and to the rest of the people, saying,

1 Kings 12.24: 24 ‘Yahweh says, “You shall not go up or fight against your brothers, the children of Israel. Everyone return to his house; for this thing is from me.”’” So they listened to Yahweh’s word, and returned and went their way, according to Yahweh’s word.

1 Kings 12.25: 25 Then Jeroboam built Shechem in the hill country of Ephraim, and lived in it; and he went out from there, and built Penuel.

1 Kings 12.26: 26 Jeroboam said in his heart, “Now the kingdom will return to David’s house.

1 Kings 12.27: 27 If this people goes up to offer sacrifices in Yahweh’s house at Jerusalem, then the heart of this people will turn again to their lord, even to Rehoboam king of Judah; and they will kill me, and return to Rehoboam king of Judah.”

1 Kings 12.28: 28 So the king took counsel, and made two calves of gold; and he said to them, “It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem. Look and behold your gods, Israel, which brought you up out of the land of Egypt!”

1 Kings 12.29: 29 He set the one in Bethel, and the other he put in Dan.

1 Kings 12.30: 30 This thing became a sin; for the people went even as far as Dan to worship before the one there.

1 Kings 12.31: 31 He made houses of high places, and made priests from among all the people, who were not of the sons of Levi.

1 Kings 12.32: 32 Jeroboam ordained a feast in the eighth month, on the fifteenth day of the month, like the feast that is in Judah, and he went up to the altar. He did so in Bethel, sacrificing to the calves that he had made, and he placed in Bethel the priests of the high places that he had made.

1 Kings 12.33: 33 He went up to the altar which he had made in Bethel on the fifteenth day in the eighth month, even in the month which he had devised of his own heart; and he ordained a feast for the children of Israel, and went up to the altar, to burn incense.

1 Kings 13.0:

13

1 Kings 13.1: 1 Behold, a man of God came out of Judah by Yahweh’s word to Bethel; and Jeroboam was standing by the altar to burn incense.

1 Kings 13.2: 2 He cried against the altar by Yahweh’s word, and said, “Altar! Altar! Yahweh says: ‘Behold, a son will be born to David’s house, Josiah by name. On you he will sacrifice the priests of the high places who burn incense on you, and they will burn men’s bones on you.’”

1 Kings 13.3: 3 He gave a sign the same day, saying, “This is the sign which Yahweh has spoken: Behold, the altar will be split apart, and the ashes that are on it will be poured out.”

1 Kings 13.4: 4 When the king heard the saying of the man of God, which he cried against the altar in Bethel, Jeroboam put out his hand from the altar, saying, “Seize him!” His hand, which he put out against him, dried up, so that he could not draw it back again to himself.

1 Kings 13.5: 5 The altar was also split apart, and the ashes poured out from the altar, according to the sign which the man of God had given by Yahweh’s word.

1 Kings 13.6: 6 The king answered the man of God, “Now intercede for the favor of Yahweh your God, and pray for me, that my hand may be restored me again.”

The man of God interceded with Yahweh, and the king’s hand was restored to him again, and became as it was before.

1 Kings 13.7: 7 The king said to the man of God, “Come home with me, and refresh yourself, and I will give you a reward.”

1 Kings 13.8: 8 The man of God said to the king, “Even if you gave me half of your house, I would not go in with you, neither would I eat bread nor drink water in this place;

1 Kings 13.9: 9 for so was it commanded me by Yahweh’s word, saying, ‘You shall eat no bread, drink no water, and don’t return by the way that you came.’”

1 Kings 13.10: 10 So he went another way, and didn’t return by the way that he came to Bethel.

1 Kings 13.11: 11 Now an old prophet lived in Bethel, and one of his sons came and told him all the works that the man of God had done that day in Bethel. They also told their father the words which he had spoken to the king.

1 Kings 13.12: 12 Their father said to them, “Which way did he go?” Now his sons had seen which way the man of God went, who came from Judah.

1 Kings 13.13: 13 He said to his sons, “Saddle the donkey for me.” So they saddled the donkey for him; and he rode on it.

1 Kings 13.14: 14 He went after the man of God, and found him sitting under an oak. He said to him, “Are you the man of God who came from Judah?”

He said, “I am.”

1 Kings 13.15: 15 Then he said to him, “Come home with me, and eat bread.”

1 Kings 13.16: 16 He said, “I may not return with you, nor go in with you. I will not eat bread or drink water with you in this place.

1 Kings 13.17: 17 For it was said to me by Yahweh’s word, ‘You shall eat no bread or drink water there, and don’t turn again to go by the way that you came.’”

1 Kings 13.18: 18 He said to him, “I also am a prophet as you are; and an angel spoke to me by Yahweh’s word, saying, ‘Bring him back with you into your house, that he may eat bread and drink water.’” He lied to him.

1 Kings 13.19: 19 So he went back with him, ate bread in his house, and drank water.

1 Kings 13.20: 20 As they sat at the table, Yahweh’s word came to the prophet who brought him back;

1 Kings 13.21: 21 and he cried out to the man of God who came from Judah, saying, “Yahweh says, ‘Because you have been disobedient to Yahweh’s mouth, and have not kept the commandment which Yahweh your God commanded you,

1 Kings 13.22: 22 but came back, and have eaten bread and drank water in the place of which he said to you, “Eat no bread, and drink no water;” your body will not come to the tomb of your fathers.’”

1 Kings 13.23: 23 After he had eaten bread, and after he drank, he saddled the donkey for the prophet whom he had brought back.

1 Kings 13.24: 24 When he had gone, a lion met him by the way and killed him. His body was thrown on the path, and the donkey stood by it. The lion also stood by the body.

1 Kings 13.25: 25 Behold, men passed by, and saw the body thrown on the path, and the lion standing by the body; and they came and told it in the city where the old prophet lived.

1 Kings 13.26: 26 When the prophet who brought him back from the way heard of it, he said, “It is the man of God who was disobedient to Yahweh’s mouth. Therefore Yahweh has delivered him to the lion, which has mauled him and slain him, according to Yahweh’s word, which he spoke to him.”

1 Kings 13.27: 27 He said to his sons, saying, “Saddle the donkey for me,” and they saddled it.

1 Kings 13.28: 28 He went and found his body thrown on the path, and the donkey and the lion standing by the body. The lion had not eaten the body, nor mauled the donkey.

1 Kings 13.29: 29 The prophet took up the body of the man of God, and laid it on the donkey, and brought it back. He came to the city of the old prophet to mourn, and to bury him.

1 Kings 13.30: 30 He laid his body in his own grave; and they mourned over him, saying, “Alas, my brother!”

1 Kings 13.31: 31 After he had buried him, he spoke to his sons, saying, “When I am dead, bury me in the tomb in which the man of God is buried. Lay my bones beside his bones.

1 Kings 13.32: 32 For the saying which he cried by Yahweh’s word against the altar in Bethel, and against all the houses of the high places which are in the cities of Samaria, will surely happen.”

1 Kings 13.33: 33 After this thing Jeroboam didn’t return from his evil way, but again made priests of the high places from among all the people. Whoever wanted to, he consecrated him, that there might be priests of the high places.

1 Kings 13.34: 34 This thing became sin to the house of Jeroboam, even to cut it off, and to destroy it from off the surface of the earth.

1 Kings 14.0:

14

1 Kings 14.1: 1 At that time Abijah the son of Jeroboam became sick.

1 Kings 14.2: 2 Jeroboam said to his wife, “Please get up and disguise yourself, so that you won’t be recognized as Jeroboam’s wife. Go to Shiloh. Behold, Ahijah the prophet is there, who said that I would be king over this people.

1 Kings 14.3: 3 Take with you ten loaves of bread, some cakes, and a jar of honey, and go to him. He will tell you what will become of the child.”

1 Kings 14.4: 4 Jeroboam’s wife did so, and arose, and went to Shiloh, and came to Ahijah’s house. Now Ahijah could not see; for his eyes were set by reason of his age.

1 Kings 14.5: 5 Yahweh said to Ahijah, “Behold, Jeroboam’s wife is coming to inquire of you concerning her son; for he is sick. Tell her such and such; for it will be, when she comes in, that she will pretend to be another woman.”

1 Kings 14.6: 6 So when Ahijah heard the sound of her feet as she came in at the door, he said, “Come in, Jeroboam’s wife! Why do you pretend to be another? For I am sent to you with heavy news.

1 Kings 14.7: 7 Go, tell Jeroboam, ‘Yahweh, the God of Israel, says: “Because I exalted you from among the people, and made you prince over my people Israel,

1 Kings 14.8: 8 and tore the kingdom away from David’s house, and gave it you; and yet you have not been as my servant David, who kept my commandments, and who followed me with all his heart, to do that only which was right in my eyes,

1 Kings 14.9: 9 but have done evil above all who were before you, and have gone and made for yourself other gods, molten images, to provoke me to anger, and have cast me behind your back;

1 Kings 14.10: 10 therefore, behold, I will bring evil on the house of Jeroboam, and will cut off from Jeroboam everyone who urinates on a wall, he who is shut up and he who is left at large in Israel, and will utterly sweep away the house of Jeroboam, as a man sweeps away dung, until it is all gone.

1 Kings 14.11: 11 The dogs will eat he who belongs to Jeroboam who dies in the city; and the birds of the sky will eat he who dies in the field: for Yahweh has spoken it.”’

1 Kings 14.12: 12 Arise therefore, and go to your house. When your feet enter into the city, the child will die.

1 Kings 14.13: 13 All Israel will mourn for him and bury him; for he only of Jeroboam will come to the grave, because in him there is found some good thing toward Yahweh, the God of Israel, in the house of Jeroboam.

1 Kings 14.14: 14 Moreover Yahweh will raise up a king for himself over Israel, who will cut off the house of Jeroboam. This is the day! What? Even now.

1 Kings 14.15: 15 For Yahweh will strike Israel, as a reed is shaken in the water; and he will root up Israel out of this good land which he gave to their fathers, and will scatter them beyond the River, because they have made their Asherah poles, provoking Yahweh to anger.

1 Kings 14.16: 16 He will give Israel up because of the sins of Jeroboam, which he has sinned, and with which he has made Israel to sin.”

1 Kings 14.17: 17 Jeroboam’s wife arose and departed, and came to Tirzah. As she came to the threshold of the house, the child died.

1 Kings 14.18: 18 All Israel buried him and mourned for him, according to Yahweh’s word, which he spoke by his servant Ahijah the prophet.

1 Kings 14.19: 19 The rest of the acts of Jeroboam, how he fought, and how he reigned, behold, they are written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel.

1 Kings 14.20: 20 The days which Jeroboam reigned were twenty two years, then he slept with his fathers, and Nadab his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 14.21: 21 Rehoboam the son of Solomon reigned in Judah. Rehoboam was forty-one years old when he began to reign, and he reigned seventeen years in Jerusalem, the city which Yahweh had chosen out of all the tribes of Israel, to put his name there. His mother’s name was Naamah the Ammonitess.

1 Kings 14.22: 22 Judah did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and they provoked him to jealousy with their sins which they committed, above all that their fathers had done.

1 Kings 14.23: 23 For they also built for themselves high places, sacred pillars, and Asherah poles on every high hill and under every green tree.

1 Kings 14.24: 24 There were also sodomites in the land. They did according to all the abominations of the nations which Yahweh drove out before the children of Israel.

1 Kings 14.25: 25 In the fifth year of king Rehoboam, Shishak king of Egypt came up against Jerusalem,

1 Kings 14.26: 26 and he took away the treasures of Yahweh’s house, and the treasures of the king’s house. He even took away all of it, including all the gold shields which Solomon had made.

1 Kings 14.27: 27 King Rehoboam made shields of bronze in their place, and committed them to the hands of the captains of the guard, who kept the door of the king’s house.

1 Kings 14.28: 28 It was so, that as often as the king went into Yahweh’s house, the guard bore them, and brought them back into the guard room.

1 Kings 14.29: 29 Now the rest of the acts of Rehoboam, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

1 Kings 14.30: 30 There was war between Rehoboam and Jeroboam continually.

1 Kings 14.31: 31 Rehoboam slept with his fathers, and was buried with his fathers in David’s city. His mother’s name was Naamah the Ammonitess. Abijam his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 15.0:

15

1 Kings 15.1: 1 Now in the eighteenth year of king Jeroboam the son of Nebat, Abijam began to reign over Judah.

1 Kings 15.2: 2 He reigned three years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Maacah the daughter of Abishalom.

1 Kings 15.3: 3 He walked in all the sins of his father, which he had done before him; and his heart was not perfect with Yahweh his God, as the heart of David his father.

1 Kings 15.4: 4 Nevertheless for David’s sake, Yahweh his God gave him a lamp in Jerusalem, to set up his son after him, and to establish Jerusalem;

1 Kings 15.5: 5 because David did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, and didn’t turn away from anything that he commanded him all the days of his life, except only in the matter of Uriah the Hittite.

1 Kings 15.6: 6 Now there was war between Rehoboam and Jeroboam all the days of his life.

1 Kings 15.7: 7 The rest of the acts of Abijam, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah? There was war between Abijam and Jeroboam.

1 Kings 15.8: 8 Abijam slept with his fathers, and they buried him in David’s city; and Asa his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 15.9: 9 In the twentieth year of Jeroboam king of Israel, Asa began to reign over Judah.

1 Kings 15.10: 10 He reigned forty-one years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Maacah the daughter of Abishalom.

1 Kings 15.11: 11 Asa did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, as David his father did.

1 Kings 15.12: 12 He put away the sodomites out of the land, and removed all the idols that his fathers had made.

1 Kings 15.13: 13 He also removed Maacah his mother from being queen, because she had made an abominable image for an Asherah. Asa cut down her image and burned it at the brook Kidron.

1 Kings 15.14: 14 But the high places were not taken away. Nevertheless the heart of Asa was perfect with Yahweh all his days.

1 Kings 15.15: 15 He brought into Yahweh’s house the things that his father had dedicated, and the things that he himself had dedicated: silver, gold, and utensils.

1 Kings 15.16: 16 There was war between Asa and Baasha king of Israel all their days.

1 Kings 15.17: 17 Baasha king of Israel went up against Judah, and built Ramah, that he might not allow anyone to go out or come in to Asa king of Judah.

1 Kings 15.18: 18 Then Asa took all the silver and the gold that was left in the treasures of Yahweh’s house, and the treasures of the king’s house, and delivered it into the hand of his servants. Then King Asa sent them to Ben Hadad, the son of Tabrimmon, the son of Hezion, king of Syria, who lived at Damascus, saying,

1 Kings 15.19: 19 “There is a treaty between me and you, between my father and your father. Behold, I have sent to you a present of silver and gold. Go, break your treaty with Baasha king of Israel, that he may depart from me.”

1 Kings 15.20: 20 Ben Hadad listened to king Asa, and sent the captains of his armies against the cities of Israel, and struck Ijon, and Dan, and Abel Beth Maacah, and all Chinneroth, with all the land of Naphtali.

1 Kings 15.21: 21 When Baasha heard of it, he stopped building Ramah, and lived in Tirzah.

1 Kings 15.22: 22 Then king Asa made a proclamation to all Judah. No one was exempted. They carried away the stones of Ramah, and its timber, with which Baasha had built; and king Asa used it to build Geba of Benjamin, and Mizpah.

1 Kings 15.23: 23 Now the rest of all the acts of Asa, and all his might, and all that he did, and the cities which he built, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah? But in the time of his old age he was diseased in his feet.

1 Kings 15.24: 24 Asa slept with his fathers, and was buried with his fathers in his father David’s city; and Jehoshaphat his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 15.25: 25 Nadab the son of Jeroboam began to reign over Israel in the second year of Asa king of Judah; and he reigned over Israel two years.

1 Kings 15.26: 26 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and walked in the way of his father, and in his sin with which he made Israel to sin.

1 Kings 15.27: 27 Baasha the son of Ahijah, of the house of Issachar, conspired against him; and Baasha struck him at Gibbethon, which belonged to the Philistines; for Nadab and all Israel were besieging Gibbethon.

1 Kings 15.28: 28 Even in the third year of Asa king of Judah, Baasha killed him, and reigned in his place.

1 Kings 15.29: 29 As soon as he was king, he struck all the house of Jeroboam. He didn’t leave to Jeroboam any who breathed, until he had destroyed him; according to the saying of Yahweh, which he spoke by his servant Ahijah the Shilonite;

1 Kings 15.30: 30 for the sins of Jeroboam which he sinned, and with which he made Israel to sin, because of his provocation with which he provoked Yahweh, the God of Israel, to anger.

1 Kings 15.31: 31 Now the rest of the acts of Nadab, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

1 Kings 15.32: 32 There was war between Asa and Baasha king of Israel all their days.

1 Kings 15.33: 33 In the third year of Asa king of Judah, Baasha the son of Ahijah began to reign over all Israel in Tirzah for twenty-four years.

1 Kings 15.34: 34 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and walked in the way of Jeroboam, and in his sin with which he made Israel to sin.

1 Kings 16.0:

16

1 Kings 16.1: 1 Yahweh’s word came to Jehu the son of Hanani against Baasha, saying,

1 Kings 16.2: 2 “Because I exalted you out of the dust, and made you prince over my people Israel, and you have walked in the way of Jeroboam, and have made my people Israel to sin, to provoke me to anger with their sins;

1 Kings 16.3: 3 behold, I will utterly sweep away Baasha and his house; and I will make your house like the house of Jeroboam the son of Nebat.

1 Kings 16.4: 4 The dogs will eat Baasha’s descendants who die in the city; and he who dies of his in the field, the birds of the sky will eat.”

1 Kings 16.5: 5 Now the rest of the acts of Baasha, and what he did, and his might, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

1 Kings 16.6: 6 Baasha slept with his fathers, and was buried in Tirzah; and Elah his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 16.7: 7 Moreover Yahweh’s word came by the prophet Jehu the son of Hanani against Baasha and against his house, both because of all the evil that he did in Yahweh’s sight, to provoke him to anger with the work of his hands, in being like the house of Jeroboam, and because he struck him.

1 Kings 16.8: 8 In the twenty-sixth year of Asa king of Judah, Elah the son of Baasha began to reign over Israel in Tirzah for two years.

1 Kings 16.9: 9 His servant Zimri, captain of half his chariots, conspired against him. Now he was in Tirzah, drinking himself drunk in the house of Arza, who was over the household in Tirzah;

1 Kings 16.10: 10 and Zimri went in and struck him, and killed him, in the twenty-seventh year of Asa king of Judah, and reigned in his place.

1 Kings 16.11: 11 When he began to reign, as soon as he sat on his throne, he attacked all the house of Baasha. He didn’t leave him a single one who urinates on a wall among his relatives or his friends.

1 Kings 16.12: 12 Thus Zimri destroyed all the house of Baasha, according to Yahweh’s word, which he spoke against Baasha by Jehu the prophet,

1 Kings 16.13: 13 for all the sins of Baasha, and the sins of Elah his son, which they sinned, and with which they made Israel to sin, to provoke Yahweh, the God of Israel, to anger with their vanities.

1 Kings 16.14: 14 Now the rest of the acts of Elah, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

1 Kings 16.15: 15 In the twenty-seventh year of Asa king of Judah, Zimri reigned seven days in Tirzah. Now the people were encamped against Gibbethon, which belonged to the Philistines.

1 Kings 16.16: 16 The people who were encamped heard that Zimri had conspired, and had also killed the king. Therefore all Israel made Omri, the captain of the army, king over Israel that day in the camp.

1 Kings 16.17: 17 Omri went up from Gibbethon, and all Israel with him, and they besieged Tirzah.

1 Kings 16.18: 18 When Zimri saw that the city was taken, he went into the fortified part of the king’s house, and burned the king’s house over him with fire, and died,

1 Kings 16.19: 19 for his sins which he sinned in doing that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, in walking in the way of Jeroboam, and in his sin which he did, to make Israel to sin.

1 Kings 16.20: 20 Now the rest of the acts of Zimri, and his treason that he committed, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

1 Kings 16.21: 21 Then the people of Israel were divided into two parts: half of the people followed Tibni the son of Ginath, to make him king; and half followed Omri.

1 Kings 16.22: 22 But the people who followed Omri prevailed against the people who followed Tibni the son of Ginath; so Tibni died, and Omri reigned.

1 Kings 16.23: 23 In the thirty-first year of Asa king of Judah, Omri began to reign over Israel for twelve years. He reigned six years in Tirzah.

1 Kings 16.24: 24 He bought the hill Samaria of Shemer for two talents of silver; and he built on the hill, and called the name of the city which he built Samaria, after the name of Shemer, the owner of the hill.

1 Kings 16.25: 25 Omri did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and dealt wickedly above all who were before him.

1 Kings 16.26: 26 For he walked in all the way of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, and in his sins with which he made Israel to sin, to provoke Yahweh, the God of Israel, to anger with their vanities.

1 Kings 16.27: 27 Now the rest of the acts of Omri which he did, and his might that he showed, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

1 Kings 16.28: 28 So Omri slept with his fathers, and was buried in Samaria; and Ahab his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 16.29: 29 In the thirty-eighth year of Asa king of Judah, Ahab the son of Omri began to reign over Israel. Ahab the son of Omri reigned over Israel in Samaria twenty-two years.

1 Kings 16.30: 30 Ahab the son of Omri did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight above all that were before him.

1 Kings 16.31: 31 As if it had been a light thing for him to walk in the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, he took as wife Jezebel the daughter of Ethbaal king of the Sidonians, and went and served Baal, and worshiped him.

1 Kings 16.32: 32 He raised up an altar for Baal in the house of Baal, which he had built in Samaria.

1 Kings 16.33: 33 Ahab made the Asherah; and Ahab did more yet to provoke Yahweh, the God of Israel, to anger than all the kings of Israel who were before him.

1 Kings 16.34: 34 In his days Hiel the Bethelite built Jericho. He laid its foundation with the loss of Abiram his firstborn, and set up its gates with the loss of his youngest son Segub, according to Yahweh’s word, which he spoke by Joshua the son of Nun.

1 Kings 17.0:

17

1 Kings 17.1: 1 Elijah the Tishbite, who was one of the settlers of Gilead, said to Ahab, “As Yahweh, the God of Israel, lives, before whom I stand, there shall not be dew nor rain these years, but according to my word.”

1 Kings 17.2: 2 Then Yahweh’s word came to him, saying,

1 Kings 17.3: 3 “Go away from here, turn eastward, and hide yourself by the brook Cherith, that is before the Jordan.

1 Kings 17.4: 4 You shall drink from the brook. I have commanded the ravens to feed you there.”

1 Kings 17.5: 5 So he went and did according to Yahweh’s word; for he went and lived by the brook Cherith that is before the Jordan.

1 Kings 17.6: 6 The ravens brought him bread and meat in the morning, and bread and meat in the evening; and he drank from the brook.

1 Kings 17.7: 7 After a while, the brook dried up, because there was no rain in the land.

1 Kings 17.8: 8 Yahweh’s word came to him, saying,

1 Kings 17.9: 9 “Arise, go to Zarephath, which belongs to Sidon, and stay there. Behold, I have commanded a widow there to sustain you.”

1 Kings 17.10: 10 So he arose and went to Zarephath; and when he came to the gate of the city, behold, a widow was there gathering sticks. He called to her, and said, “Please get me a little water in a jar, that I may drink.”

1 Kings 17.11: 11 As she was going to get it, he called to her, and said, “Please bring me a morsel of bread in your hand.”

1 Kings 17.12: 12 She said, “As Yahweh your God lives, I don’t have a cake, but a handful of meal in a jar, and a little oil in a jar. Behold, I am gathering two sticks, that I may go in and bake it for me and my son, that we may eat it, and die.”

1 Kings 17.13: 13 Elijah said to her, “Don’t be afraid. Go and do as you have said; but make me a little cake from it first, and bring it out to me, and afterward make some for you and for your son.

1 Kings 17.14: 14 For Yahweh, the God of Israel says, ‘The jar of meal will not run out, and the jar of oil will not fail, until the day that Yahweh sends rain on the earth.’”

1 Kings 17.15: 15 She went and did according to the saying of Elijah; and she, and he, and her house, ate many days.

1 Kings 17.16: 16 The jar of meal didn’t run out, and the jar of oil didn’t fail, according to Yahweh’s word, which he spoke by Elijah.

1 Kings 17.17: 17 After these things, the son of the woman, the mistress of the house, became sick; and his sickness was so severe that there was no breath left in him.

1 Kings 17.18: 18 She said to Elijah, “What have I to do with you, you man of God? You have come to me to bring my sin to memory, and to kill my son!”

1 Kings 17.19: 19 He said to her, “Give me your son.” He took him out of her bosom, and carried him up into the room where he stayed, and laid him on his own bed.

1 Kings 17.20: 20 He cried to Yahweh, and said, “Yahweh my God, have you also brought evil on the widow with whom I am staying, by killing her son?”

1 Kings 17.21: 21 He stretched himself on the child three times, and cried to Yahweh, and said, “Yahweh my God, please let this child’s soul come into him again.”

1 Kings 17.22: 22 Yahweh listened to the voice of Elijah; and the soul of the child came into him again, and he revived.

1 Kings 17.23: 23 Elijah took the child, and brought him down out of the room into the house, and delivered him to his mother; and Elijah said, “Behold, your son lives.”

1 Kings 17.24: 24 The woman said to Elijah, “Now I know that you are a man of God, and that Yahweh’s word in your mouth is truth.”

1 Kings 18.0:

18

1 Kings 18.1: 1 After many days, Yahweh’s word came to Elijah, in the third year, saying, “Go, show yourself to Ahab; and I will send rain on the earth.”

1 Kings 18.2: 2 Elijah went to show himself to Ahab. The famine was severe in Samaria.

1 Kings 18.3: 3 Ahab called Obadiah, who was over the household. (Now Obadiah feared Yahweh greatly;

1 Kings 18.4: 4 for when Jezebel cut off Yahweh’s prophets, Obadiah took one hundred prophets, and hid them by fifty in a cave, and fed them with bread and water.)

1 Kings 18.5: 5 Ahab said to Obadiah, “Go through the land, to all the springs of water, and to all the brooks. Perhaps we may find grass and save the horses and mules alive, that we not lose all the animals.”

1 Kings 18.6: 6 So they divided the land between them to pass throughout it. Ahab went one way by himself, and Obadiah went another way by himself.

1 Kings 18.7: 7 As Obadiah was on the way, behold, Elijah met him. He recognized him, and fell on his face, and said, “Is it you, my lord Elijah?”

1 Kings 18.8: 8 He answered him, “It is I. Go, tell your lord, ‘Behold, Elijah is here!’”

1 Kings 18.9: 9 He said, “How have I sinned, that you would deliver your servant into the hand of Ahab, to kill me?

1 Kings 18.10: 10 As Yahweh your God lives, there is no nation or kingdom where my lord has not sent to seek you. When they said, ‘He is not here,’ he took an oath of the kingdom and nation, that they didn’t find you.

1 Kings 18.11: 11 Now you say, ‘Go, tell your lord, “Behold, Elijah is here.”’

1 Kings 18.12: 12 It will happen, as soon as I leave you, that Yahweh’s Spirit will carry you I don’t know where; and so when I come and tell Ahab, and he can’t find you, he will kill me. But I, your servant, have feared Yahweh from my youth.

1 Kings 18.13: 13 Wasn’t it told my lord what I did when Jezebel killed Yahweh’s prophets, how I hid one hundred men of Yahweh’s prophets with fifty to a cave, and fed them with bread and water?

1 Kings 18.14: 14 Now you say, ‘Go, tell your lord, “Behold, Elijah is here”.’ He will kill me.”

1 Kings 18.15: 15 Elijah said, “As Yahweh of Armies lives, before whom I stand, I will surely show myself to him today.”

1 Kings 18.16: 16 So Obadiah went to meet Ahab, and told him; and Ahab went to meet Elijah.

1 Kings 18.17: 17 When Ahab saw Elijah, Ahab said to him, “Is that you, you troubler of Israel?”

1 Kings 18.18: 18 He answered, “I have not troubled Israel; but you, and your father’s house, in that you have forsaken Yahweh’s commandments, and you have followed the Baals.

1 Kings 18.19: 19 Now therefore send, and gather to me all Israel to Mount Carmel, and four hundred fifty of the prophets of Baal, and four hundred of the prophets of the Asherah, who eat at Jezebel’s table.”

1 Kings 18.20: 20 So Ahab sent to all the children of Israel, and gathered the prophets together to Mount Carmel.

1 Kings 18.21: 21 Elijah came near to all the people, and said, “How long will you waver between the two sides? If Yahweh is God, follow him; but if Baal, then follow him.”

The people didn’t say a word.

1 Kings 18.22: 22 Then Elijah said to the people, “I, even I only, am left as a prophet of Yahweh; but Baal’s prophets are four hundred fifty men.

1 Kings 18.23: 23 Let them therefore give us two bulls; and let them choose one bull for themselves, and cut it in pieces, and lay it on the wood, and put no fire under; and I will dress the other bull, and lay it on the wood, and put no fire under it.

1 Kings 18.24: 24 You call on the name of your god, and I will call on Yahweh’s name. The God who answers by fire, let him be God.”

All the people answered, “What you say is good.”

1 Kings 18.25: 25 Elijah said to the prophets of Baal, “Choose one bull for yourselves, and dress it first; for you are many; and call on the name of your god, but put no fire under it.”

1 Kings 18.26: 26 They took the bull which was given them, and they dressed it, and called on the name of Baal from morning even until noon, saying, “Baal, hear us!” But there was no voice, and nobody answered. They leaped about the altar which was made.

1 Kings 18.27: 27 At noon, Elijah mocked them, and said, “Cry aloud; for he is a god. Either he is deep in thought, or he has gone somewhere, or he is on a journey, or perhaps he sleeps and must be awakened.”

1 Kings 18.28: 28 They cried aloud, and cut themselves in their way with knives and lances, until the blood gushed out on them.

1 Kings 18.29: 29 When midday was past, they prophesied until the time of the evening offering; but there was no voice, no answer, and nobody paid attention.

1 Kings 18.30: 30 Elijah said to all the people, “Come near to me!”; and all the people came near to him. He repaired Yahweh’s altar that had been thrown down.

1 Kings 18.31: 31 Elijah took twelve stones, according to the number of the tribes of the sons of Jacob, to whom Yahweh’s word came, saying, “Israel shall be your name.”

1 Kings 18.32: 32 With the stones he built an altar in Yahweh’s name. He made a trench around the altar, large enough to contain two seahs of seed.

1 Kings 18.33: 33 He put the wood in order, and cut the bull in pieces, and laid it on the wood. He said, “Fill four jars with water, and pour it on the burnt offering, and on the wood.”

1 Kings 18.34: 34 He said, “Do it a second time;” and they did it the second time. He said, “Do it a third time;” and they did it the third time.

1 Kings 18.35: 35 The water ran around the altar; and he also filled the trench with water.

1 Kings 18.36: 36 At the time of the evening offering, Elijah the prophet came near, and said, “Yahweh, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Israel, let it be known today that you are God in Israel, and that I am your servant, and that I have done all these things at your word.

1 Kings 18.37: 37 Hear me, Yahweh, hear me, that this people may know that you, Yahweh, are God, and that you have turned their heart back again.”

1 Kings 18.38: 38 Then Yahweh’s fire fell, and consumed the burnt offering, the wood, the stones, and the dust, and licked up the water that was in the trench.

1 Kings 18.39: 39 When all the people saw it, they fell on their faces. They said, “Yahweh, he is God! Yahweh, he is God!”

1 Kings 18.40: 40 Elijah said to them, “Seize the prophets of Baal! Don’t let one of them escape!”

They seized them; and Elijah brought them down to the brook Kishon, and killed them there.

1 Kings 18.41: 41 Elijah said to Ahab, “Get up, eat and drink; for there is the sound of abundance of rain.”

1 Kings 18.42: 42 So Ahab went up to eat and to drink. Elijah went up to the top of Carmel; and he bowed himself down on the earth, and put his face between his knees.

1 Kings 18.43: 43 He said to his servant, “Go up now, and look toward the sea.”

He went up, and looked, and said, “There is nothing.”

He said, “Go again” seven times.

1 Kings 18.44: 44 On the seventh time, he said, “Behold, a small cloud, like a man’s hand, is rising out of the sea.”

He said, “Go up, tell Ahab, ‘Get ready and go down, so that the rain doesn’t stop you.’”

1 Kings 18.45: 45 In a little while, the sky grew black with clouds and wind, and there was a great rain. Ahab rode, and went to Jezreel.

1 Kings 18.46: 46 Yahweh’s hand was on Elijah; and he tucked his cloak into his belt and ran before Ahab to the entrance of Jezreel.

1 Kings 19.0:

19

1 Kings 19.1: 1 Ahab told Jezebel all that Elijah had done, and how he had killed all the prophets with the sword.

1 Kings 19.2: 2 Then Jezebel sent a messenger to Elijah, saying, “So let the gods do to me, and more also, if I don’t make your life as the life of one of them by tomorrow about this time!”

1 Kings 19.3: 3 When he saw that, he arose, and ran for his life, and came to Beersheba, which belongs to Judah, and left his servant there.

1 Kings 19.4: 4 But he himself went a day’s journey into the wilderness, and came and sat down under a juniper tree. Then he requested for himself that he might die, and said, “It is enough. Now, O Yahweh, take away my life; for I am not better than my fathers.”

1 Kings 19.5: 5 He lay down and slept under a juniper tree; and behold, an angel touched him, and said to him, “Arise and eat!”

1 Kings 19.6: 6 He looked, and behold, there was at his head a cake baked on the coals, and a jar of water. He ate and drank, and lay down again.

1 Kings 19.7: 7 Yahweh’s angel came again the second time, and touched him, and said, “Arise and eat, because the journey is too great for you.”

1 Kings 19.8: 8 He arose, and ate and drank, and went in the strength of that food forty days and forty nights to Horeb, God’s Mountain.

1 Kings 19.9: 9 He came to a cave there, and camped there; and behold, Yahweh’s word came to him, and he said to him, “What are you doing here, Elijah?”

1 Kings 19.10: 10 He said, “I have been very jealous for Yahweh, the God of Armies; for the children of Israel have forsaken your covenant, thrown down your altars, and killed your prophets with the sword. I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away.”

1 Kings 19.11: 11 He said, “Go out, and stand on the mountain before Yahweh.”

Behold, Yahweh passed by, and a great and strong wind tore the mountains, and broke in pieces the rocks before Yahweh; but Yahweh was not in the wind. After the wind there was an earthquake; but Yahweh was not in the earthquake.

1 Kings 19.12: 12 After the earthquake a fire passed; but Yahweh was not in the fire. After the fire, there was a still small voice.

1 Kings 19.13: 13 When Elijah heard it, he wrapped his face in his mantle, went out, and stood in the entrance of the cave. Behold, a voice came to him, and said, “What are you doing here, Elijah?”

1 Kings 19.14: 14 He said, “I have been very jealous for Yahweh, the God of Armies; for the children of Israel have forsaken your covenant, thrown down your altars, and killed your prophets with the sword. I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away.”

1 Kings 19.15: 15 Yahweh said to him, “Go, return on your way to the wilderness of Damascus. When you arrive, anoint Hazael to be king over Syria.

1 Kings 19.16: 16 Anoint Jehu the son of Nimshi to be king over Israel; and anoint Elisha the son of Shaphat of Abel Meholah to be prophet in your place.

1 Kings 19.17: 17 He who escapes from the sword of Hazael, Jehu will kill; and he who escapes from the sword of Jehu, Elisha will kill.

1 Kings 19.18: 18 Yet I reserved seven thousand in Israel, all the knees of which have not bowed to Baal, and every mouth which has not kissed him.”

1 Kings 19.19: 19 So he departed from there, and found Elisha the son of Shaphat, who was plowing with twelve yoke of oxen before him, and he with the twelfth. Elijah went over to him, and put his mantle on him.

1 Kings 19.20: 20 Elisha left the oxen, and ran after Elijah, and said, “Let me please kiss my father and my mother, and then I will follow you.”

He said to him, “Go back again; for what have I done to you?”

1 Kings 19.21: 21 He returned from following him, and took the yoke of oxen, and killed them, and boiled their meat with the instruments of the oxen, and gave to the people, and they ate. Then he arose, and went after Elijah, and served him.

1 Kings 20.0:

20

1 Kings 20.1: 1 Ben Hadad the king of Syria gathered all his army together; and there were thirty-two kings with him, with horses and chariots. He went up and besieged Samaria, and fought against it.

1 Kings 20.2: 2 He sent messengers to Ahab king of Israel, into the city, and said to him, “Ben Hadad says,

1 Kings 20.3: 3 ‘Your silver and your gold is mine. Your wives also and your children, even the best, are mine.’”

1 Kings 20.4: 4 The king of Israel answered, “It is according to your saying, my lord, O king. I am yours, and all that I have.”

1 Kings 20.5: 5 The messengers came again, and said, “Ben Hadad says, ‘I sent indeed to you, saying, “You shall deliver me your silver, and your gold, and your wives, and your children;

1 Kings 20.6: 6 but I will send my servants to you tomorrow about this time, and they will search your house, and the houses of your servants; whatever is pleasant in your eyes, they will put it in their hand, and take it away.”’”

1 Kings 20.7: 7 Then the king of Israel called all the elders of the land, and said, “Please notice how this man seeks mischief; for he sent to me for my wives, and for my children, and for my silver, and for my gold; and I didn’t deny him.”

1 Kings 20.8: 8 All the elders and all the people said to him, “Don’t listen, and don’t consent.”

1 Kings 20.9: 9 Therefore he said to the messengers of Ben Hadad, “Tell my lord the king, ‘All that you sent for to your servant at the first I will do; but this thing I cannot do.’”

The messengers departed, and brought him back the message.

1 Kings 20.10: 10 Ben Hadad sent to him, and said, “The gods do so to me, and more also, if the dust of Samaria will be enough for handfuls for all the people who follow me.”

1 Kings 20.11: 11 The king of Israel answered, “Tell him, ‘Don’t let him who puts on his armor brag like he who takes it off.’”

1 Kings 20.12: 12 When Ben Hadad heard this message, as he was drinking, he and the kings, in the pavilions, he said to his servants, “Prepare to attack!” They prepared to attack the city.

1 Kings 20.13: 13 Behold, a prophet came near to Ahab king of Israel, and said, “Yahweh says, ‘Have you seen all this great multitude? Behold, I will deliver it into your hand today. Then you will know that I am Yahweh.’”

1 Kings 20.14: 14 Ahab said, “By whom?”

He said, “Yahweh says, ‘By the young men of the princes of the provinces.’”

Then he said, “Who shall begin the battle?”

He answered, “You.”

1 Kings 20.15: 15 Then he mustered the young men of the princes of the provinces, and they were two hundred and thirty-two. After them, he mustered all the people, even all the children of Israel, being seven thousand.

1 Kings 20.16: 16 They went out at noon. But Ben Hadad was drinking himself drunk in the pavilions, he and the kings, the thirty-two kings who helped him.

1 Kings 20.17: 17 The young men of the princes of the provinces went out first; and Ben Hadad sent out, and they told him, saying, “Men are coming out from Samaria.”

1 Kings 20.18: 18 He said, “If they have come out for peace, take them alive; or if they have come out for war, take them alive.”

1 Kings 20.19: 19 So these went out of the city, the young men of the princes of the provinces, and the army which followed them.

1 Kings 20.20: 20 They each killed his man. The Syrians fled, and Israel pursued them. Ben Hadad the king of Syria escaped on a horse with horsemen.

1 Kings 20.21: 21 The king of Israel went out, and struck the horses and chariots, and killed the Syrians with a great slaughter.

1 Kings 20.22: 22 The prophet came near to the king of Israel, and said to him, “Go, strengthen yourself, and mark, and see what you do; for at the return of the year the king of Syria will come up against you.”

1 Kings 20.23: 23 The servants of the king of Syria said to him, “Their god is a god of the hills; therefore they were stronger than we. But let’s fight against them in the plain, and surely we will be stronger than they.

1 Kings 20.24: 24 Do this thing: take the kings away, every man out of his place, and put captains in their place.

1 Kings 20.25: 25 Muster an army, like the army that you have lost, horse for horse, and chariot for chariot. We will fight against them in the plain, and surely we will be stronger than they are.”

He listened to their voice, and did so.

1 Kings 20.26: 26 At the return of the year, Ben Hadad mustered the Syrians, and went up to Aphek, to fight against Israel.

1 Kings 20.27: 27 The children of Israel were mustered and given provisions, and went against them. The children of Israel encamped before them like two little flocks of young goats; but the Syrians filled the country.

1 Kings 20.28: 28 A man of God came near and spoke to the king of Israel, and said, “Yahweh says, ‘Because the Syrians have said, “Yahweh is a god of the hills, but he is not a god of the valleys;” therefore I will deliver all this great multitude into your hand, and you shall know that I am Yahweh.’”

1 Kings 20.29: 29 They encamped opposite each other for seven days. So it was, that in the seventh day the battle was joined; and the children of Israel killed one hundred thousand footmen of the Syrians in one day.

1 Kings 20.30: 30 But the rest fled to Aphek, into the city; and the wall fell on twenty-seven thousand men who were left. Ben Hadad fled, and came into the city, into an inner room.

1 Kings 20.31: 31 His servants said to him, “See now, we have heard that the kings of the house of Israel are merciful kings. Please let us put sackcloth on our bodies, and ropes on our heads, and go out to the king of Israel. Maybe he will save your life.”

1 Kings 20.32: 32 So they put sackcloth on their bodies and ropes on their heads, and came to the king of Israel, and said, “Your servant Ben Hadad says, ‘Please let me live.’”

He said, “Is he still alive? He is my brother.”

1 Kings 20.33: 33 Now the men observed diligently, and hurried to take this phrase; and they said, “Your brother Ben Hadad.”

Then he said, “Go, bring him.”

Then Ben Hadad came out to him; and he caused him to come up into the chariot.

1 Kings 20.34: 34 Ben Hadad said to him, “The cities which my father took from your father I will restore. You shall make streets for yourself in Damascus, as my father made in Samaria.”

“I”, said Ahab, “will let you go with this covenant.” So he made a covenant with him, and let him go.

1 Kings 20.35: 35 A certain man of the sons of the prophets said to his fellow by Yahweh’s word, “Please strike me!”

The man refused to strike him.

1 Kings 20.36: 36 Then he said to him, “Because you have not obeyed Yahweh’s voice, behold, as soon as you have departed from me, a lion will kill you.” As soon as he had departed from him, a lion found him and killed him.

1 Kings 20.37: 37 Then he found another man, and said, “Please strike me.”

The man struck him and wounded him.

1 Kings 20.38: 38 So the prophet departed, and waited for the king by the way, and disguised himself with his headband over his eyes.

1 Kings 20.39: 39 As the king passed by, he cried to the king; and he said, “Your servant went out into the middle of the battle; and behold, a man came over, and brought a man to me, and said, ‘Guard this man! If by any means he is missing, then your life shall be for his life, or else you shall pay a talent of silver.’

1 Kings 20.40: 40 As your servant was busy here and there, he was gone.”

The king of Israel said to him, “So shall your judgment be. You yourself have decided it.”

1 Kings 20.41: 41 He hurried, and took the headband away from his eyes; and the king of Israel recognized that he was one of the prophets.

1 Kings 20.42: 42 He said to him, “Yahweh says, ‘Because you have let go out of your hand the man whom I had devoted to destruction, therefore your life will take the place of his life, and your people take the place of his people.’”

1 Kings 20.43: 43 The king of Israel went to his house sullen and angry, and came to Samaria.

1 Kings 21.0:

21

1 Kings 21.1: 1 After these things, Naboth the Jezreelite had a vineyard, which was in Jezreel, next to the palace of Ahab king of Samaria.

1 Kings 21.2: 2 Ahab spoke to Naboth, saying, “Give me your vineyard, that I may have it for a garden of herbs, because it is near my house; and I will give you for it a better vineyard than it. Or, if it seems good to you, I will give you its worth in money.”

1 Kings 21.3: 3 Naboth said to Ahab, “May Yahweh forbid me, that I should give the inheritance of my fathers to you!”

1 Kings 21.4: 4 Ahab came into his house sullen and angry because of the word which Naboth the Jezreelite had spoken to him; for he had said, “I will not give you the inheritance of my fathers.” He laid himself down on his bed, and turned away his face, and would eat no bread.

1 Kings 21.5: 5 But Jezebel his wife came to him, and said to him, “Why is your spirit so sad, that you eat no bread?”

1 Kings 21.6: 6 He said to her, “Because I spoke to Naboth the Jezreelite, and said to him, ‘Give me your vineyard for money; or else, if it pleases you, I will give you another vineyard for it.’ He answered, ‘I will not give you my vineyard.’”

1 Kings 21.7: 7 Jezebel his wife said to him, “Do you now govern the kingdom of Israel? Arise, and eat bread, and let your heart be merry. I will give you the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite.”

1 Kings 21.8: 8 So she wrote letters in Ahab’s name, and sealed them with his seal, and sent the letters to the elders and to the nobles who were in his city, who lived with Naboth.

1 Kings 21.9: 9 She wrote in the letters, saying, “Proclaim a fast, and set Naboth on high among the people.

1 Kings 21.10: 10 Set two men, wicked fellows, before him, and let them testify against him, saying, ‘You cursed God and the king!’ Then carry him out, and stone him to death.”

1 Kings 21.11: 11 The men of his city, even the elders and the nobles who lived in his city, did as Jezebel had instructed them in the letters which she had written and sent to them.

1 Kings 21.12: 12 They proclaimed a fast, and set Naboth on high among the people.

1 Kings 21.13: 13 The two men, the wicked fellows, came in and sat before him. The wicked fellows testified against him, even against Naboth, in the presence of the people, saying, “Naboth cursed God and the king!” Then they carried him out of the city and stoned him to death with stones.

1 Kings 21.14: 14 Then they sent to Jezebel, saying, “Naboth has been stoned, and is dead.”

1 Kings 21.15: 15 When Jezebel heard that Naboth had been stoned, and was dead, Jezebel said to Ahab, “Arise, take possession of the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite, which he refused to give you for money; for Naboth is not alive, but dead.”

1 Kings 21.16: 16 When Ahab heard that Naboth was dead, Ahab rose up to go down to the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite, to take possession of it.

1 Kings 21.17: 17 Yahweh’s word came to Elijah the Tishbite, saying,

1 Kings 21.18: 18 “Arise, go down to meet Ahab king of Israel, who dwells in Samaria. Behold, he is in the vineyard of Naboth, where he has gone down to take possession of it.

1 Kings 21.19: 19 You shall speak to him, saying, ‘Yahweh says, “Have you killed and also taken possession?”’ You shall speak to him, saying, ‘Yahweh says, “In the place where dogs licked the blood of Naboth, dogs will lick your blood, even yours.”’”

1 Kings 21.20: 20 Ahab said to Elijah, “Have you found me, my enemy?”

He answered, “I have found you, because you have sold yourself to do that which is evil in Yahweh’s sight.

1 Kings 21.21: 21 Behold, I will bring evil on you, and will utterly sweep you away and will cut off from Ahab everyone who urinates against a wall, and him who is shut up and him who is left at large in Israel.

1 Kings 21.22: 22 I will make your house like the house of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, and like the house of Baasha the son of Ahijah for the provocation with which you have provoked me to anger, and have made Israel to sin.”

1 Kings 21.23: 23 Yahweh also spoke of Jezebel, saying, “The dogs will eat Jezebel by the rampart of Jezreel.

1 Kings 21.24: 24 The dogs will eat he who dies of Ahab in the city; and the birds of the sky will eat he who dies in the field.”

1 Kings 21.25: 25 But there was no one like Ahab, who sold himself to do that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, whom Jezebel his wife stirred up.

1 Kings 21.26: 26 He did very abominably in following idols, according to all that the Amorites did, whom Yahweh cast out before the children of Israel.

1 Kings 21.27: 27 When Ahab heard those words, he tore his clothes, and put sackcloth on his flesh, and fasted, and lay in sackcloth, and went softly.

1 Kings 21.28: 28 Yahweh’s word came to Elijah the Tishbite, saying,

1 Kings 21.29: 29 “See how Ahab humbles himself before me? Because he humbles himself before me, I will not bring the evil in his days; but I will bring the evil on his house in his son’s day.”

1 Kings 22.0:

22

1 Kings 22.1: 1 They continued three years without war between Syria and Israel.

1 Kings 22.2: 2 In the third year, Jehoshaphat the king of Judah came down to the king of Israel.

1 Kings 22.3: 3 The king of Israel said to his servants, “You know that Ramoth Gilead is ours, and we do nothing, and don’t take it out of the hand of the king of Syria?”

1 Kings 22.4: 4 He said to Jehoshaphat, “Will you go with me to battle to Ramoth Gilead?”

Jehoshaphat said to the king of Israel, “I am as you are, my people as your people, my horses as your horses.”

1 Kings 22.5: 5 Jehoshaphat said to the king of Israel, “Please inquire first for Yahweh’s word.”

1 Kings 22.6: 6 Then the king of Israel gathered the prophets together, about four hundred men, and said to them, “Should I go against Ramoth Gilead to battle, or should I refrain?”

They said, “Go up; for the Lord will deliver it into the hand of the king.”

1 Kings 22.7: 7 But Jehoshaphat said, “Isn’t there here a prophet of Yahweh, that we may inquire of him?”

1 Kings 22.8: 8 The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “There is yet one man by whom we may inquire of Yahweh, Micaiah the son of Imlah; but I hate him, for he does not prophesy good concerning me, but evil.”

Jehoshaphat said, “Don’t let the king say so.”

1 Kings 22.9: 9 Then the king of Israel called an officer, and said, “Quickly get Micaiah the son of Imlah.”

1 Kings 22.10: 10 Now the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat the king of Judah were sitting each on his throne, arrayed in their robes, in an open place at the entrance of the gate of Samaria; and all the prophets were prophesying before them.

1 Kings 22.11: 11 Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah made himself horns of iron, and said, “Yahweh says, ‘With these you will push the Syrians, until they are consumed.’”

1 Kings 22.12: 12 All the prophets prophesied so, saying, “Go up to Ramoth Gilead, and prosper; for Yahweh will deliver it into the hand of the king.”

1 Kings 22.13: 13 The messenger who went to call Micaiah spoke to him, saying, “See now, the prophets declare good to the king with one mouth. Please let your word be like the word of one of them, and speak good.”

1 Kings 22.14: 14 Micaiah said, “As Yahweh lives, what Yahweh says to me, that I will speak.”

1 Kings 22.15: 15 When he had come to the king, the king said to him, “Micaiah, shall we go to Ramoth Gilead to battle, or shall we forbear?”

He answered him, “Go up and prosper; and Yahweh will deliver it into the hand of the king.”

1 Kings 22.16: 16 The king said to him, “How many times do I have to adjure you that you speak to me nothing but the truth in Yahweh’s name?”

1 Kings 22.17: 17 He said, “I saw all Israel scattered on the mountains, as sheep that have no shepherd. Yahweh said, ‘These have no master. Let them each return to his house in peace.’”

1 Kings 22.18: 18 The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “Didn’t I tell you that he would not prophesy good concerning me, but evil?”

1 Kings 22.19: 19 Micaiah said, “Therefore hear Yahweh’s word. I saw Yahweh sitting on his throne, and all the army of heaven standing by him on his right hand and on his left.

1 Kings 22.20: 20 Yahweh said, ‘Who will entice Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth Gilead?’ One said one thing; and another said another.

1 Kings 22.21: 21 A spirit came out and stood before Yahweh, and said, ‘I will entice him.’

1 Kings 22.22: 22 Yahweh said to him, ‘How?’

He said, ‘I will go out and will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets.’

He said, ‘You will entice him, and will also prevail. Go out and do so.’

1 Kings 22.23: 23 Now therefore, behold, Yahweh has put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these your prophets; and Yahweh has spoken evil concerning you.”

1 Kings 22.24: 24 Then Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah came near, and struck Micaiah on the cheek, and said, “Which way did Yahweh’s Spirit go from me to speak to you?”

1 Kings 22.25: 25 Micaiah said, “Behold, you will see on that day, when you go into an inner room to hide yourself.”

1 Kings 22.26: 26 The king of Israel said, “Take Micaiah, and carry him back to Amon the governor of the city, and to Joash the king’s son.

1 Kings 22.27: 27 Say, ‘The king says, “Put this fellow in the prison, and feed him with bread of affliction and with water of affliction, until I come in peace.”’”

1 Kings 22.28: 28 Micaiah said, “If you return at all in peace, Yahweh has not spoken by me.” He said, “Listen, all you people!”

1 Kings 22.29: 29 So the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat the king of Judah went up to Ramoth Gilead.

1 Kings 22.30: 30 The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “I will disguise myself, and go into the battle; but you put on your robes.” The king of Israel disguised himself, and went into the battle.

1 Kings 22.31: 31 Now the king of Syria had commanded the thirty-two captains of his chariots, saying, “Don’t fight with small nor great, except only with the king of Israel.”

1 Kings 22.32: 32 When the captains of the chariots saw Jehoshaphat, they said, “Surely that is the king of Israel!” and they came over to fight against him. Jehoshaphat cried out.

1 Kings 22.33: 33 When the captains of the chariots saw that it was not the king of Israel, they turned back from pursuing him.

1 Kings 22.34: 34 A certain man drew his bow at random, and struck the king of Israel between the joints of the armor. Therefore he said to the driver of his chariot, “Turn your hand, and carry me out of the battle; for I am severely wounded.”

1 Kings 22.35: 35 The battle increased that day. The king was propped up in his chariot facing the Syrians, and died at evening. The blood ran out of the wound into the bottom of the chariot.

1 Kings 22.36: 36 A cry went throughout the army about the going down of the sun, saying, “Every man to his city, and every man to his country!”

1 Kings 22.37: 37 So the king died, and was brought to Samaria; and they buried the king in Samaria.

1 Kings 22.38: 38 They washed the chariot by the pool of Samaria; and the dogs licked up his blood where the prostitutes washed themselves; according to Yahweh’s word which he spoke.

1 Kings 22.39: 39 Now the rest of the acts of Ahab, and all that he did, and the ivory house which he built, and all the cities that he built, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

1 Kings 22.40: 40 So Ahab slept with his fathers; and Ahaziah his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 22.41: 41 Jehoshaphat the son of Asa began to reign over Judah in the fourth year of Ahab king of Israel.

1 Kings 22.42: 42 Jehoshaphat was thirty-five years old when he began to reign; and he reigned twenty-five years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Azubah the daughter of Shilhi.

1 Kings 22.43: 43 He walked in all the way of Asa his father. He didn’t turn away from it, doing that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes. However the high places were not taken away. The people still sacrificed and burned incense on the high places.

1 Kings 22.44: 44 Jehoshaphat made peace with the king of Israel.

1 Kings 22.45: 45 Now the rest of the acts of Jehoshaphat, and his might that he showed, and how he fought, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

1 Kings 22.46: 46 The remnant of the sodomites, that remained in the days of his father Asa, he put away out of the land.

1 Kings 22.47: 47 There was no king in Edom. A deputy ruled.

1 Kings 22.48: 48 Jehoshaphat made ships of Tarshish to go to Ophir for gold, but they didn’t go; for the ships wrecked at Ezion Geber.

1 Kings 22.49: 49 Then Ahaziah the son of Ahab said to Jehoshaphat, “Let my servants go with your servants in the ships.” But Jehoshaphat would not.

1 Kings 22.50: 50 Jehoshaphat slept with his fathers, and was buried with his fathers in his father David’s city. Jehoram his son reigned in his place.

1 Kings 22.51: 51 Ahaziah the son of Ahab began to reign over Israel in Samaria in the seventeenth year of Jehoshaphat king of Judah, and he reigned two years over Israel.

1 Kings 22.52: 52 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and walked in the way of his father, and in the way of his mother, and in the way of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, in which he made Israel to sin.

1 Kings 22.53: 53 He served Baal and worshiped him, and provoked Yahweh, the God of Israel, to anger in all the ways that his father had done so.

2 Kings 0.0:

The Second Book of Kings

2 Kings 1.0:

1

2 Kings 1.1: 1 Moab rebelled against Israel after the death of Ahab.

2 Kings 1.2: 2 Ahaziah fell down through the lattice in his upper room that was in Samaria, and was sick. So he sent messengers, and said to them, “Go, inquire of Baal Zebub, the god of Ekron, whether I will recover of this sickness.”

2 Kings 1.3: 3 But Yahweh’s angel said to Elijah the Tishbite, “Arise, go up to meet the messengers of the king of Samaria, and tell them, ‘Is it because there is no God in Israel, that you go to inquire of Baal Zebub, the god of Ekron?

2 Kings 1.4: 4 Now therefore Yahweh says, “You will not come down from the bed where you have gone up, but you will surely die.”’” Then Elijah departed.

2 Kings 1.5: 5 The messengers returned to him, and he said to them, “Why is it that you have returned?”

2 Kings 1.6: 6 They said to him, “A man came up to meet us, and said to us, ‘Go, return to the king who sent you, and tell him, “Yahweh says, ‘Is it because there is no God in Israel, that you send to inquire of Baal Zebub, the god of Ekron? Therefore you will not come down from the bed where you have gone up, but you will surely die.’”’”

2 Kings 1.7: 7 He said to them, “What kind of man was he who came up to meet you, and told you these words?”

2 Kings 1.8: 8 They answered him, “He was a hairy man, and wearing a leather belt around his waist.”

He said, “It’s Elijah the Tishbite.”

2 Kings 1.9: 9 Then the king sent a captain of fifty with his fifty to him. He went up to him; and behold, he was sitting on the top of the hill. He said to him, “Man of God, the king has said, ‘Come down!’”

2 Kings 1.10: 10 Elijah answered to the captain of fifty, “If I am a man of God, then let fire come down from the sky, and consume you and your fifty!” Then fire came down from the sky, and consumed him and his fifty.

2 Kings 1.11: 11 Again he sent to him another captain of fifty with his fifty. He answered him, “Man of God, the king has said, ‘Come down quickly!’”

2 Kings 1.12: 12 Elijah answered them, “If I am a man of God, then let fire come down from the sky, and consume you and your fifty!” Then God’s fire came down from the sky, and consumed him and his fifty.

2 Kings 1.13: 13 Again he sent the captain of a third fifty with his fifty. The third captain of fifty went up, and came and fell on his knees before Elijah, and begged him, and said to him, “Man of God, please let my life, and the life of these fifty of your servants, be precious in your sight.

2 Kings 1.14: 14 Behold, fire came down from the sky, and consumed the last two captains of fifty with their fifties. But now let my life be precious in your sight.”

2 Kings 1.15: 15 Yahweh’s angel said to Elijah, “Go down with him. Don’t be afraid of him.”

Then he arose, and went down with him to the king.

2 Kings 1.16: 16 He said to him, “Yahweh says, ‘Because you have sent messengers to inquire of Baal Zebub, the god of Ekron, is it because there is no God in Israel to inquire of his word? Therefore you will not come down from the bed where you have gone up, but you will surely die.’”

2 Kings 1.17: 17 So he died according to Yahweh’s word which Elijah had spoken. Jehoram began to reign in his place in the second year of Jehoram the son of Jehoshaphat king of Judah, because he had no son.

2 Kings 1.18: 18 Now the rest of the acts of Ahaziah which he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

2 Kings 2.0:

2

2 Kings 2.1: 1 When Yahweh was about to take Elijah up by a whirlwind into heaven, Elijah went with Elisha from Gilgal.

2 Kings 2.2: 2 Elijah said to Elisha, “Please wait here, for Yahweh has sent me as far as Bethel.”

Elisha said, “As Yahweh lives, and as your soul lives, I will not leave you.” So they went down to Bethel.

2 Kings 2.3: 3 The sons of the prophets who were at Bethel came out to Elisha, and said to him, “Do you know that Yahweh will take away your master from your head today?”

He said, “Yes, I know it. Hold your peace.”

2 Kings 2.4: 4 Elijah said to him, “Elisha, please wait here, for Yahweh has sent me to Jericho.”

He said, “As Yahweh lives, and as your soul lives, I will not leave you.” So they came to Jericho.

2 Kings 2.5: 5 The sons of the prophets who were at Jericho came near to Elisha, and said to him, “Do you know that Yahweh will take away your master from your head today?”

He answered, “Yes, I know it. Hold your peace.”

2 Kings 2.6: 6 Elijah said to him, “Please wait here, for Yahweh has sent me to the Jordan.”

He said, “As Yahweh lives, and as your soul lives, I will not leave you.” Then they both went on.

2 Kings 2.7: 7 Fifty men of the sons of the prophets went, and stood opposite them at a distance; and they both stood by the Jordan.

2 Kings 2.8: 8 Elijah took his mantle, and rolled it up, and struck the waters, and they were divided here and there, so that they both went over on dry ground.

2 Kings 2.9: 9 When they had gone over, Elijah said to Elisha, “Ask what I shall do for you, before I am taken from you.”

Elisha said, “Please let a double portion of your spirit be on me.”

2 Kings 2.10: 10 He said, “You have asked a hard thing. If you see me when I am taken from you, it will be so for you; but if not, it will not be so.”

2 Kings 2.11: 11 As they continued on and talked, behold, a chariot of fire and horses of fire separated them, and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven.

2 Kings 2.12: 12 Elisha saw it, and he cried, “My father, my father, the chariots of Israel and its horsemen!”

He saw him no more. Then he took hold of his own clothes, and tore them in two pieces.

2 Kings 2.13: 13 He also took up Elijah’s mantle that fell from him, and went back, and stood by the bank of the Jordan.

2 Kings 2.14: 14 He took Elijah’s mantle that fell from him, and struck the waters, and said, “Where is Yahweh, the God of Elijah?” When he also had struck the waters, they were divided apart, and Elisha went over.

2 Kings 2.15: 15 When the sons of the prophets who were at Jericho facing him saw him, they said, “The spirit of Elijah rests on Elisha.” They came to meet him, and bowed themselves to the ground before him.

2 Kings 2.16: 16 They said to him, “See now, there are with your servants fifty strong men. Please let them go and seek your master. Perhaps Yahweh’s Spirit has taken him up, and put him on some mountain, or into some valley.”

He said, “Don’t send them.”

2 Kings 2.17: 17 When they urged him until he was ashamed, he said, “Send them.”

Therefore they sent fifty men; and they searched for three days, but didn’t find him.

2 Kings 2.18: 18 They came back to him, while he stayed at Jericho; and he said to them, “Didn’t I tell you, ‘Don’t go?’”

2 Kings 2.19: 19 The men of the city said to Elisha, “Behold, please, the situation of this city is pleasant, as my lord sees; but the water is bad, and the land is barren.”

2 Kings 2.20: 20 He said, “Bring me a new jar, and put salt in it.” Then they brought it to him.

2 Kings 2.21: 21 He went out to the spring of the waters, and threw salt into it, and said, “Yahweh says, ‘I have healed these waters. There shall not be from there any more death or barren wasteland.’”

2 Kings 2.22: 22 So the waters were healed to this day, according to Elisha’s word which he spoke.

2 Kings 2.23: 23 He went up from there to Bethel. As he was going up by the way, some youths came out of the city and mocked him, and said to him, “Go up, you baldy! Go up, you baldy!”

2 Kings 2.24: 24 He looked behind him and saw them, and cursed them in Yahweh’s name. Then two female bears came out of the woods, and mauled forty-two of those youths.

2 Kings 2.25: 25 He went from there to Mount Carmel, and from there he returned to Samaria.

2 Kings 3.0:

3

2 Kings 3.1: 1 Now Jehoram the son of Ahab began to reign over Israel in Samaria in the eighteenth year of Jehoshaphat king of Judah, and reigned twelve years.

2 Kings 3.2: 2 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, but not like his father, and like his mother, for he put away the pillar of Baal that his father had made.

2 Kings 3.3: 3 Nevertheless he held to the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin. He didn’t depart from them.

2 Kings 3.4: 4 Now Mesha king of Moab was a sheep breeder; and he supplied the king of Israel with the wool of one hundred thousand lambs, and of one hundred thousand rams.

2 Kings 3.5: 5 But when Ahab was dead, the king of Moab rebelled against the king of Israel.

2 Kings 3.6: 6 King Jehoram went out of Samaria at that time, and mustered all Israel.

2 Kings 3.7: 7 He went and sent to Jehoshaphat the king of Judah, saying, “The king of Moab has rebelled against me. Will you go with me against Moab to battle?”

He said, “I will go up. I am as you are, my people as your people, my horses as your horses.”

2 Kings 3.8: 8 He said, “Which way shall we go up?”

He answered, “The way of the wilderness of Edom.”

2 Kings 3.9: 9 So the king of Israel went with the king of Judah and the king of Edom, and they marched for seven days along a circuitous route. There was no water for the army or for the animals that followed them.

2 Kings 3.10: 10 The king of Israel said, “Alas! For Yahweh has called these three kings together to deliver them into the hand of Moab.”

2 Kings 3.11: 11 But Jehoshaphat said, “Isn’t there a prophet of Yahweh here, that we may inquire of Yahweh by him?”

One of the king of Israel’s servants answered, “Elisha the son of Shaphat, who poured water on the hands of Elijah, is here.”

2 Kings 3.12: 12 Jehoshaphat said, “Yahweh’s word is with him.” So the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat and the king of Edom went down to him.

2 Kings 3.13: 13 Elisha said to the king of Israel, “What have I to do with you? Go to the prophets of your father, and to the prophets of your mother.”

The king of Israel said to him, “No, for Yahweh has called these three kings together to deliver them into the hand of Moab.”

2 Kings 3.14: 14 Elisha said, “As Yahweh of Armies lives, before whom I stand, surely, were it not that I respect the presence of Jehoshaphat the king of Judah, I would not look toward you, nor see you.

2 Kings 3.15: 15 But now bring me a musician.” When the musician played, Yahweh’s hand came on him.

2 Kings 3.16: 16 He said, “Yahweh says, ‘Make this valley full of trenches.’

2 Kings 3.17: 17 For Yahweh says, ‘You will not see wind, neither will you see rain, yet that valley will be filled with water, and you will drink, both you and your livestock and your other animals.

2 Kings 3.18: 18 This is an easy thing in Yahweh’s sight. He will also deliver the Moabites into your hand.

2 Kings 3.19: 19 You shall strike every fortified city, and every choice city, and shall fell every good tree, and stop all springs of water, and mar every good piece of land with stones.’”

2 Kings 3.20: 20 In the morning, about the time of offering the sacrifice, behold, water came by the way of Edom, and the country was filled with water.

2 Kings 3.21: 21 Now when all the Moabites heard that the kings had come up to fight against them, they gathered themselves together, all who were able to put on armor, young and old, and stood on the border.

2 Kings 3.22: 22 They rose up early in the morning, and the sun shone on the water, and the Moabites saw the water opposite them as red as blood.

2 Kings 3.23: 23 They said, “This is blood. The kings are surely destroyed, and they have struck each other. Now therefore, Moab, to the plunder!”

2 Kings 3.24: 24 When they came to the camp of Israel, the Israelites rose up and struck the Moabites, so that they fled before them; and they went forward into the land attacking the Moabites.

2 Kings 3.25: 25 They beat down the cities; and on every good piece of land each man cast his stone, and filled it. They also stopped all the springs of water, and cut down all the good trees, until in Kir Hareseth all they left was its stones; however the men armed with slings went around it, and attacked it.

2 Kings 3.26: 26 When the king of Moab saw that the battle was too severe for him, he took with him seven hundred men who drew a sword, to break through to the king of Edom; but they could not.

2 Kings 3.27: 27 Then he took his oldest son who would have reigned in his place, and offered him for a burnt offering on the wall. There was great wrath against Israel; and they departed from him, and returned to their own land.

2 Kings 4.0:

4

2 Kings 4.1: 1 Now a certain woman of the wives of the sons of the prophets cried out to Elisha, saying, “Your servant my husband is dead. You know that your servant feared Yahweh. Now the creditor has come to take for himself my two children to be slaves.”

2 Kings 4.2: 2 Elisha said to her, “What should I do for you? Tell me: what do you have in the house?”

She said, “Your servant has nothing in the house, except a pot of oil.”

2 Kings 4.3: 3 Then he said, “Go, borrow empty containers from all your neighbors. Don’t borrow just a few containers.

2 Kings 4.4: 4 Go in and shut the door on you and on your sons, and pour oil into all those containers; and set aside those which are full.”

2 Kings 4.5: 5 So she went from him, and shut the door on herself and on her sons. They brought the containers to her, and she poured oil.

2 Kings 4.6: 6 When the containers were full, she said to her son, “Bring me another container.”

He said to her, “There isn’t another container.” Then the oil stopped flowing.

2 Kings 4.7: 7 Then she came and told the man of God. He said, “Go, sell the oil, and pay your debt; and you and your sons live on the rest.”

2 Kings 4.8: 8 One day Elisha went to Shunem, where there was a prominent woman; and she persuaded him to eat bread. So it was, that as often as he passed by, he turned in there to eat bread.

2 Kings 4.9: 9 She said to her husband, “See now, I perceive that this is a holy man of God who passes by us continually.

2 Kings 4.10: 10 Please let’s make a little room on the roof. Let’s set a bed, a table, a chair, and a lamp stand for him there. When he comes to us, he can stay there.”

2 Kings 4.11: 11 One day he came there, and he went to the room and lay there.

2 Kings 4.12: 12 He said to Gehazi his servant, “Call this Shunammite.” When he had called her, she stood before him.

2 Kings 4.13: 13 He said to him, “Say now to her, ‘Behold, you have cared for us with all this care. What is to be done for you? Would you like to be spoken for to the king, or to the captain of the army?’”

She answered, “I dwell among my own people.”

2 Kings 4.14: 14 He said, “What then is to be done for her?”

Gehazi answered, “Most certainly she has no son, and her husband is old.”

2 Kings 4.15: 15 He said, “Call her.” When he had called her, she stood in the door.

2 Kings 4.16: 16 He said, “At this season, when the time comes around, you will embrace a son.”

She said, “No, my lord, you man of God, do not lie to your servant.”

2 Kings 4.17: 17 The woman conceived, and bore a son at that season, when the time came around, as Elisha had said to her.

2 Kings 4.18: 18 When the child was grown, one day he went out to his father to the reapers.

2 Kings 4.19: 19 He said to his father, “My head! My head!”

He said to his servant, “Carry him to his mother.”

2 Kings 4.20: 20 When he had taken him, and brought him to his mother, he sat on her knees until noon, and then died.

2 Kings 4.21: 21 She went up and laid him on the man of God’s bed, and shut the door on him, and went out.

2 Kings 4.22: 22 She called to her husband, and said, “Please send me one of the servants, and one of the donkeys, that I may run to the man of God, and come again.”

2 Kings 4.23: 23 He said, “Why would you want go to him today? It is not a new moon or a Sabbath.”

She said, “It’s all right.”

2 Kings 4.24: 24 Then she saddled a donkey, and said to her servant, “Drive, and go forward! Don’t slow down for me, unless I ask you to.”

2 Kings 4.25: 25 So she went, and came to the man of God to Mount Carmel. When the man of God saw her afar off, he said to Gehazi his servant, “Behold, there is the Shunammite.

2 Kings 4.26: 26 Please run now to meet her, and ask her, ‘Is it well with you? Is it well with your husband? Is it well with your child?’”

She answered, “It is well.”

2 Kings 4.27: 27 When she came to the man of God to the hill, she caught hold of his feet. Gehazi came near to thrust her away; but the man of God said, “Leave her alone; for her soul is troubled within her; and Yahweh has hidden it from me, and has not told me.”

2 Kings 4.28: 28 Then she said, “Did I ask you for a son, my lord? Didn’t I say, ‘Do not deceive me’?”

2 Kings 4.29: 29 Then he said to Gehazi, “Tuck your cloak into your belt, take my staff in your hand, and go your way. If you meet any man, don’t greet him; and if anyone greets you, don’t answer him again. Then lay my staff on the child’s face.”

2 Kings 4.30: 30 The child’s mother said, “As Yahweh lives, and as your soul lives, I will not leave you.”

So he arose, and followed her.

2 Kings 4.31: 31 Gehazi went ahead of them, and laid the staff on the child’s face; but there was no voice and no hearing. Therefore he returned to meet him, and told him, “The child has not awakened.”

2 Kings 4.32: 32 When Elisha had come into the house, behold, the child was dead, and lying on his bed.

2 Kings 4.33: 33 He went in therefore, and shut the door on them both, and prayed to Yahweh.

2 Kings 4.34: 34 He went up, and lay on the child, and put his mouth on his mouth, and his eyes on his eyes, and his hands on his hands. He stretched himself on him; and the child’s flesh grew warm.

2 Kings 4.35: 35 Then he returned, and walked in the house once back and forth; and went up, and stretched himself out on him. Then the child sneezed seven times, and the child opened his eyes.

2 Kings 4.36: 36 He called Gehazi, and said, “Call this Shunammite!” So he called her.

When she had come in to him, he said, “Take up your son.”

2 Kings 4.37: 37 Then she went in, fell at his feet, and bowed herself to the ground; then she picked up her son, and went out.

2 Kings 4.38: 38 Elisha came again to Gilgal. There was a famine in the land; and the sons of the prophets were sitting before him; and he said to his servant, “Get the large pot, and boil stew for the sons of the prophets.”

2 Kings 4.39: 39 One went out into the field to gather herbs, and found a wild vine, and gathered a lap full of wild gourds from it, and came and cut them up into the pot of stew; for they didn’t recognize them.

2 Kings 4.40: 40 So they poured out for the men to eat. As they were eating some of the stew, they cried out, and said, “Man of God, there is death in the pot!” And they could not eat it.

2 Kings 4.41: 41 But he said, “Then bring meal.” He threw it into the pot; and he said, “Serve it to the people, that they may eat.” And there was nothing harmful in the pot.

2 Kings 4.42: 42 A man from Baal Shalishah came, and brought the man of God some bread of the first fruits: twenty loaves of barley and fresh ears of grain in his sack. He said, “Give to the people, that they may eat.”

2 Kings 4.43: 43 His servant said, “What, should I set this before a hundred men?”

But he said, “Give the people, that they may eat; for Yahweh says, ‘They will eat, and will have some left over.’”

2 Kings 4.44: 44 So he set it before them, and they ate, and had some left over, according to Yahweh’s word.

2 Kings 5.0:

5

2 Kings 5.1: 1 Now Naaman, captain of the army of the king of Syria, was a great man with his master, and honorable, because by him Yahweh had given victory to Syria: he was also a mighty man of valor, but he was a leper.

2 Kings 5.2: 2 The Syrians had gone out in bands, and had brought away captive out of the land of Israel a little maiden; and she waited on Naaman’s wife.

2 Kings 5.3: 3 She said to her mistress, “I wish that my lord were with the prophet who is in Samaria! Then he would heal him of his leprosy.”

2 Kings 5.4: 4 Someone went in, and told his lord, saying, “The maiden who is from the land of Israel said this.”

2 Kings 5.5: 5 The king of Syria said, “Go now, and I will send a letter to the king of Israel.”

He departed, and took with him ten talents of silver, and six thousand pieces of gold, and ten changes of clothing.

2 Kings 5.6: 6 He brought the letter to the king of Israel, saying, “Now when this letter has come to you, behold, I have sent Naaman my servant to you, that you may heal him of his leprosy.”

2 Kings 5.7: 7 When the king of Israel had read the letter, he tore his clothes, and said, “Am I God, to kill and to make alive, that this man sends to me to heal a man of his leprosy? But please consider and see how he seeks a quarrel against me.”

2 Kings 5.8: 8 It was so, when Elisha the man of God heard that the king of Israel had torn his clothes, that he sent to the king, saying, “Why have you torn your clothes? Let him come now to me, and he shall know that there is a prophet in Israel.”

2 Kings 5.9: 9 So Naaman came with his horses and with his chariots, and stood at the door of the house of Elisha.

2 Kings 5.10: 10 Elisha sent a messenger to him, saying, “Go and wash in the Jordan seven times, and your flesh shall come again to you, and you shall be clean.”

2 Kings 5.11: 11 But Naaman was angry, and went away, and said, “Behold, I thought, ‘He will surely come out to me, and stand, and call on the name of Yahweh his God, and wave his hand over the place, and heal the leper.’

2 Kings 5.12: 12 Aren’t Abanah and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? Couldn’t I wash in them, and be clean?” So he turned and went away in a rage.

2 Kings 5.13: 13 His servants came near, and spoke to him, and said, “My father, if the prophet had asked you do some great thing, wouldn’t you have done it? How much rather then, when he says to you, ‘Wash, and be clean?’”

2 Kings 5.14: 14 Then went he down, and dipped himself seven times in the Jordan, according to the saying of the man of God; and his flesh was restored like the flesh of a little child, and he was clean.

2 Kings 5.15: 15 He returned to the man of God, he and all his company, and came, and stood before him; and he said, “See now, I know that there is no God in all the earth, but in Israel. Now therefore, please take a gift from your servant.”

2 Kings 5.16: 16 But he said, “As Yahweh lives, before whom I stand, I will receive none.”

He urged him to take it; but he refused.

2 Kings 5.17: 17 Naaman said, “If not, then, please let two mules’ burden of earth be given to your servant; for your servant will from now on offer neither burnt offering nor sacrifice to other gods, but to Yahweh.

2 Kings 5.18: 18 In this thing may Yahweh pardon your servant: when my master goes into the house of Rimmon to worship there, and he leans on my hand, and I bow myself in the house of Rimmon. When I bow myself in the house of Rimmon, may Yahweh pardon your servant in this thing.”

2 Kings 5.19: 19 He said to him, “Go in peace.”

So he departed from him a little way.

2 Kings 5.20: 20 But Gehazi the servant of Elisha the man of God, said, “Behold, my master has spared this Naaman the Syrian, in not receiving at his hands that which he brought. As Yahweh lives, I will run after him, and take something from him.”

2 Kings 5.21: 21 So Gehazi followed after Naaman. When Naaman saw one running after him, he came down from the chariot to meet him, and said, “Is all well?”

2 Kings 5.22: 22 He said, “All is well. My master has sent me, saying, ‘Behold, even now two young men of the sons of the prophets have come to me from the hill country of Ephraim. Please give them a talent of silver and two changes of clothing.’”

2 Kings 5.23: 23 Naaman said, “Be pleased to take two talents.” He urged him, and bound two talents of silver in two bags, with two changes of clothing, and laid them on two of his servants; and they carried them before him.

2 Kings 5.24: 24 When he came to the hill, he took them from their hand, and stored them in the house. Then he let the men go, and they departed.

2 Kings 5.25: 25 But he went in, and stood before his master. Elisha said to him, “Where did you come from, Gehazi?”

He said, “Your servant went nowhere.”

2 Kings 5.26: 26 He said to him, “Didn’t my heart go with you, when the man turned from his chariot to meet you? Is it a time to receive money, and to receive garments, and olive groves and vineyards, and sheep and cattle, and male servants and female servants?

2 Kings 5.27: 27 Therefore the leprosy of Naaman will cling to you and to your offspring forever.”

He went out from his presence a leper, as white as snow.

2 Kings 6.0:

6

2 Kings 6.1: 1 The sons of the prophets said to Elisha, “See now, the place where we live and meet with you is too small for us.

2 Kings 6.2: 2 Please let us go to the Jordan, and each man take a beam from there, and let’s make us a place there, where we may live.”

He answered, “Go!”

2 Kings 6.3: 3 One said, “Please be pleased to go with your servants.”

He answered, “I will go.”

2 Kings 6.4: 4 So he went with them. When they came to the Jordan, they cut down wood.

2 Kings 6.5: 5 But as one was cutting down a tree, the ax head fell into the water. Then he cried, and said, “Alas, my master! For it was borrowed.”

2 Kings 6.6: 6 The man of God asked, “Where did it fall?” He showed him the place. He cut down a stick, threw it in there, and made the iron float.

2 Kings 6.7: 7 He said, “Take it.” So he put out his hand and took it.

2 Kings 6.8: 8 Now the king of Syria was at war against Israel; and he took counsel with his servants, saying, “My camp will be in such and such a place.”

2 Kings 6.9: 9 The man of God sent to the king of Israel, saying, “Beware that you not pass this place; for the Syrians are coming down there.”

2 Kings 6.10: 10 The king of Israel sent to the place which the man of God told him and warned him of; and he saved himself there, not once or twice.

2 Kings 6.11: 11 The king of Syria’s heart was very troubled about this. He called his servants, and said to them, “Won’t you show me which of us is for the king of Israel?”

2 Kings 6.12: 12 One of his servants said, “No, my lord, O king; but Elisha, the prophet who is in Israel, tells the king of Israel the words that you speak in your bedroom.”

2 Kings 6.13: 13 He said, “Go and see where he is, that I may send and get him.”

He was told, “Behold, he is in Dothan.”

2 Kings 6.14: 14 Therefore he sent horses, chariots, and a great army there. They came by night, and surrounded the city.

2 Kings 6.15: 15 When the servant of the man of God had risen early, and gone out, behold, an army with horses and chariots was around the city. His servant said to him, “Alas, my master! What shall we do?”

2 Kings 6.16: 16 He answered, “Don’t be afraid; for those who are with us are more than those who are with them.”

2 Kings 6.17: 17 Elisha prayed, and said, “Yahweh, please open his eyes, that he may see.” Yahweh opened the young man’s eyes; and he saw: and behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire around Elisha.

2 Kings 6.18: 18 When they came down to him, Elisha prayed to Yahweh, and said, “Please strike this people with blindness.”

He struck them with blindness according to Elishah’s word.

2 Kings 6.19: 19 Elisha said to them, “This is not the way, neither is this the city. Follow me, and I will bring you to the man whom you seek.” He led them to Samaria.

2 Kings 6.20: 20 When they had come into Samaria, Elisha said, “Yahweh, open these men’s eyes, that they may see.”

Yahweh opened their eyes, and they saw; and behold, they were in the middle of Samaria.

2 Kings 6.21: 21 The king of Israel said to Elisha, when he saw them, “My father, shall I strike them? Shall I strike them?”

2 Kings 6.22: 22 He answered, “You shall not strike them. Would you strike those whom you have taken captive with your sword and with your bow? Set bread and water before them, that they may eat and drink, and go to their master.”

2 Kings 6.23: 23 He prepared a great feast for them. When they had eaten and drunk, he sent them away, and they went to their master. So the bands of Syria stopped raiding the land of Israel.

2 Kings 6.24: 24 After this, Benhadad king of Syria gathered all his army, and went up and besieged Samaria.

2 Kings 6.25: 25 There was a great famine in Samaria. Behold, they besieged it, until a donkey’s head was sold for eighty pieces of silver, and the fourth part of a kab of dove’s dung for five pieces of silver.

2 Kings 6.26: 26 As the king of Israel was passing by on the wall, a woman cried to him, saying, “Help, my lord, O king!”

2 Kings 6.27: 27 He said, “If Yahweh doesn’t help you, where could I get help for you? From of the threshing floor, or from the wine press?”

2 Kings 6.28: 28 The king said to her, “What is your problem?”

She answered, “This woman said to me, ‘Give your son, that we may eat him today, and we will eat my son tomorrow.’

2 Kings 6.29: 29 So we boiled my son, and ate him: and I said to her on the next day, ‘Give your son, that we may eat him;’ and she has hidden her son.”

2 Kings 6.30: 30 When the king heard the words of the woman, he tore his clothes. Now he was passing by on the wall, and the people looked, and behold, he had sackcloth underneath on his body.

2 Kings 6.31: 31 Then he said, “God do so to me, and more also, if the head of Elisha the son of Shaphat stays on him today.”

2 Kings 6.32: 32 But Elisha was sitting in his house, and the elders were sitting with him. Then the king sent a man from before him; but before the messenger came to him, he said to the elders, “Do you see how this son of a murderer has sent to take away my head? Behold, when the messenger comes, shut the door, and hold the door shut against him. Isn’t the sound of his master’s feet behind him?”

2 Kings 6.33: 33 While he was still talking with them, behold, the messenger came down to him. Then he said, “Behold, this evil is from Yahweh. Why should I wait for Yahweh any longer?”

2 Kings 7.0:

7

2 Kings 7.1: 1 Elisha said, “Hear Yahweh’s word. Yahweh says, ‘Tomorrow about this time a seah of fine flour will be sold for a shekel, and two seahs of barley for a shekel, in the gate of Samaria.’”

2 Kings 7.2: 2 Then the captain on whose hand the king leaned answered the man of God, and said, “Behold, if Yahweh made windows in heaven, could this thing be?”

He said, “Behold, you will see it with your eyes, but will not eat of it.”

2 Kings 7.3: 3 Now there were four leprous men at the entrance of the gate. They said to one another, “Why do we sit here until we die?

2 Kings 7.4: 4 If we say, ‘We will enter into the city,’ then the famine is in the city, and we will die there. If we sit still here, we also die. Now therefore come, and let’s surrender to the army of the Syrians. If they save us alive, we will live; and if they kill us, we will only die.”

2 Kings 7.5: 5 They rose up in the twilight, to go to the camp of the Syrians. When they had come to the outermost part of the camp of the Syrians, behold, no man was there.

2 Kings 7.6: 6 For the Lord had made the army of the Syrians to hear the sound of chariots, and the sound of horses, even the noise of a great army; and they said to one another, “Behold, the king of Israel has hired against us the kings of the Hittites and the kings of the Egyptians to attack us.”

2 Kings 7.7: 7 Therefore they arose and fled in the twilight, and left their tents, and their horses, and their donkeys, even the camp as it was, and fled for their life.

2 Kings 7.8: 8 When these lepers came to the outermost part of the camp, they went into one tent, and ate and drank, and carried away silver, gold, and clothing, and went and hid it. Then they came back, and entered into another tent, and carried things from there also, and went and hid them.

2 Kings 7.9: 9 Then they said to one another, “We aren’t doing right. Today is a day of good news, and we keep silent. If we wait until the morning light, punishment will overtake us. Now therefore come, let’s go and tell the king’s household.”

2 Kings 7.10: 10 So they came and called to the city gatekeepers; and they told them, “We came to the camp of the Syrians, and, behold, there was no man there, not even a man’s voice, but the horses tied, and the donkeys tied, and the tents as they were.”

2 Kings 7.11: 11 He called the gatekeepers; and they told it to the king’s household within.

2 Kings 7.12: 12 The king arose in the night, and said to his servants, “I will now show you what the Syrians have done to us. They know that we are hungry. Therefore are they gone out of the camp to hide themselves in the field, saying, ‘When they come out of the city, we shall take them alive, and get into the city.’”

2 Kings 7.13: 13 One of his servants answered, “Please let some people take five of the horses that remain, which are left in the city. Behold, they are like all the multitude of Israel who are left in it. Behold, they are like all the multitude of Israel who are consumed. Let’s send and see.”

2 Kings 7.14: 14 Therefore they took two chariots with horses; and the king sent them out to the Syrian army, saying, “Go and see.”

2 Kings 7.15: 15 They went after them to the Jordan; and behold, all the path was full of garments and equipment which the Syrians had cast away in their haste. The messengers returned, and told the king.

2 Kings 7.16: 16 The people went out and plundered the camp of the Syrians. So a seah of fine flour was sold for a shekel, and two measures of barley for a shekel, according to Yahweh’s word.

2 Kings 7.17: 17 The king appointed the captain on whose hand he leaned to be in charge of the gate; and the people trampled over him in the gate, and he died as the man of God had said, who spoke when the king came down to him.

2 Kings 7.18: 18 It happened as the man of God had spoken to the king, saying, “Two seahs of barley for a shekel, and a seah of fine flour for a shekel, shall be tomorrow about this time in the gate of Samaria;”

2 Kings 7.19: 19 and that captain answered the man of God, and said, “Now, behold, if Yahweh made windows in heaven, might such a thing be?” and he said, “Behold, you will see it with your eyes, but will not eat of it.”

2 Kings 7.20: 20 It happened like that to him; for the people trampled over him in the gate, and he died.

2 Kings 8.0:

8

2 Kings 8.1: 1 Now Elisha had spoken to the woman whose son he had restored to life, saying, “Arise, and go, you and your household, and stay for a while wherever you can; for Yahweh has called for a famine. It will also come on the land for seven years.”

2 Kings 8.2: 2 The woman arose, and did according to the man of God’s word. She went with her household, and lived in the land of the Philistines for seven years.

2 Kings 8.3: 3 At the end of seven years, the woman returned from the land of the Philistines. Then she went out to beg the king for her house and for her land.

2 Kings 8.4: 4 Now the king was talking with Gehazi the servant of the man of God, saying, “Please tell me all the great things that Elisha has done.”

2 Kings 8.5: 5 As he was telling the king how he had restored to life him who was dead, behold, the woman, whose son he had restored to life, begged the king for her house and for her land. Gehazi said, “My lord, O king, this is the woman, and this is her son, whom Elisha restored to life.”

2 Kings 8.6: 6 When the king asked the woman, she told him. So the king appointed to her a certain officer, saying, “Restore all that was hers, and all the fruits of the field since the day that she left the land, even until now.”

2 Kings 8.7: 7 Elisha came to Damascus; and Benhadad the king of Syria was sick. He was told, “The man of God has come here.”

2 Kings 8.8: 8 The king said to Hazael, “Take a present in your hand, and go, meet the man of God, and inquire of Yahweh by him, saying, ‘Will I recover from this sickness?’”

2 Kings 8.9: 9 So Hazael went to meet him, and took a present with him, even of every good thing of Damascus, forty camels’ burden, and came and stood before him, and said, “Your son Benhadad king of Syria has sent me to you, saying, ‘Will I recover from this sickness?’”

2 Kings 8.10: 10 Elisha said to him, “Go, tell him, ‘You will surely recover;’ however Yahweh has shown me that he will surely die.”

2 Kings 8.11: 11 He settled his gaze steadfastly on him, until he was ashamed. Then the man of God wept.

2 Kings 8.12: 12 Hazael said, “Why do you weep, my lord?”

He answered, “Because I know the evil that you will do to the children of Israel. You will set their strongholds on fire, and you will kill their young men with the sword, and will dash their little ones in pieces, and rip up their pregnant women.”

2 Kings 8.13: 13 Hazael said, “But what is your servant, who is but a dog, that he could do this great thing?”

Elisha answered, “Yahweh has shown me that you will be king over Syria.”

2 Kings 8.14: 14 Then he departed from Elisha, and came to his master, who said to him, “What did Elisha say to you?”

He answered, “He told me that you would surely recover.”

2 Kings 8.15: 15 On the next day, he took a thick cloth, dipped it in water, and spread it on his face, so that he died. Then Hazael reigned in his place.

2 Kings 8.16: 16 In the fifth year of Joram the son of Ahab king of Israel, Jehoshaphat being king of Judah then, Jehoram the son of Jehoshaphat king of Judah began to reign.

2 Kings 8.17: 17 He was thirty-two years old when he began to reign. He reigned eight years in Jerusalem.

2 Kings 8.18: 18 He walked in the way of the kings of Israel, as did Ahab’s house; for he married Ahab’s daughter. He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight.

2 Kings 8.19: 19 However Yahweh would not destroy Judah, for David his servant’s sake, as he promised him to give to him a lamp for his children always.

2 Kings 8.20: 20 In his days Edom revolted from under the hand of Judah, and made a king over themselves.

2 Kings 8.21: 21 Then Joram passed over to Zair, and all his chariots with him: and he rose up by night, and struck the Edomites who surrounded him, and the captains of the chariots; and the people fled to their tents.

2 Kings 8.22: 22 So Edom revolted from under the hand of Judah to this day. Then Libnah revolted at the same time.

2 Kings 8.23: 23 The rest of the acts of Joram, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 8.24: 24 Joram slept with his fathers, and was buried with his fathers in David’s city; and Ahaziah his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 8.25: 25 In the twelfth year of Joram the son of Ahab king of Israel, Ahaziah the son of Jehoram king of Judah began to reign.

2 Kings 8.26: 26 Ahaziah was twenty-two years old when he began to reign; and he reigned one year in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Athaliah the daughter of Omri king of Israel.

2 Kings 8.27: 27 He walked in the way of Ahab’s house, and did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, as did Ahab’s house; for he was the son-in-law of Ahab’s house.

2 Kings 8.28: 28 He went with Joram the son of Ahab to war against Hazael king of Syria at Ramoth Gilead, and the Syrians wounded Joram.

2 Kings 8.29: 29 King Joram returned to be healed in Jezreel from the wounds which the Syrians had given him at Ramah, when he fought against Hazael king of Syria. Ahaziah the son of Jehoram king of Judah went down to see Joram the son of Ahab in Jezreel, because he was sick.

2 Kings 9.0:

9

2 Kings 9.1: 1 Elisha the prophet called one of the sons of the prophets, and said to him, “Put your belt on your waist, take this vial of oil in your hand, and go to Ramoth Gilead.

2 Kings 9.2: 2 When you come there, find Jehu the son of Jehoshaphat the son of Nimshi, and go in, and make him rise up from among his brothers, and take him to an inner room.

2 Kings 9.3: 3 Then take the vial of oil, and pour it on his head, and say, ‘Yahweh says, “I have anointed you king over Israel.”’ Then open the door, flee, and don’t wait.”

2 Kings 9.4: 4 So the young man, even the young man, the prophet, went to Ramoth Gilead.

2 Kings 9.5: 5 When he came, behold, the captains of the army were sitting. Then he said, “I have a message for you, captain.”

Jehu said, “To which of us all?”

He said, “To you, O captain.”

2 Kings 9.6: 6 He arose, and went into the house. Then he poured the oil on his head, and said to him, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, ‘I have anointed you king over the people of Yahweh, even over Israel.

2 Kings 9.7: 7 You must strike your master Ahab’s house, that I may avenge the blood of my servants the prophets, and the blood of all the servants of Yahweh, at the hand of Jezebel.

2 Kings 9.8: 8 For the whole house of Ahab will perish. I will cut off from Ahab everyone who urinates against a wall, both him who is shut up and him who is left at large in Israel.

2 Kings 9.9: 9 I will make Ahab’s house like the house of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, and like the house of Baasha the son of Ahijah.

2 Kings 9.10: 10 The dogs will eat Jezebel on the plot of ground of Jezreel, and there shall be no one to bury her.’” Then he opened the door and fled.

2 Kings 9.11: 11 When Jehu came out to the servants of his lord, and one said to him, “Is all well? Why did this mad fellow come to you?”

He said to them, “You know the man and how he talks.”

2 Kings 9.12: 12 They said, “That is a lie. Tell us now.”

He said, “He said to me, ‘Yahweh says, I have anointed you king over Israel.’”

2 Kings 9.13: 13 Then they hurried, and each man took his cloak, and put it under him on the top of the stairs, and blew the trumpet, saying, “Jehu is king.”

2 Kings 9.14: 14 So Jehu the son of Jehoshaphat the son of Nimshi conspired against Joram. (Now Joram was keeping Ramoth Gilead, he and all Israel, because of Hazael king of Syria;

2 Kings 9.15: 15 but king Joram had returned to be healed in Jezreel of the wounds which the Syrians had given him, when he fought with Hazael king of Syria.) Jehu said, “If this is your thinking, then let no one escape and go out of the city, to go to tell it in Jezreel.”

2 Kings 9.16: 16 So Jehu rode in a chariot and went to Jezreel, for Joram lay there. Ahaziah king of Judah had come down to see Joram.

2 Kings 9.17: 17 Now the watchman was standing on the tower in Jezreel, and he spied the company of Jehu as he came, and said, “I see a company.”

Joram said, “Take a horseman, and send to meet them, and let him say, ‘Is it peace?’”

2 Kings 9.18: 18 So one went on horseback to meet him, and said, “the king says, ‘Is it peace?’”

Jehu said, “What do you have to do with peace? Fall in behind me!”

The watchman said, “The messenger came to them, but he isn’t coming back.”

2 Kings 9.19: 19 Then he sent out a second on horseback, who came to them, and said, “The king says, ‘Is it peace?’”

Jehu answered, “What do you have to do with peace? Fall in behind me!”

2 Kings 9.20: 20 The watchman said, “He came to them, and isn’t coming back. The driving is like the driving of Jehu the son of Nimshi, for he drives furiously.”

2 Kings 9.21: 21 Joram said, “Get ready!”

They got his chariot ready. Then Joram king of Israel and Ahaziah king of Judah went out, each in his chariot, and they went out to meet Jehu, and found him on Naboth the Jezreelite’s land.

2 Kings 9.22: 22 When Joram saw Jehu, he said, “Is it peace, Jehu?”

He answered, “What peace, so long as the prostitution of your mother Jezebel and her witchcraft abound?”

2 Kings 9.23: 23 Joram turned his hands, and fled, and said to Ahaziah, “This is treason, Ahaziah!”

2 Kings 9.24: 24 Jehu drew his bow with his full strength, and struck Joram between his arms; and the arrow went out at his heart, and he sunk down in his chariot.

2 Kings 9.25: 25 Then Jehu said to Bidkar his captain, “Pick him up, and throw him in the plot of the field of Naboth the Jezreelite; for remember how, when you and I rode together after Ahab his father, Yahweh laid this burden on him:

2 Kings 9.26: 26 ‘Surely I have seen yesterday the blood of Naboth, and the blood of his sons,’ says Yahweh; ‘and I will repay you in this plot of ground,’ says Yahweh. Now therefore take and cast him onto the plot of ground, according to Yahweh’s word.”

2 Kings 9.27: 27 But when Ahaziah the king of Judah saw this, he fled by the way of the garden house. Jehu followed after him, and said, “Strike him also in the chariot!” They struck him at the ascent of Gur, which is by Ibleam. He fled to Megiddo, and died there.

2 Kings 9.28: 28 His servants carried him in a chariot to Jerusalem, and buried him in his tomb with his fathers in David’s city.

2 Kings 9.29: 29 In the eleventh year of Joram the son of Ahab, Ahaziah began to reign over Judah.

2 Kings 9.30: 30 When Jehu had come to Jezreel, Jezebel heard of it; and she painted her eyes, and adorned her head, and looked out at the window.

2 Kings 9.31: 31 As Jehu entered in at the gate, she said, “Do you come in peace, Zimri, you murderer of your master?”

2 Kings 9.32: 32 He lifted up his face to the window, and said, “Who is on my side? Who?”

Two or three eunuchs looked out at him.

2 Kings 9.33: 33 He said, “Throw her down!”

So they threw her down; and some of her blood was sprinkled on the wall, and on the horses. Then he trampled her under foot.

2 Kings 9.34: 34 When he had come in, he ate and drank. Then he said, “See now to this cursed woman, and bury her; for she is a king’s daughter.”

2 Kings 9.35: 35 They went to bury her, but they found no more of her than the skull, the feet, and the palms of her hands.

2 Kings 9.36: 36 Therefore they came back, and told him.

He said, “This is Yahweh’s word, which he spoke by his servant Elijah the Tishbite, saying, ‘The dogs will eat the flesh of Jezebel on the plot of Jezreel,

2 Kings 9.37: 37 and the body of Jezebel will be as dung on the face of the field on Jezreel’s land, so that they won’t say, “This is Jezebel.”’”

2 Kings 10.0:

10

2 Kings 10.1: 1 Now Ahab had seventy sons in Samaria. Jehu wrote letters, and sent to Samaria, to the rulers of Jezreel, even the elders, and to those who brought up Ahab’s sons, saying,

2 Kings 10.2: 2 “Now as soon as this letter comes to you, since your master’s sons are with you, and you have chariots and horses, a fortified city also, and armor,

2 Kings 10.3: 3 Select the best and fittest of your master’s sons, set him on his father’s throne, and fight for your master’s house.”

2 Kings 10.4: 4 But they were exceedingly afraid, and said, “Behold, the two kings didn’t stand before him! How then shall we stand?”

2 Kings 10.5: 5 He who was over the household, and he who was over the city, the elders also, and those who raised the children, sent to Jehu, saying, “We are your servants, and will do all that you ask us. We will not make any man king. You do that which is good in your eyes.”

2 Kings 10.6: 6 Then he wrote a letter the second time to them, saying, “If you are on my side, and if you will listen to my voice, take the heads of the men who are your master’s sons, and come to me to Jezreel by tomorrow this time.”

Now the king’s sons, being seventy persons, were with the great men of the city, who brought them up.

2 Kings 10.7: 7 When the letter came to them, they took the king’s sons and killed them, even seventy people, and put their heads in baskets, and sent them to him to Jezreel.

2 Kings 10.8: 8 A messenger came and told him, “They have brought the heads of the king’s sons.”

He said, “Lay them in two heaps at the entrance of the gate until the morning.”

2 Kings 10.9: 9 In the morning, he went out, and stood, and said to all the people, “You are righteous. Behold, I conspired against my master and killed him, but who killed all these?

2 Kings 10.10: 10 Know now that nothing will fall to the earth of Yahweh’s word, which Yahweh spoke concerning Ahab’s house. For Yahweh has done that which he spoke by his servant Elijah.”

2 Kings 10.11: 11 So Jehu struck all that remained of Ahab’s house in Jezreel, with all his great men, his familiar friends, and his priests, until he left him no one remaining.

2 Kings 10.12: 12 He arose and departed, and went to Samaria. As he was at the shearing house of the shepherds on the way,

2 Kings 10.13: 13 Jehu met with the brothers of Ahaziah king of Judah, and said, “Who are you?”

They answered, “We are the brothers of Ahaziah. We are going down to greet the children of the king and the children of the queen.”

2 Kings 10.14: 14 He said, “Take them alive!”

They took them alive, and killed them at the pit of the shearing house, even forty-two men. He didn’t leave any of them.

2 Kings 10.15: 15 When he had departed from there, he met Jehonadab the son of Rechab coming to meet him. He greeted him, and said to him, “Is your heart right, as my heart is with your heart?”

Jehonadab answered, “It is.”

“If it is, give me your hand.” He gave him his hand; and he took him up to him into the chariot.

2 Kings 10.16: 16 He said, “Come with me, and see my zeal for Yahweh.” So they made him ride in his chariot.

2 Kings 10.17: 17 When he came to Samaria, he struck all who remained to Ahab in Samaria, until he had destroyed him, according to Yahweh’s word, which he spoke to Elijah.

2 Kings 10.18: 18 Jehu gathered all the people together, and said to them, “Ahab served Baal a little; but Jehu will serve him much.

2 Kings 10.19: 19 Now therefore call to me all the prophets of Baal, all of his worshipers, and all of his priests. Let no one be absent; for I have a great sacrifice to Baal. Whoever is absent, he shall not live.” But Jehu did deceptively, intending to destroy the worshipers of Baal.

2 Kings 10.20: 20 Jehu said, “Sanctify a solemn assembly for Baal!”

So they proclaimed it.

2 Kings 10.21: 21 Jehu sent through all Israel; and all the worshipers of Baal came, so that there was not a man left that didn’t come. They came into the house of Baal; and the house of Baal was filled from one end to another.

2 Kings 10.22: 22 He said to him who kept the wardrobe, “Bring out robes for all the worshipers of Baal!”

So he brought robes out to them.

2 Kings 10.23: 23 Jehu went with Jehonadab the son of Rechab into the house of Baal. Then he said to the worshipers of Baal, “Search, and see that none of the servants of Yahweh are here with you, but only the worshipers of Baal.”

2 Kings 10.24: 24 So they went in to offer sacrifices and burnt offerings. Now Jehu had appointed for himself eighty men outside, and said, “If any of the men whom I bring into your hands escape, he who lets him go, his life shall be for the life of him.”

2 Kings 10.25: 25 As soon as he had finished offering the burnt offering, Jehu said to the guard and to the captains, “Go in and kill them! Let no one escape.” So they struck them with the edge of the sword. The guard and the captains threw the bodies out, and went to the inner shrine of the house of Baal.

2 Kings 10.26: 26 They brought out the pillars that were in the house of Baal, and burned them.

2 Kings 10.27: 27 They broke down the pillar of Baal, and broke down the house of Baal, and made it a latrine, to this day.

2 Kings 10.28: 28 Thus Jehu destroyed Baal out of Israel.

2 Kings 10.29: 29 However, Jehu didn’t depart from the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin, the golden calves that were in Bethel and that were in Dan.

2 Kings 10.30: 30 Yahweh said to Jehu, “Because you have done well in executing that which is right in my eyes, and have done to Ahab’s house according to all that was in my heart, your descendants shall sit on the throne of Israel to the fourth generation.”

2 Kings 10.31: 31 But Jehu took no heed to walk in the law of Yahweh, the God of Israel, with all his heart. He didn’t depart from the sins of Jeroboam, with which he made Israel to sin.

2 Kings 10.32: 32 In those days Yahweh began to cut away parts of Israel; and Hazael struck them in all the borders of Israel;

2 Kings 10.33: 33 from the Jordan eastward, all the land of Gilead, the Gadites, and the Reubenites, and the Manassites, from Aroer, which is by the valley of the Arnon, even Gilead and Bashan.

2 Kings 10.34: 34 Now the rest of the acts of Jehu, and all that he did, and all his might, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

2 Kings 10.35: 35 Jehu slept with his fathers; and they buried him in Samaria. Jehoahaz his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 10.36: 36 The time that Jehu reigned over Israel in Samaria was twenty-eight years.

2 Kings 11.0:

11

2 Kings 11.1: 1 Now when Athaliah the mother of Ahaziah saw that her son was dead, she arose and destroyed all the royal offspring.

2 Kings 11.2: 2 But Jehosheba, the daughter of king Joram, sister of Ahaziah, took Joash the son of Ahaziah, and stole him away from among the king’s sons who were slain, even him and his nurse, and put them in the bedroom; and they hid him from Athaliah, so that he was not slain.

2 Kings 11.3: 3 He was with her hidden in Yahweh’s house six years while Athaliah reigned over the land.

2 Kings 11.4: 4 In the seventh year Jehoiada sent and fetched the captains over hundreds of the Carites and of the guard, and brought them to him into Yahweh’s house; and he made a covenant with them, and made a covenant with them in Yahweh’s house, and showed them the king’s son.

2 Kings 11.5: 5 He commanded them, saying, “This is what you must do: a third of you, who come in on the Sabbath, shall be keepers of the watch of the king’s house;

2 Kings 11.6: 6 a third of you shall be at the gate Sur; and a third of you at the gate behind the guard. So you shall keep the watch of the house, and be a barrier.

2 Kings 11.7: 7 The two companies of you, even all who go out on the Sabbath, shall keep the watch of Yahweh’s house around the king.

2 Kings 11.8: 8 You shall surround the king, every man with his weapons in his hand; and he who comes within the ranks, let him be slain. Be with the king when he goes out, and when he comes in.”

2 Kings 11.9: 9 The captains over hundreds did according to all that Jehoiada the priest commanded; and they each took his men, those who were to come in on the Sabbath, with those who were to go out on the Sabbath, and came to Jehoiada the priest.

2 Kings 11.10: 10 The priest delivered to the captains over hundreds the spears and shields that had been king David’s, which were in Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 11.11: 11 The guard stood, every man with his weapons in his hand, from the right side of the house to the left side of the house, along by the altar and the house, around the king.

2 Kings 11.12: 12 Then he brought out the king’s son, and put the crown on him, and gave him the covenant; and they made him king, and anointed him; and they clapped their hands, and said, “Long live the king!”

2 Kings 11.13: 13 When Athaliah heard the noise of the guard and of the people, she came to the people into Yahweh’s house:

2 Kings 11.14: 14 and she looked, and behold, the king stood by the pillar, as the tradition was, with the captains and the trumpets by the king; and all the people of the land rejoiced, and blew trumpets. Then Athaliah tore her clothes, and cried, “Treason! Treason!”

2 Kings 11.15: 15 Jehoiada the priest commanded the captains of hundreds who were set over the army, and said to them, “Bring her out between the ranks. Kill anyone who follows her with the sword.” For the priest said, “Don’t let her be slain in Yahweh’s house.”

2 Kings 11.16: 16 So they made way for her; and she went by the way of the horses’ entry to the king’s house, and she was slain there.

2 Kings 11.17: 17 Jehoiada made a covenant between Yahweh and the king and the people, that they should be Yahweh’s people; also between the king and the people.

2 Kings 11.18: 18 All the people of the land went to the house of Baal, and broke it down. They broke his altars and his images in pieces thoroughly, and killed Mattan the priest of Baal before the altars. The priest appointed officers over Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 11.19: 19 He took the captains over hundreds, and the Carites, and the guard, and all the people of the land; and they brought down the king from Yahweh’s house, and came by the way of the gate of the guard to the king’s house. He sat on the throne of the kings.

2 Kings 11.20: 20 So all the people of the land rejoiced, and the city was quiet. They had slain Athaliah with the sword at the king’s house.

2 Kings 11.21: 21 Jehoash was seven years old when he began to reign.

2 Kings 12.0:

12

2 Kings 12.1: 1 Jehoash began to reign in the seventh year of Jehu, and he reigned forty years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Zibiah of Beersheba.

2 Kings 12.2: 2 Jehoash did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes all his days in which Jehoiada the priest instructed him.

2 Kings 12.3: 3 However the high places were not taken away. The people still sacrificed and burned incense in the high places.

2 Kings 12.4: 4 Jehoash said to the priests, “All the money of the holy things that is brought into Yahweh’s house, in current money, the money of the people for whom each man is evaluated, and all the money that it comes into any man’s heart to bring into Yahweh’s house,

2 Kings 12.5: 5 let the priests take it to them, each man from his donor; and they shall repair the damage to the house, wherever any damage is found.”

2 Kings 12.6: 6 But it was so, that in the twenty-third year of king Jehoash the priests had not repaired the damage to the house.

2 Kings 12.7: 7 Then king Jehoash called for Jehoiada the priest, and for the other priests, and said to them, “Why don’t you repair the damage to the house? Now therefore take no more money from your treasurers, but deliver it for repair of the damage to the house.”

2 Kings 12.8: 8 The priests consented that they should take no more money from the people, and not repair the damage to the house.

2 Kings 12.9: 9 But Jehoiada the priest took a chest, and bored a hole in its lid, and set it beside the altar, on the right side as one comes into Yahweh’s house; and the priests who kept the threshold put all the money that was brought into Yahweh’s house into it.

2 Kings 12.10: 10 When they saw that there was much money in the chest, the king’s scribe and the high priest came up, and they put it in bags and counted the money that was found in Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 12.11: 11 They gave the money that was weighed out into the hands of those who did the work, who had the oversight of Yahweh’s house; and they paid it out to the carpenters and the builders, who worked on Yahweh’s house,

2 Kings 12.12: 12 and to the masons and the stone cutters, and for buying timber and cut stone to repair the damage to Yahweh’s house, and for all that was laid out for the house to repair it.

2 Kings 12.13: 13 But there were not made for Yahweh’s house cups of silver, snuffers, basins, trumpets, any vessels of gold, or vessels of silver, of the money that was brought into Yahweh’s house;

2 Kings 12.14: 14 for they gave that to those who did the work, and repaired Yahweh’s house with it.

2 Kings 12.15: 15 Moreover they didn’t demand an accounting from the men into whose hand they delivered the money to give to those who did the work; for they dealt faithfully.

2 Kings 12.16: 16 The money for the trespass offerings, and the money for the sin offerings was not brought into Yahweh’s house. It was the priests’.

2 Kings 12.17: 17 Then Hazael king of Syria went up, and fought against Gath, and took it; and Hazael set his face to go up to Jerusalem.

2 Kings 12.18: 18 Jehoash king of Judah took all the holy things that Jehoshaphat and Jehoram and Ahaziah, his fathers, kings of Judah, had dedicated, and his own holy things, and all the gold that was found in the treasures of Yahweh’s house, and of the king’s house, and sent it to Hazael king of Syria; and he went away from Jerusalem.

2 Kings 12.19: 19 Now the rest of the acts of Joash, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 12.20: 20 His servants arose, and made a conspiracy, and struck Joash at the house of Millo, on the way that goes down to Silla.

2 Kings 12.21: 21 For Jozacar the son of Shimeath, and Jehozabad the son of Shomer, his servants, struck him, and he died; and they buried him with his fathers in David’s city; and Amaziah his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 13.0:

13

2 Kings 13.1: 1 In the twenty-third year of Joash the son of Ahaziah, king of Judah, Jehoahaz the son of Jehu began to reign over Israel in Samaria for seventeen years.

2 Kings 13.2: 2 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, and followed the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin. He didn’t depart from it.

2 Kings 13.3: 3 Yahweh’s anger burned against Israel, and he delivered them into the hand of Hazael king of Syria, and into the hand of Benhadad the son of Hazael, continually.

2 Kings 13.4: 4 Jehoahaz begged Yahweh, and Yahweh listened to him; for he saw the oppression of Israel, how the king of Syria oppressed them.

2 Kings 13.5: 5 (Yahweh gave Israel a savior, so that they went out from under the hand of the Syrians; and the children of Israel lived in their tents as before.

2 Kings 13.6: 6 Nevertheless they didn’t depart from the sins of the house of Jeroboam, with which he made Israel to sin, but walked in them; and the Asherah also remained in Samaria.)

2 Kings 13.7: 7 For he didn’t leave to Jehoahaz of the people any more than fifty horsemen, and ten chariots, and ten thousand footmen; for the king of Syria destroyed them, and made them like the dust in threshing.

2 Kings 13.8: 8 Now the rest of the acts of Jehoahaz, and all that he did, and his might, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

2 Kings 13.9: 9 Jehoahaz slept with his fathers; and they buried him in Samaria; and Joash his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 13.10: 10 In the thirty-seventh year of Joash king of Judah, Jehoash the son of Jehoahaz began to reign over Israel in Samaria for sixteen years.

2 Kings 13.11: 11 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight. He didn’t depart from all the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin; but he walked in them.

2 Kings 13.12: 12 Now the rest of the acts of Joash, and all that he did, and his might with which he fought against Amaziah king of Judah, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

2 Kings 13.13: 13 Joash slept with his fathers; and Jeroboam sat on his throne. Joash was buried in Samaria with the kings of Israel.

2 Kings 13.14: 14 Now Elisha became sick with the illness of which he died; and Joash the king of Israel came down to him, and wept over him, and said, “My father, my father, the chariots of Israel and its horsemen!”

2 Kings 13.15: 15 Elisha said to him, “Take bow and arrows;” and he took bow and arrows for himself.

2 Kings 13.16: 16 He said to the king of Israel, “Put your hand on the bow;” and he put his hand on it. Elisha laid his hands on the king’s hands.

2 Kings 13.17: 17 He said, “Open the window eastward;” and he opened it. Then Elisha said, “Shoot!” and he shot. He said, “Yahweh’s arrow of victory, even the arrow of victory over Syria; for you will strike the Syrians in Aphek, until you have consumed them.”

2 Kings 13.18: 18 He said, “Take the arrows;” and he took them. He said to the king of Israel, “Strike the ground;” and he struck three times, and stopped.

2 Kings 13.19: 19 The man of God was angry with him, and said, “You should have struck five or six times. Then you would have struck Syria until you had consumed it; whereas now you will strike Syria just three times.”

2 Kings 13.20: 20 Elisha died, and they buried him.

Now the bands of the Moabites invaded the land at the coming in of the year.

2 Kings 13.21: 21 As they were burying a man, behold, they saw a band of raiders; and they threw the man into Elisha’s tomb. As soon as the man touched Elisha’s bones, he revived, and stood up on his feet.

2 Kings 13.22: 22 Hazael king of Syria oppressed Israel all the days of Jehoahaz.

2 Kings 13.23: 23 But Yahweh was gracious to them, and had compassion on them, and had respect for them, because of his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and would not destroy them, and he didn’t cast them from his presence as yet.

2 Kings 13.24: 24 Hazael king of Syria died; and Benhadad his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 13.25: 25 Jehoash the son of Jehoahaz took again out of the hand of Benhadad the son of Hazael the cities which he had taken out of the hand of Jehoahaz his father by war. Joash struck him three times, and recovered the cities of Israel.

2 Kings 14.0:

14

2 Kings 14.1: 1 In the second year of Joash son of Joahaz king of Israel Amaziah the son of Joash king of Judah began to reign.

2 Kings 14.2: 2 He was twenty-five years old when he began to reign; and he reigned twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Jehoaddin of Jerusalem.

2 Kings 14.3: 3 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, yet not like David his father. He did according to all that Joash his father had done.

2 Kings 14.4: 4 However the high places were not taken away. The people still sacrificed and burned incense in the high places.

2 Kings 14.5: 5 As soon as the kingdom was established in his hand, he killed his servants who had slain the king his father,

2 Kings 14.6: 6 but the children of the murderers he didn’t put to death; according to that which is written in the book of the law of Moses, as Yahweh commanded, saying, “The fathers shall not be put to death for the children, nor the children be put to death for the fathers; but every man shall die for his own sin.”

2 Kings 14.7: 7 He killed ten thousand Edomites in the Valley of Salt, and took Sela by war, and called its name Joktheel, to this day.

2 Kings 14.8: 8 Then Amaziah sent messengers to Jehoash, the son of Jehoahaz son of Jehu, king of Israel, saying, “Come, let’s look one another in the face.”

2 Kings 14.9: 9 Jehoash the king of Israel sent to Amaziah king of Judah, saying, “The thistle that was in Lebanon sent to the cedar that was in Lebanon, saying, ‘Give your daughter to my son as wife. Then a wild animal that was in Lebanon passed by, and trampled down the thistle.

2 Kings 14.10: 10 You have indeed struck Edom, and your heart has lifted you up. Enjoy the glory of it, and stay at home; for why should you meddle to your harm, that you fall, even you, and Judah with you?’”

2 Kings 14.11: 11 But Amaziah would not listen. So Jehoash king of Israel went up; and he and Amaziah king of Judah looked one another in the face at Beth Shemesh, which belongs to Judah.

2 Kings 14.12: 12 Judah was defeated by Israel; and each man fled to his tent.

2 Kings 14.13: 13 Jehoash king of Israel took Amaziah king of Judah, the son of Jehoash the son of Ahaziah, at Beth Shemesh, and came to Jerusalem, and broke down the wall of Jerusalem from the gate of Ephraim to the corner gate, four hundred cubits.

2 Kings 14.14: 14 He took all the gold and silver, and all the vessels that were found in Yahweh’s house and in the treasures of the king’s house, the hostages also, and returned to Samaria.

2 Kings 14.15: 15 Now the rest of the acts of Jehoash which he did, and his might, and how he fought with Amaziah king of Judah, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

2 Kings 14.16: 16 Jehoash slept with his fathers, and was buried in Samaria with the kings of Israel; and Jeroboam his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 14.17: 17 Amaziah the son of Joash king of Judah lived after the death of Jehoash son of Jehoahaz king of Israel fifteen years.

2 Kings 14.18: 18 Now the rest of the acts of Amaziah, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 14.19: 19 They made a conspiracy against him in Jerusalem, and he fled to Lachish; but they sent after him to Lachish, and killed him there.

2 Kings 14.20: 20 They brought him on horses, and he was buried at Jerusalem with his fathers in David’s city.

2 Kings 14.21: 21 All the people of Judah took Azariah, who was sixteen years old, and made him king in the place of his father Amaziah.

2 Kings 14.22: 22 He built Elath, and restored it to Judah. After that the king slept with his fathers.

2 Kings 14.23: 23 In the fifteenth year of Amaziah the son of Joash king of Judah, Jeroboam the son of Joash king of Israel began to reign in Samaria for forty-one years.

2 Kings 14.24: 24 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight. He didn’t depart from all the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin.

2 Kings 14.25: 25 He restored the border of Israel from the entrance of Hamath to the sea of the Arabah, according to Yahweh, the God of Israel’s word, which he spoke by his servant Jonah the son of Amittai, the prophet, who was from Gath Hepher.

2 Kings 14.26: 26 For Yahweh saw the affliction of Israel, that it was very bitter; for all, slave and free, and there was no helper for Israel.

2 Kings 14.27: 27 Yahweh didn’t say that he would blot out the name of Israel from under the sky; but he saved them by the hand of Jeroboam the son of Joash.

2 Kings 14.28: 28 Now the rest of the acts of Jeroboam, and all that he did, and his might, how he fought, and how he recovered Damascus, and Hamath, which had belonged to Judah, for Israel, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

2 Kings 14.29: 29 Jeroboam slept with his fathers, even with the kings of Israel; and Zechariah his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 15.0:

15

2 Kings 15.1: 1 In the twenty-seventh year of Jeroboam king of Israel, Azariah son of Amaziah king of Judah began to reign.

2 Kings 15.2: 2 He was sixteen years old when he began to reign, and he reigned fifty-two years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Jecoliah of Jerusalem.

2 Kings 15.3: 3 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, according to all that his father Amaziah had done.

2 Kings 15.4: 4 However the high places were not taken away. The people still sacrificed and burned incense in the high places.

2 Kings 15.5: 5 Yahweh struck the king, so that he was a leper to the day of his death, and lived in a separate house. Jotham, the king’s son was over the household, judging the people of the land.

2 Kings 15.6: 6 Now the rest of the acts of Azariah, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 15.7: 7 Azariah slept with his fathers; and they buried him with his fathers in David’s city: and Jotham his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 15.8: 8 In the thirty-eighth year of Azariah king of Judah, Zechariah the son of Jeroboam reigned over Israel in Samaria six months.

2 Kings 15.9: 9 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, as his fathers had done. He didn’t depart from the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin.

2 Kings 15.10: 10 Shallum the son of Jabesh conspired against him, and struck him before the people, and killed him, and reigned in his place.

2 Kings 15.11: 11 Now the rest of the acts of Zechariah, behold, they are written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel.

2 Kings 15.12: 12 This was Yahweh’s word which he spoke to Jehu, saying, “Your sons to the fourth generation shall sit on the throne of Israel.” So it came to pass.

2 Kings 15.13: 13 Shallum the son of Jabesh began to reign in the thirty-ninth year of Uzziah king of Judah, and he reigned for a month in Samaria.

2 Kings 15.14: 14 Menahem the son of Gadi went up from Tirzah, came to Samaria, struck Shallum the son of Jabesh in Samaria, killed him, and reigned in his place.

2 Kings 15.15: 15 Now the rest of the acts of Shallum, and his conspiracy which he made, behold, they are written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel.

2 Kings 15.16: 16 Then Menahem attacked Tiphsah, and all who were in it, and its border areas, from Tirzah. He attacked it because they didn’t open their gates to him, and he ripped up all their women who were with child.

2 Kings 15.17: 17 In the thirty ninth year of Azariah king of Judah, Menahem the son of Gadi began to reign over Israel for ten years in Samaria.

2 Kings 15.18: 18 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight. He didn’t depart all his days from the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin.

2 Kings 15.19: 19 Pul the king of Assyria came against the land, and Menahem gave Pul one thousand talents of silver, that his hand might be with him to confirm the kingdom in his hand.

2 Kings 15.20: 20 Menahem exacted the money from Israel, even from all the mighty men of wealth, from each man fifty shekels of silver, to give to the king of Assyria. So the king of Assyria turned back, and didn’t stay there in the land.

2 Kings 15.21: 21 Now the rest of the acts of Menahem, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel?

2 Kings 15.22: 22 Menahem slept with his fathers, and Pekahiah his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 15.23: 23 In the fiftieth year of Azariah king of Judah, Pekahiah the son of Menahem began to reign over Israel in Samaria for two years.

2 Kings 15.24: 24 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight. He didn’t depart from the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin.

2 Kings 15.25: 25 Pekah the son of Remaliah, his captain, conspired against him and attacked him in Samaria, in the fortress of the king’s house, with Argob and Arieh; and with him were fifty men of the Gileadites. He killed him, and reigned in his place.

2 Kings 15.26: 26 Now the rest of the acts of Pekahiah, and all that he did, behold, they are written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel.

2 Kings 15.27: 27 In the fifty-second year of Azariah king of Judah, Pekah the son of Remaliah began to reign over Israel in Samaria for twenty years.

2 Kings 15.28: 28 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight. He didn’t depart from the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel to sin.

2 Kings 15.29: 29 In the days of Pekah king of Israel, Tiglath Pileser king of Assyria came and took Ijon, Abel Beth Maacah, Janoah, Kedesh, Hazor, Gilead, and Galilee, all the land of Naphtali; and he carried them captive to Assyria.

2 Kings 15.30: 30 Hoshea the son of Elah made a conspiracy against Pekah the son of Remaliah, attacked him, killed him, and reigned in his place, in the twentieth year of Jotham the son of Uzziah.

2 Kings 15.31: 31 Now the rest of the acts of Pekah, and all that he did, behold, they are written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel.

2 Kings 15.32: 32 In the second year of Pekah the son of Remaliah king of Israel, Jotham the son of Uzziah king of Judah began to reign.

2 Kings 15.33: 33 He was twenty-five years old when he began to reign, and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Jerusha the daughter of Zadok.

2 Kings 15.34: 34 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes. He did according to all that his father Uzziah had done.

2 Kings 15.35: 35 However the high places were not taken away. The people still sacrificed and burned incense in the high places. He built the upper gate of Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 15.36: 36 Now the rest of the acts of Jotham, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 15.37: 37 In those days, Yahweh began to send Rezin the king of Syria and Pekah the son of Remaliah against Judah.

2 Kings 15.38: 38 Jotham slept with his fathers, and was buried with his fathers in his father David’s city, and Ahaz his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 16.0:

16

2 Kings 16.1: 1 In the seventeenth year of Pekah the son of Remaliah, Ahaz the son of Jotham king of Judah began to reign.

2 Kings 16.2: 2 Ahaz was twenty years old when he began to reign, and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem. He didn’t do that which was right in Yahweh his God’s eyes, like David his father.

2 Kings 16.3: 3 But he walked in the way of the kings of Israel, yes, and made his son to pass through the fire, according to the abominations of the nations whom Yahweh cast out from before the children of Israel.

2 Kings 16.4: 4 He sacrificed and burned incense in the high places, on the hills, and under every green tree.

2 Kings 16.5: 5 Then Rezin king of Syria and Pekah son of Remaliah king of Israel came up to Jerusalem to wage war. They besieged Ahaz, but could not overcome him.

2 Kings 16.6: 6 At that time Rezin king of Syria recovered Elath to Syria, and drove the Jews from Elath; and the Syrians came to Elath, and lived there, to this day.

2 Kings 16.7: 7 So Ahaz sent messengers to Tiglath Pileser king of Assyria, saying, “I am your servant and your son. Come up and save me out of the hand of the king of Syria, and out of the hand of the king of Israel, who rise up against me.”

2 Kings 16.8: 8 Ahaz took the silver and gold that was found in Yahweh’s house, and in the treasures of the king’s house, and sent it for a present to the king of Assyria.

2 Kings 16.9: 9 The king of Assyria listened to him; and the king of Assyria went up against Damascus, and took it, and carried its people captive to Kir, and killed Rezin.

2 Kings 16.10: 10 King Ahaz went to Damascus to meet Tiglath Pileser king of Assyria, and saw the altar that was at Damascus; and king Ahaz sent to Urijah the priest a drawing of the altar and plans to build it.

2 Kings 16.11: 11 Urijah the priest built an altar. According to all that king Ahaz had sent from Damascus, so Urijah the priest made it for the coming of king Ahaz from Damascus.

2 Kings 16.12: 12 When the king had come from Damascus, the king saw the altar; and the king came near to the altar, and offered on it.

2 Kings 16.13: 13 He burned his burnt offering and his meal offering, poured his drink offering, and sprinkled the blood of his peace offerings on the altar.

2 Kings 16.14: 14 The bronze altar, which was before Yahweh, he brought from the front of the house, from between his altar and Yahweh’s house, and put it on the north side of his altar.

2 Kings 16.15: 15 King Ahaz commanded Urijah the priest, saying, “On the great altar burn the morning burnt offering, the evening meal offering, the king’s burnt offering, his meal offering, with the burnt offering of all the people of the land, their meal offering, and their drink offerings; and sprinkle on it all the blood of the burnt offering, and all the blood of the sacrifice; but the bronze altar will be for me to inquire by.”

2 Kings 16.16: 16 Urijah the priest did so, according to all that king Ahaz commanded.

2 Kings 16.17: 17 King Ahaz cut off the panels of the bases, and removed the basin from off them, and took down the sea from off the bronze oxen that were under it, and put it on a pavement of stone.

2 Kings 16.18: 18 He removed the covered way for the Sabbath that they had built in the house, and the king’s entry outside to Yahweh’s house, because of the king of Assyria.

2 Kings 16.19: 19 Now the rest of the acts of Ahaz which he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 16.20: 20 Ahaz slept with his fathers, and was buried with his fathers in David’s city, and Hezekiah his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 17.0:

17

2 Kings 17.1: 1 In the twelfth year of Ahaz king of Judah, Hoshea the son of Elah began to reign in Samaria over Israel for nine years.

2 Kings 17.2: 2 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, yet not as the kings of Israel who were before him.

2 Kings 17.3: 3 Shalmaneser king of Assyria came up against him, and Hoshea became his servant, and brought him tribute.

2 Kings 17.4: 4 The king of Assyria found conspiracy in Hoshea; for he had sent messengers to So king of Egypt, and offered no tribute to the king of Assyria, as he had done year by year. Therefore the king of Assyria seized him, and bound him in prison.

2 Kings 17.5: 5 Then the king of Assyria came up throughout all the land, went up to Samaria, and besieged it three years.

2 Kings 17.6: 6 In the ninth year of Hoshea the king of Assyria took Samaria, and carried Israel away to Assyria, and placed them in Halah, and on the Habor, the river of Gozan, and in the cities of the Medes.

2 Kings 17.7: 7 It was so because the children of Israel had sinned against Yahweh their God, who brought them up out of the land of Egypt from under the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt, and had feared other gods,

2 Kings 17.8: 8 and walked in the statutes of the nations whom Yahweh cast out from before the children of Israel, and of the kings of Israel, which they made.

2 Kings 17.9: 9 The children of Israel secretly did things that were not right against Yahweh their God; and they built high places for themselves in all their cities, from the tower of the watchmen to the fortified city;

2 Kings 17.10: 10 and they set up for themselves pillars and Asherah poles on every high hill, and under every green tree;

2 Kings 17.11: 11 and there they burned incense in all the high places, as the nations whom Yahweh carried away before them did; and they did wicked things to provoke Yahweh to anger;

2 Kings 17.12: 12 and they served idols, of which Yahweh had said to them, “You shall not do this thing.”

2 Kings 17.13: 13 Yet Yahweh testified to Israel, and to Judah, by every prophet, and every seer, saying, “Turn from your evil ways, and keep my commandments and my statutes, according to all the law which I commanded your fathers, and which I sent to you by my servants the prophets.”

2 Kings 17.14: 14 Notwithstanding, they would not listen, but hardened their neck, like the neck of their fathers, who didn’t believe in Yahweh their God.

2 Kings 17.15: 15 They rejected his statutes, and his covenant that he made with their fathers, and his testimonies which he testified to them; and they followed vanity, and became vain, and followed the nations that were around them, concerning whom Yahweh had commanded them that they should not do like them.

2 Kings 17.16: 16 They abandoned all the commandments of Yahweh their God, and made molten images for themselves, even two calves, and made an Asherah, and worshiped all the army of the sky, and served Baal.

2 Kings 17.17: 17 They caused their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire, used divination and enchantments, and sold themselves to do that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, to provoke him to anger.

2 Kings 17.18: 18 Therefore Yahweh was very angry with Israel, and removed them out of his sight. There was none left but the tribe of Judah only.

2 Kings 17.19: 19 Also Judah didn’t keep the commandments of Yahweh their God, but walked in the statutes of Israel which they made.

2 Kings 17.20: 20 Yahweh rejected all the offspring of Israel, afflicted them, and delivered them into the hands of raiders, until he had cast them out of his sight.

2 Kings 17.21: 21 For he tore Israel from David’s house; and they made Jeroboam the son of Nebat king; and Jeroboam drove Israel from following Yahweh, and made them sin a great sin.

2 Kings 17.22: 22 The children of Israel walked in all the sins of Jeroboam which he did; they didn’t depart from them

2 Kings 17.23: 23 until Yahweh removed Israel out of his sight, as he said by all his servants the prophets. So Israel was carried away out of their own land to Assyria to this day.

2 Kings 17.24: 24 The king of Assyria brought men from Babylon, from Cuthah, from Avva, and from Hamath and Sepharvaim, and placed them in the cities of Samaria instead of the children of Israel; and they possessed Samaria, and lived in its cities.

2 Kings 17.25: 25 So it was, at the beginning of their dwelling there, that they didn’t fear Yahweh. Therefore Yahweh sent lions among them, which killed some of them.

2 Kings 17.26: 26 Therefore they spoke to the king of Assyria, saying, “The nations which you have carried away and placed in the cities of Samaria don’t know the law of the god of the land. Therefore he has sent lions among them, and behold, they kill them, because they don’t know the law of the god of the land.”

2 Kings 17.27: 27 Then the king of Assyria commanded, saying, “Carry there one of the priests whom you brought from there; and let them go and dwell there, and let him teach them the law of the god of the land.”

2 Kings 17.28: 28 So one of the priests whom they had carried away from Samaria came and lived in Bethel, and taught them how they should fear Yahweh.

2 Kings 17.29: 29 However every nation made gods of their own, and put them in the houses of the high places which the Samaritans had made, every nation in their cities in which they lived.

2 Kings 17.30: 30 The men of Babylon made Succoth Benoth, and the men of Cuth made Nergal, and the men of Hamath made Ashima,

2 Kings 17.31: 31 and the Avvites made Nibhaz and Tartak; and the Sepharvites burned their children in the fire to Adrammelech and Anammelech, the gods of Sepharvaim.

2 Kings 17.32: 32 So they feared Yahweh, and also made from among themselves priests of the high places for themselves, who sacrificed for them in the houses of the high places.

2 Kings 17.33: 33 They feared Yahweh, and also served their own gods, after the ways of the nations from among whom they had been carried away.

2 Kings 17.34: 34 To this day they do what they did before. They don’t fear Yahweh, and they do not follow the statutes, or the ordinances, or the law, or the commandment which Yahweh commanded the children of Jacob, whom he named Israel;

2 Kings 17.35: 35 with whom Yahweh had made a covenant, and commanded them, saying, “You shall not fear other gods, nor bow yourselves to them, nor serve them, nor sacrifice to them;

2 Kings 17.36: 36 but you shall fear Yahweh, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt with great power and with an outstretched arm, and you shall bow yourselves to him, and you shall sacrifice to him.

2 Kings 17.37: 37 The statutes and the ordinances, and the law and the commandment, which he wrote for you, you shall observe to do forever more. You shall not fear other gods.

2 Kings 17.38: 38 You shall not forget the covenant that I have made with you. You shall not fear other gods.

2 Kings 17.39: 39 But you shall fear Yahweh your God, and he will deliver you out of the hand of all your enemies.”

2 Kings 17.40: 40 However they didn’t listen, but they did what they did before.

2 Kings 17.41: 41 So these nations feared Yahweh, and also served their engraved images. Their children did likewise, and so did their children’s children. They do as their fathers did to this day.

2 Kings 18.0:

18

2 Kings 18.1: 1 Now in the third year of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, Hezekiah the son of Ahaz king of Judah began to reign.

2 Kings 18.2: 2 He was twenty-five years old when he began to reign, and he reigned twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Abi the daughter of Zechariah.

2 Kings 18.3: 3 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, according to all that David his father had done.

2 Kings 18.4: 4 He removed the high places, and broke the pillars, and cut down the Asherah. He also broke in pieces the bronze serpent that Moses had made, because in those days the children of Israel burned incense to it; and he called it Nehushtan.

2 Kings 18.5: 5 He trusted in Yahweh, the God of Israel; so that after him was no one like him among all the kings of Judah, nor among them that were before him.

2 Kings 18.6: 6 For he joined with Yahweh. He didn’t depart from following him, but kept his commandments, which Yahweh commanded Moses.

2 Kings 18.7: 7 Yahweh was with him. Wherever he went, he prospered. He rebelled against the king of Assyria, and didn’t serve him.

2 Kings 18.8: 8 He struck the Philistines to Gaza and its borders, from the tower of the watchmen to the fortified city.

2 Kings 18.9: 9 In the fourth year of king Hezekiah, which was the seventh year of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, Shalmaneser king of Assyria came up against Samaria, and besieged it.

2 Kings 18.10: 10 At the end of three years they took it. In the sixth year of Hezekiah, which was the ninth year of Hoshea king of Israel, Samaria was taken.

2 Kings 18.11: 11 The king of Assyria carried Israel away to Assyria, and put them in Halah, and on the Habor, the river of Gozan, and in the cities of the Medes,

2 Kings 18.12: 12 because they didn’t obey Yahweh their God’s voice, but transgressed his covenant, even all that Moses the servant of Yahweh commanded, and would not hear it or do it.

2 Kings 18.13: 13 Now in the fourteenth year of king Hezekiah, Sennacherib king of Assyria came up against all the fortified cities of Judah, and took them.

2 Kings 18.14: 14 Hezekiah king of Judah sent to the king of Assyria to Lachish, saying, “I have offended you. Return from me. That which you put on me, I will bear.” The king of Assyria appointed to Hezekiah king of Judah three hundred talents of silver and thirty talents of gold.

2 Kings 18.15: 15 Hezekiah gave him all the silver that was found in Yahweh’s house, and in the treasures of the king’s house.

2 Kings 18.16: 16 At that time, Hezekiah cut off the gold from the doors of Yahweh’s temple, and from the pillars which Hezekiah king of Judah had overlaid, and gave it to the king of Assyria.

2 Kings 18.17: 17 The king of Assyria sent Tartan and Rabsaris and Rabshakeh from Lachish to king Hezekiah with a great army to Jerusalem. They went up and came to Jerusalem. When they had come up, they came and stood by the conduit of the upper pool, which is in the highway of the fuller’s field.

2 Kings 18.18: 18 When they had called to the king, Eliakim the son of Hilkiah, who was over the household, and Shebnah the scribe, and Joah the son of Asaph the recorder came out to them.

2 Kings 18.19: 19 Rabshakeh said to them, “Say now to Hezekiah, ‘The great king, the king of Assyria, says, “What confidence is this in which you trust?

2 Kings 18.20: 20 You say (but they are but vain words), ‘There is counsel and strength for war.’ Now on whom do you trust, that you have rebelled against me?

2 Kings 18.21: 21 Now, behold, you trust in the staff of this bruised reed, even in Egypt. If a man leans on it, it will go into his hand, and pierce it. So is Pharaoh king of Egypt to all who trust on him.

2 Kings 18.22: 22 But if you tell me, ‘We trust in Yahweh our God;’ isn’t that he whose high places and whose altars Hezekiah has taken away, and has said to Judah and to Jerusalem, ‘You shall worship before this altar in Jerusalem?’

2 Kings 18.23: 23 Now therefore, please give pledges to my master the king of Assyria, and I will give you two thousand horses, if you are able on your part to set riders on them.

2 Kings 18.24: 24 How then can you turn away the face of one captain of the least of my master’s servants, and put your trust on Egypt for chariots and for horsemen?

2 Kings 18.25: 25 Have I now come up without Yahweh against this place to destroy it? Yahweh said to me, ‘Go up against this land, and destroy it.’”’”

2 Kings 18.26: 26 Then Eliakim the son of Hilkiah, Shebnah, and Joah, said to Rabshakeh, “Please speak to your servants in the Syrian language, for we understand it. Don’t speak with us in the Jews’ language, in the hearing of the people who are on the wall.”

2 Kings 18.27: 27 But Rabshakeh said to them, “Has my master sent me to your master and to you, to speak these words? Hasn’t he sent me to the men who sit on the wall, to eat their own dung, and to drink their own urine with you?”

2 Kings 18.28: 28 Then Rabshakeh stood, and cried with a loud voice in the Jews’ language, and spoke, saying, “Hear the word of the great king, the king of Assyria.

2 Kings 18.29: 29 The king says, ‘Don’t let Hezekiah deceive you; for he will not be able to deliver you out of his hand.

2 Kings 18.30: 30 Don’t let Hezekiah make you trust in Yahweh, saying, “Yahweh will surely deliver us, and this city shall not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria.”

2 Kings 18.31: 31 Don’t listen to Hezekiah.’ For the king of Assyria says, ‘Make your peace with me, and come out to me; and everyone of you eat from his own vine, and everyone from his own fig tree, and everyone drink water from his own cistern;

2 Kings 18.32: 32 until I come and take you away to a land like your own land, a land of grain and new wine, a land of bread and vineyards, a land of olive trees and of honey, that you may live, and not die. Don’t listen to Hezekiah, when he persuades you, saying, “Yahweh will deliver us.”

2 Kings 18.33: 33 Has any of the gods of the nations ever delivered his land out of the hand of the king of Assyria?

2 Kings 18.34: 34 Where are the gods of Hamath, and of Arpad? Where are the gods of Sepharvaim, of Hena, and Ivvah? Have they delivered Samaria out of my hand?

2 Kings 18.35: 35 Who are they among all the gods of the countries, that have delivered their country out of my hand, that Yahweh should deliver Jerusalem out of my hand?’”

2 Kings 18.36: 36 But the people stayed quiet, and answered him not a word; for the king’s commandment was, “Don’t answer him.”

2 Kings 18.37: 37 Then Eliakim the son of Hilkiah, who was over the household, came with Shebna the scribe, and Joah the son of Asaph the recorder, to Hezekiah with their clothes torn, and told him Rabshakeh’s words.

2 Kings 19.0:

19

2 Kings 19.1: 1 When king Hezekiah heard it, he tore his clothes, covered himself with sackcloth, and went into Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 19.2: 2 He sent Eliakim, who was over the household, Shebna the scribe, and the elders of the priests, covered with sackcloth, to Isaiah the prophet the son of Amoz.

2 Kings 19.3: 3 They said to him, “Hezekiah says, ‘Today is a day of trouble, of rebuke, and of rejection; for the children have come to the point of birth, and there is no strength to deliver them.

2 Kings 19.4: 4 It may be Yahweh your God will hear all the words of Rabshakeh, whom the king of Assyria his master has sent to defy the living God, and will rebuke the words which Yahweh your God has heard. Therefore lift up your prayer for the remnant that is left.’”

2 Kings 19.5: 5 So the servants of king Hezekiah came to Isaiah.

2 Kings 19.6: 6 Isaiah said to them, “Tell your master this: ‘Yahweh says, “Don’t be afraid of the words that you have heard, with which the servants of the king of Assyria have blasphemed me.

2 Kings 19.7: 7 Behold, I will put a spirit in him, and he will hear news, and will return to his own land. I will cause him to fall by the sword in his own land.”’”

2 Kings 19.8: 8 So Rabshakeh returned and found the king of Assyria warring against Libnah; for he had heard that he had departed from Lachish.

2 Kings 19.9: 9 When he heard it said of Tirhakah king of Ethiopia, “Behold, he has come out to fight against you, he sent messengers again to Hezekiah, saying,

2 Kings 19.10: 10 ‘Tell Hezekiah king of Judah this: “Don’t let your God in whom you trust deceive you, saying, Jerusalem will not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria.

2 Kings 19.11: 11 Behold, you have heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all lands, by destroying them utterly. Will you be delivered?

2 Kings 19.12: 12 Have the gods of the nations delivered them, which my fathers have destroyed, Gozan, Haran, Rezeph, and the children of Eden who were in Telassar?

2 Kings 19.13: 13 Where is the king of Hamath, the king of Arpad, and the king of the city of Sepharvaim, of Hena, and Ivvah?”’”

2 Kings 19.14: 14 Hezekiah received the letter from the hand of the messengers and read it. Then Hezekiah went up to Yahweh’s house, and spread it before Yahweh.

2 Kings 19.15: 15 Hezekiah prayed before Yahweh, and said, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, who are enthroned above the cherubim, you are the God, even you alone, of all the kingdoms of the earth. You have made heaven and earth.

2 Kings 19.16: 16 Incline your ear, Yahweh, and hear. Open your eyes, Yahweh, and see. Hear the words of Sennacherib, which he has sent to defy the living God.

2 Kings 19.17: 17 Truly, Yahweh, the kings of Assyria have laid waste the nations and their lands,

2 Kings 19.18: 18 and have cast their gods into the fire; for they were no gods, but the work of men’s hands, wood and stone. Therefore they have destroyed them.

2 Kings 19.19: 19 Now therefore, Yahweh our God, save us, I beg you, out of his hand, that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that you, Yahweh, are God alone.”

2 Kings 19.20: 20 Then Isaiah the son of Amoz sent to Hezekiah, saying, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, says ‘You have prayed to me against Sennacherib king of Assyria, and I have heard you.

2 Kings 19.21: 21 This is the word that Yahweh has spoken concerning him: ‘The virgin daughter of Zion has despised you and ridiculed you. The daughter of Jerusalem has shaken her head at you.

2 Kings 19.22: 22 Whom have you defied and blasphemed? Against whom have you exalted your voice and lifted up your eyes on high? Against the Holy One of Israel!

2 Kings 19.23: 23 By your messengers, you have defied the Lord, and have said, “With the multitude of my chariots, I have come up to the height of the mountains, to the innermost parts of Lebanon, and I will cut down its tall cedars and its choice cypress trees; and I will enter into his farthest lodging place, the forest of his fruitful field.

2 Kings 19.24: 24 I have dug and drunk strange waters, and I will dry up all the rivers of Egypt with the sole of my feet.”

2 Kings 19.25: 25 Haven’t you heard how I have done it long ago, and formed it of ancient times? Now I have brought it to pass, that it should be yours to lay waste fortified cities into ruinous heaps.

2 Kings 19.26: 26 Therefore their inhabitants had little power. They were dismayed and confounded. They were like the grass of the field, and like the green herb, like the grass on the housetops, and like grain blasted before it has grown up.

2 Kings 19.27: 27 But I know your sitting down, your going out, your coming in, and your raging against me.

2 Kings 19.28: 28 Because of your raging against me, and because your arrogance has come up into my ears, therefore I will put my hook in your nose, and my bridle in your lips, and I will turn you back by the way by which you came.’

2 Kings 19.29: 29 “This will be the sign to you: This year, you will eat that which grows of itself, and in the second year that which springs from that; and in the third year sow, and reap, and plant vineyards, and eat its fruit.

2 Kings 19.30: 30 The remnant that has escaped of the house of Judah will again take root downward, and bear fruit upward.

2 Kings 19.31: 31 For out of Jerusalem a remnant will go out, and out of Mount Zion those who shall escape. Yahweh’s zeal will perform this.

2 Kings 19.32: 32 “Therefore Yahweh says concerning the king of Assyria, ‘He will not come to this city, nor shoot an arrow there. He will not come before it with shield, nor cast up a mound against it.

2 Kings 19.33: 33 He will return the same way that he came, and he will not come to this city,’ says Yahweh.

2 Kings 19.34: 34 ‘For I will defend this city to save it, for my own sake, and for my servant David’s sake.’”

2 Kings 19.35: 35 That night, Yahweh’s angel went out, and struck one hundred eighty-five thousand in the camp of the Assyrians. When men arose early in the morning, behold, these were all dead bodies.

2 Kings 19.36: 36 So Sennacherib king of Assyria departed, and went and returned, and lived at Nineveh.

2 Kings 19.37: 37 As he was worshiping in the house of Nisroch his god, Adrammelech and Sharezer struck him with the sword; and they escaped into the land of Ararat. Esar Haddon his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 20.0:

20

2 Kings 20.1: 1 In those days Hezekiah was sick and dying. Isaiah the prophet the son of Amoz came to him, and said to him, “Yahweh says, ‘Set your house in order; for you will die, and not live.’”

2 Kings 20.2: 2 Then he turned his face to the wall, and prayed to Yahweh, saying,

2 Kings 20.3: 3 “Remember now, Yahweh, I beg you, how I have walked before you in truth and with a perfect heart, and have done that which is good in your sight.” And Hezekiah wept bitterly.

2 Kings 20.4: 4 Before Isaiah had gone out into the middle part of the city, Yahweh’s word came to him, saying,

2 Kings 20.5: 5 “Turn back, and tell Hezekiah the prince of my people, ‘Yahweh, the God of David your father, says, “I have heard your prayer. I have seen your tears. Behold, I will heal you. On the third day, you will go up to Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 20.6: 6 I will add to your days fifteen years. I will deliver you and this city out of the hand of the king of Assyria. I will defend this city for my own sake, and for my servant David’s sake.”’”

2 Kings 20.7: 7 Isaiah said, “Take a cake of figs.”

They took and laid it on the boil, and he recovered.

2 Kings 20.8: 8 Hezekiah said to Isaiah, “What will be the sign that Yahweh will heal me, and that I will go up to Yahweh’s house the third day?”

2 Kings 20.9: 9 Isaiah said, “This will be the sign to you from Yahweh, that Yahweh will do the thing that he has spoken: should the shadow go forward ten steps, or go back ten steps?”

2 Kings 20.10: 10 Hezekiah answered, “It is a light thing for the shadow to go forward ten steps. No, but let the shadow return backward ten steps.”

2 Kings 20.11: 11 Isaiah the prophet cried to Yahweh; and he brought the shadow ten steps backward, by which it had gone down on the sundial of Ahaz.

2 Kings 20.12: 12 At that time Berodach Baladan the son of Baladan, king of Babylon, sent letters and a present to Hezekiah; for he had heard that Hezekiah had been sick.

2 Kings 20.13: 13 Hezekiah listened to them, and showed them all the storehouse of his precious things, the silver, the gold, the spices, and the precious oil, and the house of his armor, and all that was found in his treasures. There was nothing in his house, or in all his dominion, that Hezekiah didn’t show them.

2 Kings 20.14: 14 Then Isaiah the prophet came to king Hezekiah, and said to him, “What did these men say? From where did they come to you?”

Hezekiah said, “They have come from a far country, even from Babylon.”

2 Kings 20.15: 15 He said, “What have they seen in your house?”

Hezekiah answered, “They have seen all that is in my house. There is nothing among my treasures that I have not shown them.”

2 Kings 20.16: 16 Isaiah said to Hezekiah, “Hear Yahweh’s word.

2 Kings 20.17: 17 ‘Behold, the days come that all that is in your house, and that which your fathers have laid up in store to this day, will be carried to Babylon. Nothing will be left,’ says Yahweh.

2 Kings 20.18: 18 ‘They will take away some of your sons who will issue from you, whom you will father; and they will be eunuchs in the palace of the king of Babylon.’”

2 Kings 20.19: 19 Then Hezekiah said to Isaiah, “Yahweh’s word which you have spoken is good.” He said moreover, “Isn’t it so, if peace and truth will be in my days?”

2 Kings 20.20: 20 Now the rest of the acts of Hezekiah, and all his might, and how he made the pool, and the conduit, and brought water into the city, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 20.21: 21 Hezekiah slept with his fathers, and Manasseh his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 21.0:

21

2 Kings 21.1: 1 Manasseh was twelve years old when he began to reign, and he reigned fifty-five years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Hephzibah.

2 Kings 21.2: 2 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, after the abominations of the nations whom Yahweh cast out before the children of Israel.

2 Kings 21.3: 3 For he built again the high places which Hezekiah his father had destroyed; and he raised up altars for Baal, and made an Asherah, as Ahab king of Israel did, and worshiped all the army of the sky, and served them.

2 Kings 21.4: 4 He built altars in Yahweh’s house, of which Yahweh said, “I will put my name in Jerusalem.”

2 Kings 21.5: 5 He built altars for all the army of the sky in the two courts of Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 21.6: 6 He made his son to pass through the fire, practiced sorcery, used enchantments, and dealt with those who had familiar spirits, and with wizards. He did much evil in Yahweh’s sight, to provoke him to anger.

2 Kings 21.7: 7 He set the engraved image of Asherah that he had made in the house of which Yahweh said to David and to Solomon his son, “In this house, and in Jerusalem, which I have chosen out of all the tribes of Israel, I will put my name forever;

2 Kings 21.8: 8 I will not cause the feet of Israel to wander any more out of the land which I gave their fathers, if only they will observe to do according to all that I have commanded them, and according to all the law that my servant Moses commanded them.”

2 Kings 21.9: 9 But they didn’t listen, and Manasseh seduced them to do that which is evil more than the nations did whom Yahweh destroyed before the children of Israel.

2 Kings 21.10: 10 Yahweh spoke by his servants the prophets, saying,

2 Kings 21.11: 11 “Because Manasseh king of Judah has done these abominations, and has done wickedly above all that the Amorites did, who were before him, and has also made Judah to sin with his idols;

2 Kings 21.12: 12 therefore Yahweh the God of Israel says, ‘Behold, I bring such evil on Jerusalem and Judah that whoever hears of it, both his ears will tingle.

2 Kings 21.13: 13 I will stretch over Jerusalem the line of Samaria, and the plummet of Ahab’s house; and I will wipe Jerusalem as a man wipes a dish, wiping it and turning it upside down.

2 Kings 21.14: 14 I will cast off the remnant of my inheritance, and deliver them into the hands of their enemies. They will become a prey and a plunder to all their enemies,

2 Kings 21.15: 15 because they have done that which is evil in my sight, and have provoked me to anger, since the day their fathers came out of Egypt, even to this day.’”

2 Kings 21.16: 16 Moreover Manasseh shed innocent blood very much, until he had filled Jerusalem from one end to another; in addition to his sin with which he made Judah to sin, in doing that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight.

2 Kings 21.17: 17 Now the rest of the acts of Manasseh, and all that he did, and his sin that he sinned, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 21.18: 18 Manasseh slept with his fathers, and was buried in the garden of his own house, in the garden of Uzza; and Amon his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 21.19: 19 Amon was twenty-two years old when he began to reign; and he reigned two years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Meshullemeth the daughter of Haruz of Jotbah.

2 Kings 21.20: 20 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, as Manasseh his father did.

2 Kings 21.21: 21 He walked in all the ways that his father walked in, and served the idols that his father served, and worshiped them;

2 Kings 21.22: 22 and he abandoned Yahweh, the God of his fathers, and didn’t walk in the way of Yahweh.

2 Kings 21.23: 23 The servants of Amon conspired against him, and put the king to death in his own house.

2 Kings 21.24: 24 But the people of the land killed all those who had conspired against king Amon; and the people of the land made Josiah his son king in his place.

2 Kings 21.25: 25 Now the rest of the acts of Amon which he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 21.26: 26 He was buried in his tomb in the garden of Uzza, and Josiah his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 22.0:

22

2 Kings 22.1: 1 Josiah was eight years old when he began to reign, and he reigned thirty-one years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Jedidah the daughter of Adaiah of Bozkath.

2 Kings 22.2: 2 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, and walked in all the way of David his father, and didn’t turn away to the right hand or to the left.

2 Kings 22.3: 3 In the eighteenth year of king Josiah, the king sent Shaphan, the son of Azaliah the son of Meshullam, the scribe, to Yahweh’s house, saying,

2 Kings 22.4: 4 “Go up to Hilkiah the high priest, that he may count the money which is brought into Yahweh’s house, which the keepers of the threshold have gathered of the people.

2 Kings 22.5: 5 Let them deliver it into the hand of the workmen who have the oversight of Yahweh’s house; and let them give it to the workmen who are in Yahweh’s house, to repair the damage to the house,

2 Kings 22.6: 6 to the carpenters, and to the builders, and to the masons, and for buying timber and cut stone to repair the house.

2 Kings 22.7: 7 However there was no accounting made with them of the money that was delivered into their hand; for they dealt faithfully.”

2 Kings 22.8: 8 Hilkiah the high priest said to Shaphan the scribe, “I have found the book of the law in Yahweh’s house.” Hilkiah delivered the book to Shaphan, and he read it.

2 Kings 22.9: 9 Shaphan the scribe came to the king, and brought the king word again, and said, “Your servants have emptied out the money that was found in the house, and have delivered it into the hands of the workmen who have the oversight of Yahweh’s house.”

2 Kings 22.10: 10 Shaphan the scribe told the king, saying, “Hilkiah the priest has delivered a book to me.” Then Shaphan read it before the king.

2 Kings 22.11: 11 When the king had heard the words of the book of the law, he tore his clothes.

2 Kings 22.12: 12 The king commanded Hilkiah the priest, Ahikam the son of Shaphan, Achbor the son of Micaiah, Shaphan the scribe, and Asaiah the king’s servant, saying,

2 Kings 22.13: 13 “Go inquire of Yahweh for me, and for the people, and for all Judah, concerning the words of this book that is found; for great is Yahweh’s wrath that is kindled against us, because our fathers have not listened to the words of this book, to do according to all that which is written concerning us.”

2 Kings 22.14: 14 So Hilkiah the priest, Ahikam, Achbor, Shaphan, and Asaiah, went to Huldah the prophetess, the wife of Shallum the son of Tikvah, the son of Harhas, keeper of the wardrobe (now she lived in Jerusalem in the second quarter); and they talked with her.

2 Kings 22.15: 15 She said to them, “Yahweh the God of Israel says, ‘Tell the man who sent you to me,

2 Kings 22.16: 16 “Yahweh says, ‘Behold, I will bring evil on this place, and on its inhabitants, even all the words of the book which the king of Judah has read.

2 Kings 22.17: 17 Because they have forsaken me, and have burned incense to other gods, that they might provoke me to anger with all the work of their hands, therefore my wrath shall be kindled against this place, and it will not be quenched.’”

2 Kings 22.18: 18 But to the king of Judah, who sent you to inquire of Yahweh, tell him, “Yahweh the God of Israel says, ‘Concerning the words which you have heard,

2 Kings 22.19: 19 because your heart was tender, and you humbled yourself before Yahweh, when you heard what I spoke against this place, and against its inhabitants, that they should become a desolation and a curse, and have torn your clothes, and wept before me; I also have heard you,’ says Yahweh.

2 Kings 22.20: 20 ‘Therefore behold, I will gather you to your fathers, and you will be gathered to your grave in peace. Your eyes will not see all the evil which I will bring on this place.’”’” So they brought this message back to the king.

2 Kings 23.0:

23

2 Kings 23.1: 1 The king sent, and they gathered to him all the elders of Judah and of Jerusalem.

2 Kings 23.2: 2 The king went up to Yahweh’s house, and all the men of Judah and all the inhabitants of Jerusalem with him, with the priests, the prophets, and all the people, both small and great; and he read in their hearing all the words of the book of the covenant which was found in Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 23.3: 3 The king stood by the pillar, and made a covenant before Yahweh, to walk after Yahweh, and to keep his commandments, his testimonies, and his statutes, with all his heart, and all his soul, to confirm the words of this covenant that were written in this book; and all the people agreed to the covenant.

2 Kings 23.4: 4 The king commanded Hilkiah the high priest, and the priests of the second order, and the keepers of the threshold, to bring out of Yahweh’s temple all the vessels that were made for Baal, for the Asherah, and for all the army of the sky, and he burned them outside of Jerusalem in the fields of the Kidron, and carried their ashes to Bethel.

2 Kings 23.5: 5 He got rid of the idolatrous priests, whom the kings of Judah had ordained to burn incense in the high places in the cities of Judah, and in the places around Jerusalem; those also who burned incense to Baal, to the sun, and to the moon, and to the planets, and to all the army of the sky.

2 Kings 23.6: 6 He brought out the Asherah from Yahweh’s house, outside of Jerusalem, to the brook Kidron, and burned it at the brook Kidron, and beat it to dust, and cast its dust on the graves of the common people.

2 Kings 23.7: 7 He broke down the houses of the male shrine prostitutes that were in Yahweh’s house, where the women wove hangings for the Asherah.

2 Kings 23.8: 8 He brought all the priests out of the cities of Judah, and defiled the high places where the priests had burned incense, from Geba to Beersheba; and he broke down the high places of the gates that were at the entrance of the gate of Joshua the governor of the city, which were on a man’s left hand at the gate of the city.

2 Kings 23.9: 9 Nevertheless the priests of the high places didn’t come up to Yahweh’s altar in Jerusalem, but they ate unleavened bread among their brothers.

2 Kings 23.10: 10 He defiled Topheth, which is in the valley of the children of Hinnom, that no man might make his son or his daughter to pass through the fire to Molech.

2 Kings 23.11: 11 He took away the horses that the kings of Judah had given to the sun, at the entrance of Yahweh’s house, by the room of Nathan Melech the officer, who was in the court; and he burned the chariots of the sun with fire.

2 Kings 23.12: 12 The king broke down the altars that were on the roof of the upper room of Ahaz, which the kings of Judah had made, and the altars which Manasseh had made in the two courts of Yahweh’s house, and beat them down from there, and cast their dust into the brook Kidron.

2 Kings 23.13: 13 The king defiled the high places that were before Jerusalem, which were on the right hand of the mountain of corruption, which Solomon the king of Israel had built for Ashtoreth the abomination of the Sidonians, and for Chemosh the abomination of Moab, and for Milcom the abomination of the children of Ammon.

2 Kings 23.14: 14 He broke in pieces the pillars, cut down the Asherah poles, and filled their places with men’s bones.

2 Kings 23.15: 15 Moreover the altar that was at Bethel, and the high place which Jeroboam the son of Nebat, who made Israel to sin, had made, even that altar and the high place he broke down; and he burned the high place and beat it to dust, and burned the Asherah.

2 Kings 23.16: 16 As Josiah turned himself, he spied the tombs that were there in the mountain; and he sent, and took the bones out of the tombs, and burned them on the altar, and defiled it, according to Yahweh’s word which the man of God proclaimed, who proclaimed these things.

2 Kings 23.17: 17 Then he said, “What monument is that which I see?”

The men of the city told him, “It is the tomb of the man of God, who came from Judah, and proclaimed these things that you have done against the altar of Bethel.”

2 Kings 23.18: 18 He said, “Let him be! Let no one move his bones.” So they let his bones alone, with the bones of the prophet who came out of Samaria.

2 Kings 23.19: 19 All the houses also of the high places that were in the cities of Samaria, which the kings of Israel had made to provoke Yahweh to anger, Josiah took away, and did to them according to all the acts that he had done in Bethel.

2 Kings 23.20: 20 He killed all the priests of the high places that were there, on the altars, and burned men’s bones on them; and he returned to Jerusalem.

2 Kings 23.21: 21 The king commanded all the people, saying, “Keep the Passover to Yahweh your God, as it is written in this book of the covenant.”

2 Kings 23.22: 22 Surely there was not kept such a Passover from the days of the judges who judged Israel, nor in all the days of the kings of Israel, nor of the kings of Judah;

2 Kings 23.23: 23 but in the eighteenth year of king Josiah, this Passover was kept to Yahweh in Jerusalem.

2 Kings 23.24: 24 Moreover Josiah removed those who had familiar spirits, the wizards, and the teraphim, and the idols, and all the abominations that were seen in the land of Judah and in Jerusalem, that he might confirm the words of the law which were written in the book that Hilkiah the priest found in Yahweh’s house.

2 Kings 23.25: 25 There was no king like him before him, who turned to Yahweh with all his heart, and with all his soul, and with all his might, according to all the law of Moses; and there was none like him who arose after him.

2 Kings 23.26: 26 Notwithstanding, Yahweh didn’t turn from the fierceness of his great wrath, with which his anger burned against Judah, because of all the provocation with which Manasseh had provoked him.

2 Kings 23.27: 27 Yahweh said, “I will also remove Judah out of my sight, as I have removed Israel, and I will cast off this city which I have chosen, even Jerusalem, and the house of which I said, ‘My name shall be there.’”

2 Kings 23.28: 28 Now the rest of the acts of Josiah, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 23.29: 29 In his days Pharaoh Necoh king of Egypt went up against the king of Assyria to the river Euphrates; and king Josiah went against him; and Pharaoh Necoh killed him at Megiddo, when he had seen him.

2 Kings 23.30: 30 His servants carried him in a chariot dead from Megiddo, and brought him to Jerusalem, and buried him in his own tomb. The people of the land took Jehoahaz the son of Josiah, and anointed him, and made him king in his father’s place.

2 Kings 23.31: 31 Jehoahaz was twenty-three years old when he began to reign; and he reigned three months in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Hamutal the daughter of Jeremiah of Libnah.

2 Kings 23.32: 32 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, according to all that his fathers had done.

2 Kings 23.33: 33 Pharaoh Necoh put him in bonds at Riblah in the land of Hamath, that he might not reign in Jerusalem; and put the land to a tribute of one hundred talents of silver, and a talent of gold.

2 Kings 23.34: 34 Pharaoh Necoh made Eliakim the son of Josiah king in the place of Josiah his father, and changed his name to Jehoiakim; but he took Jehoahaz away, and he came to Egypt and died there.

2 Kings 23.35: 35 Jehoiakim gave the silver and the gold to Pharaoh; but he taxed the land to give the money according to the commandment of Pharaoh. He exacted the silver and the gold of the people of the land, from everyone according to his assessment, to give it to Pharaoh Necoh.

2 Kings 23.36: 36 Jehoiakim was twenty-five years old when he began to reign, and he reigned eleven years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Zebidah the daughter of Pedaiah of Rumah.

2 Kings 23.37: 37 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, according to all that his fathers had done.

2 Kings 24.0:

24

2 Kings 24.1: 1 In his days Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came up, and Jehoiakim became his servant three years. Then he turned and rebelled against him.

2 Kings 24.2: 2 Yahweh sent against him bands of the Chaldeans, and bands of the Syrians, and bands of the Moabites, and bands of the children of Ammon, and sent them against Judah to destroy it, according to Yahweh’s word, which he spoke by his servants the prophets.

2 Kings 24.3: 3 Surely at the commandment of Yahweh this came on Judah, to remove them out of his sight, for the sins of Manasseh, according to all that he did,

2 Kings 24.4: 4 and also for the innocent blood that he shed; for he filled Jerusalem with innocent blood, and Yahweh would not pardon.

2 Kings 24.5: 5 Now the rest of the acts of Jehoiakim, and all that he did, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?

2 Kings 24.6: 6 So Jehoiakim slept with his fathers, and Jehoiachin his son reigned in his place.

2 Kings 24.7: 7 The king of Egypt didn’t come out of his land any more; for the king of Babylon had taken, from the brook of Egypt to the river Euphrates, all that belonged to the king of Egypt.

2 Kings 24.8: 8 Jehoiachin was eighteen years old when he began to reign, and he reigned in Jerusalem three months. His mother’s name was Nehushta the daughter of Elnathan of Jerusalem.

2 Kings 24.9: 9 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, according to all that his father had done.

2 Kings 24.10: 10 At that time the servants of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came up to Jerusalem, and the city was besieged.

2 Kings 24.11: 11 Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came to the city while his servants were besieging it,

2 Kings 24.12: 12 and Jehoiachin the king of Judah went out to the king of Babylon, he, and his mother, and his servants, and his princes, and his officers; and the king of Babylon captured him in the eighth year of his reign.

2 Kings 24.13: 13 He carried out from there all the treasures of Yahweh’s house, and the treasures of the king’s house, and cut in pieces all the vessels of gold, which Solomon king of Israel had made in Yahweh’s temple, as Yahweh had said.

2 Kings 24.14: 14 He carried away all Jerusalem, and all the princes, and all the mighty men of valor, even ten thousand captives, and all the craftsmen and the smiths. No one remained, except the poorest people of the land.

2 Kings 24.15: 15 He carried away Jehoiachin to Babylon, with the king’s mother, the king’s wives, his officers, and the chief men of the land. He carried them into captivity from Jerusalem to Babylon.

2 Kings 24.16: 16 All the men of might, even seven thousand, and the craftsmen and the smiths one thousand, all of them strong and fit for war, even them the king of Babylon brought captive to Babylon.

2 Kings 24.17: 17 The king of Babylon made Mattaniah, Jehoiachin’s father’s brother, king in his place, and changed his name to Zedekiah.

2 Kings 24.18: 18 Zedekiah was twenty-one years old when he began to reign, and he reigned eleven years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Hamutal the daughter of Jeremiah of Libnah.

2 Kings 24.19: 19 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, according to all that Jehoiakim had done.

2 Kings 24.20: 20 For through the anger of Yahweh, this happened in Jerusalem and Judah, until he had cast them out from his presence.

Then Zedekiah rebelled against the king of Babylon.

2 Kings 25.0:

25

2 Kings 25.1: 1 In the ninth year of his reign, in the tenth month, in the tenth day of the month, Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came, he and all his army, against Jerusalem, and encamped against it; and they built forts against it around it.

2 Kings 25.2: 2 So the city was besieged until the eleventh year of king Zedekiah.

2 Kings 25.3: 3 On the ninth day of the fourth month, the famine was severe in the city, so that there was no bread for the people of the land.

2 Kings 25.4: 4 Then a breach was made in the city, and all the men of war fled by night by the way of the gate between the two walls, which was by the king’s garden (now the Chaldeans were against the city around it); and the king went by the way of the Arabah.

2 Kings 25.5: 5 But the Chaldean army pursued the king, and overtook him in the plains of Jericho; and all his army was scattered from him.

2 Kings 25.6: 6 Then they captured the king, and carried him up to the king of Babylon to Riblah; and they passed judgment on him.

2 Kings 25.7: 7 They killed Zedekiah’s sons before his eyes, then put out Zedekiah’s eyes, bound him in fetters, and carried him to Babylon.

2 Kings 25.8: 8 Now in the fifth month, on the seventh day of the month, which was the nineteenth year of king Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, Nebuzaradan the captain of the guard, a servant of the king of Babylon, came to Jerusalem.

2 Kings 25.9: 9 He burned Yahweh’s house, the king’s house, and all the houses of Jerusalem, even every great house, he burned with fire.

2 Kings 25.10: 10 All the army of the Chaldeans, who were with the captain of the guard, broke down the walls around Jerusalem.

2 Kings 25.11: 11 Nebuzaradan the captain of the guard carried away captive the residue of the people who were left in the city, and those who fell away, who fell to the king of Babylon, and the residue of the multitude.

2 Kings 25.12: 12 But the captain of the guard left some of the poorest of the land to work the vineyards and fields.

2 Kings 25.13: 13 The Chaldeans broke up the pillars of bronze that were in Yahweh’s house and the bases and the bronze sea that were in Yahweh’s house, and carried the bronze pieces to Babylon.

2 Kings 25.14: 14 They took away the pots, the shovels, the snuffers, the spoons, and all the vessels of bronze with which they ministered.

2 Kings 25.15: 15 The captain of the guard took away the fire pans, the basins, that which was of gold, in gold, and that which was of silver, in silver.

2 Kings 25.16: 16 The two pillars, the one sea, and the bases, which Solomon had made for Yahweh’s house, the bronze of all these vessels was not weighed.

2 Kings 25.17: 17 The height of the one pillar was eighteen cubits, and a capital of bronze was on it. The height of the capital was three cubits, with network and pomegranates on the capital around it, all of bronze; and the second pillar with its network was like these.

2 Kings 25.18: 18 The captain of the guard took Seraiah the chief priest, Zephaniah the second priest, and the three keepers of the threshold;

2 Kings 25.19: 19 and out of the city he took an officer who was set over the men of war; and five men of those who saw the king’s face, who were found in the city; and the scribe, the captain of the army, who mustered the people of the land; and sixty men of the people of the land, who were found in the city.

2 Kings 25.20: 20 Nebuzaradan the captain of the guard took them, and brought them to the king of Babylon to Riblah.

2 Kings 25.21: 21 The king of Babylon attacked them, and put them to death at Riblah in the land of Hamath. So Judah was carried away captive out of his land.

2 Kings 25.22: 22 As for the people who were left in the land of Judah, whom Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon had left, even over them he made Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, the son of Shaphan, governor.

2 Kings 25.23: 23 Now when all the captains of the forces, they and their men, heard that the king of Babylon had made Gedaliah governor, they came to Gedaliah to Mizpah, even Ishmael the son of Nethaniah, and Johanan the son of Kareah, and Seraiah the son of Tanhumeth the Netophathite, and Jaazaniah the son of the Maacathite, they and their men.

2 Kings 25.24: 24 Gedaliah swore to them and to their men, and said to them, “Don’t be afraid because of the servants of the Chaldeans. Dwell in the land, and serve the king of Babylon, and it will be well with you.”

2 Kings 25.25: 25 But in the seventh month, Ishmael the son of Nethaniah, the son of Elishama, of the royal offspring came, and ten men with him, and struck Gedaliah, so that he died, with the Jews and the Chaldeans that were with him at Mizpah.

2 Kings 25.26: 26 All the people, both small and great, and the captains of the forces, arose, and came to Egypt; for they were afraid of the Chaldeans.

2 Kings 25.27: 27 In the thirty-seventh year of the captivity of Jehoiachin king of Judah, in the twelfth month, on the twenty-seventh day of the month, Evilmerodach king of Babylon, in the year that he began to reign, lifted up the head of Jehoiachin king of Judah out of prison;

2 Kings 25.28: 28 and he spoke kindly to him, and set his throne above the throne of the kings who were with him in Babylon,

2 Kings 25.29: 29 and changed his prison garments. Jehoiachin ate bread before him continually all the days of his life;

2 Kings 25.30: 30 and for his allowance, there was a continual allowance given him from the king, every day a portion, all the days of his life.

1 Chronicles 0.0:

The First Book of Chronicles

1 Chronicles 1.0:

1

1 Chronicles 1.1: 1 Adam, Seth, Enosh,

1 Chronicles 1.2: 2 Kenan, Mahalalel, Jared,

1 Chronicles 1.3: 3 Enoch, Methuselah, Lamech,

1 Chronicles 1.4: 4 Noah, Shem, Ham, and Japheth.

1 Chronicles 1.5: 5 The sons of Japheth: Gomer, Magog, Madai, Javan, Tubal, Meshech, and Tiras.

1 Chronicles 1.6: 6 The sons of Gomer: Ashkenaz, Diphath, and Togarmah.

1 Chronicles 1.7: 7 The sons of Javan: Elishah, Tarshish, Kittim, and Rodanim.

1 Chronicles 1.8: 8 The sons of Ham: Cush, Mizraim, Put, and Canaan.

1 Chronicles 1.9: 9 The sons of Cush: Seba, Havilah, Sabta, Raama, Sabteca. The sons of Raamah: Sheba and Dedan.

1 Chronicles 1.10: 10 Cush became the father of Nimrod. He began to be a mighty one in the earth.

1 Chronicles 1.11: 11 Mizraim became the father of Ludim, Anamim, Lehabim, Naphtuhim,

1 Chronicles 1.12: 12 Pathrusim, Casluhim (where the Philistines came from), and Caphtorim.

1 Chronicles 1.13: 13 Canaan became the father of Sidon his firstborn, Heth,

1 Chronicles 1.14: 14 the Jebusite, and the Amorite, the Girgashite,

1 Chronicles 1.15: 15 the Hivite, the Arkite, the Sinite,

1 Chronicles 1.16: 16 the Arvadite, the Zemarite, and the Hamathite.

1 Chronicles 1.17: 17 The sons of Shem: Elam, Asshur, Arpachshad, Lud, Aram, Uz, Hul, Gether, and Meshech.

1 Chronicles 1.18: 18 Arpachshad became the father of Shelah, and Shelah became the father of Eber.

1 Chronicles 1.19: 19 To Eber were born two sons: the name of the one was Peleg, for in his days the earth was divided; and his brother’s name was Joktan.

1 Chronicles 1.20: 20 Joktan became the father of Almodad, Sheleph, Hazarmaveth, Jerah,

1 Chronicles 1.21: 21 Hadoram, Uzal, Diklah,

1 Chronicles 1.22: 22 Ebal, Abimael, Sheba,

1 Chronicles 1.23: 23 Ophir, Havilah, and Jobab. All these were the sons of Joktan.

1 Chronicles 1.24: 24 Shem, Arpachshad, Shelah,

1 Chronicles 1.25: 25 Eber, Peleg, Reu,

1 Chronicles 1.26: 26 Serug, Nahor, Terah,

1 Chronicles 1.27: 27 Abram (also called Abraham).

1 Chronicles 1.28: 28 The sons of Abraham: Isaac and Ishmael.

1 Chronicles 1.29: 29 These are their generations: the firstborn of Ishmael, Nebaioth; then Kedar, Adbeel, Mibsam,

1 Chronicles 1.30: 30 Mishma, Dumah, Massa, Hadad, Tema,

1 Chronicles 1.31: 31 Jetur, Naphish, and Kedemah. These are the sons of Ishmael.

1 Chronicles 1.32: 32 The sons of Keturah, Abraham’s concubine: she bore Zimran, Jokshan, Medan, Midian, Ishbak, and Shuah. The sons of Jokshan: Sheba and Dedan.

1 Chronicles 1.33: 33 The sons of Midian: Ephah, Epher, Hanoch, Abida, and Eldaah. All these were the sons of Keturah.

1 Chronicles 1.34: 34 Abraham became the father of Isaac. The sons of Isaac: Esau and Israel.

1 Chronicles 1.35: 35 The sons of Esau: Eliphaz, Reuel, Jeush, Jalam, and Korah.

1 Chronicles 1.36: 36 The sons of Eliphaz: Teman, Omar, Zephi, Gatam, Kenaz, Timna, and Amalek.

1 Chronicles 1.37: 37 The sons of Reuel: Nahath, Zerah, Shammah, and Mizzah.

1 Chronicles 1.38: 38 The sons of Seir: Lotan, Shobal, Zibeon, Anah, Dishon, Ezer, and Dishan.

1 Chronicles 1.39: 39 The sons of Lotan: Hori and Homam; and Timna was Lotan’s sister.

1 Chronicles 1.40: 40 The sons of Shobal: Alian, Manahath, Ebal, Shephi, and Onam. The sons of Zibeon: Aiah and Anah.

1 Chronicles 1.41: 41 The son of Anah: Dishon. The sons of Dishon: Hamran, Eshban, Ithran, and Cheran.

1 Chronicles 1.42: 42 The sons of Ezer: Bilhan, Zaavan, and Jaakan. The sons of Dishan: Uz and Aran.

1 Chronicles 1.43: 43 Now these are the kings who reigned in the land of Edom, before any king reigned over the children of Israel: Bela the son of Beor; and the name of his city was Dinhabah.

1 Chronicles 1.44: 44 Bela died, and Jobab the son of Zerah of Bozrah reigned in his place.

1 Chronicles 1.45: 45 Jobab died, and Husham of the land of the Temanites reigned in his place.

1 Chronicles 1.46: 46 Husham died, and Hadad the son of Bedad, who struck Midian in the field of Moab, reigned in his place; and the name of his city was Avith.

1 Chronicles 1.47: 47 Hadad died, and Samlah of Masrekah reigned in his place.

1 Chronicles 1.48: 48 Samlah died, and Shaul of Rehoboth by the River reigned in his place.

1 Chronicles 1.49: 49 Shaul died, and Baal Hanan the son of Achbor reigned in his place.

1 Chronicles 1.50: 50 Baal Hanan died, and Hadad reigned in his place; and the name of his city was Pai: and his wife’s name was Mehetabel, the daughter of Matred, the daughter of Mezahab.

1 Chronicles 1.51: 51 Then Hadad died. The chiefs of Edom were: chief Timna, chief Aliah, chief Jetheth,

1 Chronicles 1.52: 52 chief Oholibamah, chief Elah, chief Pinon,

1 Chronicles 1.53: 53 chief Kenaz, chief Teman, chief Mibzar,

1 Chronicles 1.54: 54 chief Magdiel, and chief Iram. These are the chiefs of Edom.

1 Chronicles 2.0:

2

1 Chronicles 2.1: 1 These are the sons of Israel: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Zebulun,

1 Chronicles 2.2: 2 Dan, Joseph, Benjamin, Naphtali, Gad, and Asher.

1 Chronicles 2.3: 3 The sons of Judah: Er, Onan, and Shelah; which three were born to him of Shua’s daughter the Canaanitess. Er, Judah’s firstborn, was wicked in Yahweh’s sight; and he killed him.

1 Chronicles 2.4: 4 Tamar his daughter-in-law bore him Perez and Zerah. All the sons of Judah were five.

1 Chronicles 2.5: 5 The sons of Perez: Hezron and Hamul.

1 Chronicles 2.6: 6 The sons of Zerah: Zimri, Ethan, Heman, Calcol, and Dara; five of them in all.

1 Chronicles 2.7: 7 The son of Carmi: Achar, the troubler of Israel, who committed a trespass in the devoted thing.

1 Chronicles 2.8: 8 The son of Ethan: Azariah.

1 Chronicles 2.9: 9 The sons also of Hezron, who were born to him: Jerahmeel, Ram, and Chelubai.

1 Chronicles 2.10: 10 Ram became the father of Amminadab, and Amminadab became the father of Nahshon, prince of the children of Judah;

1 Chronicles 2.11: 11 and Nahshon became the father of Salma, and Salma became the father of Boaz,

1 Chronicles 2.12: 12 and Boaz became the father of Obed, and Obed became the father of Jesse;

1 Chronicles 2.13: 13 and Jesse became the father of his firstborn Eliab, and Abinadab the second, and Shimea the third,

1 Chronicles 2.14: 14 Nethanel the fourth, Raddai the fifth,

1 Chronicles 2.15: 15 Ozem the sixth, David the seventh;

1 Chronicles 2.16: 16 and their sisters were Zeruiah and Abigail. The sons of Zeruiah: Abishai, Joab, and Asahel, three.

1 Chronicles 2.17: 17 Abigail bore Amasa; and the father of Amasa was Jether the Ishmaelite.

1 Chronicles 2.18: 18 Caleb the son of Hezron became the father of children of Azubah his wife, and of Jerioth; and these were her sons: Jesher, Shobab, and Ardon.

1 Chronicles 2.19: 19 Azubah died, and Caleb married Ephrath, who bore him Hur.

1 Chronicles 2.20: 20 Hur became the father of Uri, and Uri became the father of Bezalel.

1 Chronicles 2.21: 21 Afterward Hezron went in to the daughter of Machir the father of Gilead, whom he took as wife when he was sixty years old; and she bore him Segub.

1 Chronicles 2.22: 22 Segub became the father of Jair, who had twenty-three cities in the land of Gilead.

1 Chronicles 2.23: 23 Geshur and Aram took the towns of Jair from them, with Kenath, and its villages, even sixty cities. All these were the sons of Machir the father of Gilead.

1 Chronicles 2.24: 24 After Hezron died in Caleb Ephrathah, Abijah Hezron’s wife bore him Ashhur the father of Tekoa.

1 Chronicles 2.25: 25 The sons of Jerahmeel the firstborn of Hezron were Ram the firstborn, Bunah, Oren, Ozem, and Ahijah.

1 Chronicles 2.26: 26 Jerahmeel had another wife, whose name was Atarah. She was the mother of Onam.

1 Chronicles 2.27: 27 The sons of Ram the firstborn of Jerahmeel were Maaz, Jamin, and Eker.

1 Chronicles 2.28: 28 The sons of Onam were Shammai and Jada. The sons of Shammai: Nadab and Abishur.

1 Chronicles 2.29: 29 The name of the wife of Abishur was Abihail; and she bore him Ahban and Molid.

1 Chronicles 2.30: 30 The sons of Nadab: Seled and Appaim; but Seled died without children.

1 Chronicles 2.31: 31 The son of Appaim: Ishi. The son of Ishi: Sheshan. The son of Sheshan: Ahlai.

1 Chronicles 2.32: 32 The sons of Jada the brother of Shammai: Jether and Jonathan; and Jether died without children.

1 Chronicles 2.33: 33 The sons of Jonathan: Peleth and Zaza. These were the sons of Jerahmeel.

1 Chronicles 2.34: 34 Now Sheshan had no sons, but daughters. Sheshan had a servant, an Egyptian, whose name was Jarha.

1 Chronicles 2.35: 35 Sheshan gave his daughter to Jarha his servant as wife; and she bore him Attai.

1 Chronicles 2.36: 36 Attai became the father of Nathan, and Nathan became the father of Zabad,

1 Chronicles 2.37: 37 and Zabad became the father of Ephlal, and Ephlal became the father of Obed,

1 Chronicles 2.38: 38 and Obed became the father of Jehu, and Jehu became the father of Azariah,

1 Chronicles 2.39: 39 and Azariah became the father of Helez, and Helez became the father of Eleasah,

1 Chronicles 2.40: 40 and Eleasah became the father of Sismai, and Sismai became the father of Shallum,

1 Chronicles 2.41: 41 and Shallum became the father of Jekamiah, and Jekamiah became the father of Elishama.

1 Chronicles 2.42: 42 The sons of Caleb the brother of Jerahmeel were Mesha his firstborn, who was the father of Ziph; and the sons of Mareshah the father of Hebron.

1 Chronicles 2.43: 43 The sons of Hebron: Korah, Tappuah, Rekem, and Shema.

1 Chronicles 2.44: 44 Shema became the father of Raham, the father of Jorkeam; and Rekem became the father of Shammai.

1 Chronicles 2.45: 45 The son of Shammai was Maon; and Maon was the father of Beth Zur.

1 Chronicles 2.46: 46 Ephah, Caleb’s concubine, bore Haran, Moza, and Gazez; and Haran became the father of Gazez.

1 Chronicles 2.47: 47 The sons of Jahdai: Regem, Jothan, Geshan, Pelet, Ephah, and Shaaph.

1 Chronicles 2.48: 48 Maacah, Caleb’s concubine, bore Sheber and Tirhanah.

1 Chronicles 2.49: 49 She bore also Shaaph the father of Madmannah, Sheva the father of Machbena, and the father of Gibea; and the daughter of Caleb was Achsah.

1 Chronicles 2.50: 50 These were the sons of Caleb, the son of Hur, the firstborn of Ephrathah: Shobal the father of Kiriath Jearim,

1 Chronicles 2.51: 51 Salma the father of Bethlehem, and Hareph the father of Beth Gader.

1 Chronicles 2.52: 52 Shobal the father of Kiriath Jearim had sons: Haroeh, half of the Menuhoth.

1 Chronicles 2.53: 53 The families of Kiriath Jearim: the Ithrites, the Puthites, the Shumathites, and the Mishraites; from them came the Zorathites and the Eshtaolites.

1 Chronicles 2.54: 54 The sons of Salma: Bethlehem, the Netophathites, Atroth Beth Joab, and half of the Manahathites, the Zorites.

1 Chronicles 2.55: 55 The families of scribes who lived at Jabez: the Tirathites, the Shimeathites, and the Sucathites. These are the Kenites who came from Hammath, the father of the house of Rechab.

1 Chronicles 3.0:

3

1 Chronicles 3.1: 1 Now these were the sons of David, who were born to him in Hebron: the firstborn, Amnon, of Ahinoam the Jezreelitess; the second, Daniel, of Abigail the Carmelitess;

1 Chronicles 3.2: 2 the third, Absalom the son of Maacah the daughter of Talmai king of Geshur; the fourth, Adonijah the son of Haggith;

1 Chronicles 3.3: 3 the fifth, Shephatiah of Abital; the sixth, Ithream by Eglah his wife:

1 Chronicles 3.4: 4 six were born to him in Hebron; and he reigned there seven years and six months. He reigned thirty-three years in Jerusalem;

1 Chronicles 3.5: 5 and these were born to him in Jerusalem: Shimea, Shobab, Nathan, and Solomon, four, of Bathshua the daughter of Ammiel;

1 Chronicles 3.6: 6 and Ibhar, Elishama, Eliphelet,

1 Chronicles 3.7: 7 Nogah, Nepheg, Japhia,

1 Chronicles 3.8: 8 Elishama, Eliada, and Eliphelet, nine.

1 Chronicles 3.9: 9 All these were the sons of David, in addition to the sons of the concubines; and Tamar was their sister.

1 Chronicles 3.10: 10 Solomon’s son was Rehoboam, Abijah his son, Asa his son, Jehoshaphat his son,

1 Chronicles 3.11: 11 Joram his son, Ahaziah his son, Joash his son,

1 Chronicles 3.12: 12 Amaziah his son, Azariah his son, Jotham his son,

1 Chronicles 3.13: 13 Ahaz his son, Hezekiah his son, Manasseh his son,

1 Chronicles 3.14: 14 Amon his son, and Josiah his son.

1 Chronicles 3.15: 15 The sons of Josiah: the firstborn Johanan, the second Jehoiakim, the third Zedekiah, and the fourth Shallum.

1 Chronicles 3.16: 16 The sons of Jehoiakim: Jeconiah his son, and Zedekiah his son.

1 Chronicles 3.17: 17 The sons of Jeconiah, the captive: Shealtiel his son,

1 Chronicles 3.18: 18 Malchiram, Pedaiah, Shenazzar, Jekamiah, Hoshama, and Nedabiah.

1 Chronicles 3.19: 19 The sons of Pedaiah: Zerubbabel and Shimei. The sons of Zerubbabel: Meshullam and Hananiah; and Shelomith was their sister;

1 Chronicles 3.20: 20 and Hashubah, Ohel, Berechiah, Hasadiah, and Jushab Hesed, five.

1 Chronicles 3.21: 21 The sons of Hananiah: Pelatiah and Jeshaiah; the sons of Rephaiah, the sons of Arnan, the sons of Obadiah, the sons of Shecaniah.

1 Chronicles 3.22: 22 The son of Shecaniah: Shemaiah. The sons of Shemaiah: Hattush, Igal, Bariah, Neariah, and Shaphat, six.

1 Chronicles 3.23: 23 The sons of Neariah: Elioenai, Hizkiah, and Azrikam, three.

1 Chronicles 3.24: 24 The sons of Elioenai: Hodaviah, Eliashib, Pelaiah, Akkub, Johanan, Delaiah, and Anani, seven.

1 Chronicles 4.0:

4

1 Chronicles 4.1: 1 The sons of Judah: Perez, Hezron, Carmi, Hur, and Shobal.

1 Chronicles 4.2: 2 Reaiah the son of Shobal became the father of Jahath; and Jahath became the father of Ahumai and Lahad. These are the families of the Zorathites.

1 Chronicles 4.3: 3 These were the sons of the father of Etam: Jezreel, Ishma, and Idbash. The name of their sister was Hazzelelponi.

1 Chronicles 4.4: 4 Penuel was the father of Gedor and Ezer the father of Hushah. These are the sons of Hur, the firstborn of Ephrathah, the father of Bethlehem.

1 Chronicles 4.5: 5 Ashhur the father of Tekoa had two wives, Helah and Naarah.

1 Chronicles 4.6: 6 Naarah bore him Ahuzzam, Hepher, Temeni, and Haahashtari. These were the sons of Naarah.

1 Chronicles 4.7: 7 The sons of Helah were Zereth, Izhar, and Ethnan.

1 Chronicles 4.8: 8 Hakkoz became the father of Anub, Zobebah, and the families of Aharhel the son of Harum.

1 Chronicles 4.9: 9 Jabez was more honorable than his brothers. His mother named him Jabez, saying, “Because I bore him with sorrow.”

1 Chronicles 4.10: 10 Jabez called on the God of Israel, saying, “Oh that you would bless me indeed, and enlarge my border! May your hand be with me, and may you keep me from evil, that I may not cause pain!”

God granted him that which he requested.

1 Chronicles 4.11: 11 Chelub the brother of Shuhah became the father of Mehir, who was the father of Eshton.

1 Chronicles 4.12: 12 Eshton became the father of Beth Rapha, Paseah, and Tehinnah the father of Ir Nahash. These are the men of Recah.

1 Chronicles 4.13: 13 The sons of Kenaz: Othniel and Seraiah. The sons of Othniel: Hathath.

1 Chronicles 4.14: 14 Meonothai became the father of Ophrah: and Seraiah became the father of Joab the father of Ge Harashim; for they were craftsmen.

1 Chronicles 4.15: 15 The sons of Caleb the son of Jephunneh: Iru, Elah, and Naam. The son of Elah: Kenaz.

1 Chronicles 4.16: 16 The sons of Jehallelel: Ziph, Ziphah, Tiria, and Asarel.

1 Chronicles 4.17: 17 The sons of Ezrah: Jether, Mered, Epher, and Jalon; and she bore Miriam, Shammai, and Ishbah the father of Eshtemoa.

1 Chronicles 4.18: 18 His wife the Jewess bore Jered the father of Gedor, Heber the father of Soco, and Jekuthiel the father of Zanoah. These are the sons of Bithiah the daughter of Pharaoh, whom Mered took.

1 Chronicles 4.19: 19 The sons of the wife of Hodiah, the sister of Naham, were the father of Keilah the Garmite, and Eshtemoa the Maacathite.

1 Chronicles 4.20: 20 The sons of Shimon: Amnon, Rinnah, Ben Hanan, and Tilon. The sons of Ishi: Zoheth, and Ben Zoheth.

1 Chronicles 4.21: 21 The sons of Shelah the son of Judah: Er the father of Lecah, Laadah the father of Mareshah, and the families of the house of those who worked fine linen, of the house of Ashbea;

1 Chronicles 4.22: 22 and Jokim, and the men of Cozeba, and Joash, and Saraph, who had dominion in Moab, and Jashubilehem. These records are ancient.

1 Chronicles 4.23: 23 These were the potters, and the inhabitants of Netaim and Gederah: they lived there with the king for his work.

1 Chronicles 4.24: 24 The sons of Simeon: Nemuel, Jamin, Jarib, Zerah, Shaul;

1 Chronicles 4.25: 25 Shallum his son, Mibsam his son, and Mishma his son.

1 Chronicles 4.26: 26 The sons of Mishma: Hammuel his son, Zaccur his son, Shimei his son.

1 Chronicles 4.27: 27 Shimei had sixteen sons and six daughters; but his brothers didn’t have many children, and all their family didn’t multiply like the children of Judah.

1 Chronicles 4.28: 28 They lived at Beersheba, Moladah, Hazarshual,

1 Chronicles 4.29: 29 at Bilhah, at Ezem, at Tolad,

1 Chronicles 4.30: 30 at Bethuel, at Hormah, at Ziklag,

1 Chronicles 4.31: 31 at Beth Marcaboth, Hazar Susim, at Beth Biri, and at Shaaraim. These were their cities until David’s reign.

1 Chronicles 4.32: 32 Their villages were Etam, Ain, Rimmon, Tochen, and Ashan, five cities;

1 Chronicles 4.33: 33 and all their villages that were around the same cities, to Baal. These were their settlements, and they have their genealogy.

1 Chronicles 4.34: 34 Meshobab, Jamlech, Joshah the son of Amaziah,

1 Chronicles 4.35: 35 Joel, Jehu the son of Joshibiah, the son of Seraiah, the son of Asiel,

1 Chronicles 4.36: 36 Elioenai, Jaakobah, Jeshohaiah, Asaiah, Adiel, Jesimiel, Benaiah,

1 Chronicles 4.37: 37 and Ziza the son of Shiphi, the son of Allon, the son of Jedaiah, the son of Shimri, the son of Shemaiah—

1 Chronicles 4.38: 38 these mentioned by name were princes in their families. Their fathers’ houses increased greatly.

1 Chronicles 4.39: 39 They went to the entrance of Gedor, even to the east side of the valley, to seek pasture for their flocks.

1 Chronicles 4.40: 40 They found fat pasture and good, and the land was wide, and quiet, and peaceful; for those who lived there before were descended from Ham.

1 Chronicles 4.41: 41 These written by name came in the days of Hezekiah king of Judah, and struck their tents. The Meunim who were found there, and they destroyed them utterly to this day, and lived in their place; because there was pasture there for their flocks.

1 Chronicles 4.42: 42 Some of them, even of the sons of Simeon, five hundred men, went to Mount Seir, having for their captains Pelatiah, Neariah, Rephaiah, and Uzziel, the sons of Ishi.

1 Chronicles 4.43: 43 They struck the remnant of the Amalekites who escaped, and have lived there to this day.

1 Chronicles 5.0:

5

1 Chronicles 5.1: 1 The sons of Reuben the firstborn of Israel (for he was the firstborn; but, because he defiled his father’s couch, his birthright was given to the sons of Joseph the son of Israel; and the genealogy is not to be listed according to the birthright.

1 Chronicles 5.2: 2 For Judah prevailed above his brothers, and from him came the prince; but the birthright was Joseph’s)—

1 Chronicles 5.3: 3 the sons of Reuben the firstborn of Israel: Hanoch, Pallu, Hezron, and Carmi.

1 Chronicles 5.4: 4 The sons of Joel: Shemaiah his son, Gog his son, Shimei his son,

1 Chronicles 5.5: 5 Micah his son, Reaiah his son, Baal his son,

1 Chronicles 5.6: 6 and Beerah his son, whom Tilgath Pilneser king of Assyria carried away captive. He was prince of the Reubenites.

1 Chronicles 5.7: 7 His brothers by their families, when the genealogy of their generations was listed: the chief, Jeiel, and Zechariah,

1 Chronicles 5.8: 8 and Bela the son of Azaz, the son of Shema, the son of Joel, who lived in Aroer, even to Nebo and Baal Meon;

1 Chronicles 5.9: 9 and he lived eastward even to the entrance of the wilderness from the river Euphrates, because their livestock were multiplied in the land of Gilead.

1 Chronicles 5.10: 10 In the days of Saul, they made war with the Hagrites, who fell by their hand; and they lived in their tents throughout all the land east of Gilead.

1 Chronicles 5.11: 11 The sons of Gad lived beside them, in the land of Bashan to Salecah:

1 Chronicles 5.12: 12 Joel the chief, Shapham the second, Janai, and Shaphat in Bashan.

1 Chronicles 5.13: 13 Their brothers of their fathers’ houses: Michael, Meshullam, Sheba, Jorai, Jacan, Zia, and Eber, seven.

1 Chronicles 5.14: 14 These were the sons of Abihail, the son of Huri, the son of Jaroah, the son of Gilead, the son of Michael, the son of Jeshishai, the son of Jahdo, the son of Buz;

1 Chronicles 5.15: 15 Ahi the son of Abdiel, the son of Guni, chief of their fathers’ houses.

1 Chronicles 5.16: 16 They lived in Gilead in Bashan, and in its towns, and in all the pasture lands of Sharon, as far as their borders.

1 Chronicles 5.17: 17 All these were listed by genealogies in the days of Jotham king of Judah, and in the days of Jeroboam king of Israel.

1 Chronicles 5.18: 18 The sons of Reuben, the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh, of valiant men, men able to bear buckler and sword, and to shoot with bow, and skillful in war, were forty-four thousand seven hundred sixty, that were able to go out to war.

1 Chronicles 5.19: 19 They made war with the Hagrites, with Jetur, and Naphish, and Nodab.

1 Chronicles 5.20: 20 They were helped against them, and the Hagrites were delivered into their hand, and all who were with them; for they cried to God in the battle, and he answered them, because they put their trust in him.

1 Chronicles 5.21: 21 They took away their livestock; of their camels fifty thousand, and of sheep two hundred fifty thousand, and of donkeys two thousand, and of men one hundred thousand.

1 Chronicles 5.22: 22 For many fell slain, because the war was of God. They lived in their place until the captivity.

1 Chronicles 5.23: 23 The children of the half-tribe of Manasseh lived in the land: they increased from Bashan to Baal Hermon, Senir, and Mount Hermon.

1 Chronicles 5.24: 24 These were the heads of their fathers’ houses: even Epher, Ishi, Eliel, Azriel, Jeremiah, Hodaviah, and Jahdiel, mighty men of valor, famous men, heads of their fathers’ houses.

1 Chronicles 5.25: 25 They trespassed against the God of their fathers, and played the prostitute after the gods of the peoples of the land, whom God destroyed before them.

1 Chronicles 5.26: 26 So the God of Israel stirred up the spirit of Pul king of Assyria, and the spirit of Tilgath Pilneser king of Assyria, and he carried them away, even the Reubenites, and the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh, and brought them to Halah, Habor, Hara, and to the river of Gozan, to this day.

1 Chronicles 6.0:

6

1 Chronicles 6.1: 1 The sons of Levi: Gershon, Kohath, and Merari.

1 Chronicles 6.2: 2 The sons of Kohath: Amram, Izhar, and Hebron, and Uzziel.

1 Chronicles 6.3: 3 The children of Amram: Aaron, Moses, and Miriam. The sons of Aaron: Nadab, Abihu, Eleazar, and Ithamar.

1 Chronicles 6.4: 4 Eleazar became the father of Phinehas, Phinehas became the father of Abishua,

1 Chronicles 6.5: 5 Abishua became the father of Bukki. Bukki became the father of Uzzi.

1 Chronicles 6.6: 6 Uzzi became the father of Zerahiah. Zerahiah became the father of Meraioth.

1 Chronicles 6.7: 7 Meraioth became the father of Amariah. Amariah became the father of Ahitub.

1 Chronicles 6.8: 8 Ahitub became the father of Zadok. Zadok became the father of Ahimaaz.

1 Chronicles 6.9: 9 Ahimaaz became the father of Azariah. Azariah became the father of Johanan.

1 Chronicles 6.10: 10 Johanan became the father of Azariah, who executed the priest’s office in the house that Solomon built in Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 6.11: 11 Azariah became the father of Amariah. Amariah became the father of Ahitub.

1 Chronicles 6.12: 12 Ahitub became the father of Zadok. Zadok became the father of Shallum.

1 Chronicles 6.13: 13 Shallum became the father of Hilkiah. Hilkiah became the father of Azariah.

1 Chronicles 6.14: 14 Azariah became the father of Seraiah. Seraiah became the father of Jehozadak.

1 Chronicles 6.15: 15 Jehozadak went into captivity, when Yahweh carried Judah and Jerusalem away by the hand of Nebuchadnezzar.

1 Chronicles 6.16: 16 The sons of Levi: Gershom, Kohath, and Merari.

1 Chronicles 6.17: 17 These are the names of the sons of Gershom: Libni and Shimei.

1 Chronicles 6.18: 18 The sons of Kohath were Amram, Izhar, Hebron, and Uzziel.

1 Chronicles 6.19: 19 The sons of Merari: Mahli and Mushi. These are the families of the Levites according to their fathers’ households.

1 Chronicles 6.20: 20 Of Gershom: Libni his son, Jahath his son, Zimmah his son,

1 Chronicles 6.21: 21 Joah his son, Iddo his son, Zerah his son, and Jeatherai his son.

1 Chronicles 6.22: 22 The sons of Kohath: Amminadab his son, Korah his son, Assir his son,

1 Chronicles 6.23: 23 Elkanah his son, and Ebiasaph his son, Assir his son,

1 Chronicles 6.24: 24 Tahath his son, Uriel his son, Uzziah his son, and Shaul his son.

1 Chronicles 6.25: 25 The sons of Elkanah: Amasai and Ahimoth.

1 Chronicles 6.26: 26 As for Elkanah, the sons of Elkanah: Zophai his son, Nahath his son,

1 Chronicles 6.27: 27 Eliab his son, Jeroham his son, and Elkanah his son.

1 Chronicles 6.28: 28 The sons of Samuel: the firstborn, Joel, and the second, Abijah.

1 Chronicles 6.29: 29 The sons of Merari: Mahli, Libni his son, Shimei his son, Uzzah his son,

1 Chronicles 6.30: 30 Shimea his son, Haggiah his son, Asaiah his son.

1 Chronicles 6.31: 31 These are they whom David set over the service of song in Yahweh’s house, after the ark came to rest there.

1 Chronicles 6.32: 32 They ministered with song before the tabernacle of the Tent of Meeting, until Solomon had built Yahweh’s house in Jerusalem. They performed the duties of their office according to their order.

1 Chronicles 6.33: 33 These are those who served, and their sons. Of the sons of the Kohathites: Heman the singer, the son of Joel, the son of Samuel,

1 Chronicles 6.34: 34 the son of Elkanah, the son of Jeroham, the son of Eliel, the son of Toah,

1 Chronicles 6.35: 35 the son of Zuph, the son of Elkanah, the son of Mahath, the son of Amasai,

1 Chronicles 6.36: 36 the son of Elkanah, the son of Joel, the son of Azariah, the son of Zephaniah,

1 Chronicles 6.37: 37 the son of Tahath, the son of Assir, the son of Ebiasaph, the son of Korah,

1 Chronicles 6.38: 38 the son of Izhar, the son of Kohath, the son of Levi, the son of Israel.

1 Chronicles 6.39: 39 His brother Asaph, who stood on his right hand, even Asaph the son of Berechiah, the son of Shimea,

1 Chronicles 6.40: 40 the son of Michael, the son of Baaseiah, the son of Malchijah,

1 Chronicles 6.41: 41 the son of Ethni, the son of Zerah, the son of Adaiah,

1 Chronicles 6.42: 42 the son of Ethan, the son of Zimmah, the son of Shimei,

1 Chronicles 6.43: 43 the son of Jahath, the son of Gershom, the son of Levi.

1 Chronicles 6.44: 44 On the left hand their brothers the sons of Merari: Ethan the son of Kishi, the son of Abdi, the son of Malluch,

1 Chronicles 6.45: 45 the son of Hashabiah, the son of Amaziah, the son of Hilkiah,

1 Chronicles 6.46: 46 the son of Amzi, the son of Bani, the son of Shemer,

1 Chronicles 6.47: 47 the son of Mahli, the son of Mushi, the son of Merari, the son of Levi.

1 Chronicles 6.48: 48 Their brothers the Levites were appointed for all the service of the tabernacle of God’s house.

1 Chronicles 6.49: 49 But Aaron and his sons offered on the altar of burnt offering, and on the altar of incense, for all the work of the most holy place, and to make atonement for Israel, according to all that Moses the servant of God had commanded.

1 Chronicles 6.50: 50 These are the sons of Aaron: Eleazar his son, Phinehas his son, Abishua his son,

1 Chronicles 6.51: 51 Bukki his son, Uzzi his son, Zerahiah his son,

1 Chronicles 6.52: 52 Meraioth his son, Amariah his son, Ahitub his son,

1 Chronicles 6.53: 53 Zadok his son, and Ahimaaz his son.

1 Chronicles 6.54: 54 Now these are their dwelling places according to their encampments in their borders: to the sons of Aaron, of the families of the Kohathites (for theirs was the first lot),

1 Chronicles 6.55: 55 to them they gave Hebron in the land of Judah, and its pasture lands around it;

1 Chronicles 6.56: 56 but the fields of the city, and its villages, they gave to Caleb the son of Jephunneh.

1 Chronicles 6.57: 57 To the sons of Aaron they gave the cities of refuge, Hebron; Libnah also with its pasture lands, Jattir, Eshtemoa with its pasture lands,

1 Chronicles 6.58: 58 Hilen with its pasture lands, Debir with its pasture lands,

1 Chronicles 6.59: 59 Ashan with its pasture lands, and Beth Shemesh with its pasture lands;

1 Chronicles 6.60: 60 and out of the tribe of Benjamin, Geba with its pasture lands, Allemeth with its pasture lands, and Anathoth with its pasture lands. All their cities throughout their families were thirteen cities.

1 Chronicles 6.61: 61 To the rest of the sons of Kohath were given by lot, out of the family of the tribe, out of the half-tribe, the half of Manasseh, ten cities.

1 Chronicles 6.62: 62 To the sons of Gershom, according to their families, out of the tribe of Issachar, and out of the tribe of Asher, and out of the tribe of Naphtali, and out of the tribe of Manasseh in Bashan, thirteen cities.

1 Chronicles 6.63: 63 To the sons of Merari were given by lot, according to their families, out of the tribe of Reuben, and out of the tribe of Gad, and out of the tribe of Zebulun, twelve cities.

1 Chronicles 6.64: 64 The children of Israel gave to the Levites the cities with their pasture lands.

1 Chronicles 6.65: 65 They gave by lot out of the tribe of the children of Judah, and out of the tribe of the children of Simeon, and out of the tribe of the children of Benjamin, these cities which are mentioned by name.

1 Chronicles 6.66: 66 Some of the families of the sons of Kohath had cities of their borders out of the tribe of Ephraim.

1 Chronicles 6.67: 67 They gave to them the cities of refuge, Shechem in the hill country of Ephraim with its pasture lands, and Gezer with its pasture lands,

1 Chronicles 6.68: 68 Jokmeam with its pasture lands, Beth Horon with its pasture lands,

1 Chronicles 6.69: 69 Aijalon with its pasture lands, Gath Rimmon with its pasture lands;

1 Chronicles 6.70: 70 and out of the half-tribe of Manasseh, Aner with its pasture lands, and Bileam with its pasture lands, for the rest of the family of the sons of Kohath.

1 Chronicles 6.71: 71 To the sons of Gershom were given, out of the family of the half-tribe of Manasseh, Golan in Bashan with its pasture lands, and Ashtaroth with its pasture lands;

1 Chronicles 6.72: 72 and out of the tribe of Issachar, Kedesh with its pasture lands, Daberath with its pasture lands,

1 Chronicles 6.73: 73 Ramoth with its pasture lands, and Anem with its pasture lands;

1 Chronicles 6.74: 74 and out of the tribe of Asher, Mashal with its pasture lands, Abdon with its pasture lands,

1 Chronicles 6.75: 75 Hukok with its pasture lands, and Rehob with its pasture lands;

1 Chronicles 6.76: 76 and out of the tribe of Naphtali, Kedesh in Galilee with its pasture lands, Hammon with its pasture lands, and Kiriathaim with its pasture lands.

1 Chronicles 6.77: 77 To the rest of the Levites, the sons of Merari, were given, out of the tribe of Zebulun, Rimmono with its pasture lands, Tabor with its pasture lands;

1 Chronicles 6.78: 78 and beyond the Jordan at Jericho, on the east side of the Jordan, were given them, out of the tribe of Reuben, Bezer in the wilderness with its pasture lands, and Jahzah with its pasture lands,

1 Chronicles 6.79: 79 Kedemoth with its pasture lands, and Mephaath with its pasture lands;

1 Chronicles 6.80: 80 and out of the tribe of Gad, Ramoth in Gilead with its pasture lands, Mahanaim with its pasture lands,

1 Chronicles 6.81: 81 Heshbon with its pasture lands, and Jazer with its pasture lands.

1 Chronicles 7.0:

7

1 Chronicles 7.1: 1 Of the sons of Issachar: Tola, and Puah, Jashub, and Shimron, four.

1 Chronicles 7.2: 2 The sons of Tola: Uzzi, Rephaiah, Jeriel, Jahmai, Ibsam, and Shemuel, heads of their fathers’ houses, of Tola; mighty men of valor in their generations. Their number in the days of David was twenty-two thousand six hundred.

1 Chronicles 7.3: 3 The son of Uzzi: Izrahiah. The sons of Izrahiah: Michael, Obadiah, Joel, and Isshiah, five; all of them chief men.

1 Chronicles 7.4: 4 With them, by their generations, after their fathers’ houses, were bands of the army for war, thirty-six thousand; for they had many wives and sons.

1 Chronicles 7.5: 5 Their brothers among all the families of Issachar, mighty men of valor, listed in all by genealogy, were eighty-seven thousand.

1 Chronicles 7.6: 6 The sons of Benjamin: Bela, Becher, and Jediael, three.

1 Chronicles 7.7: 7 The sons of Bela: Ezbon, Uzzi, Uzziel, Jerimoth, and Iri, five; heads of fathers’ houses, mighty men of valor; and they were listed by genealogy twenty-two thousand thirty-four.

1 Chronicles 7.8: 8 The sons of Becher: Zemirah, Joash, Eliezer, Elioenai, Omri, Jeremoth, Abijah, Anathoth, and Alemeth. All these were the sons of Becher.

1 Chronicles 7.9: 9 They were listed by genealogy, after their generations, heads of their fathers’ houses, mighty men of valor, twenty thousand two hundred.

1 Chronicles 7.10: 10 The son of Jediael: Bilhan. The sons of Bilhan: Jeush, Benjamin, Ehud, Chenaanah, Zethan, Tarshish, and Ahishahar.

1 Chronicles 7.11: 11 All these were sons of Jediael, according to the heads of their fathers’ households, mighty men of valor, seventeen thousand two hundred, who were able to go out in the army for war.

1 Chronicles 7.12: 12 So were Shuppim, Huppim, the sons of Ir, Hushim, and the sons of Aher.

1 Chronicles 7.13: 13 The sons of Naphtali: Jahziel, Guni, Jezer, Shallum, and the sons of Bilhah.

1 Chronicles 7.14: 14 The sons of Manasseh: Asriel, whom his concubine the Aramitess bore. She bore Machir the father of Gilead.

1 Chronicles 7.15: 15 Machir took a wife of Huppim and Shuppim, whose sister’s name was Maacah. The name of the second was Zelophehad; and Zelophehad had daughters.

1 Chronicles 7.16: 16 Maacah the wife of Machir bore a son, and she named him Peresh. The name of his brother was Sheresh; and his sons were Ulam and Rakem.

1 Chronicles 7.17: 17 The sons of Ulam: Bedan. These were the sons of Gilead the son of Machir, the son of Manasseh.

1 Chronicles 7.18: 18 His sister Hammolecheth bore Ishhod, Abiezer, and Mahlah.

1 Chronicles 7.19: 19 The sons of Shemida were Ahian, Shechem, Likhi, and Aniam.

1 Chronicles 7.20: 20 The sons of Ephraim: Shuthelah, Bered his son, Tahath his son, Eleadah his son, Tahath his son,

1 Chronicles 7.21: 21 Zabad his son, Shuthelah his son, Ezer, and Elead, whom the men of Gath who were born in the land killed, because they came down to take away their livestock.

1 Chronicles 7.22: 22 Ephraim their father mourned many days, and his brothers came to comfort him.

1 Chronicles 7.23: 23 He went in to his wife, and she conceived, and bore a son, and he named him Beriah, because there was trouble with his house.

1 Chronicles 7.24: 24 His daughter was Sheerah, who built Beth Horon the lower and the upper, and Uzzen Sheerah.

1 Chronicles 7.25: 25 Rephah was his son, and Resheph, and Telah his son, Tahan his son,

1 Chronicles 7.26: 26 Ladan his son, Ammihud his son, Elishama his son,

1 Chronicles 7.27: 27 Nun his son, and Joshua his son.

1 Chronicles 7.28: 28 Their possessions and settlements were Bethel and its towns, and eastward Naaran, and westward Gezer, with its towns; Shechem also and its towns, to Azzah and its towns;

1 Chronicles 7.29: 29 and by the borders of the children of Manasseh, Beth Shean and its towns, Taanach and its towns, Megiddo and its towns, and Dor and its towns. The children of Joseph the son of Israel lived in these.

1 Chronicles 7.30: 30 The sons of Asher: Imnah, Ishvah, Ishvi, and Beriah. Serah was their sister.

1 Chronicles 7.31: 31 The sons of Beriah: Heber and Malchiel, who was the father of Birzaith.

1 Chronicles 7.32: 32 Heber became the father of Japhlet, Shomer, Hotham, and Shua their sister.

1 Chronicles 7.33: 33 The sons of Japhlet: Pasach, Bimhal, and Ashvath. These are the children of Japhlet.

1 Chronicles 7.34: 34 The sons of Shemer: Ahi, Rohgah, Jehubbah, and Aram.

1 Chronicles 7.35: 35 The sons of Helem his brother: Zophah, Imna, Shelesh, and Amal.

1 Chronicles 7.36: 36 The sons of Zophah: Suah, Harnepher, Shual, Beri, Imrah,

1 Chronicles 7.37: 37 Bezer, Hod, Shamma, Shilshah, Ithran, and Beera.

1 Chronicles 7.38: 38 The sons of Jether: Jephunneh, Pispa, and Ara.

1 Chronicles 7.39: 39 The sons of Ulla: Arah, Hanniel, and Rizia.

1 Chronicles 7.40: 40 All these were the children of Asher, heads of the fathers’ houses, choice and mighty men of valor, chief of the princes. The number of them listed by genealogy for service in war was twenty-six thousand men.

1 Chronicles 8.0:

8

1 Chronicles 8.1: 1 Benjamin became the father of Bela his firstborn, Ashbel the second, Aharah the third,

1 Chronicles 8.2: 2 Nohah the fourth, and Rapha the fifth.

1 Chronicles 8.3: 3 Bela had sons: Addar, Gera, Abihud,

1 Chronicles 8.4: 4 Abishua, Naaman, Ahoah,

1 Chronicles 8.5: 5 Gera, Shephuphan, and Huram.

1 Chronicles 8.6: 6 These are the sons of Ehud. These are the heads of fathers’ households of the inhabitants of Geba, who were carried captive to Manahath:

1 Chronicles 8.7: 7 Naaman, Ahijah, and Gera, who carried them captive; and he became the father of Uzza and Ahihud.

1 Chronicles 8.8: 8 Shaharaim became the father of children in the field of Moab, after he had sent them away. Hushim and Baara were his wives.

1 Chronicles 8.9: 9 By Hodesh his wife, he became the father of Jobab, Zibia, Mesha, Malcam,

1 Chronicles 8.10: 10 Jeuz, Shachia, and Mirmah. These were his sons, heads of fathers’ households.

1 Chronicles 8.11: 11 By Hushim, he became the father of Abitub and Elpaal.

1 Chronicles 8.12: 12 The sons of Elpaal: Eber, Misham, and Shemed, who built Ono and Lod, with its towns;

1 Chronicles 8.13: 13 and Beriah, and Shema, who were heads of fathers’ households of the inhabitants of Aijalon, who put to flight the inhabitants of Gath;

1 Chronicles 8.14: 14 and Ahio, Shashak, Jeremoth,

1 Chronicles 8.15: 15 Zebadiah, Arad, Eder,

1 Chronicles 8.16: 16 Michael, Ishpah, Joha, the sons of Beriah,

1 Chronicles 8.17: 17 Zebadiah, Meshullam, Hizki, Heber,

1 Chronicles 8.18: 18 Ishmerai, Izliah, Jobab, the sons of Elpaal,

1 Chronicles 8.19: 19 Jakim, Zichri, Zabdi,

1 Chronicles 8.20: 20 Elienai, Zillethai, Eliel,

1 Chronicles 8.21: 21 Adaiah, Beraiah, Shimrath, the sons of Shimei,

1 Chronicles 8.22: 22 Ishpan, Eber, Eliel,

1 Chronicles 8.23: 23 Abdon, Zichri, Hanan,

1 Chronicles 8.24: 24 Hananiah, Elam, Anthothijah,

1 Chronicles 8.25: 25 Iphdeiah, Penuel, the sons of Shashak,

1 Chronicles 8.26: 26 Shamsherai, Shehariah, Athaliah,

1 Chronicles 8.27: 27 Jaareshiah, Elijah, Zichri, and the sons of Jeroham.

1 Chronicles 8.28: 28 These were heads of fathers’ households throughout their generations, chief men. These lived in Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 8.29: 29 The father of Gibeon, whose wife’s name was Maacah, lived in Gibeon,

1 Chronicles 8.30: 30 with his firstborn son Abdon, Zur, Kish, Baal, Nadab,

1 Chronicles 8.31: 31 Gedor, Ahio, and Zecher.

1 Chronicles 8.32: 32 Mikloth became the father of Shimeah. They also lived with their brothers in Jerusalem, near their brothers.

1 Chronicles 8.33: 33 Ner became the father of Kish. Kish became the father of Saul. Saul became the father of Jonathan, Malchishua, Abinadab, and Eshbaal.

1 Chronicles 8.34: 34 The son of Jonathan was Merib Baal. Merib Baal became the father of Micah.

1 Chronicles 8.35: 35 The sons of Micah: Pithon, Melech, Tarea, and Ahaz.

1 Chronicles 8.36: 36 Ahaz became the father of Jehoaddah. Jehoaddah became the father of Alemeth, Azmaveth, and Zimri. Zimri became the father of Moza.

1 Chronicles 8.37: 37 Moza became the father of Binea. Raphah was his son, Eleasah his son, and Azel his son.

1 Chronicles 8.38: 38 Azel had six sons, whose names are these: Azrikam, Bocheru, Ishmael, Sheariah, Obadiah, and Hanan. All these were the sons of Azel.

1 Chronicles 8.39: 39 The sons of Eshek his brother: Ulam his firstborn, Jeush the second, and Eliphelet the third.

1 Chronicles 8.40: 40 The sons of Ulam were mighty men of valor, archers, and had many sons, and sons’ sons, one hundred fifty. All these were of the sons of Benjamin.

1 Chronicles 9.0:

9

1 Chronicles 9.1: 1 So all Israel were listed by genealogies; and behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Israel. Judah was carried away captive to Babylon for their disobedience.

1 Chronicles 9.2: 2 Now the first inhabitants who lived in their possessions in their cities were Israel, the priests, the Levites, and the temple servants.

1 Chronicles 9.3: 3 In Jerusalem lived of the children of Judah, of the children of Benjamin, and of the children of Ephraim and Manasseh:

1 Chronicles 9.4: 4 Uthai the son of Ammihud, the son of Omri, the son of Imri, the son of Bani, of the children of Perez the son of Judah.

1 Chronicles 9.5: 5 Of the Shilonites: Asaiah the firstborn, and his sons.

1 Chronicles 9.6: 6 Of the sons of Zerah: Jeuel and their brothers, six hundred ninety.

1 Chronicles 9.7: 7 Of the sons of Benjamin: Sallu the son of Meshullam, the son of Hodaviah, the son of Hassenuah,

1 Chronicles 9.8: 8 and Ibneiah the son of Jeroham, and Elah the son of Uzzi, the son of Michri, and Meshullam the son of Shephatiah, the son of Reuel, the son of Ibnijah;

1 Chronicles 9.9: 9 and their brothers, according to their generations, nine hundred fifty-six. All these men were heads of fathers’ households by their fathers’ houses.

1 Chronicles 9.10: 10 Of the priests: Jedaiah, Jehoiarib, Jachin,

1 Chronicles 9.11: 11 and Azariah the son of Hilkiah, the son of Meshullam, the son of Zadok, the son of Meraioth, the son of Ahitub, the ruler of God’s house;

1 Chronicles 9.12: 12 and Adaiah the son of Jeroham, the son of Pashhur, the son of Malchijah, and Maasai the son of Adiel, the son of Jahzerah, the son of Meshullam, the son of Meshillemith, the son of Immer;

1 Chronicles 9.13: 13 and their brothers, heads of their fathers’ houses, one thousand seven hundred sixty; very able men for the work of the service of God’s house.

1 Chronicles 9.14: 14 Of the Levites: Shemaiah the son of Hasshub, the son of Azrikam, the son of Hashabiah, of the sons of Merari;

1 Chronicles 9.15: 15 and Bakbakkar, Heresh, Galal, and Mattaniah the son of Mica, the son of Zichri, the son of Asaph,

1 Chronicles 9.16: 16 and Obadiah the son of Shemaiah, the son of Galal, the son of Jeduthun, and Berechiah the son of Asa, the son of Elkanah, who lived in the villages of the Netophathites.

1 Chronicles 9.17: 17 The gatekeepers: Shallum, Akkub, Talmon, Ahiman, and their brothers (Shallum was the chief),

1 Chronicles 9.18: 18 who previously served in the king’s gate eastward. They were the gatekeepers for the camp of the children of Levi.

1 Chronicles 9.19: 19 Shallum the son of Kore, the son of Ebiasaph, the son of Korah, and his brothers, of his father’s house, the Korahites, were over the work of the service, keepers of the thresholds of the tent. Their fathers had been over Yahweh’s camp, keepers of the entry.

1 Chronicles 9.20: 20 Phinehas the son of Eleazar was ruler over them in time past, and Yahweh was with him.

1 Chronicles 9.21: 21 Zechariah the son of Meshelemiah was gatekeeper of the door of the Tent of Meeting.

1 Chronicles 9.22: 22 All these who were chosen to be gatekeepers in the thresholds were two hundred twelve. These were listed by genealogy in their villages, whom David and Samuel the seer ordained in their office of trust.

1 Chronicles 9.23: 23 So they and their children had the oversight of the gates of Yahweh’s house, even the house of the tent, as guards.

1 Chronicles 9.24: 24 On the four sides were the gatekeepers, toward the east, west, north, and south.

1 Chronicles 9.25: 25 Their brothers, in their villages, were to come in every seven days from time to time to be with them:

1 Chronicles 9.26: 26 for the four chief gatekeepers, who were Levites, were in an office of trust, and were over the rooms and over the treasuries in God’s house.

1 Chronicles 9.27: 27 They stayed around God’s house, because that duty was on them; and to their duty was its opening morning by morning.

1 Chronicles 9.28: 28 Certain of them were in charge of the vessels of service; for these were brought in by count, and these were taken out by count.

1 Chronicles 9.29: 29 Some of them also were appointed over the furniture, and over all the vessels of the sanctuary, over the fine flour, the wine, the oil, the frankincense, and the spices.

1 Chronicles 9.30: 30 Some of the sons of the priests prepared the mixing of the spices.

1 Chronicles 9.31: 31 Mattithiah, one of the Levites, who was the firstborn of Shallum the Korahite, had the office of trust over the things that were baked in pans.

1 Chronicles 9.32: 32 Some of their brothers, of the sons of the Kohathites, were over the show bread, to prepare it every Sabbath.

1 Chronicles 9.33: 33 These are the singers, heads of fathers’ households of the Levites, who lived in the rooms and were free from other service; for they were employed in their work day and night.

1 Chronicles 9.34: 34 These were heads of fathers’ households of the Levites, throughout their generations, chief men. These lived at Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 9.35: 35 Jeiel the father of Gibeon, whose wife’s name was Maacah, lived in Gibeon with

1 Chronicles 9.36: 36 his firstborn son Abdon, Zur, Kish, Baal, Ner, Nadab,

1 Chronicles 9.37: 37 Gedor, Ahio, Zechariah, and Mikloth.

1 Chronicles 9.38: 38 Mikloth became the father of Shimeam. They also lived with their brothers in Jerusalem, near their brothers.

1 Chronicles 9.39: 39 Ner became the father of Kish. Kish became the father of Saul. Saul became the father of Jonathan, Malchishua, Abinadab, and Eshbaal.

1 Chronicles 9.40: 40 The son of Jonathan was Merib Baal. Merib Baal became the father of Micah.

1 Chronicles 9.41: 41 The sons of Micah: Pithon, Melech, Tahrea, and Ahaz.

1 Chronicles 9.42: 42 Ahaz became the father of Jarah. Jarah became the father of Alemeth, Azmaveth, and Zimri. Zimri became the father of Moza.

1 Chronicles 9.43: 43 Moza became the father of Binea; and Rephaiah his son, Eleasah his son, and Azel his son.

1 Chronicles 9.44: 44 Azel had six sons, whose names are these: Azrikam, Bocheru, Ishmael, Sheariah, Obadiah, and Hanan. These were the sons of Azel.

1 Chronicles 10.0:

10

1 Chronicles 10.1: 1 Now the Philistines fought against Israel, and the men of Israel fled from before the Philistines, and fell down slain on Mount Gilboa.

1 Chronicles 10.2: 2 The Philistines followed hard after Saul and after his sons; and the Philistines killed Jonathan, Abinadab, and Malchishua, the sons of Saul.

1 Chronicles 10.3: 3 The battle went hard against Saul, and the archers overtook him; and he was distressed by reason of the archers.

1 Chronicles 10.4: 4 Then Saul said to his armor bearer, “Draw your sword, and thrust me through with it, lest these uncircumcised come and abuse me.”

But his armor bearer would not; for he was terrified. Therefore Saul took his sword, and fell on it.

1 Chronicles 10.5: 5 When his armor bearer saw that Saul was dead, he likewise fell on his sword, and died.

1 Chronicles 10.6: 6 So Saul died with his three sons; and all his house died together.

1 Chronicles 10.7: 7 When all the men of Israel who were in the valley saw that they fled, and that Saul and his sons were dead, they abandoned their cities, and fled; and the Philistines came and lived in them.

1 Chronicles 10.8: 8 On the next day, when the Philistines came to strip the slain, they found Saul and his sons fallen on Mount Gilboa.

1 Chronicles 10.9: 9 They stripped him, and took his head and his armor, and sent into the land of the Philistines all around, to carry the news to their idols, and to the people.

1 Chronicles 10.10: 10 They put his armor in the house of their gods, and fastened his head in the house of Dagon.

1 Chronicles 10.11: 11 When all Jabesh Gilead heard all that the Philistines had done to Saul,

1 Chronicles 10.12: 12 all the valiant men arose, and took away the body of Saul, and the bodies of his sons, and brought them to Jabesh, and buried their bones under the oak in Jabesh, and fasted seven days.

1 Chronicles 10.13: 13 So Saul died for his trespass which he committed against Yahweh, because of Yahweh’s word, which he didn’t keep; and also because he asked counsel of one who had a familiar spirit, to inquire,

1 Chronicles 10.14: 14 and didn’t inquire of Yahweh. Therefore he killed him, and turned the kingdom over to David the son of Jesse.

1 Chronicles 11.0:

11

1 Chronicles 11.1: 1 Then all Israel gathered themselves to David to Hebron, saying, “Behold, we are your bone and your flesh.

1 Chronicles 11.2: 2 In times past, even when Saul was king, it was you who led out and brought in Israel. Yahweh your God said to you, ‘You shall be shepherd of my people Israel, and you shall be prince over my people Israel.’”

1 Chronicles 11.3: 3 So all the elders of Israel came to the king to Hebron; and David made a covenant with them in Hebron before Yahweh; and they anointed David king over Israel, according to Yahweh’s word by Samuel.

1 Chronicles 11.4: 4 David and all Israel went to Jerusalem (also called Jebus); and the Jebusites, the inhabitants of the land, were there.

1 Chronicles 11.5: 5 The inhabitants of Jebus said to David, “You will not come in here.” Nevertheless David took the stronghold of Zion. The same is David’s city.

1 Chronicles 11.6: 6 David said, “Whoever strikes the Jebusites first shall be chief and captain.” Joab the son of Zeruiah went up first, and was made chief.

1 Chronicles 11.7: 7 David lived in the stronghold; therefore they called it David’s city.

1 Chronicles 11.8: 8 He built the city all around, from Millo even around; and Joab repaired the rest of the city.

1 Chronicles 11.9: 9 David grew greater and greater; for Yahweh of Armies was with him.

1 Chronicles 11.10: 10 Now these are the chief of the mighty men whom David had, who showed themselves strong with him in his kingdom, together with all Israel, to make him king, according to Yahweh’s word concerning Israel.

1 Chronicles 11.11: 11 This is the number of the mighty men whom David had: Jashobeam, the son of a Hachmonite, the chief of the thirty; he lifted up his spear against three hundred and killed them at one time.

1 Chronicles 11.12: 12 After him was Eleazar the son of Dodo, the Ahohite, who was one of the three mighty men.

1 Chronicles 11.13: 13 He was with David at Pasdammim, and there the Philistines were gathered together to battle, where there was a plot of ground full of barley; and the people fled from before the Philistines.

1 Chronicles 11.14: 14 They stood in the middle of the plot, defended it, and killed the Philistines; and Yahweh saved them by a great victory.

1 Chronicles 11.15: 15 Three of the thirty chief men went down to the rock to David, into the cave of Adullam; and the army of the Philistines were encamped in the valley of Rephaim.

1 Chronicles 11.16: 16 David was then in the stronghold, and the garrison of the Philistines was in Bethlehem at that time.

1 Chronicles 11.17: 17 David longed, and said, “Oh that one would give me water to drink from the well of Bethlehem, which is by the gate!”

1 Chronicles 11.18: 18 The three broke through the army of the Philistines, and drew water out of the well of Bethlehem, that was by the gate, and took it, and brought it to David; but David would not drink any of it, but poured it out to Yahweh,

1 Chronicles 11.19: 19 and said, “My God forbid me, that I should do this! Shall I drink the blood of these men who have put their lives in jeopardy?” For they risked their lives to bring it. Therefore he would not drink it. The three mighty men did these things.

1 Chronicles 11.20: 20 Abishai, the brother of Joab, he was chief of the three; for he lifted up his spear against three hundred and killed them, and had a name among the three.

1 Chronicles 11.21: 21 Of the three, he was more honorable than the two, and was made their captain; however he wasn’t included in the three.

1 Chronicles 11.22: 22 Benaiah the son of Jehoiada, the son of a valiant man of Kabzeel, who had done mighty deeds, killed the two sons of Ariel of Moab. He also went down and killed a lion in the middle of a pit on a snowy day.

1 Chronicles 11.23: 23 He killed an Egyptian, a man of great stature, five cubits high. In the Egyptian’s hand was a spear like a weaver’s beam; and he went down to him with a staff, plucked the spear out of the Egyptian’s hand, and killed him with his own spear.

1 Chronicles 11.24: 24 Benaiah the son of Jehoiada did these things, and had a name among the three mighty men.

1 Chronicles 11.25: 25 Behold, he was more honorable than the thirty, but he didn’t attain to the three; and David set him over his guard.

1 Chronicles 11.26: 26 The mighty men of the armies also include Asahel the brother of Joab, Elhanan the son of Dodo of Bethlehem,

1 Chronicles 11.27: 27 Shammoth the Harorite, Helez the Pelonite,

1 Chronicles 11.28: 28 Ira the son of Ikkesh the Tekoite, Abiezer the Anathothite,

1 Chronicles 11.29: 29 Sibbecai the Hushathite, Ilai the Ahohite,

1 Chronicles 11.30: 30 Maharai the Netophathite, Heled the son of Baanah the Netophathite,

1 Chronicles 11.31: 31 Ithai the son of Ribai of Gibeah of the children of Benjamin, Benaiah the Pirathonite,

1 Chronicles 11.32: 32 Hurai of the brooks of Gaash, Abiel the Arbathite,

1 Chronicles 11.33: 33 Azmaveth the Baharumite, Eliahba the Shaalbonite,

1 Chronicles 11.34: 34 the sons of Hashem the Gizonite, Jonathan the son of Shagee the Hararite,

1 Chronicles 11.35: 35 Ahiam the son of Sacar the Hararite, Eliphal the son of Ur,

1 Chronicles 11.36: 36 Hepher the Mecherathite, Ahijah the Pelonite,

1 Chronicles 11.37: 37 Hezro the Carmelite, Naarai the son of Ezbai,

1 Chronicles 11.38: 38 Joel the brother of Nathan, Mibhar the son of Hagri,

1 Chronicles 11.39: 39 Zelek the Ammonite, Naharai the Berothite, the armor bearer of Joab the son of Zeruiah,

1 Chronicles 11.40: 40 Ira the Ithrite, Gareb the Ithrite,

1 Chronicles 11.41: 41 Uriah the Hittite, Zabad the son of Ahlai,

1 Chronicles 11.42: 42 Adina the son of Shiza the Reubenite, a chief of the Reubenites, and thirty with him,

1 Chronicles 11.43: 43 Hanan the son of Maacah, and Joshaphat the Mithnite,

1 Chronicles 11.44: 44 Uzzia the Ashterathite, Shama and Jeiel the sons of Hotham the Aroerite,

1 Chronicles 11.45: 45 Jediael the son of Shimri, and Joha his brother, the Tizite,

1 Chronicles 11.46: 46 Eliel the Mahavite, and Jeribai, and Joshaviah, the sons of Elnaam, and Ithmah the Moabite,

1 Chronicles 11.47: 47 Eliel, and Obed, and Jaasiel the Mezobaite.

1 Chronicles 12.0:

12

1 Chronicles 12.1: 1 Now these are those who came to David to Ziklag, while he was a fugitive from Saul the son of Kish. They were among the mighty men, his helpers in war.

1 Chronicles 12.2: 2 They were armed with bows, and could use both the right hand and the left in slinging stones and in shooting arrows from the bow. They were of Saul’s relatives of the tribe of Benjamin.

1 Chronicles 12.3: 3 The chief was Ahiezer, then Joash, the sons of Shemaah the Gibeathite; Jeziel and Pelet, the sons of Azmaveth; Beracah; Jehu the Anathothite;

1 Chronicles 12.4: 4 Ishmaiah the Gibeonite, a mighty man among the thirty and a leader of the thirty; Jeremiah; Jahaziel; Johanan; Jozabad the Gederathite;

1 Chronicles 12.5: 5 Eluzai; Jerimoth; Bealiah; Shemariah; Shephatiah the Haruphite;

1 Chronicles 12.6: 6 Elkanah, Isshiah Azarel, Joezer, and Jashobeam, the Korahites;

1 Chronicles 12.7: 7 and Joelah and Zebadiah, the sons of Jeroham of Gedor.

1 Chronicles 12.8: 8 Some Gadites joined David in the stronghold in the wilderness, mighty men of valor, men trained for war, who could handle shield and spear; whose faces were like the faces of lions, and they were as swift as the gazelles on the mountains:

1 Chronicles 12.9: 9 Ezer the chief, Obadiah the second, Eliab the third,

1 Chronicles 12.10: 10 Mishmannah the fourth, Jeremiah the fifth,

1 Chronicles 12.11: 11 Attai the sixth, Eliel the seventh,

1 Chronicles 12.12: 12 Johanan the eighth, Elzabad the ninth,

1 Chronicles 12.13: 13 Jeremiah the tenth, and Machbannai the eleventh.

1 Chronicles 12.14: 14 These of the sons of Gad were captains of the army: he who was least was equal to one hundred, and the greatest to one thousand.

1 Chronicles 12.15: 15 These are those who went over the Jordan in the first month, when it had overflowed all its banks; and they put to flight all who lived in the valleys, both toward the east and toward the west.

1 Chronicles 12.16: 16 Some of the children of Benjamin and Judah came to the stronghold to David.

1 Chronicles 12.17: 17 David went out to meet them, and answered them, “If you have come peaceably to me to help me, my heart will be united with you; but if you have come to betray me to my adversaries, since there is no wrong in my hands, may the God of our fathers see this and rebuke it.”

1 Chronicles 12.18: 18 Then the Spirit came on Amasai, who was chief of the thirty, and he said, “We are yours, David, and on your side, you son of Jesse. Peace, peace be to you, and peace be to your helpers; for your God helps you.” Then David received them, and made them captains of the band.

1 Chronicles 12.19: 19 Some of Manasseh also joined David, when he came with the Philistines against Saul to battle; but they didn’t help them; for the lords of the Philistines sent him away after consultation, saying, “He will desert to his master Saul to the jeopardy of our heads.”

1 Chronicles 12.20: 20 As he went to Ziklag, some from Manasseh joined him: Adnah, Jozabad, Jediael, Michael, Jozabad, Elihu, and Zillethai, captains of thousands who were of Manasseh.

1 Chronicles 12.21: 21 They helped David against the band of rovers; for they were all mighty men of valor, and were captains in the army.

1 Chronicles 12.22: 22 For from day to day men came to David to help him, until there was a great army, like God’s army.

1 Chronicles 12.23: 23 These are the numbers of the heads of those who were armed for war, who came to David to Hebron, to turn the kingdom of Saul to him, according to Yahweh’s word.

1 Chronicles 12.24: 24 The children of Judah who bore shield and spear were six thousand eight hundred, armed for war.

1 Chronicles 12.25: 25 Of the children of Simeon, mighty men of valor for the war: seven thousand one hundred.

1 Chronicles 12.26: 26 Of the children of Levi: four thousand six hundred.

1 Chronicles 12.27: 27 Jehoiada was the leader of the household of Aaron; and with him were three thousand seven hundred,

1 Chronicles 12.28: 28 and Zadok, a young man mighty of valor, and of his father’s house twenty-two captains.

1 Chronicles 12.29: 29 Of the children of Benjamin, Saul’s relatives: three thousand, for until then, the greatest part of them had kept their allegiance to Saul’s house.

1 Chronicles 12.30: 30 Of the children of Ephraim: twenty thousand eight hundred, mighty men of valor, famous men in their fathers’ houses.

1 Chronicles 12.31: 31 Of the half-tribe of Manasseh: eighteen thousand, who were mentioned by name, to come and make David king.

1 Chronicles 12.32: 32 Of the children of Issachar, men who had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do, their heads were two hundred; and all their brothers were at their command.

1 Chronicles 12.33: 33 Of Zebulun, such as were able to go out in the army, who could set the battle in array, with all kinds of instruments of war: fifty thousand who could command and were not of double heart.

1 Chronicles 12.34: 34 Of Naphtali: one thousand captains, and with them with shield and spear thirty-seven thousand.

1 Chronicles 12.35: 35 Of the Danites who could set the battle in array: twenty-eight thousand six hundred.

1 Chronicles 12.36: 36 Of Asher, such as were able to go out in the army, who could set the battle in array: forty thousand.

1 Chronicles 12.37: 37 On the other side of the Jordan, of the Reubenites, the Gadites, and of the half-tribe of Manasseh, with all kinds of instruments of war for the battle: one hundred twenty thousand.

1 Chronicles 12.38: 38 All these were men of war, who could order the battle array, and came with a perfect heart to Hebron, to make David king over all Israel; and all the rest also of Israel were of one heart to make David king.

1 Chronicles 12.39: 39 They were there with David three days, eating and drinking; for their brothers had supplied provisions for them.

1 Chronicles 12.40: 40 Moreover those who were near to them, as far as Issachar, Zebulun, and Naphtali, brought bread on donkeys, on camels, on mules, and on oxen: supplies of flour, cakes of figs, clusters of raisins, wine, oil, cattle, and sheep in abundance; for there was joy in Israel.

1 Chronicles 13.0:

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1 Chronicles 13.1: 1 David consulted with the captains of thousands and of hundreds, even with every leader.

1 Chronicles 13.2: 2 David said to all the assembly of Israel, “If it seems good to you, and if it is of Yahweh our God, let’s send word everywhere to our brothers who are left in all the land of Israel, with whom the priests and Levites are in their cities that have pasture lands, that they may gather themselves to us.

1 Chronicles 13.3: 3 Also, let’s bring the ark of our God back to us again; for we didn’t seek it in the days of Saul.”

1 Chronicles 13.4: 4 All the assembly said that they would do so; for the thing was right in the eyes of all the people.

1 Chronicles 13.5: 5 So David assembled all Israel together, from the Shihor the brook of Egypt even to the entrance of Hamath, to bring God’s ark from Kiriath Jearim.

1 Chronicles 13.6: 6 David went up with all Israel to Baalah, that is, to Kiriath Jearim, which belonged to Judah, to bring up from there God Yahweh’s ark that sits above the cherubim, that is called by the Name.

1 Chronicles 13.7: 7 They carried God’s ark on a new cart, and brought it out of Abinadab’s house; and Uzza and Ahio drove the cart.

1 Chronicles 13.8: 8 David and all Israel played before God with all their might, even with songs, with harps, with stringed instruments, with tambourines, with cymbals, and with trumpets.

1 Chronicles 13.9: 9 When they came to Chidon’s threshing floor, Uzza put out his hand to hold the ark; for the oxen stumbled.

1 Chronicles 13.10: 10 Yahweh’s anger burned against Uzza, and he struck him, because he put his hand on the ark; and he died there before God.

1 Chronicles 13.11: 11 David was displeased, because Yahweh had broken out against Uzza. He called that place Perez Uzza, to this day.

1 Chronicles 13.12: 12 David was afraid of God that day, saying, “How can I bring God’s ark home to me?”

1 Chronicles 13.13: 13 So David didn’t move the ark with him into David’s city, but carried it aside into Obed-Edom the Gittite’s house.

1 Chronicles 13.14: 14 God’s ark remained with the family of Obed-Edom in his house three months; and Yahweh blessed Obed-Edom’s house and all that he had.

1 Chronicles 14.0:

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1 Chronicles 14.1: 1 Hiram king of Tyre sent messengers to David with cedar trees, masons, and carpenters, to build him a house.

1 Chronicles 14.2: 2 David perceived that Yahweh had established him king over Israel; for his kingdom was exalted on high, for his people Israel’s sake.

1 Chronicles 14.3: 3 David took more wives at Jerusalem, and David became the father of more sons and daughters.

1 Chronicles 14.4: 4 These are the names of the children whom he had in Jerusalem: Shammua, Shobab, Nathan, Solomon,

1 Chronicles 14.5: 5 Ibhar, Elishua, Elpelet,

1 Chronicles 14.6: 6 Nogah, Nepheg, Japhia,

1 Chronicles 14.7: 7 Elishama, Beeliada, and Eliphelet.

1 Chronicles 14.8: 8 When the Philistines heard that David was anointed king over all Israel, all the Philistines went up to seek David; and David heard of it, and went out against them.

1 Chronicles 14.9: 9 Now the Philistines had come and made a raid in the valley of Rephaim.

1 Chronicles 14.10: 10 David inquired of God, saying, “Shall I go up against the Philistines? Will you deliver them into my hand?”

Yahweh said to him, “Go up; for I will deliver them into your hand.”

1 Chronicles 14.11: 11 So they came up to Baal Perazim, and David defeated them there. David said, God has broken my enemies by my hand, like waters breaking out. Therefore they called the name of that place Baal Perazim.

1 Chronicles 14.12: 12 They left their gods there; and David gave a command, and they were burned with fire.

1 Chronicles 14.13: 13 The Philistines made a another raid in the valley.

1 Chronicles 14.14: 14 David inquired again of God; and God said to him, “You shall not go up after them. Turn away from them, and come on them opposite the mulberry trees.

1 Chronicles 14.15: 15 When you hear the sound of marching in the tops of the mulberry trees, then go out to battle; for God has gone out before you to strike the army of the Philistines.”

1 Chronicles 14.16: 16 David did as God commanded him; and they attacked the army of the Philistines from Gibeon even to Gezer.

1 Chronicles 14.17: 17 The fame of David went out into all lands; and Yahweh brought the fear of him on all nations.

1 Chronicles 15.0:

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1 Chronicles 15.1: 1 David made himself houses in David’s city; and he prepared a place for God’s ark, and pitched a tent for it.

1 Chronicles 15.2: 2 Then David said, “No one ought to carry God’s ark but the Levites. For Yahweh has chosen them to carry God’s ark, and to minister to him forever.”

1 Chronicles 15.3: 3 David assembled all Israel at Jerusalem, to bring up Yahweh’s ark to its place, which he had prepared for it.

1 Chronicles 15.4: 4 David gathered together the sons of Aaron and the Levites:

1 Chronicles 15.5: 5 of the sons of Kohath, Uriel the chief, and his brothers one hundred twenty;

1 Chronicles 15.6: 6 of the sons of Merari, Asaiah the chief, and his brothers two hundred twenty;

1 Chronicles 15.7: 7 of the sons of Gershom, Joel the chief, and his brothers one hundred thirty;

1 Chronicles 15.8: 8 of the sons of Elizaphan, Shemaiah the chief, and his brothers two hundred;

1 Chronicles 15.9: 9 of the sons of Hebron, Eliel the chief, and his brothers eighty;

1 Chronicles 15.10: 10 of the sons of Uzziel, Amminadab the chief, and his brothers one hundred twelve.

1 Chronicles 15.11: 11 David called for Zadok and Abiathar the priests, and for the Levites, for Uriel, Asaiah, Joel, Shemaiah, Eliel, and Amminadab,

1 Chronicles 15.12: 12 and said to them, “You are the heads of the fathers’ households of the Levites. Sanctify yourselves, both you and your brothers, that you may bring the ark of Yahweh, the God of Israel, up to the place that I have prepared for it.

1 Chronicles 15.13: 13 For because you didn’t carry it at first, Yahweh our God broke out in anger against us, because we didn’t seek him according to the ordinance.”

1 Chronicles 15.14: 14 So the priests and the Levites sanctified themselves to bring up the ark of Yahweh, the God of Israel.

1 Chronicles 15.15: 15 The children of the Levites bore God’s ark on their shoulders with its poles, as Moses commanded according to Yahweh’s word.

1 Chronicles 15.16: 16 David spoke to the chief of the Levites to appoint their brothers as singers with instruments of music, stringed instruments, harps, and cymbals, sounding aloud and lifting up their voices with joy.

1 Chronicles 15.17: 17 So the Levites appointed Heman the son of Joel; and of his brothers, Asaph the son of Berechiah; and of the sons of Merari their brothers, Ethan the son of Kushaiah;

1 Chronicles 15.18: 18 and with them their brothers of the second rank, Zechariah, Ben, Jaaziel, Shemiramoth, Jehiel, Unni, Eliab, Benaiah, Maaseiah, Mattithiah, Eliphelehu, Mikneiah, Obed-Edom, and Jeiel, the doorkeepers.

1 Chronicles 15.19: 19 So the singers, Heman, Asaph, and Ethan, were given cymbals of bronze to sound aloud;

1 Chronicles 15.20: 20 and Zechariah, Aziel, Shemiramoth, Jehiel, Unni, Eliab, Maaseiah, and Benaiah, with stringed instruments set to Alamoth;

1 Chronicles 15.21: 21 and Mattithiah, Eliphelehu, Mikneiah, Obed-Edom, Jeiel, and Azaziah, with harps tuned to the eight-stringed lyre, to lead.

1 Chronicles 15.22: 22 Chenaniah, chief of the Levites, was over the singing. He taught the singers, because he was skillful.

1 Chronicles 15.23: 23 Berechiah and Elkanah were doorkeepers for the ark.

1 Chronicles 15.24: 24 Shebaniah, Joshaphat, Nethanel, Amasai, Zechariah, Benaiah, and Eliezer, the priests, blew the trumpets before God’s ark; and Obed-Edom and Jehiah were doorkeepers for the ark.

1 Chronicles 15.25: 25 So David, the elders of Israel, and the captains over thousands, went to bring the ark of Yahweh’s covenant up out of the house of Obed-Edom with joy.

1 Chronicles 15.26: 26 When God helped the Levites who bore the ark of Yahweh’s covenant, they sacrificed seven bulls and seven rams.

1 Chronicles 15.27: 27 David was clothed with a robe of fine linen, as were all the Levites who bore the ark, the singers, and Chenaniah the choir master with the singers; and David had an ephod of linen on him.

1 Chronicles 15.28: 28 Thus all Israel brought the ark of Yahweh’s covenant up with shouting, with sound of the cornet, with trumpets, and with cymbals, sounding aloud with stringed instruments and harps.

1 Chronicles 15.29: 29 As the ark of Yahweh’s covenant came to David’s city, Michal the daughter of Saul looked out at the window, and saw king David dancing and playing; and she despised him in her heart.

1 Chronicles 16.0:

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1 Chronicles 16.1: 1 They brought in God’s ark, and set it in the middle of the tent that David had pitched for it; and they offered burnt offerings and peace offerings before God.

1 Chronicles 16.2: 2 When David had finished offering the burnt offering and the peace offerings, he blessed the people in Yahweh’s name.

1 Chronicles 16.3: 3 He gave to everyone of Israel, both man and woman, to everyone a loaf of bread, a portion of meat, and a cake of raisins.

1 Chronicles 16.4: 4 He appointed some of the Levites to minister before Yahweh’s ark, and to commemorate, to thank, and to praise Yahweh, the God of Israel:

1 Chronicles 16.5: 5 Asaph the chief, and second to him Zechariah, then Jeiel, Shemiramoth, Jehiel, Mattithiah, Eliab, Benaiah, Obed-Edom, and Jeiel, with stringed instruments and with harps; and Asaph with cymbals, sounding aloud;

1 Chronicles 16.6: 6 with Benaiah and Jahaziel the priests with trumpets continually, before the ark of the covenant of God.

1 Chronicles 16.7: 7 Then on that day David first ordained to give thanks to Yahweh, by the hand of Asaph and his brothers.

1 Chronicles 16.8: 8 Oh give thanks to Yahweh.

Call on his name.

Make what he has done known among the peoples.

1 Chronicles 16.9: 9 Sing to him.

Sing praises to him.

Tell of all his marvelous works.

1 Chronicles 16.10: 10 Glory in his holy name.

Let the heart of those who seek Yahweh rejoice.

1 Chronicles 16.11: 11 Seek Yahweh and his strength.

Seek his face forever more.

1 Chronicles 16.12: 12 Remember his marvelous works that he has done,

his wonders, and the judgments of his mouth,

1 Chronicles 16.13: 13 you offspring of Israel his servant,

you children of Jacob, his chosen ones.

1 Chronicles 16.14: 14 He is Yahweh our God.

His judgments are in all the earth.

1 Chronicles 16.15: 15 Remember his covenant forever,

the word which he commanded to a thousand generations,

1 Chronicles 16.16: 16 the covenant which he made with Abraham,

his oath to Isaac.

1 Chronicles 16.17: 17 He confirmed it to Jacob for a statute,

and to Israel for an everlasting covenant,

1 Chronicles 16.18: 18 saying, “I will give you the land of Canaan,

The lot of your inheritance,”

1 Chronicles 16.19: 19 when you were but a few men in number,

yes, very few, and foreigners were in it.

1 Chronicles 16.20: 20 They went about from nation to nation,

from one kingdom to another people.

1 Chronicles 16.21: 21 He allowed no man to do them wrong.

Yes, he reproved kings for their sakes,

1 Chronicles 16.22: 22 “Don’t touch my anointed ones!

Do my prophets no harm!”

1 Chronicles 16.23: 23 Sing to Yahweh, all the earth!

Display his salvation from day to day.

1 Chronicles 16.24: 24 Declare his glory among the nations,

and his marvelous works among all the peoples.

1 Chronicles 16.25: 25 For great is Yahweh, and greatly to be praised.

He also is to be feared above all gods.

1 Chronicles 16.26: 26 For all the gods of the peoples are idols,

but Yahweh made the heavens.

1 Chronicles 16.27: 27 Honor and majesty are before him.

Strength and gladness are in his place.

1 Chronicles 16.28: 28 Ascribe to Yahweh, you relatives of the peoples,

ascribe to Yahweh glory and strength!

1 Chronicles 16.29: 29 Ascribe to Yahweh the glory due to his name.

Bring an offering, and come before him.

Worship Yahweh in holy array.

1 Chronicles 16.30: 30 Tremble before him, all the earth.

The world also is established that it can’t be moved.

1 Chronicles 16.31: 31 Let the heavens be glad,

and let the earth rejoice!

Let them say among the nations, “Yahweh reigns!”

1 Chronicles 16.32: 32 Let the sea roar, and its fullness!

Let the field exult, and all that is in it!

1 Chronicles 16.33: 33 Then the trees of the forest will sing for joy before Yahweh,

for he comes to judge the earth.

1 Chronicles 16.34: 34 Oh give thanks to Yahweh, for he is good,

for his loving kindness endures forever.

1 Chronicles 16.35: 35 Say, “Save us, God of our salvation!

Gather us together and deliver us from the nations,

to give thanks to your holy name,

to triumph in your praise.”

1 Chronicles 16.36: 36 Blessed be Yahweh, the God of Israel,

from everlasting even to everlasting.

All the people said, “Amen,” and praised Yahweh.

1 Chronicles 16.37: 37 So he left Asaph and his brothers there before the ark of Yahweh’s covenant, to minister before the ark continually, as every day’s work required;

1 Chronicles 16.38: 38 and Obed-Edom with their brothers, sixty-eight; Obed-Edom also the son of Jeduthun and Hosah to be doorkeepers;

1 Chronicles 16.39: 39 and Zadok the priest, and his brothers the priests, before Yahweh’s tabernacle in the high place that was at Gibeon,

1 Chronicles 16.40: 40 to offer burnt offerings to Yahweh on the altar of burnt offering continually morning and evening, even according to all that is written in Yahweh’s law, which he commanded to Israel;

1 Chronicles 16.41: 41 and with them Heman and Jeduthun, and the rest who were chosen, who were mentioned by name, to give thanks to Yahweh, because his loving kindness endures forever;

1 Chronicles 16.42: 42 and with them Heman and Jeduthun with trumpets and cymbals for those that should sound aloud, and with instruments for the songs of God; and the sons of Jeduthun to be at the gate.

1 Chronicles 16.43: 43 All the people departed, each man to his house; and David returned to bless his house.

1 Chronicles 17.0:

17

1 Chronicles 17.1: 1 When David lived in his house, David said to Nathan the prophet, “Behold, I dwell in a house of cedar, but the ark of Yahweh’s covenant is in a tent.”

1 Chronicles 17.2: 2 Nathan said to David, “Do all that is in your heart; for God is with you.”

1 Chronicles 17.3: 3 That same night, the word of God came to Nathan, saying,

1 Chronicles 17.4: 4 “Go and tell David my servant, ‘Yahweh says, “You shall not build me a house to dwell in;

1 Chronicles 17.5: 5 for I have not lived in a house since the day that I brought up Israel to this day, but have gone from tent to tent, and from one tent to another.

1 Chronicles 17.6: 6 In all places in which I have walked with all Israel, did I speak a word with any of the judges of Israel, whom I commanded to be shepherd of my people, saying, ‘Why have you not built me a house of cedar?’”’

1 Chronicles 17.7: 7 “Now therefore, you shall tell my servant David, ‘Yahweh of Armies says, “I took you from the sheep pen, from following the sheep, to be prince over my people Israel.

1 Chronicles 17.8: 8 I have been with you wherever you have gone, and have cut off all your enemies from before you. I will make you a name like the name of the great ones who are in the earth.

1 Chronicles 17.9: 9 I will appoint a place for my people Israel, and will plant them, that they may dwell in their own place, and be moved no more. The children of wickedness will not waste them any more, as at the first,

1 Chronicles 17.10: 10 and from the day that I commanded judges to be over my people Israel. I will subdue all your enemies. Moreover I tell you that Yahweh will build you a house.

1 Chronicles 17.11: 11 It will happen, when your days are fulfilled that you must go to be with your fathers, that I will set up your offspring after you, who will be of your sons; and I will establish his kingdom.

1 Chronicles 17.12: 12 He will build me a house, and I will establish his throne forever.

1 Chronicles 17.13: 13 I will be his father, and he will be my son. I will not take my loving kindness away from him, as I took it from him that was before you;

1 Chronicles 17.14: 14 but I will settle him in my house and in my kingdom forever. His throne will be established forever.”’”

1 Chronicles 17.15: 15 According to all these words, and according to all this vision, so Nathan spoke to David.

1 Chronicles 17.16: 16 Then David the king went in, and sat before Yahweh; and he said, “Who am I, Yahweh God, and what is my house, that you have brought me this far?

1 Chronicles 17.17: 17 This was a small thing in your eyes, God; but you have spoken of your servant’s house for a great while to come, and have respected me according to the standard of a man of high degree, Yahweh God.

1 Chronicles 17.18: 18 What can David say yet more to you concerning the honor which is done to your servant? For you know your servant.

1 Chronicles 17.19: 19 Yahweh, for your servant’s sake, and according to your own heart, you have done all this greatness, to make known all these great things.

1 Chronicles 17.20: 20 Yahweh, there is no one like you, neither is there any God besides you, according to all that we have heard with our ears.

1 Chronicles 17.21: 21 What one nation in the earth is like your people Israel, whom God went to redeem to himself for a people, to make you a name by great and awesome things, in driving out nations from before your people, whom you redeem out of Egypt?

1 Chronicles 17.22: 22 For you made your people Israel your own people forever; and you, Yahweh, became their God.

1 Chronicles 17.23: 23 Now, Yahweh, let the word that you have spoken concerning your servant, and concerning his house, be established forever, and do as you have spoken.

1 Chronicles 17.24: 24 Let your name be established and magnified forever, saying, ‘Yahweh of Armies is the God of Israel, even a God to Israel. The house of David your servant is established before you.’

1 Chronicles 17.25: 25 For you, my God, have revealed to your servant that you will build him a house. Therefore your servant has found courage to pray before you.

1 Chronicles 17.26: 26 Now, Yahweh, you are God, and have promised this good thing to your servant.

1 Chronicles 17.27: 27 Now it has pleased you to bless the house of your servant, that it may continue forever before you; for you, Yahweh, have blessed, and it is blessed forever.”

1 Chronicles 18.0:

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1 Chronicles 18.1: 1 After this, David defeated the Philistines and subdued them, and took Gath and its towns out of the hand of the Philistines.

1 Chronicles 18.2: 2 He defeated Moab; and the Moabites became servants to David, and brought tribute.

1 Chronicles 18.3: 3 David defeated Hadadezer king of Zobah to Hamath, as he went to establish his dominion by the river Euphrates.

1 Chronicles 18.4: 4 David took from him one thousand chariots, seven thousand horsemen, and twenty thousand footmen; and David hamstrung all the chariot horses, but reserved of them enough for one hundred chariots.

1 Chronicles 18.5: 5 When the Syrians of Damascus came to help Hadadezer king of Zobah, David struck twenty-two thousand men of the Syrians.

1 Chronicles 18.6: 6 Then David put garrisons in Syria of Damascus; and the Syrians became servants to David, and brought tribute. Yahweh gave victory to David wherever he went.

1 Chronicles 18.7: 7 David took the shields of gold that were on the servants of Hadadezer, and brought them to Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 18.8: 8 From Tibhath and from Cun, cities of Hadadezer, David took very much bronze, with which Solomon made the bronze sea, the pillars, and the vessels of bronze.

1 Chronicles 18.9: 9 When Tou king of Hamath heard that David had struck all the army of Hadadezer king of Zobah,

1 Chronicles 18.10: 10 he sent Hadoram his son to king David, to Greet him, and to bless him, because he had fought against Hadadezer and struck him (for Hadadezer had wars with Tou); and he had with him all kinds of vessels of gold and silver and bronze.

1 Chronicles 18.11: 11 King David also dedicated these to Yahweh, with the silver and the gold that he carried away from all the nations; from Edom, from Moab, from the children of Ammon, from the Philistines, and from Amalek.

1 Chronicles 18.12: 12 Moreover Abishai the son of Zeruiah struck eighteen thousand of the Edomites in the Valley of Salt.

1 Chronicles 18.13: 13 He put garrisons in Edom; and all the Edomites became servants to David. Yahweh gave victory to David wherever he went.

1 Chronicles 18.14: 14 David reigned over all Israel; and he executed justice and righteousness for all his people.

1 Chronicles 18.15: 15 Joab the son of Zeruiah was over the army; Jehoshaphat the son of Ahilud was recorder;

1 Chronicles 18.16: 16 Zadok the son of Ahitub, and Abimelech the son of Abiathar, were priests; Shavsha was scribe;

1 Chronicles 18.17: 17 and Benaiah the son of Jehoiada was over the Cherethites and the Pelethites; and the sons of David were chief officials serving the king.

1 Chronicles 19.0:

19

1 Chronicles 19.1: 1 After this, Nahash the king of the children of Ammon died, and his son reigned in his place.

1 Chronicles 19.2: 2 David said, “I will show kindness to Hanun the son of Nahash, because his father showed kindness to me.”

So David sent messengers to comfort him concerning his father. David’s servants came into the land of the children of Ammon to Hanun, to comfort him.

1 Chronicles 19.3: 3 But the princes of the children of Ammon said to Hanun, “Do you think that David honors your father, in that he has sent comforters to you? Haven’t his servants come to you to search, to overthrow, and to spy out the land?”

1 Chronicles 19.4: 4 So Hanun took David’s servants, shaved them, and cut off their garments in the middle at their buttocks, and sent them away.

1 Chronicles 19.5: 5 Then some people went and told David how the men were treated. He sent to meet them; for the men were greatly humiliated. The king said, “Stay at Jericho until your beards have grown, and then return.”

1 Chronicles 19.6: 6 When the children of Ammon saw that they had made themselves odious to David, Hanun and the children of Ammon sent one thousand talents of silver to hire chariots and horsemen out of Mesopotamia, out of Aram-maacah, and out of Zobah.

1 Chronicles 19.7: 7 So they hired for themselves thirty-two thousand chariots, and the king of Maacah with his people, who came and encamped near Medeba. The children of Ammon gathered themselves together from their cities, and came to battle.

1 Chronicles 19.8: 8 When David heard of it, he sent Joab with all the army of the mighty men.

1 Chronicles 19.9: 9 The children of Ammon came out, and put the battle in array at the gate of the city; and the kings who had come were by themselves in the field.

1 Chronicles 19.10: 10 Now when Joab saw that the battle was set against him before and behind, he chose some of all the choice men of Israel, and put them in array against the Syrians.

1 Chronicles 19.11: 11 The rest of the people he committed into the hand of Abishai his brother; and they put themselves in array against the children of Ammon.

1 Chronicles 19.12: 12 He said, “If the Syrians are too strong for me, then you are to help me; but if the children of Ammon are too strong for you, then I will help you.

1 Chronicles 19.13: 13 Be courageous, and let’s be strong for our people and for the cities of our God. May Yahweh do that which seems good to him.”

1 Chronicles 19.14: 14 So Joab and the people who were with him came near to the front of the Syrians to the battle; and they fled before him.

1 Chronicles 19.15: 15 When the children of Ammon saw that the Syrians had fled, they likewise fled before Abishai his brother, and entered into the city. Then Joab came to Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 19.16: 16 When the Syrians saw that they were defeated by Israel, they sent messengers, and called out the Syrians who were beyond the River, with Shophach the captain of the army of Hadadezer leading them.

1 Chronicles 19.17: 17 David was told that; so he gathered all Israel together, passed over the Jordan, came to them, and set the battle in array against them. So when David had put the battle in array against the Syrians, they fought with him.

1 Chronicles 19.18: 18 The Syrians fled before Israel; and David killed of the Syrian men seven thousand chariots, and forty thousand footmen, and also killed Shophach the captain of the army.

1 Chronicles 19.19: 19 When the servants of Hadadezer saw that they were defeated by Israel, they made peace with David, and served him. The Syrians would not help the children of Ammon any more.

1 Chronicles 20.0:

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1 Chronicles 20.1: 1 At the time of the return of the year, at the time when kings go out, Joab led out the army, and wasted the country of the children of Ammon, and came and besieged Rabbah. But David stayed at Jerusalem. Joab struck Rabbah, and overthrew it.

1 Chronicles 20.2: 2 David took the crown of their king from off his head, and found it to weigh a talent of gold, and there were precious stones in it. It was set on David’s head, and he brought very much plunder out of the city.

1 Chronicles 20.3: 3 He brought out the people who were in it, and had them cut with saws, with iron picks, and with axes. David did so to all the cities of the children of Ammon. Then David and all the people returned to Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 20.4: 4 After this, war arose at Gezer with the Philistines. Then Sibbecai the Hushathite killed Sippai, of the sons of the giant; and they were subdued.

1 Chronicles 20.5: 5 Again there was war with the Philistines; and Elhanan the son of Jair killed Lahmi the brother of Goliath the Gittite, the staff of whose spear was like a weaver’s beam.

1 Chronicles 20.6: 6 There was again war at Gath, where there was a man of great stature, who had twenty-four fingers and toes, six on each hand, and six on each foot; and he also was born to the giant.

1 Chronicles 20.7: 7 When he defied Israel, Jonathan the son of Shimea David’s brother killed him.

1 Chronicles 20.8: 8 These were born to the giant in Gath; and they fell by the hand of David, and by the hand of his servants.

1 Chronicles 21.0:

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1 Chronicles 21.1: 1 Satan stood up against Israel, and moved David to take a census of Israel.

1 Chronicles 21.2: 2 David said to Joab and to the princes of the people, “Go, count Israel from Beersheba even to Dan; and bring me word, that I may know how many there are.”

1 Chronicles 21.3: 3 Joab said, “May Yahweh make his people a hundred times as many as they are. But, my lord the king, aren’t they all my lord’s servants? Why does my lord require this thing? Why will he be a cause of guilt to Israel?”

1 Chronicles 21.4: 4 Nevertheless the king’s word prevailed against Joab. Therefore Joab departed, and went throughout all Israel, then came to Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 21.5: 5 Joab gave up the sum of the census of the people to David. All those of Israel were one million one hundred thousand men who drew a sword; and in Judah were four hundred seventy thousand men who drew a sword.

1 Chronicles 21.6: 6 But he didn’t count Levi and Benjamin among them; for the king’s word was abominable to Joab.

1 Chronicles 21.7: 7 God was displeased with this thing; therefore he struck Israel.

1 Chronicles 21.8: 8 David said to God, “I have sinned greatly, in that I have done this thing. But now put away, I beg you, the iniquity of your servant; for I have done very foolishly.”

1 Chronicles 21.9: 9 Yahweh spoke to Gad, David’s seer, saying,

1 Chronicles 21.10: 10 “Go and speak to David, saying, ‘Yahweh says, “I offer you three things. Choose one of them, that I may do it to you.”’”

1 Chronicles 21.11: 11 So Gad came to David, and said to him, “Yahweh says, ‘Take your choice:

1 Chronicles 21.12: 12 either three years of famine; or three months to be consumed before your foes, while the sword of your enemies overtakes you; or else three days the sword of Yahweh, even pestilence in the land, and Yahweh’s angel destroying throughout all the borders of Israel. Now therefore consider what answer I shall return to him who sent me.’”

1 Chronicles 21.13: 13 David said to Gad, “I am in distress. Let me fall, I pray, into Yahweh’s hand; for his mercies are very great. Don’t let me fall into man’s hand.”

1 Chronicles 21.14: 14 So Yahweh sent a pestilence on Israel, and seventy thousand men of Israel fell.

1 Chronicles 21.15: 15 God sent an angel to Jerusalem to destroy it. As he was about to destroy, Yahweh saw, and he relented of the disaster, and said to the destroying angel, “It is enough. Now withdraw your hand.” Yahweh’s angel was standing by the threshing floor of Ornan the Jebusite.

1 Chronicles 21.16: 16 David lifted up his eyes, and saw Yahweh’s angel standing between earth and the sky, having a drawn sword in his hand stretched out over Jerusalem.

Then David and the elders, clothed in sackcloth, fell on their faces.

1 Chronicles 21.17: 17 David said to God, “Isn’t it I who commanded the people to be counted? It is even I who have sinned and done very wickedly; but these sheep, what have they done? Please let your hand, O Yahweh my God, be against me, and against my father’s house; but not against your people, that they should be plagued.”

1 Chronicles 21.18: 18 Then Yahweh’s angel commanded Gad to tell David that David should go up and raise an altar to Yahweh on the threshing floor of Ornan the Jebusite.

1 Chronicles 21.19: 19 David went up at the saying of Gad, which he spoke in Yahweh’s name.

1 Chronicles 21.20: 20 Ornan turned back, and saw the angel; and his four sons who were with him hid themselves. Now Ornan was threshing wheat.

1 Chronicles 21.21: 21 As David came to Ornan, Ornan looked and saw David, and went out of the threshing floor, and bowed himself to David with his face to the ground.

1 Chronicles 21.22: 22 Then David said to Ornan, “Give me the place of this threshing floor, that I may build an altar to Yahweh on it. You shall sell it to me for the full price, that the plague may be stopped from afflicting the people.”

1 Chronicles 21.23: 23 Ornan said to David, “Take it for yourself, and let my lord the king do that which is good in his eyes. Behold, I give the oxen for burnt offerings, and the threshing instruments for wood, and the wheat for the meal offering. I give it all.”

1 Chronicles 21.24: 24 King David said to Ornan, “No; but I will most certainly buy it for the full price. For I will not take that which is yours for Yahweh, nor offer a burnt offering that costs me nothing.”

1 Chronicles 21.25: 25 So David gave to Ornan six hundred shekels of gold by weight for the place.

1 Chronicles 21.26: 26 David built an altar to Yahweh there, and offered burnt offerings and peace offerings, and called on Yahweh; and he answered him from the sky by fire on the altar of burnt offering.

1 Chronicles 21.27: 27 Then Yahweh commanded the angel, and he put his sword back into its sheath.

1 Chronicles 21.28: 28 At that time, when David saw that Yahweh had answered him in the threshing floor of Ornan the Jebusite, then he sacrificed there.

1 Chronicles 21.29: 29 For Yahweh’s tabernacle, which Moses made in the wilderness, and the altar of burnt offering, were at that time in the high place at Gibeon.

1 Chronicles 21.30: 30 But David couldn’t go before it to inquire of God; for he was afraid because of the sword of Yahweh’s angel.

1 Chronicles 22.0:

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1 Chronicles 22.1: 1 Then David said, “This is the house of Yahweh God, and this is the altar of burnt offering for Israel.”

1 Chronicles 22.2: 2 David gave orders to gather together the foreigners who were in the land of Israel; and he set masons to cut dressed stones to build God’s house.

1 Chronicles 22.3: 3 David prepared iron in abundance for the nails for the doors of the gates, and for the couplings; and bronze in abundance without weight;

1 Chronicles 22.4: 4 and cedar trees without number, for the Sidonians and the people of Tyre brought cedar trees in abundance to David.

1 Chronicles 22.5: 5 David said, “Solomon my son is young and tender, and the house that is to be built for Yahweh must be exceedingly magnificent, of fame and of glory throughout all countries. I will therefore make preparation for it.” So David prepared abundantly before his death.

1 Chronicles 22.6: 6 Then he called for Solomon his son, and commanded him to build a house for Yahweh, the God of Israel.

1 Chronicles 22.7: 7 David said to Solomon his son, “As for me, it was in my heart to build a house to the name of Yahweh my God.

1 Chronicles 22.8: 8 But Yahweh’s word came to me, saying, ‘You have shed blood abundantly, and have made great wars. You shall not build a house to my name, because you have shed much blood on the earth in my sight.

1 Chronicles 22.9: 9 Behold, a son shall be born to you, who shall be a man of peace. I will give him rest from all his enemies all around; for his name shall be Solomon, and I will give peace and quietness to Israel in his days.

1 Chronicles 22.10: 10 He shall build a house for my name; and he will be my son, and I will be his father; and I will establish the throne of his kingdom over Israel forever.’

1 Chronicles 22.11: 11 Now, my son, may Yahweh be with you and prosper you, and build the house of Yahweh your God, as he has spoken concerning you.

1 Chronicles 22.12: 12 May Yahweh give you discretion and understanding, and put you in charge of Israel; that so you may keep the law of Yahweh your God.

1 Chronicles 22.13: 13 Then you will prosper, if you observe to do the statutes and the ordinances which Yahweh gave Moses concerning Israel. Be strong and courageous. Don’t be afraid, and don’t be dismayed.

1 Chronicles 22.14: 14 Now, behold, in my affliction I have prepared for Yahweh’s house one hundred thousand talents of gold, one million talents of silver, and bronze and iron without weight; for it is in abundance. I have also prepared timber and stone; and you may add to them.

1 Chronicles 22.15: 15 There are also workmen with you in abundance, cutters and workers of stone and timber, and all kinds of men who are skillful in every kind of work;

1 Chronicles 22.16: 16 of the gold, the silver, the bronze, and the iron, there is no number. Arise and be doing, and may Yahweh be with you.”

1 Chronicles 22.17: 17 David also commanded all the princes of Israel to help Solomon his son, saying,

1 Chronicles 22.18: 18 “Isn’t Yahweh your God with you? Hasn’t he given you rest on every side? For he has delivered the inhabitants of the land into my hand; and the land is subdued before Yahweh, and before his people.

1 Chronicles 22.19: 19 Now set your heart and your soul to follow Yahweh your God. Arise therefore, and build the sanctuary of Yahweh God, to bring the ark of Yahweh’s covenant and the holy vessels of God into the house that is to be built for Yahweh’s name.”

1 Chronicles 23.0:

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1 Chronicles 23.1: 1 Now David was old and full of days; and he made Solomon his son king over Israel.

1 Chronicles 23.2: 2 He gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites.

1 Chronicles 23.3: 3 The Levites were counted from thirty years old and upward; and their number by their polls, man by man, was thirty-eight thousand.

1 Chronicles 23.4: 4 David said, “Of these, twenty-four thousand were to oversee the work of Yahweh’s house, six thousand were officers and judges,

1 Chronicles 23.5: 5 four thousand were doorkeepers, and four thousand praised Yahweh with the instruments which I made for giving praise.”

1 Chronicles 23.6: 6 David divided them into divisions according to the sons of Levi: Gershon, Kohath, and Merari.

1 Chronicles 23.7: 7 Of the Gershonites: Ladan and Shimei.

1 Chronicles 23.8: 8 The sons of Ladan: Jehiel the chief, Zetham, and Joel, three.

1 Chronicles 23.9: 9 The sons of Shimei: Shelomoth, Haziel, and Haran, three. These were the heads of the fathers’ households of Ladan.

1 Chronicles 23.10: 10 The sons of Shimei: Jahath, Zina, Jeush, and Beriah. These four were the sons of Shimei.

1 Chronicles 23.11: 11 Jahath was the chief, and Zizah the second; but Jeush and Beriah didn’t have many sons; therefore they became a fathers’ house in one reckoning.

1 Chronicles 23.12: 12 The sons of Kohath: Amram, Izhar, Hebron, and Uzziel, four.

1 Chronicles 23.13: 13 The sons of Amram: Aaron and Moses; and Aaron was separated, that he should sanctify the most holy things, he and his sons, forever, to burn incense before Yahweh, to minister to him, and to bless in his name, forever.

1 Chronicles 23.14: 14 But as for Moses the man of God, his sons were named among the tribe of Levi.

1 Chronicles 23.15: 15 The sons of Moses: Gershom and Eliezer.

1 Chronicles 23.16: 16 The sons of Gershom: Shebuel the chief.

1 Chronicles 23.17: 17 The sons of Eliezer were: Rehabiah the chief; and Eliezer had no other sons; but the sons of Rehabiah were very many.

1 Chronicles 23.18: 18 The sons of Izhar: Shelomith the chief.

1 Chronicles 23.19: 19 The sons of Hebron: Jeriah the chief, Amariah the second, Jahaziel the third, and Jekameam the fourth.

1 Chronicles 23.20: 20 The sons of Uzziel: Micah the chief, and Isshiah the second.

1 Chronicles 23.21: 21 The sons of Merari: Mahli and Mushi. The sons of Mahli: Eleazar and Kish.

1 Chronicles 23.22: 22 Eleazar died, and had no sons, but daughters only: and their brothers the sons of Kish took them as wives.

1 Chronicles 23.23: 23 The sons of Mushi: Mahli, Eder, and Jeremoth, three.

1 Chronicles 23.24: 24 These were the sons of Levi after their fathers’ houses, even the heads of the fathers’ houses of those who were counted individually, in the number of names by their polls, who did the work for the service of Yahweh’s house, from twenty years old and upward.

1 Chronicles 23.25: 25 For David said, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, has given rest to his people; and he dwells in Jerusalem forever.

1 Chronicles 23.26: 26 Also the Levites will no longer need to carry the tabernacle and all its vessels for its service.”

1 Chronicles 23.27: 27 For by the last words of David the sons of Levi were counted, from twenty years old and upward.

1 Chronicles 23.28: 28 For their office was to wait on the sons of Aaron for the service of Yahweh’s house, in the courts, and in the rooms, and in the purifying of all holy things, even the work of the service of God’s house;

1 Chronicles 23.29: 29 for the show bread also, and for the fine flour for a meal offering, whether of unleavened wafers, or of that which is baked in the pan, or of that which is soaked, and for all measurements of quantity and size;

1 Chronicles 23.30: 30 and to stand every morning to thank and praise Yahweh, and likewise in the evening;

1 Chronicles 23.31: 31 and to offer all burnt offerings to Yahweh, on the Sabbaths, on the new moons, and on the set feasts, in number according to the ordinance concerning them, continually before Yahweh;

1 Chronicles 23.32: 32 and that they should keep the duty of the Tent of Meeting, the duty of the holy place, and the duty of the sons of Aaron their brothers, for the service of Yahweh’s house.

1 Chronicles 24.0:

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1 Chronicles 24.1: 1 These were the divisions of the sons of Aaron. The sons of Aaron: Nadab, Abihu, Eleazar, and Ithamar.

1 Chronicles 24.2: 2 But Nadab and Abihu died before their father, and had no children: therefore Eleazar and Ithamar executed the priest’s office.

1 Chronicles 24.3: 3 David with Zadok of the sons of Eleazar and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, divided them according to their ordering in their service.

1 Chronicles 24.4: 4 There were more chief men found of the sons of Eleazar than of the sons of Ithamar; and they were divided like this: of the sons of Eleazar there were sixteen, heads of fathers’ houses; and of the sons of Ithamar, according to their fathers’ houses, eight.

1 Chronicles 24.5: 5 Thus they were divided impartially by drawing lots; for there were princes of the sanctuary, and princes of God, both of the sons of Eleazar, and of the sons of Ithamar.

1 Chronicles 24.6: 6 Shemaiah the son of Nethanel the scribe, who was of the Levites, wrote them in the presence of the king, the princes, Zadok the priest, Ahimelech the son of Abiathar, and the heads of the fathers’ households of the priests and of the Levites; one fathers’ house being taken for Eleazar, and one taken for Ithamar.

1 Chronicles 24.7: 7 Now the first lot came out to Jehoiarib, the second to Jedaiah,

1 Chronicles 24.8: 8 the third to Harim, the fourth to Seorim,

1 Chronicles 24.9: 9 the fifth to Malchijah, the sixth to Mijamin,

1 Chronicles 24.10: 10 the seventh to Hakkoz, the eighth to Abijah,

1 Chronicles 24.11: 11 the ninth to Jeshua, the tenth to Shecaniah,

1 Chronicles 24.12: 12 the eleventh to Eliashib, the twelfth to Jakim,

1 Chronicles 24.13: 13 the thirteenth to Huppah, the fourteenth to Jeshebeab,

1 Chronicles 24.14: 14 the fifteenth to Bilgah, the sixteenth to Immer,

1 Chronicles 24.15: 15 the seventeenth to Hezir, the eighteenth to Happizzez,

1 Chronicles 24.16: 16 the nineteenth to Pethahiah, the twentieth to Jehezkel,

1 Chronicles 24.17: 17 the twenty-first to Jachin, the twenty-second to Gamul,

1 Chronicles 24.18: 18 the twenty-third to Delaiah, and the twenty-fourth to Maaziah.

1 Chronicles 24.19: 19 This was their ordering in their service, to come into Yahweh’s house according to the ordinance given to them by Aaron their father, as Yahweh, the God of Israel, had commanded him.

1 Chronicles 24.20: 20 Of the rest of the sons of Levi: of the sons of Amram, Shubael; of the sons of Shubael, Jehdeiah.

1 Chronicles 24.21: 21 Of Rehabiah: of the sons of Rehabiah, Isshiah the chief.

1 Chronicles 24.22: 22 Of the Izharites, Shelomoth; of the sons of Shelomoth, Jahath.

1 Chronicles 24.23: 23 The sons of Hebron: Jeriah, Amariah the second, Jahaziel the third, and Jekameam the fourth.

1 Chronicles 24.24: 24 The sons of Uzziel: Micah; of the sons of Micah, Shamir.

1 Chronicles 24.25: 25 The brother of Micah: Isshiah; of the sons of Isshiah, Zechariah.

1 Chronicles 24.26: 26 The sons of Merari: Mahli and Mushi. The son of Jaaziah: Beno.

1 Chronicles 24.27: 27 The sons of Merari: of Jaaziah, Beno, Shoham, Zaccur, and Ibri.

1 Chronicles 24.28: 28 Of Mahli: Eleazar, who had no sons.

1 Chronicles 24.29: 29 Of Kish, the son of Kish: Jerahmeel.

1 Chronicles 24.30: 30 The sons of Mushi: Mahli, Eder, and Jerimoth. These were the sons of the Levites after their fathers’ houses.

1 Chronicles 24.31: 31 These likewise cast lots even as their brothers the sons of Aaron in the presence of David the king, Zadok, Ahimelech, and the heads of the fathers’ households of the priests and of the Levites; the fathers’ households of the chief even as those of his younger brother.

1 Chronicles 25.0:

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1 Chronicles 25.1: 1 Moreover, David and the captains of the army set apart for the service certain of the sons of Asaph, and of Heman, and of Jeduthun, who were to prophesy with harps, with stringed instruments, and with cymbals. The number of those who did the work according to their service was:

1 Chronicles 25.2: 2 of the sons of Asaph: Zaccur, Joseph, Nethaniah, and Asharelah. The sons of Asaph were under the hand of Asaph, who prophesied at the order of the king.

1 Chronicles 25.3: 3 Of Jeduthun, the sons of Jeduthun: Gedaliah, Zeri, Jeshaiah, Shimei, Hashabiah, and Mattithiah, six, under the hands of their father Jeduthun, who prophesied in giving thanks and praising Yahweh with the harp.

1 Chronicles 25.4: 4 Of Heman, the sons of Heman: Bukkiah, Mattaniah, Uzziel, Shebuel, Jerimoth, Hananiah, Hanani, Eliathah, Giddalti, Romamti-Ezer, Joshbekashah, Mallothi, Hothir, and Mahazioth.

1 Chronicles 25.5: 5 All these were the sons of Heman the king’s seer in the words of God, to lift up the horn. God gave to Heman fourteen sons and three daughters.

1 Chronicles 25.6: 6 All these were under the hands of their father for song in Yahweh’s house, with cymbals, stringed instruments, and harps, for the service of God’s house: Asaph, Jeduthun, and Heman being under the order of the king.

1 Chronicles 25.7: 7 The number of them, with their brothers who were instructed in singing to Yahweh, even all who were skillful, was two hundred eighty-eight.

1 Chronicles 25.8: 8 They cast lots for their offices, all alike, the small as well as the great, the teacher as well as the student.

1 Chronicles 25.9: 9 Now the first lot came out for Asaph to Joseph; the second to Gedaliah, he and his brothers and sons were twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.10: 10 the third to Zaccur, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.11: 11 the fourth to Izri, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.12: 12 the fifth to Nethaniah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.13: 13 the sixth to Bukkiah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.14: 14 the seventh to Jesharelah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.15: 15 the eighth to Jeshaiah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.16: 16 the ninth to Mattaniah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.17: 17 the tenth to Shimei, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.18: 18 the eleventh to Azarel, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.19: 19 the twelfth to Hashabiah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.20: 20 for the thirteenth, Shubael, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.21: 21 for the fourteenth, Mattithiah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.22: 22 for the fifteenth to Jeremoth, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.23: 23 for the sixteenth to Hananiah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.24: 24 for the seventeenth to Joshbekashah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.25: 25 for the eighteenth to Hanani, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.26: 26 for the nineteenth to Mallothi, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.27: 27 for the twentieth to Eliathah, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.28: 28 for the twenty-first to Hothir, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.29: 29 for the twenty-second to Giddalti, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.30: 30 for the twenty-third to Mahazioth, his sons and his brothers, twelve;

1 Chronicles 25.31: 31 for the twenty-fourth to Romamti-Ezer, his sons and his brothers, twelve.

1 Chronicles 26.0:

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1 Chronicles 26.1: 1 For the divisions of the doorkeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph.

1 Chronicles 26.2: 2 Meshelemiah had sons: Zechariah the firstborn, Jediael the second, Zebadiah the third, Jathniel the fourth,

1 Chronicles 26.3: 3 Elam the fifth, Jehohanan the sixth, and Eliehoenai the seventh.

1 Chronicles 26.4: 4 Obed-Edom had sons: Shemaiah the firstborn, Jehozabad the second, Joah the third, Sacar the fourth, Nethanel the fifth,

1 Chronicles 26.5: 5 Ammiel the sixth, Issachar the seventh, and Peullethai the eighth; for God blessed him.

1 Chronicles 26.6: 6 Sons were also born to Shemaiah his son, who ruled over the house of their father; for they were mighty men of valor.

1 Chronicles 26.7: 7 The sons of Shemaiah: Othni, Rephael, Obed, and Elzabad, whose brothers were valiant men, Elihu, and Semachiah.

1 Chronicles 26.8: 8 All these were of the sons of Obed-Edom: they and their sons and their brothers, able men in strength for the service: sixty-two of Obed-Edom.

1 Chronicles 26.9: 9 Meshelemiah had sons and brothers, valiant men, eighteen.

1 Chronicles 26.10: 10 Also Hosah, of the children of Merari, had sons: Shimri the chief (for though he was not the firstborn, yet his father made him chief),

1 Chronicles 26.11: 11 Hilkiah the second, Tebaliah the third, and Zechariah the fourth. All the sons and brothers of Hosah were thirteen.

1 Chronicles 26.12: 12 Of these were the divisions of the doorkeepers, even of the chief men, having offices like their brothers, to minister in Yahweh’s house.

1 Chronicles 26.13: 13 They cast lots, the small as well as the great, according to their fathers’ houses, for every gate.

1 Chronicles 26.14: 14 The lot eastward fell to Shelemiah. Then for Zechariah his son, a wise counselor, they cast lots; and his lot came out northward.

1 Chronicles 26.15: 15 To Obed-Edom southward; and to his sons the storehouse.

1 Chronicles 26.16: 16 To Shuppim and Hosah westward, by the gate of Shallecheth, at the causeway that goes up, watchman opposite watchman.

1 Chronicles 26.17: 17 Eastward were six Levites, northward four a day, southward four a day, and for the storehouse two and two.

1 Chronicles 26.18: 18 For Parbar westward, four at the causeway, and two at Parbar.

1 Chronicles 26.19: 19 These were the divisions of the doorkeepers; of the sons of the Korahites, and of the sons of Merari.

1 Chronicles 26.20: 20 Of the Levites, Ahijah was over the treasures of God’s house and over the treasures of the dedicated things.

1 Chronicles 26.21: 21 The sons of Ladan, the sons of the Gershonites belonging to Ladan, the heads of the fathers’ households belonging to Ladan the Gershonite: Jehieli.

1 Chronicles 26.22: 22 The sons of Jehieli: Zetham, and Joel his brother, over the treasures of Yahweh’s house.

1 Chronicles 26.23: 23 Of the Amramites, of the Izharites, of the Hebronites, of the Uzzielites:

1 Chronicles 26.24: 24 and Shebuel the son of Gershom, the son of Moses, was ruler over the treasures.

1 Chronicles 26.25: 25 His brothers: of Eliezer, Rehabiah his son, and Jeshaiah his son, and Joram his son, and Zichri his son, and Shelomoth his son.

1 Chronicles 26.26: 26 This Shelomoth and his brothers were over all the treasures of the dedicated things, which David the king, and the heads of the fathers’ households, the captains over thousands and hundreds, and the captains of the army, had dedicated.

1 Chronicles 26.27: 27 They dedicated some of the plunder won in battles to repair Yahweh’s house.

1 Chronicles 26.28: 28 All that Samuel the seer, and Saul the son of Kish, and Abner the son of Ner, and Joab the son of Zeruiah, had dedicated, whoever had dedicated anything, it was under the hand of Shelomoth, and of his brothers.

1 Chronicles 26.29: 29 Of the Izharites, Chenaniah and his sons were for the outward business over Israel, for officers and judges.

1 Chronicles 26.30: 30 Of the Hebronites, Hashabiah and his brothers, men of valor, one thousand seven hundred, had the oversight of Israel beyond the Jordan westward, for all the business of Yahweh, and for the service of the king.

1 Chronicles 26.31: 31 Of the Hebronites, Jerijah was the chief, even of the Hebronites, according to their generations by fathers’ households. They were sought for in the fortieth year of the reign of David, and mighty men of valor were found among them at Jazer of Gilead.

1 Chronicles 26.32: 32 His brothers, men of valor, were two thousand seven hundred, heads of fathers’ households, whom king David made overseers over the Reubenites, the Gadites, and the half-tribe of the Manassites, for every matter pertaining to God, and for the affairs of the king.

1 Chronicles 27.0:

27

1 Chronicles 27.1: 1 Now the children of Israel after their number, the heads of fathers’ households and the captains of thousands and of hundreds, and their officers who served the king, in any matter of the divisions which came in and went out month by month throughout all the months of the year—of every division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.2: 2 Over the first division for the first month was Jashobeam the son of Zabdiel: and in his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.3: 3 He was of the children of Perez, the chief of all the captains of the army for the first month.

1 Chronicles 27.4: 4 Over the division of the second month was Dodai the Ahohite, and his division; and Mikloth the ruler: and in his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.5: 5 The third captain of the army for the third month was Benaiah, the son of Jehoiada the chief priest. In his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.6: 6 This is that Benaiah who was the mighty man of the thirty, and over the thirty: and of his division was Ammizabad his son.

1 Chronicles 27.7: 7 The fourth captain for the fourth month was Asahel the brother of Joab, and Zebadiah his son after him: and in his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.8: 8 The fifth captain for the fifth month was Shamhuth the Izrahite: and in his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.9: 9 The sixth captain for the sixth month was Ira the son of Ikkesh the Tekoite: and in his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.10: 10 The seventh captain for the seventh month was Helez the Pelonite, of the children of Ephraim. In his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.11: 11 The eighth captain for the eighth month was Sibbecai the Hushathite, of the Zerahites. In his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.12: 12 The ninth captain for the ninth month was Abiezer the Anathothite, of the Benjamites. In his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.13: 13 The tenth captain for the tenth month was Maharai the Netophathite, of the Zerahites. In his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.14: 14 The eleventh captain for the eleventh month was Benaiah the Pirathonite, of the children of Ephraim. In his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.15: 15 The twelfth captain for the twelfth month was Heldai the Netophathite, of Othniel. In his division were twenty-four thousand.

1 Chronicles 27.16: 16 Furthermore over the tribes of Israel: of the Reubenites, Eliezer the son of Zichri was the ruler; of the Simeonites, Shephatiah the son of Maacah;

1 Chronicles 27.17: 17 of Levi, Hashabiah the son of Kemuel; of Aaron, Zadok;

1 Chronicles 27.18: 18 of Judah, Elihu, one of the brothers of David; of Issachar, Omri the son of Michael;

1 Chronicles 27.19: 19 of Zebulun, Ishmaiah the son of Obadiah; of Naphtali, Jeremoth the son of Azriel;

1 Chronicles 27.20: 20 of the children of Ephraim, Hoshea the son of Azaziah; of the half-tribe of Manasseh, Joel the son of Pedaiah;

1 Chronicles 27.21: 21 of the half-tribe of Manasseh in Gilead, Iddo the son of Zechariah; of Benjamin, Jaasiel the son of Abner;

1 Chronicles 27.22: 22 of Dan, Azarel the son of Jeroham. These were the captains of the tribes of Israel.

1 Chronicles 27.23: 23 But David didn’t take the number of them from twenty years old and under, because Yahweh had said he would increase Israel like the stars of the sky.

1 Chronicles 27.24: 24 Joab the son of Zeruiah began to take a census, but didn’t finish; and wrath came on Israel for this. The number wasn’t put into the account in the chronicles of king David.

1 Chronicles 27.25: 25 Over the king’s treasures was Azmaveth the son of Adiel: and over the treasures in the fields, in the cities, and in the villages, and in the towers, was Jonathan the son of Uzziah;

1 Chronicles 27.26: 26 Over those who did the work of the field for tillage of the ground was Ezri the son of Chelub;

1 Chronicles 27.27: 27 and over the vineyards was Shimei the Ramathite; and over the increase of the vineyards for the wine cellars was Zabdi the Shiphmite;

1 Chronicles 27.28: 28 and over the olive trees and the sycamore trees that were in the lowland was Baal Hanan the Gederite; and over the cellars of oil was Joash;

1 Chronicles 27.29: 29 and over the herds that fed in Sharon was Shitrai the Sharonite; and over the herds that were in the valleys was Shaphat the son of Adlai;

1 Chronicles 27.30: 30 and over the camels was Obil the Ishmaelite; and over the donkeys was Jehdeiah the Meronothite; and over the flocks was Jaziz the Hagrite.

1 Chronicles 27.31: 31 All these were the rulers of the property which was king David’s.

1 Chronicles 27.32: 32 Also Jonathan, David’s uncle, was a counselor, a man of understanding, and a scribe. Jehiel the son of Hachmoni was with the king’s sons.

1 Chronicles 27.33: 33 Ahithophel was the king’s counselor. Hushai the Archite was the king’s friend.

1 Chronicles 27.34: 34 After Ahithophel was Jehoiada the son of Benaiah, and Abiathar. Joab was the captain of the king’s army.

1 Chronicles 28.0:

28

1 Chronicles 28.1: 1 David assembled all the princes of Israel, the princes of the tribes, the captains of the companies who served the king by division, the captains of thousands, the captains of hundreds, and the rulers over all the substance and possessions of the king and of his sons, with the officers and the mighty men, even all the mighty men of valor, to Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 28.2: 2 Then David the king stood up on his feet, and said, “Hear me, my brothers, and my people! As for me, it was in my heart to build a house of rest for the ark of Yahweh’s covenant, and for the footstool of our God; and I had prepared for the building.

1 Chronicles 28.3: 3 But God said to me, ‘You shall not build a house for my name, because you are a man of war, and have shed blood.’

1 Chronicles 28.4: 4 However Yahweh, the God of Israel, chose me out of all the house of my father to be king over Israel forever. For he has chosen Judah to be prince; and in the house of Judah, the house of my father; and among the sons of my father he took pleasure in me to make me king over all Israel.

1 Chronicles 28.5: 5 Of all my sons (for Yahweh has given me many sons), he has chosen Solomon my son to sit on the throne of Yahweh’s kingdom over Israel.

1 Chronicles 28.6: 6 He said to me, ‘Solomon, your son, shall build my house and my courts; for I have chosen him to be my son, and I will be his father.

1 Chronicles 28.7: 7 I will establish his kingdom forever if he continues to do my commandments and my ordinances, as it is today.’

1 Chronicles 28.8: 8 Now therefore, in the sight of all Israel, Yahweh’s assembly, and in the audience of our God, observe and seek out all the commandments of Yahweh your God; that you may possess this good land, and leave it for an inheritance to your children after you forever.

1 Chronicles 28.9: 9 You, Solomon my son, know the God of your father, and serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind; for Yahweh searches all hearts, and understands all the imaginations of the thoughts. If you seek him, he will be found by you; but if you forsake him, he will cast you off forever.

1 Chronicles 28.10: 10 Take heed now; for Yahweh has chosen you to build a house for the sanctuary. Be strong, and do it.”

1 Chronicles 28.11: 11 Then David gave to Solomon his son the plans for the porch of the temple, for its houses, for its treasuries, for its upper rooms, for its inner rooms, for the place of the mercy seat;

1 Chronicles 28.12: 12 and the plans of all that he had by the Spirit, for the courts of Yahweh’s house, for all the surrounding rooms, for the treasuries of God’s house, and for the treasuries of the dedicated things;

1 Chronicles 28.13: 13 also for the divisions of the priests and the Levites, for all the work of the service of Yahweh’s house, and for all the vessels of service in Yahweh’s house;

1 Chronicles 28.14: 14 of gold by weight for the gold, for all vessels of every kind of service; for all the vessels of silver by weight, for all vessels of every kind of service;

1 Chronicles 28.15: 15 by weight also for the lamp stands of gold, and for its lamps, of gold, by weight for every lamp stand and for its lamps; and for the lamp stands of silver, by weight for every lamp stand and for its lamps, according to the use of every lamp stand;

1 Chronicles 28.16: 16 and the gold by weight for the tables of show bread, for every table; and silver for the tables of silver;

1 Chronicles 28.17: 17 and the forks, the basins, and the cups, of pure gold; and for the golden bowls by weight for every bowl; and for the silver bowls by weight for every bowl;

1 Chronicles 28.18: 18 and for the altar of incense refined gold by weight; and gold for the plans for the chariot, and the cherubim that spread out and cover the ark of Yahweh’s covenant.

1 Chronicles 28.19: 19 “All this”, David said, “I have been made to understand in writing from Yahweh’s hand, even all the works of this pattern.”

1 Chronicles 28.20: 20 David said to Solomon his son, “Be strong and courageous, and do it. Don’t be afraid, nor be dismayed; for Yahweh God, even my God, is with you. He will not fail you, nor forsake you, until all the work for the service of Yahweh’s house is finished.

1 Chronicles 28.21: 21 Behold, there are the divisions of the priests and the Levites, for all the service of God’s house. Every willing man who has skill, for any kind of service, shall be with you in all kinds of work. Also the captains and all the people will be entirely at your command.”

1 Chronicles 29.0:

29

1 Chronicles 29.1: 1 David the king said to all the assembly, “Solomon my son, whom alone God has chosen, is yet young and tender, and the work is great; for the palace is not for man, but for Yahweh God.

1 Chronicles 29.2: 2 Now I have prepared with all my might for the house of my God the gold for the things of gold, the silver for the things of silver, the bronze for the things of bronze, iron for the things of iron, and wood for the things of wood; also onyx stones, stones to be set, stones for inlaid work, of various colors, all kinds of precious stones, and marble stones in abundance.

1 Chronicles 29.3: 3 In addition, because I have set my affection on the house of my God, since I have a treasure of my own of gold and silver, I give it to the house of my God, over and above all that I have prepared for the holy house,

1 Chronicles 29.4: 4 even three thousand talents of gold, of the gold of Ophir, and seven thousand talents of refined silver, with which to overlay the walls of the houses;

1 Chronicles 29.5: 5 of gold for the things of gold, and of silver for the things of silver, and for all kinds of work to be made by the hands of artisans. Who then offers willingly to consecrate himself today to Yahweh?”

1 Chronicles 29.6: 6 Then the princes of the fathers’ households, and the princes of the tribes of Israel, and the captains of thousands and of hundreds, with the rulers over the king’s work, offered willingly;

1 Chronicles 29.7: 7 and they gave for the service of God’s house of gold five thousand talents and ten thousand darics, of silver ten thousand talents, of bronze eighteen thousand talents, and of iron one hundred thousand talents.

1 Chronicles 29.8: 8 People with whom precious stones were found gave them to the treasure of Yahweh’s house, under the hand of Jehiel the Gershonite.

1 Chronicles 29.9: 9 Then the people rejoiced, because they offered willingly, because with a perfect heart they offered willingly to Yahweh; and David the king also rejoiced with great joy.

1 Chronicles 29.10: 10 Therefore David blessed Yahweh before all the assembly; and David said, “You are blessed, Yahweh, the God of Israel our father, forever and ever.

1 Chronicles 29.11: 11 Yours, Yahweh, is the greatness, the power, the glory, the victory, and the majesty! For all that is in the heavens and in the earth is yours. Yours is the kingdom, Yahweh, and you are exalted as head above all.

1 Chronicles 29.12: 12 Both riches and honor come from you, and you rule over all! In your hand is power and might! It is in your hand to make great, and to give strength to all!

1 Chronicles 29.13: 13 Now therefore, our God, we thank you, and praise your glorious name.

1 Chronicles 29.14: 14 But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly as this? For all things come from you, and we have given you of your own.

1 Chronicles 29.15: 15 For we are strangers before you, and foreigners, as all our fathers were. Our days on the earth are as a shadow, and there is no remaining.

1 Chronicles 29.16: 16 Yahweh our God, all this store that we have prepared to build you a house for your holy name comes from your hand, and is all your own.

1 Chronicles 29.17: 17 I know also, my God, that you try the heart, and have pleasure in uprightness. As for me, in the uprightness of my heart I have willingly offered all these things. Now I have seen with joy your people, who are present here, offer willingly to you.

1 Chronicles 29.18: 18 Yahweh, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Israel, our fathers, keep this desire forever in the thoughts of the heart of your people, and prepare their heart for you;

1 Chronicles 29.19: 19 and give to Solomon my son a perfect heart, to keep your commandments, your testimonies, and your statutes, and to do all these things, and to build the palace, for which I have made provision.”

1 Chronicles 29.20: 20 Then David said to all the assembly, “Now bless Yahweh your God!”

All the assembly blessed Yahweh, the God of their fathers, and bowed down their heads and prostrated themselves before Yahweh and the king.

1 Chronicles 29.21: 21 They sacrificed sacrifices to Yahweh, and offered burnt offerings to Yahweh, on the next day after that day, even one thousand bulls, one thousand rams, and one thousand lambs, with their drink offerings and sacrifices in abundance for all Israel,

1 Chronicles 29.22: 22 and ate and drank before Yahweh on that day with great gladness. They made Solomon the son of David king the second time, and anointed him before Yahweh to be prince, and Zadok to be priest.

1 Chronicles 29.23: 23 Then Solomon sat on the throne of Yahweh as king instead of David his father, and prospered; and all Israel obeyed him.

1 Chronicles 29.24: 24 All the princes, the mighty men, and also all of the sons of king David submitted themselves to Solomon the king.

1 Chronicles 29.25: 25 Yahweh magnified Solomon exceedingly in the sight of all Israel, and gave to him such royal majesty as had not been on any king before him in Israel.

1 Chronicles 29.26: 26 Now David the son of Jesse reigned over all Israel.

1 Chronicles 29.27: 27 The time that he reigned over Israel was forty years; he reigned seven years in Hebron, and he reigned thirty-three years in Jerusalem.

1 Chronicles 29.28: 28 He died at a good old age, full of days, riches, and honor; and Solomon his son reigned in his place.

1 Chronicles 29.29: 29 Now the acts of David the king, first and last, behold, they are written in the history of Samuel the seer, and in the history of Nathan the prophet, and in the history of Gad the seer,

1 Chronicles 29.30: 30 with all his reign and his might, and the times that went over him, and over Israel, and over all the kingdoms of the countries.

2 Chronicles 0.0:

The Second Book of Chronicles

2 Chronicles 1.0:

1

2 Chronicles 1.1: 1 Solomon the son of David was firmly established in his kingdom, and Yahweh his God was with him, and made him exceedingly great.

2 Chronicles 1.2: 2 Solomon spoke to all Israel, to the captains of thousands and of hundreds, to the judges, and to every prince in all Israel, the heads of the fathers’ households.

2 Chronicles 1.3: 3 So Solomon, and all the assembly with him, went to the high place that was at Gibeon; for God’s Tent of Meeting was there, which Yahweh’s servant Moses had made in the wilderness.

2 Chronicles 1.4: 4 But David had brought God’s ark up from Kiriath Jearim to the place that David had prepared for it; for he had pitched a tent for it at Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 1.5: 5 Moreover the bronze altar that Bezalel the son of Uri, the son of Hur, had made was there before Yahweh’s tabernacle; and Solomon and the assembly were seeking counsel there.

2 Chronicles 1.6: 6 Solomon went up there to the bronze altar before Yahweh, which was at the Tent of Meeting, and offered one thousand burnt offerings on it.

2 Chronicles 1.7: 7 That night, God appeared to Solomon and said to him, “Ask for what you want me to give you.”

2 Chronicles 1.8: 8 Solomon said to God, “You have shown great loving kindness to David my father, and have made me king in his place.

2 Chronicles 1.9: 9 Now, Yahweh God, let your promise to David my father be established; for you have made me king over a people like the dust of the earth in multitude.

2 Chronicles 1.10: 10 Now give me wisdom and knowledge, that I may go out and come in before this people; for who can judge this great people of yours?”

2 Chronicles 1.11: 11 God said to Solomon, “Because this was in your heart, and you have not asked riches, wealth, honor, or the life of those who hate you, nor yet have you asked for long life; but have asked for wisdom and knowledge for yourself, that you may judge my people, over whom I have made you king,

2 Chronicles 1.12: 12 therefore wisdom and knowledge is granted to you. I will give you riches, wealth, and honor, such as none of the kings have had who have been before you had, and none after you will have.”

2 Chronicles 1.13: 13 So Solomon came from the high place that was at Gibeon, from before the Tent of Meeting, to Jerusalem; and he reigned over Israel.

2 Chronicles 1.14: 14 Solomon gathered chariots and horsemen. He had one thousand four hundred chariots and twelve thousand horsemen that he placed in the chariot cities, and with the king at Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 1.15: 15 The king made silver and gold to be as common as stones in Jerusalem, and he made cedars to be as common as the sycamore trees that are in the lowland.

2 Chronicles 1.16: 16 The horses which Solomon had were brought out of Egypt and from Kue. The king’s merchants purchased them from Kue.

2 Chronicles 1.17: 17 They brought up and brought out of Egypt a chariot for six hundred pieces of silver, and a horse for one hundred fifty. They also exported them to the Hittite kings and the Syrian kings.

2 Chronicles 2.0:

2

2 Chronicles 2.1: 1 Now Solomon decided to build a house for Yahweh’s name, and a house for his kingdom.

2 Chronicles 2.2: 2 Solomon counted out seventy thousand men to bear burdens, eighty thousand men who were stone cutters in the mountains, and three thousand six hundred to oversee them.

2 Chronicles 2.3: 3 Solomon sent to Huram the king of Tyre, saying, “As you dealt with David my father, and sent him cedars to build him a house in which to dwell, so deal with me.

2 Chronicles 2.4: 4 Behold, I am about to build a house for the name of Yahweh my God, to dedicate it to him, to burn before him incense of sweet spices, for the continual show bread, and for the burnt offerings morning and evening, on the Sabbaths, on the new moons, and on the set feasts of Yahweh our God. This is an ordinance forever to Israel.

2 Chronicles 2.5: 5 “The house which I am building will be great; for our God is greater than all gods.

2 Chronicles 2.6: 6 But who is able to build him a house, since heaven and the heaven of heavens can’t contain him? Who am I then, that I should build him a house, except just to burn incense before him?

2 Chronicles 2.7: 7 “Now therefore send me a man skillful to work in gold, in silver, in bronze, in iron, and in purple, crimson, and blue, and who knows how to engrave engravings, to be with the skillful men who are with me in Judah and in Jerusalem, whom David my father provided.

2 Chronicles 2.8: 8 “Send me also cedar trees, cypress trees, and algum trees out of Lebanon; for I know that your servants know how to cut timber in Lebanon. Behold, my servants will be with your servants,

2 Chronicles 2.9: 9 even to prepare me timber in abundance; for the house which I am about to build will be great and wonderful.

2 Chronicles 2.10: 10 Behold, I will give to your servants, the cutters who cut timber, twenty thousand cors of beaten wheat, twenty thousand baths of barley, twenty thousand baths of wine, and twenty thousand baths of oil.”

2 Chronicles 2.11: 11 Then Huram the king of Tyre answered in writing, which he sent to Solomon, “Because Yahweh loves his people, he has made you king over them.”

2 Chronicles 2.12: 12 Huram continued, “Blessed be Yahweh, the God of Israel, who made heaven and earth, who has given to David the king a wise son, endowed with discretion and understanding, who would build a house for Yahweh, and a house for his kingdom.

2 Chronicles 2.13: 13 Now I have sent a skillful man, endowed with understanding, of Huram my father’s,

2 Chronicles 2.14: 14 the son of a woman of the daughters of Dan; and his father was a man of Tyre, skillful to work in gold, in silver, in bronze, in iron, in stone, in timber, and in purple, in blue, in fine linen, and in crimson, also to engrave any kind of engraving and to devise any device; that there may be a place appointed to him with your skillful men, and with the skillful men of my lord David your father.

2 Chronicles 2.15: 15 “Now therefore the wheat, the barley, the oil, and the wine, which my lord has spoken of, let him send to his servants;

2 Chronicles 2.16: 16 and we will cut wood out of Lebanon, as much as you need. We will bring it to you in rafts by sea to Joppa; then you shall carry it up to Jerusalem.”

2 Chronicles 2.17: 17 Solomon counted all the foreigners who were in the land of Israel, after the census with which David his father had counted them; and they found one hundred fifty-three thousand six hundred.

2 Chronicles 2.18: 18 He set seventy thousand of them to bear burdens, eighty thousand who were stone cutters in the mountains, and three thousand six hundred overseers to assign the people their work.

2 Chronicles 3.0:

3

2 Chronicles 3.1: 1 Then Solomon began to build Yahweh’s house at Jerusalem on Mount Moriah, where Yahweh appeared to David his father, which he prepared in the place that David had appointed, on the threshing floor of Ornan the Jebusite.

2 Chronicles 3.2: 2 He began to build in the second day of the second month, in the fourth year of his reign.

2 Chronicles 3.3: 3 Now these are the foundations which Solomon laid for the building of God’s house. The length by cubits after the first measure was sixty cubits, and the width twenty cubits.

2 Chronicles 3.4: 4 The porch that was in front, its length, according to the width of the house, was twenty cubits, and the height one hundred twenty; and he overlaid it within with pure gold.

2 Chronicles 3.5: 5 He made the larger room with a ceiling of cypress wood, which he overlaid with fine gold, and ornamented it with palm trees and chains.

2 Chronicles 3.6: 6 He decorated the house with precious stones for beauty. The gold was gold from Parvaim.

2 Chronicles 3.7: 7 He also overlaid the house, the beams, the thresholds, its walls, and its doors with gold; and engraved cherubim on the walls.

2 Chronicles 3.8: 8 He made the most holy place. Its length, according to the width of the house, was twenty cubits, and its width twenty cubits; and he overlaid it with fine gold, amounting to six hundred talents.

2 Chronicles 3.9: 9 The weight of the nails was fifty shekels of gold. He overlaid the upper rooms with gold.

2 Chronicles 3.10: 10 In the most holy place he made two cherubim by carving; and they overlaid them with gold.

2 Chronicles 3.11: 11 The wings of the cherubim were twenty cubits long: the wing of the one was five cubits, reaching to the wall of the house; and the other wing was five cubits, reaching to the wing of the other cherub.

2 Chronicles 3.12: 12 The wing of the other cherub was five cubits, reaching to the wall of the house; and the other wing was five cubits, joining to the wing of the other cherub.

2 Chronicles 3.13: 13 The wings of these cherubim spread themselves out twenty cubits. They stood on their feet, and their faces were toward the house.

2 Chronicles 3.14: 14 He made the veil of blue, purple, crimson, and fine linen, and ornamented it with cherubim.

2 Chronicles 3.15: 15 Also he made before the house two pillars of thirty-five cubits height, and the capital that was on the top of each of them was five cubits.

2 Chronicles 3.16: 16 He made chains in the inner sanctuary, and put them on the tops of the pillars; and he made one hundred pomegranates, and put them on the chains.

2 Chronicles 3.17: 17 He set up the pillars before the temple, one on the right hand, and the other on the left; and called the name of that on the right hand Jachin, and the name of that on the left Boaz.

2 Chronicles 4.0:

4

2 Chronicles 4.1: 1 Then he made an altar of bronze, twenty cubits long, twenty cubits wide, and ten cubits high.

2 Chronicles 4.2: 2 Also he made the molten sea of ten cubits from brim to brim. It was round, five cubits high, and thirty cubits in circumference.

2 Chronicles 4.3: 3 Under it was the likeness of oxen, which encircled it, for ten cubits, encircling the sea. The oxen were in two rows, cast when it was cast.

2 Chronicles 4.4: 4 It stood on twelve oxen, three looking toward the north, and three looking toward the west, and three looking toward the south, and three looking toward the east; and the sea was set on them above, and all their hindquarters were inward.

2 Chronicles 4.5: 5 It was a handbreadth thick; and its brim was made like the brim of a cup, like the flower of a lily. It received and held three thousand baths.

2 Chronicles 4.6: 6 He also made ten basins, and put five on the right hand, and five on the left, to wash in them. The things that belonged to the burnt offering were washed in them; but the sea was for the priests to wash in.

2 Chronicles 4.7: 7 He made the ten lamp stands of gold according to the ordinance concerning them; and he set them in the temple, five on the right hand, and five on the left.

2 Chronicles 4.8: 8 He made also ten tables, and placed them in the temple, five on the right side, and five on the left. He made one hundred basins of gold.

2 Chronicles 4.9: 9 Furthermore he made the court of the priests, the great court, and doors for the court, and overlaid their doors with bronze.

2 Chronicles 4.10: 10 He set the sea on the right side of the house eastward, toward the south.

2 Chronicles 4.11: 11 Huram made the pots, the shovels, and the basins.

So Huram finished doing the work that he did for king Solomon in God’s house:

2 Chronicles 4.12: 12 the two pillars, the bowls, the two capitals which were on the top of the pillars, the two networks to cover the two bowls of the capitals that were on the top of the pillars,

2 Chronicles 4.13: 13 and the four hundred pomegranates for the two networks; two rows of pomegranates for each network, to cover the two bowls of the capitals that were on the pillars.

2 Chronicles 4.14: 14 He also made the bases, and he made the basins on the bases;

2 Chronicles 4.15: 15 one sea, and the twelve oxen under it.

2 Chronicles 4.16: 16 Huram his father also made the pots, the shovels, the forks, and all its vessels for king Solomon, for Yahweh’s house, of bright bronze.

2 Chronicles 4.17: 17 The king cast them in the plain of the Jordan, in the clay ground between Succoth and Zeredah.

2 Chronicles 4.18: 18 Thus Solomon made all these vessels in great abundance; for the weight of the bronze could not be determined.

2 Chronicles 4.19: 19 Solomon made all the vessels that were in God’s house, the golden altar also, and the tables with the show bread on them;

2 Chronicles 4.20: 20 and the lamp stands with their lamps, to burn according to the ordinance before the inner sanctuary, of pure gold;

2 Chronicles 4.21: 21 and the flowers, the lamps, and the tongs of gold that was perfect gold;

2 Chronicles 4.22: 22 and the snuffers, the basins, the spoons, and the fire pans of pure gold. As for the entry of the house, its inner doors for the most holy place and the doors of the main hall of the temple were of gold.

2 Chronicles 5.0:

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2 Chronicles 5.1: 1 Thus all the work that Solomon did for Yahweh’s house was finished. Solomon brought in the things that David his father had dedicated, even the silver, the gold, and all the vessels, and put them in the treasuries of God’s house.

2 Chronicles 5.2: 2 Then Solomon assembled the elders of Israel, and all the heads of the tribes, the princes of the fathers’ households of the children of Israel, to Jerusalem, to bring up the ark of Yahweh’s covenant out of David’s city, which is Zion.

2 Chronicles 5.3: 3 So all the men of Israel assembled themselves to the king at the feast, which was in the seventh month.

2 Chronicles 5.4: 4 All the elders of Israel came. The Levites took up the ark;

2 Chronicles 5.5: 5 and they brought up the ark, the Tent of Meeting, and all the holy vessels that were in the Tent; these the Levitical priests brought up.

2 Chronicles 5.6: 6 King Solomon and all the congregation of Israel, who were assembled to him, were before the ark, sacrificing sheep and cattle that could not be counted or numbered for multitude.

2 Chronicles 5.7: 7 The priests brought in the ark of Yahweh’s covenant to its place, into the inner sanctuary of the house, to the most holy place, even under the wings of the cherubim.

2 Chronicles 5.8: 8 For the cherubim spread out their wings over the place of the ark, and the cherubim covered the ark and its poles above.

2 Chronicles 5.9: 9 The poles were so long that the ends of the poles were seen from the ark in front of the inner sanctuary; but they were not seen outside; and it is there to this day.

2 Chronicles 5.10: 10 There was nothing in the ark except the two tablets which Moses put at Horeb, when Yahweh made a covenant with the children of Israel, when they came out of Egypt.

2 Chronicles 5.11: 11 When the priests had come out of the holy place (for all the priests who were present had sanctified themselves, and didn’t keep their divisions;

2 Chronicles 5.12: 12 also the Levites who were the singers, all of them, even Asaph, Heman, Jeduthun, and their sons and their brothers, arrayed in fine linen, with cymbals and stringed instruments and harps, stood at the east end of the altar, and with them one hundred twenty priests sounding with trumpets);

2 Chronicles 5.13: 13 when the trumpeters and singers were as one, to make one sound to be heard in praising and thanking Yahweh; and when they lifted up their voice with the trumpets and cymbals and instruments of music, and praised Yahweh, saying,

“For he is good;

for his loving kindness endures forever!”

then the house was filled with a cloud, even Yahweh’s house,

2 Chronicles 5.14: 14 so that the priests could not stand to minister by reason of the cloud; for Yahweh’s glory filled God’s house.

2 Chronicles 6.0:

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2 Chronicles 6.1: 1 Then Solomon said, “Yahweh has said that he would dwell in the thick darkness.

2 Chronicles 6.2: 2 But I have built you a house and home, a place for you to dwell in forever.”

2 Chronicles 6.3: 3 The king turned his face, and blessed all the assembly of Israel: and all the assembly of Israel stood.

2 Chronicles 6.4: 4 He said, “Blessed be Yahweh, the God of Israel, who spoke with his mouth to David my father, and has with his hands fulfilled it, saying,

2 Chronicles 6.5: 5 ‘Since the day that I brought my people out of the land of Egypt, I chose no city out of all the tribes of Israel to build a house in, that my name might be there and I chose no man to be prince over my people Israel;

2 Chronicles 6.6: 6 but now I have chosen Jerusalem, that my name might be there; and I have chosen David to be over my people Israel.’

2 Chronicles 6.7: 7 Now it was in the heart of David my father to build a house for the name of Yahweh, the God of Israel.

2 Chronicles 6.8: 8 But Yahweh said to David my father, ‘Whereas it was in your heart to build a house for my name, you did well that it was in your heart;

2 Chronicles 6.9: 9 nevertheless you shall not build the house; but your son who will come out of your body, he shall build the house for my name.’

2 Chronicles 6.10: 10 “Yahweh has performed his word that he spoke; for I have risen up in the place of David my father, and sit on the throne of Israel, as Yahweh promised, and have built the house for the name of Yahweh, the God of Israel.

2 Chronicles 6.11: 11 There I have set the ark, in which is Yahweh’s covenant, which he made with the children of Israel.”

2 Chronicles 6.12: 12 He stood before Yahweh’s altar in the presence of all the assembly of Israel, and spread out his hands

2 Chronicles 6.13: 13 (for Solomon had made a bronze platform, five cubits long, and five cubits wide, and three cubits high, and had set it in the middle of the court; and he stood on it, and knelt down on his knees before all the assembly of Israel, and spread out his hands toward heaven)

2 Chronicles 6.14: 14 and he said, “Yahweh, the God of Israel, there is no God like you in heaven or on earth; you who keep covenant and loving kindness with your servants who walk before you with all their heart;

2 Chronicles 6.15: 15 who have kept with your servant David my father that which you promised him. Yes, you spoke with your mouth, and have fulfilled it with your hand, as it is today.

2 Chronicles 6.16: 16 “Now therefore, Yahweh, the God of Israel, keep with your servant David my father that which you have promised him, saying, ‘There shall not fail you a man in my sight to sit on the throne of Israel, if only your children take heed to their way, to walk in my law as you have walked before me.’

2 Chronicles 6.17: 17 Now therefore, Yahweh, the God of Israel, let your word be verified, which you spoke to your servant David.

2 Chronicles 6.18: 18 “But will God indeed dwell with men on the earth? Behold, heaven and the heaven of heavens can’t contain you; how much less this house which I have built!

2 Chronicles 6.19: 19 Yet have respect for the prayer of your servant, and to his supplication, Yahweh my God, to listen to the cry and to the prayer which your servant prays before you;

2 Chronicles 6.20: 20 that your eyes may be open toward this house day and night, even toward the place where you have said that you would put your name; to listen to the prayer which your servant will pray toward this place.

2 Chronicles 6.21: 21 Listen to the petitions of your servant, and of your people Israel, when they pray toward this place. Yes, hear from your dwelling place, even from heaven; and when you hear, forgive.

2 Chronicles 6.22: 22 “If a man sins against his neighbor, and an oath is laid on him to cause him to swear, and he comes and swears before your altar in this house;

2 Chronicles 6.23: 23 then hear from heaven, act, and judge your servants, bringing retribution to the wicked, to bring his way on his own head; and justifying the righteous, to give him according to his righteousness.

2 Chronicles 6.24: 24 “If your people Israel are struck down before the enemy because they have sinned against you, and they turn again and confess your name, and pray and make supplication before you in this house;

2 Chronicles 6.25: 25 then hear from heaven, and forgive the sin of your people Israel, and bring them again to the land which you gave to them and to their fathers.

2 Chronicles 6.26: 26 “When the sky is shut up, and there is no rain, because they have sinned against you; if they pray toward this place, and confess your name, and turn from their sin, when you afflict them;

2 Chronicles 6.27: 27 then hear in heaven, and forgive the sin of your servants of your people Israel, when you teach them the good way in which they should walk; and send rain on your land, which you have given to your people for an inheritance.

2 Chronicles 6.28: 28 “If there is famine in the land, if there is pestilence, if there is blight or mildew, locust or caterpillar; if their enemies besiege them in the land of their cities; whatever plague or whatever sickness there is;

2 Chronicles 6.29: 29 whatever prayer and supplication is made by any man, or by all your people Israel, who will each know his own plague and his own sorrow, and shall spread out his hands toward this house;

2 Chronicles 6.30: 30 then hear from heaven your dwelling place and forgive, and render to every man according to all his ways, whose heart you know (for you, even you only, know the hearts of the children of men)

2 Chronicles 6.31: 31 that they may fear you, to walk in your ways, so long as they live in the land which you gave to our fathers.

2 Chronicles 6.32: 32 “Moreover concerning the foreigner, who is not of your people Israel, when he comes from a far country for your great name’s sake, and your mighty hand, and your outstretched arm; when they come and pray toward this house;

2 Chronicles 6.33: 33 then hear from heaven, even from your dwelling place, and do according to all that the foreigner calls to you for; that all the peoples of the earth may know your name and fear you, as do your people Israel, and that they may know that this house which I have built is called by your name.

2 Chronicles 6.34: 34 “If your people go out to battle against their enemies, by whatever way you send them, and they pray to you toward this city which you have chosen, and the house which I have built for your name;

2 Chronicles 6.35: 35 then hear from heaven their prayer and their supplication, and maintain their cause.

2 Chronicles 6.36: 36 “If they sin against you (for there is no man who doesn’t sin), and you are angry with them, and deliver them to the enemy, so that they carry them away captive to a land far off or near;

2 Chronicles 6.37: 37 yet if they come to their senses in the land where they are carried captive, and turn again, and make supplication to you in the land of their captivity, saying, ‘We have sinned, we have done perversely, and have dealt wickedly;’

2 Chronicles 6.38: 38 if they return to you with all their heart and with all their soul in the land of their captivity, where they have carried them captive, and pray toward their land, which you gave to their fathers, and the city which you have chosen, and toward the house which I have built for your name;

2 Chronicles 6.39: 39 then hear from heaven, even from your dwelling place, their prayer and their petitions, and maintain their cause, and forgive your people who have sinned against you.

2 Chronicles 6.40: 40 “Now, my God, let, I beg you, your eyes be open, and let your ears be attentive, to the prayer that is made in this place.

2 Chronicles 6.41: 41 “Now therefore arise, Yahweh God, into your resting place, you, and the ark of your strength. Let your priests, Yahweh God, be clothed with salvation, and let your saints rejoice in goodness.

2 Chronicles 6.42: 42 “Yahweh God, don’t turn away the face of your anointed. Remember your loving kindnesses to David your servant.”

2 Chronicles 7.0:

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2 Chronicles 7.1: 1 Now when Solomon had finished praying, fire came down from heaven and consumed the burnt offering and the sacrifices; and Yahweh’s glory filled the house.

2 Chronicles 7.2: 2 The priests could not enter into Yahweh’s house, because Yahweh’s glory filled Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 7.3: 3 All the children of Israel looked on, when the fire came down, and Yahweh’s glory was on the house. They bowed themselves with their faces to the ground on the pavement, worshiped, and gave thanks to Yahweh, saying,

“For he is good;

for his loving kindness endures forever.”

2 Chronicles 7.4: 4 Then the king and all the people offered sacrifices before Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 7.5: 5 King Solomon offered a sacrifice of twenty-two thousand head of cattle and a hundred twenty thousand sheep. So the king and all the people dedicated God’s house.

2 Chronicles 7.6: 6 The priests stood, according to their positions; the Levites also with instruments of music of Yahweh, which David the king had made to give thanks to Yahweh, when David praised by their ministry, saying “For his loving kindness endures forever.” The priests sounded trumpets before them; and all Israel stood.

2 Chronicles 7.7: 7 Moreover Solomon made the middle of the court that was before Yahweh’s house holy; for there he offered the burnt offerings, and the fat of the peace offerings, because the bronze altar which Solomon had made was not able to receive the burnt offering, the meal offering, and the fat.

2 Chronicles 7.8: 8 So Solomon held the feast at that time for seven days, and all Israel with him, a very great assembly, from the entrance of Hamath to the brook of Egypt.

2 Chronicles 7.9: 9 On the eighth day, they held a solemn assembly; for they kept the dedication of the altar seven days, and the feast seven days.

2 Chronicles 7.10: 10 On the twenty-third day of the seventh month, he sent the people away to their tents, joyful and glad of heart for the goodness that Yahweh had shown to David, and to Solomon, and to Israel his people.

2 Chronicles 7.11: 11 Thus Solomon finished Yahweh’s house and the king’s house; and he successfully completed all that came into Solomon’s heart to make in Yahweh’s house and in his own house.

2 Chronicles 7.12: 12 Yahweh appeared to Solomon by night, and said to him, “I have heard your prayer, and have chosen this place for myself for a house of sacrifice.

2 Chronicles 7.13: 13 “If I shut up the sky so that there is no rain, or if I command the locust to devour the land, or if I send pestilence among my people;

2 Chronicles 7.14: 14 if my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves, pray, seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then I will hear from heaven, will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.

2 Chronicles 7.15: 15 Now my eyes will be open and my ears attentive to prayer that is made in this place.

2 Chronicles 7.16: 16 For now I have chosen and made this house holy, that my name may be there forever; and my eyes and my heart will be there perpetually.

2 Chronicles 7.17: 17 “As for you, if you will walk before me as David your father walked, and do according to all that I have commanded you, and will keep my statutes and my ordinances;

2 Chronicles 7.18: 18 then I will establish the throne of your kingdom, according as I covenanted with David your father, saying, ‘There shall not fail you a man to be ruler in Israel.’

2 Chronicles 7.19: 19 But if you turn away, and forsake my statutes and my commandments which I have set before you, and shall go and serve other gods, and worship them;

2 Chronicles 7.20: 20 then I will pluck them up by the roots out of my land which I have given them; and this house, which I have made holy for my name, I will cast out of my sight, and I will make it a proverb and a byword among all peoples.

2 Chronicles 7.21: 21 This house, which is so high, everyone who passes by it shall be astonished, and shall say, ‘Why has Yahweh done this to this land and to this house?’

2 Chronicles 7.22: 22 They shall answer, ‘Because they abandoned Yahweh, the God of their fathers, who brought them out of the land of Egypt, and took other gods, worshiped them, and served them. Therefore he has brought all this evil on them.’”

2 Chronicles 8.0:

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2 Chronicles 8.1: 1 At the end of twenty years, in which Solomon had built Yahweh’s house and his own house,

2 Chronicles 8.2: 2 Solomon built the cities which Huram had given to Solomon, and caused the children of Israel to dwell there.

2 Chronicles 8.3: 3 Solomon went to Hamath Zobah, and prevailed against it.

2 Chronicles 8.4: 4 He built Tadmor in the wilderness, and all the storage cities, which he built in Hamath.

2 Chronicles 8.5: 5 Also he built Beth Horon the upper and Beth Horon the lower, fortified cities, with walls, gates, and bars;

2 Chronicles 8.6: 6 and Baalath, and all the storage cities that Solomon had, and all the cities for his chariots, the cities for his horsemen, and all that Solomon desired to build for his pleasure in Jerusalem, in Lebanon, and in all the land of his dominion.

2 Chronicles 8.7: 7 As for all the people who were left of the Hittites, the Amorites, the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites, who were not of Israel;

2 Chronicles 8.8: 8 of their children who were left after them in the land, whom the children of Israel didn’t consume, of them Solomon conscripted forced labor to this day.

2 Chronicles 8.9: 9 But of the children of Israel, Solomon made no servants for his work; but they were men of war, and chief of his captains, and rulers of his chariots and of his horsemen.

2 Chronicles 8.10: 10 These were the chief officers of king Solomon, even two-hundred fifty, who ruled over the people.

2 Chronicles 8.11: 11 Solomon brought up Pharaoh’s daughter out of David’s city to the house that he had built for her; for he said, “My wife shall not dwell in the house of David king of Israel, because the places where Yahweh’s ark has come are holy.”

2 Chronicles 8.12: 12 Then Solomon offered burnt offerings to Yahweh on Yahweh’s altar, which he had built before the porch,

2 Chronicles 8.13: 13 even as the duty of every day required, offering according to the commandment of Moses, on the Sabbaths, on the new moons, and on the set feasts, three times per year, during the feast of unleavened bread, during the feast of weeks, and during the feast of booths.

2 Chronicles 8.14: 14 He appointed, according to the ordinance of David his father, the divisions of the priests to their service, and the Levites to their offices, to praise and to minister before the priests, as the duty of every day required; the doorkeepers also by their divisions at every gate, for David the man of God had so commanded.

2 Chronicles 8.15: 15 They didn’t depart from the commandment of the king to the priests and Levites concerning any matter, or concerning the treasures.

2 Chronicles 8.16: 16 Now all the work of Solomon was prepared from the day of the foundation of Yahweh’s house until it was finished. So Yahweh’s house was completed.

2 Chronicles 8.17: 17 Then Solomon went to Ezion Geber and to Eloth, on the seashore in the land of Edom.

2 Chronicles 8.18: 18 Huram sent him ships and servants who had knowledge of the sea by the hands of his servants; and they came with the servants of Solomon to Ophir, and brought from there four hundred fifty talents of gold, and brought them to king Solomon.

2 Chronicles 9.0:

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2 Chronicles 9.1: 1 When the queen of Sheba heard of the fame of Solomon, she came to test Solomon with hard questions at Jerusalem, with a very great caravan, including camels that bore spices, gold in abundance, and precious stones. When she had come to Solomon, she talked with him about all that was in her heart.

2 Chronicles 9.2: 2 Solomon answered all her questions. There wasn’t anything hidden from Solomon which he didn’t tell her.

2 Chronicles 9.3: 3 When the queen of Sheba had seen the wisdom of Solomon, the house that he had built,

2 Chronicles 9.4: 4 the food of his table, the seating of his servants, the attendance of his ministers, their clothing, his cup bearers also, their clothing, and his ascent by which he went up to Yahweh’s house; there was no more spirit in her.

2 Chronicles 9.5: 5 She said to the king, “It was a true report that I heard in my own land of your acts and of your wisdom.

2 Chronicles 9.6: 6 However I didn’t believe their words until I came, and my eyes had seen it; and behold half of the greatness of your wisdom wasn’t told me. You exceed the fame that I heard!

2 Chronicles 9.7: 7 Happy are your men, and happy are these your servants, who stand continually before you, and hear your wisdom.

2 Chronicles 9.8: 8 Blessed be Yahweh your God, who delighted in you, to set you on his throne, to be king for Yahweh your God; because your God loved Israel, to establish them forever. Therefore he made you king over them, to do justice and righteousness.”

2 Chronicles 9.9: 9 She gave the king one hundred and twenty talents of gold, spices in great abundance, and precious stones. There was never before such spice as the queen of Sheba gave to king Solomon.

2 Chronicles 9.10: 10 The servants of Huram and the servants of Solomon, who brought gold from Ophir, also brought algum trees and precious stones.

2 Chronicles 9.11: 11 The king used algum tree wood to make terraces for Yahweh’s house and for the king’s house, and harps and stringed instruments for the singers. There were none like these seen before in the land of Judah.

2 Chronicles 9.12: 12 King Solomon gave to the queen of Sheba all her desire, whatever she asked, in addition to that which she had brought to the king. So she turned, and went to her own land, she and her servants.

2 Chronicles 9.13: 13 Now the weight of gold that came to Solomon in one year was six hundred sixty-six talents of gold,

2 Chronicles 9.14: 14 in addition to that which the traders and merchants brought. All the kings of Arabia and the governors of the country brought gold and silver to Solomon.

2 Chronicles 9.15: 15 King Solomon made two hundred bucklers of beaten gold. Six hundred shekels of beaten gold went to one buckler.

2 Chronicles 9.16: 16 He made three hundred shields of beaten gold. Three hundred shekels of gold went to one shield. The king put them in the House of the Forest of Lebanon.

2 Chronicles 9.17: 17 Moreover the king made a great throne of ivory, and overlaid it with pure gold.

2 Chronicles 9.18: 18 There were six steps to the throne, with a footstool of gold, which were fastened to the throne, and armrests on either side by the place of the seat, and two lions standing beside the armrests.

2 Chronicles 9.19: 19 Twelve lions stood there on the one side and on the other on the six steps. There was nothing like it made in any other kingdom.

2 Chronicles 9.20: 20 All king Solomon’s drinking vessels were of gold, and all the vessels of the House of the Forest of Lebanon were of pure gold. Silver was not considered valuable in the days of Solomon.

2 Chronicles 9.21: 21 For the king had ships that went to Tarshish with Huram’s servants. Once every three years, the ships of Tarshish came bringing gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks.

2 Chronicles 9.22: 22 So king Solomon exceeded all the kings of the earth in riches and wisdom.

2 Chronicles 9.23: 23 All the kings of the earth sought the presence of Solomon, to hear his wisdom, which God had put in his heart.

2 Chronicles 9.24: 24 They each brought tribute, vessels of silver, vessels of gold, clothing, armor, spices, horses, and mules every year.

2 Chronicles 9.25: 25 Solomon had four thousand stalls for horses and chariots, and twelve thousand horsemen, that he stationed in the chariot cities, and with the king at Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 9.26: 26 He ruled over all the kings from the River even to the land of the Philistines, and to the border of Egypt.

2 Chronicles 9.27: 27 The king made silver as common in Jerusalem as stones, and he made cedars to be as abundant as the sycamore trees that are in the lowland.

2 Chronicles 9.28: 28 They brought horses for Solomon out of Egypt and out of all lands.

2 Chronicles 9.29: 29 Now the rest of the acts of Solomon, first and last, aren’t they written in the history of Nathan the prophet, and in the prophecy of Ahijah the Shilonite, and in the visions of Iddo the seer concerning Jeroboam the son of Nebat?

2 Chronicles 9.30: 30 Solomon reigned in Jerusalem over all Israel forty years.

2 Chronicles 9.31: 31 Solomon slept with his fathers, and he was buried in his father David’s city: and Rehoboam his son reigned in his place.

2 Chronicles 10.0:

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2 Chronicles 10.1: 1 Rehoboam went to Shechem; for all Israel had come to Shechem to make him king.

2 Chronicles 10.2: 2 When Jeroboam the son of Nebat heard of it (for he was in Egypt, where he had fled from the presence of king Solomon), Jeroboam returned out of Egypt.

2 Chronicles 10.3: 3 They sent and called him; and Jeroboam and all Israel came, and they spoke to Rehoboam, saying,

2 Chronicles 10.4: 4 “Your father made our yoke grievous: now therefore make the grievous service of your father, and his heavy yoke which he put on us, lighter, and we will serve you.”

2 Chronicles 10.5: 5 He said to them, “Come again to me after three days.”

So the people departed.

2 Chronicles 10.6: 6 King Rehoboam took counsel with the old men, who had stood before Solomon his father while he yet lived, saying, “What counsel do you give me about how to answer these people?”

2 Chronicles 10.7: 7 They spoke to him, saying, “If you are kind to these people, please them, and speak good words to them, then they will be your servants forever.”

2 Chronicles 10.8: 8 But he abandoned the counsel of the old men which they had given him, and took counsel with the young men who had grown up with him, who stood before him.

2 Chronicles 10.9: 9 He said to them, “What counsel do you give, that we may give an answer to these people, who have spoken to me, saying, ‘Make the yoke that your father put on us lighter?’”

2 Chronicles 10.10: 10 The young men who had grown up with him spoke to him, saying, “Thus you shall tell the people who spoke to you, saying, ‘Your father made our yoke heavy, but make it lighter on us;’ thus you shall say to them, ‘My little finger is thicker than my father’s waist.

2 Chronicles 10.11: 11 Now whereas my father burdened you with a heavy yoke, I will add to your yoke. My father chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with scorpions.’”

2 Chronicles 10.12: 12 So Jeroboam and all the people came to Rehoboam the third day, as the king asked, saying, “Come to me again the third day.”

2 Chronicles 10.13: 13 The king answered them roughly; and king Rehoboam abandoned the counsel of the old men,

2 Chronicles 10.14: 14 and spoke to them after the counsel of the young men, saying, “My father made your yoke heavy, but I will add to it. My father chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with scorpions.”

2 Chronicles 10.15: 15 So the king didn’t listen to the people; for it was brought about by God, that Yahweh might establish his word, which he spoke by Ahijah the Shilonite to Jeroboam the son of Nebat.

2 Chronicles 10.16: 16 When all Israel saw that the king didn’t listen to them, the people answered the king, saying, “What portion do we have in David? We don’t have an inheritance in the son of Jesse! Every man to your tents, Israel! Now see to your own house, David.” So all Israel departed to their tents.

2 Chronicles 10.17: 17 But as for the children of Israel who lived in the cities of Judah, Rehoboam reigned over them.

2 Chronicles 10.18: 18 Then king Rehoboam sent Hadoram, who was over the men subject to forced labor; and the children of Israel stoned him to death with stones. King Rehoboam hurried to get himself up to his chariot, to flee to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 10.19: 19 So Israel rebelled against David’s house to this day.

2 Chronicles 11.0:

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2 Chronicles 11.1: 1 When Rehoboam had come to Jerusalem, he assembled the house of Judah and Benjamin, one hundred eighty thousand chosen men who were warriors, to fight against Israel, to bring the kingdom again to Rehoboam.

2 Chronicles 11.2: 2 But Yahweh’s word came to Shemaiah the man of God, saying,

2 Chronicles 11.3: 3 “Speak to Rehoboam the son of Solomon, king of Judah, and to all Israel in Judah and Benjamin, saying,

2 Chronicles 11.4: 4 ‘Yahweh says, “You shall not go up, nor fight against your brothers! Every man return to his house; for this thing is of me.”’” So they listened to Yahweh’s words, and returned from going against Jeroboam.

2 Chronicles 11.5: 5 Rehoboam lived in Jerusalem, and built cities for defense in Judah.

2 Chronicles 11.6: 6 He built Bethlehem, Etam, Tekoa,

2 Chronicles 11.7: 7 Beth Zur, Soco, Adullam,

2 Chronicles 11.8: 8 Gath, Mareshah, Ziph,

2 Chronicles 11.9: 9 Adoraim, Lachish, Azekah,

2 Chronicles 11.10: 10 Zorah, Aijalon, and Hebron, which are fortified cities in Judah and in Benjamin.

2 Chronicles 11.11: 11 He fortified the strongholds, and put captains in them, and stores of food, oil and wine.

2 Chronicles 11.12: 12 He put shields and spears in every city, and made them exceedingly strong. Judah and Benjamin belonged to him.

2 Chronicles 11.13: 13 The priests and the Levites who were in all Israel stood with him out of all their territory.

2 Chronicles 11.14: 14 For the Levites left their pasture lands and their possession, and came to Judah and Jerusalem; for Jeroboam and his sons cast them off, that they should not execute the priest’s office to Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 11.15: 15 He himself appointed priests for the high places, for the male goats, and for the calves which he had made.

2 Chronicles 11.16: 16 After them, out of all the tribes of Israel, those who set their hearts to seek Yahweh, the God of Israel, came to Jerusalem to sacrifice to Yahweh, the God of their fathers.

2 Chronicles 11.17: 17 So they strengthened the kingdom of Judah, and made Rehoboam the son of Solomon strong for three years; for they walked three years in the way of David and Solomon.

2 Chronicles 11.18: 18 Rehoboam took a wife for himself, Mahalath the daughter of Jerimoth the son of David and of Abihail the daughter of Eliab the son of Jesse.

2 Chronicles 11.19: 19 She bore him sons: Jeush, Shemariah, and Zaham.

2 Chronicles 11.20: 20 After her, he took Maacah the daughter of Absalom; and she bore him Abijah, Attai, Ziza, and Shelomith.

2 Chronicles 11.21: 21 Rehoboam loved Maacah the daughter of Absalom above all his wives and his concubines; for he took eighteen wives and sixty concubines, and became the father of twenty-eight sons and sixty daughters.

2 Chronicles 11.22: 22 Rehoboam appointed Abijah the son of Maacah to be chief, the prince among his brothers; for he intended to make him king.

2 Chronicles 11.23: 23 He dealt wisely, and dispersed of all his sons throughout all the lands of Judah and Benjamin, to every fortified city. He gave them food in abundance and he sought many wives for them.

2 Chronicles 12.0:

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2 Chronicles 12.1: 1 When the kingdom of Rehoboam was established and he was strong, he abandoned Yahweh’s law, and all Israel with him.

2 Chronicles 12.2: 2 In the fifth year of king Rehoboam, Shishak king of Egypt came up against Jerusalem, because they had trespassed against Yahweh,

2 Chronicles 12.3: 3 with twelve hundred chariots, and sixty thousand horsemen. The people were without number who came with him out of Egypt: the Lubim, the Sukkiim, and the Ethiopians.

2 Chronicles 12.4: 4 He took the fortified cities which belonged to Judah, and came to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 12.5: 5 Now Shemaiah the prophet came to Rehoboam, and to the princes of Judah, who were gathered together to Jerusalem because of Shishak, and said to them, “Yahweh says, ‘You have forsaken me, therefore I have also left you in the hand of Shishak.’”

2 Chronicles 12.6: 6 Then the princes of Israel and the king humbled themselves; and they said, “Yahweh is righteous.”

2 Chronicles 12.7: 7 When Yahweh saw that they humbled themselves, Yahweh’s word came to Shemaiah, saying, “They have humbled themselves. I will not destroy them; but I will grant them some deliverance, and my wrath won’t be poured out on Jerusalem by the hand of Shishak.

2 Chronicles 12.8: 8 Nevertheless they will be his servants, that they may know my service, and the service of the kingdoms of the countries.”

2 Chronicles 12.9: 9 So Shishak king of Egypt came up against Jerusalem and took away the treasures of Yahweh’s house and the treasures of the king’s house. He took it all away. He also took away the shields of gold which Solomon had made.

2 Chronicles 12.10: 10 King Rehoboam made shields of bronze in their place, and committed them to the hands of the captains of the guard, who kept the door of the king’s house.

2 Chronicles 12.11: 11 As often as the king entered into Yahweh’s house, the guard came and bore them, then brought them back into the guard room.

2 Chronicles 12.12: 12 When he humbled himself, Yahweh’s wrath turned from him, so as not to destroy him altogether. Moreover, there were good things found in Judah.

2 Chronicles 12.13: 13 So king Rehoboam strengthened himself in Jerusalem and reigned; for Rehoboam was forty-one years old when he began to reign, and he reigned seventeen years in Jerusalem, the city which Yahweh had chosen out of all the tribes of Israel to put his name there. His mother’s name was Naamah the Ammonitess.

2 Chronicles 12.14: 14 He did that which was evil, because he didn’t set his heart to seek Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 12.15: 15 Now the acts of Rehoboam, first and last, aren’t they written in the histories of Shemaiah the prophet and of Iddo the seer, in the genealogies? There were wars between Rehoboam and Jeroboam continually.

2 Chronicles 12.16: 16 Rehoboam slept with his fathers, and was buried in David’s city; and Abijah his son reigned in his place.

2 Chronicles 13.0:

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2 Chronicles 13.1: 1 In the eighteenth year of king Jeroboam, Abijah began to reign over Judah.

2 Chronicles 13.2: 2 He reigned three years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Micaiah the daughter of Uriel of Gibeah. There was war between Abijah and Jeroboam.

2 Chronicles 13.3: 3 Abijah joined battle with an army of valiant men of war, even four hundred thousand chosen men; and Jeroboam set the battle in array against him with eight hundred thousand chosen men, who were mighty men of valor.

2 Chronicles 13.4: 4 Abijah stood up on Mount Zemaraim, which is in the hill country of Ephraim, and said, “Hear me, Jeroboam and all Israel:

2 Chronicles 13.5: 5 Ought you not to know that Yahweh, the God of Israel, gave the kingdom over Israel to David forever, even to him and to his sons by a covenant of salt?

2 Chronicles 13.6: 6 Yet Jeroboam the son of Nebat, the servant of Solomon the son of David, rose up, and rebelled against his lord.

2 Chronicles 13.7: 7 Worthless men were gathered to him, wicked fellows who strengthened themselves against Rehoboam the son of Solomon, when Rehoboam was young and tender hearted, and could not withstand them.

2 Chronicles 13.8: 8 “Now you intend to withstand the kingdom of Yahweh in the hand of the sons of David. You are a great multitude, and the golden calves which Jeroboam made you for gods are with you.

2 Chronicles 13.9: 9 Haven’t you driven out the priests of Yahweh, the sons of Aaron, and the Levites, and made priests for yourselves according to the ways of the peoples of other lands? Whoever comes to consecrate himself with a young bull and seven rams may be a priest of those who are no gods.

2 Chronicles 13.10: 10 “But as for us, Yahweh is our God, and we have not forsaken him. We have priests serving Yahweh, the sons of Aaron, and the Levites in their work;

2 Chronicles 13.11: 11 and they burn to Yahweh every morning and every evening burnt offerings and sweet incense. They also set the show bread in order on the pure table; and the lamp stand of gold with its lamps, to burn every evening; for we keep the instruction of Yahweh our God, but you have forsaken him.

2 Chronicles 13.12: 12 Behold, God is with us at our head, and his priests with the trumpets of alarm to sound an alarm against you. Children of Israel, don’t fight against Yahweh, the God of your fathers; for you will not prosper.”

2 Chronicles 13.13: 13 But Jeroboam caused an ambush to come about behind them; so they were before Judah, and the ambush was behind them.

2 Chronicles 13.14: 14 When Judah looked back, behold, the battle was before and behind them; and they cried to Yahweh, and the priests sounded with the trumpets.

2 Chronicles 13.15: 15 Then the men of Judah gave a shout. As the men of Judah shouted, God struck Jeroboam and all Israel before Abijah and Judah.

2 Chronicles 13.16: 16 The children of Israel fled before Judah, and God delivered them into their hand.

2 Chronicles 13.17: 17 Abijah and his people killed them with a great slaughter, so five hundred thousand chosen men of Israel fell down slain.

2 Chronicles 13.18: 18 Thus the children of Israel were brought under at that time, and the children of Judah prevailed, because they relied on Yahweh, the God of their fathers.

2 Chronicles 13.19: 19 Abijah pursued Jeroboam, and took cities from him, Bethel with its villages, Jeshanah with its villages, and Ephron with its villages.

2 Chronicles 13.20: 20 Jeroboam didn’t recover strength again in the days of Abijah. Yahweh struck him, and he died.

2 Chronicles 13.21: 21 But Abijah grew mighty, and took for himself fourteen wives, and became the father of twenty-two sons, and sixteen daughters.

2 Chronicles 13.22: 22 The rest of the acts of Abijah, his ways, and his sayings are written in the commentary of the prophet Iddo.

2 Chronicles 14.0:

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2 Chronicles 14.1: 1 So Abijah slept with his fathers, and they buried him in David’s city; and Asa his son reigned in his place. In his days, the land was quiet ten years.

2 Chronicles 14.2: 2 Asa did that which was good and right in Yahweh his God’s eyes;

2 Chronicles 14.3: 3 for he took away the foreign altars and the high places, broke down the pillars, cut down the Asherah poles,

2 Chronicles 14.4: 4 and commanded Judah to seek Yahweh, the God of their fathers, and to obey his law and command.

2 Chronicles 14.5: 5 Also he took away out of all the cities of Judah the high places and the sun images; and the kingdom was quiet before him.

2 Chronicles 14.6: 6 He built fortified cities in Judah; for the land was quiet, and he had no war in those years, because Yahweh had given him rest.

2 Chronicles 14.7: 7 For he said to Judah, “Let’s build these cities, and make walls around them, with towers, gates, and bars. The land is yet before us, because we have sought Yahweh our God. We have sought him, and he has given us rest on every side.” So they built and prospered.

2 Chronicles 14.8: 8 Asa had an army of three hundred thousand out of Judah who bore bucklers and spears, and two hundred eighty thousand out of Benjamin who bore shields and drew bows. All these were mighty men of valor.

2 Chronicles 14.9: 9 Zerah the Ethiopian came out against them with an army of a million troops and three hundred chariots, and he came to Mareshah.

2 Chronicles 14.10: 10 Then Asa went out to meet him, and they set the battle in array in the valley of Zephathah at Mareshah.

2 Chronicles 14.11: 11 Asa cried to Yahweh his God, and said, “Yahweh, there is no one besides you to help, between the mighty and him who has no strength. Help us, Yahweh our God; for we rely on you, and in your name are we come against this multitude. Yahweh, you are our God. Don’t let man prevail against you.”

2 Chronicles 14.12: 12 So Yahweh struck the Ethiopians before Asa and before Judah; and the Ethiopians fled.

2 Chronicles 14.13: 13 Asa and the people who were with him pursued them to Gerar: and so many of the Ethiopians fell that they could not recover themselves; for they were destroyed before Yahweh and before his army; and they carried away very much booty.

2 Chronicles 14.14: 14 They struck all the cities around Gerar; for the fear of Yahweh came on them, and they plundered all the cities; for there was much plunder in them.

2 Chronicles 14.15: 15 They also struck the tents of livestock, and carried away sheep in abundance, and camels, and returned to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 15.0:

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2 Chronicles 15.1: 1 The Spirit of God came on Azariah the son of Oded:

2 Chronicles 15.2: 2 and he went out to meet Asa, and said to him, “Hear me, Asa, and all Judah and Benjamin! Yahweh is with you, while you are with him; and if you seek him, he will be found by you; but if you forsake him, he will forsake you.

2 Chronicles 15.3: 3 Now for a long time Israel was without the true God, without a teaching priest, and without law.

2 Chronicles 15.4: 4 But when in their distress they turned to Yahweh, the God of Israel, and sought him, he was found by them.

2 Chronicles 15.5: 5 In those times there was no peace to him who went out, nor to him who came in; but great troubles were on all the inhabitants of the lands.

2 Chronicles 15.6: 6 They were broken in pieces, nation against nation, and city against city; for God troubled them with all adversity.

2 Chronicles 15.7: 7 But you be strong, and don’t let your hands be slack; for your work will be rewarded.”

2 Chronicles 15.8: 8 When Asa heard these words, and the prophecy of Oded the prophet, he took courage, and put away the abominations out of all the land of Judah and Benjamin, and out of the cities which he had taken from the hill country of Ephraim; and he renewed Yahweh’s altar that was before Yahweh’s porch.

2 Chronicles 15.9: 9 He gathered all Judah and Benjamin, and those who lived with them out of Ephraim, Manasseh, and Simeon; for they came to him out of Israel in abundance when they saw that Yahweh his God was with him.

2 Chronicles 15.10: 10 So they gathered themselves together at Jerusalem in the third month, in the fifteenth year of Asa’s reign.

2 Chronicles 15.11: 11 They sacrificed to Yahweh in that day, of the plunder which they had brought, seven hundred head of cattle and seven thousand sheep.

2 Chronicles 15.12: 12 They entered into the covenant to seek Yahweh, the God of their fathers, with all their heart and with all their soul;

2 Chronicles 15.13: 13 and that whoever would not seek Yahweh, the God of Israel, should be put to death, whether small or great, whether man or woman.

2 Chronicles 15.14: 14 They swore to Yahweh with a loud voice, with shouting, with trumpets, and with cornets.

2 Chronicles 15.15: 15 All Judah rejoiced at the oath, for they had sworn with all their heart, and sought him with their whole desire; and he was found by them. Then Yahweh gave them rest all around.

2 Chronicles 15.16: 16 Also Maacah, the mother of Asa the king, he removed from being queen, because she had made an abominable image for an Asherah; so Asa cut down her image, ground it into dust, and burned it at the brook Kidron.

2 Chronicles 15.17: 17 But the high places were not taken away out of Israel; nevertheless the heart of Asa was perfect all his days.

2 Chronicles 15.18: 18 He brought the things that his father had dedicated, and that he himself had dedicated, silver, gold, and vessels into God’s house.

2 Chronicles 15.19: 19 There was no more war to the thirty-fifth year of Asa’s reign.

2 Chronicles 16.0:

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2 Chronicles 16.1: 1 In the thirty-sixth year of Asa’s reign, Baasha king of Israel went up against Judah, and built Ramah, that he might not allow anyone to go out or come in to Asa king of Judah.

2 Chronicles 16.2: 2 Then Asa brought out silver and gold out of the treasures of Yahweh’s house and of the king’s house, and sent to Ben Hadad king of Syria, who lived at Damascus, saying,

2 Chronicles 16.3: 3 “Let there be a treaty between me and you, as there was between my father and your father. Behold, I have sent you silver and gold. Go, break your treaty with Baasha king of Israel, that he may depart from me.”

2 Chronicles 16.4: 4 Ben Hadad listened to king Asa, and sent the captains of his armies against the cities of Israel; and they struck Ijon, Dan, Abel Maim, and all the storage cities of Naphtali.

2 Chronicles 16.5: 5 When Baasha heard of it, he stopped building Ramah, and let his work cease.

2 Chronicles 16.6: 6 Then Asa the king took all Judah, and they carried away the stones of Rama, and its timber, with which Baasha had built; and he built Geba and Mizpah with them.

2 Chronicles 16.7: 7 At that time Hanani the seer came to Asa king of Judah, and said to him, “Because you have relied on the king of Syria, and have not relied on Yahweh your God, therefore the army of the king of Syria has escaped out of your hand.

2 Chronicles 16.8: 8 Weren’t the Ethiopians and the Lubim a huge army, with chariots and exceedingly many horsemen? Yet, because you relied on Yahweh, he delivered them into your hand.

2 Chronicles 16.9: 9 For Yahweh’s eyes run back and forth throughout the whole earth, to show himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect toward him. You have done foolishly in this; for from now on you will have wars.”

2 Chronicles 16.10: 10 Then Asa was angry with the seer, and put him in the prison; for he was in a rage with him because of this thing. Asa oppressed some of the people at the same time.

2 Chronicles 16.11: 11 Behold, the acts of Asa, first and last, behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Judah and Israel.

2 Chronicles 16.12: 12 In the thirty-ninth year of his reign, Asa was diseased in his feet. His disease was exceedingly great: yet in his disease he didn’t seek Yahweh, but just the physicians.

2 Chronicles 16.13: 13 Asa slept with his fathers, and died in the forty-first year of his reign.

2 Chronicles 16.14: 14 They buried him in his own tomb, which he had dug out for himself in David’s city, and laid him in the bed which was filled with sweet odors and various kinds of spices prepared by the perfumers’ art; and they made a very great fire for him.

2 Chronicles 17.0:

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2 Chronicles 17.1: 1 Jehoshaphat his son reigned in his place, and strengthened himself against Israel.

2 Chronicles 17.2: 2 He placed forces in all the fortified cities of Judah, and set garrisons in the land of Judah, and in the cities of Ephraim, which Asa his father had taken.

2 Chronicles 17.3: 3 Yahweh was with Jehoshaphat, because he walked in the first ways of his father David, and didn’t seek the Baals,

2 Chronicles 17.4: 4 but sought to the God of his father, and walked in his commandments, and not in the ways of Israel.

2 Chronicles 17.5: 5 Therefore Yahweh established the kingdom in his hand. All Judah brought tribute to Jehoshaphat, and he had riches and honor in abundance.

2 Chronicles 17.6: 6 His heart was lifted up in the ways of Yahweh. Furthermore, he took away the high places and the Asherah poles out of Judah.

2 Chronicles 17.7: 7 Also in the third year of his reign he sent his princes, even Ben Hail, Obadiah, Zechariah, Nethanel, and Micaiah, to teach in the cities of Judah;

2 Chronicles 17.8: 8 and with them the Levites, even Shemaiah, Nethaniah, Zebadiah, Asahel, Shemiramoth, Jehonathan, Adonijah, Tobijah, and Tobadonijah, the Levites; and with them Elishama and Jehoram, the priests.

2 Chronicles 17.9: 9 They taught in Judah, having the book of Yahweh’s law with them. They went about throughout all the cities of Judah and taught among the people.

2 Chronicles 17.10: 10 The fear of Yahweh fell on all the kingdoms of the lands that were around Judah, so that they made no war against Jehoshaphat.

2 Chronicles 17.11: 11 Some of the Philistines brought Jehoshaphat presents and silver for tribute. The Arabians also brought him flocks, seven thousand seven hundred rams, and seven thousand seven hundred male goats.

2 Chronicles 17.12: 12 Jehoshaphat grew great exceedingly; and he built fortresses and store cities in Judah.

2 Chronicles 17.13: 13 He had many works in the cities of Judah; and men of war, mighty men of valor, in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 17.14: 14 This was the numbering of them according to their fathers’ houses: From Judah, the captains of thousands: Adnah the captain, and with him three hundred thousand mighty men of valor;

2 Chronicles 17.15: 15 and next to him Jehohanan the captain, and with him two hundred eighty thousand;

2 Chronicles 17.16: 16 and next to him Amasiah the son of Zichri, who willingly offered himself to Yahweh, and with him two hundred thousand mighty men of valor.

2 Chronicles 17.17: 17 From Benjamin: Eliada, a mighty man of valor, and with him two hundred thousand armed with bow and shield;

2 Chronicles 17.18: 18 and next to him Jehozabad, and with him one hundred eighty thousand ready and prepared for war.

2 Chronicles 17.19: 19 These were those who waited on the king, in addition to those whom the king put in the fortified cities throughout all Judah.

2 Chronicles 18.0:

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2 Chronicles 18.1: 1 Now Jehoshaphat had riches and honor in abundance; and he allied himself with Ahab.

2 Chronicles 18.2: 2 After some years, he went down to Ahab to Samaria. Ahab killed sheep and cattle for him in abundance, and for the people who were with him, and moved him to go up with him to Ramoth Gilead.

2 Chronicles 18.3: 3 Ahab king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat king of Judah, “Will you go with me to Ramoth Gilead?”

He answered him, “I am as you are, and my people as your people. We will be with you in the war.”

2 Chronicles 18.4: 4 Jehoshaphat said to the king of Israel, “Please inquire first for Yahweh’s word.”

2 Chronicles 18.5: 5 Then the king of Israel gathered the prophets together, four hundred men, and said to them, “Shall we go to Ramoth Gilead to battle, or shall I forbear?”

They said, “Go up; for God will deliver it into the hand of the king.”

2 Chronicles 18.6: 6 But Jehoshaphat said, “Isn’t there here a prophet of Yahweh besides, that we may inquire of him?”

2 Chronicles 18.7: 7 The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “There is yet one man by whom we may inquire of Yahweh; but I hate him, for he never prophesies good concerning me, but always evil. He is Micaiah the son of Imla.”

Jehoshaphat said, “Don’t let the king say so.”

2 Chronicles 18.8: 8 Then the king of Israel called an officer, and said, “Get Micaiah the son of Imla quickly.”

2 Chronicles 18.9: 9 Now the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat the king of Judah each sat on his throne, arrayed in their robes, and they were sitting in an open place at the entrance of the gate of Samaria; and all the prophets were prophesying before them.

2 Chronicles 18.10: 10 Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah made himself horns of iron and said, “Yahweh says, ‘With these you shall push the Syrians, until they are consumed.’”

2 Chronicles 18.11: 11 All the prophets prophesied so, saying, “Go up to Ramoth Gilead, and prosper; for Yahweh will deliver it into the hand of the king.”

2 Chronicles 18.12: 12 The messenger who went to call Micaiah spoke to him, saying, “Behold, the words of the prophets declare good to the king with one mouth. Let your word therefore, please be like one of theirs, and speak good.”

2 Chronicles 18.13: 13 Micaiah said, “As Yahweh lives, I will say what my God says.”

2 Chronicles 18.14: 14 When he had come to the king, the king said to him, “Micaiah, shall we go to Ramoth Gilead to battle, or shall I forbear?”

He said, “Go up, and prosper. They shall be delivered into your hand.”

2 Chronicles 18.15: 15 The king said to him, “How many times shall I adjure you that you speak to me nothing but the truth in Yahweh’s name?”

2 Chronicles 18.16: 16 He said, “I saw all Israel scattered on the mountains, as sheep that have no shepherd. Yahweh said, ‘These have no master. Let them each return to his house in peace.’”

2 Chronicles 18.17: 17 The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “Didn’t I tell you that he would not prophesy good concerning me, but evil?”

2 Chronicles 18.18: 18 Micaiah said, “Therefore hear Yahweh’s word: I saw Yahweh sitting on his throne, and all the army of heaven standing on his right hand and on his left.

2 Chronicles 18.19: 19 Yahweh said, ‘Who will entice Ahab king of Israel, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth Gilead?’ One spoke saying in this way, and another saying in that way.

2 Chronicles 18.20: 20 A spirit came out, stood before Yahweh, and said, ‘I will entice him.’

“Yahweh said to him, ‘How?’

2 Chronicles 18.21: 21 “He said, ‘I will go, and will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets.’

“He said, ‘You will entice him, and will prevail also. Go and do so.’

2 Chronicles 18.22: 22 “Now therefore, behold, Yahweh has put a lying spirit in the mouth of these your prophets; and Yahweh has spoken evil concerning you.”

2 Chronicles 18.23: 23 Then Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah came near, and struck Micaiah on the cheek, and said, “Which way did Yahweh’s Spirit go from me to speak to you?”

2 Chronicles 18.24: 24 Micaiah said, “Behold, you shall see on that day, when you go into an inner room to hide yourself.”

2 Chronicles 18.25: 25 The king of Israel said, “Take Micaiah, and carry him back to Amon the governor of the city, and to Joash the king’s son;

2 Chronicles 18.26: 26 and say, ‘The king says, “Put this fellow in the prison, and feed him with bread of affliction and with water of affliction, until I return in peace.”’”

2 Chronicles 18.27: 27 Micaiah said, “If you return at all in peace, Yahweh has not spoken by me.” He said, “Listen, you people, all of you!”

2 Chronicles 18.28: 28 So the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat the king of Judah went up to Ramoth Gilead.

2 Chronicles 18.29: 29 The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “I will disguise myself, and go into the battle; but you put on your robes.” So the king of Israel disguised himself; and they went into the battle.

2 Chronicles 18.30: 30 Now the king of Syria had commanded the captains of his chariots, saying, “Don’t fight with small nor great, except only with the king of Israel.”

2 Chronicles 18.31: 31 When the captains of the chariots saw Jehoshaphat, they said, “It is the king of Israel!” Therefore they turned around to fight against him. But Jehoshaphat cried out, and Yahweh helped him; and God moved them to depart from him.

2 Chronicles 18.32: 32 When the captains of the chariots saw that it was not the king of Israel, they turned back from pursuing him.

2 Chronicles 18.33: 33 A certain man drew his bow at random, and struck the king of Israel between the joints of the armor. Therefore he said to the driver of the chariot, “Turn your hand, and carry me out of the army; for I am severely wounded.”

2 Chronicles 18.34: 34 The battle increased that day. However the king of Israel propped himself up in his chariot against the Syrians until the evening; and at about sunset, he died.

2 Chronicles 19.0:

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2 Chronicles 19.1: 1 Jehoshaphat the king of Judah returned to his house in peace to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 19.2: 2 Jehu the son of Hanani the seer went out to meet him, and said to king Jehoshaphat, “Should you help the wicked, and love those who hate Yahweh? Because of this, wrath is on you from before Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 19.3: 3 Nevertheless there are good things found in you, in that you have put away the Asheroth out of the land, and have set your heart to seek God.”

2 Chronicles 19.4: 4 Jehoshaphat lived at Jerusalem; and he went out again among the people from Beersheba to the hill country of Ephraim, and brought them back to Yahweh, the God of their fathers.

2 Chronicles 19.5: 5 He set judges in the land throughout all the fortified cities of Judah, city by city,

2 Chronicles 19.6: 6 and said to the judges, “Consider what you do, for you don’t judge for man, but for Yahweh; and he is with you in the judgment.

2 Chronicles 19.7: 7 Now therefore let the fear of Yahweh be on you. Take heed and do it; for there is no iniquity with Yahweh our God, nor respect of persons, nor taking of bribes.”

2 Chronicles 19.8: 8 Moreover in Jerusalem Jehoshaphat appointed Levites and priests, and of the heads of the fathers’ households of Israel, for the judgment of Yahweh, and for controversies. They returned to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 19.9: 9 He commanded them, saying, “You shall do this in the fear of Yahweh, faithfully, and with a perfect heart.

2 Chronicles 19.10: 10 Whenever any controversy comes to you from your brothers who dwell in their cities, between blood and blood, between law and commandment, statutes and ordinances, you must warn them, that they not be guilty toward Yahweh, and so wrath come on you and on your brothers. Do this, and you will not be guilty.

2 Chronicles 19.11: 11 Behold, Amariah the chief priest is over you in all matters of Yahweh; and Zebadiah the son of Ishmael, the ruler of the house of Judah, in all the king’s matters. Also the Levites shall be officers before you. Deal courageously, and may Yahweh be with the good.”

2 Chronicles 20.0:

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2 Chronicles 20.1: 1 After this, the children of Moab, the children of Ammon, and with them some of the Ammonites, came against Jehoshaphat to battle.

2 Chronicles 20.2: 2 Then some came who told Jehoshaphat, saying, “A great multitude is coming against you from beyond the sea from Syria. Behold, they are in Hazazon Tamar” (that is, En Gedi).

2 Chronicles 20.3: 3 Jehoshaphat was alarmed, and set himself to seek to Yahweh. He proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah.

2 Chronicles 20.4: 4 Judah gathered themselves together to seek help from Yahweh. They came out of all the cities of Judah to seek Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 20.5: 5 Jehoshaphat stood in the assembly of Judah and Jerusalem, in Yahweh’s house, before the new court;

2 Chronicles 20.6: 6 and he said, “Yahweh, the God of our fathers, aren’t you God in heaven? Aren’t you ruler over all the kingdoms of the nations? Power and might are in your hand, so that no one is able to withstand you.

2 Chronicles 20.7: 7 Didn’t you, our God, drive out the inhabitants of this land before your people Israel, and give it to the offspring of Abraham your friend forever?

2 Chronicles 20.8: 8 They lived in it, and have built you a sanctuary in it for your name, saying,

2 Chronicles 20.9: 9 ‘If evil comes on us—the sword, judgment, pestilence, or famine—we will stand before this house, and before you (for your name is in this house), and cry to you in our affliction, and you will hear and save.’

2 Chronicles 20.10: 10 Now, behold, the children of Ammon and Moab and Mount Seir, whom you would not let Israel invade when they came out of the land of Egypt, but they turned away from them, and didn’t destroy them;

2 Chronicles 20.11: 11 behold, how they reward us, to come to cast us out of your possession, which you have given us to inherit.

2 Chronicles 20.12: 12 Our God, will you not judge them? For we have no might against this great company that comes against us. We don’t know what to do, but our eyes are on you.”

2 Chronicles 20.13: 13 All Judah stood before Yahweh, with their little ones, their wives, and their children.

2 Chronicles 20.14: 14 Then Yahweh’s Spirit came on Jahaziel the son of Zechariah, the son of Benaiah, the son of Jeiel, the son of Mattaniah, the Levite, of the sons of Asaph, in the middle of the assembly;

2 Chronicles 20.15: 15 and he said, “Listen, all Judah, and you inhabitants of Jerusalem, and you, king Jehoshaphat. Yahweh says to you, ‘Don’t be afraid, and don’t be dismayed because of this great multitude; for the battle is not yours, but God’s.

2 Chronicles 20.16: 16 Tomorrow, go down against them. Behold, they are coming up by the ascent of Ziz. You will find them at the end of the valley, before the wilderness of Jeruel.

2 Chronicles 20.17: 17 You will not need to fight this battle. Set yourselves, stand still, and see the salvation of Yahweh with you, O Judah and Jerusalem. Don’t be afraid, nor be dismayed. Go out against them tomorrow, for Yahweh is with you.’”

2 Chronicles 20.18: 18 Jehoshaphat bowed his head with his face to the ground; and all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell down before Yahweh, worshiping Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 20.19: 19 The Levites, of the children of the Kohathites and of the children of the Korahites, stood up to praise Yahweh, the God of Israel, with an exceedingly loud voice.

2 Chronicles 20.20: 20 They rose early in the morning, and went out into the wilderness of Tekoa. As they went out, Jehoshaphat stood and said, “Listen to me, Judah, and you inhabitants of Jerusalem! Believe in Yahweh your God, so you will be established! Believe his prophets, so you will prosper.”

2 Chronicles 20.21: 21 When he had taken counsel with the people, he appointed those who were to sing to Yahweh, and give praise in holy array, as they go out before the army, and say, “Give thanks to Yahweh; for his loving kindness endures forever.”

2 Chronicles 20.22: 22 When they began to sing and to praise, Yahweh set ambushers against the children of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir, who had come against Judah; and they were struck.

2 Chronicles 20.23: 23 For the children of Ammon and Moab stood up against the inhabitants of Mount Seir to utterly kill and destroy them. When they had finished the inhabitants of Seir, everyone helped to destroy each other.

2 Chronicles 20.24: 24 When Judah came to the place overlooking the wilderness, they looked at the multitude; and behold, they were dead bodies fallen to the earth, and there were none who escaped.

2 Chronicles 20.25: 25 When Jehoshaphat and his people came to take their plunder, they found among them in abundance both riches and dead bodies, and precious jewels, which they stripped off for themselves, more than they could carry away. They took plunder for three days, it was so much.

2 Chronicles 20.26: 26 On the fourth day, they assembled themselves in Beracah Valley, for there they blessed Yahweh. Therefore the name of that place was called “Beracah Valley” to this day.

2 Chronicles 20.27: 27 Then they returned, every man of Judah and Jerusalem, with Jehoshaphat in front of them, to go again to Jerusalem with joy; for Yahweh had made them to rejoice over their enemies.

2 Chronicles 20.28: 28 They came to Jerusalem with stringed instruments, harps, and trumpets to Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 20.29: 29 The fear of God was on all the kingdoms of the countries, when they heard that Yahweh fought against the enemies of Israel.

2 Chronicles 20.30: 30 So the realm of Jehoshaphat was quiet, for his God gave him rest all around.

2 Chronicles 20.31: 31 Jehoshaphat reigned over Judah. He was thirty-five years old when he began to reign; and he reigned twenty-five years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Azubah the daughter of Shilhi.

2 Chronicles 20.32: 32 He walked in the way of Asa his father, and didn’t turn away from it, doing that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes.

2 Chronicles 20.33: 33 However the high places were not taken away, and the people had still not set their hearts on the God of their fathers.

2 Chronicles 20.34: 34 Now the rest of the acts of Jehoshaphat, first and last, behold, they are written in the history of Jehu the son of Hanani, which is included in the book of the kings of Israel.

2 Chronicles 20.35: 35 After this, Jehoshaphat king of Judah joined himself with Ahaziah king of Israel. The same did very wickedly.

2 Chronicles 20.36: 36 He joined himself with him to make ships to go to Tarshish. They made the ships in Ezion Geber.

2 Chronicles 20.37: 37 Then Eliezer the son of Dodavahu of Mareshah prophesied against Jehoshaphat, saying, “Because you have joined yourself with Ahaziah, Yahweh has destroyed your works.” The ships were wrecked, so that they were not able to go to Tarshish.

2 Chronicles 21.0:

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2 Chronicles 21.1: 1 Jehoshaphat slept with his fathers, and was buried with his fathers in David’s city, and Jehoram his son reigned in his place.

2 Chronicles 21.2: 2 He had brothers, the sons of Jehoshaphat: Azariah, Jehiel, Zechariah, Azariah, Michael, and Shephatiah. All these were the sons of Jehoshaphat king of Israel.

2 Chronicles 21.3: 3 Their father gave them great gifts of silver, of gold, and of precious things, with fortified cities in Judah; but he gave the kingdom to Jehoram, because he was the firstborn.

2 Chronicles 21.4: 4 Now when Jehoram had risen up over the kingdom of his father, and had strengthened himself, he killed all his brothers with the sword, and also some of the princes of Israel.

2 Chronicles 21.5: 5 Jehoram was thirty-two years old when he began to reign, and he reigned eight years in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 21.6: 6 He walked in the way of the kings of Israel, as did Ahab’s house; for he had Ahab’s daughter as his wife. He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight.

2 Chronicles 21.7: 7 However Yahweh would not destroy David’s house, because of the covenant that he had made with David, and as he promised to give a lamp to him and to his children always.

2 Chronicles 21.8: 8 In his days Edom revolted from under the hand of Judah, and made a king over themselves.

2 Chronicles 21.9: 9 Then Jehoram went there with his captains and all his chariots with him. He rose up by night and struck the Edomites who surrounded him, along with the captains of the chariots.

2 Chronicles 21.10: 10 So Edom revolted from under the hand of Judah to this day. Then Libnah revolted at the same time from under his hand, because he had forsaken Yahweh, the God of his fathers.

2 Chronicles 21.11: 11 Moreover he made high places in the mountains of Judah, and made the inhabitants of Jerusalem play the prostitute, and led Judah astray.

2 Chronicles 21.12: 12 A letter came to him from Elijah the prophet, saying, “Yahweh, the God of David your father, says, ‘Because you have not walked in the ways of Jehoshaphat your father, nor in the ways of Asa king of Judah,

2 Chronicles 21.13: 13 but have walked in the way of the kings of Israel, and have made Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem to play the prostitute like Ahab’s house did, and also have slain your brothers of your father’s house, who were better than yourself,

2 Chronicles 21.14: 14 behold, Yahweh will strike your people with a great plague, including your children, your wives, and all your possessions;

2 Chronicles 21.15: 15 and you will have great sickness with a disease of your bowels, until your bowels fall out by reason of the sickness, day by day.’”

2 Chronicles 21.16: 16 Yahweh stirred up against Jehoram the spirit of the Philistines, and of the Arabians who are beside the Ethiopians;

2 Chronicles 21.17: 17 and they came up against Judah, broke into it, and carried away all the possessions that were found in the king’s house, including his sons and his wives; so that there was no son left him, except Jehoahaz, the youngest of his sons.

2 Chronicles 21.18: 18 After all this Yahweh struck him in his bowels with an incurable disease.

2 Chronicles 21.19: 19 In process of time, at the end of two years, his bowels fell out by reason of his sickness, and he died of severe diseases. His people made no burning for him, like the burning of his fathers.

2 Chronicles 21.20: 20 He was thirty-two years old when he began to reign, and he reigned in Jerusalem eight years. He departed without being missed; and they buried him in David’s city, but not in the tombs of the kings.

2 Chronicles 22.0:

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2 Chronicles 22.1: 1 The inhabitants of Jerusalem made Ahaziah his youngest son king in his place, because the band of men who came with the Arabians to the camp had slain all the oldest. So Ahaziah the son of Jehoram king of Judah reigned.

2 Chronicles 22.2: 2 Ahaziah was forty-two years old when he began to reign, and he reigned one year in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Athaliah the daughter of Omri.

2 Chronicles 22.3: 3 He also walked in the ways of Ahab’s house, because his mother was his counselor in acting wickedly.

2 Chronicles 22.4: 4 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, as did Ahab’s house, for they were his counselors after the death of his father, to his destruction.

2 Chronicles 22.5: 5 He also followed their counsel, and went with Jehoram the son of Ahab king of Israel to war against Hazael king of Syria at Ramoth Gilead, and the Syrians wounded Joram.

2 Chronicles 22.6: 6 He returned to be healed in Jezreel of the wounds which they had given him at Ramah, when he fought against Hazael king of Syria. Azariah the son of Jehoram king of Judah went down to see Jehoram the son of Ahab in Jezreel, because he was sick.

2 Chronicles 22.7: 7 Now the destruction of Ahaziah was of God, in that he went to Joram; for when he had come, he went out with Jehoram against Jehu the son of Nimshi, whom Yahweh had anointed to cut off Ahab’s house.

2 Chronicles 22.8: 8 When Jehu was executing judgment on Ahab’s house, he found the princes of Judah and the sons of the brothers of Ahaziah, serving Ahaziah, and killed them.

2 Chronicles 22.9: 9 He sought Ahaziah, and they caught him (now he was hiding in Samaria), and they brought him to Jehu, and killed him; and they buried him, for they said, “He is the son of Jehoshaphat, who sought Yahweh with all his heart.” The house of Ahaziah had no power to hold the kingdom.

2 Chronicles 22.10: 10 Now when Athaliah the mother of Ahaziah saw that her son was dead, she arose and destroyed all the royal offspring of the house of Judah.

2 Chronicles 22.11: 11 But Jehoshabeath, the king’s daughter, took Joash the son of Ahaziah, and stealthily rescued him from among the king’s sons who were slain, and put him and his nurse in the bedroom. So Jehoshabeath, the daughter of king Jehoram, the wife of Jehoiada the priest (for she was the sister of Ahaziah), hid him from Athaliah, so that she didn’t kill him.

2 Chronicles 22.12: 12 He was with them hidden in God’s house six years while Athaliah reigned over the land.

2 Chronicles 23.0:

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2 Chronicles 23.1: 1 In the seventh year, Jehoiada strengthened himself, and took the captains of hundreds, Azariah the son of Jeroham, Ishmael the son of Jehohanan, Azariah the son of Obed, Maaseiah the son of Adaiah, and Elishaphat the son of Zichri, into a covenant with him.

2 Chronicles 23.2: 2 They went around in Judah, and gathered the Levites out of all the cities of Judah, and the heads of fathers’ households of Israel, and they came to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 23.3: 3 All the assembly made a covenant with the king in God’s house. He said to them, “Behold, the king’s son must reign, as Yahweh has spoken concerning the sons of David.

2 Chronicles 23.4: 4 This is the thing that you must do. A third part of you, who come in on the Sabbath, of the priests and of the Levites, shall be gatekeepers of the thresholds.

2 Chronicles 23.5: 5 A third part shall be at the king’s house; and a third part at the gate of the foundation. All the people will be in the courts of Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 23.6: 6 But let no one come into Yahweh’s house, except the priests and those who minister of the Levites. They shall come in, for they are holy, but all the people shall follow Yahweh’s instructions.

2 Chronicles 23.7: 7 The Levites shall surround the king, every man with his weapons in his hand. Whoever comes into the house, let him be slain. Be with the king when he comes in, and when he goes out.”

2 Chronicles 23.8: 8 So the Levites and all Judah did according to all that Jehoiada the priest commanded: and they each took his men, those who were to come in on the Sabbath; with those who were to go out on the Sabbath; for Jehoiada the priest didn’t dismiss the shift.

2 Chronicles 23.9: 9 Jehoiada the priest delivered to the captains of hundreds the spears, and bucklers, and shields, that had been king David’s, which were in God’s house.

2 Chronicles 23.10: 10 He set all the people, every man with his weapon in his hand, from the right side of the house to the left side of the house, near the altar and the house, around the king.

2 Chronicles 23.11: 11 Then they brought out the king’s son, and put the crown on him, and gave him the covenant, and made him king. Jehoiada and his sons anointed him, and they said, “Long live the king!”

2 Chronicles 23.12: 12 When Athaliah heard the noise of the people running and praising the king, she came to the people into Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 23.13: 13 Then she looked, and, behold, the king stood by his pillar at the entrance, and the captains and the trumpets by the king. All the people of the land rejoiced, and blew trumpets. The singers also played musical instruments, and led the singing of praise. Then Athaliah tore her clothes, and said, “Treason! treason!”

2 Chronicles 23.14: 14 Jehoiada the priest brought out the captains of hundreds who were set over the army, and said to them, “Bring her out between the ranks; and whoever follows her, let him be slain with the sword.” For the priest said, “Don’t kill her in Yahweh’s house.”

2 Chronicles 23.15: 15 So they made way for her. She went to the entrance of the horse gate to the king’s house; and they killed her there.

2 Chronicles 23.16: 16 Jehoiada made a covenant between himself, all the people, and the king, that they should be Yahweh’s people.

2 Chronicles 23.17: 17 All the people went to the house of Baal, broke it down, broke his altars and his images in pieces, and killed Mattan the priest of Baal before the altars.

2 Chronicles 23.18: 18 Jehoiada appointed the officers of Yahweh’s house under the hand of the Levitical priests, whom David had distributed in Yahweh’s house, to offer the burnt offerings of Yahweh, as it is written in the law of Moses, with rejoicing and with singing, as David had ordered.

2 Chronicles 23.19: 19 He set the gatekeepers at the gates of Yahweh’s house, that no one who was unclean in anything should enter in.

2 Chronicles 23.20: 20 He took the captains of hundreds, the nobles, the governors of the people, and all the people of the land, and brought the king down from Yahweh’s house. They came through the upper gate to the king’s house, and set the king on the throne of the kingdom.

2 Chronicles 23.21: 21 So all the people of the land rejoiced, and the city was quiet. They had slain Athaliah with the sword.

2 Chronicles 24.0:

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2 Chronicles 24.1: 1 Joash was seven years old when he began to reign, and he reigned forty years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Zibiah, of Beersheba.

2 Chronicles 24.2: 2 Joash did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes all the days of Jehoiada the priest.

2 Chronicles 24.3: 3 Jehoiada took for him two wives, and he became the father of sons and daughters.

2 Chronicles 24.4: 4 After this, Joash intended to restore Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 24.5: 5 He gathered together the priests and the Levites, and said to them, “Go out to the cities of Judah, and gather money to repair the house of your God from all Israel from year to year. See that you expedite this matter.” However the Levites didn’t do it right away.

2 Chronicles 24.6: 6 The king called for Jehoiada the chief, and said to him, “Why haven’t you required of the Levites to bring in the tax of Moses the servant of Yahweh, and of the assembly of Israel, out of Judah and out of Jerusalem, for the Tent of the Testimony?”

2 Chronicles 24.7: 7 For the sons of Athaliah, that wicked woman, had broken up God’s house; and they also gave all the dedicated things of Yahweh’s house to the Baals.

2 Chronicles 24.8: 8 So the king commanded, and they made a chest, and set it outside at the gate of Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 24.9: 9 They made a proclamation through Judah and Jerusalem, to bring in for Yahweh the tax that Moses the servant of God laid on Israel in the wilderness.

2 Chronicles 24.10: 10 All the princes and all the people rejoiced, and brought in, and cast into the chest, until they had filled it.

2 Chronicles 24.11: 11 Whenever the chest was brought to the king’s officers by the hand of the Levites, and when they saw that there was much money, the king’s scribe and the chief priest’s officer came and emptied the chest, and took it, and carried it to its place again. Thus they did day by day, and gathered money in abundance.

2 Chronicles 24.12: 12 The king and Jehoiada gave it to those who did the work of the service of Yahweh’s house. They hired masons and carpenters to restore Yahweh’s house, and also those who worked iron and bronze to repair Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 24.13: 13 So the workmen worked, and the work of repairing went forward in their hands. They set up God’s house as it was designed, and strengthened it.

2 Chronicles 24.14: 14 When they had finished, they brought the rest of the money before the king and Jehoiada, from which were made vessels for Yahweh’s house, even vessels with which to minister and to offer, including spoons and vessels of gold and silver. They offered burnt offerings in Yahweh’s house continually all the days of Jehoiada.

2 Chronicles 24.15: 15 But Jehoiada grew old and was full of days, and he died. He was one hundred thirty years old when he died.

2 Chronicles 24.16: 16 They buried him in David’s city among the kings, because he had done good in Israel, and toward God and his house.

2 Chronicles 24.17: 17 Now after the death of Jehoiada, the princes of Judah came, and bowed down to the king. Then the king listened to them.

2 Chronicles 24.18: 18 They abandoned the house of Yahweh, the God of their fathers, and served the Asherah poles and the idols, so wrath came on Judah and Jerusalem for this their guiltiness.

2 Chronicles 24.19: 19 Yet he sent prophets to them, to bring them again to Yahweh, and they testified against them; but they would not listen.

2 Chronicles 24.20: 20 The Spirit of God came on Zechariah the son of Jehoiada the priest; and he stood above the people, and said to them, “God says, ‘Why do you disobey Yahweh’s commandments, so that you can’t prosper? Because you have forsaken Yahweh, he has also forsaken you.’”

2 Chronicles 24.21: 21 They conspired against him, and stoned him with stones at the commandment of the king in the court of Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 24.22: 22 Thus Joash the king didn’t remember the kindness which Jehoiada his father had done to him, but killed his son. When he died, he said, “May Yahweh look at it, and repay it.”

2 Chronicles 24.23: 23 At the end of the year, the army of the Syrians came up against him: and they came to Judah and Jerusalem, and destroyed all the princes of the people from among the people, and sent all their plunder to the king of Damascus.

2 Chronicles 24.24: 24 For the army of the Syrians came with a small company of men; and Yahweh delivered a very great army into their hand, because they had forsaken Yahweh, the God of their fathers. So they executed judgment on Joash.

2 Chronicles 24.25: 25 When they had departed from him (for they left him very sick), his own servants conspired against him for the blood of the sons of Jehoiada the priest, and killed him on his bed, and he died. They buried him in David’s city, but they didn’t bury him in the tombs of the kings.

2 Chronicles 24.26: 26 These are those who conspired against him: Zabad the son of Shimeath the Ammonitess and Jehozabad the son of Shimrith the Moabitess.

2 Chronicles 24.27: 27 Now concerning his sons, the greatness of the burdens laid on him, and the rebuilding of God’s house, behold, they are written in the commentary of the book of the kings. Amaziah his son reigned in his place.

2 Chronicles 25.0:

25

2 Chronicles 25.1: 1 Amaziah was twenty-five years old when he began to reign, and he reigned twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Jehoaddan, of Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 25.2: 2 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, but not with a perfect heart.

2 Chronicles 25.3: 3 Now when the kingdom was established to him, he killed his servants who had killed his father the king.

2 Chronicles 25.4: 4 But he didn’t put their children to death, but did according to that which is written in the law in the book of Moses, as Yahweh commanded, saying, “The fathers shall not die for the children, neither shall the children die for the fathers; but every man shall die for his own sin.”

2 Chronicles 25.5: 5 Moreover Amaziah gathered Judah together, and ordered them according to their fathers’ houses, under captains of thousands and captains of hundreds, even all Judah and Benjamin. He counted them from twenty years old and upward, and found that there were three hundred thousand chosen men, able to go out to war, who could handle spear and shield.

2 Chronicles 25.6: 6 He also hired one hundred thousand mighty men of valor out of Israel for one hundred talents of silver.

2 Chronicles 25.7: 7 A man of God came to him, saying, “O king, don’t let the army of Israel go with you, for Yahweh is not with Israel, with all the children of Ephraim.

2 Chronicles 25.8: 8 But if you will go, take action, and be strong for the battle. God will overthrow you before the enemy; for God has power to help, and to overthrow.”

2 Chronicles 25.9: 9 Amaziah said to the man of God, “But what shall we do for the hundred talents which I have given to the army of Israel?”

The man of God answered, “Yahweh is able to give you much more than this.”

2 Chronicles 25.10: 10 Then Amaziah separated them, the army that had come to him out of Ephraim, to go home again. Therefore their anger was greatly kindled against Judah, and they returned home in fierce anger.

2 Chronicles 25.11: 11 Amaziah took courage, and led his people out, and went to the Valley of Salt, and struck ten thousand of the children of Seir.

2 Chronicles 25.12: 12 The children of Judah carried away ten thousand alive, and brought them to the top of the rock, and threw them down from the top of the rock, so that they all were broken in pieces.

2 Chronicles 25.13: 13 But the men of the army whom Amaziah sent back, that they should not go with him to battle, fell on the cities of Judah, from Samaria even to Beth Horon, and struck of them three thousand, and took much plunder.

2 Chronicles 25.14: 14 Now after Amaziah had come from the slaughter of the Edomites, he brought the gods of the children of Seir, and set them up to be his gods, and bowed down himself before them, and burned incense to them.

2 Chronicles 25.15: 15 Therefore Yahweh’s anger burned against Amaziah, and he sent to him a prophet, who said to him, “Why have you sought after the gods of the people, which have not delivered their own people out of your hand?”

2 Chronicles 25.16: 16 As he talked with him, the king said to him, “Have we made you one of the king’s counselors? Stop! Why should you be struck down?”

Then the prophet stopped, and said, “I know that God has determined to destroy you, because you have done this, and have not listened to my counsel.”

2 Chronicles 25.17: 17 Then Amaziah king of Judah consulted his advisers, and sent to Joash, the son of Jehoahaz the son of Jehu, king of Israel, saying, “Come! Let’s look one another in the face.”

2 Chronicles 25.18: 18 Joash king of Israel sent to Amaziah king of Judah, saying, “The thistle that was in Lebanon sent to the cedar that was in Lebanon, saying, ‘Give your daughter to my son as his wife. Then a wild animal that was in Lebanon passed by, and trampled down the thistle.

2 Chronicles 25.19: 19 You say to yourself that you have struck Edom; and your heart lifts you up to boast. Now stay at home. Why should you meddle with trouble, that you should fall, even you, and Judah with you?’”

2 Chronicles 25.20: 20 But Amaziah would not listen; for it was of God, that he might deliver them into the hand of their enemies, because they had sought after the gods of Edom.

2 Chronicles 25.21: 21 So Joash king of Israel went up, and he and Amaziah king of Judah looked one another in the face at Beth Shemesh, which belongs to Judah.

2 Chronicles 25.22: 22 Judah was defeated by Israel; so every man fled to his tent.

2 Chronicles 25.23: 23 Joash king of Israel took Amaziah king of Judah, the son of Joash the son of Jehoahaz, at Beth Shemesh, and brought him to Jerusalem, and broke down the wall of Jerusalem from the gate of Ephraim to the corner gate, four hundred cubits.

2 Chronicles 25.24: 24 He took all the gold and silver, and all the vessels that were found in God’s house with Obed-Edom, and the treasures of the king’s house, the hostages also, and returned to Samaria.

2 Chronicles 25.25: 25 Amaziah the son of Joash king of Judah lived for fifteen years after the death of Joash son of Jehoahaz king of Israel.

2 Chronicles 25.26: 26 Now the rest of the acts of Amaziah, first and last, behold, aren’t they written in the book of the kings of Judah and Israel?

2 Chronicles 25.27: 27 Now from the time that Amaziah turned away from following Yahweh, they made a conspiracy against him in Jerusalem. He fled to Lachish, but they sent after him to Lachish, and killed him there.

2 Chronicles 25.28: 28 They brought him on horses, and buried him with his fathers in the City of Judah.

2 Chronicles 26.0:

26

2 Chronicles 26.1: 1 All the people of Judah took Uzziah, who was sixteen years old, and made him king in the place of his father Amaziah.

2 Chronicles 26.2: 2 He built Eloth, and restored it to Judah, after that the king slept with his fathers.

2 Chronicles 26.3: 3 Uzziah was sixteen years old when he began to reign; and he reigned fifty-two years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Jechiliah, of Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 26.4: 4 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, according to all that his father Amaziah had done.

2 Chronicles 26.5: 5 He set himself to seek God in the days of Zechariah, who had understanding in the vision of God; and as long as he sought Yahweh, God made him prosper.

2 Chronicles 26.6: 6 He went out and fought against the Philistines, and broke down the wall of Gath, the wall of Jabneh, and the wall of Ashdod; and he built cities in the country of Ashdod, and among the Philistines.

2 Chronicles 26.7: 7 God helped him against the Philistines, and against the Arabians who lived in Gur Baal, and the Meunim.

2 Chronicles 26.8: 8 The Ammonites gave tribute to Uzziah. His name spread abroad even to the entrance of Egypt; for he grew exceedingly strong.

2 Chronicles 26.9: 9 Moreover Uzziah built towers in Jerusalem at the corner gate, at the valley gate, and at the turning of the wall, and fortified them.

2 Chronicles 26.10: 10 He built towers in the wilderness, and dug out many cisterns, for he had much livestock; in the lowland also, and in the plain. He had farmers and vineyard keepers in the mountains and in the fruitful fields, for he loved farming.

2 Chronicles 26.11: 11 Moreover Uzziah had an army of fighting men, who went out to war by bands, according to the number of their reckoning made by Jeiel the scribe and Maaseiah the officer, under the hand of Hananiah, one of the king’s captains.

2 Chronicles 26.12: 12 The whole number of the heads of fathers’ households, even the mighty men of valor, was two thousand six hundred.

2 Chronicles 26.13: 13 Under their hand was an army, three hundred seven thousand five hundred, who made war with mighty power, to help the king against the enemy.

2 Chronicles 26.14: 14 Uzziah prepared for them, even for all the army, shields, spears, helmets, coats of mail, bows, and stones for slinging.

2 Chronicles 26.15: 15 In Jerusalem, he made devices, invented by skillful men, to be on the towers and on the battlements, with which to shoot arrows and great stones. His name spread far abroad, because he was marvelously helped until he was strong.

2 Chronicles 26.16: 16 But when he was strong, his heart was lifted up, so that he did corruptly, and he trespassed against Yahweh his God; for he went into Yahweh’s temple to burn incense on the altar of incense.

2 Chronicles 26.17: 17 Azariah the priest went in after him, and with him eighty priests of Yahweh, who were valiant men.

2 Chronicles 26.18: 18 They resisted Uzziah the king, and said to him, “It isn’t for you, Uzziah, to burn incense to Yahweh, but for the priests the sons of Aaron, who are consecrated to burn incense. Go out of the sanctuary, for you have trespassed. It will not be for your honor from Yahweh God.”

2 Chronicles 26.19: 19 Then Uzziah was angry. He had a censer in his hand to burn incense, and while he was angry with the priests, the leprosy broke out on his forehead before the priests in Yahweh’s house, beside the altar of incense.

2 Chronicles 26.20: 20 Azariah the chief priest, and all the priests, looked at him, and behold, he was leprous in his forehead, and they thrust him out quickly from there. Yes, he himself also hurried to go out, because Yahweh had struck him.

2 Chronicles 26.21: 21 Uzziah the king was a leper to the day of his death, and lived in a separate house, being a leper; for he was cut off from Yahweh’s house. Jotham his son was over the king’s house, judging the people of the land.

2 Chronicles 26.22: 22 Now the rest of the acts of Uzziah, first and last, Isaiah the prophet, the son of Amoz, wrote.

2 Chronicles 26.23: 23 So Uzziah slept with his fathers; and they buried him with his fathers in the field of burial which belonged to the kings, for they said, “He is a leper.” Jotham his son reigned in his place.

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2 Chronicles 27.1: 1 Jotham was twenty-five years old when he began to reign, and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Jerushah the daughter of Zadok.

2 Chronicles 27.2: 2 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, according to all that his father Uzziah had done. However he didn’t enter into Yahweh’s temple. The people still acted corruptly.

2 Chronicles 27.3: 3 He built the upper gate of Yahweh’s house, and he built much on the wall of Ophel.

2 Chronicles 27.4: 4 Moreover he built cities in the hill country of Judah, and in the forests he built fortresses and towers.

2 Chronicles 27.5: 5 He also fought with the king of the children of Ammon, and prevailed against them. The children of Ammon gave him the same year one hundred talents of silver, ten thousand cors of wheat, and ten thousand cors of barley. The children of Ammon also gave that much to him in the second year, and in the third.

2 Chronicles 27.6: 6 So Jotham became mighty, because he ordered his ways before Yahweh his God.

2 Chronicles 27.7: 7 Now the rest of the acts of Jotham, and all his wars, and his ways, behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Israel and Judah.

2 Chronicles 27.8: 8 He was five and twenty years old when he began to reign, and reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 27.9: 9 Jotham slept with his fathers, and they buried him in David’s city; and Ahaz his son reigned in his place.

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2 Chronicles 28.1: 1 Ahaz was twenty years old when he began to reign, and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem. He didn’t do that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, like David his father,

2 Chronicles 28.2: 2 but he walked in the ways of the kings of Israel, and also made molten images for the Baals.

2 Chronicles 28.3: 3 Moreover he burned incense in the valley of the son of Hinnom, and burned his children in the fire, according to the abominations of the nations whom Yahweh cast out before the children of Israel.

2 Chronicles 28.4: 4 He sacrificed and burned incense in the high places, and on the hills, and under every green tree.

2 Chronicles 28.5: 5 Therefore Yahweh his God delivered him into the hand of the king of Syria. They struck him, and carried away from him a great multitude of captives, and brought them to Damascus. He was also delivered into the hand of the king of Israel, who struck him with a great slaughter.

2 Chronicles 28.6: 6 For Pekah the son of Remaliah killed in Judah one hundred twenty thousand in one day, all of them valiant men, because they had forsaken Yahweh, the God of their fathers.

2 Chronicles 28.7: 7 Zichri, a mighty man of Ephraim, killed Maaseiah the king’s son, Azrikam the ruler of the house, and Elkanah who was next to the king.

2 Chronicles 28.8: 8 The children of Israel carried away captive of their brothers two hundred thousand women, sons, and daughters, and also took away much plunder from them, and brought the plunder to Samaria.

2 Chronicles 28.9: 9 But a prophet of Yahweh was there, whose name was Oded; and he went out to meet the army that came to Samaria, and said to them, “Behold, because Yahweh, the God of your fathers, was angry with Judah, he has delivered them into your hand, and you have slain them in a rage which has reached up to heaven.

2 Chronicles 28.10: 10 Now you intend to degrade the children of Judah and Jerusalem as male and female slaves for yourselves. Aren’t there even with you trespasses of your own against Yahweh your God?

2 Chronicles 28.11: 11 Now hear me therefore, and send back the captives that you have taken captive from your brothers, for the fierce wrath of Yahweh is on you.”

2 Chronicles 28.12: 12 Then some of the heads of the children of Ephraim, Azariah the son of Johanan, Berechiah the son of Meshillemoth, Jehizkiah the son of Shallum, and Amasa the son of Hadlai, stood up against those who came from the war,

2 Chronicles 28.13: 13 and said to them, “You must not bring in the captives here, for you intend that which will bring on us a trespass against Yahweh, to add to our sins and to our guilt; for our guilt is great, and there is fierce wrath against Israel.”

2 Chronicles 28.14: 14 So the armed men left the captives and the plunder before the princes and all the assembly.

2 Chronicles 28.15: 15 The men who have been mentioned by name rose up and took the captives, and with the plunder clothed all who were naked among them, dressed them, gave them sandals, and gave them something to eat and to drink, anointed them, carried all the feeble of them on donkeys, and brought them to Jericho, the city of palm trees, to their brothers. Then they returned to Samaria.

2 Chronicles 28.16: 16 At that time king Ahaz sent to the kings of Assyria to help him.

2 Chronicles 28.17: 17 For again the Edomites had come and struck Judah, and carried away captives.

2 Chronicles 28.18: 18 The Philistines also had invaded the cities of the lowland, and of the South of Judah, and had taken Beth Shemesh, Aijalon, Gederoth, Soco with its villages, Timnah with its villages, and also Gimzo and its villages; and they lived there.

2 Chronicles 28.19: 19 For Yahweh brought Judah low because of Ahaz king of Israel, because he acted without restraint in Judah and trespassed severely against Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 28.20: 20 Tilgath Pilneser king of Assyria came to him, and gave him trouble, but didn’t strengthen him.

2 Chronicles 28.21: 21 For Ahaz took away a portion out of Yahweh’s house, and out of the house of the king and of the princes, and gave it to the king of Assyria; but it didn’t help him.

2 Chronicles 28.22: 22 In the time of his distress, he trespassed yet more against Yahweh, this same king Ahaz.

2 Chronicles 28.23: 23 For he sacrificed to the gods of Damascus, which struck him. He said, “Because the gods of the kings of Syria helped them, so I will sacrifice to them, that they may help me.” But they were the ruin of him, and of all Israel.

2 Chronicles 28.24: 24 Ahaz gathered together the vessels of God’s house, and cut the vessels of God’s house in pieces, and shut up the doors of Yahweh’s house; and he made himself altars in every corner of Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 28.25: 25 In every city of Judah he made high places to burn incense to other gods, and provoked Yahweh, the God of his fathers, to anger.

2 Chronicles 28.26: 26 Now the rest of his acts, and all his ways, first and last, behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Judah and Israel.

2 Chronicles 28.27: 27 Ahaz slept with his fathers, and they buried him in the city, even in Jerusalem, because they didn’t bring him into the tombs of the kings of Israel; and Hezekiah his son reigned in his place.

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2 Chronicles 29.1: 1 Hezekiah began to reign when he was twenty-five years old, and he reigned twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Abijah, the daughter of Zechariah.

2 Chronicles 29.2: 2 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, according to all that David his father had done.

2 Chronicles 29.3: 3 In the first year of his reign, in the first month, he opened the doors of Yahweh’s house, and repaired them.

2 Chronicles 29.4: 4 He brought in the priests and the Levites, and gathered them together into the wide place on the east,

2 Chronicles 29.5: 5 and said to them, “Listen to me, you Levites! Now sanctify yourselves, and sanctify Yahweh, the God of your fathers’ house, and carry the filthiness out of the holy place.

2 Chronicles 29.6: 6 For our fathers were unfaithful, and have done that which was evil in Yahweh our God’s sight, and have forsaken him, and have turned away their faces from the habitation of Yahweh, and turned their backs.

2 Chronicles 29.7: 7 Also they have shut up the doors of the porch, and put out the lamps, and have not burned incense nor offered burnt offerings in the holy place to the God of Israel.

2 Chronicles 29.8: 8 Therefore Yahweh’s wrath was on Judah and Jerusalem, and he has delivered them to be tossed back and forth, to be an astonishment, and a hissing, as you see with your eyes.

2 Chronicles 29.9: 9 For, behold, our fathers have fallen by the sword, and our sons and our daughters and our wives are in captivity for this.

2 Chronicles 29.10: 10 Now it is in my heart to make a covenant with Yahweh, the God of Israel, that his fierce anger may turn away from us.

2 Chronicles 29.11: 11 My sons, don’t be negligent now; for Yahweh has chosen you to stand before him, to minister to him, and that you should be his ministers, and burn incense.”

2 Chronicles 29.12: 12 Then the Levites arose, Mahath, the son of Amasai, and Joel the son of Azariah, of the sons of the Kohathites; and of the sons of Merari, Kish the son of Abdi, and Azariah the son of Jehallelel; and of the Gershonites, Joah the son of Zimmah, and Eden the son of Joah;

2 Chronicles 29.13: 13 and of the sons of Elizaphan, Shimri and Jeuel; and of the sons of Asaph, Zechariah and Mattaniah;

2 Chronicles 29.14: 14 and of the sons of Heman, Jehuel and Shimei; and of the sons of Jeduthun, Shemaiah and Uzziel.

2 Chronicles 29.15: 15 They gathered their brothers, sanctified themselves, and went in, according to the commandment of the king by Yahweh’s words, to cleanse Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 29.16: 16 The priests went into the inner part of Yahweh’s house to cleanse it, and brought out all the uncleanness that they found in Yahweh’s temple into the court of Yahweh’s house. The Levites took it from there to carry it out to the brook Kidron.

2 Chronicles 29.17: 17 Now they began on the first day of the first month to sanctify, and on the eighth day of the month they came to Yahweh’s porch. They sanctified Yahweh’s house in eight days, and on the sixteenth day of the first month they finished.

2 Chronicles 29.18: 18 Then they went in to Hezekiah the king within the palace, and said, “We have cleansed all Yahweh’s house, including the altar of burnt offering with all its vessels, and the table of show bread with all its vessels.

2 Chronicles 29.19: 19 Moreover have we prepared and sanctified all the vessels which king Ahaz threw away in his reign, when he was unfaithful. Behold, they are before Yahweh’s altar.”

2 Chronicles 29.20: 20 Then Hezekiah the king arose early, gathered the princes of the city, and went up to Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 29.21: 21 They brought seven bulls, seven rams, seven lambs, and seven male goats, for a sin offering for the kingdom, for the sanctuary, and for Judah. He commanded the priests the sons of Aaron to offer them on Yahweh’s altar.

2 Chronicles 29.22: 22 So they killed the bulls, and the priests received the blood, and sprinkled it on the altar. They killed the rams, and sprinkled the blood on the altar. They also killed the lambs, and sprinkled the blood on the altar.

2 Chronicles 29.23: 23 They brought near the male goats for the sin offering before the king and the assembly; and they laid their hands on them.

2 Chronicles 29.24: 24 Then the priests killed them, and they made a sin offering with their blood on the altar, to make atonement for all Israel; for the king commanded that the burnt offering and the sin offering should be made for all Israel.

2 Chronicles 29.25: 25 He set the Levites in Yahweh’s house with cymbals, with stringed instruments, and with harps, according to the commandment of David, of Gad the king’s seer, and Nathan the prophet; for the commandment was from Yahweh by his prophets.

2 Chronicles 29.26: 26 The Levites stood with David’s instruments, and the priests with the trumpets.

2 Chronicles 29.27: 27 Hezekiah commanded them to offer the burnt offering on the altar. When the burnt offering began, Yahweh’s song also began, along with the trumpets and David king of Israel’s instruments.

2 Chronicles 29.28: 28 All the assembly worshiped, the singers sang, and the trumpeters sounded. All this continued until the burnt offering was finished.

2 Chronicles 29.29: 29 When they had finished offering, the king and all who were present with him bowed themselves and worshiped.

2 Chronicles 29.30: 30 Moreover Hezekiah the king and the princes commanded the Levites to sing praises to Yahweh with the words of David, and of Asaph the seer. They sang praises with gladness, and they bowed their heads and worshiped.

2 Chronicles 29.31: 31 Then Hezekiah answered, “Now you have consecrated yourselves to Yahweh. Come near and bring sacrifices and thank offerings into Yahweh’s house.” The assembly brought in sacrifices and thank offerings, and as many as were of a willing heart brought burnt offerings.

2 Chronicles 29.32: 32 The number of the burnt offerings which the assembly brought was seventy bulls, one hundred rams, and two hundred lambs. All these were for a burnt offering to Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 29.33: 33 The consecrated things were six hundred head of cattle and three thousand sheep.

2 Chronicles 29.34: 34 But the priests were too few, so that they could not skin all the burnt offerings. Therefore their brothers the Levites helped them, until the work was ended, and until the priests had sanctified themselves; for the Levites were more upright in heart to sanctify themselves than the priests.

2 Chronicles 29.35: 35 Also the burnt offerings were in abundance, with the fat of the peace offerings, and with the drink offerings for every burnt offering. So the service of Yahweh’s house was set in order.

2 Chronicles 29.36: 36 Hezekiah and all the people rejoiced, because of that which God had prepared for the people; for the thing was done suddenly.

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2 Chronicles 30.1: 1 Hezekiah sent to all Israel and Judah, and wrote letters also to Ephraim and Manasseh, that they should come to Yahweh’s house at Jerusalem, to keep the Passover to Yahweh, the God of Israel.

2 Chronicles 30.2: 2 For the king had taken counsel with his princes and all the assembly in Jerusalem to keep the Passover in the second month.

2 Chronicles 30.3: 3 For they could not keep it at that time, because the priests had not sanctified themselves in sufficient number, and the people had not gathered themselves together to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 30.4: 4 The thing was right in the eyes of the king and of all the assembly.

2 Chronicles 30.5: 5 So they established a decree to make proclamation throughout all Israel, from Beersheba even to Dan, that they should come to keep the Passover to Yahweh, the God of Israel, at Jerusalem, for they had not kept it in great numbers in the way it is written.

2 Chronicles 30.6: 6 So the couriers went with the letters from the king and his princes throughout all Israel and Judah, and according to the commandment of the king, saying, “You children of Israel, turn again to Yahweh, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, that he may return to the remnant of you that have escaped out of the hand of the kings of Assyria.

2 Chronicles 30.7: 7 Don’t be like your fathers and like your brothers, who trespassed against Yahweh, the God of their fathers, so that he gave them up to desolation, as you see.

2 Chronicles 30.8: 8 Now don’t be stiff-necked, as your fathers were, but yield yourselves to Yahweh, and enter into his sanctuary, which he has sanctified forever, and serve Yahweh your God, that his fierce anger may turn away from you.

2 Chronicles 30.9: 9 For if you turn again to Yahweh, your brothers and your children will find compassion before those who led them captive, and will come again into this land, because Yahweh your God is gracious and merciful, and will not turn away his face from you, if you return to him.”

2 Chronicles 30.10: 10 So the couriers passed from city to city through the country of Ephraim and Manasseh, even to Zebulun, but people ridiculed them and mocked them.

2 Chronicles 30.11: 11 Nevertheless some men of Asher, Manasseh, and Zebulun humbled themselves, and came to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 30.12: 12 Also the hand of God came on Judah to give them one heart, to do the commandment of the king and of the princes by Yahweh’s word.

2 Chronicles 30.13: 13 Many people assembled at Jerusalem to keep the feast of unleavened bread in the second month, a very great assembly.

2 Chronicles 30.14: 14 They arose and took away the altars that were in Jerusalem, and they took away all the altars for incense and threw them into the brook Kidron.

2 Chronicles 30.15: 15 Then they killed the Passover on the fourteenth day of the second month. The priests and the Levites were ashamed, and sanctified themselves, and brought burnt offerings into Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 30.16: 16 They stood in their place after their order, according to the law of Moses the man of God. The priests sprinkled the blood which they received of the hand of the Levites.

2 Chronicles 30.17: 17 For there were many in the assembly who had not sanctified themselves: therefore the Levites were in charge of killing the Passovers for everyone who was not clean, to sanctify them to Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 30.18: 18 For a multitude of the people, even many of Ephraim, Manasseh, Issachar, and Zebulun, had not cleansed themselves, yet they ate the Passover other than the way it is written. For Hezekiah had prayed for them, saying, “May the good Yahweh pardon everyone

2 Chronicles 30.19: 19 who sets his heart to seek God, Yahweh, the God of his fathers, even if they aren’t clean according to the purification of the sanctuary.”

2 Chronicles 30.20: 20 Yahweh listened to Hezekiah, and healed the people.

2 Chronicles 30.21: 21 The children of Israel who were present at Jerusalem kept the feast of unleavened bread seven days with great gladness. The Levites and the priests praised Yahweh day by day, singing with loud instruments to Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 30.22: 22 Hezekiah spoke encouragingly to all the Levites who had good understanding in the service of Yahweh. So they ate throughout the feast for the seven days, offering sacrifices of peace offerings, and making confession to Yahweh, the God of their fathers.

2 Chronicles 30.23: 23 The whole assembly took counsel to keep another seven days, and they kept another seven days with gladness.

2 Chronicles 30.24: 24 For Hezekiah king of Judah gave to the assembly for offerings one thousand bulls and seven thousand sheep; and the princes gave to the assembly a thousand bulls and ten thousand sheep: and a great number of priests sanctified themselves.

2 Chronicles 30.25: 25 All the assembly of Judah, with the priests and the Levites, and all the assembly who came out of Israel, and the foreigners who came out of the land of Israel, and who lived in Judah, rejoiced.

2 Chronicles 30.26: 26 So there was great joy in Jerusalem; for since the time of Solomon the son of David king of Israel there was nothing like this in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 30.27: 27 Then the Levitical priests arose and blessed the people. Their voice was heard, and their prayer came up to his holy habitation, even to heaven.

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2 Chronicles 31.1: 1 Now when all this was finished, all Israel who were present went out to the cities of Judah, and broke the pillars in pieces, cut down the Asherah poles, and broke down the high places and the altars out of all Judah and Benjamin, also in Ephraim and Manasseh, until they had destroyed them all. Then all the children of Israel returned, every man to his possession, into their own cities.

2 Chronicles 31.2: 2 Hezekiah appointed the divisions of the priests and the Levites after their divisions, every man according to his service, both the priests and the Levites, for burnt offerings and for peace offerings, to minister, to give thanks, and to praise in the gates of Yahweh’s camp.

2 Chronicles 31.3: 3 He also appointed the king’s portion of his possessions for the burnt offerings, for the morning and evening burnt offerings, and the burnt offerings for the Sabbaths, for the new moons, and for the set feasts, as it is written in Yahweh’s law.

2 Chronicles 31.4: 4 Moreover he commanded the people who lived in Jerusalem to give the portion of the priests and the Levites, that they might give themselves to Yahweh’s law.

2 Chronicles 31.5: 5 As soon as the commandment went out, the children of Israel gave in abundance the first fruits of grain, new wine, oil, honey, and of all the increase of the field; and they brought in the tithe of all things abundantly.

2 Chronicles 31.6: 6 The children of Israel and Judah, who lived in the cities of Judah, also brought in the tithe of cattle and sheep, and the tithe of dedicated things which were consecrated to Yahweh their God, and laid them in heaps.

2 Chronicles 31.7: 7 In the third month they began to lay the foundation of the heaps, and finished them in the seventh month.

2 Chronicles 31.8: 8 When Hezekiah and the princes came and saw the heaps, they blessed Yahweh and his people Israel.

2 Chronicles 31.9: 9 Then Hezekiah questioned the priests and the Levites about the heaps.

2 Chronicles 31.10: 10 Azariah the chief priest, of the house of Zadok, answered him and said, “Since people began to bring the offerings into Yahweh’s house, we have eaten and had enough, and have plenty left over, for Yahweh has blessed his people; and that which is left is this great store.”

2 Chronicles 31.11: 11 Then Hezekiah commanded them to prepare rooms in Yahweh’s house, and they prepared them.

2 Chronicles 31.12: 12 They brought in the offerings, the tithes, and the dedicated things faithfully. Conaniah the Levite was ruler over them, and Shimei his brother was second.

2 Chronicles 31.13: 13 Jehiel, Azaziah, Nahath, Asahel, Jerimoth, Jozabad, Eliel, Ismachiah, Mahath, and Benaiah were overseers under the hand of Conaniah and Shimei his brother, by the appointment of Hezekiah the king and Azariah the ruler of God’s house.

2 Chronicles 31.14: 14 Kore the son of Imnah the Levite, the gatekeeper at the east gate, was over the free will offerings of God, to distribute Yahweh’s offerings and the most holy things.

2 Chronicles 31.15: 15 Under him were Eden, Miniamin, Jeshua, Shemaiah, Amariah, and Shecaniah, in the cities of the priests, in their office of trust, to give to their brothers by divisions, to the great as well as to the small;

2 Chronicles 31.16: 16 in addition to those who were listed by genealogy of males, from three years old and upward, even everyone who entered into Yahweh’s house, as the duty of every day required, for their service in their offices according to their divisions;

2 Chronicles 31.17: 17 and those who were listed by genealogy of the priests by their fathers’ houses, and the Levites from twenty years old and upward, in their offices by their divisions;

2 Chronicles 31.18: 18 and those who were listed by genealogy of all their little ones, their wives, their sons, and their daughters, through all the congregation; for in their office of trust they sanctified themselves in holiness.

2 Chronicles 31.19: 19 Also for the sons of Aaron the priests, who were in the fields of the pasture lands of their cities, in every city, there were men who were mentioned by name, to give portions to all the males among the priests, and to all who were listed by genealogy among the Levites.

2 Chronicles 31.20: 20 Hezekiah did so throughout all Judah; and he did that which was good, right, and faithful before Yahweh his God.

2 Chronicles 31.21: 21 In every work that he began in the service of God’s house, in the law, and in the commandments, to seek his God, he did it with all his heart, and prospered.

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2 Chronicles 32.1: 1 After these things and this faithfulness, Sennacherib king of Assyria came, entered into Judah, and encamped against the fortified cities, and intended to win them for himself.

2 Chronicles 32.2: 2 When Hezekiah saw that Sennacherib had come, and that he was planning to fight against Jerusalem,

2 Chronicles 32.3: 3 he took counsel with his princes and his mighty men to stop the waters of the springs which were outside of the city, and they helped him.

2 Chronicles 32.4: 4 So, many people gathered together and they stopped all the springs and the brook that flowed through the middle of the land, saying, “Why should the kings of Assyria come, and find abundant water?”

2 Chronicles 32.5: 5 He took courage, built up all the wall that was broken down, and raised it up to the towers, with the other wall outside, and strengthened Millo in David’s city, and made weapons and shields in abundance.

2 Chronicles 32.6: 6 He set captains of war over the people, and gathered them together to him in the wide place at the gate of the city, and spoke encouragingly to them, saying,

2 Chronicles 32.7: 7 “Be strong and courageous. Don’t be afraid or dismayed because of the king of Assyria, nor for all the multitude who is with him; for there is a greater one with us than with him.

2 Chronicles 32.8: 8 An arm of flesh is with him, but Yahweh our God is with us to help us and to fight our battles.” The people rested themselves on the words of Hezekiah king of Judah.

2 Chronicles 32.9: 9 After this, Sennacherib king of Assyria sent his servants to Jerusalem, (now he was before Lachish, and all his power with him), to Hezekiah king of Judah, and to all Judah who were at Jerusalem, saying,

2 Chronicles 32.10: 10 Sennacherib king of Assyria says, “In whom do you trust, that you remain under siege in Jerusalem?

2 Chronicles 32.11: 11 Doesn’t Hezekiah persuade you, to give you over to die by famine and by thirst, saying, ‘Yahweh our God will deliver us out of the hand of the king of Assyria?’

2 Chronicles 32.12: 12 Hasn’t the same Hezekiah taken away his high places and his altars, and commanded Judah and Jerusalem, saying, ‘You shall worship before one altar, and you shall burn incense on it?’

2 Chronicles 32.13: 13 Don’t you know what I and my fathers have done to all the peoples of the lands? Were the gods of the nations of the lands in any way able to deliver their land out of my hand?

2 Chronicles 32.14: 14 Who was there among all the gods of those nations which my fathers utterly destroyed, that could deliver his people out of my hand, that your God should be able to deliver you out of my hand?

2 Chronicles 32.15: 15 Now therefore don’t let Hezekiah deceive you, nor persuade you in this way. Don’t believe him, for no god of any nation or kingdom was able to deliver his people out of my hand, and out of the hand of my fathers. How much less will your God deliver you out of my hand?”

2 Chronicles 32.16: 16 His servants spoke yet more against Yahweh God, and against his servant Hezekiah.

2 Chronicles 32.17: 17 He also wrote letters insulting Yahweh, the God of Israel, and speaking against him, saying, “As the gods of the nations of the lands, which have not delivered their people out of my hand, so shall the God of Hezekiah not deliver his people out of my hand.”

2 Chronicles 32.18: 18 They called out with a loud voice in the Jews’ language to the people of Jerusalem who were on the wall, to frighten them, and to trouble them; that they might take the city.

2 Chronicles 32.19: 19 They spoke of the God of Jerusalem as of the gods of the peoples of the earth, which are the work of men’s hands.

2 Chronicles 32.20: 20 Hezekiah the king and Isaiah the prophet the son of Amoz, prayed because of this, and cried to heaven.

2 Chronicles 32.21: 21 Yahweh sent an angel, who cut off all the mighty men of valor, and the leaders and captains, in the camp of the king of Assyria. So he returned with shame of face to his own land. When he had come into the house of his god, those who came out of his own body killed him there with the sword.

2 Chronicles 32.22: 22 Thus Yahweh saved Hezekiah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem from the hand of Sennacherib the king of Assyria and from the hand of all others, and guided them on every side.

2 Chronicles 32.23: 23 Many brought gifts to Yahweh to Jerusalem, and precious things to Hezekiah king of Judah; so that he was exalted in the sight of all nations from then on.

2 Chronicles 32.24: 24 In those days Hezekiah was terminally ill, and he prayed to Yahweh; and he spoke to him, and gave him a sign.

2 Chronicles 32.25: 25 But Hezekiah didn’t reciprocate appropriate to the benefit done for him, because his heart was lifted up. Therefore there was wrath on him, and on Judah and Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 32.26: 26 Notwithstanding Hezekiah humbled himself for the pride of his heart, both he and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, so that Yahweh’s wrath didn’t come on them in the days of Hezekiah.

2 Chronicles 32.27: 27 Hezekiah had exceedingly much riches and honor. He provided himself with treasuries for silver, for gold, for precious stones, for spices, for shields, and for all kinds of valuable vessels;

2 Chronicles 32.28: 28 also storehouses for the increase of grain, new wine, and oil; and stalls for all kinds of animals, and flocks in folds.

2 Chronicles 32.29: 29 Moreover he provided for himself cities, and possessions of flocks and herds in abundance; for God had given him abundant possessions.

2 Chronicles 32.30: 30 This same Hezekiah also stopped the upper spring of the waters of Gihon, and brought them straight down on the west side of David’s city. Hezekiah prospered in all his works.

2 Chronicles 32.31: 31 However concerning the ambassadors of the princes of Babylon, who sent to him to inquire of the wonder that was done in the land, God left him, to try him, that he might know all that was in his heart.

2 Chronicles 32.32: 32 Now the rest of the acts of Hezekiah, and his good deeds, behold, they are written in the vision of Isaiah the prophet the son of Amoz, in the book of the kings of Judah and Israel.

2 Chronicles 32.33: 33 Hezekiah slept with his fathers, and they buried him in the ascent of the tombs of the sons of David. All Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem honored him at his death. Manasseh his son reigned in his place.

2 Chronicles 33.0:

33

2 Chronicles 33.1: 1 Manasseh was twelve years old when he began to reign, and he reigned fifty-five years in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 33.2: 2 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, after the abominations of the nations whom Yahweh cast out before the children of Israel.

2 Chronicles 33.3: 3 For he built again the high places which Hezekiah his father had broken down; and he raised up altars for the Baals, made Asheroth, and worshiped all the army of the sky, and served them.

2 Chronicles 33.4: 4 He built altars in Yahweh’s house, of which Yahweh said, “My name shall be in Jerusalem forever.”

2 Chronicles 33.5: 5 He built altars for all the army of the sky in the two courts of Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 33.6: 6 He also made his children to pass through the fire in the valley of the son of Hinnom. He practiced sorcery, divination, and witchcraft, and dealt with those who had familiar spirits and with wizards. He did much evil in Yahweh’s sight, to provoke him to anger.

2 Chronicles 33.7: 7 He set the engraved image of the idol, which he had made, in God’s house, of which God said to David and to Solomon his son, “In this house, and in Jerusalem, which I have chosen out of all the tribes of Israel, I will put my name forever.

2 Chronicles 33.8: 8 I will not any more remove the foot of Israel from off the land which I have appointed for your fathers, if only they will observe to do all that I have commanded them, even all the law, the statutes, and the ordinances given by Moses.”

2 Chronicles 33.9: 9 Manasseh seduced Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, so that they did more evil than did the nations whom Yahweh destroyed before the children of Israel.

2 Chronicles 33.10: 10 Yahweh spoke to Manasseh, and to his people; but they didn’t listen.

2 Chronicles 33.11: 11 Therefore Yahweh brought on them the captains of the army of the king of Assyria, who took Manasseh in chains, bound him with fetters, and carried him to Babylon.

2 Chronicles 33.12: 12 When he was in distress, he begged Yahweh his God, and humbled himself greatly before the God of his fathers.

2 Chronicles 33.13: 13 He prayed to him; and he was entreated by him, and heard his supplication, and brought him again to Jerusalem into his kingdom. Then Manasseh knew that Yahweh was God.

2 Chronicles 33.14: 14 Now after this, he built an outer wall to David’s city, on the west side of Gihon, in the valley, even to the entrance at the fish gate. He encircled Ophel with it, and raised it up to a very great height; and he put valiant captains in all the fortified cities of Judah.

2 Chronicles 33.15: 15 He took away the foreign gods, and the idol out of Yahweh’s house, and all the altars that he had built in the mountain of Yahweh’s house, and in Jerusalem, and cast them out of the city.

2 Chronicles 33.16: 16 He built up Yahweh’s altar, and offered sacrifices of peace offerings and of thanksgiving on it, and commanded Judah to serve Yahweh, the God of Israel.

2 Chronicles 33.17: 17 Nevertheless the people sacrificed still in the high places, but only to Yahweh their God.

2 Chronicles 33.18: 18 Now the rest of the acts of Manasseh, and his prayer to his God, and the words of the seers who spoke to him in the name of Yahweh, the God of Israel, behold, they are written among the acts of the kings of Israel.

2 Chronicles 33.19: 19 His prayer also, and how God was entreated of him, and all his sin and his trespass, and the places in which he built high places, and set up the Asherah poles and the engraved images, before he humbled himself: behold, they are written in the history of Hozai.

2 Chronicles 33.20: 20 So Manasseh slept with his fathers, and they buried him in his own house; and Amon his son reigned in his place.

2 Chronicles 33.21: 21 Amon was twenty-two years old when he began to reign; and he reigned two years in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 33.22: 22 He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight, as did Manasseh his father; and Amon sacrificed to all the engraved images which Manasseh his father had made, and served them.

2 Chronicles 33.23: 23 He didn’t humble himself before Yahweh, as Manasseh his father had humbled himself; but this same Amon trespassed more and more.

2 Chronicles 33.24: 24 His servants conspired against him, and put him to death in his own house.

2 Chronicles 33.25: 25 But the people of the land killed all those who had conspired against king Amon; and the people of the land made Josiah his son king in his place.

2 Chronicles 34.0:

34

2 Chronicles 34.1: 1 Josiah was eight years old when he began to reign, and he reigned thirty-one years in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 34.2: 2 He did that which was right in Yahweh’s eyes, and walked in the ways of David his father, and didn’t turn away to the right hand or to the left.

2 Chronicles 34.3: 3 For in the eighth year of his reign, while he was yet young, he began to seek after the God of David his father; and in the twelfth year he began to purge Judah and Jerusalem from the high places, the Asherah poles, the engraved images, and the molten images.

2 Chronicles 34.4: 4 They broke down the altars of the Baals in his presence; and he cut down the incense altars that were on high above them. He broke the Asherah poles, the engraved images, and the molten images in pieces, made dust of them, and scattered it on the graves of those who had sacrificed to them.

2 Chronicles 34.5: 5 He burned the bones of the priests on their altars, and purged Judah and Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 34.6: 6 He did this in the cities of Manasseh, Ephraim, and Simeon, even to Naphtali, around in their ruins.

2 Chronicles 34.7: 7 He broke down the altars, and beat the Asherah poles and the engraved images into powder, and cut down all the incense altars throughout all the land of Israel, then returned to Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 34.8: 8 Now in the eighteenth year of his reign, when he had purged the land and the house, he sent Shaphan the son of Azaliah, and Maaseiah the governor of the city, and Joah the son of Joahaz the recorder, to repair Yahweh his God’s house.

2 Chronicles 34.9: 9 They came to Hilkiah the high priest, and delivered the money that was brought into God’s house, which the Levites, the keepers of the threshold, had gathered from the hands of Manasseh, Ephraim, of all the remnant of Israel, of all Judah and Benjamin, and of the inhabitants of Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 34.10: 10 They delivered it into the hands of the workmen who had the oversight of Yahweh’s house; and the workmen who labored in Yahweh’s house gave it to mend and repair the house.

2 Chronicles 34.11: 11 They gave it to the carpenters and to the builders, to buy cut stone and timber for couplings, and to make beams for the houses which the kings of Judah had destroyed.

2 Chronicles 34.12: 12 The men did the work faithfully. Their overseers were Jahath and Obadiah, the Levites, of the sons of Merari; and Zechariah and Meshullam, of the sons of the Kohathites, to give direction; and others of the Levites, who were all skillful with musical instruments.

2 Chronicles 34.13: 13 Also they were over the bearers of burdens, and directed all who did the work in every kind of service. Of the Levites, there were scribes, officials, and gatekeepers.

2 Chronicles 34.14: 14 When they brought out the money that was brought into Yahweh’s house, Hilkiah the priest found the book of Yahweh’s law given by Moses.

2 Chronicles 34.15: 15 Hilkiah answered Shaphan the scribe, “I have found the book of the law in Yahweh’s house.” So Hilkiah delivered the book to Shaphan.

2 Chronicles 34.16: 16 Shaphan carried the book to the king, and moreover brought back word to the king, saying, “All that was committed to your servants, they are doing.

2 Chronicles 34.17: 17 They have emptied out the money that was found in Yahweh’s house, and have delivered it into the hand of the overseers, and into the hand of the workmen.”

2 Chronicles 34.18: 18 Shaphan the scribe told the king, saying, “Hilkiah the priest has delivered me a book.” Shaphan read from it to the king.

2 Chronicles 34.19: 19 When the king had heard the words of the law, he tore his clothes.

2 Chronicles 34.20: 20 The king commanded Hilkiah, Ahikam the son of Shaphan, Abdon the son of Micah, Shaphan the scribe, and Asaiah the king’s servant, saying,

2 Chronicles 34.21: 21 “Go inquire of Yahweh for me, and for those who are left in Israel and in Judah, concerning the words of the book that is found; for great is Yahweh’s wrath that is poured out on us, because our fathers have not kept Yahweh’s word, to do according to all that is written in this book.”

2 Chronicles 34.22: 22 So Hilkiah, and they whom the king had commanded, went to Huldah the prophetess, the wife of Shallum the son of Tokhath, the son of Hasrah, keeper of the wardrobe (now she lived in Jerusalem in the second quarter), and they spoke to her to that effect.

2 Chronicles 34.23: 23 She said to them, “Yahweh, the God of Israel says: ‘Tell the man who sent you to me,

2 Chronicles 34.24: 24 “Yahweh says, ‘Behold, I will bring evil on this place, and on its inhabitants, even all the curses that are written in the book which they have read before the king of Judah.

2 Chronicles 34.25: 25 Because they have forsaken me, and have burned incense to other gods, that they might provoke me to anger with all the works of their hands; therefore my wrath is poured out on this place, and it will not be quenched.’”’

2 Chronicles 34.26: 26 But to the king of Judah, who sent you to inquire of Yahweh, you shall tell him this, ‘Yahweh, the God of Israel says: “About the words which you have heard,

2 Chronicles 34.27: 27 because your heart was tender, and you humbled yourself before God, when you heard his words against this place, and against its inhabitants, and have humbled yourself before me, and have torn your clothes, and wept before me, I also have heard you,” says Yahweh.

2 Chronicles 34.28: 28 “Behold, I will gather you to your fathers, and you will be gathered to your grave in peace. Your eyes won’t see all the evil that I will bring on this place and on its inhabitants.”’”

They brought back word to the king.

2 Chronicles 34.29: 29 Then the king sent and gathered together all the elders of Judah and Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 34.30: 30 The king went up to Yahweh’s house, with all the men of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, the priests, the Levites, and all the people, both great and small; and he read in their hearing all the words of the book of the covenant that was found in Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 34.31: 31 The king stood in his place, and made a covenant before Yahweh, to walk after Yahweh, and to keep his commandments, and his testimonies, and his statutes, with all his heart, and with all his soul, to perform the words of the covenant that were written in this book.

2 Chronicles 34.32: 32 He caused all who were found in Jerusalem and Benjamin to stand. The inhabitants of Jerusalem did according to the covenant of God, the God of their fathers.

2 Chronicles 34.33: 33 Josiah took away all the abominations out of all the countries that belonged to the children of Israel, and made all who were found in Israel to serve, even to serve Yahweh their God. All his days they didn’t depart from following Yahweh, the God of their fathers.

2 Chronicles 35.0:

35

2 Chronicles 35.1: 1 Josiah kept a Passover to Yahweh in Jerusalem. They killed the Passover on the fourteenth day of the first month.

2 Chronicles 35.2: 2 He set the priests in their offices, and encouraged them in the service of Yahweh’s house.

2 Chronicles 35.3: 3 He said to the Levites who taught all Israel, who were holy to Yahweh, “Put the holy ark in the house which Solomon the son of David king of Israel built. It will no longer be a burden on your shoulders. Now serve Yahweh your God, and his people Israel.

2 Chronicles 35.4: 4 Prepare yourselves after your fathers’ houses by your divisions, according to the writing of David king of Israel, and according to the writing of Solomon his son.

2 Chronicles 35.5: 5 Stand in the holy place according to the divisions of the fathers’ houses of your brothers the children of the people, and let there be for each a portion of a fathers’ house of the Levites.

2 Chronicles 35.6: 6 Kill the Passover, sanctify yourselves, and prepare for your brothers, to do according to Yahweh’s word by Moses.”

2 Chronicles 35.7: 7 Josiah gave to the children of the people, of the flock, lambs and young goats, all of them for the Passover offerings, to all who were present, to the number of thirty thousand, and three thousand bulls. These were of the king’s substance.

2 Chronicles 35.8: 8 His princes gave for a free will offering to the people, to the priests, and to the Levites. Hilkiah, Zechariah, and Jehiel, the rulers of God’s house, gave to the priests for the Passover offerings two thousand six hundred small livestock, and three hundred head of cattle.

2 Chronicles 35.9: 9 Conaniah also, and Shemaiah and Nethanel, his brothers, and Hashabiah, Jeiel, and Jozabad, the chiefs of the Levites, gave to the Levites for the Passover offerings five thousand small livestock and five hundred head of cattle.

2 Chronicles 35.10: 10 So the service was prepared, and the priests stood in their place, and the Levites by their divisions, according to the king’s commandment.

2 Chronicles 35.11: 11 They killed the Passover, and the priests sprinkled the blood which they received of their hand, and the Levites skinned them.

2 Chronicles 35.12: 12 They removed the burnt offerings, that they might give them according to the divisions of the fathers’ houses of the children of the people, to offer to Yahweh, as it is written in the book of Moses. They did the same with the cattle.

2 Chronicles 35.13: 13 They roasted the Passover with fire according to the ordinance. They boiled the holy offerings in pots, in cauldrons, and in pans, and carried them quickly to all the children of the people.

2 Chronicles 35.14: 14 Afterward they prepared for themselves and for the priests, because the priests the sons of Aaron were busy with offering the burnt offerings and the fat until night. Therefore the Levites prepared for themselves and for the priests the sons of Aaron.

2 Chronicles 35.15: 15 The singers the sons of Asaph were in their place, according to the commandment of David, Asaph, Heman, and Jeduthun the king’s seer; and the gatekeepers were at every gate. They didn’t need to depart from their service, because their brothers the Levites prepared for them.

2 Chronicles 35.16: 16 So all the service of Yahweh was prepared the same day, to keep the Passover, and to offer burnt offerings on Yahweh’s altar, according to the commandment of king Josiah.

2 Chronicles 35.17: 17 The children of Israel who were present kept the Passover at that time, and the feast of unleavened bread seven days.

2 Chronicles 35.18: 18 There was no Passover like that kept in Israel from the days of Samuel the prophet, nor did any of the kings of Israel keep such a Passover as Josiah kept, with the priests, the Levites, and all Judah and Israel who were present, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 35.19: 19 This Passover was kept in the eighteenth year of the reign of Josiah.

2 Chronicles 35.20: 20 After all this, when Josiah had prepared the temple, Neco king of Egypt went up to fight against Carchemish by the Euphrates, and Josiah went out against him.

2 Chronicles 35.21: 21 But he sent ambassadors to him, saying, “What have I to do with you, you king of Judah? I come not against you today, but against the house with which I have war. God has commanded me to make haste. Beware that it is God who is with me, that he not destroy you.”

2 Chronicles 35.22: 22 Nevertheless Josiah would not turn his face from him, but disguised himself, that he might fight with him, and didn’t listen to the words of Neco from the mouth of God, and came to fight in the valley of Megiddo.

2 Chronicles 35.23: 23 The archers shot at king Josiah; and the king said to his servants, “Take me away, because I am seriously wounded!”

2 Chronicles 35.24: 24 So his servants took him out of the chariot, and put him in the second chariot that he had, and brought him to Jerusalem; and he died, and was buried in the tombs of his fathers. All Judah and Jerusalem mourned for Josiah.

2 Chronicles 35.25: 25 Jeremiah lamented for Josiah, and all the singing men and singing women spoke of Josiah in their lamentations to this day; and they made them an ordinance in Israel. Behold, they are written in the lamentations.

2 Chronicles 35.26: 26 Now the rest of the acts of Josiah, and his good deeds, according to that which is written in Yahweh’s law,

2 Chronicles 35.27: 27 and his acts, first and last, behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Israel and Judah.

2 Chronicles 36.0:

36

2 Chronicles 36.1: 1 Then the people of the land took Jehoahaz the son of Josiah, and made him king in his father’s place in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 36.2: 2 Joahaz was twenty-three years old when he began to reign; and he reigned three months in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 36.3: 3 The king of Egypt removed him from office at Jerusalem, and fined the land one hundred talents of silver and a talent of gold.

2 Chronicles 36.4: 4 The king of Egypt made Eliakim his brother king over Judah and Jerusalem, and changed his name to Jehoiakim. Neco took Joahaz his brother, and carried him to Egypt.

2 Chronicles 36.5: 5 Jehoiakim was twenty-five years old when he began to reign, and he reigned eleven years in Jerusalem. He did that which was evil in Yahweh his God’s sight.

2 Chronicles 36.6: 6 Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came up against him, and bound him in fetters to carry him to Babylon.

2 Chronicles 36.7: 7 Nebuchadnezzar also carried some of the vessels of Yahweh’s house to Babylon, and put them in his temple at Babylon.

2 Chronicles 36.8: 8 Now the rest of the acts of Jehoiakim, and his abominations which he did, and that which was found in him, behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Israel and Judah; and Jehoiachin his son reigned in his place.

2 Chronicles 36.9: 9 Jehoiachin was eight years old when he began to reign, and he reigned three months and ten days in Jerusalem. He did that which was evil in Yahweh’s sight.

2 Chronicles 36.10: 10 At the return of the year, king Nebuchadnezzar sent and brought him to Babylon, with the valuable vessels of Yahweh’s house, and made Zedekiah his brother king over Judah and Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 36.11: 11 Zedekiah was twenty-one years old when he began to reign, and he reigned eleven years in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 36.12: 12 He did that which was evil in Yahweh his God’s sight. He didn’t humble himself before Jeremiah the prophet speaking from Yahweh’s mouth.

2 Chronicles 36.13: 13 He also rebelled against king Nebuchadnezzar, who had made him swear by God; but he stiffened his neck, and hardened his heart against turning to Yahweh, the God of Israel.

2 Chronicles 36.14: 14 Moreover all the chiefs of the priests, and the people, trespassed very greatly after all the abominations of the nations; and they polluted Yahweh’s house which he had made holy in Jerusalem.

2 Chronicles 36.15: 15 Yahweh, the God of their fathers, sent to them by his messengers, rising up early and sending, because he had compassion on his people, and on his dwelling place;

2 Chronicles 36.16: 16 but they mocked the messengers of God, and despised his words, and scoffed at his prophets, until Yahweh’s wrath arose against his people, until there was no remedy.

2 Chronicles 36.17: 17 Therefore he brought on them the king of the Chaldeans, who killed their young men with the sword in the house of their sanctuary, and had no compassion on young man or virgin, old man or gray-headed. He gave them all into his hand.

2 Chronicles 36.18: 18 All the vessels of God’s house, great and small, and the treasures of Yahweh’s house, and the treasures of the king, and of his princes, all these he brought to Babylon.

2 Chronicles 36.19: 19 They burned God’s house, and broke down the wall of Jerusalem, and burned all its palaces with fire, and destroyed all of its valuable vessels.

2 Chronicles 36.20: 20 He carried those who had escaped from the sword away to Babylon, and they were servants to him and his sons until the reign of the kingdom of Persia,

2 Chronicles 36.21: 21 to fulfill Yahweh’s word by Jeremiah’s mouth, until the land had enjoyed its Sabbaths. As long as it lay desolate, it kept Sabbath, to fulfill seventy years.

2 Chronicles 36.22: 22 Now in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, that Yahweh’s word by the mouth of Jeremiah might be accomplished, Yahweh stirred up the spirit of Cyrus king of Persia, so that he made a proclamation throughout all his kingdom, and put it also in writing, saying,

2 Chronicles 36.23: 23 “Cyrus king of Persia says, ‘Yahweh, the God of heaven, has given all the kingdoms of the earth to me; and he has commanded me to build him a house in Jerusalem, which is in Judah. Whoever there is among you of all his people, Yahweh his God be with him, and let him go up.’”

Ezra 0.0:

The Book of

Ezra

Ezra 1.0:

1

Ezra 1.1: 1 Now in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, that Yahweh’s word by Jeremiah’s mouth might be accomplished, Yahweh stirred up the spirit of Cyrus king of Persia, so that he made a proclamation throughout all his kingdom, and put it also in writing, saying,

Ezra 1.2: 2 “Cyrus king of Persia says, ‘Yahweh, the God of heaven, has given me all the kingdoms of the earth; and he has commanded me to build him a house in Jerusalem, which is in Judah.

Ezra 1.3: 3 Whoever there is among you of all his people, may his God be with him, and let him go up to Jerusalem, which is in Judah, and build the house of Yahweh, the God of Israel (he is God), which is in Jerusalem.

Ezra 1.4: 4 Whoever is left, in any place where he lives, let the men of his place help him with silver, with gold, with goods, and with animals, in addition to the free will offering for God’s house which is in Jerusalem.’”

Ezra 1.5: 5 Then the heads of fathers’ households of Judah and Benjamin, the priests, and the Levites, all whose spirit God had stirred to go up rose up to build Yahweh’s house which is in Jerusalem.

Ezra 1.6: 6 All those who were around them strengthened their hands with vessels of silver, with gold, with goods, with animals, and with precious things, in addition to all that was willingly offered.

Ezra 1.7: 7 Also Cyrus the king brought out the vessels of Yahweh’s house, which Nebuchadnezzar had brought out of Jerusalem, and had put in the house of his gods;

Ezra 1.8: 8 even those, Cyrus king of Persia brought out by the hand of Mithredath the treasurer, and counted them out to Sheshbazzar, the prince of Judah.

Ezra 1.9: 9 This is the number of them: thirty platters of gold, one thousand platters of silver, twenty-nine knives,

Ezra 1.10: 10 thirty bowls of gold, four hundred ten silver bowls of a second sort, and one thousand other vessels.

Ezra 1.11: 11 All the vessels of gold and of silver were five thousand four hundred. Sheshbazzar brought all these up when the captives were brought up from Babylon to Jerusalem.

Ezra 2.0:

2

Ezra 2.1: 1 Now these are the children of the province, who went up out of the captivity of those who had been carried away, whom Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon had carried away to Babylon, and who returned to Jerusalem and Judah, everyone to his city;

Ezra 2.2: 2 who came with Zerubbabel, Jeshua, Nehemiah, Seraiah, Reelaiah, Mordecai, Bilshan, Mispar, Bigvai, Rehum, and Baanah.

The number of the men of the people of Israel:

Ezra 2.3: 3 The children of Parosh, two thousand one hundred seventy-two.

Ezra 2.4: 4 The children of Shephatiah, three hundred seventy-two.

Ezra 2.5: 5 The children of Arah, seven hundred seventy-five.

Ezra 2.6: 6 The children of Pahathmoab, of the children of Jeshua and Joab, two thousand eight hundred twelve.

Ezra 2.7: 7 The children of Elam, one thousand two hundred fifty-four.

Ezra 2.8: 8 The children of Zattu, nine hundred forty-five.

Ezra 2.9: 9 The children of Zaccai, seven hundred sixty.

Ezra 2.10: 10 The children of Bani, six hundred forty-two.

Ezra 2.11: 11 The children of Bebai, six hundred twenty-three.

Ezra 2.12: 12 The children of Azgad, one thousand two hundred twenty-two.

Ezra 2.13: 13 The children of Adonikam, six hundred sixty-six.

Ezra 2.14: 14 The children of Bigvai, two thousand fifty-six.

Ezra 2.15: 15 The children of Adin, four hundred fifty-four.

Ezra 2.16: 16 The children of Ater, of Hezekiah, ninety-eight.

Ezra 2.17: 17 The children of Bezai, three hundred twenty-three.

Ezra 2.18: 18 The children of Jorah, one hundred twelve.

Ezra 2.19: 19 The children of Hashum, two hundred twenty-three.

Ezra 2.20: 20 The children of Gibbar, ninety-five.

Ezra 2.21: 21 The children of Bethlehem, one hundred twenty-three.

Ezra 2.22: 22 The men of Netophah, fifty-six.

Ezra 2.23: 23 The men of Anathoth, one hundred twenty-eight.

Ezra 2.24: 24 The children of Azmaveth, forty-two.

Ezra 2.25: 25 The children of Kiriath Arim, Chephirah, and Beeroth, seven hundred forty-three.

Ezra 2.26: 26 The children of Ramah and Geba, six hundred twenty-one.

Ezra 2.27: 27 The men of Michmas, one hundred twenty-two.

Ezra 2.28: 28 The men of Bethel and Ai, two hundred twenty-three.

Ezra 2.29: 29 The children of Nebo, fifty-two.

Ezra 2.30: 30 The children of Magbish, one hundred fifty-six.

Ezra 2.31: 31 The children of the other Elam, one thousand two hundred fifty-four.

Ezra 2.32: 32 The children of Harim, three hundred twenty.

Ezra 2.33: 33 The children of Lod, Hadid, and Ono, seven hundred twenty-five.

Ezra 2.34: 34 The children of Jericho, three hundred forty-five.

Ezra 2.35: 35 The children of Senaah, three thousand six hundred thirty.

Ezra 2.36: 36 The priests: the children of Jedaiah, of the house of Jeshua, nine hundred seventy-three.

Ezra 2.37: 37 The children of Immer, one thousand fifty-two.

Ezra 2.38: 38 The children of Pashhur, one thousand two hundred forty-seven.

Ezra 2.39: 39 The children of Harim, one thousand seventeen.

Ezra 2.40: 40 The Levites: the children of Jeshua and Kadmiel, of the children of Hodaviah, seventy-four.

Ezra 2.41: 41 The singers: the children of Asaph, one hundred twenty-eight.

Ezra 2.42: 42 The children of the gatekeepers: the children of Shallum, the children of Ater, the children of Talmon, the children of Akkub, the children of Hatita, the children of Shobai, in all one hundred thirty-nine.

Ezra 2.43: 43 The temple servants: the children of Ziha, the children of Hasupha, the children of Tabbaoth,

Ezra 2.44: 44 the children of Keros, the children of Siaha, the children of Padon,

Ezra 2.45: 45 the children of Lebanah, the children of Hagabah, the children of Akkub,

Ezra 2.46: 46 the children of Hagab, the children of Shamlai, the children of Hanan,

Ezra 2.47: 47 the children of Giddel, the children of Gahar, the children of Reaiah,

Ezra 2.48: 48 the children of Rezin, the children of Nekoda, the children of Gazzam,

Ezra 2.49: 49 the children of Uzza, the children of Paseah, the children of Besai,

Ezra 2.50: 50 the children of Asnah, the children of Meunim, the children of Nephisim,

Ezra 2.51: 51 the children of Bakbuk, the children of Hakupha, the children of Harhur,

Ezra 2.52: 52 the children of Bazluth, the children of Mehida, the children of Harsha,

Ezra 2.53: 53 the children of Barkos, the children of Sisera, the children of Temah,

Ezra 2.54: 54 the children of Neziah, the children of Hatipha.

Ezra 2.55: 55 The children of Solomon’s servants: the children of Sotai, the children of Hassophereth, the children of Peruda,

Ezra 2.56: 56 the children of Jaalah, the children of Darkon, the children of Giddel,

Ezra 2.57: 57 the children of Shephatiah, the children of Hattil, the children of Pochereth Hazzebaim, the children of Ami.

Ezra 2.58: 58 All the temple servants, and the children of Solomon’s servants, were three hundred ninety-two.

Ezra 2.59: 59 These were those who went up from Tel Melah, Tel Harsha, Cherub, Addan, and Immer; but they could not show their fathers’ houses, and their offspring, whether they were of Israel:

Ezra 2.60: 60 the children of Delaiah, the children of Tobiah, the children of Nekoda, six hundred fifty-two.

Ezra 2.61: 61 Of the children of the priests: the children of Habaiah, the children of Hakkoz, and the children of Barzillai, who took a wife of the daughters of Barzillai the Gileadite, and was called after their name.

Ezra 2.62: 62 These sought their place among those who were registered by genealogy, but they were not found: therefore were they deemed disqualified and removed from the priesthood.

Ezra 2.63: 63 The governor told them that they should not eat of the most holy things until a priest stood up to serve with Urim and with Thummim.

Ezra 2.64: 64 The whole assembly together was forty-two thousand three hundred sixty,

Ezra 2.65: 65 in addition to their male servants and their female servants, of whom there were seven thousand three hundred thirty-seven; and they had two hundred singing men and singing women.

Ezra 2.66: 66 Their horses were seven hundred thirty-six; their mules, two hundred forty-five;

Ezra 2.67: 67 their camels, four hundred thirty-five; their donkeys, six thousand seven hundred twenty.

Ezra 2.68: 68 Some of the heads of fathers’ households, when they came to Yahweh’s house which is in Jerusalem, offered willingly for God’s house to set it up in its place.

Ezra 2.69: 69 They gave according to their ability into the treasury of the work sixty-one thousand darics of gold, and five thousand minas of silver, and one hundred priests’ garments.

Ezra 2.70: 70 So the priests and the Levites, with some of the people, the singers, the gatekeepers, and the temple servants, lived in their cities, and all Israel in their cities.

Ezra 3.0:

3

Ezra 3.1: 1 When the seventh month had come, and the children of Israel were in the cities, the people gathered themselves together as one man to Jerusalem.

Ezra 3.2: 2 Then Jeshua the son of Jozadak stood up with his brothers the priests, and Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel and his brothers, and built the altar of the God of Israel, to offer burnt offerings on it, as it is written in the law of Moses the man of God.

Ezra 3.3: 3 In spite of their fear because of the peoples of the surrounding lands, they set the altar on its base; and they offered burnt offerings on it to Yahweh, even burnt offerings morning and evening.

Ezra 3.4: 4 They kept the feast of booths, as it is written, and offered the daily burnt offerings by number, according to the ordinance, as the duty of every day required;

Ezra 3.5: 5 and afterward the continual burnt offering, the offerings of the new moons, of all the set feasts of Yahweh that were consecrated, and of everyone who willingly offered a free will offering to Yahweh.

Ezra 3.6: 6 From the first day of the seventh month, they began to offer burnt offerings to Yahweh; but the foundation of Yahweh’s temple was not yet laid.

Ezra 3.7: 7 They also gave money to the masons, and to the carpenters. They also gave food, drink, and oil to the people of Sidon and Tyre, to bring cedar trees from Lebanon to the sea, to Joppa, according to the grant that they had from Cyrus King of Persia.

Ezra 3.8: 8 Now in the second year of their coming to God’s house at Jerusalem, in the second month, Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel, and Jeshua the son of Jozadak, and the rest of their brothers the priests and the Levites, and all those who had come out of the captivity to Jerusalem, began the work and appointed the Levites, from twenty years old and upward, to have the oversight of the work of Yahweh’s house.

Ezra 3.9: 9 Then Jeshua stood with his sons and his brothers, Kadmiel and his sons, the sons of Judah, together, to have the oversight of the workmen in God’s house: the sons of Henadad, with their sons and their brothers the Levites.

Ezra 3.10: 10 When the builders laid the foundation of Yahweh’s temple, they set the priests in their clothing with trumpets, with the Levites the sons of Asaph with cymbals, to praise Yahweh, according to the directions of David king of Israel.

Ezra 3.11: 11 They sang to one another in praising and giving thanks to Yahweh, “For he is good, for his loving kindness endures forever toward Israel.” All the people shouted with a great shout, when they praised Yahweh, because the foundation of Yahweh’s house had been laid.

Ezra 3.12: 12 But many of the priests and Levites and heads of fathers’ households, the old men who had seen the first house, when the foundation of this house was laid before their eyes, wept with a loud voice. Many also shouted aloud for joy,

Ezra 3.13: 13 so that the people could not discern the noise of the shout of joy from the noise of the weeping of the people; for the people shouted with a loud shout, and the noise was heard far away.

Ezra 4.0:

4

Ezra 4.1: 1 Now when the adversaries of Judah and Benjamin heard that the children of the captivity were building a temple to Yahweh, the God of Israel;

Ezra 4.2: 2 they came near to Zerubbabel, and to the heads of fathers’ households, and said to them, “Let us build with you; for we seek your God, as you do; and we have been sacrificing to him since the days of Esar Haddon king of Assyria, who brought us up here.”

Ezra 4.3: 3 But Zerubbabel, and Jeshua, and the rest of the heads of fathers’ households of Israel, said to them, “You have nothing to do with us in building a house to our God; but we ourselves together will build to Yahweh, the God of Israel, as king Cyrus the king of Persia has commanded us.”

Ezra 4.4: 4 Then the people of the land weakened the hands of the people of Judah, and troubled them in building.

Ezra 4.5: 5 They hired counselors against them, to frustrate their purpose, all the days of Cyrus king of Persia, even until the reign of Darius king of Persia.

Ezra 4.6: 6 In the reign of Ahasuerus, in the beginning of his reign, they wrote an accusation against the inhabitants of Judah and Jerusalem.

Ezra 4.7: 7 In the days of Artaxerxes, Bishlam, Mithredath, Tabeel, and the rest of his companions, wrote to Artaxerxes king of Persia; and the writing of the letter was written in Syrian, and delivered in the Syrian language.

Ezra 4.8: 8 Rehum the chancellor and Shimshai the scribe wrote a letter against Jerusalem to Artaxerxes the king as follows,

Ezra 4.9: 9 then Rehum the chancellor, Shimshai the scribe, and the rest of their companions, the Dinaites, and the Apharsathchites, the Tarpelites, the Apharsites, the Archevites, the Babylonians, the Shushanchites, the Dehaites, the Elamites,

Ezra 4.10: 10 and the rest of the nations whom the great and noble Osnappar brought over, and set in the city of Samaria, and in the rest of the country beyond the River, and so forth, wrote.

Ezra 4.11: 11 This is the copy of the letter that they sent:

To King Artaxerxes,

From your servants the men beyond the River.

Ezra 4.12: 12 Be it known to the king that the Jews who came up from you have come to us to Jerusalem. They are building the rebellious and bad city, and have finished the walls, and repaired the foundations.

Ezra 4.13: 13 Be it known now to the king that if this city is built and the walls finished, they will not pay tribute, custom, or toll, and in the end it will be hurtful to the kings.

Ezra 4.14: 14 Now because we eat the salt of the palace, and it is not appropriate for us to see the king’s dishonor, therefore we have sent and informed the king,

Ezra 4.15: 15 that search may be made in the book of the records of your fathers. You will see in the book of the records, and know that this city is a rebellious city, and hurtful to kings and provinces, and that they have started rebellions within it in the past. That is why this city was destroyed.

Ezra 4.16: 16 We inform the king that, if this city is built and the walls finished, then you will have no possession beyond the River.

Ezra 4.17: 17 Then the king sent an answer to Rehum the chancellor, and to Shimshai the scribe, and to the rest of their companions who live in Samaria, and in the rest of the country beyond the River:

Peace.

Ezra 4.18: 18 The letter which you sent to us has been plainly read before me.

Ezra 4.19: 19 I decreed, and search has been made, and it was found that this city has made insurrection against kings in the past, and that rebellion and revolts have been made in it.

Ezra 4.20: 20 There have also been mighty kings over Jerusalem, who have ruled over all the country beyond the River; and tribute, custom, and toll, was paid to them.

Ezra 4.21: 21 Make a decree now to cause these men to cease, and that this city not be built, until a decree is made by me.

Ezra 4.22: 22 Be careful that you not be slack doing so. Why should damage grow to the hurt of the kings?

Ezra 4.23: 23 Then when the copy of king Artaxerxes’ letter was read before Rehum, Shimshai the scribe, and their companions, they went in haste to Jerusalem to the Jews, and made them to cease by force of arms.

Ezra 4.24: 24 Then work stopped on God’s house which is at Jerusalem. It stopped until the second year of the reign of Darius king of Persia.

Ezra 5.0:

5

Ezra 5.1: 1 Now the prophets, Haggai the prophet and Zechariah the son of Iddo, prophesied to the Jews who were in Judah and Jerusalem. They prophesied to them in the name of the God of Israel.

Ezra 5.2: 2 Then Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel, and Jeshua the son of Jozadak rose up and began to build God’s house which is at Jerusalem; and with them were the prophets of God, helping them.

Ezra 5.3: 3 At the same time Tattenai, the governor beyond the River came to them, with Shetharbozenai, and their companions, and asked them, “Who gave you a decree to build this house, and to finish this wall?”

Ezra 5.4: 4 They also asked for the names of the men were who were making this building.

Ezra 5.5: 5 But the eye of their God was on the elders of the Jews, and they didn’t make them cease, until the matter should come to Darius, and an answer should be returned by letter concerning it.

Ezra 5.6: 6 The copy of the letter that Tattenai, the governor beyond the River, and Shetharbozenai, and his companions the Apharsachites, who were beyond the River, sent to Darius the king follows.

Ezra 5.7: 7 They sent a letter to him, in which was written:

To Darius the king, all peace.

Ezra 5.8: 8 Be it known to the king that we went into the province of Judah, to the house of the great God, which is built with great stones, and timber is laid in the walls. This work goes on with diligence and prospers in their hands.

Ezra 5.9: 9 Then we asked those elders, and said to them thus, “Who gave you a decree to build this house, and to finish this wall?”

Ezra 5.10: 10 We asked them their names also, to inform you that we might write the names of the men who were at their head.

Ezra 5.11: 11 Thus they returned us answer, saying, “We are the servants of the God of heaven and earth, and are building the house that was built these many years ago, which a great king of Israel built and finished.

Ezra 5.12: 12 But after our fathers had provoked the God of heaven to wrath, he gave them into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, the Chaldean, who destroyed this house, and carried the people away into Babylon.

Ezra 5.13: 13 But in the first year of Cyrus king of Babylon, Cyrus the king made a decree to build this house of God.

Ezra 5.14: 14 The gold and silver vessels of God’s house, which Nebuchadnezzar took out of the temple that was in Jerusalem, and brought into the temple of Babylon, those Cyrus the king also took out of the temple of Babylon, and they were delivered to one whose name was Sheshbazzar, whom he had made governor.

Ezra 5.15: 15 He said to him, ‘Take these vessels, go, put them in the temple that is in Jerusalem, and let God’s house be built in its place.’

Ezra 5.16: 16 Then the same Sheshbazzar came and laid the foundations of God’s house which is in Jerusalem. Since that time even until now it has been being built, and yet it is not completed.

Ezra 5.17: 17 Now therefore, if it seems good to the king, let a search be made in the king’s treasure house, which is there at Babylon, whether it is so, that a decree was made of Cyrus the king to build this house of God at Jerusalem; and let the king send his pleasure to us concerning this matter.”

Ezra 6.0:

6

Ezra 6.1: 1 Then Darius the king made a decree, and the house of the archives, where the treasures were laid up in Babylon, was searched.

Ezra 6.2: 2 A scroll was found at Achmetha, in the palace that is in the province of Media, and in it this was written for a record:

Ezra 6.3: 3 In the first year of Cyrus the king, Cyrus the king made a decree: Concerning God’s house at Jerusalem, let the house be built, the place where they offer sacrifices, and let its foundations be strongly laid; with its height sixty cubits, and its width sixty cubits;

Ezra 6.4: 4 with three courses of great stones and a course of new timber. Let the expenses be given out of the king’s house.

Ezra 6.5: 5 Also let the gold and silver vessels of God’s house, which Nebuchadnezzar took out of the temple which is at Jerusalem, and brought to Babylon, be restored and brought again to the temple which is at Jerusalem, everything to its place. You shall put them in God’s house.

Ezra 6.6: 6 Now therefore, Tattenai, governor beyond the River, Shetharbozenai, and your companions the Apharsachites, who are beyond the River, you must stay far from there.

Ezra 6.7: 7 Leave the work of this house of God alone; let the governor of the Jews and the elders of the Jews build this house of God in its place.

Ezra 6.8: 8 Moreover I make a decree what you shall do for these elders of the Jews for the building of this house of God: that of the king’s goods, even of the tribute beyond the River, expenses must be given with all diligence to these men, that they not be hindered.

Ezra 6.9: 9 That which they have need of, including young bulls, rams, and lambs, for burnt offerings to the God of heaven; also wheat, salt, wine, and oil, according to the word of the priests who are at Jerusalem, let it be given them day by day without fail;

Ezra 6.10: 10 that they may offer sacrifices of pleasant aroma to the God of heaven, and pray for the life of the king, and of his sons.

Ezra 6.11: 11 I have also made a decree that whoever alters this message, let a beam be pulled out from his house, and let him be lifted up and fastened on it; and let his house be made a dunghill for this.

Ezra 6.12: 12 May the God who has caused his name to dwell there overthrow all kings and peoples who stretch out their hand to alter this, to destroy this house of God which is at Jerusalem. I Darius have made a decree. Let it be done with all diligence.

Ezra 6.13: 13 Then Tattenai, the governor beyond the River, Shetharbozenai, and their companions did accordingly with all diligence, because Darius the king had sent a decree.

Ezra 6.14: 14 The elders of the Jews built and prospered, through the prophesying of Haggai the prophet and Zechariah the son of Iddo. They built and finished it, according to the commandment of the God of Israel, and according to the decree of Cyrus, Darius, and Artaxerxes king of Persia.

Ezra 6.15: 15 This house was finished on the third day of the month Adar, which was in the sixth year of the reign of Darius the king.

Ezra 6.16: 16 The children of Israel, the priests, the Levites, and the rest of the children of the captivity, kept the dedication of this house of God with joy.

Ezra 6.17: 17 They offered at the dedication of this house of God one hundred bulls, two hundred rams, four hundred lambs; and for a sin offering for all Israel, twelve male goats, according to the number of the tribes of Israel.

Ezra 6.18: 18 They set the priests in their divisions, and the Levites in their courses, for the service of God, which is at Jerusalem, as it is written in the book of Moses.

Ezra 6.19: 19 The children of the captivity kept the Passover on the fourteenth day of the first month.

Ezra 6.20: 20 Because the priests and the Levites had purified themselves together, all of them were pure. They killed the Passover for all the children of the captivity, for their brothers the priests, and for themselves.

Ezra 6.21: 21 The children of Israel who had returned out of the captivity, and all who had separated themselves to them from the filthiness of the nations of the land, to seek Yahweh, the God of Israel, ate,

Ezra 6.22: 22 and kept the feast of unleavened bread seven days with joy; because Yahweh had made them joyful, and had turned the heart of the king of Assyria to them, to strengthen their hands in the work of God, the God of Israel’s house.

Ezra 7.0:

7

Ezra 7.1: 1 Now after these things, in the reign of Artaxerxes king of Persia, Ezra the son of Seraiah, the son of Azariah, the son of Hilkiah,

Ezra 7.2: 2 the son of Shallum, the son of Zadok, the son of Ahitub,

Ezra 7.3: 3 the son of Amariah, the son of Azariah, the son of Meraioth,

Ezra 7.4: 4 the son of Zerahiah, the son of Uzzi, the son of Bukki,

Ezra 7.5: 5 the son of Abishua, the son of Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the chief priest—

Ezra 7.6: 6 this Ezra went up from Babylon. He was a skilled scribe in the law of Moses, which Yahweh, the God of Israel, had given; and the king granted him all his request, according to Yahweh his God’s hand on him.

Ezra 7.7: 7 Some of the children of Israel, including some of the priests, the Levites, the singers, the gatekeepers, and the temple servants went up to Jerusalem in the seventh year of Artaxerxes the king.

Ezra 7.8: 8 He came to Jerusalem in the fifth month, which was in the seventh year of the king.

Ezra 7.9: 9 For on the first day of the first month he began to go up from Babylon; and on the first day of the fifth month he came to Jerusalem, according to the good hand of his God on him.

Ezra 7.10: 10 For Ezra had set his heart to seek Yahweh’s law, and to do it, and to teach statutes and ordinances in Israel.

Ezra 7.11: 11 Now this is the copy of the letter that the king Artaxerxes gave to Ezra the priest, the scribe, even the scribe of the words of Yahweh’s commandments, and of his statutes to Israel:

Ezra 7.12: 12 Artaxerxes, king of kings,

To Ezra the priest, the scribe of the law of the perfect God of heaven.

Now

Ezra 7.13: 13 I make a decree, that all those of the people of Israel, and their priests and the Levites, in my realm, who intend of their own free will to go to Jerusalem, go with you.

Ezra 7.14: 14 Because you are sent by the king and his seven counselors, to inquire concerning Judah and Jerusalem, according to the law of your God which is in your hand,

Ezra 7.15: 15 and to carry the silver and gold, which the king and his counselors have freely offered to the God of Israel, whose habitation is in Jerusalem,

Ezra 7.16: 16 and all the silver and gold that you will find in all the province of Babylon, with the free will offering of the people, and of the priests, offering willingly for the house of their God which is in Jerusalem;

Ezra 7.17: 17 therefore you shall with all diligence buy with this money bulls, rams, lambs, with their meal offerings and their drink offerings, and shall offer them on the altar of the house of your God which is in Jerusalem.

Ezra 7.18: 18 Whatever seems good to you and to your brothers to do with the rest of the silver and the gold, do that according to the will of your God.

Ezra 7.19: 19 The vessels that are given to you for the service of the house of your God, deliver before the God of Jerusalem.

Ezra 7.20: 20 Whatever more will be needed for the house of your God, which you may have occasion to give, give it out of the king’s treasure house.

Ezra 7.21: 21 I, even I Artaxerxes the king, make a decree to all the treasurers who are beyond the River, that whatever Ezra the priest, the scribe of the law of the God of heaven, requires of you, it shall be done with all diligence,

Ezra 7.22: 22 up to one hundred talents of silver, and to one hundred cors of wheat, and to one hundred baths of wine, and to one hundred baths of oil, and salt without prescribing how much.

Ezra 7.23: 23 Whatever is commanded by the God of heaven, let it be done exactly for the house of the God of heaven; for why should there be wrath against the realm of the king and his sons?

Ezra 7.24: 24 Also we inform you that it shall not be lawful to impose tribute, custom, or toll, on any of the priests, Levites, singers, gatekeepers, temple servants, or laborers of this house of God.

Ezra 7.25: 25 You, Ezra, according to the wisdom of your God that is in your hand, appoint magistrates and judges, who may judge all the people who are beyond the River, who all know the laws of your God; and teach him who doesn’t know them.

Ezra 7.26: 26 Whoever will not do the law of your God and the law of the king, let judgment be executed on him with all diligence, whether it is to death, or to banishment, or to confiscation of goods, or to imprisonment.

Ezra 7.27: 27 Blessed be Yahweh, the God of our fathers, who has put such a thing as this in the king’s heart, to beautify Yahweh’s house which is in Jerusalem;

Ezra 7.28: 28 and has extended loving kindness to me before the king and his counselors, and before all the king’s mighty princes. I was strengthened according to Yahweh my God’s hand on me, and I gathered together chief men out of Israel to go up with me.

Ezra 8.0:

8

Ezra 8.1: 1 Now these are the heads of their fathers’ households, and this is the genealogy of those who went up with me from Babylon, in the reign of Artaxerxes the king:

Ezra 8.2: 2 Of the sons of Phinehas, Gershom.

Of the sons of Ithamar, Daniel.

Of the sons of David, Hattush.

Ezra 8.3: 3 Of the sons of Shecaniah, of the sons of Parosh, Zechariah; and with him were listed by genealogy of the males one hundred fifty.

Ezra 8.4: 4 Of the sons of Pahathmoab, Eliehoenai the son of Zerahiah; and with him two hundred males.

Ezra 8.5: 5 Of the sons of Shecaniah, the son of Jahaziel; and with him three hundred males.

Ezra 8.6: 6 Of the sons of Adin, Ebed the son of Jonathan; and with him fifty males.

Ezra 8.7: 7 Of the sons of Elam, Jeshaiah the son of Athaliah; and with him seventy males.

Ezra 8.8: 8 Of the sons of Shephatiah, Zebadiah the son of Michael; and with him eighty males.

Ezra 8.9: 9 Of the sons of Joab, Obadiah the son of Jehiel; and with him two hundred eighteen males.

Ezra 8.10: 10 Of the sons of Shelomith, the son of Josiphiah; and with him one hundred sixty males.

Ezra 8.11: 11 Of the sons of Bebai, Zechariah the son of Bebai; and with him twenty-eight males.

Ezra 8.12: 12 Of the sons of Azgad, Johanan the son of Hakkatan; and with him one hundred ten males.

Ezra 8.13: 13 Of the sons of Adonikam, who were the last; and these are their names: Eliphelet, Jeuel, and Shemaiah; and with them sixty males.

Ezra 8.14: 14 Of the sons of Bigvai, Uthai and Zabbud; and with them seventy males.

Ezra 8.15: 15 I gathered them together to the river that runs to Ahava; and there we encamped three days: and I looked around at the people and the priests, and found there were none of the sons of Levi.

Ezra 8.16: 16 Then sent I for Eliezer, for Ariel, for Shemaiah, for Elnathan, for Jarib, for Elnathan, for Nathan, for Zechariah, and for Meshullam, chief men; also for Joiarib and for Elnathan, who were teachers.

Ezra 8.17: 17 I sent them out to Iddo the chief at the place Casiphia; and I told them what they should tell Iddo, and his brothers the temple servants, at the place Casiphia, that they should bring to us ministers for the house of our God.

Ezra 8.18: 18 According to the good hand of our God on us they brought us a man of discretion, of the sons of Mahli, the son of Levi, the son of Israel; and Sherebiah, with his sons and his brothers, eighteen;

Ezra 8.19: 19 and Hashabiah, and with him Jeshaiah of the sons of Merari, his brothers and their sons, twenty;

Ezra 8.20: 20 and of the temple servants, whom David and the princes had given for the service of the Levites, two hundred twenty temple servants. All of them were mentioned by name.

Ezra 8.21: 21 Then I proclaimed a fast there, at the river Ahava, that we might humble ourselves before our God, to seek from him a straight way for us, and for our little ones, and for all our possessions.

Ezra 8.22: 22 For I was ashamed to ask of the king a band of soldiers and horsemen to help us against the enemy on the way, because we had spoken to the king, saying, “The hand of our God is on all those who seek him, for good; but his power and his wrath is against all those who forsake him.”

Ezra 8.23: 23 So we fasted and begged our God for this: and he granted our request.

Ezra 8.24: 24 Then I set apart twelve of the chiefs of the priests, even Sherebiah, Hashabiah, and ten of their brothers with them,

Ezra 8.25: 25 and weighed to them the silver, the gold, and the vessels, even the offering for the house of our God, which the king, his counselors, his princes, and all Israel there present, had offered.

Ezra 8.26: 26 I weighed into their hand six hundred fifty talents of silver, one hundred talents of silver vessels; one hundred talents of gold,

Ezra 8.27: 27 twenty bowls of gold weighing one thousand darics; and two vessels of fine bright bronze, precious as gold.

Ezra 8.28: 28 I said to them, “You are holy to Yahweh, and the vessels are holy. The silver and the gold are a free will offering to Yahweh, the God of your fathers.

Ezra 8.29: 29 Watch and keep them, until you weigh them before the chiefs of the priests and the Levites, and the princes of the fathers’ households of Israel, at Jerusalem, in the rooms of Yahweh’s house.”

Ezra 8.30: 30 So the priests and the Levites received the weight of the silver and the gold, and the vessels, to bring them to Jerusalem to the house of our God.

Ezra 8.31: 31 Then we departed from the river Ahava on the twelfth day of the first month, to go to Jerusalem. The hand of our God was on us, and he delivered us from the hand of the enemy and the bandit by the way.

Ezra 8.32: 32 We came to Jerusalem, and stayed there three days.

Ezra 8.33: 33 On the fourth day the silver and the gold and the vessels were weighed in the house of our God into the hand of Meremoth the son of Uriah the priest; and with him was Eleazar the son of Phinehas; and with them was Jozabad the son of Jeshua, and Noadiah the son of Binnui, the Levite;

Ezra 8.34: 34 everything by number and by weight; and all the weight was written at that time.

Ezra 8.35: 35 The children of the captivity, who had come out of exile, offered burnt offerings to the God of Israel, twelve bulls for all Israel, ninety-six rams, seventy-seven lambs, and twelve male goats for a sin offering. All this was a burnt offering to Yahweh.

Ezra 8.36: 36 They delivered the king’s commissions to the king’s local governors, and to the governors beyond the River. So they supported the people and God’s house.

Ezra 9.0:

9

Ezra 9.1: 1 Now when these things were done, the princes came near to me, saying, “The people of Israel, the priests, and the Levites, have not separated themselves from the peoples of the lands, following their abominations, even those of the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Jebusites, the Ammonites, the Moabites, the Egyptians, and the Amorites.

Ezra 9.2: 2 For they have taken of their daughters for themselves and for their sons, so that the holy offspring have mixed themselves with the peoples of the lands. Yes, the hand of the princes and rulers has been chief in this trespass.”

Ezra 9.3: 3 When I heard this thing, I tore my garment and my robe, and pulled the hair out of my head and of my beard, and sat down confounded.

Ezra 9.4: 4 Then everyone who trembled at the words of the God of Israel were assembled to me, because of their trespass of the captivity; and I sat confounded until the evening offering.

Ezra 9.5: 5 At the evening offering I arose up from my humiliation, even with my garment and my robe torn; and I fell on my knees, and spread out my hands to Yahweh my God;

Ezra 9.6: 6 and I said, “My God, I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to you, my God; for our iniquities have increased over our head, and our guiltiness has grown up to the heavens.

Ezra 9.7: 7 Since the days of our fathers we have been exceedingly guilty to this day; and for our iniquities we, our kings, and our priests, have been delivered into the hand of the kings of the lands, to the sword, to captivity, to plunder, and to confusion of face, as it is this day.

Ezra 9.8: 8 Now for a little moment grace has been shown from Yahweh our God, to leave us a remnant to escape, and to give us a nail in his holy place, that our God may lighten our eyes, and revived us a little in our bondage.

Ezra 9.9: 9 For we are bondservants; yet our God has not forsaken us in our bondage, but has extended loving kindness to us in the sight of the kings of Persia, to revive us, to set up the house of our God, and to repair its ruins, and to give us a wall in Judah and in Jerusalem.

Ezra 9.10: 10 “Now, our God, what shall we say after this? For we have forsaken your commandments,

Ezra 9.11: 11 which you have commanded by your servants the prophets, saying, ‘The land, to which you go to possess it, is an unclean land through the uncleanness of the peoples of the lands, through their abominations, which have filled it from one end to another with their filthiness.

Ezra 9.12: 12 Now therefore don’t give your daughters to their sons. Don’t take their daughters to your sons, nor seek their peace or their prosperity forever; that you may be strong, and eat the good of the land, and leave it for an inheritance to your children forever.’

Ezra 9.13: 13 “After all that has come on us for our evil deeds, and for our great guilt, since you, our God, have punished us less than our iniquities deserve, and have given us such a remnant,

Ezra 9.14: 14 shall we again break your commandments, and join ourselves with the peoples that do these abominations? Wouldn’t you be angry with us until you had consumed us, so that there would be no remnant, nor any to escape?

Ezra 9.15: 15 Yahweh, the God of Israel, you are righteous; for we are left a remnant that has escaped, as it is today. Behold, we are before you in our guiltiness; for no one can stand before you because of this.”

Ezra 10.0:

10

Ezra 10.1: 1 Now while Ezra prayed and made confession, weeping and casting himself down before God’s house, there was gathered together to him out of Israel a very great assembly of men and women and children; for the people wept very bitterly.

Ezra 10.2: 2 Shecaniah the son of Jehiel, one of the sons of Elam, answered Ezra, “We have trespassed against our God, and have married foreign women of the peoples of the land. Yet now there is hope for Israel concerning this thing.

Ezra 10.3: 3 Now therefore let’s make a covenant with our God to put away all the wives, and those who are born of them, according to the counsel of my lord, and of those who tremble at the commandment of our God. Let it be done according to the law.

Ezra 10.4: 4 Arise; for the matter belongs to you, and we are with you. Be courageous, and do it.”

Ezra 10.5: 5 Then Ezra arose, and made the chiefs of the priests, the Levites, and all Israel, to swear that they would do according to this word. So they swore.

Ezra 10.6: 6 Then Ezra rose up from before God’s house, and went into the room of Jehohanan the son of Eliashib. When he came there, he ate no bread, nor drank water; for he mourned because of their trespass of the captivity.

Ezra 10.7: 7 They made a proclamation throughout Judah and Jerusalem to all the children of the captivity, that they should gather themselves together to Jerusalem;

Ezra 10.8: 8 and that whoever didn’t come within three days, according to the counsel of the princes and the elders, all his possessions should be forfeited, and himself separated from the assembly of the captivity.

Ezra 10.9: 9 Then all the men of Judah and Benjamin gathered themselves together to Jerusalem within the three days. It was the ninth month, on the twentieth day of the month; and all the people sat in the wide place in front of God’s house, trembling because of this matter, and because of the great rain.

Ezra 10.10: 10 Ezra the priest stood up and said to them, “You have trespassed, and have married foreign women, to increase the guilt of Israel.

Ezra 10.11: 11 Now therefore make confession to Yahweh, the God of your fathers, and do his pleasure; and separate yourselves from the peoples of the land, and from the foreign women.”

Ezra 10.12: 12 Then all the assembly answered with a loud voice, “We must do as you have said concerning us.

Ezra 10.13: 13 But the people are many, and it is a time of much rain, and we are not able to stand outside. This is not a work of one day or two, for we have greatly transgressed in this matter.

Ezra 10.14: 14 Now let our princes be appointed for all the assembly, and let all those who are in our cities who have married foreign women come at appointed times, and with them the elders of every city, and its judges, until the fierce wrath of our God is turned from us, until this matter is resolved.”

Ezra 10.15: 15 Only Jonathan the son of Asahel and Jahzeiah the son of Tikvah stood up against this; and Meshullam and Shabbethai the Levite helped them.

Ezra 10.16: 16 The children of the captivity did so. Ezra the priest, with certain heads of fathers’ households, after their fathers’ houses, and all of them by their names, were set apart; and they sat down in the first day of the tenth month to examine the matter.

Ezra 10.17: 17 They finished with all the men who had married foreign women by the first day of the first month.

Ezra 10.18: 18 Among the sons of the priests there were found who had married foreign women:

of the sons of Jeshua, the son of Jozadak, and his brothers, Maaseiah, and Eliezer, and Jarib, and Gedaliah.

Ezra 10.19: 19 They gave their hand that they would put away their wives; and being guilty, they offered a ram of the flock for their guilt.

Ezra 10.20: 20 Of the sons of Immer: Hanani and Zebadiah.

Ezra 10.21: 21 Of the sons of Harim: Maaseiah, and Elijah, and Shemaiah, and Jehiel, and Uzziah.

Ezra 10.22: 22 Of the sons of Pashhur: Elioenai, Maaseiah, Ishmael, Nethanel, Jozabad, and Elasah.

Ezra 10.23: 23 Of the Levites: Jozabad, and Shimei, and Kelaiah (also called Kelita), Pethahiah, Judah, and Eliezer.

Ezra 10.24: 24 Of the singers: Eliashib. Of the gatekeepers: Shallum, and Telem, and Uri.

Ezra 10.25: 25 Of Israel: Of the sons of Parosh: Ramiah, and Izziah, and Malchijah, and Mijamin, and Eleazar, and Malchijah, and Benaiah.

Ezra 10.26: 26 Of the sons of Elam: Mattaniah, Zechariah, and Jehiel, and Abdi, and Jeremoth, and Elijah.

Ezra 10.27: 27 Of the sons of Zattu: Elioenai, Eliashib, Mattaniah, and Jeremoth, and Zabad, and Aziza.

Ezra 10.28: 28 Of the sons of Bebai: Jehohanan, Hananiah, Zabbai, Athlai.

Ezra 10.29: 29 Of the sons of Bani: Meshullam, Malluch, and Adaiah, Jashub, and Sheal, Jeremoth.

Ezra 10.30: 30 Of the sons of Pahathmoab: Adna, and Chelal, Benaiah, Maaseiah, Mattaniah, Bezalel, and Binnui, and Manasseh.

Ezra 10.31: 31 Of the sons of Harim: Eliezer, Isshijah, Malchijah, Shemaiah, Shimeon,

Ezra 10.32: 32 Benjamin, Malluch, Shemariah.

Ezra 10.33: 33 Of the sons of Hashum: Mattenai, Mattattah, Zabad, Eliphelet, Jeremai, Manasseh, Shimei.

Ezra 10.34: 34 Of the sons of Bani: Maadai, Amram, and Uel,

Ezra 10.35: 35 Benaiah, Bedeiah, Cheluhi,

Ezra 10.36: 36 Vaniah, Meremoth, Eliashib,

Ezra 10.37: 37 Mattaniah, Mattenai, and Jaasu,

Ezra 10.38: 38 and Bani, and Binnui, Shimei,

Ezra 10.39: 39 and Shelemiah, and Nathan, and Adaiah,

Ezra 10.40: 40 Machnadebai, Shashai, Sharai,

Ezra 10.41: 41 Azarel, and Shelemiah, Shemariah,

Ezra 10.42: 42 Shallum, Amariah, Joseph.

Ezra 10.43: 43 Of the sons of Nebo: Jeiel, Mattithiah, Zabad, Zebina, Iddo, and Joel, Benaiah.

Ezra 10.44: 44 All these had taken foreign wives; and some of them had wives by whom they had children.

Nehemiah 0.0:

The Book of

Nehemiah

Nehemiah 1.0:

1

Nehemiah 1.1: 1 The words of Nehemiah the son of Hacaliah.

Now in the month Chislev, in the twentieth year, as I was in Susa the palace,

Nehemiah 1.2: 2 Hanani, one of my brothers, came, he and certain men out of Judah; and I asked them about the Jews who had escaped, who were left of the captivity, and concerning Jerusalem.

Nehemiah 1.3: 3 They said to me, “The remnant who are left of the captivity there in the province are in great affliction and reproach. The wall of Jerusalem is also broken down, and its gates are burned with fire.”

Nehemiah 1.4: 4 When I heard these words, I sat down and wept, and mourned several days; and I fasted and prayed before the God of heaven,

Nehemiah 1.5: 5 and said, “I beg you, Yahweh, the God of heaven, the great and awesome God, who keeps covenant and loving kindness with those who love him and keep his commandments:

Nehemiah 1.6: 6 Let your ear now be attentive, and your eyes open, that you may listen to the prayer of your servant, which I pray before you at this time, day and night, for the children of Israel your servants, while I confess the sins of the children of Israel, which we have sinned against you. Yes, I and my father’s house have sinned.

Nehemiah 1.7: 7 We have dealt very corruptly against you, and have not kept the commandments, nor the statutes, nor the ordinances, which you commanded your servant Moses.

Nehemiah 1.8: 8 “Remember, I beg you, the word that you commanded your servant Moses, saying, ‘If you trespass, I will scatter you among the peoples;

Nehemiah 1.9: 9 but if you return to me, and keep my commandments and do them, though your outcasts were in the uttermost part of the heavens, yet I will gather them from there, and will bring them to the place that I have chosen, to cause my name to dwell there.’

Nehemiah 1.10: 10 “Now these are your servants and your people, whom you have redeemed by your great power, and by your strong hand.

Nehemiah 1.11: 11 Lord, I beg you, let your ear be attentive now to the prayer of your servant, and to the prayer of your servants, who delight to fear your name; and please prosper your servant today, and grant him mercy in the sight of this man.”

Now I was cup bearer to the king.

Nehemiah 2.0:

2

Nehemiah 2.1: 1 In the month Nisan, in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes the king, when wine was before him, I picked up the wine, and gave it to the king. Now I had not been sad before in his presence.

Nehemiah 2.2: 2 The king said to me, “Why is your face sad, since you are not sick? This is nothing else but sorrow of heart.”

Then I was very much afraid.

Nehemiah 2.3: 3 I said to the king, “Let the king live forever! Why shouldn’t my face be sad, when the city, the place of my fathers’ tombs, lies waste, and its gates have been consumed with fire?”

Nehemiah 2.4: 4 Then the king said to me, “What is your request?”

So I prayed to the God of heaven.

Nehemiah 2.5: 5 I said to the king, “If it pleases the king, and if your servant has found favor in your sight, that you would send me to Judah, to the city of my fathers’ tombs, that I may build it.”

Nehemiah 2.6: 6 The king said to me (the queen was also sitting by him), “How long will your journey be? When will you return?”

So it pleased the king to send me, and I set a time for him.

Nehemiah 2.7: 7 Moreover I said to the king, “If it pleases the king, let letters be given me to the governors beyond the River, that they may let me pass through until I come to Judah;

Nehemiah 2.8: 8 and a letter to Asaph the keeper of the king’s forest, that he may give me timber to make beams for the gates of the citadel by the temple, for the wall of the city, and for the house that I will occupy.”

The king granted my requests, because of the good hand of my God on me.

Nehemiah 2.9: 9 Then I came to the governors beyond the River, and gave them the king’s letters. Now the king had sent captains of the army and horsemen with me.

Nehemiah 2.10: 10 When Sanballat the Horonite, and Tobiah the servant, the Ammonite, heard of it, it grieved them exceedingly, because a man had come to seek the welfare of the children of Israel.

Nehemiah 2.11: 11 So I came to Jerusalem, and was there three days.

Nehemiah 2.12: 12 I arose in the night, I and a few men with me. I didn’t tell anyone what my God put into my heart to do for Jerusalem. There wasn’t any animal with me, except the animal that I rode on.

Nehemiah 2.13: 13 I went out by night by the valley gate, even toward the jackal’s well, then to the dung gate, and inspected the walls of Jerusalem, which were broken down, and its gates were consumed with fire.

Nehemiah 2.14: 14 Then I went on to the spring gate and to the king’s pool, but there was no place for the animal that was under me to pass.

Nehemiah 2.15: 15 Then I went up in the night by the brook, and inspected the wall; and I turned back, and entered by the valley gate, and so returned.

Nehemiah 2.16: 16 The rulers didn’t know where I went, or what I did. I had not as yet told it to the Jews, nor to the priests, nor to the nobles, nor to the rulers, nor to the rest who did the work.

Nehemiah 2.17: 17 Then I said to them, “You see the bad situation that we are in, how Jerusalem lies waste, and its gates are burned with fire. Come, let’s build up the wall of Jerusalem, that we won’t be disgraced.”

Nehemiah 2.18: 18 I told them of the hand of my God which was good on me, as also of the king’s words that he had spoken to me.

They said, “Let’s rise up and build.” So they strengthened their hands for the good work.

Nehemiah 2.19: 19 But when Sanballat the Horonite, Tobiah the Ammonite servant, and Geshem the Arabian, heard it, they ridiculed us, and despised us, and said, “What is this thing that you are doing? Will you rebel against the king?”

Nehemiah 2.20: 20 Then I answered them, and said to them, “The God of heaven will prosper us. Therefore we, his servants, will arise and build; but you have no portion, nor right, nor memorial, in Jerusalem.”

Nehemiah 3.0:

3

Nehemiah 3.1: 1 Then Eliashib the high priest rose up with his brothers the priests, and they built the sheep gate. They sanctified it, and set up its doors. They sanctified it even to the tower of Hammeah, to the tower of Hananel.

Nehemiah 3.2: 2 Next to him the men of Jericho built. Next to them Zaccur the son of Imri built.

Nehemiah 3.3: 3 The sons of Hassenaah built the fish gate. They laid its beams, and set up its doors, its bolts, and its bars.

Nehemiah 3.4: 4 Next to them, Meremoth the son of Uriah, the son of Hakkoz made repairs. Next to them, Meshullam the son of Berechiah, the son of Meshezabel made repairs. Next to them, Zadok the son of Baana made repairs.

Nehemiah 3.5: 5 Next to them, the Tekoites made repairs; but their nobles didn’t put their necks to the Lord’s work.

Nehemiah 3.6: 6 Joiada the son of Paseah and Meshullam the son of Besodeiah repaired the old gate. They laid its beams, and set up its doors, and its bolts, and its bars.

Nehemiah 3.7: 7 Next to them, Melatiah the Gibeonite, and Jadon the Meronothite, the men of Gibeon and of Mizpah, repaired the residence of the governor beyond the River.

Nehemiah 3.8: 8 Next to him, Uzziel the son of Harhaiah, goldsmiths, made repairs. Next to him, Hananiah, one of the perfumers, made repairs, and they fortified Jerusalem even to the wide wall.

Nehemiah 3.9: 9 Next to them, Rephaiah the son of Hur, the ruler of half the district of Jerusalem, made repairs.

Nehemiah 3.10: 10 Next to them, Jedaiah the son of Harumaph made repairs across from his house. Next to him, Hattush the son of Hashabneiah made repairs.

Nehemiah 3.11: 11 Malchijah the son of Harim, and Hasshub the son of Pahathmoab, repaired another portion, and the tower of the furnaces.

Nehemiah 3.12: 12 Next to him, Shallum the son of Hallohesh, the ruler of half the district of Jerusalem, he and his daughters, made repairs.

Nehemiah 3.13: 13 Hanun and the inhabitants of Zanoah repaired the valley gate. They built it, and set up its doors, its bolts, and its bars, and one thousand cubits of the wall to the dung gate.

Nehemiah 3.14: 14 Malchijah the son of Rechab, the ruler of the district of Beth Haccherem repaired the dung gate. He built it, and set up its doors, its bolts, and its bars.

Nehemiah 3.15: 15 Shallun the son of Colhozeh, the ruler of the district of Mizpah repaired the spring gate. He built it, and covered it, and set up its doors, its bolts, and its bars, and the wall of the pool of Shelah by the king’s garden, even to the stairs that go down from David’s city.

Nehemiah 3.16: 16 After him, Nehemiah the son of Azbuk, the ruler of half the district of Beth Zur, made repairs to the place opposite the tombs of David, and to the pool that was made, and to the house of the mighty men.

Nehemiah 3.17: 17 After him, the Levites, Rehum the son of Bani made repairs. Next to him, Hashabiah, the ruler of half the district of Keilah, made repairs for his district.

Nehemiah 3.18: 18 After him, their brothers, Bavvai the son of Henadad, the ruler of half the district of Keilah made repairs.

Nehemiah 3.19: 19 Next to him, Ezer the son of Jeshua, the ruler of Mizpah, repaired another portion, across from the ascent to the armory at the turning of the wall.

Nehemiah 3.20: 20 After him, Baruch the son of Zabbai earnestly repaired another portion, from the turning of the wall to the door of the house of Eliashib the high priest.

Nehemiah 3.21: 21 After him, Meremoth the son of Uriah the son of Hakkoz repaired another portion, from the door of the house of Eliashib even to the end of the house of Eliashib.

Nehemiah 3.22: 22 After him, the priests, the men of the Plain made repairs.

Nehemiah 3.23: 23 After them, Benjamin and Hasshub made repairs across from their house. After them, Azariah the son of Maaseiah the son of Ananiah made repairs beside his own house.

Nehemiah 3.24: 24 After him, Binnui the son of Henadad repaired another portion, from the house of Azariah to the turning of the wall, and to the corner.

Nehemiah 3.25: 25 Palal the son of Uzai made repairs opposite the turning of the wall, and the tower that stands out from the upper house of the king, which is by the court of the guard. After him Pedaiah the son of Parosh made repairs.

Nehemiah 3.26: 26 (Now the temple servants lived in Ophel, to the place opposite the water gate toward the east, and the tower that stands out.)

Nehemiah 3.27: 27 After him the Tekoites repaired another portion, opposite the great tower that stands out, and to the wall of Ophel.

Nehemiah 3.28: 28 Above the horse gate, the priests made repairs, everyone across from his own house.

Nehemiah 3.29: 29 After them, Zadok the son of Immer made repairs across from his own house. After him, Shemaiah the son of Shecaniah, the keeper of the east gate made repairs.

Nehemiah 3.30: 30 After him, Hananiah the son of Shelemiah, and Hanun the sixth son of Zalaph, repaired another portion. After him, Meshullam the son of Berechiah made repairs across from his room.

Nehemiah 3.31: 31 After him, Malchijah, one of the goldsmiths to the house of the temple servants, and of the merchants, made repairs opposite the gate of Hammiphkad, and to the ascent of the corner.

Nehemiah 3.32: 32 Between the ascent of the corner and the sheep gate, the goldsmiths and the merchants made repairs.

Nehemiah 4.0:

4

Nehemiah 4.1: 1 But when Sanballat heard that we were building the wall, he was angry, and was very indignant, and mocked the Jews.

Nehemiah 4.2: 2 He spoke before his brothers and the army of Samaria, and said, “What are these feeble Jews doing? Will they fortify themselves? Will they sacrifice? Will they finish in a day? Will they revive the stones out of the heaps of rubbish, since they are burned?”

Nehemiah 4.3: 3 Now Tobiah the Ammonite was by him, and he said, “What they are building, if a fox climbed up it, he would break down their stone wall.”

Nehemiah 4.4: 4 “Hear, our God; for we are despised. Turn back their reproach on their own head. Give them up for a plunder in a land of captivity.

Nehemiah 4.5: 5 Don’t cover their iniquity. Don’t let their sin be blotted out from before you; for they have insulted the builders.”

Nehemiah 4.6: 6 So we built the wall; and all the wall was joined together to half its height: for the people had a mind to work.

Nehemiah 4.7: 7 But when Sanballat, Tobiah, the Arabians, the Ammonites, and the Ashdodites heard that the repairing of the walls of Jerusalem went forward, and that the breaches began to be filled, they were very angry;

Nehemiah 4.8: 8 and they all conspired together to come and fight against Jerusalem, and to cause confusion among us.

Nehemiah 4.9: 9 But we made our prayer to our God, and set a watch against them day and night because of them.

Nehemiah 4.10: 10 Judah said, “The strength of the bearers of burdens is fading, and there is much rubble; so that we are not able to build the wall.”

Nehemiah 4.11: 11 Our adversaries said, “They will not know or see, until we come in among them and kill them, and cause the work to cease.”

Nehemiah 4.12: 12 When the Jews who lived by them came, they said to us ten times from all places, “Wherever you turn, they will attack us.”

Nehemiah 4.13: 13 Therefore I set guards in the lowest parts of the space behind the wall, in the open places. I set the people by family groups with their swords, their spears, and their bows.

Nehemiah 4.14: 14 I looked, and rose up, and said to the nobles, to the rulers, and to the rest of the people, “Don’t be afraid of them! Remember the Lord, who is great and awesome, and fight for your brothers, your sons, your daughters, your wives, and your houses.”

Nehemiah 4.15: 15 When our enemies heard that it was known to us, and God had brought their counsel to nothing, all of us returned to the wall, everyone to his work.

Nehemiah 4.16: 16 From that time forth, half of my servants did the work, and half of them held the spears, the shields, the bows, and the coats of mail; and the rulers were behind all the house of Judah.

Nehemiah 4.17: 17 Those who built the wall, and those who bore burdens loaded themselves; everyone with one of his hands did the work, and with the other held his weapon.

Nehemiah 4.18: 18 Among the builders, everyone wore his sword at his side, and so built. He who sounded the trumpet was by me.

Nehemiah 4.19: 19 I said to the nobles, and to the rulers and to the rest of the people, “The work is great and large, and we are separated on the wall, far from one another.

Nehemiah 4.20: 20 Wherever you hear the sound of the trumpet, rally there to us. Our God will fight for us.”

Nehemiah 4.21: 21 So we did the work. Half of the people held the spears from the rising of the morning until the stars appeared.

Nehemiah 4.22: 22 Likewise at the same time I said to the people, “Let everyone with his servant lodge within Jerusalem, that in the night they may be a guard to us, and may labor in the day.”

Nehemiah 4.23: 23 So neither I, nor my brothers, nor my servants, nor the men of the guard who followed me, none of us took off our clothes. Everyone took his weapon to the water.

Nehemiah 5.0:

5

Nehemiah 5.1: 1 Then there arose a great cry of the people and of their wives against their brothers the Jews.

Nehemiah 5.2: 2 For there were some who said, “We, our sons and our daughters, are many. Let us get grain, that we may eat and live.”

Nehemiah 5.3: 3 There were also some who said, “We are mortgaging our fields, our vineyards, and our houses. Let us get grain, because of the famine.”

Nehemiah 5.4: 4 There were also some who said, “We have borrowed money for the king’s tribute using our fields and our vineyards as collateral.

Nehemiah 5.5: 5 Yet now our flesh is as the flesh of our brothers, our children as their children. Behold, we bring our sons and our daughters into bondage to be servants, and some of our daughters have been brought into bondage. It is also not in our power to help it, because other men have our fields and our vineyards.”

Nehemiah 5.6: 6 I was very angry when I heard their cry and these words.

Nehemiah 5.7: 7 Then I consulted with myself, and contended with the nobles and the rulers, and said to them, “You exact usury, everyone of his brother.” I held a great assembly against them.

Nehemiah 5.8: 8 I said to them, “We, after our ability, have redeemed our brothers the Jews that were sold to the nations; and would you even sell your brothers, and should they be sold to us?” Then they held their peace, and found not a word to say.

Nehemiah 5.9: 9 Also I said, “The thing that you do is not good. Shouldn’t you walk in the fear of our God, because of the reproach of the nations our enemies?

Nehemiah 5.10: 10 I likewise, my brothers and my servants, lend them money and grain. Please let us stop this usury.

Nehemiah 5.11: 11 Please restore to them, even today, their fields, their vineyards, their olive groves, and their houses, also the hundredth part of the money, and of the grain, the new wine, and the oil, that you are charging them.”

Nehemiah 5.12: 12 Then they said, “We will restore them, and will require nothing of them. We will do so, even as you say.”

Then I called the priests, and took an oath of them, that they would do according to this promise.

Nehemiah 5.13: 13 Also I shook out my lap, and said, “So may God shake out every man from his house, and from his labor, that doesn’t perform this promise; even may he be shaken out and emptied like this.”

All the assembly said, “Amen,” and praised Yahweh. The people did according to this promise.

Nehemiah 5.14: 14 Moreover from the time that I was appointed to be their governor in the land of Judah, from the twentieth year even to the thirty-second year of Artaxerxes the king, that is, twelve years, I and my brothers have not eaten the bread of the governor.

Nehemiah 5.15: 15 But the former governors who were before me were supported by the people, and took bread and wine from them, plus forty shekels of silver; yes, even their servants ruled over the people; but I didn’t do so, because of the fear of God.

Nehemiah 5.16: 16 Yes, I also continued in the work of this wall. We didn’t buy any land. All my servants were gathered there to the work.

Nehemiah 5.17: 17 Moreover there were at my table, of the Jews and the rulers, one hundred fifty men, in addition to those who came to us from among the nations that were around us.

Nehemiah 5.18: 18 Now that which was prepared for one day was one ox and six choice sheep. Also fowls were prepared for me, and once in ten days a store of all sorts of wine. Yet for all this, I didn’t demand the governor’s pay, because the bondage was heavy on this people.

Nehemiah 5.19: 19 Remember me, my God, for good, all that I have done for this people.

Nehemiah 6.0:

6

Nehemiah 6.1: 1 Now when it was reported to Sanballat, Tobiah, and to Geshem the Arabian, and to the rest of our enemies, that I had built the wall, and that there was no breach left in it (though even to that time I had not set up the doors in the gates)

Nehemiah 6.2: 2 Sanballat and Geshem sent to me, saying, “Come! Let’s meet together in the villages in the plain of Ono.” But they intended to harm me.

Nehemiah 6.3: 3 I sent messengers to them, saying, “I am doing a great work, so that I can’t come down. Why should the work cease, while I leave it, and come down to you?”

Nehemiah 6.4: 4 They sent to me four times like this; and I answered them the same way.

Nehemiah 6.5: 5 Then Sanballat sent his servant to me the same way the fifth time with an open letter in his hand,

Nehemiah 6.6: 6 in which was written, “It is reported among the nations, and Gashmu says it, that you and the Jews intend to rebel. Because of that, you are building the wall. You would be their king, according to these words.

Nehemiah 6.7: 7 You have also appointed prophets to proclaim of you at Jerusalem, saying, ‘There is a king in Judah!’ Now it will be reported to the king according to these words. Come now therefore, and let’s take counsel together.”

Nehemiah 6.8: 8 Then I sent to him, saying, “There are no such things done as you say, but you imagine them out of your own heart.”

Nehemiah 6.9: 9 For they all would have made us afraid, saying, “Their hands will be weakened from the work, that it not be done.” But now, strengthen my hands.

Nehemiah 6.10: 10 I went to the house of Shemaiah the son of Delaiah the son of Mehetabel, who was shut in at his home; and he said, “Let us meet together in God’s house, within the temple, and let’s shut the doors of the temple; for they will come to kill you. Yes, in the night they will come to kill you.”

Nehemiah 6.11: 11 I said, “Should a man like me flee? Who is there that, being such as I, would go into the temple to save his life? I will not go in.”

Nehemiah 6.12: 12 I discerned, and behold, God had not sent him; but he pronounced this prophecy against me. Tobiah and Sanballat had hired him.

Nehemiah 6.13: 13 He hired so that I would be afraid, do so, and sin, and that they might have material for an evil report, that they might reproach me.

Nehemiah 6.14: 14 “Remember, my God, Tobiah and Sanballat according to these their works, and also the prophetess Noadiah, and the rest of the prophets, that would have put me in fear.”

Nehemiah 6.15: 15 So the wall was finished in the twenty-fifth day of Elul, in fifty-two days.

Nehemiah 6.16: 16 When all our enemies heard of it, all the nations that were around us were afraid, and they lost their confidence; for they perceived that this work was done by our God.

Nehemiah 6.17: 17 Moreover in those days the nobles of Judah sent many letters to Tobiah, and Tobiah’s letters came to them.

Nehemiah 6.18: 18 For there were many in Judah sworn to him, because he was the son-in-law of Shecaniah the son of Arah; and his son Jehohanan had taken the daughter of Meshullam the son of Berechiah as wife.

Nehemiah 6.19: 19 Also they spoke of his good deeds before me, and reported my words to him. Tobiah sent letters to put me in fear.

Nehemiah 7.0:

7

Nehemiah 7.1: 1 Now when the wall was built, and I had set up the doors, and the gatekeepers and the singers and the Levites were appointed,

Nehemiah 7.2: 2 I put my brother Hanani, and Hananiah the governor of the fortress, in charge of Jerusalem; for he was a faithful man, and feared God above many.

Nehemiah 7.3: 3 I said to them, “Don’t let the gates of Jerusalem be opened until the sun is hot; and while they stand guard, let them shut the doors, and you bar them: and appoint watches of the inhabitants of Jerusalem, everyone in his watch, with everyone near his house.”

Nehemiah 7.4: 4 Now the city was wide and large; but the people were few therein, and the houses were not built.

Nehemiah 7.5: 5 My God put into my heart to gather together the nobles, and the rulers, and the people, that they might be listed by genealogy. I found the book of the genealogy of those who came up at the first, and I found this written in it:

Nehemiah 7.6: 6 These are the children of the province who went up out of the captivity of those who had been carried away, whom Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon had carried away, and who returned to Jerusalem and to Judah, everyone to his city,

Nehemiah 7.7: 7 who came with Zerubbabel, Jeshua, Nehemiah, Azariah, Raamiah, Nahamani, Mordecai, Bilshan, Mispereth, Bigvai, Nehum, Baanah.

The number of the men of the people of Israel:

Nehemiah 7.8: 8 The children of Parosh: two thousand one hundred seventy-two.

Nehemiah 7.9: 9 The children of Shephatiah: three hundred seventy-two.

Nehemiah 7.10: 10 The children of Arah: six hundred fifty-two.

Nehemiah 7.11: 11 The children of Pahathmoab, of the children of Jeshua and Joab: two thousand eight hundred eighteen.

Nehemiah 7.12: 12 The children of Elam: one thousand two hundred fifty-four.

Nehemiah 7.13: 13 The children of Zattu: eight hundred forty-five.

Nehemiah 7.14: 14 The children of Zaccai: seven hundred sixty.

Nehemiah 7.15: 15 The children of Binnui: six hundred forty-eight.

Nehemiah 7.16: 16 The children of Bebai: six hundred twenty-eight.

Nehemiah 7.17: 17 The children of Azgad: two thousand three hundred twenty-two.

Nehemiah 7.18: 18 The children of Adonikam: six hundred sixty-seven.

Nehemiah 7.19: 19 The children of Bigvai: two thousand sixty-seven.

Nehemiah 7.20: 20 The children of Adin: six hundred fifty-five.

Nehemiah 7.21: 21 The children of Ater: of Hezekiah, ninety-eight.

Nehemiah 7.22: 22 The children of Hashum: three hundred twenty-eight.

Nehemiah 7.23: 23 The children of Bezai: three hundred twenty-four.

Nehemiah 7.24: 24 The children of Hariph: one hundred twelve.

Nehemiah 7.25: 25 The children of Gibeon: ninety-five.

Nehemiah 7.26: 26 The men of Bethlehem and Netophah: one hundred eighty-eight.

Nehemiah 7.27: 27 The men of Anathoth: one hundred twenty-eight.

Nehemiah 7.28: 28 The men of Beth Azmaveth: forty-two.

Nehemiah 7.29: 29 The men of Kiriath Jearim, Chephirah, and Beeroth: seven hundred forty-three.

Nehemiah 7.30: 30 The men of Ramah and Geba: six hundred twenty-one.

Nehemiah 7.31: 31 The men of Michmas: one hundred twenty-two.

Nehemiah 7.32: 32 The men of Bethel and Ai: one hundred twenty-three.

Nehemiah 7.33: 33 The men of the other Nebo: fifty-two.

Nehemiah 7.34: 34 The children of the other Elam: one thousand two hundred fifty-four.

Nehemiah 7.35: 35 The children of Harim: three hundred twenty.

Nehemiah 7.36: 36 The children of Jericho: three hundred forty-five.

Nehemiah 7.37: 37 The children of Lod, Hadid, and Ono: seven hundred twenty-one.

Nehemiah 7.38: 38 The children of Senaah: three thousand nine hundred thirty.

Nehemiah 7.39: 39 The priests: The children of Jedaiah, of the house of Jeshua: nine hundred seventy-three.

Nehemiah 7.40: 40 The children of Immer: one thousand fifty-two.

Nehemiah 7.41: 41 The children of Pashhur: one thousand two hundred forty-seven.

Nehemiah 7.42: 42 The children of Harim: one thousand seventeen.

Nehemiah 7.43: 43 The Levites: the children of Jeshua, of Kadmiel, of the children of Hodevah: seventy-four.

Nehemiah 7.44: 44 The singers: the children of Asaph: one hundred forty-eight.

Nehemiah 7.45: 45 The gatekeepers: the children of Shallum, the children of Ater, the children of Talmon, the children of Akkub, the children of Hatita, the children of Shobai: one hundred thirty-eight.

Nehemiah 7.46: 46 The temple servants: the children of Ziha, the children of Hasupha, the children of Tabbaoth,

Nehemiah 7.47: 47 the children of Keros, the children of Sia, the children of Padon,

Nehemiah 7.48: 48 the children of Lebana, the children of Hagaba, the children of Salmai,

Nehemiah 7.49: 49 the children of Hanan, the children of Giddel, the children of Gahar,

Nehemiah 7.50: 50 the children of Reaiah, the children of Rezin, the children of Nekoda,

Nehemiah 7.51: 51 the children of Gazzam, the children of Uzza, the children of Paseah.

Nehemiah 7.52: 52 The children of Besai, the children of Meunim, the children of Nephushesim,

Nehemiah 7.53: 53 the children of Bakbuk, the children of Hakupha, the children of Harhur,

Nehemiah 7.54: 54 the children of Bazlith, the children of Mehida, the children of Harsha,

Nehemiah 7.55: 55 the children of Barkos, the children of Sisera, the children of Temah,

Nehemiah 7.56: 56 the children of Neziah, and the children of Hatipha.

Nehemiah 7.57: 57 The children of Solomon’s servants: the children of Sotai, the children of Sophereth, the children of Perida,

Nehemiah 7.58: 58 the children of Jaala, the children of Darkon, the children of Giddel,

Nehemiah 7.59: 59 the children of Shephatiah, the children of Hattil, the children of Pochereth Hazzebaim, and the children of Amon.

Nehemiah 7.60: 60 All the temple servants and the children of Solomon’s servants were three hundred ninety-two.

Nehemiah 7.61: 61 These were those who went up from Tel Melah, Tel Harsha, Cherub, Addon, and Immer; but they could not show their fathers’ houses, nor their offspring, whether they were of Israel:

Nehemiah 7.62: 62 The children of Delaiah, the children of Tobiah, the children of Nekoda: six hundred forty-two.

Nehemiah 7.63: 63 Of the priests: the children of Hobaiah, the children of Hakkoz, the children of Barzillai, who took a wife of the daughters of Barzillai the Gileadite, and was called after their name.

Nehemiah 7.64: 64 These searched for their genealogical records, but couldn’t find them. Therefore they were deemed disqualified and removed from the priesthood.

Nehemiah 7.65: 65 The governor told that they should not eat of the most holy things until a priest stood up to minister with Urim and Thummim.

Nehemiah 7.66: 66 The whole assembly together was forty-two thousand three hundred sixty,

Nehemiah 7.67: 67 in addition to their male servants and their female servants, of whom there were seven thousand three hundred thirty-seven. They had two hundred forty-five singing men and singing women.

Nehemiah 7.68: 68 Their horses were seven hundred thirty-six; their mules, two hundred forty-five;

Nehemiah 7.69: 69 their camels, four hundred thirty-five; their donkeys, six thousand seven hundred twenty.

Nehemiah 7.70: 70 Some from among the heads of fathers’ households gave to the work. The governor gave to the treasury one thousand darics of gold, fifty basins, and five hundred thirty priests’ garments.

Nehemiah 7.71: 71 Some of the heads of fathers’ households gave into the treasury of the work twenty thousand darics of gold, and two thousand two hundred minas of silver.

Nehemiah 7.72: 72 That which the rest of the people gave was twenty thousand darics of gold, plus two thousand minas of silver, and sixty-seven priests’ garments.

Nehemiah 7.73: 73 So the priests, the Levites, the gatekeepers, the singers, some of the people, the temple servants, and all Israel, lived in their cities.

When the seventh month had come, the children of Israel were in their cities.

Nehemiah 8.0:

8

Nehemiah 8.1: 1 All the people gathered themselves together as one man into the wide place that was in front of the water gate; and they spoke to Ezra the scribe to bring the book of the law of Moses, which Yahweh had commanded to Israel.

Nehemiah 8.2: 2 Ezra the priest brought the law before the assembly, both men and women, and all who could hear with understanding, on the first day of the seventh month.

Nehemiah 8.3: 3 He read from it before the wide place that was in front of the water gate from early morning until midday, in the presence of the men and the women, and of those who could understand. The ears of all the people were attentive to the book of the law.

Nehemiah 8.4: 4 Ezra the scribe stood on a pulpit of wood, which they had made for the purpose; and beside him stood Mattithiah, Shema, Anaiah, Uriah, Hilkiah, and Maaseiah, on his right hand; and on his left hand, Pedaiah, Mishael, Malchijah, Hashum, Hashbaddanah, Zechariah, and Meshullam.

Nehemiah 8.5: 5 Ezra opened the book in the sight of all the people (for he was above all the people), and when he opened it, all the people stood up.

Nehemiah 8.6: 6 Then Ezra blessed Yahweh, the great God.

All the people answered, “Amen, Amen,” with the lifting up of their hands. They bowed their heads, and worshiped Yahweh with their faces to the ground.

Nehemiah 8.7: 7 Also Jeshua, Bani, Sherebiah, Jamin, Akkub, Shabbethai, Hodiah, Maaseiah, Kelita, Azariah, Jozabad, Hanan, Pelaiah, and the Levites, caused the people to understand the law; and the people stayed in their place.

Nehemiah 8.8: 8 They read in the book, in the law of God, distinctly; and they gave the sense, so that they understood the reading.

Nehemiah 8.9: 9 Nehemiah, who was the governor, and Ezra the priest and scribe, and the Levites who taught the people, said to all the people, “Today is holy to Yahweh your God. Don’t mourn, nor weep.” For all the people wept when they heard the words of the law.

Nehemiah 8.10: 10 Then he said to them, “Go your way. Eat the fat, drink the sweet, and send portions to him for whom nothing is prepared, for today is holy to our Lord. Don’t be grieved, for the joy of Yahweh is your strength.”

Nehemiah 8.11: 11 So the Levites calmed all the people, saying, “Hold your peace, for the day is holy. Don’t be grieved.”

Nehemiah 8.12: 12 All the people went their way to eat, to drink, to send portions, and to celebrate, because they had understood the words that were declared to them.

Nehemiah 8.13: 13 On the second day, the heads of fathers’ households of all the people, the priests, and the Levites were gathered together to Ezra the scribe, to study the words of the law.

Nehemiah 8.14: 14 They found written in the law how Yahweh had commanded by Moses that the children of Israel should dwell in booths in the feast of the seventh month;

Nehemiah 8.15: 15 and that they should publish and proclaim in all their cities, and in Jerusalem, saying, “Go out to the mountain, and get olive branches, branches of wild olive, myrtle branches, palm branches, and branches of thick trees, to make temporary shelters, as it is written.”

Nehemiah 8.16: 16 So the people went out, and brought them, and made themselves temporary shelters, everyone on the roof of his house, in their courts, in the courts of God’s house, in the wide place of the water gate, and in the wide place of Ephraim’s gate.

Nehemiah 8.17: 17 All the assembly of those who had come back out of the captivity made temporary shelters, and lived in the temporary shelters; for since the days of Jeshua the son of Nun to that day the children of Israel had not done so. There was very great gladness.

Nehemiah 8.18: 18 Also day by day, from the first day to the last day, he read in the book of the law of God. They kept the feast seven days; and on the eighth day was a solemn assembly, according to the ordinance.

Nehemiah 9.0:

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Nehemiah 9.1: 1 Now in the twenty-fourth day of this month the children of Israel were assembled with fasting, with sackcloth, and dirt on them.

Nehemiah 9.2: 2 The offspring of Israel separated themselves from all foreigners and stood and confessed their sins and the iniquities of their fathers.

Nehemiah 9.3: 3 They stood up in their place, and read in the book of the law of Yahweh their God a fourth part of the day; and a fourth part they confessed, and worshiped Yahweh their God.

Nehemiah 9.4: 4 Then Jeshua, Bani, Kadmiel, Shebaniah, Bunni, Sherebiah, Bani, and Chenani of the Levites stood up on the stairs, and cried with a loud voice to Yahweh their God.

Nehemiah 9.5: 5 Then the Levites, Jeshua, and Kadmiel, Bani, Hashabneiah, Sherebiah, Hodiah, Shebaniah, and Pethahiah, said, “Stand up and bless Yahweh your God from everlasting to everlasting! Blessed be your glorious name, which is exalted above all blessing and praise!

Nehemiah 9.6: 6 You are Yahweh, even you alone. You have made heaven, the heaven of heavens, with all their army, the earth and all things that are on it, the seas and all that is in them, and you preserve them all. The army of heaven worships you.

Nehemiah 9.7: 7 You are Yahweh, the God who chose Abram, brought him out of Ur of the Chaldees, gave him the name of Abraham,

Nehemiah 9.8: 8 found his heart faithful before you, and made a covenant with him to give the land of the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Amorite, the Perizzite, the Jebusite, and the Girgashite, to give it to his offspring, and have performed your words; for you are righteous.

Nehemiah 9.9: 9 “You saw the affliction of our fathers in Egypt, and heard their cry by the Red Sea,

Nehemiah 9.10: 10 and showed signs and wonders against Pharaoh, and against all his servants, and against all the people of his land; for you knew that they dealt proudly against them, and made a name for yourself, as it is today.

Nehemiah 9.11: 11 You divided the sea before them, so that they went through the middle of the sea on the dry land; and you cast their pursuers into the depths, as a stone into the mighty waters.

Nehemiah 9.12: 12 Moreover, in a pillar of cloud you led them by day; and in a pillar of fire by night, to give them light in the way in which they should go.

Nehemiah 9.13: 13 “You also came down on Mount Sinai, and spoke with them from heaven, and gave them right ordinances and true laws, good statutes and commandments,

Nehemiah 9.14: 14 and made known to them your holy Sabbath, and commanded them commandments, statutes, and a law, by Moses your servant,

Nehemiah 9.15: 15 and gave them bread from the sky for their hunger, and brought water out of the rock for them for their thirst, and commanded them that they should go in to possess the land which you had sworn to give them.

Nehemiah 9.16: 16 “But they and our fathers behaved proudly, hardened their neck, didn’t listen to your commandments,

Nehemiah 9.17: 17 and refused to obey. They weren’t mindful of your wonders that you did among them, but hardened their neck, and in their rebellion appointed a captain to return to their bondage. But you are a God ready to pardon, gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness, and didn’t forsake them.

Nehemiah 9.18: 18 Yes, when they had made themselves a molded calf, and said, ‘This is your God who brought you up out of Egypt,’ and had committed awful blasphemies;

Nehemiah 9.19: 19 yet you in your manifold mercies didn’t forsake them in the wilderness. The pillar of cloud didn’t depart from over them by day, to lead them in the way; neither did the pillar of fire by night, to show them light, and the way in which they should go.

Nehemiah 9.20: 20 You gave also your good Spirit to instruct them, and didn’t withhold your manna from their mouth, and gave them water for their thirst.

Nehemiah 9.21: 21 “Yes, forty years you sustained them in the wilderness. They lacked nothing. Their clothes didn’t grow old, and their feet didn’t swell.

Nehemiah 9.22: 22 Moreover you gave them kingdoms and peoples, which you allotted according to their portions. So they possessed the land of Sihon, even the land of the king of Heshbon, and the land of Og king of Bashan.

Nehemiah 9.23: 23 You also multiplied their children as the stars of the sky, and brought them into the land concerning which you said to their fathers, that they should go in to possess it.

Nehemiah 9.24: 24 “So the children went in and possessed the land, and you subdued before them the inhabitants of the land, the Canaanites, and gave them into their hands, with their kings and the peoples of the land, that they might do with them as they pleased.

Nehemiah 9.25: 25 They took fortified cities and a rich land, and possessed houses full of all good things, cisterns dug out, vineyards, olive groves, and fruit trees in abundance. So they ate, were filled, became fat, and delighted themselves in your great goodness.

Nehemiah 9.26: 26 “Nevertheless they were disobedient, and rebelled against you, cast your law behind their back, killed your prophets that testified against them to turn them again to you, and they committed awful blasphemies.

Nehemiah 9.27: 27 Therefore you delivered them into the hand of their adversaries, who distressed them. In the time of their trouble, when they cried to you, you heard from heaven; and according to your manifold mercies you gave them saviors who saved them out of the hands of their adversaries.

Nehemiah 9.28: 28 But after they had rest, they did evil again before you; therefore you left them in the hands of their enemies, so that they had the dominion over them; yet when they returned, and cried to you, you heard from heaven; and many times you delivered them according to your mercies,

Nehemiah 9.29: 29 and testified against them, that you might bring them again to your law. Yet they were arrogant, and didn’t listen to your commandments, but sinned against your ordinances (which if a man does, he shall live in them), turned their backs, stiffened their neck, and would not hear.

Nehemiah 9.30: 30 Yet many years you put up with them, and testified against them by your Spirit through your prophets. Yet they would not listen. Therefore you gave them into the hand of the peoples of the lands.

Nehemiah 9.31: 31 “Nevertheless in your manifold mercies you didn’t make a full end of them, nor forsake them; for you are a gracious and merciful God.

Nehemiah 9.32: 32 Now therefore, our God, the great, the mighty, and the awesome God, who keeps covenant and loving kindness, don’t let all the travail seem little before you, that has come on us, on our kings, on our princes, on our priests, on our prophets, on our fathers, and on all your people, since the time of the kings of Assyria to this day.

Nehemiah 9.33: 33 However you are just in all that has come on us; for you have dealt truly, but we have done wickedly.

Nehemiah 9.34: 34 Also our kings, our princes, our priests, and our fathers have not kept your law, nor listened to your commandments and your testimonies with which you testified against them.

Nehemiah 9.35: 35 For they have not served you in their kingdom, and in your great goodness that you gave them, and in the large and rich land which you gave before them. They didn’t turn from their wicked works.

Nehemiah 9.36: 36 “Behold, we are servants today, and as for the land that you gave to our fathers to eat its fruit and its good, behold, we are servants in it.

Nehemiah 9.37: 37 It yields much increase to the kings whom you have set over us because of our sins. Also they have power over our bodies and over our livestock, at their pleasure, and we are in great distress.

Nehemiah 9.38: 38 Yet for all this, we make a sure covenant, and write it; and our princes, our Levites, and our priests, seal it.”

Nehemiah 10.0:

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Nehemiah 10.1: 1 Now those who sealed were: Nehemiah the governor, the son of Hacaliah, and Zedekiah,

Nehemiah 10.2: 2 Seraiah, Azariah, Jeremiah,

Nehemiah 10.3: 3 Pashhur, Amariah, Malchijah,

Nehemiah 10.4: 4 Hattush, Shebaniah, Malluch,

Nehemiah 10.5: 5 Harim, Meremoth, Obadiah,

Nehemiah 10.6: 6 Daniel, Ginnethon, Baruch,

Nehemiah 10.7: 7 Meshullam, Abijah, Mijamin,

Nehemiah 10.8: 8 Maaziah, Bilgai, and Shemaiah. These were the priests.

Nehemiah 10.9: 9 The Levites: namely, Jeshua the son of Azaniah, Binnui of the sons of Henadad, Kadmiel;

Nehemiah 10.10: 10 and their brothers, Shebaniah, Hodiah, Kelita, Pelaiah, Hanan,

Nehemiah 10.11: 11 Mica, Rehob, Hashabiah,

Nehemiah 10.12: 12 Zaccur, Sherebiah, Shebaniah,

Nehemiah 10.13: 13 Hodiah, Bani, and Beninu.

Nehemiah 10.14: 14 The chiefs of the people: Parosh, Pahathmoab, Elam, Zattu, Bani,

Nehemiah 10.15: 15 Bunni, Azgad, Bebai,

Nehemiah 10.16: 16 Adonijah, Bigvai, Adin,

Nehemiah 10.17: 17 Ater, Hezekiah, Azzur,

Nehemiah 10.18: 18 Hodiah, Hashum, Bezai,

Nehemiah 10.19: 19 Hariph, Anathoth, Nobai,

Nehemiah 10.20: 20 Magpiash, Meshullam, Hezir,

Nehemiah 10.21: 21 Meshezabel, Zadok, Jaddua,

Nehemiah 10.22: 22 Pelatiah, Hanan, Anaiah,

Nehemiah 10.23: 23 Hoshea, Hananiah, Hasshub,

Nehemiah 10.24: 24 Hallohesh, Pilha, Shobek,

Nehemiah 10.25: 25 Rehum, Hashabnah, Maaseiah,

Nehemiah 10.26: 26 Ahiah, Hanan, Anan,

Nehemiah 10.27: 27 Malluch, Harim, and Baanah.

Nehemiah 10.28: 28 The rest of the people, the priests, the Levites, the gatekeepers, the singers, the temple servants, and all those who had separated themselves from the peoples of the lands to the law of God, their wives, their sons, and their daughters—everyone who had knowledge, and understanding—

Nehemiah 10.29: 29 joined with their brothers, their nobles, and entered into a curse, and into an oath, to walk in God’s law, which was given by Moses the servant of God, and to observe and do all the commandments of Yahweh our Lord, and his ordinances and his statutes;

Nehemiah 10.30: 30 and that we would not give our daughters to the peoples of the land, nor take their daughters for our sons;

Nehemiah 10.31: 31 and if the peoples of the land bring wares or any grain on the Sabbath day to sell, that we would not buy from them on the Sabbath, or on a holy day; and that we would forego the seventh year, and the exaction of every debt.

Nehemiah 10.32: 32 Also we made ordinances for ourselves, to charge ourselves yearly with the third part of a shekel for the service of the house of our God;

Nehemiah 10.33: 33 for the show bread, for the continual meal offering, for the continual burnt offering, for the Sabbaths, for the new moons, for the set feasts, and for the holy things, and for the sin offerings to make atonement for Israel, and for all the work of the house of our God.

Nehemiah 10.34: 34 We, the priests, the Levites, and the people, cast lots for the wood offering, to bring it into the house of our God, according to our fathers’ houses, at times appointed, year by year, to burn on Yahweh our God’s altar, as it is written in the law;

Nehemiah 10.35: 35 and to bring the first fruits of our ground, and the first fruits of all fruit of all kinds of trees, year by year, to Yahweh’s house;

Nehemiah 10.36: 36 also the firstborn of our sons, and of our livestock, as it is written in the law, and the firstborn of our herds and of our flocks, to bring to the house of our God, to the priests who minister in the house of our God;

Nehemiah 10.37: 37 and that we should bring the first fruits of our dough, our wave offerings, the fruit of all kinds of trees, and the new wine and the oil, to the priests, to the rooms of the house of our God; and the tithes of our ground to the Levites; for they, the Levites, take the tithes in all the cities of our tillage.

Nehemiah 10.38: 38 The priest the son of Aaron shall be with the Levites, when the Levites take tithes. The Levites shall bring up the tithe of the tithes to the house of our God, to the rooms, into the treasure house.

Nehemiah 10.39: 39 For the children of Israel and the children of Levi shall bring the wave offering of the grain, of the new wine, and of the oil, to the rooms, where the vessels of the sanctuary are, and the priests who minister, with the gatekeepers and the singers. We will not forsake the house of our God.

Nehemiah 11.0:

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Nehemiah 11.1: 1 The princes of the people lived in Jerusalem. The rest of the people also cast lots, to bring one of ten to dwell in Jerusalem the holy city, and nine parts in the other cities.

Nehemiah 11.2: 2 The people blessed all the men who willingly offered themselves to dwell in Jerusalem.

Nehemiah 11.3: 3 Now these are the chiefs of the province who lived in Jerusalem; but in the cities of Judah everyone lived in his possession in their cities: Israel, the priests, the Levites, the temple servants, and the children of Solomon’s servants.

Nehemiah 11.4: 4 Some of the children of Judah and of the children of Benjamin lived in Jerusalem. Of the children of Judah: Athaiah the son of Uzziah, the son of Zechariah, the son of Amariah, the son of Shephatiah, the son of Mahalalel, of the children of Perez;

Nehemiah 11.5: 5 and Maaseiah the son of Baruch, the son of Colhozeh, the son of Hazaiah, the son of Adaiah, the son of Joiarib, the son of Zechariah, the son of the Shilonite.

Nehemiah 11.6: 6 All the sons of Perez who lived in Jerusalem were four hundred sixty-eight valiant men.

Nehemiah 11.7: 7 These are the sons of Benjamin: Sallu the son of Meshullam, the son of Joed, the son of Pedaiah, the son of Kolaiah, the son of Maaseiah, the son of Ithiel, the son of Jeshaiah.

Nehemiah 11.8: 8 After him Gabbai, Sallai, nine hundred twenty-eight.

Nehemiah 11.9: 9 Joel the son of Zichri was their overseer; and Judah the son of Hassenuah was second over the city.

Nehemiah 11.10: 10 Of the priests: Jedaiah the son of Joiarib, Jachin,

Nehemiah 11.11: 11 Seraiah the son of Hilkiah, the son of Meshullam, the son of Zadok, the son of Meraioth, the son of Ahitub, the ruler of God’s house,

Nehemiah 11.12: 12 and their brothers who did the work of the house, eight hundred twenty-two; and Adaiah the son of Jeroham, the son of Pelaliah, the son of Amzi, the son of Zechariah, the son of Pashhur, the son of Malchijah,

Nehemiah 11.13: 13 and his brothers, chiefs of fathers’ households, two hundred forty-two; and Amashsai the son of Azarel, the son of Ahzai, the son of Meshillemoth, the son of Immer,

Nehemiah 11.14: 14 and their brothers, mighty men of valor, one hundred twenty-eight; and their overseer was Zabdiel, the son of Haggedolim.

Nehemiah 11.15: 15 Of the Levites: Shemaiah the son of Hasshub, the son of Azrikam, the son of Hashabiah, the son of Bunni;

Nehemiah 11.16: 16 and Shabbethai and Jozabad, of the chiefs of the Levites, who had the oversight of the outward business of God’s house;

Nehemiah 11.17: 17 and Mattaniah the son of Mica, the son of Zabdi, the son of Asaph, who was the chief to begin the thanksgiving in prayer, and Bakbukiah, the second among his brothers; and Abda the son of Shammua, the son of Galal, the son of Jeduthun.

Nehemiah 11.18: 18 All the Levites in the holy city were two hundred eighty-four.

Nehemiah 11.19: 19 Moreover the gatekeepers, Akkub, Talmon, and their brothers, who kept watch at the gates, were one hundred seventy-two.

Nehemiah 11.20: 20 The residue of Israel, of the priests, the Levites, were in all the cities of Judah, everyone in his inheritance.

Nehemiah 11.21: 21 But the temple servants lived in Ophel: and Ziha and Gishpa were over the temple servants.

Nehemiah 11.22: 22 The overseer also of the Levites at Jerusalem was Uzzi the son of Bani, the son of Hashabiah, the son of Mattaniah, the son of Mica, of the sons of Asaph, the singers, over the business of God’s house.

Nehemiah 11.23: 23 For there was a commandment from the king concerning them, and a settled provision for the singers, as every day required.

Nehemiah 11.24: 24 Pethahiah the son of Meshezabel, of the children of Zerah the son of Judah, was at the king’s hand in all matters concerning the people.

Nehemiah 11.25: 25 As for the villages, with their fields, some of the children of Judah lived in Kiriath Arba and its towns, in Dibon and its towns, in Jekabzeel and its villages,

Nehemiah 11.26: 26 in Jeshua, in Moladah, Beth Pelet,

Nehemiah 11.27: 27 in Hazar Shual, in Beersheba and its towns,

Nehemiah 11.28: 28 in Ziklag, in Meconah and in its towns,

Nehemiah 11.29: 29 in En Rimmon, in Zorah, in Jarmuth,

Nehemiah 11.30: 30 Zanoah, Adullam, and their villages, Lachish and its fields, and Azekah and its towns. So they encamped from Beersheba to the valley of Hinnom.

Nehemiah 11.31: 31 The children of Benjamin also lived from Geba onward, at Michmash and Aija, and at Bethel and its towns,

Nehemiah 11.32: 32 at Anathoth, Nob, Ananiah,

Nehemiah 11.33: 33 Hazor, Ramah, Gittaim,

Nehemiah 11.34: 34 Hadid, Zeboim, Neballat,

Nehemiah 11.35: 35 Lod, and Ono, the valley of craftsmen.

Nehemiah 11.36: 36 Of the Levites, certain divisions in Judah settled in Benjamin’s territory.

Nehemiah 12.0:

12

Nehemiah 12.1: 1 Now these are the priests and the Levites who went up with Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel, and Jeshua: Seraiah, Jeremiah, Ezra,

Nehemiah 12.2: 2 Amariah, Malluch, Hattush,

Nehemiah 12.3: 3 Shecaniah, Rehum, Meremoth,

Nehemiah 12.4: 4 Iddo, Ginnethoi, Abijah,

Nehemiah 12.5: 5 Mijamin, Maadiah, Bilgah,

Nehemiah 12.6: 6 Shemaiah, and Joiarib, Jedaiah.

Nehemiah 12.7: 7 Sallu, Amok, Hilkiah, and Jedaiah. These were the chiefs of the priests and of their brothers in the days of Jeshua.

Nehemiah 12.8: 8 Moreover the Levites: Jeshua, Binnui, Kadmiel, Sherebiah, Judah, and Mattaniah, who was over the thanksgiving, he and his brothers.

Nehemiah 12.9: 9 Also Bakbukiah and Unno, their brothers, were close to them according to their offices.

Nehemiah 12.10: 10 Jeshua became the father of Joiakim, and Joiakim became the father of Eliashib, and Eliashib became the father of Joiada,

Nehemiah 12.11: 11 and Joiada became the father of Jonathan, and Jonathan became the father of Jaddua.

Nehemiah 12.12: 12 In the days of Joiakim were priests, heads of fathers’ households: of Seraiah, Meraiah; of Jeremiah, Hananiah;

Nehemiah 12.13: 13 of Ezra, Meshullam; of Amariah, Jehohanan;

Nehemiah 12.14: 14 of Malluchi, Jonathan; of Shebaniah, Joseph;

Nehemiah 12.15: 15 of Harim, Adna; of Meraioth, Helkai;

Nehemiah 12.16: 16 of Iddo, Zechariah; of Ginnethon, Meshullam;

Nehemiah 12.17: 17 of Abijah, Zichri; of Miniamin, of Moadiah, Piltai;

Nehemiah 12.18: 18 of Bilgah, Shammua; of Shemaiah, Jehonathan;

Nehemiah 12.19: 19 and of Joiarib, Mattenai; of Jedaiah, Uzzi;

Nehemiah 12.20: 20 of Sallai, Kallai; of Amok, Eber;

Nehemiah 12.21: 21 of Hilkiah, Hashabiah; of Jedaiah, Nethanel.

Nehemiah 12.22: 22 As for the Levites, in the days of Eliashib, Joiada, and Johanan, and Jaddua, there were recorded the heads of fathers’ households; also the priests, in the reign of Darius the Persian.

Nehemiah 12.23: 23 The sons of Levi, heads of fathers’ households, were written in the book of the chronicles, even until the days of Johanan the son of Eliashib.

Nehemiah 12.24: 24 The chiefs of the Levites: Hashabiah, Sherebiah, and Jeshua the son of Kadmiel, with their brothers close to them, to praise and give thanks, according to the commandment of David the man of God, watch next to watch.

Nehemiah 12.25: 25 Mattaniah, and Bakbukiah, Obadiah, Meshullam, Talmon, Akkub, were gatekeepers keeping the watch at the storehouses of the gates.

Nehemiah 12.26: 26 These were in the days of Joiakim the son of Jeshua, the son of Jozadak, and in the days of Nehemiah the governor, and of Ezra the priest and scribe.

Nehemiah 12.27: 27 At the dedication of the wall of Jerusalem, they sought the Levites out of all their places, to bring them to Jerusalem, to keep the dedication with gladness, both with giving thanks, and with singing, with cymbals, stringed instruments, and with harps.

Nehemiah 12.28: 28 The sons of the singers gathered themselves together, both out of the plain around Jerusalem and from the villages of the Netophathites;

Nehemiah 12.29: 29 also from Beth Gilgal, and out of the fields of Geba and Azmaveth: for the singers had built themselves villages around Jerusalem.

Nehemiah 12.30: 30 The priests and the Levites purified themselves; and they purified the people, and the gates, and the wall.

Nehemiah 12.31: 31 Then I brought up the princes of Judah on the wall, and appointed two great companies who gave thanks and went in procession. One went on the right hand on the wall toward the dung gate;

Nehemiah 12.32: 32 and after them went Hoshaiah, with half of the princes of Judah,

Nehemiah 12.33: 33 and Azariah, Ezra, and Meshullam,

Nehemiah 12.34: 34 Judah, Benjamin, Shemaiah, Jeremiah,

Nehemiah 12.35: 35 and some of the priests’ sons with trumpets: Zechariah the son of Jonathan, the son of Shemaiah, the son of Mattaniah, the son of Micaiah, the son of Zaccur, the son of Asaph;

Nehemiah 12.36: 36 and his brothers, Shemaiah, Azarel, Milalai, Gilalai, Maai, Nethanel, Judah, and Hanani, with the musical instruments of David the man of God; and Ezra the scribe was before them.

Nehemiah 12.37: 37 By the spring gate, and straight before them, they went up by the stairs of David’s city, at the ascent of the wall, above David’s house, even to the water gate eastward.

Nehemiah 12.38: 38 The other company of those who gave thanks went to meet them, and I after them, with the half of the people, on the wall, above the tower of the furnaces, even to the wide wall,

Nehemiah 12.39: 39 and above the gate of Ephraim, and by the old gate, and by the fish gate, and the tower of Hananel, and the tower of Hammeah, even to the sheep gate: and they stood still in the gate of the guard.

Nehemiah 12.40: 40 So the two companies of those who gave thanks in God’s house stood, and I, and the half of the rulers with me;

Nehemiah 12.41: 41 and the priests, Eliakim, Maaseiah, Miniamin, Micaiah, Elioenai, Zechariah, and Hananiah, with trumpets;

Nehemiah 12.42: 42 and Maaseiah, Shemaiah, Eleazar, Uzzi, Jehohanan, Malchijah, Elam, and Ezer. The singers sang loud, with Jezrahiah their overseer.

Nehemiah 12.43: 43 They offered great sacrifices that day, and rejoiced; for God had made them rejoice with great joy; and the women and the children also rejoiced; so that the joy of Jerusalem was heard even far away.

Nehemiah 12.44: 44 On that day, men were appointed over the rooms for the treasures, for the wave offerings, for the first fruits, and for the tithes, to gather into them, according to the fields of the cities, the portions appointed by the law for the priests and Levites; for Judah rejoiced for the priests and for the Levites who waited.

Nehemiah 12.45: 45 They performed the duty of their God, and the duty of the purification, and so did the singers and the gatekeepers, according to the commandment of David, and of Solomon his son.

Nehemiah 12.46: 46 For in the days of David and Asaph of old there was a chief of the singers, and songs of praise and thanksgiving to God.

Nehemiah 12.47: 47 All Israel in the days of Zerubbabel, and in the days of Nehemiah, gave the portions of the singers and the gatekeepers, as every day required; and they set apart that which was for the Levites; and the Levites set apart that which was for the sons of Aaron.

Nehemiah 13.0:

13

Nehemiah 13.1: 1 On that day they read in the book of Moses in the hearing of the people; and it was found written in it that an Ammonite and a Moabite should not enter into the assembly of God forever,

Nehemiah 13.2: 2 because they didn’t meet the children of Israel with bread and with water, but hired Balaam against them, to curse them; however our God turned the curse into a blessing.

Nehemiah 13.3: 3 It came to pass, when they had heard the law, that they separated all the mixed multitude from Israel.

Nehemiah 13.4: 4 Now before this, Eliashib the priest, who was appointed over the rooms of the house of our God, being allied to Tobiah,

Nehemiah 13.5: 5 had prepared for him a great room, where before they laid the meal offerings, the frankincense, the vessels, and the tithes of the grain, the new wine, and the oil, which were given by commandment to the Levites, the singers, and the gatekeepers; and the wave offerings for the priests.

Nehemiah 13.6: 6 But in all this, I was not at Jerusalem; for in the thirty-second year of Artaxerxes king of Babylon I went to the king; and after some days I asked leave of the king,

Nehemiah 13.7: 7 and I came to Jerusalem, and understood the evil that Eliashib had done for Tobiah, in preparing him a room in the courts of God’s house.

Nehemiah 13.8: 8 It grieved me severely. Therefore I threw all Tobiah’s household stuff out of the room.

Nehemiah 13.9: 9 Then I commanded, and they cleansed the rooms. I brought into them the vessels of God’s house, with the meal offerings and the frankincense again.

Nehemiah 13.10: 10 I perceived that the portions of the Levites had not been given them; so that the Levites and the singers, who did the work, had each fled to his field.

Nehemiah 13.11: 11 Then I contended with the rulers, and said, “Why is God’s house forsaken?” I gathered them together, and set them in their place.

Nehemiah 13.12: 12 Then all Judah brought the tithe of the grain, the new wine, and the oil to the treasuries.

Nehemiah 13.13: 13 I made treasurers over the treasuries, Shelemiah the priest, and Zadok the scribe, and of the Levites, Pedaiah: and next to them was Hanan the son of Zaccur, the son of Mattaniah; for they were counted faithful, and their business was to distribute to their brothers.

Nehemiah 13.14: 14 Remember me, my God, concerning this, and don’t wipe out my good deeds that I have done for the house of my God, and for its observances.

Nehemiah 13.15: 15 In those days I saw some men treading wine presses on the Sabbath in Judah, bringing in sheaves, and loading donkeys; also with wine, grapes, figs, and all kinds of burdens, which they brought into Jerusalem on the Sabbath day; and I testified against them in the day in which they sold food.

Nehemiah 13.16: 16 Some men of Tyre also lived there, who brought in fish and all kinds of wares, and sold on the Sabbath to the children of Judah, and in Jerusalem.

Nehemiah 13.17: 17 Then I contended with the nobles of Judah, and said to them, “What evil thing is this that you do, and profane the Sabbath day?

Nehemiah 13.18: 18 Didn’t your fathers do this, and didn’t our God bring all this evil on us, and on this city? Yet you bring more wrath on Israel by profaning the Sabbath.”

Nehemiah 13.19: 19 It came to pass that when the gates of Jerusalem began to be dark before the Sabbath, I commanded that the doors should be shut, and commanded that they should not be opened until after the Sabbath. I set some of my servants over the gates, so that no burden should be brought in on the Sabbath day.

Nehemiah 13.20: 20 So the merchants and sellers of all kinds of wares camped outside of Jerusalem once or twice.

Nehemiah 13.21: 21 Then I testified against them, and said to them, “Why do you stay around the wall? If you do so again, I will lay hands on you.” From that time on, they didn’t come on the Sabbath.

Nehemiah 13.22: 22 I commanded the Levites that they should purify themselves, and that they should come and keep the gates, to sanctify the Sabbath day. Remember to me, my God, this also, and spare me according to the greatness of your loving kindness.

Nehemiah 13.23: 23 In those days I also saw the Jews who had married women of Ashdod, of Ammon, and of Moab;

Nehemiah 13.24: 24 and their children spoke half in the speech of Ashdod, and could not speak in the Jews’ language, but according to the language of each people.

Nehemiah 13.25: 25 I contended with them, and cursed them, and struck certain of them, and plucked off their hair, and made them swear by God, “You shall not give your daughters to their sons, nor take their daughters for your sons, or for yourselves.

Nehemiah 13.26: 26 Didn’t Solomon king of Israel sin by these things? Yet among many nations there was no king like him, and he was loved by his God, and God made him king over all Israel. Nevertheless foreign women caused even him to sin.

Nehemiah 13.27: 27 Shall we then listen to you to do all this great evil, to trespass against our God in marrying foreign women?”

Nehemiah 13.28: 28 One of the sons of Joiada, the son of Eliashib the high priest, was son-in-law to Sanballat the Horonite; therefore I chased him from me.

Nehemiah 13.29: 29 Remember them, my God, because they have defiled the priesthood, and the covenant of the priesthood and of the Levites.

Nehemiah 13.30: 30 Thus I cleansed them from all foreigners, and appointed duties for the priests and for the Levites, everyone in his work;

Nehemiah 13.31: 31 and for the wood offering, at times appointed, and for the first fruits. Remember me, my God, for good.

Esther 0.0:

The Book of

Esther

Esther 1.0:

1

Esther 1.1: 1 Now in the days of Ahasuerus (this is Ahasuerus who reigned from India even to Ethiopia, over one hundred twenty-seven provinces),

Esther 1.2: 2 in those days, when the King Ahasuerus sat on the throne of his kingdom, which was in Susa the palace,

Esther 1.3: 3 in the third year of his reign, he made a feast for all his princes and his servants; the power of Persia and Media, the nobles and princes of the provinces, being before him.

Esther 1.4: 4 He displayed the riches of his glorious kingdom and the honor of his excellent majesty many days, even one hundred eighty days.

Esther 1.5: 5 When these days were fulfilled, the king made a seven day feast for all the people who were present in Susa the palace, both great and small, in the court of the garden of the king’s palace.

Esther 1.6: 6 There were hangings of white and blue material, fastened with cords of fine linen and purple to silver rings and marble pillars. The couches were of gold and silver, on a pavement of red, white, yellow, and black marble.

Esther 1.7: 7 They gave them drinks in golden vessels of various kinds, including royal wine in abundance, according to the bounty of the king.

Esther 1.8: 8 In accordance with the law, the drinking was not compulsory; for so the king had instructed all the officials of his house, that they should do according to every man’s pleasure.

Esther 1.9: 9 Also Vashti the queen made a feast for the women in the royal house which belonged to King Ahasuerus.

Esther 1.10: 10 On the seventh day, when the heart of the king was merry with wine, he commanded Mehuman, Biztha, Harbona, Bigtha, and Abagtha, Zethar, and Carcass, the seven eunuchs who served in the presence of Ahasuerus the king,

Esther 1.11: 11 to bring Vashti the queen before the king with the royal crown, to show the people and the princes her beauty; for she was beautiful.

Esther 1.12: 12 But the queen Vashti refused to come at the king’s commandment by the eunuchs. Therefore the king was very angry, and his anger burned in him.

Esther 1.13: 13 Then the king said to the wise men, who knew the times (for it was the king’s custom to consult those who knew law and judgment;

Esther 1.14: 14 and the next to him were Carshena, Shethar, Admatha, Tarshish, Meres, Marsena, and Memucan, the seven princes of Persia and Media, who saw the king’s face, and sat first in the kingdom),

Esther 1.15: 15 “What shall we do to the queen Vashti according to law, because she has not done the bidding of the King Ahasuerus by the eunuchs?”

Esther 1.16: 16 Memucan answered before the king and the princes, “Vashti the queen has not done wrong to just the king, but also to all the princes, and to all the people who are in all the provinces of the King Ahasuerus.

Esther 1.17: 17 For this deed of the queen will become known to all women, causing them to show contempt for their husbands, when it is reported, ‘King Ahasuerus commanded Vashti the queen to be brought in before him, but she didn’t come.’

Esther 1.18: 18 Today, the princesses of Persia and Media who have heard of the queen’s deed will tell all the king’s princes. This will cause much contempt and wrath.

Esther 1.19: 19 “If it pleases the king, let a royal commandment go from him, and let it be written among the laws of the Persians and the Medes, so that it cannot be altered, that Vashti may never again come before King Ahasuerus; and let the king give her royal estate to another who is better than she.

Esther 1.20: 20 When the king’s decree which he shall make is published throughout all his kingdom (for it is great), all the wives will give their husbands honor, both great and small.”

Esther 1.21: 21 This advice pleased the king and the princes, and the king did according to the word of Memucan:

Esther 1.22: 22 for he sent letters into all the king’s provinces, into every province according to its writing, and to every people in their language, that every man should rule his own house, speaking in the language of his own people.

Esther 2.0:

2

Esther 2.1: 1 After these things, when the wrath of King Ahasuerus was pacified, he remembered Vashti, and what she had done, and what was decreed against her.

Esther 2.2: 2 Then the king’s servants who served him said, “Let beautiful young virgins be sought for the king.

Esther 2.3: 3 Let the king appoint officers in all the provinces of his kingdom, that they may gather together all the beautiful young virgins to the citadel of Susa, to the women’s house, to the custody of Hegai the king’s eunuch, keeper of the women. Let cosmetics be given them;

Esther 2.4: 4 and let the maiden who pleases the king be queen instead of Vashti.” The thing pleased the king, and he did so.

Esther 2.5: 5 There was a certain Jew in the citadel of Susa, whose name was Mordecai, the son of Jair, the son of Shimei, the son of Kish, a Benjamite,

Esther 2.6: 6 who had been carried away from Jerusalem with the captives who had been carried away with Jeconiah king of Judah, whom Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon had carried away.

Esther 2.7: 7 He brought up Hadassah, that is, Esther, his uncle’s daughter; for she had neither father nor mother. The maiden was fair and beautiful; and when her father and mother were dead, Mordecai took her for his own daughter.

Esther 2.8: 8 So, when the king’s commandment and his decree was heard, and when many maidens were gathered together to the citadel of Susa, to the custody of Hegai, Esther was taken into the king’s house, to the custody of Hegai, keeper of the women.

Esther 2.9: 9 The maiden pleased him, and she obtained kindness from him. He quickly gave her cosmetics and her portions of food, and the seven choice maidens who were to be given her out of the king’s house. He moved her and her maidens to the best place in the women’s house.

Esther 2.10: 10 Esther had not made known her people nor her relatives, because Mordecai had instructed her that she should not make it known.

Esther 2.11: 11 Mordecai walked every day in front of the court of the women’s house, to find out how Esther was doing, and what would become of her.

Esther 2.12: 12 Each young woman’s turn came to go in to King Ahasuerus after her purification for twelve months (for so were the days of their purification accomplished, six months with oil of myrrh, and six months with sweet fragrances and with preparations for beautifying women).

Esther 2.13: 13 The young woman then came to the king like this: whatever she desired was given her to go with her out of the women’s house to the king’s house.

Esther 2.14: 14 In the evening she went, and on the next day she returned into the second women’s house, to the custody of Shaashgaz, the king’s eunuch, who kept the concubines. She came in to the king no more, unless the king delighted in her, and she was called by name.

Esther 2.15: 15 Now when the turn of Esther, the daughter of Abihail the uncle of Mordecai, who had taken her for his daughter, came to go in to the king, she required nothing but what Hegai the king’s eunuch, the keeper of the women, advised. Esther obtained favor in the sight of all those who looked at her.

Esther 2.16: 16 So Esther was taken to King Ahasuerus into his royal house in the tenth month, which is the month Tebeth, in the seventh year of his reign.

Esther 2.17: 17 The king loved Esther more than all the women, and she obtained favor and kindness in his sight more than all the virgins; so that he set the royal crown on her head, and made her queen instead of Vashti.

Esther 2.18: 18 Then the king made a great feast for all his princes and his servants, even Esther’s feast; and he proclaimed a holiday in the provinces, and gave gifts according to the king’s bounty.

Esther 2.19: 19 When the virgins were gathered together the second time, Mordecai was sitting in the king’s gate.

Esther 2.20: 20 Esther had not yet made known her relatives nor her people, as Mordecai had commanded her; for Esther obeyed Mordecai, like she did when she was brought up by him.

Esther 2.21: 21 In those days, while Mordecai was sitting in the king’s gate, two of the king’s eunuchs, Bigthan and Teresh, who were doorkeepers, were angry, and sought to lay hands on the King Ahasuerus.

Esther 2.22: 22 This thing became known to Mordecai, who informed Esther the queen; and Esther informed the king in Mordecai’s name.

Esther 2.23: 23 When this matter was investigated, and it was found to be so, they were both hanged on a gallows; and it was written in the book of the chronicles in the king’s presence.

Esther 3.0:

3

Esther 3.1: 1 After these things King Ahasuerus promoted Haman the son of Hammedatha the Agagite, and advanced him, and set his seat above all the princes who were with him.

Esther 3.2: 2 All the king’s servants who were in the king’s gate bowed down, and paid homage to Haman; for the king had so commanded concerning him. But Mordecai didn’t bow down or pay him homage.

Esther 3.3: 3 Then the king’s servants, who were in the king’s gate, said to Mordecai, “Why do you disobey the king’s commandment?”

Esther 3.4: 4 Now it came to pass, when they spoke daily to him, and he didn’t listen to them, that they told Haman, to see whether Mordecai’s reason would stand; for he had told them that he was a Jew.

Esther 3.5: 5 When Haman saw that Mordecai didn’t bow down, nor pay him homage, Haman was full of wrath.

Esther 3.6: 6 But he scorned the thought of laying hands on Mordecai alone, for they had made known to him Mordecai’s people. Therefore Haman sought to destroy all the Jews who were throughout the whole kingdom of Ahasuerus, even Mordecai’s people.

Esther 3.7: 7 In the first month, which is the month Nisan, in the twelfth year of King Ahasuerus, they cast Pur, that is, the lot, before Haman from day to day, and from month to month, and chose the twelfth month, which is the month Adar.

Esther 3.8: 8 Haman said to King Ahasuerus, “There is a certain people scattered abroad and dispersed among the peoples in all the provinces of your kingdom, and their laws are different from other people’s. They don’t keep the king’s laws. Therefore it is not for the king’s profit to allow them to remain.

Esther 3.9: 9 If it pleases the king, let it be written that they be destroyed; and I will pay ten thousand talents of silver into the hands of those who are in charge of the king’s business, to bring it into the king’s treasuries.”

Esther 3.10: 10 The king took his ring from his hand, and gave it to Haman the son of Hammedatha the Agagite, the Jews’ enemy.

Esther 3.11: 11 The king said to Haman, “The silver is given to you, the people also, to do with them as it seems good to you.”

Esther 3.12: 12 Then the king’s scribes were called in on the first month, on the thirteenth day of the month; and all that Haman commanded was written to the king’s local governors, and to the governors who were over every province, and to the princes of every people, to every province according to its writing, and to every people in their language. It was written in the name of King Ahasuerus, and it was sealed with the king’s ring.

Esther 3.13: 13 Letters were sent by couriers into all the king’s provinces, to destroy, to kill, and to cause to perish, all Jews, both young and old, little children and women, in one day, even on the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, which is the month Adar, and to plunder their possessions.

Esther 3.14: 14 A copy of the letter, that the decree should be given out in every province, was published to all the peoples, that they should be ready against that day.

Esther 3.15: 15 The couriers went out in haste by the king’s commandment, and the decree was given out in the citadel of Susa. The king and Haman sat down to drink; but the city of Susa was perplexed.

Esther 4.0:

4

Esther 4.1: 1 Now when Mordecai found out all that was done, Mordecai tore his clothes, and put on sackcloth with ashes, and went out into the middle of the city, and wailed loudly and bitterly.

Esther 4.2: 2 He came even before the king’s gate, for no one is allowed inside the king’s gate clothed with sackcloth.

Esther 4.3: 3 In every province, wherever the king’s commandment and his decree came, there was great mourning among the Jews, and fasting, and weeping, and wailing; and many lay in sackcloth and ashes.

Esther 4.4: 4 Esther’s maidens and her eunuchs came and told her this, and the queen was exceedingly grieved. She sent clothing to Mordecai, to replace his sackcloth; but he didn’t receive it.

Esther 4.5: 5 Then Esther called for Hathach, one of the king’s eunuchs, whom he had appointed to attend her, and commanded him to go to Mordecai, to find out what this was, and why it was.

Esther 4.6: 6 So Hathach went out to Mordecai, to city square which was before the king’s gate.

Esther 4.7: 7 Mordecai told him of all that had happened to him, and the exact sum of the money that Haman had promised to pay to the king’s treasuries for the destruction of the Jews.

Esther 4.8: 8 He also gave him the copy of the writing of the decree that was given out in Susa to destroy them, to show it to Esther, and to declare it to her, and to urge her to go in to the king, to make supplication to him, and to make request before him, for her people.

Esther 4.9: 9 Hathach came and told Esther the words of Mordecai.

Esther 4.10: 10 Then Esther spoke to Hathach, and gave him a message to Mordecai:

Esther 4.11: 11 “All the king’s servants, and the people of the king’s provinces, know, that whoever, whether man or woman, comes to the king into the inner court without being called, there is one law for him, that he be put to death, except those to whom the king might hold out the golden scepter, that he may live. I have not been called to come in to the king these thirty days.”

Esther 4.12: 12 They told Esther’s words to Mordecai.

Esther 4.13: 13 Then Mordecai asked them to return this answer to Esther: “Don’t think to yourself that you will escape in the king’s house any more than all the Jews.

Esther 4.14: 14 For if you remain silent now, then relief and deliverance will come to the Jews from another place, but you and your father’s house will perish. Who knows if you haven’t come to the kingdom for such a time as this?”

Esther 4.15: 15 Then Esther asked them to answer Mordecai,

Esther 4.16: 16 “Go, gather together all the Jews who are present in Susa, and fast for me, and neither eat nor drink three days, night or day. I and my maidens will also fast the same way. Then I will go in to the king, which is against the law; and if I perish, I perish.”

Esther 4.17: 17 So Mordecai went his way, and did according to all that Esther had commanded him.

Esther 5.0:

5

Esther 5.1: 1 Now on the third day, Esther put on her royal clothing, and stood in the inner court of the king’s house, next to the king’s house. The king sat on his royal throne in the royal house, next to the entrance of the house.

Esther 5.2: 2 When the king saw Esther the queen standing in the court, she obtained favor in his sight; and the king held out to Esther the golden scepter that was in his hand. So Esther came near, and touched the top of the scepter.

Esther 5.3: 3 Then the king asked her, “What would you like, queen Esther? What is your request? It shall be given you even to the half of the kingdom.”

Esther 5.4: 4 Esther said, “If it seems good to the king, let the king and Haman come today to the banquet that I have prepared for him.”

Esther 5.5: 5 Then the king said, “Bring Haman quickly, so that it may be done as Esther has said.” So the king and Haman came to the banquet that Esther had prepared.

Esther 5.6: 6 The king said to Esther at the banquet of wine, “What is your petition? It shall be granted you. What is your request? Even to the half of the kingdom it shall be performed.”

Esther 5.7: 7 Then Esther answered and said, “My petition and my request is this.

Esther 5.8: 8 If I have found favor in the sight of the king, and if it pleases the king to grant my petition and to perform my request, let the king and Haman come to the banquet that I will prepare for them, and I will do tomorrow as the king has said.”

Esther 5.9: 9 Then Haman went out that day joyful and glad of heart, but when Haman saw Mordecai in the king’s gate, that he didn’t stand up nor move for him, he was filled with wrath against Mordecai.

Esther 5.10: 10 Nevertheless Haman restrained himself, and went home. There, he sent and called for his friends and Zeresh his wife.

Esther 5.11: 11 Haman recounted to them the glory of his riches, the multitude of his children, all the things in which the king had promoted him, and how he had advanced him above the princes and servants of the king.

Esther 5.12: 12 Haman also said, “Yes, Esther the queen let no man come in with the king to the banquet that she had prepared but myself; and tomorrow I am also invited by her together with the king.

Esther 5.13: 13 Yet all this avails me nothing, so long as I see Mordecai the Jew sitting at the king’s gate.”

Esther 5.14: 14 Then Zeresh his wife and all his friends said to him, “Let a gallows be made fifty cubits high, and in the morning speak to the king about hanging Mordecai on it. Then go in merrily with the king to the banquet.” This pleased Haman, so he had the gallows made.

Esther 6.0:

6

Esther 6.1: 1 On that night, the king couldn’t sleep. He commanded the book of records of the chronicles to be brought, and they were read to the king.

Esther 6.2: 2 It was found written that Mordecai had told of Bigthana and Teresh, two of the king’s eunuchs, who were doorkeepers, who had tried to lay hands on the King Ahasuerus.

Esther 6.3: 3 The king said, “What honor and dignity has been given to Mordecai for this?”

Then the king’s servants who attended him said, “Nothing has been done for him.”

Esther 6.4: 4 The king said, “Who is in the court?” Now Haman had come into the outer court of the king’s house, to speak to the king about hanging Mordecai on the gallows that he had prepared for him.

Esther 6.5: 5 The king’s servants said to him, “Behold, Haman stands in the court.”

The king said, “Let him come in.”

Esther 6.6: 6 So Haman came in. The king said to him, “What shall be done to the man whom the king delights to honor?”

Now Haman said in his heart, “Who would the king delight to honor more than myself?”

Esther 6.7: 7 Haman said to the king, “For the man whom the king delights to honor,

Esther 6.8: 8 let royal clothing be brought which the king uses to wear, and the horse that the king rides on, and on the head of which a royal crown is set.

Esther 6.9: 9 Let the clothing and the horse be delivered to the hand of one of the king’s most noble princes, that they may array the man whom the king delights to honor with them, and have him ride on horseback through the city square, and proclaim before him, ‘Thus it shall be done to the man whom the king delights to honor!’”

Esther 6.10: 10 Then the king said to Haman, “Hurry and take the clothing and the horse, as you have said, and do this for Mordecai the Jew, who sits at the king’s gate. Let nothing fail of all that you have spoken.”

Esther 6.11: 11 Then Haman took the clothing and the horse, and arrayed Mordecai, and had him ride through the city square, and proclaimed before him, “Thus it shall be done to the man whom the king delights to honor!”

Esther 6.12: 12 Mordecai came back to the king’s gate, but Haman hurried to his house, mourning and having his head covered.

Esther 6.13: 13 Haman recounted to Zeresh his wife and all his friends everything that had happened to him. Then his wise men and Zeresh his wife said to him, “If Mordecai, before whom you have begun to fall, is of Jewish descent, you will not prevail against him, but you will surely fall before him.”

Esther 6.14: 14 While they were yet talking with him, the king’s eunuchs came, and hurried to bring Haman to the banquet that Esther had prepared.

Esther 7.0:

7

Esther 7.1: 1 So the king and Haman came to banquet with Esther the queen.

Esther 7.2: 2 The king said again to Esther on the second day at the banquet of wine, “What is your petition, queen Esther? It shall be granted you. What is your request? Even to the half of the kingdom it shall be performed.”

Esther 7.3: 3 Then Esther the queen answered, “If I have found favor in your sight, O king, and if it pleases the king, let my life be given me at my petition, and my people at my request.

Esther 7.4: 4 For we are sold, I and my people, to be destroyed, to be slain, and to perish. But if we had been sold for male and female slaves, I would have held my peace, although the adversary could not have compensated for the king’s loss.”

Esther 7.5: 5 Then King Ahasuerus said to Esther the queen, “Who is he, and where is he who dared presume in his heart to do so?”

Esther 7.6: 6 Esther said, “An adversary and an enemy, even this wicked Haman!”

Then Haman was afraid before the king and the queen.

Esther 7.7: 7 The king arose in his wrath from the banquet of wine and went into the palace garden. Haman stood up to make request for his life to Esther the queen; for he saw that there was evil determined against him by the king.

Esther 7.8: 8 Then the king returned out of the palace garden into the place of the banquet of wine; and Haman had fallen on the couch where Esther was. Then the king said, “Will he even assault the queen in front of me in the house?” As the word went out of the king’s mouth, they covered Haman’s face.

Esther 7.9: 9 Then Harbonah, one of the eunuchs who were with the king said, “Behold, the gallows fifty cubits high, which Haman has made for Mordecai, who spoke good for the king, is standing at Haman’s house.”

The king said, “Hang him on it!”

Esther 7.10: 10 So they hanged Haman on the gallows that he had prepared for Mordecai. Then the king’s wrath was pacified.

Esther 8.0:

8

Esther 8.1: 1 On that day, King Ahasuerus gave the house of Haman, the Jews’ enemy, to Esther the queen. Mordecai came before the king; for Esther had told what he was to her.

Esther 8.2: 2 The king took off his ring, which he had taken from Haman, and gave it to Mordecai. Esther set Mordecai over the house of Haman.

Esther 8.3: 3 Esther spoke yet again before the king, and fell down at his feet, and begged him with tears to put away the mischief of Haman the Agagite, and his plan that he had planned against the Jews.

Esther 8.4: 4 Then the king held out to Esther the golden scepter. So Esther arose, and stood before the king.

Esther 8.5: 5 She said, “If it pleases the king, and if I have found favor in his sight, and the thing seem right to the king, and I am pleasing in his eyes, let it be written to reverse the letters devised by Haman, the son of Hammedatha the Agagite, which he wrote to destroy the Jews who are in all the king’s provinces.

Esther 8.6: 6 For how can I endure to see the evil that would come to my people? How can I endure to see the destruction of my relatives?”

Esther 8.7: 7 Then King Ahasuerus said to Esther the queen and to Mordecai the Jew, “See, I have given Esther the house of Haman, and they have hanged him on the gallows, because he laid his hand on the Jews.

Esther 8.8: 8 Write also to the Jews, as it pleases you, in the king’s name, and seal it with the king’s ring; for the writing which is written in the king’s name, and sealed with the king’s ring, may not be reversed by any man.”

Esther 8.9: 9 Then the king’s scribes were called at that time, in the third month, which is the month Sivan, on the twenty-third day of the month; and it was written according to all that Mordecai commanded to the Jews, and to the local governors, and the governors and princes of the provinces which are from India to Ethiopia, one hundred twenty-seven provinces, to every province according to its writing, and to every people in their language, and to the Jews in their writing, and in their language.

Esther 8.10: 10 He wrote in the name of King Ahasuerus, and sealed it with the king’s ring, and sent letters by courier on horseback, riding on royal horses that were bred from swift steeds.

Esther 8.11: 11 In those letters, the king granted the Jews who were in every city to gather themselves together, and to defend their life, to destroy, to kill, and to cause to perish, all the power of the people and province that would assault them, their little ones and women, and to plunder their possessions,

Esther 8.12: 12 on one day in all the provinces of King Ahasuerus, on the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, which is the month Adar.

Esther 8.13: 13 A copy of the letter, that the decree should be given out in every province, was published to all the peoples, that the Jews should be ready for that day to avenge themselves on their enemies.

Esther 8.14: 14 So the couriers who rode on royal horses went out, hastened and pressed on by the king’s commandment. The decree was given out in the citadel of Susa.

Esther 8.15: 15 Mordecai went out of the presence of the king in royal clothing of blue and white, and with a great crown of gold, and with a robe of fine linen and purple; and the city of Susa shouted and was glad.

Esther 8.16: 16 The Jews had light, gladness, joy, and honor.

Esther 8.17: 17 In every province, and in every city, wherever the king’s commandment and his decree came, the Jews had gladness, joy, a feast, and a good day. Many from among the peoples of the land became Jews; for the fear of the Jews was fallen on them.

Esther 9.0:

9

Esther 9.1: 1 Now in the twelfth month, which is the month Adar, on the thirteenth day of the month, when the king’s commandment and his decree came near to be put in execution, on the day that the enemies of the Jews hoped to conquer them, (but it was turned out the opposite happened, that the Jews conquered those who hated them),

Esther 9.2: 2 the Jews gathered themselves together in their cities throughout all the provinces of the King Ahasuerus, to lay hands on those who wanted to harm them. No one could withstand them, because the fear of them had fallen on all the people.

Esther 9.3: 3 All the princes of the provinces, the local governors, the governors, and those who did the king’s business helped the Jews, because the fear of Mordecai had fallen on them.

Esther 9.4: 4 For Mordecai was great in the king’s house, and his fame went out throughout all the provinces; for the man Mordecai grew greater and greater.

Esther 9.5: 5 The Jews struck all their enemies with the stroke of the sword, and with slaughter and destruction, and did what they wanted to those who hated them.

Esther 9.6: 6 In the citadel of Susa, the Jews killed and destroyed five hundred men.

Esther 9.7: 7 They killed Parshandatha, Dalphon, Aspatha,

Esther 9.8: 8 Poratha, Adalia, Aridatha,

Esther 9.9: 9 Parmashta, Arisai, Aridai, and Vaizatha,

Esther 9.10: 10 the ten sons of Haman the son of Hammedatha, the Jews’ enemy, but they didn’t lay their hand on the plunder.

Esther 9.11: 11 On that day, the number of those who were slain in the citadel of Susa was brought before the king.

Esther 9.12: 12 The king said to Esther the queen, “The Jews have slain and destroyed five hundred men in the citadel of Susa, including the ten sons of Haman; what then have they done in the rest of the king’s provinces! Now what is your petition? It shall be granted you. What is your further request? It shall be done.”

Esther 9.13: 13 Then Esther said, “If it pleases the king, let it be granted to the Jews who are in Susa to do tomorrow also according to today’s decree, and let Haman’s ten sons be hanged on the gallows.”

Esther 9.14: 14 The king commanded this to be done. A decree was given out in Susa; and they hanged Haman’s ten sons.

Esther 9.15: 15 The Jews who were in Susa gathered themselves together on the fourteenth day also of the month Adar, and killed three hundred men in Susa; but they didn’t lay their hand on the plunder.

Esther 9.16: 16 The other Jews who were in the king’s provinces gathered themselves together, defended their lives, had rest from their enemies, and killed seventy-five thousand of those who hated them; but they didn’t lay their hand on the plunder.

Esther 9.17: 17 This was done on the thirteenth day of the month Adar; and on the fourteenth day of that month they rested and made it a day of feasting and gladness.

Esther 9.18: 18 But the Jews who were in Susa assembled together on the thirteenth and on the fourteenth days of the month; and on the fifteenth day of that month, they rested, and made it a day of feasting and gladness.

Esther 9.19: 19 Therefore the Jews of the villages, who live in the unwalled towns, make the fourteenth day of the month Adar a day of gladness and feasting, a good day, and a day of sending presents of food to one another.

Esther 9.20: 20 Mordecai wrote these things, and sent letters to all the Jews who were in all the provinces of the king Ahasuerus, both near and far,

Esther 9.21: 21 to enjoin them that they should keep the fourteenth and fifteenth days of the month Adar yearly,

Esther 9.22: 22 as the days in which the Jews had rest from their enemies, and the month which was turned to them from sorrow to gladness, and from mourning into a good day; that they should make them days of feasting and gladness, and of sending presents of food to one another, and gifts to the needy.

Esther 9.23: 23 The Jews accepted the custom that they had begun, as Mordecai had written to them;

Esther 9.24: 24 because Haman the son of Hammedatha, the Agagite, the enemy of all the Jews, had plotted against the Jews to destroy them, and had cast “Pur”, that is the lot, to consume them, and to destroy them;

Esther 9.25: 25 but when this became known to the king, he commanded by letters that his wicked plan, which he had planned against the Jews, should return on his own head, and that he and his sons should be hanged on the gallows.

Esther 9.26: 26 Therefore they called these days “Purim”, from the word “Pur.” Therefore because of all the words of this letter, and of that which they had seen concerning this matter, and that which had come to them,

Esther 9.27: 27 the Jews established and imposed on themselves, and on their descendants, and on all those who joined themselves to them, so that it should not fail that they would keep these two days according to what was written, and according to its appointed time, every year;

Esther 9.28: 28 and that these days should be remembered and kept throughout every generation, every family, every province, and every city; and that these days of Purim should not fail from among the Jews, nor their memory perish from their offspring,

Esther 9.29: 29 Then Esther the queen, the daughter of Abihail, and Mordecai the Jew, wrote with all authority to confirm this second letter of Purim.

Esther 9.30: 30 He sent letters to all the Jews, to the hundred twenty-seven provinces of the kingdom of Ahasuerus, with words of peace and truth,

Esther 9.31: 31 to confirm these days of Purim in their appointed times, as Mordecai the Jew and Esther the queen had decreed, and as they had imposed upon themselves and their descendants, in the matter of the fastings and their cry.

Esther 9.32: 32 The commandment of Esther confirmed these matters of Purim; and it was written in the book.

Esther 10.0:

10

Esther 10.1: 1 King Ahasuerus laid a tribute on the land, and on the islands of the sea.

Esther 10.2: 2 All the acts of his power and of his might, and the full account of the greatness of Mordecai, to which the king advanced him, aren’t they written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Media and Persia?

Esther 10.3: 3 For Mordecai the Jew was next to King Ahasuerus, and great among the Jews, and accepted by the multitude of his brothers, seeking the good of his people, and speaking peace to all his descendants.

Proverbs 0.0:

The Proverbs

Proverbs 1.0:

1

Proverbs 1.1: 1 The proverbs of Solomon, the son of David, king of Israel:

Proverbs 1.2: 2 to know wisdom and instruction;

to discern the words of understanding;

Proverbs 1.3: 3 to receive instruction in wise dealing,

in righteousness, justice, and equity;

Proverbs 1.4: 4 to give prudence to the simple,

knowledge and discretion to the young man:

Proverbs 1.5: 5 that the wise man may hear, and increase in learning;

that the man of understanding may attain to sound counsel:

Proverbs 1.6: 6 to understand a proverb, and parables,

the words and riddles of the wise.

Proverbs 1.7: 7 The fear of Yahweh is the beginning of knowledge;

but the foolish despise wisdom and instruction.

Proverbs 1.8: 8 My son, listen to your father’s instruction,

and don’t forsake your mother’s teaching:

Proverbs 1.9: 9 for they will be a garland to grace your head,

and chains around your neck.

Proverbs 1.10: 10 My son, if sinners entice you,

don’t consent.

Proverbs 1.11: 11 If they say, “Come with us.

Let’s lay in wait for blood.

Let’s lurk secretly for the innocent without cause.

Proverbs 1.12: 12 Let’s swallow them up alive like Sheol,

and whole, like those who go down into the pit.

Proverbs 1.13: 13 We’ll find all valuable wealth.

We’ll fill our houses with plunder.

Proverbs 1.14: 14 You shall cast your lot among us.

We’ll all have one purse.”

Proverbs 1.15: 15 My son, don’t walk on the path with them.

Keep your foot from their path,

Proverbs 1.16: 16 for their feet run to evil.

They hurry to shed blood.

Proverbs 1.17: 17 For the net is spread in vain in the sight of any bird;

Proverbs 1.18: 18 but these lay in wait for their own blood.

They lurk secretly for their own lives.

Proverbs 1.19: 19 So are the ways of everyone who is greedy for gain.

It takes away the life of its owners.

Proverbs 1.20: 20 Wisdom calls aloud in the street.

She utters her voice in the public squares.

Proverbs 1.21: 21 She calls at the head of noisy places.

At the entrance of the city gates, she utters her words:

Proverbs 1.22: 22 “How long, you simple ones, will you love simplicity?

How long will mockers delight themselves in mockery,

and fools hate knowledge?

Proverbs 1.23: 23 Turn at my reproof.

Behold, I will pour out my spirit on you.

I will make known my words to you.

Proverbs 1.24: 24 Because I have called, and you have refused;

I have stretched out my hand, and no one has paid attention;

Proverbs 1.25: 25 but you have ignored all my counsel,

and wanted none of my reproof;

Proverbs 1.26: 26 I also will laugh at your disaster.

I will mock when calamity overtakes you,

Proverbs 1.27: 27 when calamity overtakes you like a storm,

when your disaster comes on like a whirlwind,

when distress and anguish come on you.

Proverbs 1.28: 28 Then they will call on me, but I will not answer.

They will seek me diligently, but they will not find me;

Proverbs 1.29: 29 because they hated knowledge,

and didn’t choose the fear of Yahweh.

Proverbs 1.30: 30 They wanted none of my counsel.

They despised all my reproof.

Proverbs 1.31: 31 Therefore they will eat of the fruit of their own way,

and be filled with their own schemes.

Proverbs 1.32: 32 For the backsliding of the simple will kill them.

The careless ease of fools will destroy them.

Proverbs 1.33: 33 But whoever listens to me will dwell securely,

and will be at ease, without fear of harm.”

Proverbs 2.0:

2

Proverbs 2.1: 1 My son, if you will receive my words,

and store up my commandments within you,

Proverbs 2.2: 2 so as to turn your ear to wisdom,

and apply your heart to understanding;

Proverbs 2.3: 3 yes, if you call out for discernment,

and lift up your voice for understanding;

Proverbs 2.4: 4 if you seek her as silver,

and search for her as for hidden treasures:

Proverbs 2.5: 5 then you will understand the fear of Yahweh,

and find the knowledge of God.

Proverbs 2.6: 6 For Yahweh gives wisdom.

Out of his mouth comes knowledge and understanding.

Proverbs 2.7: 7 He lays up sound wisdom for the upright.

He is a shield to those who walk in integrity,

Proverbs 2.8: 8 that he may guard the paths of justice,

and preserve the way of his saints.

Proverbs 2.9: 9 Then you will understand righteousness and justice,

equity and every good path.

Proverbs 2.10: 10 For wisdom will enter into your heart.

Knowledge will be pleasant to your soul.

Proverbs 2.11: 11 Discretion will watch over you.

Understanding will keep you,

Proverbs 2.12: 12 to deliver you from the way of evil,

from the men who speak perverse things,

Proverbs 2.13: 13 who forsake the paths of uprightness,

to walk in the ways of darkness,

Proverbs 2.14: 14 who rejoice to do evil,

and delight in the perverseness of evil,

Proverbs 2.15: 15 who are crooked in their ways,

and wayward in their paths,

Proverbs 2.16: 16 to deliver you from the strange woman,

even from the foreigner who flatters with her words,

Proverbs 2.17: 17 who forsakes the friend of her youth,

and forgets the covenant of her God;

Proverbs 2.18: 18 for her house leads down to death,

her paths to the departed spirits.

Proverbs 2.19: 19 None who go to her return again,

neither do they attain to the paths of life.

Proverbs 2.20: 20 So you may walk in the way of good men,

and keep the paths of the righteous.

Proverbs 2.21: 21 For the upright will dwell in the land.

The perfect will remain in it.

Proverbs 2.22: 22 But the wicked will be cut off from the land.

The treacherous will be rooted out of it.

Proverbs 3.0:

3

Proverbs 3.1: 1 My son, don’t forget my teaching;

but let your heart keep my commandments:

Proverbs 3.2: 2 for they will add to you length of days,

years of life, and peace.

Proverbs 3.3: 3 Don’t let kindness and truth forsake you.

Bind them around your neck.

Write them on the tablet of your heart.

Proverbs 3.4: 4 So you will find favor,

and good understanding in the sight of God and man.

Proverbs 3.5: 5 Trust in Yahweh with all your heart,

and don’t lean on your own understanding.

Proverbs 3.6: 6 In all your ways acknowledge him,

and he will make your paths straight.

Proverbs 3.7: 7 Don’t be wise in your own eyes.

Fear Yahweh, and depart from evil.

Proverbs 3.8: 8 It will be health to your body,

and nourishment to your bones.

Proverbs 3.9: 9 Honor Yahweh with your substance,

with the first fruits of all your increase:

Proverbs 3.10: 10 so your barns will be filled with plenty,

and your vats will overflow with new wine.

Proverbs 3.11: 11 My son, don’t despise Yahweh’s discipline,

neither be weary of his correction;

Proverbs 3.12: 12 for whom Yahweh loves, he corrects,

even as a father reproves the son in whom he delights.

Proverbs 3.13: 13 Happy is the man who finds wisdom,

the man who gets understanding.

Proverbs 3.14: 14 For her good profit is better than getting silver,

and her return is better than fine gold.

Proverbs 3.15: 15 She is more precious than rubies.

None of the things you can desire are to be compared to her.

Proverbs 3.16: 16 Length of days is in her right hand.

In her left hand are riches and honor.

Proverbs 3.17: 17 Her ways are ways of pleasantness.

All her paths are peace.

Proverbs 3.18: 18 She is a tree of life to those who lay hold of her.

Happy is everyone who retains her.

Proverbs 3.19: 19 By wisdom Yahweh founded the earth.

By understanding, he established the heavens.

Proverbs 3.20: 20 By his knowledge, the depths were broken up,

and the skies drop down the dew.

Proverbs 3.21: 21 My son, let them not depart from your eyes.

Keep sound wisdom and discretion:

Proverbs 3.22: 22 so they will be life to your soul,

and grace for your neck.

Proverbs 3.23: 23 Then you shall walk in your way securely.

Your foot won’t stumble.

Proverbs 3.24: 24 When you lie down, you will not be afraid.

Yes, you will lie down, and your sleep will be sweet.

Proverbs 3.25: 25 Don’t be afraid of sudden fear,

neither of the desolation of the wicked, when it comes;

Proverbs 3.26: 26 for Yahweh will be your confidence,

and will keep your foot from being taken.

Proverbs 3.27: 27 Don’t withhold good from those to whom it is due,

when it is in the power of your hand to do it.

Proverbs 3.28: 28 Don’t say to your neighbor, “Go, and come again;

tomorrow I will give it to you,”

when you have it by you.

Proverbs 3.29: 29 Don’t devise evil against your neighbor,

since he dwells securely by you.

Proverbs 3.30: 30 Don’t strive with a man without cause,

if he has done you no harm.

Proverbs 3.31: 31 Don’t envy the man of violence.

Choose none of his ways.

Proverbs 3.32: 32 For the perverse is an abomination to Yahweh,

but his friendship is with the upright.

Proverbs 3.33: 33 Yahweh’s curse is in the house of the wicked,

but he blesses the habitation of the righteous.

Proverbs 3.34: 34 Surely he mocks the mockers,

but he gives grace to the humble.

Proverbs 3.35: 35 The wise will inherit glory,

but shame will be the promotion of fools.

Proverbs 4.0:

4

Proverbs 4.1: 1 Listen, sons, to a father’s instruction.

Pay attention and know understanding;

Proverbs 4.2: 2 for I give you sound learning.

Don’t forsake my law.

Proverbs 4.3: 3 For I was a son to my father,

tender and an only child in the sight of my mother.

Proverbs 4.4: 4 He taught me, and said to me:

“Let your heart retain my words.

Keep my commandments, and live.

Proverbs 4.5: 5 Get wisdom.

Get understanding.

Don’t forget, and don’t deviate from the words of my mouth.

Proverbs 4.6: 6 Don’t forsake her, and she will preserve you.

Love her, and she will keep you.

Proverbs 4.7: 7 Wisdom is supreme.

Get wisdom.

Yes, though it costs all your possessions, get understanding.

Proverbs 4.8: 8 Esteem her, and she will exalt you.

She will bring you to honor when you embrace her.

Proverbs 4.9: 9 She will give to your head a garland of grace.

She will deliver a crown of splendor to you.”

Proverbs 4.10: 10 Listen, my son, and receive my sayings.

The years of your life will be many.

Proverbs 4.11: 11 I have taught you in the way of wisdom.

I have led you in straight paths.

Proverbs 4.12: 12 When you go, your steps will not be hampered.

When you run, you will not stumble.

Proverbs 4.13: 13 Take firm hold of instruction.

Don’t let her go.

Keep her, for she is your life.

Proverbs 4.14: 14 Don’t enter into the path of the wicked.

Don’t walk in the way of evil men.

Proverbs 4.15: 15 Avoid it, and don’t pass by it.

Turn from it, and pass on.

Proverbs 4.16: 16 For they don’t sleep unless they do evil.

Their sleep is taken away, unless they make someone fall.

Proverbs 4.17: 17 For they eat the bread of wickedness

and drink the wine of violence.

Proverbs 4.18: 18 But the path of the righteous is like the dawning light

that shines more and more until the perfect day.

Proverbs 4.19: 19 The way of the wicked is like darkness.

They don’t know what they stumble over.

Proverbs 4.20: 20 My son, attend to my words.

Turn your ear to my sayings.

Proverbs 4.21: 21 Let them not depart from your eyes.

Keep them in the center of your heart.

Proverbs 4.22: 22 For they are life to those who find them,

and health to their whole body.

Proverbs 4.23: 23 Keep your heart with all diligence,

for out of it is the wellspring of life.

Proverbs 4.24: 24 Put away from yourself a perverse mouth.

Put corrupt lips far from you.

Proverbs 4.25: 25 Let your eyes look straight ahead.

Fix your gaze directly before you.

Proverbs 4.26: 26 Make the path of your feet level.

Let all of your ways be established.

Proverbs 4.27: 27 Don’t turn to the right hand nor to the left.

Remove your foot from evil.

Proverbs 5.0:

5

Proverbs 5.1: 1 My son, pay attention to my wisdom.

Turn your ear to my understanding,

Proverbs 5.2: 2 that you may maintain discretion,

that your lips may preserve knowledge.

Proverbs 5.3: 3 For the lips of an adulteress drip honey.

Her mouth is smoother than oil,

Proverbs 5.4: 4 but in the end she is as bitter as wormwood,

and as sharp as a two-edged sword.

Proverbs 5.5: 5 Her feet go down to death.

Her steps lead straight to Sheol.

Proverbs 5.6: 6 She gives no thought to the way of life.

Her ways are crooked, and she doesn’t know it.

Proverbs 5.7: 7 Now therefore, my sons, listen to me.

Don’t depart from the words of my mouth.

Proverbs 5.8: 8 Remove your way far from her.

Don’t come near the door of her house,

Proverbs 5.9: 9 lest you give your honor to others,

and your years to the cruel one;

Proverbs 5.10: 10 lest strangers feast on your wealth,

and your labors enrich another man’s house.

Proverbs 5.11: 11 You will groan at your latter end,

when your flesh and your body are consumed,

Proverbs 5.12: 12 and say, “How I have hated instruction,

and my heart despised reproof;

Proverbs 5.13: 13 neither have I obeyed the voice of my teachers,

nor turned my ear to those who instructed me!

Proverbs 5.14: 14 I have come to the brink of utter ruin,

among the gathered assembly.”

Proverbs 5.15: 15 Drink water out of your own cistern,

running water out of your own well.

Proverbs 5.16: 16 Should your springs overflow in the streets,

streams of water in the public squares?

Proverbs 5.17: 17 Let them be for yourself alone,

not for strangers with you.

Proverbs 5.18: 18 Let your spring be blessed.

Rejoice in the wife of your youth.

Proverbs 5.19: 19 A loving doe and a graceful deer—

let her breasts satisfy you at all times.

Be captivated always with her love.

Proverbs 5.20: 20 For why should you, my son, be captivated with an adulteress?

Why embrace the bosom of another?

Proverbs 5.21: 21 For the ways of man are before Yahweh’s eyes.

He examines all his paths.

Proverbs 5.22: 22 The evil deeds of the wicked ensnare him.

The cords of his sin hold him firmly.

Proverbs 5.23: 23 He will die for lack of instruction.

In the greatness of his folly, he will go astray.

Proverbs 6.0:

6

Proverbs 6.1: 1 My son, if you have become collateral for your neighbor,

if you have struck your hands in pledge for a stranger,

Proverbs 6.2: 2 you are trapped by the words of your mouth;

you are ensnared with the words of your mouth.

Proverbs 6.3: 3 Do this now, my son, and deliver yourself,

since you have come into the hand of your neighbor.

Go, humble yourself.

Press your plea with your neighbor.

Proverbs 6.4: 4 Give no sleep to your eyes,

nor slumber to your eyelids.

Proverbs 6.5: 5 Free yourself, like a gazelle from the hand of the hunter,

like a bird from the snare of the fowler.

Proverbs 6.6: 6 Go to the ant, you sluggard.

Consider her ways, and be wise;

Proverbs 6.7: 7 which having no chief, overseer, or ruler,

Proverbs 6.8: 8 provides her bread in the summer,

and gathers her food in the harvest.

Proverbs 6.9: 9 How long will you sleep, sluggard?

When will you arise out of your sleep?

Proverbs 6.10: 10 A little sleep, a little slumber,

a little folding of the hands to sleep:

Proverbs 6.11: 11 so your poverty will come as a robber,

and your scarcity as an armed man.

Proverbs 6.12: 12 A worthless person, a man of iniquity,

is he who walks with a perverse mouth,

Proverbs 6.13: 13 who winks with his eyes, who signals with his feet,

who motions with his fingers,

Proverbs 6.14: 14 in whose heart is perverseness,

who devises evil continually,

who always sows discord.

Proverbs 6.15: 15 Therefore his calamity will come suddenly.

He will be broken suddenly, and that without remedy.

Proverbs 6.16: 16 There are six things which Yahweh hates;

yes, seven which are an abomination to him:

Proverbs 6.17: 17 arrogant eyes, a lying tongue,

hands that shed innocent blood,

Proverbs 6.18: 18 a heart that devises wicked schemes,

feet that are swift in running to mischief,

Proverbs 6.19: 19 a false witness who utters lies,

and he who sows discord among brothers.

Proverbs 6.20: 20 My son, keep your father’s commandment,

and don’t forsake your mother’s teaching.

Proverbs 6.21: 21 Bind them continually on your heart.

Tie them around your neck.

Proverbs 6.22: 22 When you walk, it will lead you.

When you sleep, it will watch over you.

When you awake, it will talk with you.

Proverbs 6.23: 23 For the commandment is a lamp,

and the law is light.

Reproofs of instruction are the way of life,

Proverbs 6.24: 24 to keep you from the immoral woman,

from the flattery of the wayward wife’s tongue.

Proverbs 6.25: 25 Don’t lust after her beauty in your heart,

neither let her captivate you with her eyelids.

Proverbs 6.26: 26 For a prostitute reduces you to a piece of bread.

The adulteress hunts for your precious life.

Proverbs 6.27: 27 Can a man scoop fire into his lap,

and his clothes not be burned?

Proverbs 6.28: 28 Or can one walk on hot coals,

and his feet not be scorched?

Proverbs 6.29: 29 So is he who goes in to his neighbor’s wife.

Whoever touches her will not be unpunished.

Proverbs 6.30: 30 Men don’t despise a thief

if he steals to satisfy himself when he is hungry;

Proverbs 6.31: 31 but if he is found, he shall restore seven times.

He shall give all the wealth of his house.

Proverbs 6.32: 32 He who commits adultery with a woman is void of understanding.

He who does it destroys his own soul.

Proverbs 6.33: 33 He will get wounds and dishonor.

His reproach will not be wiped away.

Proverbs 6.34: 34 For jealousy arouses the fury of the husband.

He won’t spare in the day of vengeance.

Proverbs 6.35: 35 He won’t regard any ransom,

neither will he rest content, though you give many gifts.

Proverbs 7.0:

7

Proverbs 7.1: 1 My son, keep my words.

Lay up my commandments within you.

Proverbs 7.2: 2 Keep my commandments and live!

Guard my teaching as the apple of your eye.

Proverbs 7.3: 3 Bind them on your fingers.

Write them on the tablet of your heart.

Proverbs 7.4: 4 Tell wisdom, “You are my sister.”

Call understanding your relative,

Proverbs 7.5: 5 that they may keep you from the strange woman,

from the foreigner who flatters with her words.

Proverbs 7.6: 6 For at the window of my house,

I looked out through my lattice.

Proverbs 7.7: 7 I saw among the simple ones.

I discerned among the youths a young man void of understanding,

Proverbs 7.8: 8 passing through the street near her corner,

he went the way to her house,

Proverbs 7.9: 9 in the twilight, in the evening of the day,

in the middle of the night and in the darkness.

Proverbs 7.10: 10 Behold, there a woman met him with the attire of a prostitute,

and with crafty intent.

Proverbs 7.11: 11 She is loud and defiant.

Her feet don’t stay in her house.

Proverbs 7.12: 12 Now she is in the streets, now in the squares,

and lurking at every corner.

Proverbs 7.13: 13 So she caught him, and kissed him.

With an impudent face she said to him:

Proverbs 7.14: 14 “Sacrifices of peace offerings are with me.

Today I have paid my vows.

Proverbs 7.15: 15 Therefore I came out to meet you,

to diligently seek your face,

and I have found you.

Proverbs 7.16: 16 I have spread my couch with carpets of tapestry,

with striped cloths of the yarn of Egypt.

Proverbs 7.17: 17 I have perfumed my bed with myrrh, aloes, and cinnamon.

Proverbs 7.18: 18 Come, let’s take our fill of loving until the morning.

Let’s solace ourselves with loving.

Proverbs 7.19: 19 For my husband isn’t at home.

He has gone on a long journey.

Proverbs 7.20: 20 He has taken a bag of money with him.

He will come home at the full moon.”

Proverbs 7.21: 21 With persuasive words, she led him astray.

With the flattering of her lips, she seduced him.

Proverbs 7.22: 22 He followed her immediately,

as an ox goes to the slaughter,

as a fool stepping into a noose.

Proverbs 7.23: 23 Until an arrow strikes through his liver,

as a bird hurries to the snare,

and doesn’t know that it will cost his life.

Proverbs 7.24: 24 Now therefore, sons, listen to me.

Pay attention to the words of my mouth.

Proverbs 7.25: 25 Don’t let your heart turn to her ways.

Don’t go astray in her paths,

Proverbs 7.26: 26 for she has thrown down many wounded.

Yes, all her slain are a mighty army.

Proverbs 7.27: 27 Her house is the way to Sheol,

going down to the rooms of death.

Proverbs 8.0:

8

Proverbs 8.1: 1 Doesn’t wisdom cry out?

Doesn’t understanding raise her voice?

Proverbs 8.2: 2 On the top of high places by the way,

where the paths meet, she stands.

Proverbs 8.3: 3 Beside the gates, at the entry of the city,

at the entry doors, she cries aloud:

Proverbs 8.4: 4 “I call to you men!

I send my voice to the sons of mankind.

Proverbs 8.5: 5 You simple, understand prudence!

You fools, be of an understanding heart!

Proverbs 8.6: 6 Hear, for I will speak excellent things.

The opening of my lips is for right things.

Proverbs 8.7: 7 For my mouth speaks truth.

Wickedness is an abomination to my lips.

Proverbs 8.8: 8 All the words of my mouth are in righteousness.

There is nothing crooked or perverse in them.

Proverbs 8.9: 9 They are all plain to him who understands,

right to those who find knowledge.

Proverbs 8.10: 10 Receive my instruction rather than silver,

knowledge rather than choice gold.

Proverbs 8.11: 11 For wisdom is better than rubies.

All the things that may be desired can’t be compared to it.

Proverbs 8.12: 12 “I, wisdom, have made prudence my dwelling.

Find out knowledge and discretion.

Proverbs 8.13: 13 The fear of Yahweh is to hate evil.

I hate pride, arrogance, the evil way, and the perverse mouth.

Proverbs 8.14: 14 Counsel and sound knowledge are mine.

I have understanding and power.

Proverbs 8.15: 15 By me kings reign,

and princes decree justice.

Proverbs 8.16: 16 By me princes rule,

nobles, and all the righteous rulers of the earth.

Proverbs 8.17: 17 I love those who love me.

Those who seek me diligently will find me.

Proverbs 8.18: 18 With me are riches, honor,

enduring wealth, and prosperity.

Proverbs 8.19: 19 My fruit is better than gold, yes, than fine gold,

my yield than choice silver.

Proverbs 8.20: 20 I walk in the way of righteousness,

in the middle of the paths of justice,

Proverbs 8.21: 21 that I may give wealth to those who love me.

I fill their treasuries.

Proverbs 8.22: 22 “Yahweh possessed me in the beginning of his work,

before his deeds of old.

Proverbs 8.23: 23 I was set up from everlasting, from the beginning,

before the earth existed.

Proverbs 8.24: 24 When there were no depths, I was born,

when there were no springs abounding with water.

Proverbs 8.25: 25 Before the mountains were settled in place,

before the hills, I was born;

Proverbs 8.26: 26 while as yet he had not made the earth, nor the fields,

nor the beginning of the dust of the world.

Proverbs 8.27: 27 When he established the heavens, I was there.

When he set a circle on the surface of the deep,

Proverbs 8.28: 28 when he established the clouds above,

when the springs of the deep became strong,

Proverbs 8.29: 29 when he gave to the sea its boundary,

that the waters should not violate his commandment,

when he marked out the foundations of the earth,

Proverbs 8.30: 30 then I was the craftsman by his side.

I was a delight day by day,

always rejoicing before him,

Proverbs 8.31: 31 rejoicing in his whole world.

My delight was with the sons of men.

Proverbs 8.32: 32 “Now therefore, my sons, listen to me,

for blessed are those who keep my ways.

Proverbs 8.33: 33 Hear instruction, and be wise.

Don’t refuse it.

Proverbs 8.34: 34 Blessed is the man who hears me,

watching daily at my gates,

waiting at my door posts.

Proverbs 8.35: 35 For whoever finds me, finds life,

and will obtain favor from Yahweh.

Proverbs 8.36: 36 But he who sins against me wrongs his own soul.

All those who hate me love death.”

Proverbs 9.0:

9

Proverbs 9.1: 1 Wisdom has built her house.

She has carved out her seven pillars.

Proverbs 9.2: 2 She has prepared her meat.

She has mixed her wine.

She has also set her table.

Proverbs 9.3: 3 She has sent out her maidens.

She cries from the highest places of the city:

Proverbs 9.4: 4 “Whoever is simple, let him turn in here!”

As for him who is void of understanding, she says to him,

Proverbs 9.5: 5 “Come, eat some of my bread,

Drink some of the wine which I have mixed!

Proverbs 9.6: 6 Leave your simple ways, and live.

Walk in the way of understanding.”

Proverbs 9.7: 7 One who corrects a mocker invites insult.

One who reproves a wicked man invites abuse.

Proverbs 9.8: 8 Don’t reprove a scoffer, lest he hate you.

Reprove a wise person, and he will love you.

Proverbs 9.9: 9 Instruct a wise person, and he will be still wiser.

Teach a righteous person, and he will increase in learning.

Proverbs 9.10: 10 The fear of Yahweh is the beginning of wisdom.

The knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.

Proverbs 9.11: 11 For by me your days will be multiplied.

The years of your life will be increased.

Proverbs 9.12: 12 If you are wise, you are wise for yourself.

If you mock, you alone will bear it.

Proverbs 9.13: 13 The foolish woman is loud,

undisciplined, and knows nothing.

Proverbs 9.14: 14 She sits at the door of her house,

on a seat in the high places of the city,

Proverbs 9.15: 15 to call to those who pass by,

who go straight on their ways,

Proverbs 9.16: 16 “Whoever is simple, let him turn in here.”

as for him who is void of understanding, she says to him,

Proverbs 9.17: 17 “Stolen water is sweet.

Food eaten in secret is pleasant.”

Proverbs 9.18: 18 But he doesn’t know that the departed spirits are there,

that her guests are in the depths of Sheol.

Proverbs 10.0:

10

Proverbs 10.1: 1 The proverbs of Solomon.

A wise son makes a glad father;

but a foolish son brings grief to his mother.

Proverbs 10.2: 2 Treasures of wickedness profit nothing,

but righteousness delivers from death.

Proverbs 10.3: 3 Yahweh will not allow the soul of the righteous to go hungry,

but he thrusts away the desire of the wicked.

Proverbs 10.4: 4 He becomes poor who works with a lazy hand,

but the hand of the diligent brings wealth.

Proverbs 10.5: 5 He who gathers in summer is a wise son,

but he who sleeps during the harvest is a son who causes shame.

Proverbs 10.6: 6 Blessings are on the head of the righteous,

but violence covers the mouth of the wicked.

Proverbs 10.7: 7 The memory of the righteous is blessed,

but the name of the wicked will rot.

Proverbs 10.8: 8 The wise in heart accept commandments,

but a chattering fool will fall.

Proverbs 10.9: 9 He who walks blamelessly walks surely,

but he who perverts his ways will be found out.

Proverbs 10.10: 10 One winking with the eye causes sorrow,

but a chattering fool will fall.

Proverbs 10.11: 11 The mouth of the righteous is a spring of life,

but violence covers the mouth of the wicked.

Proverbs 10.12: 12 Hatred stirs up strife,

but love covers all wrongs.

Proverbs 10.13: 13 Wisdom is found on the lips of him who has discernment,

but a rod is for the back of him who is void of understanding.

Proverbs 10.14: 14 Wise men lay up knowledge,

but the mouth of the foolish is near ruin.

Proverbs 10.15: 15 The rich man’s wealth is his strong city.

The destruction of the poor is their poverty.

Proverbs 10.16: 16 The labor of the righteous leads to life.

The increase of the wicked leads to sin.

Proverbs 10.17: 17 He is in the way of life who heeds correction,

but he who forsakes reproof leads others astray.

Proverbs 10.18: 18 He who hides hatred has lying lips.

He who utters a slander is a fool.

Proverbs 10.19: 19 In the multitude of words there is no lack of disobedience,

but he who restrains his lips does wisely.

Proverbs 10.20: 20 The tongue of the righteous is like choice silver.

The heart of the wicked is of little worth.

Proverbs 10.21: 21 The lips of the righteous feed many,

but the foolish die for lack of understanding.

Proverbs 10.22: 22 Yahweh’s blessing brings wealth,

and he adds no trouble to it.

Proverbs 10.23: 23 It is a fool’s pleasure to do wickedness,

but wisdom is a man of understanding’s pleasure.

Proverbs 10.24: 24 What the wicked fear, will overtake them,

but the desire of the righteous will be granted.

Proverbs 10.25: 25 When the whirlwind passes, the wicked is no more;

but the righteous stand firm forever.

Proverbs 10.26: 26 As vinegar to the teeth, and as smoke to the eyes,

so is the sluggard to those who send him.

Proverbs 10.27: 27 The fear of Yahweh prolongs days,

but the years of the wicked shall be shortened.

Proverbs 10.28: 28 The prospect of the righteous is joy,

but the hope of the wicked will perish.

Proverbs 10.29: 29 The way of Yahweh is a stronghold to the upright,

but it is a destruction to the workers of iniquity.

Proverbs 10.30: 30 The righteous will never be removed,

but the wicked will not dwell in the land.

Proverbs 10.31: 31 The mouth of the righteous produces wisdom,

but the perverse tongue will be cut off.

Proverbs 10.32: 32 The lips of the righteous know what is acceptable,

but the mouth of the wicked is perverse.

Proverbs 11.0:

11

Proverbs 11.1: 1 A false balance is an abomination to Yahweh,

but accurate weights are his delight.

Proverbs 11.2: 2 When pride comes, then comes shame,

but with humility comes wisdom.

Proverbs 11.3: 3 The integrity of the upright shall guide them,

but the perverseness of the treacherous shall destroy them.

Proverbs 11.4: 4 Riches don’t profit in the day of wrath,

but righteousness delivers from death.

Proverbs 11.5: 5 The righteousness of the blameless will direct his way,

but the wicked shall fall by his own wickedness.

Proverbs 11.6: 6 The righteousness of the upright shall deliver them,

but the unfaithful will be trapped by evil desires.

Proverbs 11.7: 7 When a wicked man dies, hope perishes,

and expectation of power comes to nothing.

Proverbs 11.8: 8 A righteous person is delivered out of trouble,

and the wicked takes his place.

Proverbs 11.9: 9 With his mouth the godless man destroys his neighbor,

but the righteous will be delivered through knowledge.

Proverbs 11.10: 10 When it goes well with the righteous, the city rejoices.

When the wicked perish, there is shouting.

Proverbs 11.11: 11 By the blessing of the upright, the city is exalted,

but it is overthrown by the mouth of the wicked.

Proverbs 11.12: 12 One who despises his neighbor is void of wisdom,

but a man of understanding holds his peace.

Proverbs 11.13: 13 One who brings gossip betrays a confidence,

but one who is of a trustworthy spirit is one who keeps a secret.

Proverbs 11.14: 14 Where there is no wise guidance, the nation falls,

but in the multitude of counselors there is victory.

Proverbs 11.15: 15 He who is collateral for a stranger will suffer for it,

but he who refuses pledges of collateral is secure.

Proverbs 11.16: 16 A gracious woman obtains honor,

but violent men obtain riches.

Proverbs 11.17: 17 The merciful man does good to his own soul,

but he who is cruel troubles his own flesh.

Proverbs 11.18: 18 Wicked people earn deceitful wages,

but one who sows righteousness reaps a sure reward.

Proverbs 11.19: 19 He who is truly righteous gets life.

He who pursues evil gets death.

Proverbs 11.20: 20 Those who are perverse in heart are an abomination to Yahweh,

but those whose ways are blameless are his delight.

Proverbs 11.21: 21 Most certainly, the evil man will not be unpunished,

but the offspring of the righteous will be delivered.

Proverbs 11.22: 22 Like a gold ring in a pig’s snout,

is a beautiful woman who lacks discretion.

Proverbs 11.23: 23 The desire of the righteous is only good.

The expectation of the wicked is wrath.

Proverbs 11.24: 24 There is one who scatters, and increases yet more.

There is one who withholds more than is appropriate, but gains poverty.

Proverbs 11.25: 25 The liberal soul shall be made fat.

He who waters shall be watered also himself.

Proverbs 11.26: 26 People curse someone who withholds grain,

but blessing will be on the head of him who sells it.

Proverbs 11.27: 27 He who diligently seeks good seeks favor,

but he who searches after evil, it shall come to him.

Proverbs 11.28: 28 He who trusts in his riches will fall,

but the righteous shall flourish as the green leaf.

Proverbs 11.29: 29 He who troubles his own house shall inherit the wind.

The foolish shall be servant to the wise of heart.

Proverbs 11.30: 30 The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life.

He who is wise wins souls.

Proverbs 11.31: 31 Behold, the righteous shall be repaid in the earth,

how much more the wicked and the sinner!

Proverbs 12.0:

12

Proverbs 12.1: 1 Whoever loves correction loves knowledge,

but he who hates reproof is stupid.

Proverbs 12.2: 2 A good man shall obtain favor from Yahweh,

but he will condemn a man of wicked plans.

Proverbs 12.3: 3 A man shall not be established by wickedness,

but the root of the righteous shall not be moved.

Proverbs 12.4: 4 A worthy woman is the crown of her husband,

but a disgraceful wife is as rottenness in his bones.

Proverbs 12.5: 5 The thoughts of the righteous are just,

but the advice of the wicked is deceitful.

Proverbs 12.6: 6 The words of the wicked are about lying in wait for blood,

but the speech of the upright rescues them.

Proverbs 12.7: 7 The wicked are overthrown, and are no more,

but the house of the righteous shall stand.

Proverbs 12.8: 8 A man shall be commended according to his wisdom,

but he who has a warped mind shall be despised.

Proverbs 12.9: 9 Better is he who is little known, and has a servant,

than he who honors himself, and lacks bread.

Proverbs 12.10: 10 A righteous man respects the life of his animal,

but the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel.

Proverbs 12.11: 11 He who tills his land shall have plenty of bread,

but he who chases fantasies is void of understanding.

Proverbs 12.12: 12 The wicked desires the plunder of evil men,

but the root of the righteous flourishes.

Proverbs 12.13: 13 An evil man is trapped by sinfulness of lips,

but the righteous shall come out of trouble.

Proverbs 12.14: 14 A man shall be satisfied with good by the fruit of his mouth.

The work of a man’s hands shall be rewarded to him.

Proverbs 12.15: 15 The way of a fool is right in his own eyes,

but he who is wise listens to counsel.

Proverbs 12.16: 16 A fool shows his annoyance the same day,

but one who overlooks an insult is prudent.

Proverbs 12.17: 17 He who is truthful testifies honestly,

but a false witness lies.

Proverbs 12.18: 18 There is one who speaks rashly like the piercing of a sword,

but the tongue of the wise heals.

Proverbs 12.19: 19 Truth’s lips will be established forever,

but a lying tongue is only momentary.

Proverbs 12.20: 20 Deceit is in the heart of those who plot evil,

but joy comes to the promoters of peace.

Proverbs 12.21: 21 No mischief shall happen to the righteous,

but the wicked shall be filled with evil.

Proverbs 12.22: 22 Lying lips are an abomination to Yahweh,

but those who do the truth are his delight.

Proverbs 12.23: 23 A prudent man keeps his knowledge,

but the hearts of fools proclaim foolishness.

Proverbs 12.24: 24 The hands of the diligent ones shall rule,

but laziness ends in slave labor.

Proverbs 12.25: 25 Anxiety in a man’s heart weighs it down,

but a kind word makes it glad.

Proverbs 12.26: 26 A righteous person is cautious in friendship,

but the way of the wicked leads them astray.

Proverbs 12.27: 27 The slothful man doesn’t roast his game,

but the possessions of diligent men are prized.

Proverbs 12.28: 28 In the way of righteousness is life;

in its path there is no death.

Proverbs 13.0:

13

Proverbs 13.1: 1 A wise son listens to his father’s instruction,

but a scoffer doesn’t listen to rebuke.

Proverbs 13.2: 2 By the fruit of his lips, a man enjoys good things,

but the unfaithful crave violence.

Proverbs 13.3: 3 He who guards his mouth guards his soul.

One who opens wide his lips comes to ruin.

Proverbs 13.4: 4 The soul of the sluggard desires, and has nothing,

but the desire of the diligent shall be fully satisfied.

Proverbs 13.5: 5 A righteous man hates lies,

but a wicked man brings shame and disgrace.

Proverbs 13.6: 6 Righteousness guards the way of integrity,

but wickedness overthrows the sinner.

Proverbs 13.7: 7 There are some who pretend to be rich, yet have nothing.

There are some who pretend to be poor, yet have great wealth.

Proverbs 13.8: 8 The ransom of a man’s life is his riches,

but the poor hear no threats.

Proverbs 13.9: 9 The light of the righteous shines brightly,

but the lamp of the wicked is snuffed out.

Proverbs 13.10: 10 Pride only breeds quarrels,

but wisdom is with people who take advice.

Proverbs 13.11: 11 Wealth gained dishonestly dwindles away,

but he who gathers by hand makes it grow.

Proverbs 13.12: 12 Hope deferred makes the heart sick,

but when longing is fulfilled, it is a tree of life.

Proverbs 13.13: 13 Whoever despises instruction will pay for it,

but he who respects a command will be rewarded.

Proverbs 13.14: 14 The teaching of the wise is a spring of life,

to turn from the snares of death.

Proverbs 13.15: 15 Good understanding wins favor,

but the way of the unfaithful is hard.

Proverbs 13.16: 16 Every prudent man acts from knowledge,

but a fool exposes folly.

Proverbs 13.17: 17 A wicked messenger falls into trouble,

but a trustworthy envoy gains healing.

Proverbs 13.18: 18 Poverty and shame come to him who refuses discipline,

but he who heeds correction shall be honored.

Proverbs 13.19: 19 Longing fulfilled is sweet to the soul,

but fools detest turning from evil.

Proverbs 13.20: 20 One who walks with wise men grows wise,

but a companion of fools suffers harm.

Proverbs 13.21: 21 Misfortune pursues sinners,

but prosperity rewards the righteous.

Proverbs 13.22: 22 A good man leaves an inheritance to his children’s children,

but the wealth of the sinner is stored for the righteous.

Proverbs 13.23: 23 An abundance of food is in poor people’s fields,

but injustice sweeps it away.

Proverbs 13.24: 24 One who spares the rod hates his son,

but one who loves him is careful to discipline him.

Proverbs 13.25: 25 The righteous one eats to the satisfying of his soul,

but the belly of the wicked goes hungry.

Proverbs 14.0:

14

Proverbs 14.1: 1 Every wise woman builds her house,

but the foolish one tears it down with her own hands.

Proverbs 14.2: 2 He who walks in his uprightness fears Yahweh,

but he who is perverse in his ways despises him.

Proverbs 14.3: 3 The fool’s talk brings a rod to his back,

but the lips of the wise protect them.

Proverbs 14.4: 4 Where no oxen are, the crib is clean,

but much increase is by the strength of the ox.

Proverbs 14.5: 5 A truthful witness will not lie,

but a false witness pours out lies.

Proverbs 14.6: 6 A scoffer seeks wisdom, and doesn’t find it,

but knowledge comes easily to a discerning person.

Proverbs 14.7: 7 Stay away from a foolish man,

for you won’t find knowledge on his lips.

Proverbs 14.8: 8 The wisdom of the prudent is to think about his way,

but the folly of fools is deceit.

Proverbs 14.9: 9 Fools mock at making atonement for sins,

but among the upright there is good will.

Proverbs 14.10: 10 The heart knows its own bitterness and joy;

he will not share these with a stranger.

Proverbs 14.11: 11 The house of the wicked will be overthrown,

but the tent of the upright will flourish.

Proverbs 14.12: 12 There is a way which seems right to a man,

but in the end it leads to death.

Proverbs 14.13: 13 Even in laughter the heart may be sorrowful,

and mirth may end in heaviness.

Proverbs 14.14: 14 The unfaithful will be repaid for his own ways;

likewise a good man will be rewarded for his ways.

Proverbs 14.15: 15 A simple man believes everything,

but the prudent man carefully considers his ways.

Proverbs 14.16: 16 A wise man fears and shuns evil,

but the fool is hot headed and reckless.

Proverbs 14.17: 17 He who is quick to become angry will commit folly,

and a crafty man is hated.

Proverbs 14.18: 18 The simple inherit folly,

but the prudent are crowned with knowledge.

Proverbs 14.19: 19 The evil bow down before the good,

and the wicked at the gates of the righteous.

Proverbs 14.20: 20 The poor person is shunned even by his own neighbor,

but the rich person has many friends.

Proverbs 14.21: 21 He who despises his neighbor sins,

but he who has pity on the poor is blessed.

Proverbs 14.22: 22 Don’t they go astray who plot evil?

But love and faithfulness belong to those who plan good.

Proverbs 14.23: 23 In all hard work there is profit,

but the talk of the lips leads only to poverty.

Proverbs 14.24: 24 The crown of the wise is their riches,

but the folly of fools crowns them with folly.

Proverbs 14.25: 25 A truthful witness saves souls,

but a false witness is deceitful.

Proverbs 14.26: 26 In the fear of Yahweh is a secure fortress,

and he will be a refuge for his children.

Proverbs 14.27: 27 The fear of Yahweh is a fountain of life,

turning people from the snares of death.

Proverbs 14.28: 28 In the multitude of people is the king’s glory,

but in the lack of people is the destruction of the prince.

Proverbs 14.29: 29 He who is slow to anger has great understanding,

but he who has a quick temper displays folly.

Proverbs 14.30: 30 The life of the body is a heart at peace,

but envy rots the bones.

Proverbs 14.31: 31 He who oppresses the poor shows contempt for his Maker,

but he who is kind to the needy honors him.

Proverbs 14.32: 32 The wicked is brought down in his calamity,

but in death, the righteous has a refuge.

Proverbs 14.33: 33 Wisdom rests in the heart of one who has understanding,

and is even made known in the inward part of fools.

Proverbs 14.34: 34 Righteousness exalts a nation,

but sin is a disgrace to any people.

Proverbs 14.35: 35 The king’s favor is toward a servant who deals wisely,

but his wrath is toward one who causes shame.

Proverbs 15.0:

15

Proverbs 15.1: 1 A gentle answer turns away wrath,

but a harsh word stirs up anger.

Proverbs 15.2: 2 The tongue of the wise commends knowledge,

but the mouth of fools gush out folly.

Proverbs 15.3: 3 Yahweh’s eyes are everywhere,

keeping watch on the evil and the good.

Proverbs 15.4: 4 A gentle tongue is a tree of life,

but deceit in it crushes the spirit.

Proverbs 15.5: 5 A fool despises his father’s correction,

but he who heeds reproof shows prudence.

Proverbs 15.6: 6 In the house of the righteous is much treasure,

but the income of the wicked brings trouble.

Proverbs 15.7: 7 The lips of the wise spread knowledge;

not so with the heart of fools.

Proverbs 15.8: 8 The sacrifice made by the wicked is an abomination to Yahweh,

but the prayer of the upright is his delight.

Proverbs 15.9: 9 The way of the wicked is an abomination to Yahweh,

but he loves him who follows after righteousness.

Proverbs 15.10: 10 There is stern discipline for one who forsakes the way:

whoever hates reproof shall die.

Proverbs 15.11: 11 Sheol and Abaddon are before Yahweh—

how much more then the hearts of the children of men!

Proverbs 15.12: 12 A scoffer doesn’t love to be reproved;

he will not go to the wise.

Proverbs 15.13: 13 A glad heart makes a cheerful face,

but an aching heart breaks the spirit.

Proverbs 15.14: 14 The heart of one who has understanding seeks knowledge,

but the mouths of fools feed on folly.

Proverbs 15.15: 15 All the days of the afflicted are wretched,

but one who has a cheerful heart enjoys a continual feast.

Proverbs 15.16: 16 Better is little, with the fear of Yahweh,

than great treasure with trouble.

Proverbs 15.17: 17 Better is a dinner of herbs, where love is,

than a fattened calf with hatred.

Proverbs 15.18: 18 A wrathful man stirs up contention,

but one who is slow to anger appeases strife.

Proverbs 15.19: 19 The way of the sluggard is like a thorn patch,

but the path of the upright is a highway.

Proverbs 15.20: 20 A wise son makes a father glad,

but a foolish man despises his mother.

Proverbs 15.21: 21 Folly is joy to one who is void of wisdom,

but a man of understanding keeps his way straight.

Proverbs 15.22: 22 Where there is no counsel, plans fail;

but in a multitude of counselors they are established.

Proverbs 15.23: 23 Joy comes to a man with the reply of his mouth.

How good is a word at the right time!

Proverbs 15.24: 24 The path of life leads upward for the wise,

to keep him from going downward to Sheol.

Proverbs 15.25: 25 Yahweh will uproot the house of the proud,

but he will keep the widow’s borders intact.

Proverbs 15.26: 26 Yahweh detests the thoughts of the wicked,

but the thoughts of the pure are pleasing.

Proverbs 15.27: 27 He who is greedy for gain troubles his own house,

but he who hates bribes will live.

Proverbs 15.28: 28 The heart of the righteous weighs answers,

but the mouth of the wicked gushes out evil.

Proverbs 15.29: 29 Yahweh is far from the wicked,

but he hears the prayer of the righteous.

Proverbs 15.30: 30 The light of the eyes rejoices the heart.

Good news gives health to the bones.

Proverbs 15.31: 31 The ear that listens to reproof lives,

and will be at home among the wise.

Proverbs 15.32: 32 He who refuses correction despises his own soul,

but he who listens to reproof gets understanding.

Proverbs 15.33: 33 The fear of Yahweh teaches wisdom.

Before honor is humility.

Proverbs 16.0:

16

Proverbs 16.1: 1 The plans of the heart belong to man,

but the answer of the tongue is from Yahweh.

Proverbs 16.2: 2 All the ways of a man are clean in his own eyes;

but Yahweh weighs the motives.

Proverbs 16.3: 3 Commit your deeds to Yahweh,

and your plans shall succeed.

Proverbs 16.4: 4 Yahweh has made everything for its own end—

yes, even the wicked for the day of evil.

Proverbs 16.5: 5 Everyone who is proud in heart is an abomination to Yahweh:

they shall certainly not be unpunished.

Proverbs 16.6: 6 By mercy and truth iniquity is atoned for.

By the fear of Yahweh men depart from evil.

Proverbs 16.7: 7 When a man’s ways please Yahweh,

he makes even his enemies to be at peace with him.

Proverbs 16.8: 8 Better is a little with righteousness,

than great revenues with injustice.

Proverbs 16.9: 9 A man’s heart plans his course,

but Yahweh directs his steps.

Proverbs 16.10: 10 Inspired judgments are on the lips of the king.

He shall not betray his mouth.

Proverbs 16.11: 11 Honest balances and scales are Yahweh’s;

all the weights in the bag are his work.

Proverbs 16.12: 12 It is an abomination for kings to do wrong,

for the throne is established by righteousness.

Proverbs 16.13: 13 Righteous lips are the delight of kings.

They value one who speaks the truth.

Proverbs 16.14: 14 The king’s wrath is a messenger of death,

but a wise man will pacify it.

Proverbs 16.15: 15 In the light of the king’s face is life.

His favor is like a cloud of the spring rain.

Proverbs 16.16: 16 How much better it is to get wisdom than gold!

Yes, to get understanding is to be chosen rather than silver.

Proverbs 16.17: 17 The highway of the upright is to depart from evil.

He who keeps his way preserves his soul.

Proverbs 16.18: 18 Pride goes before destruction,

and an arrogant spirit before a fall.

Proverbs 16.19: 19 It is better to be of a lowly spirit with the poor,

than to divide the plunder with the proud.

Proverbs 16.20: 20 He who heeds the Word finds prosperity.

Whoever trusts in Yahweh is blessed.

Proverbs 16.21: 21 The wise in heart shall be called prudent.

Pleasantness of the lips promotes instruction.

Proverbs 16.22: 22 Understanding is a fountain of life to one who has it,

but the punishment of fools is their folly.

Proverbs 16.23: 23 The heart of the wise instructs his mouth,

and adds learning to his lips.

Proverbs 16.24: 24 Pleasant words are a honeycomb,

sweet to the soul, and health to the bones.

Proverbs 16.25: 25 There is a way which seems right to a man,

but in the end it leads to death.

Proverbs 16.26: 26 The appetite of the laboring man labors for him;

for his mouth urges him on.

Proverbs 16.27: 27 A worthless man devises mischief.

His speech is like a scorching fire.

Proverbs 16.28: 28 A perverse man stirs up strife.

A whisperer separates close friends.

Proverbs 16.29: 29 A man of violence entices his neighbor,

and leads him in a way that is not good.

Proverbs 16.30: 30 One who winks his eyes to plot perversities,

one who compresses his lips, is bent on evil.

Proverbs 16.31: 31 Gray hair is a crown of glory.

It is attained by a life of righteousness.

Proverbs 16.32: 32 One who is slow to anger is better than the mighty;

one who rules his spirit, than he who takes a city.

Proverbs 16.33: 33 The lot is cast into the lap,

but its every decision is from Yahweh.

Proverbs 17.0:

17

Proverbs 17.1: 1 Better is a dry morsel with quietness,

than a house full of feasting with strife.

Proverbs 17.2: 2 A servant who deals wisely will rule over a son who causes shame,

and shall have a part in the inheritance among the brothers.

Proverbs 17.3: 3 The refining pot is for silver, and the furnace for gold,

but Yahweh tests the hearts.

Proverbs 17.4: 4 An evildoer heeds wicked lips.

A liar gives ear to a mischievous tongue.

Proverbs 17.5: 5 Whoever mocks the poor reproaches his Maker.

He who is glad at calamity shall not be unpunished.

Proverbs 17.6: 6 Children’s children are the crown of old men;

the glory of children are their parents.

Proverbs 17.7: 7 Arrogant speech isn’t fitting for a fool,

much less do lying lips fit a prince.

Proverbs 17.8: 8 A bribe is a precious stone in the eyes of him who gives it;

wherever he turns, he prospers.

Proverbs 17.9: 9 He who covers an offense promotes love;

but he who repeats a matter separates best friends.

Proverbs 17.10: 10 A rebuke enters deeper into one who has understanding

than a hundred lashes into a fool.

Proverbs 17.11: 11 An evil man seeks only rebellion;

therefore a cruel messenger shall be sent against him.

Proverbs 17.12: 12 Let a bear robbed of her cubs meet a man,

rather than a fool in his folly.

Proverbs 17.13: 13 Whoever rewards evil for good,

evil shall not depart from his house.

Proverbs 17.14: 14 The beginning of strife is like breaching a dam,

therefore stop contention before quarreling breaks out.

Proverbs 17.15: 15 He who justifies the wicked, and he who condemns the righteous,

both of them alike are an abomination to Yahweh.

Proverbs 17.16: 16 Why is there money in the hand of a fool to buy wisdom,

since he has no understanding?

Proverbs 17.17: 17 A friend loves at all times;

and a brother is born for adversity.

Proverbs 17.18: 18 A man void of understanding strikes hands,

and becomes collateral in the presence of his neighbor.

Proverbs 17.19: 19 He who loves disobedience loves strife.

One who builds a high gate seeks destruction.

Proverbs 17.20: 20 One who has a perverse heart doesn’t find prosperity,

and one who has a deceitful tongue falls into trouble.

Proverbs 17.21: 21 He who becomes the father of a fool grieves.

The father of a fool has no joy.

Proverbs 17.22: 22 A cheerful heart makes good medicine,

but a crushed spirit dries up the bones.

Proverbs 17.23: 23 A wicked man receives a bribe in secret,

to pervert the ways of justice.

Proverbs 17.24: 24 Wisdom is before the face of one who has understanding,

but the eyes of a fool wander to the ends of the earth.

Proverbs 17.25: 25 A foolish son brings grief to his father,

and bitterness to her who bore him.

Proverbs 17.26: 26 Also to punish the righteous is not good,

nor to flog officials for their integrity.

Proverbs 17.27: 27 He who spares his words has knowledge.

He who is even tempered is a man of understanding.

Proverbs 17.28: 28 Even a fool, when he keeps silent, is counted wise.

When he shuts his lips, he is thought to be discerning.

Proverbs 18.0:

18

Proverbs 18.1: 1 A man who isolates himself pursues selfishness,

and defies all sound judgment.

Proverbs 18.2: 2 A fool has no delight in understanding,

but only in revealing his own opinion.

Proverbs 18.3: 3 When wickedness comes, contempt also comes,

and with shame comes disgrace.

Proverbs 18.4: 4 The words of a man’s mouth are like deep waters.

The fountain of wisdom is like a flowing brook.

Proverbs 18.5: 5 To be partial to the faces of the wicked is not good,

nor to deprive the innocent of justice.

Proverbs 18.6: 6 A fool’s lips come into strife,

and his mouth invites beatings.

Proverbs 18.7: 7 A fool’s mouth is his destruction,

and his lips are a snare to his soul.

Proverbs 18.8: 8 The words of a gossip are like dainty morsels:

they go down into a person’s innermost parts.

Proverbs 18.9: 9 One who is slack in his work

is brother to him who is a master of destruction.

Proverbs 18.10: 10 Yahweh’s name is a strong tower:

the righteous run to him, and are safe.

Proverbs 18.11: 11 The rich man’s wealth is his strong city,

like an unscalable wall in his own imagination.

Proverbs 18.12: 12 Before destruction the heart of man is proud,

but before honor is humility.

Proverbs 18.13: 13 He who answers before he hears,

that is folly and shame to him.

Proverbs 18.14: 14 A man’s spirit will sustain him in sickness,

but a crushed spirit, who can bear?

Proverbs 18.15: 15 The heart of the discerning gets knowledge.

The ear of the wise seeks knowledge.

Proverbs 18.16: 16 A man’s gift makes room for him,

and brings him before great men.

Proverbs 18.17: 17 He who pleads his cause first seems right;

until another comes and questions him.

Proverbs 18.18: 18 The lot settles disputes,

and keeps strong ones apart.

Proverbs 18.19: 19 A brother offended is more difficult than a fortified city.

Disputes are like the bars of a fortress.

Proverbs 18.20: 20 A man’s stomach is filled with the fruit of his mouth.

With the harvest of his lips he is satisfied.

Proverbs 18.21: 21 Death and life are in the power of the tongue;

those who love it will eat its fruit.

Proverbs 18.22: 22 Whoever finds a wife finds a good thing,

and obtains favor of Yahweh.

Proverbs 18.23: 23 The poor plead for mercy,

but the rich answer harshly.

Proverbs 18.24: 24 A man of many companions may be ruined,

but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother.

Proverbs 19.0:

19

Proverbs 19.1: 1 Better is the poor who walks in his integrity

than he who is perverse in his lips and is a fool.

Proverbs 19.2: 2 It isn’t good to have zeal without knowledge,

nor being hasty with one’s feet and missing the way.

Proverbs 19.3: 3 The foolishness of man subverts his way;

his heart rages against Yahweh.

Proverbs 19.4: 4 Wealth adds many friends,

but the poor is separated from his friend.

Proverbs 19.5: 5 A false witness shall not be unpunished.

He who pours out lies shall not go free.

Proverbs 19.6: 6 Many will entreat the favor of a ruler,

and everyone is a friend to a man who gives gifts.

Proverbs 19.7: 7 All the relatives of the poor shun him:

how much more do his friends avoid him!

He pursues them with pleas, but they are gone.

Proverbs 19.8: 8 He who gets wisdom loves his own soul.

He who keeps understanding shall find good.

Proverbs 19.9: 9 A false witness shall not be unpunished.

He who utters lies shall perish.

Proverbs 19.10: 10 Delicate living is not appropriate for a fool,

much less for a servant to have rule over princes.

Proverbs 19.11: 11 The discretion of a man makes him slow to anger.

It is his glory to overlook an offense.

Proverbs 19.12: 12 The king’s wrath is like the roaring of a lion,

but his favor is like dew on the grass.

Proverbs 19.13: 13 A foolish son is the calamity of his father.

A wife’s quarrels are a continual dripping.

Proverbs 19.14: 14 House and riches are an inheritance from fathers,

but a prudent wife is from Yahweh.

Proverbs 19.15: 15 Slothfulness casts into a deep sleep.

The idle soul shall suffer hunger.

Proverbs 19.16: 16 He who keeps the commandment keeps his soul,

but he who is contemptuous in his ways shall die.

Proverbs 19.17: 17 He who has pity on the poor lends to Yahweh;

he will reward him.

Proverbs 19.18: 18 Discipline your son, for there is hope;

don’t be a willing party to his death.

Proverbs 19.19: 19 A hot-tempered man must pay the penalty,

for if you rescue him, you must do it again.

Proverbs 19.20: 20 Listen to counsel and receive instruction,

that you may be wise in your latter end.

Proverbs 19.21: 21 There are many plans in a man’s heart,

but Yahweh’s counsel will prevail.

Proverbs 19.22: 22 That which makes a man to be desired is his kindness.

A poor man is better than a liar.

Proverbs 19.23: 23 The fear of Yahweh leads to life, then contentment;

he rests and will not be touched by trouble.

Proverbs 19.24: 24 The sluggard buries his hand in the dish;

he will not so much as bring it to his mouth again.

Proverbs 19.25: 25 Flog a scoffer, and the simple will learn prudence;

rebuke one who has understanding, and he will gain knowledge.

Proverbs 19.26: 26 He who robs his father and drives away his mother,

is a son who causes shame and brings reproach.

Proverbs 19.27: 27 If you stop listening to instruction, my son,

you will stray from the words of knowledge.

Proverbs 19.28: 28 A corrupt witness mocks justice,

and the mouth of the wicked gulps down iniquity.

Proverbs 19.29: 29 Penalties are prepared for scoffers,

and beatings for the backs of fools.

Proverbs 20.0:

20

Proverbs 20.1: 1 Wine is a mocker and beer is a brawler.

Whoever is led astray by them is not wise.

Proverbs 20.2: 2 The terror of a king is like the roaring of a lion.

He who provokes him to anger forfeits his own life.

Proverbs 20.3: 3 It is an honor for a man to keep aloof from strife,

but every fool will be quarreling.

Proverbs 20.4: 4 The sluggard will not plow by reason of the winter;

therefore he shall beg in harvest, and have nothing.

Proverbs 20.5: 5 Counsel in the heart of man is like deep water,

but a man of understanding will draw it out.

Proverbs 20.6: 6 Many men claim to be men of unfailing love,

but who can find a faithful man?

Proverbs 20.7: 7 A righteous man walks in integrity.

Blessed are his children after him.

Proverbs 20.8: 8 A king who sits on the throne of judgment

scatters away all evil with his eyes.

Proverbs 20.9: 9 Who can say, “I have made my heart pure.

I am clean and without sin?”

Proverbs 20.10: 10 Differing weights and differing measures,

both of them alike are an abomination to Yahweh.

Proverbs 20.11: 11 Even a child makes himself known by his doings,

whether his work is pure, and whether it is right.

Proverbs 20.12: 12 The hearing ear, and the seeing eye,

Yahweh has made even both of them.

Proverbs 20.13: 13 Don’t love sleep, lest you come to poverty.

Open your eyes, and you shall be satisfied with bread.

Proverbs 20.14: 14 “It’s no good, it’s no good,” says the buyer;

but when he is gone his way, then he boasts.

Proverbs 20.15: 15 There is gold and abundance of rubies,

but the lips of knowledge are a rare jewel.

Proverbs 20.16: 16 Take the garment of one who puts up collateral for a stranger;

and hold him in pledge for a wayward woman.

Proverbs 20.17: 17 Fraudulent food is sweet to a man,

but afterwards his mouth is filled with gravel.

Proverbs 20.18: 18 Plans are established by advice;

by wise guidance you wage war!

Proverbs 20.19: 19 He who goes about as a tale-bearer reveals secrets;

therefore don’t keep company with him who opens wide his lips.

Proverbs 20.20: 20 Whoever curses his father or his mother,

his lamp shall be put out in blackness of darkness.

Proverbs 20.21: 21 An inheritance quickly gained at the beginning,

won’t be blessed in the end.

Proverbs 20.22: 22 Don’t say, “I will pay back evil.”

Wait for Yahweh, and he will save you.

Proverbs 20.23: 23 Yahweh detests differing weights,

and dishonest scales are not pleasing.

Proverbs 20.24: 24 A man’s steps are from Yahweh;

how then can man understand his way?

Proverbs 20.25: 25 It is a snare to a man to make a rash dedication,

then later to consider his vows.

Proverbs 20.26: 26 A wise king winnows out the wicked,

and drives the threshing wheel over them.

Proverbs 20.27: 27 The spirit of man is Yahweh’s lamp,

searching all his innermost parts.

Proverbs 20.28: 28 Love and faithfulness keep the king safe.

His throne is sustained by love.

Proverbs 20.29: 29 The glory of young men is their strength.

The splendor of old men is their gray hair.

Proverbs 20.30: 30 Wounding blows cleanse away evil,

and beatings purge the innermost parts.

Proverbs 21.0:

21

Proverbs 21.1: 1 The king’s heart is in Yahweh’s hand like the watercourses.

He turns it wherever he desires.

Proverbs 21.2: 2 Every way of a man is right in his own eyes,

but Yahweh weighs the hearts.

Proverbs 21.3: 3 To do righteousness and justice

is more acceptable to Yahweh than sacrifice.

Proverbs 21.4: 4 A high look and a proud heart,

the lamp of the wicked, is sin.

Proverbs 21.5: 5 The plans of the diligent surely lead to profit;

and everyone who is hasty surely rushes to poverty.

Proverbs 21.6: 6 Getting treasures by a lying tongue

is a fleeting vapor for those who seek death.

Proverbs 21.7: 7 The violence of the wicked will drive them away,

because they refuse to do what is right.

Proverbs 21.8: 8 The way of the guilty is devious,

but the conduct of the innocent is upright.

Proverbs 21.9: 9 It is better to dwell in the corner of the housetop

than to share a house with a contentious woman.

Proverbs 21.10: 10 The soul of the wicked desires evil;

his neighbor finds no mercy in his eyes.

Proverbs 21.11: 11 When the mocker is punished, the simple gains wisdom.

When the wise is instructed, he receives knowledge.

Proverbs 21.12: 12 The Righteous One considers the house of the wicked,

and brings the wicked to ruin.

Proverbs 21.13: 13 Whoever stops his ears at the cry of the poor,

he will also cry out, but shall not be heard.

Proverbs 21.14: 14 A gift in secret pacifies anger,

and a bribe in the cloak, strong wrath.

Proverbs 21.15: 15 It is joy to the righteous to do justice;

but it is a destruction to the workers of iniquity.

Proverbs 21.16: 16 The man who wanders out of the way of understanding

shall rest in the assembly of the departed spirits.

Proverbs 21.17: 17 He who loves pleasure will be a poor man.

He who loves wine and oil won’t be rich.

Proverbs 21.18: 18 The wicked is a ransom for the righteous,

the treacherous for the upright.

Proverbs 21.19: 19 It is better to dwell in a desert land,

than with a contentious and fretful woman.

Proverbs 21.20: 20 There is precious treasure and oil in the dwelling of the wise;

but a foolish man swallows it up.

Proverbs 21.21: 21 He who follows after righteousness and kindness

finds life, righteousness, and honor.

Proverbs 21.22: 22 A wise man scales the city of the mighty,

and brings down the strength of its confidence.

Proverbs 21.23: 23 Whoever guards his mouth and his tongue

keeps his soul from troubles.

Proverbs 21.24: 24 The proud and arrogant man—“Scoffer” is his name—

he works in the arrogance of pride.

Proverbs 21.25: 25 The desire of the sluggard kills him,

for his hands refuse to labor.

Proverbs 21.26: 26 There are those who covet greedily all day long;

but the righteous give and don’t withhold.

Proverbs 21.27: 27 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination—

how much more, when he brings it with a wicked mind!

Proverbs 21.28: 28 A false witness will perish.

A man who listens speaks to eternity.

Proverbs 21.29: 29 A wicked man hardens his face;

but as for the upright, he establishes his ways.

Proverbs 21.30: 30 There is no wisdom nor understanding

nor counsel against Yahweh.

Proverbs 21.31: 31 The horse is prepared for the day of battle;

but victory is with Yahweh.

Proverbs 22.0:

22

Proverbs 22.1: 1 A good name is more desirable than great riches,

and loving favor is better than silver and gold.

Proverbs 22.2: 2 The rich and the poor have this in common:

Yahweh is the maker of them all.

Proverbs 22.3: 3 A prudent man sees danger and hides himself;

but the simple pass on, and suffer for it.

Proverbs 22.4: 4 The result of humility and the fear of Yahweh

is wealth, honor, and life.

Proverbs 22.5: 5 Thorns and snares are in the path of the wicked:

whoever guards his soul stays from them.

Proverbs 22.6: 6 Train up a child in the way he should go,

and when he is old he will not depart from it.

Proverbs 22.7: 7 The rich rule over the poor.

The borrower is servant to the lender.

Proverbs 22.8: 8 He who sows wickedness reaps trouble,

and the rod of his fury will be destroyed.

Proverbs 22.9: 9 He who has a generous eye will be blessed;

for he shares his food with the poor.

Proverbs 22.10: 10 Drive out the mocker, and strife will go out;

yes, quarrels and insults will stop.

Proverbs 22.11: 11 He who loves purity of heart and speaks gracefully

is the king’s friend.

Proverbs 22.12: 12 Yahweh’s eyes watch over knowledge;

but he frustrates the words of the unfaithful.

Proverbs 22.13: 13 The sluggard says, “There is a lion outside!

I will be killed in the streets!”

Proverbs 22.14: 14 The mouth of an adulteress is a deep pit.

He who is under Yahweh’s wrath will fall into it.

Proverbs 22.15: 15 Folly is bound up in the heart of a child:

the rod of discipline drives it far from him.

Proverbs 22.16: 16 Whoever oppresses the poor for his own increase and whoever gives to the rich,

both come to poverty.

Proverbs 22.17: 17 Turn your ear, and listen to the words of the wise.

Apply your heart to my teaching.

Proverbs 22.18: 18 For it is a pleasant thing if you keep them within you,

if all of them are ready on your lips.

Proverbs 22.19: 19 I teach you today, even you,

So that your trust may be in Yahweh.

Proverbs 22.20: 20 Haven’t I written to you thirty excellent things

of counsel and knowledge,

Proverbs 22.21: 21 To teach you truth, reliable words,

to give sound answers to the ones who sent you?

Proverbs 22.22: 22 Don’t exploit the poor, because he is poor;

and don’t crush the needy in court;

Proverbs 22.23: 23 for Yahweh will plead their case,

and plunder the life of those who plunder them.

Proverbs 22.24: 24 Don’t befriend a hot-tempered man,

and don’t associate with one who harbors anger:

Proverbs 22.25: 25 lest you learn his ways,

and ensnare your soul.

Proverbs 22.26: 26 Don’t you be one of those who strike hands,

of those who are collateral for debts.

Proverbs 22.27: 27 If you don’t have means to pay,

why should he take away your bed from under you?

Proverbs 22.28: 28 Don’t move the ancient boundary stone

which your fathers have set up.

Proverbs 22.29: 29 Do you see a man skilled in his work?

He will serve kings.

He won’t serve obscure men.

Proverbs 23.0:

23

Proverbs 23.1: 1 When you sit to eat with a ruler,

consider diligently what is before you;

Proverbs 23.2: 2 put a knife to your throat,

if you are a man given to appetite.

Proverbs 23.3: 3 Don’t be desirous of his dainties,

since they are deceitful food.

Proverbs 23.4: 4 Don’t weary yourself to be rich.

In your wisdom, show restraint.

Proverbs 23.5: 5 Why do you set your eyes on that which is not?

For it certainly sprouts wings like an eagle and flies in the sky.

Proverbs 23.6: 6 Don’t eat the food of him who has a stingy eye,

and don’t crave his delicacies:

Proverbs 23.7: 7 for as he thinks about the cost, so he is.

“Eat and drink!” he says to you,

but his heart is not with you.

Proverbs 23.8: 8 The morsel which you have eaten you shall vomit up,

and lose your good words.

Proverbs 23.9: 9 Don’t speak in the ears of a fool,

for he will despise the wisdom of your words.

Proverbs 23.10: 10 Don’t move the ancient boundary stone.

Don’t encroach on the fields of the fatherless,

Proverbs 23.11: 11 for their Defender is strong.

He will plead their case against you.

Proverbs 23.12: 12 Apply your heart to instruction,

and your ears to the words of knowledge.

Proverbs 23.13: 13 Don’t withhold correction from a child.

If you punish him with the rod, he will not die.

Proverbs 23.14: 14 Punish him with the rod,

and save his soul from Sheol.

Proverbs 23.15: 15 My son, if your heart is wise,

then my heart will be glad, even mine.

Proverbs 23.16: 16 Yes, my heart will rejoice

when your lips speak what is right.

Proverbs 23.17: 17 Don’t let your heart envy sinners,

but rather fear Yahweh all day long.

Proverbs 23.18: 18 Indeed surely there is a future hope,

and your hope will not be cut off.

Proverbs 23.19: 19 Listen, my son, and be wise,

and keep your heart on the right path!

Proverbs 23.20: 20 Don’t be among ones drinking too much wine,

or those who gorge themselves on meat:

Proverbs 23.21: 21 for the drunkard and the glutton shall become poor;

and drowsiness clothes them in rags.

Proverbs 23.22: 22 Listen to your father who gave you life,

and don’t despise your mother when she is old.

Proverbs 23.23: 23 Buy the truth, and don’t sell it.

Get wisdom, discipline, and understanding.

Proverbs 23.24: 24 The father of the righteous has great joy.

Whoever fathers a wise child delights in him.

Proverbs 23.25: 25 Let your father and your mother be glad!

Let her who bore you rejoice!

Proverbs 23.26: 26 My son, give me your heart;

and let your eyes keep in my ways.

Proverbs 23.27: 27 For a prostitute is a deep pit;

and a wayward wife is a narrow well.

Proverbs 23.28: 28 Yes, she lies in wait like a robber,

and increases the unfaithful among men.

Proverbs 23.29: 29 Who has woe?

Who has sorrow?

Who has strife?

Who has complaints?

Who has needless bruises?

Who has bloodshot eyes?

Proverbs 23.30: 30 Those who stay long at the wine;

those who go to seek out mixed wine.

Proverbs 23.31: 31 Don’t look at the wine when it is red,

when it sparkles in the cup,

when it goes down smoothly.

Proverbs 23.32: 32 In the end, it bites like a snake,

and poisons like a viper.

Proverbs 23.33: 33 Your eyes will see strange things,

and your mind will imagine confusing things.

Proverbs 23.34: 34 Yes, you will be as he who lies down in the middle of the sea,

or as he who lies on top of the rigging:

Proverbs 23.35: 35 “They hit me, and I was not hurt!

They beat me, and I don’t feel it!

When will I wake up? I can do it again.

I can find another.”

Proverbs 24.0:

24

Proverbs 24.1: 1 Don’t be envious of evil men,

neither desire to be with them;

Proverbs 24.2: 2 for their hearts plot violence

and their lips talk about mischief.

Proverbs 24.3: 3 Through wisdom a house is built;

by understanding it is established;

Proverbs 24.4: 4 by knowledge the rooms are filled

with all rare and beautiful treasure.

Proverbs 24.5: 5 A wise man has great power;

and a knowledgeable man increases strength;

Proverbs 24.6: 6 for by wise guidance you wage your war;

and victory is in many advisors.

Proverbs 24.7: 7 Wisdom is too high for a fool.

He doesn’t open his mouth in the gate.

Proverbs 24.8: 8 One who plots to do evil

will be called a schemer.

Proverbs 24.9: 9 The schemes of folly are sin.

The mocker is detested by men.

Proverbs 24.10: 10 If you falter in the time of trouble,

your strength is small.

Proverbs 24.11: 11 Rescue those who are being led away to death!

Indeed, hold back those who are staggering to the slaughter!

Proverbs 24.12: 12 If you say, “Behold, we didn’t know this,”

doesn’t he who weighs the hearts consider it?

He who keeps your soul, doesn’t he know it?

Shall he not render to every man according to his work?

Proverbs 24.13: 13 My son, eat honey, for it is good,

the droppings of the honeycomb, which are sweet to your taste;

Proverbs 24.14: 14 so you shall know wisdom to be to your soul.

If you have found it, then there will be a reward:

Your hope will not be cut off.

Proverbs 24.15: 15 Don’t lay in wait, wicked man, against the habitation of the righteous.

Don’t destroy his resting place;

Proverbs 24.16: 16 for a righteous man falls seven times and rises up again;

but the wicked are overthrown by calamity.

Proverbs 24.17: 17 Don’t rejoice when your enemy falls.

Don’t let your heart be glad when he is overthrown,

Proverbs 24.18: 18 lest Yahweh see it, and it displease him,

and he turn away his wrath from him.

Proverbs 24.19: 19 Don’t fret yourself because of evildoers,

neither be envious of the wicked;

Proverbs 24.20: 20 for there will be no reward to the evil man.

The lamp of the wicked will be snuffed out.

Proverbs 24.21: 21 My son, fear Yahweh and the king.

Don’t join those who are rebellious;

Proverbs 24.22: 22 for their calamity will rise suddenly.

Who knows what destruction may come from them both?

Proverbs 24.23: 23 These also are sayings of the wise.

To show partiality in judgment is not good.

Proverbs 24.24: 24 He who says to the wicked, “You are righteous,”

peoples will curse him, and nations will abhor him—

Proverbs 24.25: 25 but it will go well with those who convict the guilty,

and a rich blessing will come on them.

Proverbs 24.26: 26 An honest answer

is like a kiss on the lips.

Proverbs 24.27: 27 Prepare your work outside,

and get your fields ready.

Afterwards, build your house.

Proverbs 24.28: 28 Don’t be a witness against your neighbor without cause.

Don’t deceive with your lips.

Proverbs 24.29: 29 Don’t say, “I will do to him as he has done to me;

I will repay the man according to his work.”

Proverbs 24.30: 30 I went by the field of the sluggard,

by the vineyard of the man void of understanding:

Proverbs 24.31: 31 Behold, it was all grown over with thorns.

Its surface was covered with nettles,

and its stone wall was broken down.

Proverbs 24.32: 32 Then I saw, and considered well.

I saw, and received instruction:

Proverbs 24.33: 33 a little sleep, a little slumber,

a little folding of the hands to sleep,

Proverbs 24.34: 34 so your poverty will come as a robber

and your want as an armed man.

Proverbs 25.0:

25

Proverbs 25.1: 1 These also are proverbs of Solomon, which the men of Hezekiah king of Judah copied out.

Proverbs 25.2: 2 It is the glory of God to conceal a thing,

but the glory of kings is to search out a matter.

Proverbs 25.3: 3 As the heavens for height, and the earth for depth,

so the hearts of kings are unsearchable.

Proverbs 25.4: 4 Take away the dross from the silver,

and material comes out for the refiner;

Proverbs 25.5: 5 Take away the wicked from the king’s presence,

and his throne will be established in righteousness.

Proverbs 25.6: 6 Don’t exalt yourself in the presence of the king,

or claim a place among great men;

Proverbs 25.7: 7 for it is better that it be said to you, “Come up here,”

than that you should be put lower in the presence of the prince,

whom your eyes have seen.

Proverbs 25.8: 8 Don’t be hasty in bringing charges to court.

What will you do in the end when your neighbor shames you?

Proverbs 25.9: 9 Debate your case with your neighbor,

and don’t betray the confidence of another,

Proverbs 25.10: 10 lest one who hears it put you to shame,

and your bad reputation never depart.

Proverbs 25.11: 11 A word fitly spoken

is like apples of gold in settings of silver.

Proverbs 25.12: 12 As an earring of gold, and an ornament of fine gold,

so is a wise reprover to an obedient ear.

Proverbs 25.13: 13 As the cold of snow in the time of harvest,

so is a faithful messenger to those who send him;

for he refreshes the soul of his masters.

Proverbs 25.14: 14 As clouds and wind without rain,

so is he who boasts of gifts deceptively.

Proverbs 25.15: 15 By patience a ruler is persuaded.

A soft tongue breaks the bone.

Proverbs 25.16: 16 Have you found honey?

Eat as much as is sufficient for you,

lest you eat too much, and vomit it.

Proverbs 25.17: 17 Let your foot be seldom in your neighbor’s house,

lest he be weary of you, and hate you.

Proverbs 25.18: 18 A man who gives false testimony against his neighbor

is like a club, a sword, or a sharp arrow.

Proverbs 25.19: 19 Confidence in someone unfaithful in time of trouble

is like a bad tooth or a lame foot.

Proverbs 25.20: 20 As one who takes away a garment in cold weather,

or vinegar on soda,

so is one who sings songs to a heavy heart.

Proverbs 25.21: 21 If your enemy is hungry, give him food to eat.

If he is thirsty, give him water to drink;

Proverbs 25.22: 22 for you will heap coals of fire on his head,

and Yahweh will reward you.

Proverbs 25.23: 23 The north wind produces rain;

so a backbiting tongue brings an angry face.

Proverbs 25.24: 24 It is better to dwell in the corner of the housetop

than to share a house with a contentious woman.

Proverbs 25.25: 25 Like cold water to a thirsty soul,

so is good news from a far country.

Proverbs 25.26: 26 Like a muddied spring and a polluted well,

so is a righteous man who gives way before the wicked.

Proverbs 25.27: 27 It is not good to eat much honey,

nor is it honorable to seek one’s own honor.

Proverbs 25.28: 28 Like a city that is broken down and without walls

is a man whose spirit is without restraint.

Proverbs 26.0:

26

Proverbs 26.1: 1 Like snow in summer, and as rain in harvest,

so honor is not fitting for a fool.

Proverbs 26.2: 2 Like a fluttering sparrow,

like a darting swallow,

so the undeserved curse doesn’t come to rest.

Proverbs 26.3: 3 A whip is for the horse,

a bridle for the donkey,

and a rod for the back of fools!

Proverbs 26.4: 4 Don’t answer a fool according to his folly,

lest you also be like him.

Proverbs 26.5: 5 Answer a fool according to his folly,

lest he be wise in his own eyes.

Proverbs 26.6: 6 One who sends a message by the hand of a fool

is cutting off feet and drinking violence.

Proverbs 26.7: 7 Like the legs of the lame that hang loose,

so is a parable in the mouth of fools.

Proverbs 26.8: 8 As one who binds a stone in a sling,

so is he who gives honor to a fool.

Proverbs 26.9: 9 Like a thorn bush that goes into the hand of a drunkard,

so is a parable in the mouth of fools.

Proverbs 26.10: 10 As an archer who wounds all,

so is he who hires a fool

or he who hires those who pass by.

Proverbs 26.11: 11 As a dog that returns to his vomit,

so is a fool who repeats his folly.

Proverbs 26.12: 12 Do you see a man wise in his own eyes?

There is more hope for a fool than for him.

Proverbs 26.13: 13 The sluggard says, “There is a lion in the road!

A fierce lion roams the streets!”

Proverbs 26.14: 14 As the door turns on its hinges,

so does the sluggard on his bed.

Proverbs 26.15: 15 The sluggard buries his hand in the dish.

He is too lazy to bring it back to his mouth.

Proverbs 26.16: 16 The sluggard is wiser in his own eyes

than seven men who answer with discretion.

Proverbs 26.17: 17 Like one who grabs a dog’s ears

is one who passes by and meddles in a quarrel not his own.

Proverbs 26.18: 18 Like a madman who shoots torches, arrows, and death,

Proverbs 26.19: 19 is the man who deceives his neighbor and says, “Am I not joking?”

Proverbs 26.20: 20 For lack of wood a fire goes out.

Without gossip, a quarrel dies down.

Proverbs 26.21: 21 As coals are to hot embers,

and wood to fire,

so is a contentious man to kindling strife.

Proverbs 26.22: 22 The words of a whisperer are as dainty morsels,

they go down into the innermost parts.

Proverbs 26.23: 23 Like silver dross on an earthen vessel

are the lips of a fervent one with an evil heart.

Proverbs 26.24: 24 A malicious man disguises himself with his lips,

but he harbors evil in his heart.

Proverbs 26.25: 25 When his speech is charming, don’t believe him,

for there are seven abominations in his heart.

Proverbs 26.26: 26 His malice may be concealed by deception,

but his wickedness will be exposed in the assembly.

Proverbs 26.27: 27 Whoever digs a pit shall fall into it.

Whoever rolls a stone, it will come back on him.

Proverbs 26.28: 28 A lying tongue hates those it hurts;

and a flattering mouth works ruin.

Proverbs 27.0:

27

Proverbs 27.1: 1 Don’t boast about tomorrow;

for you don’t know what a day may bring.

Proverbs 27.2: 2 Let another man praise you,

and not your own mouth;

a stranger, and not your own lips.

Proverbs 27.3: 3 A stone is heavy,

and sand is a burden;

but a fool’s provocation is heavier than both.

Proverbs 27.4: 4 Wrath is cruel,

and anger is overwhelming;

but who is able to stand before jealousy?

Proverbs 27.5: 5 Better is open rebuke

than hidden love.

Proverbs 27.6: 6 The wounds of a friend are faithful,

although the kisses of an enemy are profuse.

Proverbs 27.7: 7 A full soul loathes a honeycomb;

but to a hungry soul, every bitter thing is sweet.

Proverbs 27.8: 8 As a bird that wanders from her nest,

so is a man who wanders from his home.

Proverbs 27.9: 9 Perfume and incense bring joy to the heart;

so does earnest counsel from a man’s friend.

Proverbs 27.10: 10 Don’t forsake your friend and your father’s friend.

Don’t go to your brother’s house in the day of your disaster.

A neighbor who is near is better than a distant brother.

Proverbs 27.11: 11 Be wise, my son,

and bring joy to my heart,

then I can answer my tormentor.

Proverbs 27.12: 12 A prudent man sees danger and takes refuge;

but the simple pass on, and suffer for it.

Proverbs 27.13: 13 Take his garment when he puts up collateral for a stranger.

Hold it for a wayward woman!

Proverbs 27.14: 14 He who blesses his neighbor with a loud voice early in the morning,

it will be taken as a curse by him.

Proverbs 27.15: 15 A continual dropping on a rainy day

and a contentious wife are alike:

Proverbs 27.16: 16 restraining her is like restraining the wind,

or like grasping oil in his right hand.

Proverbs 27.17: 17 Iron sharpens iron;

so a man sharpens his friend’s countenance.

Proverbs 27.18: 18 Whoever tends the fig tree shall eat its fruit.

He who looks after his master shall be honored.

Proverbs 27.19: 19 Like water reflects a face,

so a man’s heart reflects the man.

Proverbs 27.20: 20 Sheol and Abaddon are never satisfied;

and a man’s eyes are never satisfied.

Proverbs 27.21: 21 The crucible is for silver,

and the furnace for gold;

but man is refined by his praise.

Proverbs 27.22: 22 Though you grind a fool in a mortar with a pestle along with grain,

yet his foolishness will not be removed from him.

Proverbs 27.23: 23 Know well the state of your flocks,

and pay attention to your herds:

Proverbs 27.24: 24 for riches are not forever,

nor does the crown endure to all generations.

Proverbs 27.25: 25 The hay is removed, and the new growth appears,

the grasses of the hills are gathered in.

Proverbs 27.26: 26 The lambs are for your clothing,

and the goats are the price of a field.

Proverbs 27.27: 27 There will be plenty of goats’ milk for your food,

for your family’s food,

and for the nourishment of your servant girls.

Proverbs 28.0:

28

Proverbs 28.1: 1 The wicked flee when no one pursues;

but the righteous are as bold as a lion.

Proverbs 28.2: 2 In rebellion, a land has many rulers,

but order is maintained by a man of understanding and knowledge.

Proverbs 28.3: 3 A needy man who oppresses the poor

is like a driving rain which leaves no crops.

Proverbs 28.4: 4 Those who forsake the law praise the wicked;

but those who keep the law contend with them.

Proverbs 28.5: 5 Evil men don’t understand justice;

but those who seek Yahweh understand it fully.

Proverbs 28.6: 6 Better is the poor who walks in his integrity,

than he who is perverse in his ways, and he is rich.

Proverbs 28.7: 7 Whoever keeps the law is a wise son;

but he who is a companion of gluttons shames his father.

Proverbs 28.8: 8 He who increases his wealth by excessive interest

gathers it for one who has pity on the poor.

Proverbs 28.9: 9 He who turns away his ear from hearing the law,

even his prayer is an abomination.

Proverbs 28.10: 10 Whoever causes the upright to go astray in an evil way,

he will fall into his own trap;

but the blameless will inherit good.

Proverbs 28.11: 11 The rich man is wise in his own eyes;

but the poor who has understanding sees through him.

Proverbs 28.12: 12 When the righteous triumph, there is great glory;

but when the wicked rise, men hide themselves.

Proverbs 28.13: 13 He who conceals his sins doesn’t prosper,

but whoever confesses and renounces them finds mercy.

Proverbs 28.14: 14 Blessed is the man who always fears;

but one who hardens his heart falls into trouble.

Proverbs 28.15: 15 As a roaring lion or a charging bear,

so is a wicked ruler over helpless people.

Proverbs 28.16: 16 A tyrannical ruler lacks judgment.

One who hates ill-gotten gain will have long days.

Proverbs 28.17: 17 A man who is tormented by life blood will be a fugitive until death;

no one will support him.

Proverbs 28.18: 18 Whoever walks blamelessly is kept safe;

but one with perverse ways will fall suddenly.

Proverbs 28.19: 19 One who works his land will have an abundance of food;

but one who chases fantasies will have his fill of poverty.

Proverbs 28.20: 20 A faithful man is rich with blessings;

but one who is eager to be rich will not go unpunished.

Proverbs 28.21: 21 To show partiality is not good;

yet a man will do wrong for a piece of bread.

Proverbs 28.22: 22 A stingy man hurries after riches,

and doesn’t know that poverty waits for him.

Proverbs 28.23: 23 One who rebukes a man will afterward find more favor

than one who flatters with the tongue.

Proverbs 28.24: 24 Whoever robs his father or his mother and says, “It’s not wrong,”

is a partner with a destroyer.

Proverbs 28.25: 25 One who is greedy stirs up strife;

but one who trusts in Yahweh will prosper.

Proverbs 28.26: 26 One who trusts in himself is a fool;

but one who walks in wisdom is kept safe.

Proverbs 28.27: 27 One who gives to the poor has no lack;

but one who closes his eyes will have many curses.

Proverbs 28.28: 28 When the wicked rise, men hide themselves;

but when they perish, the righteous thrive.

Proverbs 29.0:

29

Proverbs 29.1: 1 He who is often rebuked and stiffens his neck

will be destroyed suddenly, with no remedy.

Proverbs 29.2: 2 When the righteous thrive, the people rejoice;

but when the wicked rule, the people groan.

Proverbs 29.3: 3 Whoever loves wisdom brings joy to his father;

but a companion of prostitutes squanders his wealth.

Proverbs 29.4: 4 The king by justice makes the land stable,

but he who takes bribes tears it down.

Proverbs 29.5: 5 A man who flatters his neighbor

spreads a net for his feet.

Proverbs 29.6: 6 An evil man is snared by his sin,

but the righteous can sing and be glad.

Proverbs 29.7: 7 The righteous care about justice for the poor.

The wicked aren’t concerned about knowledge.

Proverbs 29.8: 8 Mockers stir up a city,

but wise men turn away anger.

Proverbs 29.9: 9 If a wise man goes to court with a foolish man,

the fool rages or scoffs, and there is no peace.

Proverbs 29.10: 10 The bloodthirsty hate a man of integrity;

and they seek the life of the upright.

Proverbs 29.11: 11 A fool vents all of his anger,

but a wise man brings himself under control.

Proverbs 29.12: 12 If a ruler listens to lies,

all of his officials are wicked.

Proverbs 29.13: 13 The poor man and the oppressor have this in common:

Yahweh gives sight to the eyes of both.

Proverbs 29.14: 14 The king who fairly judges the poor,

his throne shall be established forever.

Proverbs 29.15: 15 The rod of correction gives wisdom,

but a child left to himself causes shame to his mother.

Proverbs 29.16: 16 When the wicked increase, sin increases;

but the righteous will see their downfall.

Proverbs 29.17: 17 Correct your son, and he will give you peace;

yes, he will bring delight to your soul.

Proverbs 29.18: 18 Where there is no revelation, the people cast off restraint;

but one who keeps the law is blessed.

Proverbs 29.19: 19 A servant can’t be corrected by words.

Though he understands, yet he will not respond.

Proverbs 29.20: 20 Do you see a man who is hasty in his words?

There is more hope for a fool than for him.

Proverbs 29.21: 21 He who pampers his servant from youth

will have him become a son in the end.

Proverbs 29.22: 22 An angry man stirs up strife,

and a wrathful man abounds in sin.

Proverbs 29.23: 23 A man’s pride brings him low,

but one of lowly spirit gains honor.

Proverbs 29.24: 24 Whoever is an accomplice of a thief is an enemy of his own soul.

He takes an oath, but dares not testify.

Proverbs 29.25: 25 The fear of man proves to be a snare,

but whoever puts his trust in Yahweh is kept safe.

Proverbs 29.26: 26 Many seek the ruler’s favor,

but a man’s justice comes from Yahweh.

Proverbs 29.27: 27 A dishonest man detests the righteous,

and the upright in their ways detest the wicked.

Proverbs 30.0:

30

Proverbs 30.1: 1 The words of Agur the son of Jakeh; the revelation:

the man says to Ithiel,

to Ithiel and Ucal:

Proverbs 30.2: 2 “Surely I am the most ignorant man,

and don’t have a man’s understanding.

Proverbs 30.3: 3 I have not learned wisdom,

neither do I have the knowledge of the Holy One.

Proverbs 30.4: 4 Who has ascended up into heaven, and descended?

Who has gathered the wind in his fists?

Who has bound the waters in his garment?

Who has established all the ends of the earth?

What is his name, and what is his son’s name, if you know?

Proverbs 30.5: 5 “Every word of God is flawless.

He is a shield to those who take refuge in him.

Proverbs 30.6: 6 Don’t you add to his words,

lest he reprove you, and you be found a liar.

Proverbs 30.7: 7 “Two things I have asked of you.

Don’t deny me before I die.

Proverbs 30.8: 8 Remove far from me falsehood and lies.

Give me neither poverty nor riches.

Feed me with the food that is needful for me,

Proverbs 30.9: 9 lest I be full, deny you, and say, ‘Who is Yahweh?’

or lest I be poor, and steal,

and so dishonor the name of my God.

Proverbs 30.10: 10 “Don’t slander a servant to his master,

lest he curse you, and you be held guilty.

Proverbs 30.11: 11 There is a generation that curses their father,

and doesn’t bless their mother.

Proverbs 30.12: 12 There is a generation that is pure in their own eyes,

yet are not washed from their filthiness.

Proverbs 30.13: 13 There is a generation, oh how lofty are their eyes!

Their eyelids are lifted up.

Proverbs 30.14: 14 There is a generation whose teeth are like swords,

and their jaws like knives,

to devour the poor from the earth, and the needy from among men.

Proverbs 30.15: 15 “The leech has two daughters:

‘Give, give.’

“There are three things that are never satisfied;

four that don’t say, ‘Enough:’

Proverbs 30.16: 16 Sheol,

the barren womb;

the earth that is not satisfied with water;

and the fire that doesn’t say, ‘Enough.’

Proverbs 30.17: 17 “The eye that mocks at his father,

and scorns obedience to his mother:

the ravens of the valley shall pick it out,

the young eagles shall eat it.

Proverbs 30.18: 18 “There are three things which are too amazing for me,

four which I don’t understand:

Proverbs 30.19: 19 The way of an eagle in the air,

the way of a serpent on a rock,

the way of a ship in the middle of the sea,

and the way of a man with a maiden.

Proverbs 30.20: 20 “So is the way of an adulterous woman:

She eats and wipes her mouth,

and says, ‘I have done nothing wrong.’

Proverbs 30.21: 21 “For three things the earth trembles,

and under four, it can’t bear up:

Proverbs 30.22: 22 For a servant when he is king,

a fool when he is filled with food,

Proverbs 30.23: 23 for an unloved woman when she is married,

and a servant who is heir to her mistress.

Proverbs 30.24: 24 “There are four things which are little on the earth,

but they are exceedingly wise:

Proverbs 30.25: 25 The ants are not a strong people,

yet they provide their food in the summer.

Proverbs 30.26: 26 The hyraxes are but a feeble folk,

yet make they their houses in the rocks.

Proverbs 30.27: 27 The locusts have no king,

yet they advance in ranks.

Proverbs 30.28: 28 You can catch a lizard with your hands,

yet it is in kings’ palaces.

Proverbs 30.29: 29 “There are three things which are stately in their march,

four which are stately in going:

Proverbs 30.30: 30 The lion, which is mightiest among animals,

and doesn’t turn away for any;

Proverbs 30.31: 31 the greyhound;

the male goat;

and the king against whom there is no rising up.

Proverbs 30.32: 32 “If you have done foolishly in lifting up yourself,

or if you have thought evil,

put your hand over your mouth.

Proverbs 30.33: 33 For as the churning of milk produces butter,

and the wringing of the nose produces blood;

so the forcing of wrath produces strife.”

Proverbs 31.0:

31

Proverbs 31.1: 1 The words of king Lemuel; the revelation which his mother taught him.

Proverbs 31.2: 2 “Oh, my son!

Oh, son of my womb!

Oh, son of my vows!

Proverbs 31.3: 3 Don’t give your strength to women,

nor your ways to that which destroys kings.

Proverbs 31.4: 4 It is not for kings, Lemuel,

it is not for kings to drink wine,

nor for princes to say, ‘Where is strong drink?’

Proverbs 31.5: 5 lest they drink, and forget the law,

and pervert the justice due to anyone who is afflicted.

Proverbs 31.6: 6 Give strong drink to him who is ready to perish,

and wine to the bitter in soul.

Proverbs 31.7: 7 Let him drink, and forget his poverty,

and remember his misery no more.

Proverbs 31.8: 8 Open your mouth for the mute,

in the cause of all who are left desolate.

Proverbs 31.9: 9 Open your mouth, judge righteously,

and serve justice to the poor and needy.”

Proverbs 31.10: 10 Who can find a worthy woman?

For her price is far above rubies.

Proverbs 31.11: 11 The heart of her husband trusts in her.

He shall have no lack of gain.

Proverbs 31.12: 12 She does him good, and not harm,

all the days of her life.

Proverbs 31.13: 13 She seeks wool and flax,

and works eagerly with her hands.

Proverbs 31.14: 14 She is like the merchant ships.

She brings her bread from afar.

Proverbs 31.15: 15 She rises also while it is yet night,

gives food to her household,

and portions for her servant girls.

Proverbs 31.16: 16 She considers a field, and buys it.

With the fruit of her hands, she plants a vineyard.

Proverbs 31.17: 17 She arms her waist with strength,

and makes her arms strong.

Proverbs 31.18: 18 She perceives that her merchandise is profitable.

Her lamp doesn’t go out by night.

Proverbs 31.19: 19 She lays her hands to the distaff,

and her hands hold the spindle.

Proverbs 31.20: 20 She opens her arms to the poor;

yes, she extends her hands to the needy.

Proverbs 31.21: 21 She is not afraid of the snow for her household;

for all her household are clothed with scarlet.

Proverbs 31.22: 22 She makes for herself carpets of tapestry.

Her clothing is fine linen and purple.

Proverbs 31.23: 23 Her husband is respected in the gates,

when he sits among the elders of the land.

Proverbs 31.24: 24 She makes linen garments and sells them,

and delivers sashes to the merchant.

Proverbs 31.25: 25 Strength and dignity are her clothing.

She laughs at the time to come.

Proverbs 31.26: 26 She opens her mouth with wisdom.

Kind instruction is on her tongue.

Proverbs 31.27: 27 She looks well to the ways of her household,

and doesn’t eat the bread of idleness.

Proverbs 31.28: 28 Her children rise up and call her blessed.

Her husband also praises her:

Proverbs 31.29: 29 “Many women do noble things,

but you excel them all.”

Proverbs 31.30: 30 Charm is deceitful, and beauty is vain;

but a woman who fears Yahweh, she shall be praised.

Proverbs 31.31: 31 Give her of the fruit of her hands!

Let her works praise her in the gates!

Song of Solomon 0.0:

The Song of Solomon

Song of Solomon 1.0:

1

Song of Solomon 1.1: 1 The Song of songs, which is Solomon’s.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 1.2: 2 Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth;

for your love is better than wine.

Song of Solomon 1.3: 3 Your oils have a pleasing fragrance.

Your name is oil poured out,

therefore the virgins love you.

Song of Solomon 1.4: 4 Take me away with you.

Let’s hurry.

The king has brought me into his rooms.

Friends

We will be glad and rejoice in you.

We will praise your love more than wine!

Beloved

They are right to love you.

Song of Solomon 1.5: 5 I am dark, but lovely,

you daughters of Jerusalem,

like Kedar’s tents,

like Solomon’s curtains.

Song of Solomon 1.6: 6 Don’t stare at me because I am dark,

because the sun has scorched me.

My mother’s sons were angry with me.

They made me keeper of the vineyards.

I haven’t kept my own vineyard.

Song of Solomon 1.7: 7 Tell me, you whom my soul loves,

where you graze your flock,

where you rest them at noon;

for why should I be as one who is veiled

beside the flocks of your companions?

Lover

Song of Solomon 1.8: 8 If you don’t know, most beautiful among women,

follow the tracks of the sheep.

Graze your young goats beside the shepherds’ tents.

Song of Solomon 1.9: 9 I have compared you, my love,

to a steed in Pharaoh’s chariots.

Song of Solomon 1.10: 10 Your cheeks are beautiful with earrings,

your neck with strings of jewels.

Friends

Song of Solomon 1.11: 11 We will make you earrings of gold,

with studs of silver.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 1.12: 12 While the king sat at his table,

my perfume spread its fragrance.

Song of Solomon 1.13: 13 My beloved is to me a sachet of myrrh,

that lies between my breasts.

Song of Solomon 1.14: 14 My beloved is to me a cluster of henna blossoms

from the vineyards of En Gedi.

Lover

Song of Solomon 1.15: 15 Behold, you are beautiful, my love.

Behold, you are beautiful.

Your eyes are like doves.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 1.16: 16 Behold, you are beautiful, my beloved, yes, pleasant;

and our couch is verdant.

Lover

Song of Solomon 1.17: 17 The beams of our house are cedars.

Our rafters are firs.

Song of Solomon 2.0:

2

Beloved

Song of Solomon 2.1: 1 I am a rose of Sharon,

a lily of the valleys.

Lover

Song of Solomon 2.2: 2 As a lily among thorns,

so is my love among the daughters.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 2.3: 3 As the apple tree among the trees of the wood,

so is my beloved among the sons.

I sat down under his shadow with great delight,

his fruit was sweet to my taste.

Song of Solomon 2.4: 4 He brought me to the banquet hall.

His banner over me is love.

Song of Solomon 2.5: 5 Strengthen me with raisins,

refresh me with apples;

for I am faint with love.

Song of Solomon 2.6: 6 His left hand is under my head.

His right hand embraces me.

Song of Solomon 2.7: 7 I adjure you, daughters of Jerusalem,

by the roes, or by the hinds of the field,

that you not stir up, nor awaken love,

until it so desires.

Song of Solomon 2.8: 8 The voice of my beloved!

Behold, he comes,

leaping on the mountains,

skipping on the hills.

Song of Solomon 2.9: 9 My beloved is like a roe or a young deer.

Behold, he stands behind our wall!

He looks in at the windows.

He glances through the lattice.

Song of Solomon 2.10: 10 My beloved spoke, and said to me,

“Rise up, my love, my beautiful one, and come away.

Song of Solomon 2.11: 11 For behold, the winter is past.

The rain is over and gone.

Song of Solomon 2.12: 12 The flowers appear on the earth.

The time of the singing has come,

and the voice of the turtledove is heard in our land.

Song of Solomon 2.13: 13 The fig tree ripens her green figs.

The vines are in blossom.

They give out their fragrance.

Arise, my love, my beautiful one,

and come away.”

Lover

Song of Solomon 2.14: 14 My dove in the clefts of the rock,

in the hiding places of the mountainside,

let me see your face.

let me hear your voice;

for your voice is sweet and your face is lovely.

Song of Solomon 2.15: 15 Catch for us the foxes,

the little foxes that plunder the vineyards;

for our vineyards are in blossom.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 2.16: 16 My beloved is mine, and I am his.

He browses among the lilies.

Song of Solomon 2.17: 17 Until the day is cool, and the shadows flee away,

turn, my beloved,

and be like a roe or a young deer on the mountains of Bether.

Song of Solomon 3.0:

3

Song of Solomon 3.1: 1 By night on my bed,

I sought him whom my soul loves.

I sought him, but I didn’t find him.

Song of Solomon 3.2: 2 I will get up now, and go about the city;

in the streets and in the squares I will seek him whom my soul loves.

I sought him, but I didn’t find him.

Song of Solomon 3.3: 3 The watchmen who go about the city found me;

“Have you seen him whom my soul loves?”

Song of Solomon 3.4: 4 I had scarcely passed from them,

when I found him whom my soul loves.

I held him, and would not let him go,

until I had brought him into my mother’s house,

into the room of her who conceived me.

Song of Solomon 3.5: 5 I adjure you, daughters of Jerusalem,

by the roes, or by the hinds of the field,

that you not stir up nor awaken love,

until it so desires.

Song of Solomon 3.6: 6 Who is this who comes up from the wilderness like pillars of smoke,

perfumed with myrrh and frankincense,

with all spices of the merchant?

Song of Solomon 3.7: 7 Behold, it is Solomon’s carriage!

Sixty mighty men are around it,

of the mighty men of Israel.

Song of Solomon 3.8: 8 They all handle the sword, and are expert in war.

Every man has his sword on his thigh,

because of fear in the night.

Song of Solomon 3.9: 9 King Solomon made himself a carriage

of the wood of Lebanon.

Song of Solomon 3.10: 10 He made its pillars of silver,

its bottom of gold, its seat of purple,

the middle of it being paved with love,

from the daughters of Jerusalem.

Song of Solomon 3.11: 11 Go out, you daughters of Zion, and see king Solomon,

with the crown with which his mother has crowned him,

in the day of his weddings,

in the day of the gladness of his heart.

Song of Solomon 4.0:

4

Lover

Song of Solomon 4.1: 1 Behold, you are beautiful, my love.

Behold, you are beautiful.

Your eyes are like doves behind your veil.

Your hair is as a flock of goats,

that descend from Mount Gilead.

Song of Solomon 4.2: 2 Your teeth are like a newly shorn flock,

which have come up from the washing,

where every one of them has twins.

None is bereaved among them.

Song of Solomon 4.3: 3 Your lips are like scarlet thread.

Your mouth is lovely.

Your temples are like a piece of a pomegranate behind your veil.

Song of Solomon 4.4: 4 Your neck is like David’s tower built for an armory,

on which a thousand shields hang,

all the shields of the mighty men.

Song of Solomon 4.5: 5 Your two breasts are like two fawns

that are twins of a roe,

which feed among the lilies.

Song of Solomon 4.6: 6 Until the day is cool, and the shadows flee away,

I will go to the mountain of myrrh,

to the hill of frankincense.

Song of Solomon 4.7: 7 You are all beautiful, my love.

There is no spot in you.

Song of Solomon 4.8: 8 Come with me from Lebanon, my bride,

with me from Lebanon.

Look from the top of Amana,

from the top of Senir and Hermon,

from the lions’ dens,

from the mountains of the leopards.

Song of Solomon 4.9: 9 You have ravished my heart, my sister, my bride.

You have ravished my heart with one of your eyes,

with one chain of your neck.

Song of Solomon 4.10: 10 How beautiful is your love, my sister, my bride!

How much better is your love than wine,

the fragrance of your perfumes than all kinds of spices!

Song of Solomon 4.11: 11 Your lips, my bride, drip like the honeycomb.

Honey and milk are under your tongue.

The smell of your garments is like the smell of Lebanon.

Song of Solomon 4.12: 12 My sister, my bride, is a locked up garden;

a locked up spring,

a sealed fountain.

Song of Solomon 4.13: 13 Your shoots are an orchard of pomegranates, with precious fruits,

henna with spikenard plants,

Song of Solomon 4.14: 14 spikenard and saffron,

calamus and cinnamon, with every kind of incense tree;

myrrh and aloes, with all the best spices,

Song of Solomon 4.15: 15 a fountain of gardens,

a well of living waters,

flowing streams from Lebanon.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 4.16: 16 Awake, north wind, and come, you south!

Blow on my garden, that its spices may flow out.

Let my beloved come into his garden,

and taste his precious fruits.

Song of Solomon 5.0:

5

Lover

Song of Solomon 5.1: 1 I have come into my garden, my sister, my bride.

I have gathered my myrrh with my spice;

I have eaten my honeycomb with my honey;

I have drunk my wine with my milk.

Friends

Eat, friends!

Drink, yes, drink abundantly, beloved.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 5.2: 2 I was asleep, but my heart was awake.

It is the voice of my beloved who knocks:

“Open to me, my sister, my love, my dove, my undefiled;

for my head is filled with dew,

and my hair with the dampness of the night.”

Song of Solomon 5.3: 3 I have taken off my robe. Indeed, must I put it on?

I have washed my feet. Indeed, must I soil them?

Song of Solomon 5.4: 4 My beloved thrust his hand in through the latch opening.

My heart pounded for him.

Song of Solomon 5.5: 5 I rose up to open for my beloved.

My hands dripped with myrrh,

my fingers with liquid myrrh,

on the handles of the lock.

Song of Solomon 5.6: 6 I opened to my beloved;

but my beloved left, and had gone away.

My heart went out when he spoke.

I looked for him, but I didn’t find him.

I called him, but he didn’t answer.

Song of Solomon 5.7: 7 The watchmen who go about the city found me.

They beat me.

They bruised me.

The keepers of the walls took my cloak away from me.

Song of Solomon 5.8: 8 I adjure you, daughters of Jerusalem,

If you find my beloved,

that you tell him that I am faint with love.

Friends

Song of Solomon 5.9: 9 How is your beloved better than another beloved,

you fairest among women?

How is your beloved better than another beloved,

that you do so adjure us?

Beloved

Song of Solomon 5.10: 10 My beloved is white and ruddy.

The best among ten thousand.

Song of Solomon 5.11: 11 His head is like the purest gold.

His hair is bushy, black as a raven.

Song of Solomon 5.12: 12 His eyes are like doves beside the water brooks,

washed with milk, mounted like jewels.

Song of Solomon 5.13: 13 His cheeks are like a bed of spices with towers of perfumes.

His lips are like lilies, dropping liquid myrrh.

Song of Solomon 5.14: 14 His hands are like rings of gold set with beryl.

His body is like ivory work overlaid with sapphires.

Song of Solomon 5.15: 15 His legs are like pillars of marble set on sockets of fine gold.

His appearance is like Lebanon, excellent as the cedars.

Song of Solomon 5.16: 16 His mouth is sweetness;

yes, he is altogether lovely.

This is my beloved, and this is my friend,

daughters of Jerusalem.

Song of Solomon 6.0:

6

Friends

Song of Solomon 6.1: 1 Where has your beloved gone, you fairest among women?

Where has your beloved turned, that we may seek him with you?

Beloved

Song of Solomon 6.2: 2 My beloved has gone down to his garden,

to the beds of spices,

to pasture his flock in the gardens, and to gather lilies.

Song of Solomon 6.3: 3 I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine.

He browses among the lilies.

Lover

Song of Solomon 6.4: 4 You are beautiful, my love, as Tirzah,

lovely as Jerusalem,

awesome as an army with banners.

Song of Solomon 6.5: 5 Turn away your eyes from me,

for they have overcome me.

Your hair is like a flock of goats,

that lie along the side of Gilead.

Song of Solomon 6.6: 6 Your teeth are like a flock of ewes,

which have come up from the washing,

of which every one has twins;

not one is bereaved among them.

Song of Solomon 6.7: 7 Your temples are like a piece of a pomegranate behind your veil.

Song of Solomon 6.8: 8 There are sixty queens, eighty concubines,

and virgins without number.

Song of Solomon 6.9: 9 My dove, my perfect one, is unique.

She is her mother’s only daughter.

She is the favorite one of her who bore her.

The daughters saw her, and called her blessed.

The queens and the concubines saw her, and they praised her.

Song of Solomon 6.10: 10 Who is she who looks out as the morning,

beautiful as the moon,

clear as the sun,

and awesome as an army with banners?

Song of Solomon 6.11: 11 I went down into the nut tree grove,

to see the green plants of the valley,

to see whether the vine budded,

and the pomegranates were in flower.

Song of Solomon 6.12: 12 Without realizing it,

my desire set me with my royal people’s chariots.

Friends

Song of Solomon 6.13: 13 Return, return, Shulammite!

Return, return, that we may gaze at you.

Lover

Why do you desire to gaze at the Shulammite,

as at the dance of Mahanaim?

Song of Solomon 7.0:

7

Song of Solomon 7.1: 1 How beautiful are your feet in sandals, prince’s daughter!

Your rounded thighs are like jewels,

the work of the hands of a skillful workman.

Song of Solomon 7.2: 2 Your body is like a round goblet,

no mixed wine is wanting.

Your waist is like a heap of wheat,

set about with lilies.

Song of Solomon 7.3: 3 Your two breasts are like two fawns,

that are twins of a roe.

Song of Solomon 7.4: 4 Your neck is like an ivory tower.

Your eyes are like the pools in Heshbon by the gate of Bathrabbim.

Your nose is like the tower of Lebanon which looks toward Damascus.

Song of Solomon 7.5: 5 Your head on you is like Carmel.

The hair of your head like purple.

The king is held captive in its tresses.

Song of Solomon 7.6: 6 How beautiful and how pleasant you are,

love, for delights!

Song of Solomon 7.7: 7 This, your stature, is like a palm tree,

your breasts like its fruit.

Song of Solomon 7.8: 8 I said, “I will climb up into the palm tree.

I will take hold of its fruit.”

Let your breasts be like clusters of the vine,

the smell of your breath like apples.

Song of Solomon 7.9: 9 Your mouth is like the best wine,

that goes down smoothly for my beloved,

gliding through the lips of those who are asleep.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 7.10: 10 I am my beloved’s.

His desire is toward me.

Song of Solomon 7.11: 11 Come, my beloved! Let’s go out into the field.

Let’s lodge in the villages.

Song of Solomon 7.12: 12 Let’s go early up to the vineyards.

Let’s see whether the vine has budded,

its blossom is open,

and the pomegranates are in flower.

There I will give you my love.

Song of Solomon 7.13: 13 The mandrakes produce fragrance.

At our doors are all kinds of precious fruits, new and old,

which I have stored up for you, my beloved.

Song of Solomon 8.0:

8

Song of Solomon 8.1: 1 Oh that you were like my brother,

who nursed from the breasts of my mother!

If I found you outside, I would kiss you;

yes, and no one would despise me.

Song of Solomon 8.2: 2 I would lead you, bringing you into the house of my mother,

who would instruct me.

I would have you drink spiced wine,

of the juice of my pomegranate.

Song of Solomon 8.3: 3 His left hand would be under my head.

His right hand would embrace me.

Song of Solomon 8.4: 4 I adjure you, daughters of Jerusalem,

that you not stir up, nor awaken love,

until it so desires.

Friends

Song of Solomon 8.5: 5 Who is this who comes up from the wilderness,

leaning on her beloved?

Beloved

Under the apple tree I aroused you.

There your mother conceived you.

There she was in labor and bore you.

Song of Solomon 8.6: 6 Set me as a seal on your heart,

as a seal on your arm;

for love is strong as death.

Jealousy is as cruel as Sheol.

Its flashes are flashes of fire,

a very flame of Yahweh.

Song of Solomon 8.7: 7 Many waters can’t quench love,

neither can floods drown it.

If a man would give all the wealth of his house for love,

he would be utterly scorned.

Brothers

Song of Solomon 8.8: 8 We have a little sister.

She has no breasts.

What shall we do for our sister

in the day when she is to be spoken for?

Song of Solomon 8.9: 9 If she is a wall,

we will build on her a turret of silver.

If she is a door,

we will enclose her with boards of cedar.

Beloved

Song of Solomon 8.10: 10 I am a wall, and my breasts like towers,

then I was in his eyes like one who found peace.

Song of Solomon 8.11: 11 Solomon had a vineyard at Baal Hamon.

He leased out the vineyard to keepers.

Each was to bring a thousand shekels of silver for its fruit.

Song of Solomon 8.12: 12 My own vineyard is before me.

The thousand are for you, Solomon,

two hundred for those who tend its fruit.

Lover

Song of Solomon 8.13: 13 You who dwell in the gardens, with friends in attendance,

let me hear your voice!

Beloved

Song of Solomon 8.14: 14 Come away, my beloved!

Be like a gazelle or a young stag on the mountains of spices!

Lamentations 0.0:

The

Lamentations

of Jeremiah

Lamentations 1.0:

1

Lamentations 1.1: 1 How the city sits solitary,

that was full of people!

She has become as a widow,

who was great among the nations!

She who was a princess among the provinces

has become a slave!

Lamentations 1.2: 2 She weeps bitterly in the night.

Her tears are on her cheeks.

Among all her lovers

she has no one to comfort her.

All her friends have dealt treacherously with her.

They have become her enemies.

Lamentations 1.3: 3 Judah has gone into captivity because of affliction,

and because of great servitude.

She dwells among the nations.

She finds no rest.

All her persecutors overtook her within the straits.

Lamentations 1.4: 4 The roads to Zion mourn,

because no one comes to the solemn assembly.

All her gates are desolate.

Her priests sigh.

Her virgins are afflicted,

and she herself is in bitterness.

Lamentations 1.5: 5 Her adversaries have become the head.

Her enemies prosper;

for Yahweh has afflicted her for the multitude of her transgressions.

Her young children have gone into captivity before the adversary.

Lamentations 1.6: 6 All majesty has departed from the daughter of Zion.

Her princes have become like deer that find no pasture.

They have gone without strength before the pursuer.

Lamentations 1.7: 7 Jerusalem remembers in the days of her affliction and of her miseries

all her pleasant things that were from the days of old;

when her people fell into the hand of the adversary,

and no one helped her.

The adversaries saw her.

They mocked at her desolations.

Lamentations 1.8: 8 Jerusalem has grievously sinned.

Therefore she has become unclean.

All who honored her despise her,

because they have seen her nakedness.

Yes, she sighs, and turns backward.

Lamentations 1.9: 9 Her filthiness was in her skirts.

She didn’t remember her latter end.

Therefore she has come down astoundingly.

She has no comforter.

“See, Yahweh, my affliction;

for the enemy has magnified himself.”

Lamentations 1.10: 10 The adversary has spread out his hand on all her pleasant things;

for she has seen that the nations have entered into her sanctuary,

concerning whom you commanded that they should not enter into your assembly.

Lamentations 1.11: 11 All her people sigh.

They seek bread.

They have given their pleasant things for food to refresh their soul.

“Look, Yahweh, and see;

for I have become despised.”

Lamentations 1.12: 12 “Is it nothing to you, all you who pass by?

Look, and see if there is any sorrow like my sorrow,

which is brought on me,

with which Yahweh has afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger.

Lamentations 1.13: 13 “From on high has he sent fire into my bones,

and it prevails against them.

He has spread a net for my feet.

He has turned me back.

He has made me desolate and I faint all day long.

Lamentations 1.14: 14 “The yoke of my transgressions is bound by his hand.

They are knit together.

They have come up on my neck.

He made my strength fail.

The Lord has delivered me into their hands,

against whom I am not able to stand.

Lamentations 1.15: 15 “The Lord has set at nothing all my mighty men within me.

He has called a solemn assembly against me to crush my young men.

The Lord has trodden the virgin daughter of Judah as in a wine press.

Lamentations 1.16: 16 “For these things I weep.

My eye, my eye runs down with water,

because the comforter who should refresh my soul is far from me.

My children are desolate,

because the enemy has prevailed.”

Lamentations 1.17: 17 Zion spreads out her hands.

There is no one to comfort her.

Yahweh has commanded concerning Jacob,

that those who are around him should be his adversaries.

Jerusalem is among them as an unclean thing.

Lamentations 1.18: 18 “Yahweh is righteous;

for I have rebelled against his commandment.

Please hear all you peoples,

and see my sorrow.

My virgins and my young men have gone into captivity.

Lamentations 1.19: 19 “I called for my lovers,

but they deceived me.

My priests and my elders gave up the spirit in the city,

while they sought food for themselves to refresh their souls.

Lamentations 1.20: 20 “Look, Yahweh; for I am in distress.

My heart is troubled.

My heart turns over within me,

for I have grievously rebelled.

Abroad, the sword bereaves.

At home, it is like death.

Lamentations 1.21: 21 “They have heard that I sigh.

There is no one to comfort me.

All my enemies have heard of my trouble.

They are glad that you have done it.

You will bring the day that you have proclaimed,

and they will be like me.

Lamentations 1.22: 22 “Let all their wickedness come before you.

Do to them as you have done to me for all my transgressions.

For my sighs are many,

and my heart is faint.

Lamentations 2.0:

2

Lamentations 2.1: 1 How has the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger!

He has cast the beauty of Israel down from heaven to the earth,

and hasn’t remembered his footstool in the day of his anger.

Lamentations 2.2: 2 The Lord has swallowed up all the dwellings of Jacob

without pity.

He has thrown down in his wrath the strongholds of the daughter of Judah.

He has brought them down to the ground.

He has profaned the kingdom and its princes.

Lamentations 2.3: 3 He has cut off all the horn of Israel in fierce anger.

He has drawn back his right hand from before the enemy.

He has burned up Jacob like a flaming fire,

which devours all around.

Lamentations 2.4: 4 He has bent his bow like an enemy.

He has stood with his right hand as an adversary.

Has killed all that were pleasant to the eye.

In the tent of the daughter of Zion, he has poured out his wrath like fire.

Lamentations 2.5: 5 The Lord has become as an enemy.

He has swallowed up Israel.

He has swallowed up all her palaces.

He has destroyed his strongholds.

He has multiplied mourning and lamentation in the daughter of Judah.

Lamentations 2.6: 6 He has violently taken away his tabernacle,

as if it were of a garden.

He has destroyed his place of assembly.

Yahweh has caused solemn assembly and Sabbath to be forgotten in Zion.

In the indignation of his anger, he has despised the king and the priest.

Lamentations 2.7: 7 The Lord has cast off his altar.

He has abhorred his sanctuary.

He has given the walls of her palaces into the hand of the enemy.

They have made a noise in Yahweh’s house,

as in the day of a solemn assembly.

Lamentations 2.8: 8 Yahweh has purposed to destroy the wall of the daughter of Zion.

He has stretched out the line.

He has not withdrawn his hand from destroying;

He has made the rampart and wall lament.

They languish together.

Lamentations 2.9: 9 Her gates have sunk into the ground.

He has destroyed and broken her bars.

Her king and her princes are among the nations where the law is not.

Yes, her prophets find no vision from Yahweh.

Lamentations 2.10: 10 The elders of the daughter of Zion sit on the ground.

They keep silence.

They have cast up dust on their heads.

They have clothed themselves with sackcloth.

The virgins of Jerusalem hang down their heads to the ground.

Lamentations 2.11: 11 My eyes fail with tears.

My heart is troubled.

My liver is poured on the earth,

because of the destruction of the daughter of my people,

because the young children and the infants swoon in the streets of the city.

Lamentations 2.12: 12 They ask their mothers,

“Where is grain and wine?”

when they swoon as the wounded in the streets of the city,

when their soul is poured out into their mothers’ bosom.

Lamentations 2.13: 13 What shall I testify to you?

What shall I liken to you, daughter of Jerusalem?

What shall I compare to you,

that I may comfort you, virgin daughter of Zion?

For your breach is as big as the sea.

Who can heal you?

Lamentations 2.14: 14 Your prophets have seen false and foolish visions for you.

They have not uncovered your iniquity,

to reverse your captivity,

but have seen for you false revelations and causes of banishment.

Lamentations 2.15: 15 All that pass by clap their hands at you.

They hiss and wag their head at the daughter of Jerusalem, saying,

“Is this the city that men called ‘The perfection of beauty,

the joy of the whole earth’?”

Lamentations 2.16: 16 All your enemies have opened their mouth wide against you.

They hiss and gnash their teeth.

They say, “We have swallowed her up.

Certainly this is the day that we looked for.

We have found it.

We have seen it.”

Lamentations 2.17: 17 Yahweh has done that which he planned.

He has fulfilled his word that he commanded in the days of old.

He has thrown down,

and has not pitied.

He has caused the enemy to rejoice over you.

He has exalted the horn of your adversaries.

Lamentations 2.18: 18 Their heart cried to the Lord.

O wall of the daughter of Zion,

let tears run down like a river day and night.

Give yourself no relief.

Don’t let the your eyes rest.

Lamentations 2.19: 19 Arise, cry out in the night,

at the beginning of the watches!

Pour out your heart like water before the face of the Lord.

Lift up your hands toward him for the life of your young children,

who faint for hunger at the head of every street.

Lamentations 2.20: 20 “Look, Yahweh, and see to whom you have done thus!

Should the women eat their offspring,

the children that they held and bounced on their knees?

Should the priest and the prophet be killed in the sanctuary of the Lord?

Lamentations 2.21: 21 “The youth and the old man lie on the ground in the streets.

My virgins and my young men have fallen by the sword.

You have killed them in the day of your anger.

You have slaughtered, and not pitied.

Lamentations 2.22: 22 “You have called, as in the day of a solemn assembly, my terrors on every side.

There was no one that escaped or remained in the day of Yahweh’s anger.

My enemy has consumed those whom I have cared for and brought up.

Lamentations 3.0:

3

Lamentations 3.1: 1 I am the man who has seen affliction

by the rod of his wrath.

Lamentations 3.2: 2 He has led me and caused me to walk in darkness,

and not in light.

Lamentations 3.3: 3 Surely he turns his hand against me

again and again all day long.

Lamentations 3.4: 4 He has made my flesh and my skin old.

He has broken my bones.

Lamentations 3.5: 5 He has built against me,

and surrounded me with bitterness and hardship.

Lamentations 3.6: 6 He has made me dwell in dark places,

as those who have been long dead.

Lamentations 3.7: 7 He has walled me about, so that I can’t go out.

He has made my chain heavy.

Lamentations 3.8: 8 Yes, when I cry, and call for help,

he shuts out my prayer.

Lamentations 3.9: 9 He has walled up my ways with cut stone.

He has made my paths crooked.

Lamentations 3.10: 10 He is to me as a bear lying in wait,

as a lion in secret places.

Lamentations 3.11: 11 He has turned away my ways,

and pulled me in pieces.

He has made me desolate.

Lamentations 3.12: 12 He has bent his bow,

and set me as a mark for the arrow.

Lamentations 3.13: 13 He has caused the shafts of his quiver to enter into my kidneys.

Lamentations 3.14: 14 I have become a derision to all my people,

and their song all day long.

Lamentations 3.15: 15 He has filled me with bitterness.

He has stuffed me with wormwood.

Lamentations 3.16: 16 He has also broken my teeth with gravel.

He has covered me with ashes.

Lamentations 3.17: 17 You have removed my soul far away from peace.

I forgot prosperity.

Lamentations 3.18: 18 I said, “My strength has perished,

along with my expectation from Yahweh.”

Lamentations 3.19: 19 Remember my affliction and my misery,

the wormwood and the bitterness.

Lamentations 3.20: 20 My soul still remembers them,

and is bowed down within me.

Lamentations 3.21: 21 This I recall to my mind;

therefore I have hope.

Lamentations 3.22: 22 It is because of Yahweh’s loving kindnesses that we are not consumed,

because his compassion doesn’t fail.

Lamentations 3.23: 23 They are new every morning.

Great is your faithfulness.

Lamentations 3.24: 24 “Yahweh is my portion,” says my soul.

“Therefore I will hope in him.”

Lamentations 3.25: 25 Yahweh is good to those who wait for him,

to the soul who seeks him.

Lamentations 3.26: 26 It is good that a man should hope

and quietly wait for the salvation of Yahweh.

Lamentations 3.27: 27 It is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his youth.

Lamentations 3.28: 28 Let him sit alone and keep silence,

because he has laid it on him.

Lamentations 3.29: 29 Let him put his mouth in the dust,

if it is so that there may be hope.

Lamentations 3.30: 30 Let him give his cheek to him who strikes him.

Let him be filled full of reproach.

Lamentations 3.31: 31 For the Lord will not cast off forever.

Lamentations 3.32: 32 For though he causes grief,

yet he will have compassion according to the multitude of his loving kindnesses.

Lamentations 3.33: 33 For he does not afflict willingly,

nor grieve the children of men.

Lamentations 3.34: 34 To crush under foot all the prisoners of the earth,

Lamentations 3.35: 35 to turn away the right of a man before the face of the Most High,

Lamentations 3.36: 36 to subvert a man in his cause, the Lord doesn’t approve.

Lamentations 3.37: 37 Who is he who says, and it comes to pass,

when the Lord doesn’t command it?

Lamentations 3.38: 38 Doesn’t evil and good come out of the mouth of the Most High?

Lamentations 3.39: 39 Why does a living man complain,

a man for the punishment of his sins?

Lamentations 3.40: 40 Let us search and try our ways,

and turn again to Yahweh.

Lamentations 3.41: 41 Let’s lift up our heart with our hands to God in the heavens.

Lamentations 3.42: 42 “We have transgressed and have rebelled.

You have not pardoned.

Lamentations 3.43: 43 “You have covered us with anger and pursued us.

You have killed.

You have not pitied.

Lamentations 3.44: 44 You have covered yourself with a cloud,

so that no prayer can pass through.

Lamentations 3.45: 45 You have made us an off-scouring and refuse

in the middle of the peoples.

Lamentations 3.46: 46 “All our enemies have opened their mouth wide against us.

Lamentations 3.47: 47 Terror and the pit have come on us,

devastation and destruction.”

Lamentations 3.48: 48 My eye runs down with streams of water,

for the destruction of the daughter of my people.

Lamentations 3.49: 49 My eye pours down

and doesn’t cease,

without any intermission,

Lamentations 3.50: 50 until Yahweh looks down,

and sees from heaven.

Lamentations 3.51: 51 My eye affects my soul,

because of all the daughters of my city.

Lamentations 3.52: 52 They have chased me relentlessly like a bird,

those who are my enemies without cause.

Lamentations 3.53: 53 They have cut off my life in the dungeon,

and have cast a stone on me.

Lamentations 3.54: 54 Waters flowed over my head.

I said, “I am cut off.”

Lamentations 3.55: 55 I called on your name, Yahweh,

out of the lowest dungeon.

Lamentations 3.56: 56 You heard my voice:

“Don’t hide your ear from my sighing,

and my cry.”

Lamentations 3.57: 57 You came near in the day that I called on you.

You said, “Don’t be afraid.”

Lamentations 3.58: 58 Lord, you have pleaded the causes of my soul.

You have redeemed my life.

Lamentations 3.59: 59 Yahweh, you have seen my wrong.

Judge my cause.

Lamentations 3.60: 60 You have seen all their vengeance

and all their plans against me.

Lamentations 3.61: 61 You have heard their reproach, Yahweh,

and all their plans against me,

Lamentations 3.62: 62 the lips of those that rose up against me,

and their plots against me all day long.

Lamentations 3.63: 63 You see their sitting down and their rising up.

I am their song.

Lamentations 3.64: 64 You will pay them back, Yahweh,

according to the work of their hands.

Lamentations 3.65: 65 You will give them hardness of heart,

your curse to them.

Lamentations 3.66: 66 You will pursue them in anger,

and destroy them from under the heavens of Yahweh.

Lamentations 4.0:

4

Lamentations 4.1: 1 How the gold has become dim!

The most pure gold has changed!

The stones of the sanctuary are poured out

at the head of every street.

Lamentations 4.2: 2 The precious sons of Zion,

comparable to fine gold,

how they are esteemed as earthen pitchers,

the work of the hands of the potter!

Lamentations 4.3: 3 Even the jackals offer their breast.

They nurse their young ones.

But the daughter of my people has become cruel,

like the ostriches in the wilderness.

Lamentations 4.4: 4 The tongue of the nursing child clings to the roof of his mouth for thirst.

The young children ask bread,

and no one breaks it for them.

Lamentations 4.5: 5 Those who ate delicacies are desolate in the streets.

Those who were brought up in purple embrace dunghills.

Lamentations 4.6: 6 For the iniquity of the daughter of my people is greater than the sin of Sodom,

which was overthrown as in a moment.

No hands were laid on her.

Lamentations 4.7: 7 Her nobles were purer than snow.

They were whiter than milk.

They were more ruddy in body than rubies.

Their polishing was like sapphire.

Lamentations 4.8: 8 Their appearance is blacker than a coal.

They are not known in the streets.

Their skin clings to their bones.

It is withered.

It has become like a stick.

Lamentations 4.9: 9 Those who are killed with the sword are better than those who are killed with hunger;

For these pine away, stricken through,

for lack of the fruits of the field.

Lamentations 4.10: 10 The hands of the pitiful women have boiled their own children.

They were their food in the destruction of the daughter of my people.

Lamentations 4.11: 11 Yahweh has accomplished his wrath.

He has poured out his fierce anger.

He has kindled a fire in Zion,

which has devoured its foundations.

Lamentations 4.12: 12 The kings of the earth didn’t believe,

neither did all the inhabitants of the world,

that the adversary and the enemy would enter into the gates of Jerusalem.

Lamentations 4.13: 13 It is because of the sins of her prophets

and the iniquities of her priests,

That have shed the blood of the just in the middle of her.

Lamentations 4.14: 14 They wander as blind men in the streets.

They are polluted with blood,

So that men can’t touch their garments.

Lamentations 4.15: 15 “Go away!” they cried to them.

“Unclean! Go away! Go away! Don’t touch!

When they fled away and wandered, men said among the nations,

“They can’t live here any more.”

Lamentations 4.16: 16 Yahweh’s anger has scattered them.

He will not pay attention to them any more.

They didn’t respect the persons of the priests.

They didn’t favor the elders.

Lamentations 4.17: 17 Our eyes still fail,

looking in vain for our help.

In our watching we have watched for a nation that could not save.

Lamentations 4.18: 18 They hunt our steps,

so that we can’t go in our streets.

Our end is near.

Our days are fulfilled,

for our end has come.

Lamentations 4.19: 19 Our pursuers were swifter than the eagles of the sky.

They chased us on the mountains.

They set an ambush for us in the wilderness.

Lamentations 4.20: 20 The breath of our nostrils,

the anointed of Yahweh,

was taken in their pits;

of whom we said,

under his shadow we will live among the nations.

Lamentations 4.21: 21 Rejoice and be glad, daughter of Edom,

that dwells in the land of Uz.

The cup will pass through to you also.

You will be drunken,

and will make yourself naked.

Lamentations 4.22: 22 The punishment of your iniquity is accomplished, daughter of Zion.

He will no more carry you away into captivity.

He will visit your iniquity, daughter of Edom.

He will uncover your sins.

Lamentations 5.0:

5

Lamentations 5.1: 1 Remember, Yahweh, what has come on us.

Look, and see our reproach.

Lamentations 5.2: 2 Our inheritance has been turned over to strangers,

our houses to aliens.

Lamentations 5.3: 3 We are orphans and fatherless.

Our mothers are as widows.

Lamentations 5.4: 4 We have drunken our water for money.

Our wood is sold to us.

Lamentations 5.5: 5 Our pursuers are on our necks.

We are weary, and have no rest.

Lamentations 5.6: 6 We have given our hands to the Egyptians,

and to the Assyrians, to be satisfied with bread.

Lamentations 5.7: 7 Our fathers sinned, and are no more.

We have borne their iniquities.

Lamentations 5.8: 8 Servants rule over us.

There is no one to deliver us out of their hand.

Lamentations 5.9: 9 We get our bread at the peril of our lives,

because of the sword of the wilderness.

Lamentations 5.10: 10 Our skin is black like an oven,

because of the burning heat of famine.

Lamentations 5.11: 11 They ravished the women in Zion,

the virgins in the cities of Judah.

Lamentations 5.12: 12 Princes were hanged up by their hands.

The faces of elders were not honored.

Lamentations 5.13: 13 The young men carry millstones.

The children stumbled under loads of wood.

Lamentations 5.14: 14 The elders have ceased from the gate,

and the young men from their music.

Lamentations 5.15: 15 The joy of our heart has ceased.

Our dance is turned into mourning.

Lamentations 5.16: 16 The crown has fallen from our head.

Woe to us, for we have sinned!

Lamentations 5.17: 17 For this our heart is faint.

For these things our eyes are dim.

Lamentations 5.18: 18 For the mountain of Zion, which is desolate.

The foxes walk on it.

Lamentations 5.19: 19 You, Yahweh, remain forever.

Your throne is from generation to generation.

Lamentations 5.20: 20 Why do you forget us forever,

and forsake us for so long a time?

Lamentations 5.21: 21 Turn us to yourself, Yahweh, and we will be turned.

Renew our days as of old.

Lamentations 5.22: 22 But you have utterly rejected us.

You are very angry against us.

Daniel 0.0:

The Book of

Daniel

Daniel 1.0:

1

Daniel 1.1: 1 In the third year of the reign of Jehoiakim king of Judah Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came to Jerusalem and besieged it.

Daniel 1.2: 2 The Lord gave Jehoiakim king of Judah into his hand, with part of the vessels of the house of God; and he carried them into the land of Shinar to the house of his god. He brought the vessels into the treasure house of his god.

Daniel 1.3: 3 The king spoke to Ashpenaz the master of his eunuchs, that he should bring in some of the children of Israel, even of the royal offspring and of the nobles;

Daniel 1.4: 4 youths in whom was no defect, but well-favored, and skillful in all wisdom, and endowed with knowledge, and understanding science, and who had the ability to stand in the king’s palace; and that he should teach them the learning and the language of the Chaldeans.

Daniel 1.5: 5 The king appointed for them a daily portion of the king’s dainties, and of the wine which he drank, and that they should be nourished three years; that at its end they should stand before the king.

Daniel 1.6: 6 Now among these were of the children of Judah: Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah.

Daniel 1.7: 7 The prince of the eunuchs gave names to them: to Daniel he gave the name Belteshazzar; to Hananiah, Shadrach; to Mishael, Meshach; and to Azariah, Abednego.

Daniel 1.8: 8 But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself with the king’s dainties, nor with the wine which he drank. Therefore he requested of the prince of the eunuchs that he might not defile himself.

Daniel 1.9: 9 Now God made Daniel find kindness and compassion in the sight of the prince of the eunuchs.

Daniel 1.10: 10 The prince of the eunuchs said to Daniel, “I fear my lord the king, who has appointed your food and your drink. For why should he see your faces worse looking than the youths who are of your own age? Then you would endanger my head with the king.”

Daniel 1.11: 11 Then Daniel said to the steward whom the prince of the eunuchs had appointed over Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah:

Daniel 1.12: 12 “Test your servants, I beg you, ten days; and let them give us vegetables to eat, and water to drink.

Daniel 1.13: 13 Then let our faces be examined before you, and the face of the youths who eat of the king’s dainties; and as you see, deal with your servants.”

Daniel 1.14: 14 So he listened to them in this matter, and tested them for ten days.

Daniel 1.15: 15 At the end of ten days, their faces appeared fairer, and they were fatter in flesh, than all the youths who ate of the king’s dainties.

Daniel 1.16: 16 So the steward took away their dainties, and the wine that they would drink, and gave them vegetables.

Daniel 1.17: 17 Now as for these four youths, God gave them knowledge and skill in all learning and wisdom; and Daniel had understanding in all visions and dreams.

Daniel 1.18: 18 At the end of the days which the king had appointed for bringing them in, the prince of the eunuchs brought them in before Nebuchadnezzar.

Daniel 1.19: 19 The king talked with them; and among them all was found no one like Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. Therefore stood they before the king.

Daniel 1.20: 20 In every matter of wisdom and understanding, concerning which the king inquired of them, he found them ten times better than all the magicians and enchanters who were in all his realm.

Daniel 1.21: 21 Daniel continued even to the first year of king Cyrus.

Daniel 2.0:

2

Daniel 2.1: 1 In the second year of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar, Nebuchadnezzar dreamed dreams; and his spirit was troubled, and his sleep went from him.

Daniel 2.2: 2 Then the king commanded that the magicians, the enchanters, the sorcerers, and the Chaldeans be called to tell the king his dreams. So they came in and stood before the king.

Daniel 2.3: 3 The king said to them, “I have dreamed a dream, and my spirit is troubled to know the dream.”

Daniel 2.4: 4 Then the Chaldeans spoke to the king in the Syrian language, “O king, live forever! Tell your servants the dream, and we will show the interpretation.”

Daniel 2.5: 5 The king answered the Chaldeans, “The thing has gone from me. If you don’t make known to me the dream and its interpretation, you will be cut in pieces, and your houses will be made a dunghill.

Daniel 2.6: 6 But if you show the dream and its interpretation, you will receive of me gifts and rewards and great honor. Therefore show me the dream and its interpretation.”

Daniel 2.7: 7 They answered the second time and said, “Let the king tell his servants the dream, and we will show the interpretation.”

Daniel 2.8: 8 The king answered, “I know of a certainty that you are trying to gain time, because you see the thing has gone from me.

Daniel 2.9: 9 But if you don’t make known to me the dream, there is but one law for you; for you have prepared lying and corrupt words to speak before me, until the situation changes. Therefore tell me the dream, and I will know that you can show me its interpretation.”

Daniel 2.10: 10 The Chaldeans answered before the king, and said, “There is not a man on the earth who can show the king’s matter, because no king, lord, or ruler, has asked such a thing of any magician, or enchanter, or Chaldean.

Daniel 2.11: 11 It is a rare thing that the king requires, and there is no other who can show it before the king, except the gods, whose dwelling is not with flesh.”

Daniel 2.12: 12 Because of this, the king was angry and very furious, and commanded that all the wise men of Babylon be destroyed.

Daniel 2.13: 13 So the decree went out, and the wise men were to be slain. They sought Daniel and his companions to be slain.

Daniel 2.14: 14 Then Daniel returned answer with counsel and prudence to Arioch the captain of the king’s guard, who had gone out to kill the wise men of Babylon.

Daniel 2.15: 15 He answered Arioch the king’s captain, “Why is the decree so urgent from the king?” Then Arioch made the thing known to Daniel.

Daniel 2.16: 16 Daniel went in, and desired of the king that he would appoint him a time, and he would show the king the interpretation.

Daniel 2.17: 17 Then Daniel went to his house and made the thing known to Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah, his companions:

Daniel 2.18: 18 that they would desire mercies of the God of heaven concerning this secret; that Daniel and his companions would not perish with the rest of the wise men of Babylon.

Daniel 2.19: 19 Then the secret was revealed to Daniel in a vision of the night. Then Daniel blessed the God of heaven.

Daniel 2.20: 20 Daniel answered,

“Blessed be the name of God forever and ever;

for wisdom and might are his.

Daniel 2.21: 21 He changes the times and the seasons.

He removes kings, and sets up kings.

He gives wisdom to the wise,

and knowledge to those who have understanding.

Daniel 2.22: 22 He reveals the deep and secret things.

He knows what is in the darkness,

and the light dwells with him.

Daniel 2.23: 23 I thank you, and praise you,

you God of my fathers,

who have given me wisdom and might,

and have now made known to me what we desired of you;

for you have made known to us the king’s matter.”

Daniel 2.24: 24 Therefore Daniel went in to Arioch, whom the king had appointed to destroy the wise men of Babylon. He went and said this to him: “Don’t destroy the wise men of Babylon. Bring me in before the king, and I will show to the king the interpretation.”

Daniel 2.25: 25 Then Arioch brought in Daniel before the king in haste, and said this to him: “I have found a man of the children of the captivity of Judah who will make known to the king the interpretation.”

Daniel 2.26: 26 The king answered Daniel, whose name was Belteshazzar, “Are you able to make known to me the dream which I have seen, and its interpretation?”

Daniel 2.27: 27 Daniel answered before the king, and said, “The secret which the king has demanded can’t be shown to the king by wise men, enchanters, magicians, or soothsayers;

Daniel 2.28: 28 but there is a God in heaven who reveals secrets, and he has made known to the king Nebuchadnezzar what will be in the latter days. Your dream, and the visions of your head on your bed, are these:

Daniel 2.29: 29 “As for you, O king, your thoughts came on your bed, what should happen hereafter; and he who reveals secrets has made known to you what will happen.

Daniel 2.30: 30 But as for me, this secret is not revealed to me for any wisdom that I have more than any living, but to the intent that the interpretation may be made known to the king, and that you may know the thoughts of your heart.

Daniel 2.31: 31 “You, O king, saw, and behold, a great image. This image, which was mighty, and whose brightness was excellent, stood before you; and its appearance was terrifying.

Daniel 2.32: 32 As for this image, its head was of fine gold, its breast and its arms of silver, its belly and its thighs of bronze,

Daniel 2.33: 33 its legs of iron, its feet part of iron, and part of clay.

Daniel 2.34: 34 You saw until a stone was cut out without hands, which struck the image on its feet that were of iron and clay, and broke them in pieces.

Daniel 2.35: 35 Then the iron, the clay, the bronze, the silver, and the gold were broken in pieces together, and became like the chaff of the summer threshing floors. The wind carried them away, so that no place was found for them. The stone that struck the image became a great mountain, and filled the whole earth.

Daniel 2.36: 36 “This is the dream; and we will tell its interpretation before the king.

Daniel 2.37: 37 You, O king, are king of kings, to whom the God of heaven has given the kingdom, the power, the strength, and the glory.

Daniel 2.38: 38 Wherever the children of men dwell, he has given the animals of the field and the birds of the sky into your hand, and has made you rule over them all. You are the head of gold.

Daniel 2.39: 39 “After you, another kingdom will arise that is inferior to you; and another third kingdom of bronze, which will rule over all the earth.

Daniel 2.40: 40 The fourth kingdom will be strong as iron, because iron breaks in pieces and subdues all things; and as iron that crushes all these, it will break in pieces and crush.

Daniel 2.41: 41 Whereas you saw the feet and toes, part of potters’ clay, and part of iron, it will be a divided kingdom; but there will be in it of the strength of the iron, because you saw the iron mixed with miry clay.

Daniel 2.42: 42 As the toes of the feet were part of iron, and part of clay, so the kingdom will be partly strong, and partly broken.

Daniel 2.43: 43 Whereas you saw the iron mixed with miry clay, they will mingle themselves with the seed of men; but they won’t cling to one another, even as iron does not mix with clay.

Daniel 2.44: 44 “In the days of those kings the God of heaven will set up a kingdom which will never be destroyed, nor will its sovereignty be left to another people; but it will break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it will stand forever.

Daniel 2.45: 45 Because you saw that a stone was cut out of the mountain without hands, and that it broke in pieces the iron, the bronze, the clay, the silver, and the gold; the great God has made known to the king what will happen hereafter. The dream is certain, and its interpretation sure.”

Daniel 2.46: 46 Then the king Nebuchadnezzar fell on his face, worshiped Daniel, and commanded that they should offer an offering and sweet odors to him.

Daniel 2.47: 47 The king answered to Daniel, and said, “Of a truth your God is the God of gods, and the Lord of kings, and a revealer of secrets, since you have been able to reveal this secret.”

Daniel 2.48: 48 Then the king made Daniel great, and gave him many great gifts, and made him rule over the whole province of Babylon, and to be chief governor over all the wise men of Babylon.

Daniel 2.49: 49 Daniel requested of the king, and he appointed Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego over the affairs of the province of Babylon; but Daniel was in the king’s gate.

Daniel 3.0:

3

Daniel 3.1: 1 Nebuchadnezzar the king made an image of gold, whose height was sixty cubits, and its width six cubits. He set it up in the plain of Dura, in the province of Babylon.

Daniel 3.2: 2 Then Nebuchadnezzar the king sent to gather together the local governors, the deputies, and the governors, the judges, the treasurers, the counselors, the sheriffs, and all the rulers of the provinces, to come to the dedication of the image which Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up.

Daniel 3.3: 3 Then the local governors, the deputies, and the governors, the judges, the treasurers, the counselors, the sheriffs, and all the rulers of the provinces, were gathered together to the dedication of the image that Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up; and they stood before the image that Nebuchadnezzar had set up.

Daniel 3.4: 4 Then the herald cried aloud, “To you it is commanded, peoples, nations, and languages,

Daniel 3.5: 5 that whenever you hear the sound of the horn, flute, zither, lyre, harp, pipe, and all kinds of music, you fall down and worship the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king has set up.

Daniel 3.6: 6 Whoever doesn’t fall down and worship shall be cast into the middle of a burning fiery furnace the same hour.”

Daniel 3.7: 7 Therefore at that time, when all the peoples heard the sound of the horn, flute, zither, lyre, harp, pipe, and all kinds of music, all the peoples, the nations, and the languages, fell down and worshiped the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up.

Daniel 3.8: 8 Therefore at that time certain Chaldeans came near, and brought accusation against the Jews.

Daniel 3.9: 9 They answered Nebuchadnezzar the king, “O king, live for ever!

Daniel 3.10: 10 You, O king, have made a decree, that every man that hears the sound of the horn, flute, zither, lyre, harp, pipe, and all kinds of music, shall fall down and worship the golden image;

Daniel 3.11: 11 and whoever doesn’t fall down and worship shall be cast into the middle of a burning fiery furnace.

Daniel 3.12: 12 There are certain Jews whom you have appointed over the affairs of the province of Babylon: Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. These men, O king, have not respected you. They don’t serve your gods, and don’t worship the golden image which you have set up.”

Daniel 3.13: 13 Then Nebuchadnezzar in rage and fury commanded that Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego be brought. Then these men were brought before the king.

Daniel 3.14: 14 Nebuchadnezzar answered them, “Is it on purpose, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, that you don’t serve my god, nor worship the golden image which I have set up?

Daniel 3.15: 15 Now if you are ready whenever you hear the sound of the horn, flute, zither, lyre, harp, pipe, and all kinds of music to fall down and worship the image which I have made, good; but if you don’t worship, you shall be cast the same hour into the middle of a burning fiery furnace. Who is that god that will deliver you out of my hands?”

Daniel 3.16: 16 Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego answered the king, “Nebuchadnezzar, we have no need to answer you in this matter.

Daniel 3.17: 17 If it happens, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace; and he will deliver us out of your hand, O king.

Daniel 3.18: 18 But if not, let it be known to you, O king, that we will not serve your gods or worship the golden image which you have set up.”

Daniel 3.19: 19 Then Nebuchadnezzar was full of fury, and the form of his appearance was changed against Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. He spoke, and commanded that they should heat the furnace seven times more than it was usually heated.

Daniel 3.20: 20 He commanded certain mighty men who were in his army to bind Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, and to cast them into the burning fiery furnace.

Daniel 3.21: 21 Then these men were bound in their pants, their tunics, and their mantles, and their other clothes, and were cast into the middle of the burning fiery furnace.

Daniel 3.22: 22 Therefore because the king’s commandment was urgent, and the furnace exceedingly hot, the flame of the fire killed those men who took up Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.

Daniel 3.23: 23 These three men, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, fell down bound into the middle of the burning fiery furnace.

Daniel 3.24: 24 Then Nebuchadnezzar the king was astonished, and rose up in haste. He spoke and said to his counselors, “Didn’t we cast three men bound into the middle of the fire?”

They answered the king, “True, O king.”

Daniel 3.25: 25 He answered, “Look, I see four men loose, walking in the middle of the fire, and they are unharmed. The appearance of the fourth is like a son of the gods.”

Daniel 3.26: 26 Then Nebuchadnezzar came near to the mouth of the burning fiery furnace. He spoke and said, “Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, you servants of the Most High God, come out, and come here!”

Then Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego came out of the middle of the fire.

Daniel 3.27: 27 The local governors, the deputies, and the governors, and the king’s counselors, being gathered together, saw these men, that the fire had no power on their bodies. The hair of their head wasn’t singed. Their pants weren’t changed, the smell of fire wasn’t even on them.

Daniel 3.28: 28 Nebuchadnezzar spoke and said, “Blessed be the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, who has sent his angel, and delivered his servants who trusted in him, and have changed the king’s word, and have yielded their bodies, that they might not serve nor worship any god, except their own God.

Daniel 3.29: 29 Therefore I make a decree, that every people, nation, and language, which speak anything evil against the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, shall be cut in pieces, and their houses shall be made a dunghill; because there is no other god who is able to deliver like this.”

Daniel 3.30: 30 Then the king promoted Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in the province of Babylon.

Daniel 4.0:

4

Daniel 4.1: 1 Nebuchadnezzar the king,

to all the peoples, nations, and languages, who dwell in all the earth:

Peace be multiplied to you.

Daniel 4.2: 2 It has seemed good to me to show the signs and wonders that the Most High God has worked toward me.

Daniel 4.3: 3 How great are his signs!

How mighty are his wonders!

His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom.

His dominion is from generation to generation.

Daniel 4.4: 4 I, Nebuchadnezzar, was at rest in my house, and flourishing in my palace.

Daniel 4.5: 5 I saw a dream which made me afraid; and the thoughts on my bed and the visions of my head troubled me.

Daniel 4.6: 6 Therefore made I a decree to bring in all the wise men of Babylon before me, that they might make known to me the interpretation of the dream.

Daniel 4.7: 7 Then the magicians, the enchanters, the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers came in; and I told the dream before them; but they didn’t make known to me its interpretation.

Daniel 4.8: 8 But at the last Daniel came in before me, whose name was Belteshazzar, according to the name of my god, and in whom is the spirit of the holy gods. I told the dream before him, saying,

Daniel 4.9: 9 “Belteshazzar, master of the magicians, because I know that the spirit of the holy gods is in you, and no secret troubles you, tell me the visions of my dream that I have seen, and its interpretation.

Daniel 4.10: 10 Thus were the visions of my head on my bed: I saw, and behold, a tree in the middle of the earth; and its height was great.

Daniel 4.11: 11 The tree grew, and was strong, and its height reached to the sky, and its sight to the end of all the earth.

Daniel 4.12: 12 The leaves of it were beautiful, and it had much fruit, and in it was food for all. The animals of the field had shade under it, and the birds of the sky lived in its branches, and all flesh was fed from it.

Daniel 4.13: 13 “I saw in the visions of my head on my bed, and behold, a watcher and a holy one came down from the sky.

Daniel 4.14: 14 He cried aloud, and said this, ‘Cut down the tree, and cut off its branches! Shake off its leaves, and scatter its fruit! Let the animals get away from under it, and the fowls from its branches.

Daniel 4.15: 15 Nevertheless leave the stump of its roots in the earth, even with a band of iron and bronze, in the tender grass of the field; and let it be wet with the dew of the sky. Let his portion be with the animals in the grass of the earth.

Daniel 4.16: 16 Let his heart be changed from man’s, and let an animal’s heart be given to him. Then let seven times pass over him.

Daniel 4.17: 17 “‘The sentence is by the decree of the watchers, and the demand by the word of the holy ones; to the intent that the living may know that the Most High rules in the kingdom of men, and gives it to whomever he will, and sets up over it the lowest of men.’

Daniel 4.18: 18 “This dream I, king Nebuchadnezzar, have seen; and you, Belteshazzar, declare the interpretation, because all the wise men of my kingdom are not able to make known to me the interpretation; but you are able; for the spirit of the holy gods is in you.”

Daniel 4.19: 19 Then Daniel, whose name was Belteshazzar, was stricken mute for a while, and his thoughts troubled him. The king answered, “Belteshazzar, don’t let the dream, or the interpretation, trouble you.”

Belteshazzar answered, “My lord, may the dream be for those who hate you, and its interpretation to your adversaries.

Daniel 4.20: 20 The tree that you saw, which grew, and was strong, whose height reached to the sky, and its sight to all the earth;

Daniel 4.21: 21 whose leaves were beautiful, and its fruit plentiful, and in it was food for all; under which the animals of the field lived, and on whose branches the birds of the sky had their habitation:

Daniel 4.22: 22 it is you, O king, that have grown and become strong; for your greatness has grown, and reaches to the sky, and your dominion to the end of the earth.

Daniel 4.23: 23 “Whereas the king saw a watcher and a holy one coming down from the sky, and saying, ‘Cut down the tree, and destroy it; nevertheless leave the stump of its roots in the earth, even with a band of iron and bronze, in the tender grass of the field, and let it be wet with the dew of the sky. Let his portion be with the animals of the field, until seven times pass over him.

Daniel 4.24: 24 “This is the interpretation, O king, and it is the decree of the Most High, which has come on my lord the king:

Daniel 4.25: 25 that you shall be driven from men, and your dwelling shall be with the animals of the field. You shall be made to eat grass as oxen, and shall be wet with the dew of the sky, and seven times shall pass over you; until you know that the Most High rules in the kingdom of men, and gives it to whomever he will.

Daniel 4.26: 26 Whereas they commanded to leave the stump of the roots of the tree; your kingdom shall be sure to you, after that you will have known that the heavens do rule.

Daniel 4.27: 27 Therefore, O king, let my counsel be acceptable to you, and break off your sins by righteousness, and your iniquities by showing mercy to the poor. Perhaps there may be a lengthening of your tranquility.”

Daniel 4.28: 28 All this came on the king Nebuchadnezzar.

Daniel 4.29: 29 At the end of twelve months he was walking in the royal palace of Babylon.

Daniel 4.30: 30 The king spoke and said, “Is not this great Babylon, which I have built for the royal dwelling place, by the might of my power and for the glory of my majesty?”

Daniel 4.31: 31 While the word was in the king’s mouth, a voice came from the sky, saying, “O king Nebuchadnezzar, to you it is spoken: ‘The kingdom has departed from you.

Daniel 4.32: 32 You shall be driven from men; and your dwelling shall be with the animals of the field. You shall be made to eat grass as oxen. Seven times shall pass over you, until you know that the Most High rules in the kingdom of men, and gives it to whomever he will.’”

Daniel 4.33: 33 This was fulfilled the same hour on Nebuchadnezzar. He was driven from men, and ate grass as oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of the sky, until his hair had grown like eagles’ feathers, and his nails like birds’ claws.

Daniel 4.34: 34 At the end of the days I, Nebuchadnezzar, lifted up my eyes to heaven, and my understanding returned to me, and I blessed the Most High, and I praised and honored him who lives forever;

for his dominion is an everlasting dominion,

and his kingdom from generation to generation.

Daniel 4.35: 35 All the inhabitants of the earth are reputed as nothing;

and he does according to his will in the army of heaven,

and among the inhabitants of the earth;

and no one can stop his hand,

or ask him, “What are you doing?”

Daniel 4.36: 36 At the same time my understanding returned to me; and for the glory of my kingdom, my majesty and brightness returned to me. My counselors and my lords sought me; and I was established in my kingdom, and excellent greatness was added to me.

Daniel 4.37: 37 Now I, Nebuchadnezzar, praise and extol and honor the King of heaven; for all his works are truth, and his ways justice; and those who walk in pride he is able to abase.

Daniel 5.0:

5

Daniel 5.1: 1 Belshazzar the king made a great feast to a thousand of his lords, and drank wine before the thousand.

Daniel 5.2: 2 Belshazzar, while he tasted the wine, commanded that the golden and silver vessels which Nebuchadnezzar his father had taken out of the temple which was in Jerusalem be brought to him; that the king and his lords, his wives and his concubines, might drink from them.

Daniel 5.3: 3 Then they brought the golden vessels that were taken out of the temple of God’s house which was at Jerusalem; and the king and his lords, his wives and his concubines, drank from them.

Daniel 5.4: 4 They drank wine, and praised the gods of gold, and of silver, of bronze, of iron, of wood, and of stone.

Daniel 5.5: 5 In the same hour, the fingers of a man’s hand came out and wrote near the lamp stand on the plaster of the wall of the king’s palace. The king saw the part of the hand that wrote.

Daniel 5.6: 6 Then the king’s face was changed in him, and his thoughts troubled him; and the joints of his thighs were loosened, and his knees struck one against another.

Daniel 5.7: 7 The king cried aloud to bring in the enchanters, the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers. The king spoke and said to the wise men of Babylon, “Whoever reads this writing, and shows me its interpretation, shall be clothed with purple, and have a chain of gold about his neck, and shall be the third ruler in the kingdom.”

Daniel 5.8: 8 Then all the king’s wise men came in; but they could not read the writing, and couldn’t make known to the king the interpretation.

Daniel 5.9: 9 Then king Belshazzar was greatly troubled, and his face was changed in him, and his lords were perplexed.

Daniel 5.10: 10 The queen by reason of the words of the king and his lords came into the banquet house. The queen spoke and said, “O king, live forever; don’t let your thoughts trouble you, nor let your face be changed.

Daniel 5.11: 11 There is a man in your kingdom, in whom is the spirit of the holy gods; and in the days of your father light and understanding and wisdom, like the wisdom of the gods, were found in him. The king Nebuchadnezzar your father, yes, the king, your father, made him master of the magicians, enchanters, Chaldeans, and soothsayers;

Daniel 5.12: 12 because an excellent spirit, knowledge, understanding, interpreting of dreams, showing of dark sentences, and dissolving of doubts were found in the same Daniel, whom the king named Belteshazzar. Now let Daniel be called, and he will show the interpretation.”

Daniel 5.13: 13 Then Daniel was brought in before the king. The king spoke and said to Daniel, “Are you that Daniel of the children of the captivity of Judah, whom the king my father brought out of Judah?

Daniel 5.14: 14 I have heard of you, that the spirit of the gods is in you, and that light, understanding, and excellent wisdom are found in you.

Daniel 5.15: 15 Now the wise men, the enchanters, have been brought in before me, that they should read this writing, and make known to me its interpretation; but they could not show the interpretation of the thing.

Daniel 5.16: 16 But I have heard of you, that you can give interpretations, and dissolve doubts. Now if you can read the writing, and make known to me its interpretation, you shall be clothed with purple, and have a chain of gold around your neck, and shall be the third ruler in the kingdom.”

Daniel 5.17: 17 Then Daniel answered before the king, “Let your gifts be to yourself, and give your rewards to another. Nevertheless, I will read the writing to the king, and make known to him the interpretation.

Daniel 5.18: 18 “You, king, the Most High God gave Nebuchadnezzar your father the kingdom, and greatness, and glory, and majesty.

Daniel 5.19: 19 Because of the greatness that he gave him, all the peoples, nations, and languages trembled and feared before him. He killed whom he wanted to, and he kept alive whom he wanted to. He raised up whom he wanted to, and he put down whom he wanted to.

Daniel 5.20: 20 But when his heart was lifted up, and his spirit was hardened so that he dealt proudly, he was deposed from his kingly throne, and they took his glory from him.

Daniel 5.21: 21 He was driven from the sons of men, and his heart was made like the animals’, and his dwelling was with the wild donkeys. He was fed with grass like oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of the sky; until he knew that the Most High God rules in the kingdom of men, and that he sets up over it whomever he will.

Daniel 5.22: 22 “You, his son, Belshazzar, have not humbled your heart, though you knew all this,

Daniel 5.23: 23 but have lifted up yourself against the Lord of heaven; and they have brought the vessels of his house before you, and you and your lords, your wives, and your concubines, have drunk wine from them. You have praised the gods of silver and gold, of bronze, iron, wood, and stone, which don’t see, or hear, or know; and you have not glorified the God in whose hand your breath is, and whose are all your ways.

Daniel 5.24: 24 Then the part of the hand was sent from before him, and this writing was inscribed.

Daniel 5.25: 25 “This is the writing that was inscribed: ‘MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN.’

Daniel 5.26: 26 “This is the interpretation of the thing:

MENE: God has counted your kingdom, and brought it to an end.

Daniel 5.27: 27 TEKEL: you are weighed in the balances, and are found wanting.

Daniel 5.28: 28 PERES: your kingdom is divided, and given to the Medes and Persians.”

Daniel 5.29: 29 Then Belshazzar commanded, and they clothed Daniel with purple, and put a chain of gold about his neck, and made proclamation concerning him, that he should be the third ruler in the kingdom.

Daniel 5.30: 30 In that night Belshazzar the Chaldean King was slain.

Daniel 5.31: 31 Darius the Mede received the kingdom, being about sixty-two years old.

Daniel 6.0:

6

Daniel 6.1: 1 It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom one hundred twenty local governors, who should be throughout the whole kingdom;

Daniel 6.2: 2 and over them three presidents, of whom Daniel was one; that these local governors might give account to them, and that the king should suffer no loss.

Daniel 6.3: 3 Then this Daniel was distinguished above the presidents and the local governors, because an excellent spirit was in him; and the king thought to set him over the whole realm.

Daniel 6.4: 4 Then the presidents and the local governors sought to find occasion against Daniel as touching the kingdom; but they could find no occasion or fault, because he was faithful. There wasn’t any error or fault found in him.

Daniel 6.5: 5 Then these men said, “We won’t find any occasion against this Daniel, unless we find it against him concerning the law of his God.”

Daniel 6.6: 6 Then these presidents and local governors assembled together to the king, and said this to him, “King Darius, live forever!

Daniel 6.7: 7 All the presidents of the kingdom, the deputies and the local governors, the counselors and the governors, have consulted together to establish a royal statute, and to make a strong decree, that whoever asks a petition of any god or man for thirty days, except of you, O king, he shall be cast into the den of lions.

Daniel 6.8: 8 Now, O king, establish the decree, and sign the writing, that it not be changed, according to the law of the Medes and Persians, which doesn’t alter.”

Daniel 6.9: 9 Therefore king Darius signed the writing and the decree.

Daniel 6.10: 10 When Daniel knew that the writing was signed, he went into his house (now his windows were open in his room toward Jerusalem) and he kneeled on his knees three times a day, and prayed, and gave thanks before his God, as he did before.

Daniel 6.11: 11 Then these men assembled together, and found Daniel making petition and supplication before his God.

Daniel 6.12: 12 Then they came near, and spoke before the king concerning the king’s decree: “Haven’t you signed a decree that every man who makes a petition to any god or man within thirty days, except to you, O king, shall be cast into the den of lions?”

The king answered, “This thing is true, according to the law of the Medes and Persians, which doesn’t alter.”

Daniel 6.13: 13 Then they answered and said before the king, “That Daniel, who is of the children of the captivity of Judah, doesn’t respect you, O king, nor the decree that you have signed, but makes his petition three times a day.”

Daniel 6.14: 14 Then the king, when he heard these words, was very displeased, and set his heart on Daniel to deliver him; and he labored until the going down of the sun to rescue him.

Daniel 6.15: 15 Then these men assembled together to the king, and said to the king, “Know, O king, that it is a law of the Medes and Persians, that no decree nor statute which the king establishes may be changed.”

Daniel 6.16: 16 Then the king commanded, and they brought Daniel, and cast him into the den of lions. The king spoke and said to Daniel, “Your God whom you serve continually, he will deliver you.”

Daniel 6.17: 17 A stone was brought, and laid on the mouth of the den; and the king sealed it with his own signet, and with the signet of his lords; that nothing might be changed concerning Daniel.

Daniel 6.18: 18 Then the king went to his palace, and passed the night fasting. No musical instruments were brought before him; and his sleep fled from him.

Daniel 6.19: 19 Then the king arose very early in the morning, and went in haste to the den of lions.

Daniel 6.20: 20 When he came near to the den to Daniel, he cried with a troubled voice. The king spoke and said to Daniel, “Daniel, servant of the living God, is your God, whom you serve continually, able to deliver you from the lions?”

Daniel 6.21: 21 Then Daniel said to the king, “O king, live forever!

Daniel 6.22: 22 My God has sent his angel, and has shut the lions’ mouths, and they have not hurt me; because as before him innocence was found in me; and also before you, O king, I have done no harm.”

Daniel 6.23: 23 Then the king was exceedingly glad, and commanded that they should take Daniel up out of the den. So Daniel was taken up out of the den, and no kind of harm was found on him, because he had trusted in his God.

Daniel 6.24: 24 The king commanded, and they brought those men who had accused Daniel, and they cast them into the den of lions, them, their children, and their wives; and the lions mauled them, and broke all their bones in pieces, before they came to the bottom of the den.

Daniel 6.25: 25 Then king Darius wrote to all the peoples, nations, and languages, who dwell in all the earth:

“Peace be multiplied to you.

Daniel 6.26: 26 “I make a decree that in all the dominion of my kingdom men tremble and fear before the God of Daniel;

“for he is the living God,

and steadfast forever.

His kingdom is that which will not be destroyed.

His dominion will be even to the end.

Daniel 6.27: 27 He delivers and rescues.

He works signs and wonders in heaven and in earth,

who has delivered Daniel from the power of the lions.”

Daniel 6.28: 28 So this Daniel prospered in the reign of Darius, and in the reign of Cyrus the Persian.

Daniel 7.0:

7

Daniel 7.1: 1 In the first year of Belshazzar king of Babylon Daniel had a dream and visions of his head on his bed. Then he wrote the dream and told the sum of the matters.

Daniel 7.2: 2 Daniel spoke and said, “I saw in my vision by night, and, behold, the four winds of the sky broke out on the great sea.

Daniel 7.3: 3 Four great animals came up from the sea, different from one another.

Daniel 7.4: 4 “The first was like a lion, and had eagle’s wings. I watched until its wings were plucked, and it was lifted up from the earth, and made to stand on two feet as a man. A man’s heart was given to it.

Daniel 7.5: 5 “Behold, there was another animal, a second, like a bear. It was raised up on one side, and three ribs were in its mouth between its teeth. They said this to it: ‘Arise! Devour much flesh!’

Daniel 7.6: 6 “After this I saw, and behold, another, like a leopard, which had on its back four wings of a bird. The animal also had four heads; and dominion was given to it.

Daniel 7.7: 7 “After this I saw in the night visions, and, behold, there was a fourth animal, awesome and powerful, and exceedingly strong. It had great iron teeth. It devoured and broke in pieces, and stamped the residue with its feet. It was different from all the animals that were before it. It had ten horns.

Daniel 7.8: 8 “I considered the horns, and behold, there came up among them another horn, a little one, before which three of the first horns were plucked up by the roots: and behold, in this horn were eyes like the eyes of a man, and a mouth speaking great things.

Daniel 7.9: 9 “I watched until thrones were placed,

and one who was ancient of days sat.

His clothing was white as snow,

and the hair of his head like pure wool.

His throne was fiery flames,

and its wheels burning fire.

Daniel 7.10: 10 A fiery stream issued and came out from before him.

Thousands of thousands ministered to him.

Ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him.

The judgment was set.

The books were opened.

Daniel 7.11: 11 “I watched at that time because of the voice of the great words which the horn spoke. I watched even until the animal was slain, and its body destroyed, and it was given to be burned with fire.

Daniel 7.12: 12 As for the rest of the animals, their dominion was taken away; yet their lives were prolonged for a season and a time.

Daniel 7.13: 13 “I saw in the night visions, and behold, there came with the clouds of the sky one like a son of man, and he came even to the ancient of days, and they brought him near before him.

Daniel 7.14: 14 Dominion was given him, and glory, and a kingdom, that all the peoples, nations, and languages should serve him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion, which will not pass away, and his kingdom that which will not be destroyed.

Daniel 7.15: 15 “As for me, Daniel, my spirit was grieved within my body, and the visions of my head troubled me.

Daniel 7.16: 16 I came near to one of those who stood by, and asked him the truth concerning all this.

“So he told me, and made me know the interpretation of the things.

Daniel 7.17: 17 ‘These great animals, which are four, are four kings, who will arise out of the earth.

Daniel 7.18: 18 But the saints of the Most High will receive the kingdom, and possess the kingdom forever, even forever and ever.’

Daniel 7.19: 19 “Then I desired to know the truth concerning the fourth animal, which was different from all of them, exceedingly terrible, whose teeth were of iron, and its nails of bronze; which devoured, broke in pieces, and stamped the residue with its feet;

Daniel 7.20: 20 and concerning the ten horns that were on its head, and the other horn which came up, and before which three fell, even that horn that had eyes, and a mouth that spoke great things, whose look was more stout than its fellows.

Daniel 7.21: 21 I saw, and the same horn made war with the saints, and prevailed against them,

Daniel 7.22: 22 until the ancient of days came, and judgment was given to the saints of the Most High, and the time came that the saints possessed the kingdom.

Daniel 7.23: 23 “Thus he said, ‘The fourth animal will be a fourth kingdom on earth, which will be different from all the kingdoms, and will devour the whole earth, and will tread it down, and break it in pieces.

Daniel 7.24: 24 As for the ten horns, ten kings will arise out of this kingdom. Another will arise after them; and he will be different from the former, and he will put down three kings.

Daniel 7.25: 25 He will speak words against the Most High, and will wear out the saints of the Most High. He will plan to change the times and the law; and they will be given into his hand until a time and times and half a time.

Daniel 7.26: 26 “‘But the judgment will be set, and they will take away his dominion, to consume and to destroy it to the end.

Daniel 7.27: 27 The kingdom and the dominion, and the greatness of the kingdoms under the whole sky, will be given to the people of the saints of the Most High. His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and all dominions will serve and obey him.’

Daniel 7.28: 28 “Here is the end of the matter. As for me, Daniel, my thoughts much troubled me, and my face was changed in me; but I kept the matter in my heart.”

Daniel 8.0:

8

Daniel 8.1: 1 In the third year of the reign of king Belshazzar a vision appeared to me, even to me, Daniel, after that which appeared to me at the first.

Daniel 8.2: 2 I saw the vision. Now it was so, that when I saw, I was in the citadel of Susa, which is in the province of Elam. I saw in the vision, and I was by the river Ulai.

Daniel 8.3: 3 Then I lifted up my eyes, and saw, and behold, there stood before the river a ram which had two horns. The two horns were high; but one was higher than the other, and the higher came up last.

Daniel 8.4: 4 I saw the ram pushing westward, northward, and southward. No animals could stand before him. There wasn’t any who could deliver out of his hand; but he did according to his will, and magnified himself.

Daniel 8.5: 5 As I was considering, behold, a male goat came from the west over the surface of the whole earth, and didn’t touch the ground. The goat had a notable horn between his eyes.

Daniel 8.6: 6 He came to the ram that had the two horns, which I saw standing before the river, and ran on him in the fury of his power.

Daniel 8.7: 7 I saw him come close to the ram, and he was moved with anger against him, and struck the ram, and broke his two horns. There was no power in the ram to stand before him; but he cast him down to the ground, and trampled on him. There was no one who could deliver the ram out of his hand.

Daniel 8.8: 8 The male goat magnified himself exceedingly. When he was strong, the great horn was broken; and instead of it there came up four notable horns toward the four winds of the sky.

Daniel 8.9: 9 Out of one of them came out a little horn, which grew exceedingly great, toward the south, and toward the east, and toward the glorious land.

Daniel 8.10: 10 It grew great, even to the army of the sky; and it cast down some of the army and of the stars to the ground, and trampled on them.

Daniel 8.11: 11 Yes, it magnified itself, even to the prince of the army; and it took away from him the continual burnt offering, and the place of his sanctuary was cast down.

Daniel 8.12: 12 The army was given over to it together with the continual burnt offering through disobedience. It cast down truth to the ground, and it did its pleasure and prospered.

Daniel 8.13: 13 Then I heard a holy one speaking; and another holy one said to that certain one who spoke, “How long will the vision about the continual burnt offering, and the disobedience that makes desolate, to give both the sanctuary and the army to be trodden under foot be?”

Daniel 8.14: 14 He said to me, “To two thousand and three hundred evenings and mornings. Then the sanctuary will be cleansed.”

Daniel 8.15: 15 When I, even I Daniel, had seen the vision, I sought to understand it. Then behold, there stood before me something like the appearance of a man.

Daniel 8.16: 16 I heard a man’s voice between the banks of the Ulai, which called, and said, “Gabriel, make this man understand the vision.”

Daniel 8.17: 17 So he came near where I stood; and when he came, I was frightened, and fell on my face; but he said to me, “Understand, son of man; for the vision belongs to the time of the end.”

Daniel 8.18: 18 Now as he was speaking with me, I fell into a deep sleep with my face toward the ground; but he touched me, and set me upright.

Daniel 8.19: 19 He said, “Behold, I will make you know what will be in the latter time of the indignation; for it belongs to the appointed time of the end.

Daniel 8.20: 20 The ram which you saw, that had the two horns, they are the kings of Media and Persia.

Daniel 8.21: 21 The rough male goat is the king of Greece. The great horn that is between his eyes is the first king.

Daniel 8.22: 22 As for that which was broken, in the place where four stood up, four kingdoms will stand up out of the nation, but not with his power.

Daniel 8.23: 23 “In the latter time of their kingdom, when the transgressors have come to the full, a king of fierce face, and understanding dark sentences, will stand up.

Daniel 8.24: 24 His power will be mighty, but not by his own power. He will destroy awesomely, and will prosper in what he does. He will destroy the mighty ones and the holy people.

Daniel 8.25: 25 Through his policy he will cause deceit to prosper in his hand. He will magnify himself in his heart, and he will destroy many in their security. He will also stand up against the prince of princes; but he will be broken without hand.

Daniel 8.26: 26 “The vision of the evenings and mornings which has been told is true; but seal up the vision, for it belongs to many days to come.”

Daniel 8.27: 27 I, Daniel, fainted, and was sick for some days. Then I rose up, and did the king’s business. I wondered at the vision, but no one understood it.

Daniel 9.0:

9

Daniel 9.1: 1 In the first year of Darius the son of Ahasuerus, of the offspring of the Medes, who was made king over the realm of the Chaldeans,

Daniel 9.2: 2 in the first year of his reign I, Daniel, understood by the books the number of the years about which Yahweh’s word came to Jeremiah the prophet, for the accomplishing of the desolations of Jerusalem, even seventy years.

Daniel 9.3: 3 I set my face to the Lord God, to seek by prayer and petitions, with fasting and sackcloth and ashes.

Daniel 9.4: 4 I prayed to Yahweh my God, and made confession, and said,

“Oh, Lord, the great and dreadful God, who keeps covenant and loving kindness with those who love him and keep his commandments,

Daniel 9.5: 5 we have sinned, and have dealt perversely, and have done wickedly, and have rebelled, even turning aside from your precepts and from your ordinances.

Daniel 9.6: 6 We haven’t listened to your servants the prophets, who spoke in your name to our kings, our princes, and our fathers, and to all the people of the land.

Daniel 9.7: 7 “Lord, righteousness belongs to you, but to us confusion of face, as it is today; to the men of Judah, and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and to all Israel, who are near, and who are far off, through all the countries where you have driven them, because of their trespass that they have trespassed against you.

Daniel 9.8: 8 Lord, to us belongs confusion of face, to our kings, to our princes, and to our fathers, because we have sinned against you.

Daniel 9.9: 9 To the Lord our God belong mercies and forgiveness; for we have rebelled against him.

Daniel 9.10: 10 We haven’t obeyed Yahweh our God’s voice, to walk in his laws, which he set before us by his servants the prophets.

Daniel 9.11: 11 Yes, all Israel have transgressed your law, turning aside, that they should not obey your voice.

“Therefore the curse and the oath written in the law of Moses the servant of God has been poured out on us; for we have sinned against him.

Daniel 9.12: 12 He has confirmed his words, which he spoke against us, and against our judges who judged us, by bringing on us a great evil; for under the whole sky, such has not been done as has been done to Jerusalem.

Daniel 9.13: 13 As it is written in the law of Moses, all this evil has come on us. Yet we have not entreated the favor of Yahweh our God, that we should turn from our iniquities and have discernment in your truth.

Daniel 9.14: 14 Therefore Yahweh has watched over the evil, and brought it on us; for Yahweh our God is righteous in all his works which he does, and we have not obeyed his voice.

Daniel 9.15: 15 “Now, Lord our God, who has brought your people out of the land of Egypt with a mighty hand, and have gotten yourself renown, as it is today; we have sinned. We have done wickedly.

Daniel 9.16: 16 Lord, according to all your righteousness, let your anger and please let your wrath be turned away from your city Jerusalem, your holy mountain; because for our sins, and for the iniquities of our fathers, Jerusalem and your people have become a reproach to all who are around us.

Daniel 9.17: 17 “Now therefore, our God, listen to the prayer of your servant, and to his petitions, and cause your face to shine on your sanctuary that is desolate, for the Lord’s sake.

Daniel 9.18: 18 My God, turn your ear, and hear. Open your eyes, and see our desolations, and the city which is called by your name; for we do not present our petitions before you for our righteousness, but for your great mercies’ sake.

Daniel 9.19: 19 Lord, hear. Lord, forgive. Lord, listen and do. Don’t defer, for your own sake, my God, because your city and your people are called by your name.”

Daniel 9.20: 20 While I was speaking, and praying, and confessing my sin and the sin of my people Israel, and presenting my supplication before Yahweh my God for the holy mountain of my God;

Daniel 9.21: 21 yes, while I was speaking in prayer, the man Gabriel, whom I had seen in the vision at the beginning, being caused to fly swiftly, touched me about the time of the evening offering.

Daniel 9.22: 22 He instructed me and talked with me, and said, Daniel, “I have now come to give you wisdom and understanding.

Daniel 9.23: 23 At the beginning of your petitions the commandment went out, and I have come to tell you; for you are greatly beloved. Therefore consider the matter, and understand the vision.

Daniel 9.24: 24 “Seventy weeks are decreed on your people and on your holy city, to finish disobedience, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up vision and prophecy, and to anoint the most holy.

Daniel 9.25: 25 “Know therefore and discern that from the going out of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem to the Anointed One, the prince, will be seven weeks and sixty-two weeks. It will be built again, with street and moat, even in troubled times.

Daniel 9.26: 26 After the sixty-two weeks the Anointed One will be cut off, and will have nothing. The people of the prince who come will destroy the city and the sanctuary. Its end will be with a flood, and war will be even to the end. Desolations are determined.

Daniel 9.27: 27 He will make a firm covenant with many for one week. In the middle of the week he will cause the sacrifice and the offering to cease. On the wing of abominations will come one who makes desolate; and even to the full end, and that determined, wrath will be poured out on the desolate.”

Daniel 10.0:

10

Daniel 10.1: 1 In the third year of Cyrus king of Persia a thing was revealed to Daniel, whose name was called Belteshazzar; and the thing was true, even a great warfare. He understood the thing, and had understanding of the vision.

Daniel 10.2: 2 In those days I, Daniel, was mourning three whole weeks.

Daniel 10.3: 3 I ate no pleasant bread. No meat or wine came into my mouth. I didn’t anoint myself at all, until three whole weeks were fulfilled.

Daniel 10.4: 4 In the twenty-fourth day of the first month, as I was by the side of the great river, which is Hiddekel,

Daniel 10.5: 5 I lifted up my eyes, and looked, and behold, there was a man clothed in linen, whose thighs were adorned with pure gold of Uphaz.

Daniel 10.6: 6 His body also was like the beryl, and his face as the appearance of lightning, and his eyes as flaming torches. His arms and his feet were like burnished bronze. The voice of his words was like the voice of a multitude.

Daniel 10.7: 7 I, Daniel, alone saw the vision; for the men who were with me didn’t see the vision; but a great quaking fell on them, and they fled to hide themselves.

Daniel 10.8: 8 So I was left alone, and saw this great vision. No strength remained in me; for my face grew deathly pale, and I retained no strength.

Daniel 10.9: 9 Yet I heard the voice of his words. When I heard the voice of his words, then I fell into a deep sleep on my face, with my face toward the ground.

Daniel 10.10: 10 Behold, a hand touched me, which set me on my knees and on the palms of my hands.

Daniel 10.11: 11 He said to me, “Daniel, you greatly beloved man, understand the words that I speak to you, and stand upright; for I have been sent to you, now.” When he had spoken this word to me, I stood trembling.

Daniel 10.12: 12 Then he said to me, “Don’t be afraid, Daniel; for from the first day that you set your heart to understand, and to humble yourself before your God, your words were heard. I have come for your words’ sake.

Daniel 10.13: 13 But the prince of the kingdom of Persia withstood me twenty-one days; but, behold, Michael, one of the chief princes, came to help me because I remained there with the kings of Persia.

Daniel 10.14: 14 Now I have come to make you understand what will happen to your people in the latter days; for the vision is yet for many days.”

Daniel 10.15: 15 When he had spoken these words to me, I set my face toward the ground, and was mute.

Daniel 10.16: 16 Behold, one in the likeness of the sons of men touched my lips. Then I opened my mouth, and spoke and said to him who stood before me, “My lord, by reason of the vision my sorrows have overtaken me, and I retain no strength.

Daniel 10.17: 17 For how can the servant of this my lord talk with this my lord? For as for me, immediately there remained no strength in me. There was no breath left in me.”

Daniel 10.18: 18 Then one like the appearance of a man touched me again, and he strengthened me.

Daniel 10.19: 19 He said, “Greatly beloved man, don’t be afraid. Peace be to you. Be strong. Yes, be strong.”

When he spoke to me, I was strengthened, and said, “Let my lord speak; for you have strengthened me.”

Daniel 10.20: 20 Then he said, “Do you know why I have come to you? Now I will return to fight with the prince of Persia. When I go out, behold, the prince of Greece will come.

Daniel 10.21: 21 But I will tell you that which is inscribed in the writing of truth. There is no one who holds with me against these, but Michael your prince.

Daniel 11.0:

11

Daniel 11.1: 1 “As for me, in the first year of Darius the Mede, I stood up to confirm and strengthen him.

Daniel 11.2: 2 “Now I will show you the truth. Behold, three more kings will stand up in Persia; and the fourth will be far richer than all of them. When he has grown strong through his riches, he will stir up all against the realm of Greece.

Daniel 11.3: 3 A mighty king will stand up, who will rule with great dominion, and do according to his will.

Daniel 11.4: 4 When he stands up, his kingdom will be broken, and will be divided toward the four winds of the sky, but not to his posterity, nor according to his dominion with which he ruled; for his kingdom will be plucked up, even for others besides these.

Daniel 11.5: 5 “The king of the south will be strong. One of his princes will become stronger than him, and have dominion. His dominion will be a great dominion.

Daniel 11.6: 6 At the end of years they will join themselves together; and the daughter of the king of the south will come to the king of the north to make an agreement; but she will not retain the strength of her arm. He will also not stand, nor will his arm; but she will be given up, with those who brought her, and he who became the father of her, and he who strengthened her in those times.

Daniel 11.7: 7 “But out of a shoot from her roots one will stand up in his place, who will come to the army, and will enter into the fortress of the king of the north, and will deal against them, and will prevail.

Daniel 11.8: 8 He will also carry their gods, with their molten images, and with their goodly vessels of silver and of gold, captive into Egypt. He will refrain some years from the king of the north.

Daniel 11.9: 9 He will come into the realm of the king of the south, but he will return into his own land.

Daniel 11.10: 10 His sons will wage war, and will assemble a multitude of great forces, which will come on, and overflow, and pass through. They will return and wage war, even to his fortress.

Daniel 11.11: 11 “The king of the south will be moved with anger, and will come out and fight with him, even with the king of the north. He will send out a great multitude, and the multitude will be given into his hand.

Daniel 11.12: 12 The multitude will be lifted up, and his heart will be exalted. He will cast down tens of thousands, but he won’t prevail.

Daniel 11.13: 13 The king of the north will return, and will send out a multitude greater than the former. He will come on at the end of the times, even of years, with a great army and with much substance.

Daniel 11.14: 14 “In those times many will stand up against the king of the south. Also the children of the violent among your people will lift themselves up to establish the vision; but they will fall.

Daniel 11.15: 15 So the king of the north will come and cast up a mound, and take a well-fortified city. The forces of the south won’t stand, neither will his chosen people, neither will there be any strength to stand.

Daniel 11.16: 16 But he who comes against him will do according to his own will, and no one will stand before him. He will stand in the glorious land, and destruction will be in his hand.

Daniel 11.17: 17 He will set his face to come with the strength of his whole kingdom, and with him equitable conditions. He will perform them. He will give him the daughter of women, to corrupt her; but she will not stand, and won’t be for him.

Daniel 11.18: 18 After this he will turn his face to the islands, and will take many; but a prince will cause the reproach offered by him to cease. Yes, moreover, he will cause his reproach to turn on him.

Daniel 11.19: 19 Then he will turn his face toward the fortresses of his own land; but he will stumble and fall, and won’t be found.

Daniel 11.20: 20 “Then one who will cause a tax collector to pass through the kingdom to maintain its glory will stand up in his place; but within few days he shall be destroyed, not in anger, and not in battle.

Daniel 11.21: 21 “In his place a contemptible person will stand up, to whom they had not given the honor of the kingdom; but he will come in time of security, and will obtain the kingdom by flatteries.

Daniel 11.22: 22 The overwhelming forces will be overwhelmed from before him, and will be broken. Yes, also the prince of the covenant.

Daniel 11.23: 23 After the treaty made with him he will work deceitfully; for he will come up, and will become strong, with a small people.

Daniel 11.24: 24 In time of security he will come even on the fattest places of the province. He will do that which his fathers have not done, nor his fathers’ fathers. He will scatter among them prey, plunder, and substance. Yes, he will devise his plans against the strongholds, even for a time.

Daniel 11.25: 25 “He will stir up his power and his courage against the king of the south with a great army; and the king of the south will wage war in battle with an exceedingly great and mighty army; but he won’t stand; for they will devise plans against him.

Daniel 11.26: 26 Yes, those who eat of his dainties will destroy him, and his army will be swept away. Many will fall down slain.

Daniel 11.27: 27 As for both these kings, their hearts will be to do mischief, and they will speak lies at one table; but it won’t prosper, for the end will still be at the appointed time.

Daniel 11.28: 28 Then he will return into his land with great wealth. His heart will be against the holy covenant. He will take action, and return to his own land.

Daniel 11.29: 29 “He will return at the appointed time, and come into the south; but it won’t be in the latter time as it was in the former.

Daniel 11.30: 30 For ships of Kittim will come against him. Therefore he will be grieved, and will return, and have indignation against the holy covenant, and will take action. He will even return, and have regard to those who forsake the holy covenant.

Daniel 11.31: 31 “Forces will stand on his part, and they will profane the sanctuary, even the fortress, and will take away the continual burnt offering. Then they will set up the abomination that makes desolate.

Daniel 11.32: 32 He will corrupt those who do wickedly against the covenant by flatteries; but the people who know their God will be strong, and take action.

Daniel 11.33: 33 “Those who are wise among the people will instruct many; yet they will fall by the sword and by flame, by captivity and by plunder, many days.

Daniel 11.34: 34 Now when they fall, they will be helped with a little help; but many will join themselves to them with flatteries.

Daniel 11.35: 35 Some of those who are wise will fall, to refine them, and to purify, and to make them white, even to the time of the end; because it is yet for the time appointed.

Daniel 11.36: 36 “The king will do according to his will. He will exalt himself, and magnify himself above every god, and will speak marvelous things against the God of gods. He will prosper until the indignation is accomplished; for that which is determined will be done.

Daniel 11.37: 37 He won’t regard the gods of his fathers, or the desire of women, or regard any god; for he will magnify himself above all.

Daniel 11.38: 38 But in his place he will honor the god of fortresses. He will honor a god whom his fathers didn’t know with gold, silver, and with precious stones and pleasant things.

Daniel 11.39: 39 He will deal with the strongest fortresses by the help of a foreign god. He will increase with glory whoever acknowledges him. He will cause them to rule over many, and will divide the land for a price.

Daniel 11.40: 40 “At the time of the end the king of the south will contend with him; and the king of the north will come against him like a whirlwind, with chariots, with horsemen, and with many ships. He will enter into the countries, and will overflow and pass through.

Daniel 11.41: 41 He will enter also into the glorious land, and many countries will be overthrown; but these will be delivered out of his hand: Edom, Moab, and the chief of the children of Ammon.

Daniel 11.42: 42 He will also stretch out his hand on the countries. The land of Egypt won’t escape.

Daniel 11.43: 43 But he will have power over the treasures of gold and of silver, and over all the precious things of Egypt. The Libyans and the Ethiopians will be at his steps.

Daniel 11.44: 44 But news out of the east and out of the north will trouble him; and he will go out with great fury to destroy and utterly to sweep away many.

Daniel 11.45: 45 He will plant the tents of his palace between the sea and the glorious holy mountain; yet he will come to his end, and no one will help him.

Daniel 12.0:

12

Daniel 12.1: 1 “At that time Michael will stand up, the great prince who stands for the children of your people; and there will be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time. At that time your people will be delivered, everyone who is found written in the book.

Daniel 12.2: 2 Many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt.

Daniel 12.3: 3 Those who are wise will shine as the brightness of the expanse. Those who turn many to righteousness will shine as the stars forever and ever.

Daniel 12.4: 4 But you, Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book, even to the time of the end. Many will run back and forth, and knowledge will be increased.”

Daniel 12.5: 5 Then I, Daniel, looked, and behold, two others stood, one on the river bank on this side, and the other on the river bank on that side.

Daniel 12.6: 6 One said to the man clothed in linen, who was above the waters of the river, “How long will it be to the end of these wonders?”

Daniel 12.7: 7 I heard the man clothed in linen, who was above the waters of the river, when he held up his right hand and his left hand to heaven, and swore by him who lives forever that it will be for a time, times, and a half; and when they have finished breaking in pieces the power of the holy people, all these things will be finished.

Daniel 12.8: 8 I heard, but I didn’t understand. Then I said, “My lord, what will be the outcome of these things?”

Daniel 12.9: 9 He said, “Go your way, Daniel; for the words are shut up and sealed until the time of the end.

Daniel 12.10: 10 Many will purify themselves, and make themselves white, and be refined; but the wicked will do wickedly; and none of the wicked will understand; but those who are wise will understand.

Daniel 12.11: 11 “From the time that the continual burnt offering is taken away, and the abomination that makes desolate set up, there will be one thousand two hundred ninety days.

Daniel 12.12: 12 Blessed is he who waits, and comes to the one thousand three hundred thirty-five days.

Daniel 12.13: 13 “But go your way until the end; for you will rest, and will stand in your inheritance at the end of the days.”

Hosea 0.0:

The Book of

Hosea

Hosea 1.0:

1

Hosea 1.1: 1 Yahweh’s word that came to Hosea the son of Beeri, in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah, and in the days of Jeroboam the son of Joash, king of Israel.

Hosea 1.2: 2 When Yahweh spoke at first by Hosea, Yahweh said to Hosea, “Go, take for yourself a wife of prostitution and children of unfaithfulness; for the land commits great adultery, forsaking Yahweh.”

Hosea 1.3: 3 So he went and took Gomer the daughter of Diblaim; and she conceived, and bore him a son.

Hosea 1.4: 4 Yahweh said to him, “Call his name Jezreel; for yet a little while, and I will avenge the blood of Jezreel on the house of Jehu, and will cause the kingdom of the house of Israel to cease.

Hosea 1.5: 5 It will happen in that day that I will break the bow of Israel in the valley of Jezreel.”

Hosea 1.6: 6 She conceived again, and bore a daughter.

Then he said to him, “Call her name Lo-Ruhamah; for I will no longer have mercy on the house of Israel, that I should in any way pardon them.

Hosea 1.7: 7 But I will have mercy on the house of Judah, and will save them by Yahweh their God, and will not save them by bow, sword, battle, horses, or horsemen.”

Hosea 1.8: 8 Now when she had weaned Lo-Ruhamah, she conceived, and bore a son.

Hosea 1.9: 9 He said, “Call his name Lo-Ammi; for you are not my people, and I will not be yours.

Hosea 1.10: 10 Yet the number of the children of Israel will be as the sand of the sea, which can’t be measured or counted; and it will come to pass that, in the place where it was said to them, ‘You are not my people,’ they will be called ‘sons of the living God.’

Hosea 1.11: 11 The children of Judah and the children of Israel will be gathered together, and they will appoint themselves one head, and will go up from the land; for great will be the day of Jezreel.

Hosea 2.0:

2

Hosea 2.1: 1 “Say to your brothers, ‘My people!’

and to your sisters, ‘My loved one!’

Hosea 2.2: 2 Contend with your mother!

Contend, for she is not my wife,

neither am I her husband;

and let her put away her prostitution from her face,

and her adulteries from between her breasts;

Hosea 2.3: 3 Lest I strip her naked,

and make her bare as in the day that she was born,

and make her like a wilderness,

and set her like a dry land,

and kill her with thirst.

Hosea 2.4: 4 Indeed, on her children I will have no mercy;

for they are children of unfaithfulness;

Hosea 2.5: 5 For their mother has played the prostitute.

She who conceived them has done shamefully;

for she said, ‘I will go after my lovers,

who give me my bread and my water,

my wool and my flax,

my oil and my drink.’

Hosea 2.6: 6 Therefore behold, I will hedge up your way with thorns,

and I will build a wall against her,

that she can’t find her way.

Hosea 2.7: 7 She will follow after her lovers,

but she won’t overtake them;

and she will seek them,

but won’t find them.

Then she will say, ‘I will go and return to my first husband;

for then was it better with me than now.’

Hosea 2.8: 8 For she didn’t know that I gave her the grain, the new wine, and the oil,

and multiplied to her silver and gold, which they used for Baal.

Hosea 2.9: 9 Therefore I will take back my grain in its time,

and my new wine in its season,

and will pluck away my wool and my flax which should have covered her nakedness.

Hosea 2.10: 10 Now I will uncover her lewdness in the sight of her lovers,

and no one will deliver her out of my hand.

Hosea 2.11: 11 I will also cause all her celebrations to cease:

her feasts, her new moons, her Sabbaths, and all her solemn assemblies.

Hosea 2.12: 12 I will lay waste her vines and her fig trees,

about which she has said, ‘These are my wages that my lovers have given me;

and I will make them a forest,’

and the animals of the field shall eat them.

Hosea 2.13: 13 I will visit on her the days of the Baals,

to which she burned incense,

when she decked herself with her earrings and her jewels,

and went after her lovers,

and forgot me,” says Yahweh.

Hosea 2.14: 14 “Therefore behold, I will allure her,

and bring her into the wilderness,

and speak tenderly to her.

Hosea 2.15: 15 I will give her vineyards from there,

and the valley of Achor for a door of hope;

and she will respond there,

as in the days of her youth,

and as in the day when she came up out of the land of Egypt.

Hosea 2.16: 16 It will be in that day,” says Yahweh,

“that you will call me ‘my husband,’

and no longer call me ‘my master.’

Hosea 2.17: 17 For I will take away the names of the Baals out of her mouth,

and they will no longer be mentioned by name.

Hosea 2.18: 18 In that day I will make a covenant for them with the animals of the field,

and with the birds of the sky,

and with the creeping things of the ground.

I will break the bow, the sword, and the battle out of the land,

and will make them lie down safely.

Hosea 2.19: 19 I will betroth you to me forever.

Yes, I will betroth you to me in righteousness, in justice, in loving kindness, and in compassion.

Hosea 2.20: 20 I will even betroth you to me in faithfulness;

and you shall know Yahweh.

Hosea 2.21: 21 It will happen in that day, I will respond,” says Yahweh,

“I will respond to the heavens,

and they will respond to the earth;

Hosea 2.22: 22 and the earth will respond to the grain, and the new wine, and the oil;

and they will respond to Jezreel.

Hosea 2.23: 23 I will sow her to me in the earth;

and I will have mercy on her who had not obtained mercy;

and I will tell those who were not my people, ‘You are my people;’

and they will say, ‘My God!’”

Hosea 3.0:

3

Hosea 3.1: 1 Yahweh said to me, “Go again, love a woman loved by another, and an adulteress, even as Yahweh loves the children of Israel, though they turn to other gods, and love cakes of raisins.”

Hosea 3.2: 2 So I bought her for myself for fifteen pieces of silver and a homer and a half of barley.

Hosea 3.3: 3 I said to her, “You shall stay with me many days. You shall not play the prostitute, and you shall not be with any other man. I will also be so toward you.”

Hosea 3.4: 4 For the children of Israel shall live many days without king, and without prince, and without sacrifice, and without sacred stone, and without ephod or idols.

Hosea 3.5: 5 Afterward the children of Israel shall return, and seek Yahweh their God, and David their king, and shall come with trembling to Yahweh and to his blessings in the last days.

Hosea 4.0:

4

Hosea 4.1: 1 Hear Yahweh’s word, you children of Israel;

for Yahweh has a charge against the inhabitants of the land:

“Indeed there is no truth,

nor goodness,

nor knowledge of God in the land.

Hosea 4.2: 2 There is cursing, lying, murder, stealing, and committing adultery;

they break boundaries, and bloodshed causes bloodshed.

Hosea 4.3: 3 Therefore the land will mourn,

and everyone who dwells in it will waste away,

with all living things in her,

even the animals of the field and the birds of the sky,

yes, the fish of the sea also die.

Hosea 4.4: 4 “Yet let no man bring a charge, neither let any man accuse; for your people are like those who bring charges against a priest.

Hosea 4.5: 5 You will stumble in the day,

and the prophet will also stumble with you in the night;

and I will destroy your mother.

Hosea 4.6: 6 My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.

Because you have rejected knowledge, I will also reject you,

that you may be no priest to me.

Because you have forgotten your God’s law,

I will also forget your children.

Hosea 4.7: 7 As they were multiplied, so they sinned against me.

I will change their glory into shame.

Hosea 4.8: 8 They feed on the sin of my people,

and set their heart on their iniquity.

Hosea 4.9: 9 It will be, like people, like priest;

and I will punish them for their ways,

and will repay them for their deeds.

Hosea 4.10: 10 They will eat, and not have enough.

They will play the prostitute, and will not increase;

because they have abandoned giving to Yahweh.

Hosea 4.11: 11 Prostitution, wine, and new wine take away understanding.

Hosea 4.12: 12 My people consult with their wooden idol,

and answer to a stick of wood.

Indeed the spirit of prostitution has led them astray,

and they have been unfaithful to their God.

Hosea 4.13: 13 They sacrifice on the tops of the mountains,

and burn incense on the hills, under oaks and poplars and terebinths,

because its shade is good.

Therefore your daughters play the prostitute,

and your brides commit adultery.

Hosea 4.14: 14 I will not punish your daughters when they play the prostitute,

nor your brides when they commit adultery;

because the men consort with prostitutes,

and they sacrifice with the shrine prostitutes;

so the people without understanding will come to ruin.

Hosea 4.15: 15 “Though you, Israel, play the prostitute,

yet don’t let Judah offend;

and don’t come to Gilgal,

neither go up to Beth Aven,

nor swear, ‘As Yahweh lives.’

Hosea 4.16: 16 For Israel has behaved extremely stubbornly, like a stubborn heifer.

Then how will Yahweh feed them like a lamb in a meadow.

Hosea 4.17: 17 Ephraim is joined to idols.

Leave him alone!

Hosea 4.18: 18 Their drink has become sour.

They play the prostitute continually.

Her rulers dearly love their shameful way.

Hosea 4.19: 19 The wind has wrapped her up in its wings;

and they shall be disappointed because of their sacrifices.

Hosea 5.0:

5

Hosea 5.1: 1 “Listen to this, you priests!

Listen, house of Israel,

and give ear, house of the king!

For the judgment is against you;

for you have been a snare at Mizpah,

and a net spread on Tabor.

Hosea 5.2: 2 The rebels are deep in slaughter;

but I discipline all of them.

Hosea 5.3: 3 I know Ephraim,

and Israel is not hidden from me;

for now, Ephraim, you have played the prostitute.

Israel is defiled.

Hosea 5.4: 4 Their deeds won’t allow them to turn to their God;

for the spirit of prostitution is within them,

and they don’t know Yahweh.

Hosea 5.5: 5 The pride of Israel testifies to his face.

Therefore Israel and Ephraim will stumble in their iniquity.

Judah also will stumble with them.

Hosea 5.6: 6 They will go with their flocks and with their herds to seek Yahweh;

but they won’t find him.

He has withdrawn himself from them.

Hosea 5.7: 7 They are unfaithful to Yahweh;

for they have borne illegitimate children.

Now the new moon will devour them with their fields.

Hosea 5.8: 8 “Blow the cornet in Gibeah,

and the trumpet in Ramah!

Sound a battle cry at Beth Aven, behind you, Benjamin!

Hosea 5.9: 9 Ephraim will become a desolation in the day of rebuke.

Among the tribes of Israel, I have made known that which will surely be.

Hosea 5.10: 10 The princes of Judah are like those who remove a landmark.

I will pour out my wrath on them like water.

Hosea 5.11: 11 Ephraim is oppressed,

he is crushed in judgment;

Because he is intent in his pursuit of idols.

Hosea 5.12: 12 Therefore I am to Ephraim like a moth,

and to the house of Judah like rottenness.

Hosea 5.13: 13 “When Ephraim saw his sickness,

and Judah his wound,

Then Ephraim went to Assyria,

and sent to king Jareb:

but he is not able to heal you,

neither will he cure you of your wound.

Hosea 5.14: 14 For I will be to Ephraim like a lion,

and like a young lion to the house of Judah.

I myself will tear in pieces and go away.

I will carry off, and there will be no one to deliver.

Hosea 5.15: 15 I will go and return to my place,

until they acknowledge their offense,

and seek my face.

In their affliction they will seek me earnestly.”

Hosea 6.0:

6

Hosea 6.1: 1 “Come! Let’s return to Yahweh;

for he has torn us to pieces,

and he will heal us;

he has injured us,

and he will bind up our wounds.

Hosea 6.2: 2 After two days he will revive us.

On the third day he will raise us up,

and we will live before him.

Hosea 6.3: 3 Let’s acknowledge Yahweh.

Let’s press on to know Yahweh.

As surely as the sun rises,

Yahweh will appear.

He will come to us like the rain,

like the spring rain that waters the earth.”

Hosea 6.4: 4 “Ephraim, what shall I do to you?

Judah, what shall I do to you?

For your love is like a morning cloud,

and like the dew that disappears early.

Hosea 6.5: 5 Therefore I have cut them to pieces with the prophets;

I killed them with the words of my mouth.

Your judgments are like a flash of lightning.

Hosea 6.6: 6 For I desire mercy, and not sacrifice;

and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings.

Hosea 6.7: 7 But they, like Adam, have broken the covenant.

They were unfaithful to me, there.

Hosea 6.8: 8 Gilead is a city of those who work iniquity;

it is stained with blood.

Hosea 6.9: 9 As gangs of robbers wait to ambush a man,

so the company of priests murder on the path toward Shechem,

committing shameful crimes.

Hosea 6.10: 10 In the house of Israel I have seen a horrible thing.

There is prostitution in Ephraim.

Israel is defiled.

Hosea 6.11: 11 “Also, Judah, there is a harvest appointed for you,

when I restore the fortunes of my people.

Hosea 7.0:

7

Hosea 7.1: 1 When I would heal Israel,

then the iniquity of Ephraim is uncovered,

also the wickedness of Samaria;

for they commit falsehood,

and the thief enters in,

and the gang of robbers ravages outside.

Hosea 7.2: 2 They don’t consider in their hearts that I remember all their wickedness.

Now their own deeds have engulfed them.

They are before my face.

Hosea 7.3: 3 They make the king glad with their wickedness,

and the princes with their lies.

Hosea 7.4: 4 They are all adulterers.

They are burning like an oven that the baker stops stirring,

from the kneading of the dough, until it is leavened.

Hosea 7.5: 5 On the day of our king, the princes made themselves sick with the heat of wine.

He joined his hand with mockers.

Hosea 7.6: 6 For they have prepared their heart like an oven,

while they lie in wait.

Their baker sleeps all the night.

In the morning it burns as a flaming fire.

Hosea 7.7: 7 They are all hot as an oven,

and devour their judges.

All their kings have fallen.

There is no one among them who calls to me.

Hosea 7.8: 8 Ephraim, he mixes himself among the nations.

Ephraim is a pancake not turned over.

Hosea 7.9: 9 Strangers have devoured his strength,

and he doesn’t realize it.

Indeed, gray hairs are here and there on him,

and he doesn’t realize it.

Hosea 7.10: 10 The pride of Israel testifies to his face;

yet they haven’t returned to Yahweh their God,

nor sought him, for all this.

Hosea 7.11: 11 “Ephraim is like an easily deceived dove, without understanding.

They call to Egypt.

They go to Assyria.

Hosea 7.12: 12 When they go, I will spread my net on them.

I will bring them down like the birds of the sky.

I will chastise them, as their congregation has heard.

Hosea 7.13: 13 Woe to them!

For they have wandered from me.

Destruction to them!

For they have trespassed against me.

Though I would redeem them,

yet they have spoken lies against me.

Hosea 7.14: 14 They haven’t cried to me with their heart,

but they howl on their beds.

They assemble themselves for grain and new wine.

They turn away from me.

Hosea 7.15: 15 Though I have taught and strengthened their arms,

yet they plot evil against me.

Hosea 7.16: 16 They return, but not to the Most High.

They are like a faulty bow.

Their princes will fall by the sword for the rage of their tongue.

This will be their derision in the land of Egypt.

Hosea 8.0:

8

Hosea 8.1: 1 “Put the trumpet to your lips!

Something like an eagle is over Yahweh’s house,

because they have broken my covenant,

and rebelled against my law.

Hosea 8.2: 2 They cry to me, ‘My God, we Israel acknowledge you!’

Hosea 8.3: 3 Israel has cast off that which is good.

The enemy will pursue him.

Hosea 8.4: 4 They have set up kings, but not by me.

They have made princes, and I didn’t approve.

Of their silver and their gold they have made themselves idols,

that they may be cut off.

Hosea 8.5: 5 Let Samaria throw out his calf idol!

My anger burns against them!

How long will it be until they are capable of purity?

Hosea 8.6: 6 For this is even from Israel!

The workman made it, and it is no God;

indeed, the calf of Samaria shall be broken in pieces.

Hosea 8.7: 7 For they sow the wind,

and they will reap the whirlwind.

He has no standing grain.

The stalk will yield no head.

If it does yield, strangers will swallow it up.

Hosea 8.8: 8 Israel is swallowed up.

Now they are among the nations like a worthless thing.

Hosea 8.9: 9 For they have gone up to Assyria,

like a wild donkey wandering alone.

Ephraim has hired lovers for himself.

Hosea 8.10: 10 But although they sold themselves among the nations,

I will now gather them;

and they begin to waste away because of the oppression of the king of mighty ones.

Hosea 8.11: 11 Because Ephraim has multiplied altars for sinning,

they became for him altars for sinning.

Hosea 8.12: 12 I wrote for him the many things of my law;

but they were regarded as a strange thing.

Hosea 8.13: 13 As for the sacrifices of my offerings,

they sacrifice meat and eat it;

But Yahweh doesn’t accept them.

Now he will remember their iniquity,

and punish their sins.

They will return to Egypt.

Hosea 8.14: 14 For Israel has forgotten his Maker and built palaces;

and Judah has multiplied fortified cities;

but I will send a fire on his cities,

and it will devour its fortresses.”

Hosea 9.0:

9

Hosea 9.1: 1 Don’t rejoice, Israel, to jubilation like the nations;

for you were unfaithful to your God.

You love the wages of a prostitute at every grain threshing floor.

Hosea 9.2: 2 The threshing floor and the wine press won’t feed them,

and the new wine will fail her.

Hosea 9.3: 3 They won’t dwell in Yahweh’s land;

but Ephraim will return to Egypt,

and they will eat unclean food in Assyria.

Hosea 9.4: 4 They won’t pour out wine offerings to Yahweh,

neither will they be pleasing to him.

Their sacrifices will be to them like the bread of mourners;

all who eat of it will be polluted;

for their bread will be for their appetite.

It will not come into Yahweh’s house.

Hosea 9.5: 5 What will you do in the day of solemn assembly,

and in the day of the feast of Yahweh?

Hosea 9.6: 6 For, behold, they have gone away from destruction.

Egypt will gather them up.

Memphis will bury them.

Nettles will possess their pleasant things of silver.

Thorns will be in their tents.

Hosea 9.7: 7 The days of visitation have come.

The days of reckoning have come.

Israel will consider the prophet to be a fool,

and the man who is inspired to be insane,

because of the abundance of your sins,

and because your hostility is great.

Hosea 9.8: 8 A prophet watches over Ephraim with my God.

A fowler’s snare is on all of his paths,

and hostility in the house of his God.

Hosea 9.9: 9 They have deeply corrupted themselves,

as in the days of Gibeah.

He will remember their iniquity.

He will punish them for their sins.

Hosea 9.10: 10 I found Israel like grapes in the wilderness.

I saw your fathers as the first ripe in the fig tree at its first season;

but they came to Baal Peor, and consecrated themselves to the shameful thing,

and became abominable like that which they loved.

Hosea 9.11: 11 As for Ephraim, their glory will fly away like a bird.

There will be no birth, no one with child, and no conception.

Hosea 9.12: 12 Though they bring up their children,

yet I will bereave them, so that not a man shall be left.

Indeed, woe also to them when I depart from them!

Hosea 9.13: 13 I have seen Ephraim, like Tyre, planted in a pleasant place;

but Ephraim will bring out his children to the murderer.

Hosea 9.14: 14 Give them—Yahweh what will you give?

Give them a miscarrying womb and dry breasts.

Hosea 9.15: 15 “All their wickedness is in Gilgal;

for there I hated them.

Because of the wickedness of their deeds I will drive them out of my house!

I will love them no more.

All their princes are rebels.

Hosea 9.16: 16 Ephraim is struck.

Their root has dried up.

They will bear no fruit.

Even though they give birth, yet I will kill the beloved ones of their womb.”

Hosea 9.17: 17 My God will cast them away, because they didn’t listen to him;

and they will be wanderers among the nations.

Hosea 10.0:

10

Hosea 10.1: 1 Israel is a luxuriant vine that produces his fruit.

According to the abundance of his fruit he has multiplied his altars.

As their land has prospered, they have adorned their sacred stones.

Hosea 10.2: 2 Their heart is divided.

Now they will be found guilty.

He will demolish their altars.

He will destroy their sacred stones.

Hosea 10.3: 3 Surely now they will say, “We have no king; for we don’t fear Yahweh;

and the king, what can he do for us?”

Hosea 10.4: 4 They make promises, swearing falsely in making covenants.

Therefore judgment springs up like poisonous weeds in the furrows of the field.

Hosea 10.5: 5 The inhabitants of Samaria will be in terror for the calves of Beth Aven;

for its people will mourn over it,

Along with its priests who rejoiced over it,

for its glory, because it has departed from it.

Hosea 10.6: 6 It also will be carried to Assyria for a present to a great king.

Ephraim will receive shame,

and Israel will be ashamed of his own counsel.

Hosea 10.7: 7 Samaria and her king float away,

like a twig on the water.

Hosea 10.8: 8 The high places also of Aven, the sin of Israel, will be destroyed.

The thorn and the thistle will come up on their altars.

They will tell the mountains, “Cover us!” and the hills, “Fall on us!”

Hosea 10.9: 9 “Israel, you have sinned from the days of Gibeah.

There they remained.

The battle against the children of iniquity doesn’t overtake them in Gibeah.

Hosea 10.10: 10 When it is my desire, I will chastise them;

and the nations will be gathered against them,

when they are bound to their two transgressions.

Hosea 10.11: 11 Ephraim is a trained heifer that loves to thresh;

so I will put a yoke on her beautiful neck.

I will set a rider on Ephraim.

Judah will plow.

Jacob will break his clods.

Hosea 10.12: 12 Sow to yourselves in righteousness,

reap according to kindness.

Break up your fallow ground;

for it is time to seek Yahweh,

until he comes and rains righteousness on you.

Hosea 10.13: 13 You have plowed wickedness.

You have reaped iniquity.

You have eaten the fruit of lies,

for you trusted in your way, in the multitude of your mighty men.

Hosea 10.14: 14 Therefore a battle roar will arise among your people,

and all your fortresses will be destroyed,

as Shalman destroyed Beth Arbel in the day of battle.

The mother was dashed in pieces with her children.

Hosea 10.15: 15 So Bethel will do to you because of your great wickedness.

At daybreak the king of Israel will be destroyed.

Hosea 11.0:

11

Hosea 11.1: 1 “When Israel was a child, then I loved him,

and called my son out of Egypt.

Hosea 11.2: 2 They called to them, so they went from them.

They sacrificed to the Baals,

and burned incense to engraved images.

Hosea 11.3: 3 Yet I taught Ephraim to walk.

I took them by his arms;

but they didn’t know that I healed them.

Hosea 11.4: 4 I drew them with cords of a man, with ties of love;

and I was to them like those who lift up the yoke on their necks;

and I bent down to him and I fed him.

Hosea 11.5: 5 “They won’t return into the land of Egypt;

but the Assyrian will be their king,

because they refused to repent.

Hosea 11.6: 6 The sword will fall on their cities,

and will destroy the bars of their gates,

and will put an end to their plans.

Hosea 11.7: 7 My people are determined to turn from me.

Though they call to the Most High,

he certainly won’t exalt them.

Hosea 11.8: 8 “How can I give you up, Ephraim?

How can I hand you over, Israel?

How can I make you like Admah?

How can I make you like Zeboiim?

My heart is turned within me,

my compassion is aroused.

Hosea 11.9: 9 I will not execute the fierceness of my anger.

I will not return to destroy Ephraim:

for I am God, and not man; the Holy One among you;

and I will not come in wrath.

Hosea 11.10: 10 They will walk after Yahweh,

who will roar like a lion;

for he will roar, and the children will come trembling from the west.

Hosea 11.11: 11 They will come trembling like a bird out of Egypt,

and like a dove out of the land of Assyria;

and I will settle them in their houses,” says Yahweh.

Hosea 11.12: 12 Ephraim surrounds me with falsehood,

and the house of Israel with deceit.

Judah still strays from God,

and is unfaithful to the Holy One.

Hosea 12.0:

12

Hosea 12.1: 1 Ephraim feeds on wind,

and chases the east wind.

He continually multiplies lies and desolation.

They make a covenant with Assyria,

and oil is carried into Egypt.

Hosea 12.2: 2 Yahweh also has a controversy with Judah,

and will punish Jacob according to his ways;

according to his deeds he will repay him.

Hosea 12.3: 3 In the womb he took his brother by the heel;

and in his manhood he contended with God.

Hosea 12.4: 4 Indeed, he struggled with the angel, and prevailed;

he wept, and made supplication to him.

He found him at Bethel, and there he spoke with us,

Hosea 12.5: 5 even Yahweh, the God of Armies;

Yahweh is his name of renown!

Hosea 12.6: 6 Therefore turn to your God.

Keep kindness and justice,

and wait continually for your God.

Hosea 12.7: 7 A merchant has dishonest scales in his hand.

He loves to defraud.

Hosea 12.8: 8 Ephraim said, “Surely I have become rich,

I have found myself wealth.

In all my wealth they won’t find in me any iniquity that is sin.”

Hosea 12.9: 9 “But I am Yahweh your God from the land of Egypt.

I will yet again make you dwell in tents,

as in the days of the solemn feast.

Hosea 12.10: 10 I have also spoken to the prophets,

and I have multiplied visions;

and by the ministry of the prophets I have used parables.

Hosea 12.11: 11 If Gilead is wicked,

surely they are worthless.

In Gilgal they sacrifice bulls.

Indeed, their altars are like heaps in the furrows of the field.

Hosea 12.12: 12 Jacob fled into the country of Aram,

and Israel served to get a wife,

and for a wife he tended flocks and herds.

Hosea 12.13: 13 By a prophet Yahweh brought Israel up out of Egypt,

and by a prophet he was preserved.

Hosea 12.14: 14 Ephraim has bitterly provoked anger.

Therefore his blood will be left on him,

and his Lord will repay his contempt.

Hosea 13.0:

13

Hosea 13.1: 1 When Ephraim spoke, there was trembling.

He exalted himself in Israel,

but when he became guilty in Baal, he died.

Hosea 13.2: 2 Now they sin more and more,

and have made themselves molten images of their silver,

even idols according to their own understanding,

all of them the work of the craftsmen.

They say of them, ‘They offer human sacrifice and kiss the calves.’

Hosea 13.3: 3 Therefore they will be like the morning mist,

and like the dew that passes away early,

like the chaff that is driven with the whirlwind out of the threshing floor,

and like the smoke out of the chimney.

Hosea 13.4: 4 “Yet I am Yahweh your God from the land of Egypt;

and you shall acknowledge no god but me,

and besides me there is no savior.

Hosea 13.5: 5 I knew you in the wilderness,

in the land of great drought.

Hosea 13.6: 6 According to their pasture, so were they filled;

they were filled, and their heart was exalted.

Therefore they have forgotten me.

Hosea 13.7: 7 Therefore I am like a lion to them.

Like a leopard, I will lurk by the path.

Hosea 13.8: 8 I will meet them like a bear that is bereaved of her cubs,

and will tear the covering of their heart.

There I will devour them like a lioness.

The wild animal will tear them.

Hosea 13.9: 9 You are destroyed, Israel, because you are against me,

against your help.

Hosea 13.10: 10 Where is your king now, that he may save you in all your cities?

And your judges, of whom you said, ‘Give me a king and princes?’

Hosea 13.11: 11 I have given you a king in my anger,

and have taken him away in my wrath.

Hosea 13.12: 12 The guilt of Ephraim is stored up.

His sin is stored up.

Hosea 13.13: 13 The sorrows of a travailing woman will come on him.

He is an unwise son;

for when it is time, he doesn’t come to the opening of the womb.

Hosea 13.14: 14 I will ransom them from the power of Sheol.

I will redeem them from death!

Death, where are your plagues?

Sheol, where is your destruction?

“Compassion will be hidden from my eyes.

Hosea 13.15: 15 Though he is fruitful among his brothers, an east wind will come,

the breath of Yahweh coming up from the wilderness;

and his spring will become dry,

and his fountain will be dried up.

He will plunder the storehouse of treasure.

Hosea 13.16: 16 Samaria will bear her guilt;

for she has rebelled against her God.

They will fall by the sword.

Their infants will be dashed in pieces,

and their pregnant women will be ripped open.”

Hosea 14.0:

14

Hosea 14.1: 1 Israel, return to Yahweh your God;

for you have fallen because of your sin.

Hosea 14.2: 2 Take words with you, and return to Yahweh.

Tell him, “Forgive all our sins,

and accept that which is good:

so we offer our lips like bulls.

Hosea 14.3: 3 Assyria can’t save us.

We won’t ride on horses;

neither will we say any more to the work of our hands, ‘Our gods!’

for in you the fatherless finds mercy.”

Hosea 14.4: 4 “I will heal their waywardness.

I will love them freely;

for my anger is turned away from him.

Hosea 14.5: 5 I will be like the dew to Israel.

He will blossom like the lily,

and send down his roots like Lebanon.

Hosea 14.6: 6 His branches will spread,

and his beauty will be like the olive tree,

and his fragrance like Lebanon.

Hosea 14.7: 7 Men will dwell in his shade.

They will revive like the grain,

and blossom like the vine.

Their fragrance will be like the wine of Lebanon.

Hosea 14.8: 8 Ephraim, what have I to do any more with idols?

I answer, and will take care of him.

I am like a green cypress tree;

from me your fruit is found.”

Hosea 14.9: 9 Who is wise, that he may understand these things?

Who is prudent, that he may know them?

For the ways of Yahweh are right,

and the righteous walk in them;

But the rebellious stumble in them.

Joel 0.0:

The Book of

Joel

Joel 1.0:

1

Joel 1.1: 1 Yahweh’s word that came to Joel, the son of Pethuel.

Joel 1.2: 2 Hear this, you elders,

And listen, all you inhabitants of the land.

Has this ever happened in your days,

or in the days of your fathers?

Joel 1.3: 3 Tell your children about it,

and have your children tell their children,

and their children, another generation.

Joel 1.4: 4 What the swarming locust has left, the great locust has eaten.

What the great locust has left, the grasshopper has eaten.

What the grasshopper has left, the caterpillar has eaten.

Joel 1.5: 5 Wake up, you drunkards, and weep!

Wail, all you drinkers of wine, because of the sweet wine;

for it is cut off from your mouth.

Joel 1.6: 6 For a nation has come up on my land, strong, and without number.

His teeth are the teeth of a lion,

and he has the fangs of a lioness.

Joel 1.7: 7 He has laid my vine waste,

and stripped my fig tree.

He has stripped its bark, and thrown it away.

Its branches are made white.

Joel 1.8: 8 Mourn like a virgin dressed in sackcloth for the husband of her youth!

Joel 1.9: 9 The meal offering and the drink offering are cut off from Yahweh’s house.

The priests, Yahweh’s ministers, mourn.

Joel 1.10: 10 The field is laid waste.

The land mourns, for the grain is destroyed,

The new wine has dried up,

and the oil languishes.

Joel 1.11: 11 Be confounded, you farmers!

Wail, you vineyard keepers;

for the wheat and for the barley;

for the harvest of the field has perished.

Joel 1.12: 12 The vine has dried up, and the fig tree withered;

the pomegranate tree, the palm tree also, and the apple tree,

even all of the trees of the field are withered;

for joy has withered away from the sons of men.

Joel 1.13: 13 Put on sackcloth and mourn, you priests!

Wail, you ministers of the altar.

Come, lie all night in sackcloth, you ministers of my God,

for the meal offering and the drink offering are withheld from your God’s house.

Joel 1.14: 14 Sanctify a fast.

Call a solemn assembly.

Gather the elders,

and all the inhabitants of the land, to the house of Yahweh, your God,

and cry to Yahweh.

Joel 1.15: 15 Alas for the day!

For the day of Yahweh is at hand,

and it will come as destruction from the Almighty.

Joel 1.16: 16 Isn’t the food cut off before our eyes;

joy and gladness from the house of our God?

Joel 1.17: 17 The seeds rot under their clods.

The granaries are laid desolate.

The barns are broken down, for the grain has withered.

Joel 1.18: 18 How the animals groan!

The herds of livestock are perplexed, because they have no pasture.

Yes, the flocks of sheep are made desolate.

Joel 1.19: 19 Yahweh, I cry to you,

For the fire has devoured the pastures of the wilderness,

and the flame has burned all the trees of the field.

Joel 1.20: 20 Yes, the animals of the field pant to you,

for the water brooks have dried up,

And the fire has devoured the pastures of the wilderness.

Joel 2.0:

2

Joel 2.1: 1 Blow the trumpet in Zion,

and sound an alarm in my holy mountain!

Let all the inhabitants of the land tremble,

for the day of Yahweh comes,

for it is close at hand:

Joel 2.2: 2 A day of darkness and gloominess,

a day of clouds and thick darkness.

As the dawn spreading on the mountains,

a great and strong people;

there has never been the like,

neither will there be any more after them,

even to the years of many generations.

Joel 2.3: 3 A fire devours before them,

and behind them, a flame burns.

The land is as the garden of Eden before them,

and behind them, a desolate wilderness.

Yes, and no one has escaped them.

Joel 2.4: 4 Their appearance is as the appearance of horses,

and they run as horsemen.

Joel 2.5: 5 Like the noise of chariots on the tops of the mountains, they leap,

like the noise of a flame of fire that devours the stubble,

like a strong people set in battle array.

Joel 2.6: 6 At their presence the peoples are in anguish.

All faces have grown pale.

Joel 2.7: 7 They run like mighty men.

They climb the wall like warriors.

They each march in his line, and they don’t swerve off course.

Joel 2.8: 8 Neither does one jostle another;

they march everyone in his path,

and they burst through the defenses,

and don’t break ranks.

Joel 2.9: 9 They rush on the city.

They run on the wall.

They climb up into the houses.

They enter in at the windows like thieves.

Joel 2.10: 10 The earth quakes before them.

The heavens tremble.

The sun and the moon are darkened,

and the stars withdraw their shining.

Joel 2.11: 11 Yahweh thunders his voice before his army;

for his forces are very great;

for he is strong who obeys his command;

for the day of Yahweh is great and very awesome,

and who can endure it?

Joel 2.12: 12 “Yet even now,” says Yahweh, “turn to me with all your heart,

and with fasting, and with weeping, and with mourning.”

Joel 2.13: 13 Tear your heart, and not your garments,

and turn to Yahweh, your God;

for he is gracious and merciful,

slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness,

and relents from sending calamity.

Joel 2.14: 14 Who knows? He may turn and relent,

and leave a blessing behind him,

even a meal offering and a drink offering to Yahweh, your God.

Joel 2.15: 15 Blow the trumpet in Zion!

Sanctify a fast.

Call a solemn assembly.

Joel 2.16: 16 Gather the people.

Sanctify the assembly.

Assemble the elders.

Gather the children, and those who nurse from breasts.

Let the bridegroom go out of his room,

and the bride out of her room.

Joel 2.17: 17 Let the priests, the ministers of Yahweh, weep between the porch and the altar,

and let them say, “Spare your people, Yahweh,

and don’t give your heritage to reproach,

that the nations should rule over them.

Why should they say among the peoples,

‘Where is their God?’”

Joel 2.18: 18 Then Yahweh was jealous for his land,

And had pity on his people.

Joel 2.19: 19 Yahweh answered his people,

“Behold, I will send you grain, new wine, and oil,

and you will be satisfied with them;

and I will no more make you a reproach among the nations.

Joel 2.20: 20 But I will remove the northern army far away from you,

and will drive it into a barren and desolate land,

its front into the eastern sea,

and its back into the western sea;

and its stench will come up,

and its bad smell will rise.”

Surely he has done great things.

Joel 2.21: 21 Land, don’t be afraid.

Be glad and rejoice, for Yahweh has done great things.

Joel 2.22: 22 Don’t be afraid, you animals of the field;

for the pastures of the wilderness spring up,

for the tree bears its fruit.

The fig tree and the vine yield their strength.

Joel 2.23: 23 “Be glad then, you children of Zion,

and rejoice in Yahweh, your God;

for he gives you the early rain in just measure,

and he causes the rain to come down for you,

the early rain and the latter rain,

as before.

Joel 2.24: 24 The threshing floors will be full of wheat,

and the vats will overflow with new wine and oil.

Joel 2.25: 25 I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten,

the great locust, the grasshopper, and the caterpillar,

my great army, which I sent among you.

Joel 2.26: 26 You will have plenty to eat, and be satisfied,

and will praise the name of Yahweh, your God,

who has dealt wondrously with you;

and my people will never again be disappointed.

Joel 2.27: 27 You will know that I am among Israel,

and that I am Yahweh, your God, and there is no one else;

and my people will never again be disappointed.

Joel 2.28: 28 “It will happen afterward, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh;

and your sons and your daughters will prophesy.

Your old men will dream dreams.

Your young men will see visions.

Joel 2.29: 29 And also on the servants and on the handmaids in those days,

I will pour out my Spirit.

Joel 2.30: 30 I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth:

blood, fire, and pillars of smoke.

Joel 2.31: 31 The sun will be turned into darkness,

and the moon into blood,

before the great and terrible day of Yahweh comes.

Joel 2.32: 32 It will happen that whoever will call on Yahweh’s name shall be saved;

for in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there will be those who escape,

as Yahweh has said,

and among the remnant, those whom Yahweh calls.

Joel 3.0:

3

Joel 3.1: 1 “For, behold, in those days,

and in that time,

when I restore the fortunes of Judah and Jerusalem,

Joel 3.2: 2 I will gather all nations,

and will bring them down into the valley of Jehoshaphat;

and I will execute judgment on them there for my people,

and for my heritage, Israel, whom they have scattered among the nations.

They have divided my land,

Joel 3.3: 3 and have cast lots for my people,

and have given a boy for a prostitute,

and sold a girl for wine, that they may drink.

Joel 3.4: 4 “Yes, and what are you to me, Tyre, and Sidon,

and all the regions of Philistia?

Will you repay me?

And if you repay me,

I will swiftly and speedily return your repayment on your own head.

Joel 3.5: 5 Because you have taken my silver and my gold,

and have carried my finest treasures into your temples,

Joel 3.6: 6 and have sold the children of Judah and the children of Jerusalem to the sons of the Greeks,

that you may remove them far from their border.

Joel 3.7: 7 Behold, I will stir them up out of the place where you have sold them,

and will return your repayment on your own head;

Joel 3.8: 8 and I will sell your sons and your daughters into the hands of the children of Judah,

and they will sell them to the men of Sheba,

to a faraway nation,

for Yahweh has spoken it.”

Joel 3.9: 9 Proclaim this among the nations:

“Prepare for war!

Stir up the mighty men.

Let all the warriors draw near.

Let them come up.

Joel 3.10: 10 Beat your plowshares into swords,

and your pruning hooks into spears.

Let the weak say, ‘I am strong.’

Joel 3.11: 11 Hurry and come, all you surrounding nations,

and gather yourselves together.”

Cause your mighty ones to come down there, Yahweh.

Joel 3.12: 12 “Let the nations arouse themselves,

and come up to the valley of Jehoshaphat;

for there I will sit to judge all the surrounding nations.

Joel 3.13: 13 Put in the sickle;

for the harvest is ripe.

Come, tread, for the wine press is full,

the vats overflow, for their wickedness is great.”

Joel 3.14: 14 Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of decision!

For the day of Yahweh is near, in the valley of decision.

Joel 3.15: 15 The sun and the moon are darkened,

and the stars withdraw their shining.

Joel 3.16: 16 Yahweh will roar from Zion,

and thunder from Jerusalem;

and the heavens and the earth will shake;

but Yahweh will be a refuge to his people,

and a stronghold to the children of Israel.

Joel 3.17: 17 “So you will know that I am Yahweh, your God,

dwelling in Zion, my holy mountain.

Then Jerusalem will be holy,

and no strangers will pass through her any more.

Joel 3.18: 18 It will happen in that day,

that the mountains will drop down sweet wine,

the hills will flow with milk,

all the brooks of Judah will flow with waters,

and a fountain will flow out from Yahweh’s house,

and will water the valley of Shittim.

Joel 3.19: 19 Egypt will be a desolation,

and Edom will be a desolate wilderness,

for the violence done to the children of Judah,

because they have shed innocent blood in their land.

Joel 3.20: 20 But Judah will be inhabited forever,

and Jerusalem from generation to generation.

Joel 3.21: 21 I will cleanse their blood,

that I have not cleansed:

for Yahweh dwells in Zion.”

Amos 0.0:

The Book of

Amos

Amos 1.0:

1

Amos 1.1: 1 The words of Amos, who was among the herdsmen of Tekoa, which he saw concerning Israel in the days of Uzziah king of Judah, and in the days of Jeroboam the son of Joash king of Israel, two years before the earthquake.

Amos 1.2: 2 He said:

“Yahweh will roar from Zion,

and utter his voice from Jerusalem;

and the pastures of the shepherds will mourn,

and the top of Carmel will wither.”

Amos 1.3: 3 Yahweh says:

“For three transgressions of Damascus, yes, for four,

I will not turn away its punishment;

because they have threshed Gilead with threshing instruments of iron;

Amos 1.4: 4 but I will send a fire into the house of Hazael,

and it will devour the palaces of Ben Hadad.

Amos 1.5: 5 I will break the bar of Damascus,

and cut off the inhabitant from the valley of Aven,

and him who holds the scepter from the house of Eden;

and the people of Syria shall go into captivity to Kir,”

says Yahweh.

Amos 1.6: 6 Yahweh says:

“For three transgressions of Gaza, yes, for four,

I will not turn away its punishment;

because they carried away captive the whole community,

to deliver them up to Edom;

Amos 1.7: 7 but I will send a fire on the wall of Gaza,

and it will devour its palaces.

Amos 1.8: 8 I will cut off the inhabitant from Ashdod,

and him who holds the scepter from Ashkelon;

and I will turn my hand against Ekron;

and the remnant of the Philistines will perish,”

says the Lord Yahweh.

Amos 1.9: 9 Yahweh says:

“For three transgressions of Tyre, yes, for four,

I will not turn away its punishment;

because they delivered up the whole community to Edom,

and didn’t remember the brotherly covenant;

Amos 1.10: 10 but I will send a fire on the wall of Tyre,

and it will devour its palaces.”

Amos 1.11: 11 Yahweh says:

“For three transgressions of Edom, yes, for four,

I will not turn away its punishment;

because he pursued his brother with the sword,

and cast off all pity,

and his anger raged continually,

and he kept his wrath forever;

Amos 1.12: 12 but I will send a fire on Teman,

and it will devour the palaces of Bozrah.”

Amos 1.13: 13 Yahweh says:

“For three transgressions of the children of Ammon, yes, for four,

I will not turn away its punishment;

because they have ripped open the pregnant women of Gilead,

that they may enlarge their border.

Amos 1.14: 14 But I will kindle a fire in the wall of Rabbah,

and it will devour its palaces,

with shouting in the day of battle,

with a storm in the day of the whirlwind;

Amos 1.15: 15 and their king will go into captivity,

he and his princes together,”

says Yahweh.

Amos 2.0:

2

Amos 2.1: 1 Yahweh says:

“For three transgressions of Moab, yes, for four,

I will not turn away its punishment;

because he burned the bones of the king of Edom into lime;

Amos 2.2: 2 but I will send a fire on Moab,

and it will devour the palaces of Kerioth;

and Moab will die with tumult, with shouting, and with the sound of the trumpet;

Amos 2.3: 3 and I will cut off the judge from among them,

and will kill all its princes with him,”

says Yahweh.

Amos 2.4: 4 Yahweh says:

“For three transgressions of Judah, yes, for four,

I will not turn away its punishment;

because they have rejected Yahweh’s law,

and have not kept his statutes,

and their lies have led them astray,

after which their fathers walked;

Amos 2.5: 5 but I will send a fire on Judah,

and it will devour the palaces of Jerusalem.”

Amos 2.6: 6 Yahweh says:

“For three transgressions of Israel, yes, for four,

I will not turn away its punishment;

because they have sold the righteous for silver,

and the needy for a pair of sandals;

Amos 2.7: 7 They trample on the dust of the earth on the head of the poor,

and deny justice to the oppressed;

and a man and his father use the same maiden, to profane my holy name;

Amos 2.8: 8 and they lay themselves down beside every altar on clothes taken in pledge;

and in the house of their God they drink the wine of those who have been fined.

Amos 2.9: 9 Yet I destroyed the Amorite before them,

whose height was like the height of the cedars,

and he was strong as the oaks;

yet I destroyed his fruit from above,

and his roots from beneath.

Amos 2.10: 10 Also I brought you up out of the land of Egypt,

and led you forty years in the wilderness,

to possess the land of the Amorite.

Amos 2.11: 11 I raised up some of your sons for prophets,

and some of your young men for Nazirites.

Isn’t this true,

you children of Israel?” says Yahweh.

Amos 2.12: 12 “But you gave the Nazirites wine to drink,

and commanded the prophets, saying, ‘Don’t prophesy!’

Amos 2.13: 13 Behold, I will crush you in your place,

as a cart crushes that is full of grain.

Amos 2.14: 14 Flight will perish from the swift;

and the strong won’t strengthen his force;

neither shall the mighty deliver himself;

Amos 2.15: 15 neither shall he stand who handles the bow;

and he who is swift of foot won’t escape;

neither shall he who rides the horse deliver himself;

Amos 2.16: 16 and he who is courageous among the mighty will flee away naked on that day,”

says Yahweh.

Amos 3.0:

3

Amos 3.1: 1 Hear this word that Yahweh has spoken against you, children of Israel, against the whole family which I brought up out of the land of Egypt, saying:

Amos 3.2: 2 “I have only chosen you of all the families of the earth.

Therefore I will punish you for all of your sins.”

Amos 3.3: 3 Do two walk together,

unless they have agreed?

Amos 3.4: 4 Will a lion roar in the thicket,

when he has no prey?

Does a young lion cry out of his den,

if he has caught nothing?

Amos 3.5: 5 Can a bird fall in a trap on the earth,

where no snare is set for him?

Does a snare spring up from the ground,

when there is nothing to catch?

Amos 3.6: 6 Does the trumpet alarm sound in a city,

without the people being afraid?

Does evil happen to a city,

and Yahweh hasn’t done it?

Amos 3.7: 7 Surely the Lord Yahweh will do nothing,

unless he reveals his secret to his servants the prophets.

Amos 3.8: 8 The lion has roared.

Who will not fear?

The Lord Yahweh has spoken.

Who can but prophesy?

Amos 3.9: 9 Proclaim in the palaces at Ashdod,

and in the palaces in the land of Egypt,

and say, “Assemble yourselves on the mountains of Samaria,

and see what unrest is in her,

and what oppression is among them.”

Amos 3.10: 10 “Indeed they don’t know to do right,” says Yahweh,

“Who hoard plunder and loot in their palaces.”

Amos 3.11: 11 Therefore the Lord Yahweh says:

“An adversary will overrun the land;

and he will pull down your strongholds,

and your fortresses will be plundered.”

Amos 3.12: 12 Yahweh says:

“As the shepherd rescues out of the mouth of the lion two legs,

or a piece of an ear,

so shall the children of Israel be rescued who sit in Samaria on the corner of a couch,

and on the silken cushions of a bed.”

Amos 3.13: 13 “Listen, and testify against the house of Jacob,” says the Lord Yahweh, the God of Armies.

Amos 3.14: 14 “For in the day that I visit the transgressions of Israel on him,

I will also visit the altars of Bethel;

and the horns of the altar will be cut off,

and fall to the ground.

Amos 3.15: 15 I will strike the winter house with the summer house;

and the houses of ivory will perish,

and the great houses will have an end,”

says Yahweh.

Amos 4.0:

4

Amos 4.1: 1 Listen to this word, you cows of Bashan, who are on the mountain of Samaria, who oppress the poor, who crush the needy, who tell their husbands, “Bring us drinks!”

Amos 4.2: 2 The Lord Yahweh has sworn by his holiness that behold,

“The days shall come on you that they will take you away with hooks,

and the last of you with fish hooks.

Amos 4.3: 3 You will go out at the breaks in the wall,

everyone straight before her;

and you will cast yourselves into Harmon,” says Yahweh.

Amos 4.4: 4 “Go to Bethel, and sin;

to Gilgal, and sin more.

Bring your sacrifices every morning,

your tithes every three days,

Amos 4.5: 5 offer a sacrifice of thanksgiving of that which is leavened,

and proclaim free will offerings and brag about them:

for this pleases you, you children of Israel,” says the Lord Yahweh.

Amos 4.6: 6 “I also have given you cleanness of teeth in all your cities,

and lack of bread in every town;

yet you haven’t returned to me,” says Yahweh.

Amos 4.7: 7 “I also have withheld the rain from you,

when there were yet three months to the harvest;

and I caused it to rain on one city,

and caused it not to rain on another city.

One place was rained on,

and the piece where it didn’t rain withered.

Amos 4.8: 8 So two or three cities staggered to one city to drink water,

and were not satisfied:

yet you haven’t returned to me,” says Yahweh.

Amos 4.9: 9 “I struck you with blight and mildew many times in your gardens and your vineyards;

and the swarming locusts have devoured your fig trees and your olive trees;

yet you haven’t returned to me,” says Yahweh.

Amos 4.10: 10 “I sent plagues among you like I did Egypt.

I have slain your young men with the sword,

and have carried away your horses;

and I filled your nostrils with the stench of your camp,

yet you haven’t returned to me,” says Yahweh.

Amos 4.11: 11 “I have overthrown some of you,

as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah,

and you were like a burning stick plucked out of the fire;

yet you haven’t returned to me,” says Yahweh.

Amos 4.12: 12 “Therefore thus I will do to you, Israel;

because I will do this to you,

prepare to meet your God, Israel.

Amos 4.13: 13 For, behold, he who forms the mountains,

and creates the wind,

and declares to man what is his thought;

who makes the morning darkness,

and treads on the high places of the earth:

Yahweh, the God of Armies, is his name.”

Amos 5.0:

5

Amos 5.1: 1 Listen to this word which I take up for a lamentation over you, O house of Israel.

Amos 5.2: 2 “The virgin of Israel has fallen;

She shall rise no more.

She is cast down on her land;

there is no one to raise her up.”

Amos 5.3: 3 For the Lord Yahweh says:

“The city that went out a thousand shall have a hundred left,

and that which went out one hundred shall have ten left to the house of Israel.”

Amos 5.4: 4 For Yahweh says to the house of Israel:

“Seek me, and you will live;

Amos 5.5: 5 but don’t seek Bethel,

nor enter into Gilgal,

and don’t pass to Beersheba:

for Gilgal shall surely go into captivity,

and Bethel shall come to nothing.

Amos 5.6: 6 Seek Yahweh, and you will live;

lest he break out like fire in the house of Joseph,

and it devour, and there be no one to quench it in Bethel.

Amos 5.7: 7 You who turn justice to wormwood,

and cast down righteousness to the earth:

Amos 5.8: 8 seek him who made the Pleiades and Orion,

and turns the shadow of death into the morning,

and makes the day dark with night;

who calls for the waters of the sea,

and pours them out on the surface of the earth, Yahweh is his name,

Amos 5.9: 9 who brings sudden destruction on the strong,

so that destruction comes on the fortress.

Amos 5.10: 10 They hate him who reproves in the gate,

and they abhor him who speaks blamelessly.

Amos 5.11: 11 Therefore, because you trample on the poor,

and take taxes from him of wheat:

You have built houses of cut stone,

but you will not dwell in them.

You have planted pleasant vineyards,

but you shall not drink their wine.

Amos 5.12: 12 For I know how many your offenses,

and how great are your sins—

you who afflict the just,

who take a bribe,

and who turn away the needy in the courts.

Amos 5.13: 13 Therefore a prudent person keeps silent in such a time,

for it is an evil time.

Amos 5.14: 14 Seek good, and not evil,

that you may live;

and so Yahweh, the God of Armies, will be with you,

as you say.

Amos 5.15: 15 Hate evil, love good,

and establish justice in the courts.

It may be that Yahweh, the God of Armies, will be gracious to the remnant of Joseph.”

Amos 5.16: 16 Therefore Yahweh, the God of Armies, the Lord, says:

“Wailing will be in all the wide ways;

and they will say in all the streets, ‘Alas! Alas!’

and they will call the farmer to mourning,

and those who are skillful in lamentation to wailing.

Amos 5.17: 17 In all vineyards there will be wailing;

for I will pass through the middle of you,” says Yahweh.

Amos 5.18: 18 “Woe to you who desire the day of Yahweh!

Why do you long for the day of Yahweh?

It is darkness,

and not light.

Amos 5.19: 19 As if a man fled from a lion,

and a bear met him;

Or he went into the house and leaned his hand on the wall,

and a snake bit him.

Amos 5.20: 20 Won’t the day of Yahweh be darkness, and not light?

Even very dark, and no brightness in it?

Amos 5.21: 21 I hate, I despise your feasts,

and I can’t stand your solemn assemblies.

Amos 5.22: 22 Yes, though you offer me your burnt offerings and meal offerings,

I will not accept them;

neither will I regard the peace offerings of your fat animals.

Amos 5.23: 23 Take away from me the noise of your songs!

I will not listen to the music of your harps.

Amos 5.24: 24 But let justice roll on like rivers,

and righteousness like a mighty stream.

Amos 5.25: 25 “Did you bring to me sacrifices and offerings in the wilderness forty years, house of Israel?

Amos 5.26: 26 You also carried the tent of your king and the shrine of your images, the star of your god, which you made for yourselves.

Amos 5.27: 27 Therefore I will cause you to go into captivity beyond Damascus,” says Yahweh, whose name is the God of Armies.

Amos 6.0:

6

Amos 6.1: 1 Woe to those who are at ease in Zion,

and to those who are secure on the mountain of Samaria,

the notable men of the chief of the nations,

to whom the house of Israel come!

Amos 6.2: 2 Go to Calneh, and see;

and from there go to Hamath the great;

then go down to Gath of the Philistines.

are they better than these kingdoms?

or is their border greater than your border?

Amos 6.3: 3 Those who put far away the evil day,

and cause the seat of violence to come near;

Amos 6.4: 4 Who lie on beds of ivory,

and stretch themselves on their couches,

and eat the lambs out of the flock,

and the calves out of the middle of the stall;

Amos 6.5: 5 who strum on the strings of a harp;

who invent for themselves instruments of music, like David;

Amos 6.6: 6 who drink wine in bowls,

and anoint themselves with the best oils;

but they are not grieved for the affliction of Joseph.

Amos 6.7: 7 Therefore they will now go captive with the first who go captive;

and the feasting and lounging will end.

Amos 6.8: 8 “The Lord Yahweh has sworn by himself,” says Yahweh, the God of Armies:

“I abhor the pride of Jacob,

and detest his fortresses.

Therefore I will deliver up the city with all that is in it.

Amos 6.9: 9 It will happen, if there remain ten men in one house,

that they shall die.

Amos 6.10: 10 “When a man’s relative carries him, even he who burns him, to bring bodies out of the house, and asks him who is in the innermost parts of the house, ‘Is there yet any with you?’ And he says, ‘No;’ then he will say, ‘Hush! Indeed we must not mention Yahweh’s name.’

Amos 6.11: 11 “For, behold, Yahweh commands, and the great house will be smashed to pieces,

and the little house into bits.

Amos 6.12: 12 Do horses run on the rocky crags?

Does one plow there with oxen?

But you have turned justice into poison,

and the fruit of righteousness into bitterness;

Amos 6.13: 13 you who rejoice in a thing of nothing, who say,

‘Haven’t we taken for ourselves horns by our own strength?’

Amos 6.14: 14 For, behold, I will raise up against you a nation, house of Israel,”

says Yahweh, the God of Armies;

“and they will afflict you from the entrance of Hamath to the brook of the Arabah.”

Amos 7.0:

7

Amos 7.1: 1 Thus the Lord Yahweh showed me: and behold, he formed locusts in the beginning of the shooting up of the latter growth; and behold, it was the latter growth after the king’s harvest.

Amos 7.2: 2 When they finished eating the grass of the land, then I said, “Lord Yahweh, forgive, I beg you! How could Jacob stand? For he is small.”

Amos 7.3: 3 Yahweh relented concerning this. “It shall not be,” says Yahweh.

Amos 7.4: 4 Thus the Lord Yahweh showed me and behold, the Lord Yahweh called for judgment by fire; and it dried up the great deep, and would have devoured the land.

Amos 7.5: 5 Then I said, “Lord Yahweh, stop, I beg you! How could Jacob stand? For he is small.”

Amos 7.6: 6 Yahweh relented concerning this. “This also shall not be,” says the Lord Yahweh.

Amos 7.7: 7 Thus he showed me and behold, the Lord stood beside a wall made by a plumb line, with a plumb line in his hand.

Amos 7.8: 8 Yahweh said to me, “Amos, what do you see?”

I said, “A plumb line.”

Then the Lord said, “Behold, I will set a plumb line in the middle of my people Israel. I will not again pass by them any more.

Amos 7.9: 9 The high places of Isaac will be desolate, the sanctuaries of Israel will be laid waste; and I will rise against the house of Jeroboam with the sword.”

Amos 7.10: 10 Then Amaziah the priest of Bethel sent to Jeroboam king of Israel, saying, “Amos has conspired against you in the middle of the house of Israel. The land is not able to bear all his words.

Amos 7.11: 11 For Amos says, ‘Jeroboam will die by the sword, and Israel shall surely be led away captive out of his land.’”

Amos 7.12: 12 Amaziah also said to Amos, “You seer, go, flee away into the land of Judah, and there eat bread, and prophesy there:

Amos 7.13: 13 but don’t prophesy again any more at Bethel; for it is the king’s sanctuary, and it is a royal house!”

Amos 7.14: 14 Then Amos answered Amaziah, “I was no prophet, neither was I a prophet’s son; but I was a herdsman, and a farmer of sycamore figs;

Amos 7.15: 15 and Yahweh took me from following the flock, and Yahweh said to me, ‘Go, prophesy to my people Israel.’

Amos 7.16: 16 Now therefore listen to Yahweh’s word: ‘You say, Don’t prophesy against Israel, and don’t preach against the house of Isaac.’

Amos 7.17: 17 Therefore Yahweh says: ‘Your wife shall be a prostitute in the city, and your sons and your daughters shall fall by the sword, and your land shall be divided by line; and you yourself shall die in a land that is unclean, and Israel shall surely be led away captive out of his land.’”

Amos 8.0:

8

Amos 8.1: 1 Thus the Lord Yahweh showed me: behold, a basket of summer fruit.

Amos 8.2: 2 He said, “Amos, what do you see?”

I said, “A basket of summer fruit.”

Then Yahweh said to me,

“The end has come on my people Israel.

I will not again pass by them any more.

Amos 8.3: 3 The songs of the temple will be wailing in that day,” says the Lord Yahweh.

“The dead bodies will be many. In every place they will throw them out with silence.

Amos 8.4: 4 Hear this, you who desire to swallow up the needy,

and cause the poor of the land to fail,

Amos 8.5: 5 Saying, ‘When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell grain?

And the Sabbath, that we may market wheat,

making the ephah small, and the shekel large,

and dealing falsely with balances of deceit;

Amos 8.6: 6 that we may buy the poor for silver,

and the needy for a pair of sandals,

and sell the sweepings with the wheat?’”

Amos 8.7: 7 Yahweh has sworn by the pride of Jacob,

“Surely I will never forget any of their works.

Amos 8.8: 8 Won’t the land tremble for this,

and everyone mourn who dwells in it?

Yes, it will rise up wholly like the River;

and it will be stirred up and sink again, like the River of Egypt.

Amos 8.9: 9 It will happen in that day,” says the Lord Yahweh,

“that I will cause the sun to go down at noon,

and I will darken the earth in the clear day.

Amos 8.10: 10 I will turn your feasts into mourning,

and all your songs into lamentation;

and I will make you wear sackcloth on all your bodies,

and baldness on every head.

I will make it like the mourning for an only son,

and its end like a bitter day.

Amos 8.11: 11 Behold, the days come,” says the Lord Yahweh,

“that I will send a famine in the land,

not a famine of bread,

nor a thirst for water,

but of hearing Yahweh’s words.

Amos 8.12: 12 They will wander from sea to sea,

and from the north even to the east;

they will run back and forth to seek Yahweh’s word,

and will not find it.

Amos 8.13: 13 In that day the beautiful virgins

and the young men will faint for thirst.

Amos 8.14: 14 Those who swear by the sin of Samaria,

and say, ‘As your god, Dan, lives;’

and, ‘As the way of Beersheba lives;’

they will fall, and never rise up again.”

Amos 9.0:

9

Amos 9.1: 1 I saw the Lord standing beside the altar, and he said, “Strike the tops of the pillars, that the thresholds may shake; and break them in pieces on the head of all of them; and I will kill the last of them with the sword: there shall not one of them flee away, and there shall not one of them escape.

Amos 9.2: 2 Though they dig into Sheol, there my hand will take them; and though they climb up to heaven, there I will bring them down.

Amos 9.3: 3 Though they hide themselves in the top of Carmel, I will search and take them out there; and though they be hidden from my sight in the bottom of the sea, there I will command the serpent, and it will bite them.

Amos 9.4: 4 Though they go into captivity before their enemies, there I will command the sword, and it will kill them. I will set my eyes on them for evil, and not for good.

Amos 9.5: 5 For the Lord, Yahweh of Armies, is he who touches the land and it melts, and all who dwell in it will mourn; and it will rise up wholly like the River, and will sink again, like the River of Egypt.

Amos 9.6: 6 It is he who builds his rooms in the heavens, and has founded his vault on the earth; he who calls for the waters of the sea, and pours them out on the surface of the earth; Yahweh is his name.

Amos 9.7: 7 Are you not like the children of the Ethiopians to me, children of Israel?” says Yahweh. “Haven’t I brought up Israel out of the land of Egypt, and the Philistines from Caphtor, and the Syrians from Kir?

Amos 9.8: 8 Behold, the eyes of the Lord Yahweh are on the sinful kingdom, and I will destroy it from off the surface of the earth; except that I will not utterly destroy the house of Jacob,” says Yahweh.

Amos 9.9: 9 “For, behold, I will command, and I will sift the house of Israel among all the nations, as grain is sifted in a sieve, yet not the least kernel will fall on the earth.

Amos 9.10: 10 All the sinners of my people will die by the sword, who say, ‘Evil won’t overtake nor meet us.’

Amos 9.11: 11 In that day I will raise up the tent of David who is fallen, and close up its breaches, and I will raise up its ruins, and I will build it as in the days of old;

Amos 9.12: 12 that they may possess the remnant of Edom, and all the nations who are called by my name,” says Yahweh who does this.

Amos 9.13: 13 “Behold, the days come,” says Yahweh,

“that the plowman shall overtake the reaper,

and the one treading grapes him who sows seed;

and sweet wine will drip from the mountains,

and flow from the hills.

Amos 9.14: 14 I will bring my people Israel back from captivity,

and they will rebuild the ruined cities, and inhabit them;

and they will plant vineyards, and drink wine from them.

They shall also make gardens,

and eat their fruit.

Amos 9.15: 15 I will plant them on their land,

and they will no more be plucked up out of their land which I have given them,”

says Yahweh your God.

Obadiah 0.0:

The Book of

Obadiah

Obadiah 1.0:

1

Obadiah 1.1: 1 The vision of Obadiah. This is what the Lord Yahweh says about Edom. We have heard news from Yahweh, and an ambassador is sent among the nations, saying, “Arise, and let’s rise up against her in battle.

Obadiah 1.2: 2 Behold, I have made you small among the nations. You are greatly despised.

Obadiah 1.3: 3 The pride of your heart has deceived you, you who dwell in the clefts of the rock, whose habitation is high, who says in his heart, ‘Who will bring me down to the ground?’

Obadiah 1.4: 4 Though you mount on high as the eagle, and though your nest is set among the stars, I will bring you down from there,” says Yahweh.

Obadiah 1.5: 5 “If thieves came to you, if robbers by night—oh, what disaster awaits you—wouldn’t they only steal until they had enough? If grape pickers came to you, wouldn’t they leave some gleaning grapes?

Obadiah 1.6: 6 How Esau will be ransacked! How his hidden treasures are sought out!

Obadiah 1.7: 7 All the men of your alliance have brought you on your way, even to the border. The men who were at peace with you have deceived you, and prevailed against you. Friends who eat your bread lay a snare under you. There is no understanding in him.”

Obadiah 1.8: 8 “Won’t I in that day”, says Yahweh, “destroy the wise men out of Edom, and understanding out of the mountain of Esau?

Obadiah 1.9: 9 Your mighty men, Teman, will be dismayed, to the end that everyone may be cut off from the mountain of Esau by slaughter.

Obadiah 1.10: 10 For the violence done to your brother Jacob, shame will cover you, and you will be cut off forever.

Obadiah 1.11: 11 In the day that you stood on the other side, in the day that strangers carried away his substance, and foreigners entered into his gates, and cast lots for Jerusalem, even you were like one of them.

Obadiah 1.12: 12 But don’t look down on your brother in the day of his disaster, and don’t rejoice over the children of Judah in the day of their destruction. Don’t speak proudly in the day of distress.

Obadiah 1.13: 13 Don’t enter into the gate of my people in the day of their calamity. Don’t look down on their affliction in the day of their calamity, neither seize their wealth on the day of their calamity.

Obadiah 1.14: 14 Don’t stand in the crossroads to cut off those of his who escape. Don’t deliver up those of his who remain in the day of distress.

Obadiah 1.15: 15 For the day of Yahweh is near all the nations! As you have done, it will be done to you. Your deeds will return upon your own head.

Obadiah 1.16: 16 For as you have drunk on my holy mountain, so will all the nations drink continually. Yes, they will drink, swallow down, and will be as though they had not been.

Obadiah 1.17: 17 But in Mount Zion, there will be those who escape, and it will be holy. The house of Jacob will possess their possessions.

Obadiah 1.18: 18 The house of Jacob will be a fire, the house of Joseph a flame, and the house of Esau for stubble. They will burn among them, and devour them. There will not be any remaining to the house of Esau.” Indeed, Yahweh has spoken.

Obadiah 1.19: 19 Those of the South will possess the mountain of Esau, and those of the lowland, the Philistines. They will possess the field of Ephraim, and the field of Samaria. Benjamin will possess Gilead.

Obadiah 1.20: 20 The captives of this army of the children of Israel, who are among the Canaanites, will possess even to Zarephath; and the captives of Jerusalem, who are in Sepharad, will possess the cities of the Negev.

Obadiah 1.21: 21 Saviors will go up on Mount Zion to judge the mountains of Esau, and the kingdom will be Yahweh’s.

Jonah 0.0:

The Book of

Jonah

Jonah 1.0:

1

Jonah 1.1: 1 Now Yahweh’s word came to Jonah the son of Amittai, saying,

Jonah 1.2: 2 “Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and preach against it, for their wickedness has come up before me.”

Jonah 1.3: 3 But Jonah rose up to flee to Tarshish from the presence of Yahweh. He went down to Joppa, and found a ship going to Tarshish; so he paid its fare, and went down into it, to go with them to Tarshish from the presence of Yahweh.

Jonah 1.4: 4 But Yahweh sent out a great wind on the sea, and there was a mighty storm on the sea, so that the ship was likely to break up.

Jonah 1.5: 5 Then the mariners were afraid, and every man cried to his god. They threw the cargo that was in the ship into the sea to lighten the ship. But Jonah had gone down into the innermost parts of the ship, and he was laying down, and was fast asleep.

Jonah 1.6: 6 So the ship master came to him, and said to him, “What do you mean, sleeper? Arise, call on your God! Maybe your God will notice us, so that we won’t perish.”

Jonah 1.7: 7 They all said to each other, “Come! Let’s cast lots, that we may know who is responsible for this evil that is on us.” So they cast lots, and the lot fell on Jonah.

Jonah 1.8: 8 Then they asked him, “Tell us, please, for whose cause this evil is on us. What is your occupation? Where do you come from? What is your country? Of what people are you?”

Jonah 1.9: 9 He said to them, “I am a Hebrew, and I fear Yahweh, the God of heaven, who has made the sea and the dry land.”

Jonah 1.10: 10 Then the men were exceedingly afraid, and said to him, “What have you done?” For the men knew that he was fleeing from the presence of Yahweh, because he had told them.

Jonah 1.11: 11 Then they said to him, “What shall we do to you, that the sea may be calm to us?” For the sea grew more and more stormy.

Jonah 1.12: 12 He said to them, “Take me up, and throw me into the sea. Then the sea will be calm for you; for I know that because of me this great storm is on you.”

Jonah 1.13: 13 Nevertheless the men rowed hard to get them back to the land; but they could not, for the sea grew more and more stormy against them.

Jonah 1.14: 14 Therefore they cried to Yahweh, and said, “We beg you, Yahweh, we beg you, don’t let us die for this man’s life, and don’t lay on us innocent blood; for you, Yahweh, have done as it pleased you.”

Jonah 1.15: 15 So they took up Jonah, and threw him into the sea; and the sea ceased its raging.

Jonah 1.16: 16 Then the men feared Yahweh exceedingly; and they offered a sacrifice to Yahweh, and made vows.

Jonah 1.17: 17 Yahweh prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah, and Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights.

Jonah 2.0:

2

Jonah 2.1: 1 Then Jonah prayed to Yahweh, his God, out of the fish’s belly.

Jonah 2.2: 2 He said,

“I called because of my affliction to Yahweh.

He answered me.

Out of the belly of Sheol I cried.

You heard my voice.

Jonah 2.3: 3 For you threw me into the depths,

in the heart of the seas.

The flood was all around me.

All your waves and your billows passed over me.

Jonah 2.4: 4 I said, ‘I have been banished from your sight;

yet I will look again toward your holy temple.’

Jonah 2.5: 5 The waters surrounded me,

even to the soul.

The deep was around me.

The weeds were wrapped around my head.

Jonah 2.6: 6 I went down to the bottoms of the mountains.

The earth barred me in forever:

yet have you brought up my life from the pit, Yahweh my God.

Jonah 2.7: 7 “When my soul fainted within me, I remembered Yahweh.

My prayer came in to you, into your holy temple.

Jonah 2.8: 8 Those who regard lying vanities forsake their own mercy.

Jonah 2.9: 9 But I will sacrifice to you with the voice of thanksgiving.

I will pay that which I have vowed.

Salvation belongs to Yahweh.”

Jonah 2.10: 10 Then Yahweh spoke to the fish, and it vomited out Jonah on the dry land.

Jonah 3.0:

3

Jonah 3.1: 1 Yahweh’s word came to Jonah the second time, saying,

Jonah 3.2: 2 “Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and preach to it the message that I give you.”

Jonah 3.3: 3 So Jonah arose, and went to Nineveh, according to Yahweh’s word. Now Nineveh was an exceedingly great city, three days’ journey across.

Jonah 3.4: 4 Jonah began to enter into the city a day’s journey, and he cried out, and said, “In forty days, Nineveh will be overthrown!”

Jonah 3.5: 5 The people of Nineveh believed God; and they proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from their greatest even to their least.

Jonah 3.6: 6 The news reached the king of Nineveh, and he arose from his throne, and took off his royal robe, covered himself with sackcloth, and sat in ashes.

Jonah 3.7: 7 He made a proclamation and published through Nineveh by the decree of the king and his nobles, saying, “Let neither man nor animal, herd nor flock, taste anything; let them not feed, nor drink water;

Jonah 3.8: 8 but let them be covered with sackcloth, both man and animal, and let them cry mightily to God. Yes, let them turn everyone from his evil way, and from the violence that is in his hands.

Jonah 3.9: 9 Who knows whether God will not turn and relent, and turn away from his fierce anger, so that we might not perish?”

Jonah 3.10: 10 God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way. God relented of the disaster which he said he would do to them, and he didn’t do it.

Jonah 4.0:

4

Jonah 4.1: 1 But it displeased Jonah exceedingly, and he was angry.

Jonah 4.2: 2 He prayed to Yahweh, and said, “Please, Yahweh, wasn’t this what I said when I was still in my own country? Therefore I hurried to flee to Tarshish, for I knew that you are a gracious God, and merciful, slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness, and you relent of doing harm.

Jonah 4.3: 3 Therefore now, Yahweh, take, I beg you, my life from me; for it is better for me to die than to live.”

Jonah 4.4: 4 Yahweh said, “Is it right for you to be angry?”

Jonah 4.5: 5 Then Jonah went out of the city, and sat on the east side of the city, and there made himself a booth, and sat under it in the shade, until he might see what would become of the city.

Jonah 4.6: 6 Yahweh God prepared a vine, and made it to come up over Jonah, that it might be a shade over his head, to deliver him from his discomfort. So Jonah was exceedingly glad because of the vine.

Jonah 4.7: 7 But God prepared a worm at dawn the next day, and it chewed on the vine, so that it withered.

Jonah 4.8: 8 When the sun arose, God prepared a sultry east wind; and the sun beat on Jonah’s head, so that he fainted, and requested for himself that he might die, and said, “It is better for me to die than to live.”

Jonah 4.9: 9 God said to Jonah, “Is it right for you to be angry about the vine?”

He said, “I am right to be angry, even to death.”

Jonah 4.10: 10 Yahweh said, “You have been concerned for the vine, for which you have not labored, neither made it grow; which came up in a night, and perished in a night.

Jonah 4.11: 11 Shouldn’t I be concerned for Nineveh, that great city, in which are more than one hundred twenty thousand persons who can’t discern between their right hand and their left hand; and also much livestock?”

Habakkuk 0.0:

The Book of

Habakkuk

Habakkuk 1.0:

1

Habakkuk 1.1: 1 The revelation which Habakkuk the prophet saw.

Habakkuk 1.2: 2 Yahweh, how long will I cry, and you will not hear? I cry out to you “Violence!” and will you not save?

Habakkuk 1.3: 3 Why do you show me iniquity, and look at perversity? For destruction and violence are before me. There is strife, and contention rises up.

Habakkuk 1.4: 4 Therefore the law is paralyzed, and justice never prevails; for the wicked surround the righteous; therefore justice comes out perverted.

Habakkuk 1.5: 5 “Look among the nations, watch, and wonder marvelously; for I am working a work in your days, which you will not believe though it is told you.

Habakkuk 1.6: 6 For, behold, I raise up the Chaldeans, that bitter and hasty nation, that march through the width of the earth, to possess dwelling places that are not theirs.

Habakkuk 1.7: 7 They are feared and dreaded. Their judgment and their dignity proceed from themselves.

Habakkuk 1.8: 8 Their horses also are swifter than leopards, and are more fierce than the evening wolves. Their horsemen press proudly on. Yes, their horsemen come from afar. They fly as an eagle that hurries to devour.

Habakkuk 1.9: 9 All of them come for violence. Their hordes face the desert. He gathers prisoners like sand.

Habakkuk 1.10: 10 Yes, he scoffs at kings, and princes are a derision to him. He laughs at every stronghold, for he builds up an earthen ramp, and takes it.

Habakkuk 1.11: 11 Then he sweeps by like the wind, and goes on. He is indeed guilty, whose strength is his god.”

Habakkuk 1.12: 12 Aren’t you from everlasting, Yahweh my God, my Holy One? We will not die. Yahweh, you have appointed him for judgment. You, Rock, have established him to punish.

Habakkuk 1.13: 13 You who have purer eyes than to see evil, and who cannot look on perversity, why do you tolerate those who deal treacherously, and keep silent when the wicked swallows up the man who is more righteous than he,

Habakkuk 1.14: 14 and make men like the fish of the sea, like the creeping things, that have no ruler over them?

Habakkuk 1.15: 15 He takes up all of them with the hook. He catches them in his net, and gathers them in his dragnet. Therefore he rejoices and is glad.

Habakkuk 1.16: 16 Therefore he sacrifices to his net, and burns incense to his dragnet, because by them his life is luxurious, and his food is good.

Habakkuk 1.17: 17 Will he therefore continually empty his net, and kill the nations without mercy?

Habakkuk 2.0:

2

Habakkuk 2.1: 1 I will stand at my watch, and set myself on the ramparts, and will look out to see what he will say to me, and what I will answer concerning my complaint.

Habakkuk 2.2: 2 Yahweh answered me, “Write the vision, and make it plain on tablets, that he who runs may read it.

Habakkuk 2.3: 3 For the vision is yet for the appointed time, and it hurries toward the end, and won’t prove false. Though it takes time, wait for it; because it will surely come. It won’t delay.

Habakkuk 2.4: 4 Behold, his soul is puffed up. It is not upright in him, but the righteous will live by his faith.

Habakkuk 2.5: 5 Yes, moreover, wine is treacherous. An arrogant man who doesn’t stay at home, who enlarges his desire as Sheol, and he is like death, and can’t be satisfied, but gathers to himself all nations, and heaps to himself all peoples.

Habakkuk 2.6: 6 Won’t all these take up a parable against him, and a taunting proverb against him, and say, ‘Woe to him who increases that which is not his, and who enriches himself by extortion! How long?’

Habakkuk 2.7: 7 Won’t your debtors rise up suddenly, and wake up those who make you tremble, and you will be their victim?

Habakkuk 2.8: 8 Because you have plundered many nations, all the remnant of the peoples will plunder you, because of men’s blood, and for the violence done to the land, to the city and to all who dwell in it.

Habakkuk 2.9: 9 Woe to him who gets an evil gain for his house, that he may set his nest on high, that he may be delivered from the hand of evil!

Habakkuk 2.10: 10 You have devised shame to your house, by cutting off many peoples, and have sinned against your soul.

Habakkuk 2.11: 11 For the stone will cry out of the wall, and the beam out of the woodwork will answer it.

Habakkuk 2.12: 12 Woe to him who builds a town with blood, and establishes a city by iniquity!

Habakkuk 2.13: 13 Behold, isn’t it of Yahweh of Armies that the peoples labor for the fire, and the nations weary themselves for vanity?

Habakkuk 2.14: 14 For the earth will be filled with the knowledge of Yahweh’s glory, as the waters cover the sea.

Habakkuk 2.15: 15 “Woe to him who gives his neighbor drink, pouring your inflaming wine until they are drunk, so that you may gaze at their naked bodies!

Habakkuk 2.16: 16 You are filled with shame, and not glory. You will also drink, and be exposed! The cup of Yahweh’s right hand will come around to you, and disgrace will cover your glory.

Habakkuk 2.17: 17 For the violence done to Lebanon will overwhelm you, and the destruction of the animals, which made them afraid; because of men’s blood, and for the violence done to the land, to every city and to those who dwell in them.

Habakkuk 2.18: 18 “What value does the engraved image have, that its maker has engraved it; the molten image, even the teacher of lies, that he who fashions its form trusts in it, to make mute idols?

Habakkuk 2.19: 19 Woe to him who says to the wood, ‘Awake!’ or to the mute stone, ‘Arise!’ Shall this teach? Behold, it is overlaid with gold and silver, and there is no breath at all within it.

Habakkuk 2.20: 20 But Yahweh is in his holy temple. Let all the earth be silent before him!”

Habakkuk 3.0:

3

Habakkuk 3.1: 1 A prayer of Habakkuk, the prophet, set to victorious music.

Habakkuk 3.2: 2 Yahweh, I have heard of your fame.

I stand in awe of your deeds, Yahweh.

Renew your work in the middle of the years.

In the middle of the years make it known.

In wrath, you remember mercy.

Habakkuk 3.3: 3 God came from Teman,

the Holy One from Mount Paran. Selah.

His glory covered the heavens,

and his praise filled the earth.

Habakkuk 3.4: 4 His splendor is like the sunrise.

Rays shine from his hand, where his power is hidden.

Habakkuk 3.5: 5 Plague went before him,

and pestilence followed his feet.

Habakkuk 3.6: 6 He stood, and shook the earth.

He looked, and made the nations tremble.

The ancient mountains were crumbled.

The age-old hills collapsed.

His ways are eternal.

Habakkuk 3.7: 7 I saw the tents of Cushan in affliction.

The dwellings of the land of Midian trembled.

Habakkuk 3.8: 8 Was Yahweh displeased with the rivers?

Was your anger against the rivers,

or your wrath against the sea,

that you rode on your horses,

on your chariots of salvation?

Habakkuk 3.9: 9 You uncovered your bow.

You called for your sworn arrows. Selah.

You split the earth with rivers.

Habakkuk 3.10: 10 The mountains saw you, and were afraid.

The storm of waters passed by.

The deep roared and lifted up its hands on high.

Habakkuk 3.11: 11 The sun and moon stood still in the sky,

at the light of your arrows as they went,

at the shining of your glittering spear.

Habakkuk 3.12: 12 You marched through the land in wrath.

You threshed the nations in anger.

Habakkuk 3.13: 13 You went out for the salvation of your people,

for the salvation of your anointed.

You crushed the head of the land of wickedness.

You stripped them head to foot. Selah.

Habakkuk 3.14: 14 You pierced the heads of his warriors with their own spears.

They came as a whirlwind to scatter me,

gloating as if to devour the wretched in secret.

Habakkuk 3.15: 15 You trampled the sea with your horses,

churning mighty waters.

Habakkuk 3.16: 16 I heard, and my body trembled.

My lips quivered at the voice.

Rottenness enters into my bones, and I tremble in my place,

because I must wait quietly for the day of trouble,

for the coming up of the people who invade us.

Habakkuk 3.17: 17 For though the fig tree doesn’t flourish,

nor fruit be in the vines;

the labor of the olive fails,

the fields yield no food;

the flocks are cut off from the fold,

and there is no herd in the stalls:

Habakkuk 3.18: 18 yet I will rejoice in Yahweh.

I will be joyful in the God of my salvation!

Habakkuk 3.19: 19 Yahweh, the Lord, is my strength.

He makes my feet like deer’s feet,

and enables me to go in high places.

For the music director, on my stringed instruments.

Zephaniah 0.0:

The Book of

Zephaniah

Zephaniah 1.0:

1

Zephaniah 1.1: 1 Yahweh’s word which came to Zephaniah, the son of Cushi, the son of Gedaliah, the son of Amariah, the son of Hezekiah, in the days of Josiah, the son of Amon, king of Judah.

Zephaniah 1.2: 2 I will utterly sweep away everything from the surface of the earth, says Yahweh.

Zephaniah 1.3: 3 I will sweep away man and animal. I will sweep away the birds of the sky, the fish of the sea, and the heaps of rubble with the wicked. I will cut off man from the surface of the earth, says Yahweh.

Zephaniah 1.4: 4 I will stretch out my hand against Judah, and against all the inhabitants of Jerusalem. I will cut off the remnant of Baal from this place: the name of the idolatrous and pagan priests,

Zephaniah 1.5: 5 those who worship the army of the sky on the housetops, those who worship and swear by Yahweh and also swear by Malcam,

Zephaniah 1.6: 6 those who have turned back from following Yahweh, and those who haven’t sought Yahweh nor inquired after him.

Zephaniah 1.7: 7 Be silent at the presence of the Lord Yahweh, for the day of Yahweh is at hand. For Yahweh has prepared a sacrifice. He has consecrated his guests.

Zephaniah 1.8: 8 It will happen in the day of Yahweh’s sacrifice, that I will punish the princes, the king’s sons, and all those who are clothed with foreign clothing.

Zephaniah 1.9: 9 In that day, I will punish all those who leap over the threshold, who fill their master’s house with violence and deceit.

Zephaniah 1.10: 10 In that day, says Yahweh, there will be the noise of a cry from the fish gate, a wailing from the second quarter, and a great crashing from the hills.

Zephaniah 1.11: 11 Wail, you inhabitants of Maktesh, for all the people of Canaan are undone! All those who were loaded with silver are cut off.

Zephaniah 1.12: 12 It will happen at that time, that I will search Jerusalem with lamps, and I will punish the men who are settled on their dregs, who say in their heart, “Yahweh will not do good, neither will he do evil.”

Zephaniah 1.13: 13 Their wealth will become a plunder, and their houses a desolation. Yes, they will build houses, but won’t inhabit them. They will plant vineyards, but won’t drink their wine.

Zephaniah 1.14: 14 The great day of Yahweh is near. It is near, and hurries greatly, the voice of the day of Yahweh. The mighty man cries there bitterly.

Zephaniah 1.15: 15 That day is a day of wrath, a day of distress and anguish, a day of trouble and ruin, a day of darkness and gloom, a day of clouds and blackness,

Zephaniah 1.16: 16 a day of the trumpet and alarm, against the fortified cities, and against the high battlements.

Zephaniah 1.17: 17 I will bring distress on men, that they will walk like blind men, because they have sinned against Yahweh, and their blood will be poured out like dust, and their flesh like dung.

Zephaniah 1.18: 18 Neither their silver nor their gold will be able to deliver them in the day of Yahweh’s wrath, but the whole land will be devoured by the fire of his jealousy; for he will make an end, yes, a terrible end, of all those who dwell in the land.

Zephaniah 2.0:

2

Zephaniah 2.1: 1 Gather yourselves together, yes, gather together, you nation that has no shame,

Zephaniah 2.2: 2 before the appointed time when the day passes as the chaff, before the fierce anger of Yahweh comes on you, before the day of Yahweh’s anger comes on you.

Zephaniah 2.3: 3 Seek Yahweh, all you humble of the land, who have kept his ordinances. Seek righteousness. Seek humility. It may be that you will be hidden in the day of Yahweh’s anger.

Zephaniah 2.4: 4 For Gaza will be forsaken, and Ashkelon a desolation. They will drive out Ashdod at noonday, and Ekron will be rooted up.

Zephaniah 2.5: 5 Woe to the inhabitants of the sea coast, the nation of the Cherethites! Yahweh’s word is against you, Canaan, the land of the Philistines. I will destroy you, that there will be no inhabitant.

Zephaniah 2.6: 6 The sea coast will be pastures, with cottages for shepherds and folds for flocks.

Zephaniah 2.7: 7 The coast will be for the remnant of the house of Judah. They will find pasture. In the houses of Ashkelon, they will lie down in the evening, for Yahweh, their God, will visit them, and restore them.

Zephaniah 2.8: 8 I have heard the reproach of Moab, and the insults of the children of Ammon, with which they have reproached my people, and magnified themselves against their border.

Zephaniah 2.9: 9 Therefore as I live, says Yahweh of Armies, the God of Israel, surely Moab will be as Sodom, and the children of Ammon as Gomorrah, a possession of nettles, and salt pits, and a perpetual desolation. The remnant of my people will plunder them, and the survivors of my nation will inherit them.

Zephaniah 2.10: 10 This they will have for their pride, because they have reproached and magnified themselves against the people of Yahweh of Armies.

Zephaniah 2.11: 11 Yahweh will be awesome to them, for he will famish all the gods of the land. Men will worship him, everyone from his place, even all the shores of the nations.

Zephaniah 2.12: 12 You Cushites also, you will be killed by my sword.

Zephaniah 2.13: 13 He will stretch out his hand against the north, destroy Assyria, and will make Nineveh a desolation, as dry as the wilderness.

Zephaniah 2.14: 14 Herds will lie down in the middle of her, all the animals of the nations. Both the pelican and the porcupine will lodge in its capitals. Their calls will echo through the windows. Desolation will be in the thresholds, for he has laid bare the cedar beams.

Zephaniah 2.15: 15 This is the joyous city that lived carelessly, that said in her heart, “I am, and there is no one besides me.” How she has become a desolation, a place for animals to lie down in! Everyone who passes by her will hiss, and shake their fists.

Zephaniah 3.0:

3

Zephaniah 3.1: 1 Woe to her who is rebellious and polluted, the oppressing city!

Zephaniah 3.2: 2 She didn’t obey the voice. She didn’t receive correction. She didn’t trust in Yahweh. She didn’t draw near to her God.

Zephaniah 3.3: 3 Her princes within her are roaring lions. Her judges are evening wolves. They leave nothing until the next day.

Zephaniah 3.4: 4 Her prophets are arrogant and treacherous people. Her priests have profaned the sanctuary. They have done violence to the law.

Zephaniah 3.5: 5 Yahweh, within her, is righteous. He will do no wrong. Every morning he brings his justice to light. He doesn’t fail, but the unjust know no shame.

Zephaniah 3.6: 6 I have cut off nations. Their battlements are desolate. I have made their streets waste, so that no one passes by. Their cities are destroyed, so that there is no man, so that there is no inhabitant.

Zephaniah 3.7: 7 I said, “Just fear me. Receive correction, so that her dwelling won’t be cut off, according to all that I have appointed concerning her.” But they rose early and corrupted all their doings.

Zephaniah 3.8: 8 “Therefore wait for me”, says Yahweh, “until the day that I rise up to the prey, for my determination is to gather the nations, that I may assemble the kingdoms, to pour on them my indignation, even all my fierce anger, for all the earth will be devoured with the fire of my jealousy.

Zephaniah 3.9: 9 For then I will purify the lips of the peoples, that they may all call on Yahweh’s name, to serve him shoulder to shoulder.

Zephaniah 3.10: 10 From beyond the rivers of Cush, my worshipers, even the daughter of my dispersed people, will bring my offering.

Zephaniah 3.11: 11 In that day you will not be disappointed for all your doings, in which you have transgressed against me; for then I will take away out from among you your proudly exulting ones, and you will no more be arrogant in my holy mountain.

Zephaniah 3.12: 12 But I will leave among you an afflicted and poor people, and they will take refuge in Yahweh’s name.

Zephaniah 3.13: 13 The remnant of Israel will not do iniquity, nor speak lies, neither will a deceitful tongue be found in their mouth, for they will feed and lie down, and no one will make them afraid.”

Zephaniah 3.14: 14 Sing, daughter of Zion! Shout, Israel! Be glad and rejoice with all your heart, daughter of Jerusalem.

Zephaniah 3.15: 15 Yahweh has taken away your judgments. He has thrown out your enemy. The King of Israel, Yahweh, is among you. You will not be afraid of evil any more.

Zephaniah 3.16: 16 In that day, it will be said to Jerusalem, “Don’t be afraid, Zion. Don’t let your hands be weak.”

Zephaniah 3.17: 17 Yahweh, your God, is among you, a mighty one who will save. He will rejoice over you with joy. He will calm you in his love. He will rejoice over you with singing.

Zephaniah 3.18: 18 I will remove those who grieve about the appointed feasts from you. They are a burden and a reproach to you.

Zephaniah 3.19: 19 Behold, at that time I will deal with all those who afflict you, and I will save those who are lame, and gather those who were driven away. I will give them praise and honor, whose shame has been in all the earth.

Zephaniah 3.20: 20 At that time I will bring you in, and at that time I will gather you; for I will give you honor and praise among all the peoples of the earth, when I restore your fortunes before your eyes, says Yahweh.

Haggai 0.0:

The Book of

Haggai

Haggai 1.0:

1

Haggai 1.1: 1 In the second year of Darius the king, in the sixth month, in the first day of the month, Yahweh’s word came by Haggai, the prophet, to Zerubbabel, the son of Shealtiel, governor of Judah, and to Joshua, the son of Jehozadak, the high priest, saying,

Haggai 1.2: 2 “This is what Yahweh of Armies says: These people say, ‘The time hasn’t yet come, the time for Yahweh’s house to be built.’”

Haggai 1.3: 3 Then Yahweh’s word came by Haggai, the prophet, saying,

Haggai 1.4: 4 “Is it a time for you yourselves to dwell in your paneled houses, while this house lies waste?

Haggai 1.5: 5 Now therefore this is what Yahweh of Armies says: Consider your ways.

Haggai 1.6: 6 You have sown much, and bring in little. You eat, but you don’t have enough. You drink, but you aren’t filled with drink. You clothe yourselves, but no one is warm, and he who earns wages earns wages to put them into a bag with holes in it.”

Haggai 1.7: 7 This is what Yahweh of Armies says: “Consider your ways.

Haggai 1.8: 8 Go up to the mountain, bring wood, and build the house. I will take pleasure in it, and I will be glorified,” says Yahweh.

Haggai 1.9: 9 “You looked for much, and, behold, it came to little; and when you brought it home, I blew it away. Why?” says Yahweh of Armies, “Because of my house that lies waste, while each of you is busy with his own house.

Haggai 1.10: 10 Therefore for your sake the heavens withhold the dew, and the earth withholds its fruit.

Haggai 1.11: 11 I called for a drought on the land, on the mountains, on the grain, on the new wine, on the oil, on that which the ground produces, on men, on livestock, and on all the labor of the hands.”

Haggai 1.12: 12 Then Zerubbabel, the son of Shealtiel, and Joshua, the son of Jehozadak, the high priest, with all the remnant of the people, obeyed Yahweh, their God’s voice, and the words of Haggai, the prophet, as Yahweh, their God, had sent him; and the people feared Yahweh.

Haggai 1.13: 13 Then Haggai, Yahweh’s messenger, spoke Yahweh’s message to the people, saying, “I am with you,” says Yahweh.

Haggai 1.14: 14 Yahweh stirred up the spirit of Zerubbabel, the son of Shealtiel, governor of Judah, and the spirit of Joshua, the son of Jehozadak, the high priest, and the spirit of all the remnant of the people; and they came and worked on the house of Yahweh of Armies, their God,

Haggai 1.15: 15 in the twenty-fourth day of the month, in the sixth month, in the second year of Darius the king.

Haggai 2.0:

2

Haggai 2.1: 1 In the seventh month, in the twenty-first day of the month, Yahweh’s word came by Haggai the prophet, saying,

Haggai 2.2: 2 “Speak now to Zerubbabel, the son of Shealtiel, governor of Judah, and to Joshua, the son of Jehozadak, the high priest, and to the remnant of the people, saying,

Haggai 2.3: 3 ‘Who is left among you who saw this house in its former glory? How do you see it now? Isn’t it in your eyes as nothing?

Haggai 2.4: 4 Yet now be strong, Zerubbabel,’ says Yahweh. ‘Be strong, Joshua, son of Jehozadak, the high priest. Be strong, all you people of the land,’ says Yahweh, ‘and work, for I am with you,’ says Yahweh of Armies.

Haggai 2.5: 5 This is the word that I covenanted with you when you came out of Egypt, and my Spirit lived among you. ‘Don’t be afraid.’

Haggai 2.6: 6 For this is what Yahweh of Armies says: ‘Yet once, it is a little while, and I will shake the heavens, the earth, the sea, and the dry land;

Haggai 2.7: 7 and I will shake all nations. The precious things of all nations will come, and I will fill this house with glory, says Yahweh of Armies.

Haggai 2.8: 8 The silver is mine, and the gold is mine,’ says Yahweh of Armies.

Haggai 2.9: 9 ‘The latter glory of this house will be greater than the former,’ says Yahweh of Armies; ‘and in this place I will give peace,’ says Yahweh of Armies.”

Haggai 2.10: 10 In the twenty-fourth day of the ninth month, in the second year of Darius, Yahweh’s word came by Haggai the prophet, saying,

Haggai 2.11: 11 “Yahweh of Armies says: Ask now the priests concerning the law, saying,

Haggai 2.12: 12 ‘If someone carries holy meat in the fold of his garment, and with his fold touches bread, stew, wine, oil, or any food, will it become holy?’”

The priests answered, “No.”

Haggai 2.13: 13 Then Haggai said, “If one who is unclean by reason of a dead body touch any of these, will it be unclean?”

The priests answered, “It will be unclean.”

Haggai 2.14: 14 Then Haggai answered, “‘So is this people, and so is this nation before me,’ says Yahweh; ‘and so is every work of their hands. That which they offer there is unclean.

Haggai 2.15: 15 Now, please consider from this day and backward, before a stone was laid on a stone in Yahweh’s temple.

Haggai 2.16: 16 Through all that time, when one came to a heap of twenty measures, there were only ten. When one came to the wine vat to draw out fifty, there were only twenty.

Haggai 2.17: 17 I struck you with blight, mildew, and hail in all the work of your hands; yet you didn’t turn to me,’ says Yahweh.

Haggai 2.18: 18 ‘Consider, please, from this day and backward, from the twenty-fourth day of the ninth month, since the day that the foundation of Yahweh’s temple was laid, consider it.

Haggai 2.19: 19 Is the seed yet in the barn? Yes, the vine, the fig tree, the pomegranate, and the olive tree haven’t produced. From today I will bless you.’”

Haggai 2.20: 20 Yahweh’s word came the second time to Haggai in the twenty-fourth day of the month, saying,

Haggai 2.21: 21 “Speak to Zerubbabel, governor of Judah, saying, ‘I will shake the heavens and the earth.

Haggai 2.22: 22 I will overthrow the throne of kingdoms. I will destroy the strength of the kingdoms of the nations. I will overthrow the chariots, and those who ride in them. The horses and their riders will come down, everyone by the sword of his brother.

Haggai 2.23: 23 In that day, says Yahweh of Armies, I will take you, Zerubbabel, my servant, the son of Shealtiel,’ says Yahweh, ‘and will make you as a signet, for I have chosen you,’ says Yahweh of Armies.”

Malachi 0.0:

The Book of

Malachi

Malachi 1.0:

1

Malachi 1.1: 1 A revelation, Yahweh’s word to Israel by Malachi.

Malachi 1.2: 2 “I have loved you,” says Yahweh.

Yet you say, “How have you loved us?”

“Wasn’t Esau Jacob’s brother?” says Yahweh, “Yet I loved Jacob;

Malachi 1.3: 3 but Esau I hated, and made his mountains a desolation, and gave his heritage to the jackals of the wilderness.”

Malachi 1.4: 4 Whereas Edom says, “We are beaten down, but we will return and build the waste places;” Yahweh of Armies says, “They shall build, but I will throw down; and men will call them ‘The Wicked Land,’ even the people against whom Yahweh shows wrath forever.”

Malachi 1.5: 5 Your eyes will see, and you will say, “Yahweh is great—even beyond the border of Israel!”

Malachi 1.6: 6 “A son honors his father, and a servant his master. If I am a father, then where is my honor? And if I am a master, where is the respect due me? Says Yahweh of Armies to you, priests, who despise my name. You say, ‘How have we despised your name?’

Malachi 1.7: 7 You offer polluted bread on my altar. You say, ‘How have we polluted you?’ In that you say, ‘Yahweh’s table is contemptible.’

Malachi 1.8: 8 When you offer the blind for sacrifice, isn’t that evil? And when you offer the lame and sick, isn’t that evil? Present it now to your governor! Will he be pleased with you? Or will he accept your person?” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 1.9: 9 “Now, please entreat the favor of God, that he may be gracious to us. With this, will he accept any of you?” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 1.10: 10 “Oh that there were one among you who would shut the doors, that you might not kindle fire on my altar in vain! I have no pleasure in you,” says Yahweh of Armies, “neither will I accept an offering at your hand.

Malachi 1.11: 11 For from the rising of the sun even to its going down, my name is great among the nations, and in every place incense will be offered to my name, and a pure offering: for my name is great among the nations,” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 1.12: 12 “But you profane it, in that you say, ‘Yahweh’s table is polluted, and its fruit, even its food, is contemptible.’

Malachi 1.13: 13 You say also, ‘Behold, what a weariness it is!’ and you have sniffed at it”, says Yahweh of Armies; “and you have brought that which was taken by violence, the lame, and the sick; thus you bring the offering. Should I accept this at your hand?” says Yahweh.

Malachi 1.14: 14 “But the deceiver is cursed, who has in his flock a male, and vows, and sacrifices to the Lord a defective thing; for I am a great King,” says Yahweh of Armies, “and my name is awesome among the nations.”

Malachi 2.0:

2

Malachi 2.1: 1 “Now, you priests, this commandment is for you.

Malachi 2.2: 2 If you will not listen, and if you will not take it to heart, to give glory to my name,” says Yahweh of Armies, “then I will send the curse on you, and I will curse your blessings. Indeed, I have cursed them already, because you do not take it to heart.

Malachi 2.3: 3 Behold, I will rebuke your offspring, and will spread dung on your faces, even the dung of your feasts; and you will be taken away with it.

Malachi 2.4: 4 You will know that I have sent this commandment to you, that my covenant may be with Levi,” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 2.5: 5 “My covenant was with him of life and peace; and I gave them to him that he might be reverent toward me; and he was reverent toward me, and stood in awe of my name.

Malachi 2.6: 6 The law of truth was in his mouth, and unrighteousness was not found in his lips. He walked with me in peace and uprightness, and turned many away from iniquity.

Malachi 2.7: 7 For the priest’s lips should keep knowledge, and they should seek the law at his mouth; for he is the messenger of Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 2.8: 8 But you have turned away from the path. You have caused many to stumble in the law. You have corrupted the covenant of Levi,” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 2.9: 9 “Therefore I have also made you contemptible and wicked before all the people, according to the way you have not kept my ways, but have had respect for persons in the law.

Malachi 2.10: 10 Don’t we all have one father? Hasn’t one God created us? Why do we deal treacherously every man against his brother, profaning the covenant of our fathers?

Malachi 2.11: 11 Judah has dealt treacherously, and an abomination is committed in Israel and in Jerusalem; for Judah has profaned the holiness of Yahweh which he loves, and has married the daughter of a foreign god.

Malachi 2.12: 12 Yahweh will cut off, to the man who does this, him who wakes and him who answers, out of the tents of Jacob, and him who offers an offering to Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 2.13: 13 This again you do: you cover Yahweh’s altar with tears, with weeping, and with sighing, because he doesn’t regard the offering any more, neither receives it with good will at your hand.

Malachi 2.14: 14 Yet you say, ‘Why?’ Because Yahweh has been witness between you and the wife of your youth, against whom you have dealt treacherously, though she is your companion, and the wife of your covenant.

Malachi 2.15: 15 Did he not make you one, although he had the residue of the Spirit? Why one? He sought godly offspring. Therefore take heed to your spirit, and let no one deal treacherously against the wife of his youth.

Malachi 2.16: 16 One who hates and divorces”, says Yahweh, the God of Israel, “covers his garment with violence!” says Yahweh of Armies. “Therefore pay attention to your spirit, that you don’t be unfaithful.

Malachi 2.17: 17 You have wearied Yahweh with your words. Yet you say, ‘How have we wearied him?’ In that you say, ‘Everyone who does evil is good in Yahweh’s sight, and he delights in them;’ or ‘Where is the God of justice?’

Malachi 3.0:

3

Malachi 3.1: 1 “Behold, I send my messenger, and he will prepare the way before me; and the Lord, whom you seek, will suddenly come to his temple; and the messenger of the covenant, whom you desire, behold, he comes!” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 3.2: 2 “But who can endure the day of his coming? And who will stand when he appears? For he is like a refiner’s fire, and like launderers’ soap;

Malachi 3.3: 3 and he will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver, and he will purify the sons of Levi, and refine them as gold and silver; and they shall offer to Yahweh offerings in righteousness.

Malachi 3.4: 4 Then the offering of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasant to Yahweh, as in the days of old, and as in ancient years.

Malachi 3.5: 5 I will come near to you to judgment; and I will be a swift witness against the sorcerers, and against the adulterers, and against the perjurers, and against those who oppress the hireling in his wages, the widow, and the fatherless, and who deprive the foreigner of justice, and don’t fear me,” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 3.6: 6 “For I, Yahweh, don’t change; therefore you, sons of Jacob, are not consumed.

Malachi 3.7: 7 From the days of your fathers you have turned away from my ordinances, and have not kept them. Return to me, and I will return to you,” says Yahweh of Armies. “But you say, ‘How shall we return?’

Malachi 3.8: 8 Will a man rob God? Yet you rob me! But you say, ‘How have we robbed you?’ In tithes and offerings.

Malachi 3.9: 9 You are cursed with the curse; for you rob me, even this whole nation.

Malachi 3.10: 10 Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in my house, and test me now in this,” says Yahweh of Armies, “if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there will not be room enough for.

Malachi 3.11: 11 I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes, and he shall not destroy the fruits of your ground; neither shall your vine cast its fruit before its time in the field,” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 3.12: 12 “All nations shall call you blessed, for you will be a delightful land,” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 3.13: 13 “Your words have been stout against me,” says Yahweh. “Yet you say, ‘What have we spoken against you?’

Malachi 3.14: 14 You have said, ‘It is vain to serve God;’ and ‘What profit is it that we have followed his instructions, and that we have walked mournfully before Yahweh of Armies?

Malachi 3.15: 15 Now we call the proud happy; yes, those who work wickedness are built up; yes, they tempt God, and escape.’

Malachi 3.16: 16 Then those who feared Yahweh spoke one with another; and Yahweh listened, and heard, and a book of memory was written before him, for those who feared Yahweh, and who honored his name.

Malachi 3.17: 17 They shall be mine,” says Yahweh of Armies, “my own possession in the day that I make, and I will spare them, as a man spares his own son who serves him.

Malachi 3.18: 18 Then you shall return and discern between the righteous and the wicked, between him who serves God and him who doesn’t serve him.

Malachi 4.0:

4

Malachi 4.1: 1 “For, behold, the day comes, it burns as a furnace; and all the proud, and all who work wickedness, will be stubble; and the day that comes will burn them up,” says Yahweh of Armies, “that it shall leave them neither root nor branch.

Malachi 4.2: 2 But to you who fear my name shall the sun of righteousness arise with healing in its wings. You will go out, and leap like calves of the stall.

Malachi 4.3: 3 You shall tread down the wicked; for they will be ashes under the soles of your feet in the day that I make,” says Yahweh of Armies.

Malachi 4.4: 4 “Remember the law of Moses my servant, which I commanded to him in Horeb for all Israel, even statutes and ordinances.

Malachi 4.5: 5 Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the great and terrible day of Yahweh comes.

Malachi 4.6: 6 He will turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the hearts of the children to their fathers, lest I come and strike the earth with a curse.”