Immerse: Kingdoms Full Volume - Flipbook - Page 146
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IMMERSE
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KINGDOMS
1S
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had carried off the women and children and everyone else but without
killing anyone.
When David and his men saw the ruins and realized what had happened
to their families, they wept until they could weep no more. David’s two
wives, Ahinoam from Jezreel and Abigail, the widow of Nabal from Carmel, were among those captured. David was now in great danger because
all his men were very bitter about losing their sons and daughters, and
they began to talk of stoning him. But David found strength in the Lord
his God.
Then he said to Abiathar the priest, “Bring me the ephod!” So Abiathar
brought it. Then David asked the Lord, “Should I chase after this band of
raiders? Will I catch them?”
And the Lord told him, “Yes, go after them. You will surely recover
everything that was taken from you!”
So David and his 600 men set out, and they came to the brook Besor.
But 200 of the men were too exhausted to cross the brook, so David continued the pursuit with 400 men.
Along the way they found an Egyptian man in a field and brought him
to David. They gave him some bread to eat and water to drink. They also
gave him part of a fig cake and two clusters of raisins, for he hadn’t had
anything to eat or drink for three days and nights. Before long his strength
returned.
“To whom do you belong, and where do you come from?” David asked
him.
“I am an Egyptian—the slave of an Amalekite,” he replied. “My master
abandoned me three days ago because I was sick. We were on our way back
from raiding the Kerethites in the Negev, the territory of Judah, and the
land of Caleb, and we had just burned Ziklag.”
“Will you lead me to this band of raiders?” David asked.
The young man replied, “If you take an oath in God’s name that you will
not kill me or give me back to my master, then I will guide you to them.”
So he led David to them, and they found the Amalekites spread out
across the fields, eating and drinking and dancing with joy because of the
vast amount of plunder they had taken from the Philistines and the land
of Judah. David and his men rushed in among them and slaughtered them
throughout that night and the entire next day until evening. None of the
Amalekites escaped except 400 young men who fled on camels. David
got back everything the Amalekites had taken, and he rescued his two
wives. Nothing was missing: small or great, son or daughter, nor anything
else that had been taken. David brought everything back. He also recovered all the flocks and herds, and his men drove them ahead of the other
livestock. “This plunder belongs to David!” they said.