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跟随系统浅色深色简体中文香港繁體台灣繁體English
奉献
49:27 NIrV
逐节对照
  • New International Reader's Version - “Benjamin is a hungry wolf. In the morning he eats what he has killed. In the evening he shares what he has stolen.”
  • 新标点和合本 - “便雅悯是个撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所夺的。”
  • 和合本2010(上帝版-简体) - 便雅悯是只抓撕掠物的狼, 早晨要吃他的猎物, 晚上要分他的掳物。”
  • 和合本2010(神版-简体) - 便雅悯是只抓撕掠物的狼, 早晨要吃他的猎物, 晚上要分他的掳物。”
  • 当代译本 - “便雅悯是匹贪婪的狼, 早晨吞吃猎物, 晚上瓜分战利品。”
  • 圣经新译本 - 便雅悯是只撕掠的豺狼, 早晨吞吃他的猎物, 晚上瓜分他的掳物。”
  • 中文标准译本 - 便雅悯是撕掠的狼, 早晨吞噬他的猎物, 晚上瓜分他的掠物。”
  • 现代标点和合本 - 便雅悯是个撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所夺的。”
  • 和合本(拼音版) - “便雅悯是个撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所夺的。”
  • New International Version - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; in the morning he devours the prey, in the evening he divides the plunder.”
  • English Standard Version - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf, in the morning devouring the prey and at evening dividing the spoil.”
  • New Living Translation - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf, devouring his enemies in the morning and dividing his plunder in the evening.”
  • The Message - Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; all morning he gorges on his kill, at evening divides up what’s left over.
  • Christian Standard Bible - Benjamin is a wolf; he tears his prey. In the morning he devours the prey, and in the evening he divides the plunder.”
  • New American Standard Bible - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; In the morning he devours the prey, And in the evening he divides the spoils.”
  • New King James Version - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; In the morning he shall devour the prey, And at night he shall divide the spoil.”
  • Amplified Bible - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; In the morning he devours the prey, And at night he divides the spoil.”
  • American Standard Version - Benjamin is a wolf that raveneth: In the morning he shall devour the prey, And at even he shall divide the spoil.
  • King James Version - Benjamin shall ravin as a wolf: in the morning he shall devour the prey, and at night he shall divide the spoil.
  • New English Translation - Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; in the morning devouring the prey, and in the evening dividing the plunder.”
  • World English Bible - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf. In the morning he will devour the prey. At evening he will divide the plunder.”
  • 新標點和合本 - 便雅憫是個撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所奪的。」
  • 和合本2010(上帝版-繁體) - 便雅憫是隻抓撕掠物的狼, 早晨要吃他的獵物, 晚上要分他的擄物。」
  • 和合本2010(神版-繁體) - 便雅憫是隻抓撕掠物的狼, 早晨要吃他的獵物, 晚上要分他的擄物。」
  • 當代譯本 - 「便雅憫是匹貪婪的狼, 早晨吞吃獵物, 晚上瓜分戰利品。」
  • 聖經新譯本 - 便雅憫是隻撕掠的豺狼, 早晨吞吃他的獵物, 晚上瓜分他的擄物。”
  • 呂振中譯本 - 便雅憫 是肆行抓掠的豺狼, 早晨喫所掠奪的, 晚上分所擄獲的。』
  • 中文標準譯本 - 便雅憫是撕掠的狼, 早晨吞噬他的獵物, 晚上瓜分他的掠物。」
  • 現代標點和合本 - 便雅憫是個撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所奪的。」
  • 文理和合譯本 - 便雅憫如攫物之狼、朝吞所獲、夕分所奪、○
  • 文理委辦譯本 - 便雅憫如狼、斷傷牲畜、朝吞所獲、夕分所得。○
  • 施約瑟淺文理新舊約聖經 - 便雅憫 如狼攫物、朝吞所獲、夕分所奪、○
  • Nueva Versión Internacional - »Benjamín es un lobo rapaz que en la mañana devora la presa y en la tarde reparte los despojos».
  • 현대인의 성경 - “베냐민은 사나운 이리와 같아서 아침에는 원수를 삼키고 저녁에는 그 약탈물을 나누리라.”
  • Новый Русский Перевод - Вениамин – прожорливый волк; утром он пожирает добычу, вечером делит награбленное добро.
  • Восточный перевод - Вениамин – прожорливый волк; утром он пожирает добычу, вечером делит награбленное добро.
  • Восточный перевод, версия с «Аллахом» - Вениамин – прожорливый волк; утром он пожирает добычу, вечером делит награбленное добро.
  • Восточный перевод, версия для Таджикистана - Вениамин – прожорливый волк; утром он пожирает добычу, вечером делит награбленное добро.
  • La Bible du Semeur 2015 - Benjamin est semblable ╵à un loup qui déchire. Dès le matin, ╵il dévore sa proie, et sur le soir encore, ╵répartit le butin.
  • リビングバイブル - ベニヤミンはほえたける狼だ。明け方には敵を食い荒らし、夕べには戦利品を分け合う。」
  • Nova Versão Internacional - “Benjamim é um lobo predador; pela manhã devora a presa e à tarde divide o despojo”.
  • Hoffnung für alle - Benjamin gleicht einem reißenden Wolf, der morgens seine Feinde verschlingt und abends seine Beute teilt.«
  • Kinh Thánh Hiện Đại - Bên-gia-min là chó sói săn mồi, buổi sáng con tiêu diệt kẻ thù, đến chiều phân chia chiến lợi phẩm.”
  • พระคริสตธรรมคัมภีร์ไทย ฉบับอมตธรรมร่วมสมัย - “เบนยามินเป็นสุนัขป่าที่หิวโซ ในตอนเช้าเขาขย้ำเหยื่อ ในตอนเย็นเขาแบ่งของที่ยึดมาได้”
  • พระคัมภีร์ ฉบับแปลใหม่ - เบนยามิน​ฉีก​เนื้อ​กิน​อย่าง​สุนัข​ป่า เขา​เขมือบ​เหยื่อ​ใน​ยาม​เช้า และ​แบ่ง​ปัน​สิ่ง​ที่​ชิง​มา​ได้​ใน​ยาม​เย็น”
交叉引用
  • Ezekiel 22:25 - Ezekiel, the princes of the land are like a roaring lion that tears its food apart. They eat people up. They take treasures and other valuable things. They cause many women in the land to become widows.
  • 1 Samuel 11:4 - The messengers came to Gibeah of Saul. They reported to the people the terms Nahash had required. Then all the people wept out loud.
  • 1 Samuel 11:5 - Just then Saul was coming in from the fields. He was walking behind his oxen. He asked, “What’s wrong with everyone? Why are they weeping?” He was told what the men of Jabesh had said.
  • 1 Samuel 11:6 - When Saul heard their words, the Spirit of God came powerfully on him. He became very angry.
  • 1 Samuel 11:7 - He got a pair of oxen and cut them into pieces. He sent the pieces by messengers all through Israel. They announced, “You must follow Saul and Samuel. If you don’t, this is what will happen to your oxen.” The terror of the Lord fell on the people. So all of them came together with one purpose in mind.
  • 1 Samuel 11:8 - Saul brought his army together at Bezek. There were 300,000 men from Israel and 30,000 from Judah.
  • 1 Samuel 11:9 - The messengers who had come were told, “Go back and report to the men of Jabesh Gilead. Tell them, ‘By the hottest time of the day tomorrow, you will be rescued.’ ” The messengers went and reported it to the men of Jabesh. It made those men very happy.
  • 1 Samuel 11:10 - They said to the people of Ammon, “Tomorrow we’ll hand ourselves over to you. Then you can do to us whatever you like.”
  • 1 Samuel 11:11 - The next day Saul separated his men into three groups. While it was still dark, they broke into the camp of the Ammonite army. They kept killing the men of Ammon until the hottest time of the day. Those who got away were scattered. There weren’t two of them left together anywhere.
  • Deuteronomy 33:12 - Here’s what Moses said about Benjamin. “Let the one the Lord loves rest safely in him. The Lord guards him all day long. The one the Lord loves rests in his arms.”
  • Zephaniah 3:3 - Jerusalem’s officials are like roaring lions. Their rulers are like wolves that hunt in the evening. They don’t leave anything to eat in the morning.
  • Hosea 13:7 - So I will leap on them like a lion. I will hide and wait beside the road like a leopard.
  • Hosea 13:8 - I will attack them like a bear that is robbed of her cubs. I will rip them wide open. Like a lion I will eat them up. Like a wild animal I will tear them apart.
  • Judges 3:15 - Again the Israelites cried out to the Lord. Then he provided someone to save them. The man’s name was Ehud, the son of Gera. Ehud was left-handed. He was from the tribe of Benjamin. The Israelites sent Ehud to Eglon, the king of Moab. They sent him to give the king what he required them to bring him.
  • Judges 3:16 - Ehud had made a sword that had two edges. It was about a foot and a half long. He tied it to his right leg under his clothes.
  • Judges 3:17 - Eglon, the king of Moab, was a very fat man. Ehud gave him the gift he had brought.
  • Judges 3:18 - After that, Ehud sent away those who had carried it.
  • Judges 3:19 - When he came to the place where some statues of gods stood near Gilgal, Ehud went back to Eglon. He said, “Your Majesty, I have a secret message for you.” The king said to his attendants, “Leave us!” And all his attendants left him.
  • Judges 3:20 - Then Ehud approached him. King Eglon was sitting alone in the upstairs room of his palace. Ehud said, “I have a message from God for you.” So the king got up from his seat.
  • Judges 3:21 - Then Ehud reached out his left hand. He pulled out the sword tied to his right leg. He stuck it into the king’s stomach.
  • Judges 3:22 - Even the handle sank in after the blade. Eglon sagged and fell to the floor. Ehud didn’t pull out the sword. And the fat closed over it.
  • Judges 3:23 - Ehud went out to the porch. He shut the doors of the upstairs room behind him. Then he locked them.
  • Judges 3:24 - After he had gone, the servants came. They found the doors of the upstairs room locked. They said, “Eglon must be going to the toilet in the inside room of the palace.”
  • Judges 3:25 - They waited for a long time. They waited so long they became worried. But the king still didn’t open the doors of the room. So they took a key and unlocked them. There they saw their king. He had fallen to the floor and was dead.
  • Judges 3:26 - While Eglon’s servants had been waiting, Ehud had gotten away. He passed by the statues of gods and escaped to Seirah.
  • Judges 3:27 - There in the hill country of Ephraim he blew a trumpet. Then he led the Israelites down from the hills.
  • Judges 3:28 - “Follow me,” Ehud ordered. “The Lord has handed your enemy Moab over to you.” So they followed him down. They took over the only places where people could go across the Jordan River to get to Moab. They didn’t let anyone go across.
  • Judges 3:29 - At that time they struck down about 10,000 men of Moab. All those men were strong and powerful. But not even one escaped.
  • Numbers 23:24 - The Israelites are going to wake up like a female lion. They are going to get up like a male lion. They are like a lion that won’t rest until it eats what it has caught. They are like a lion that won’t rest until it drinks the blood of what it has killed.”
  • Jeremiah 5:6 - So a lion from the forest will attack them. A wolf from the desert will destroy them. A leopard will hide and wait near their towns. It will tear to pieces anyone who dares to go out. Again and again they have refused to obey the Lord. They have turned away from him many times.
  • Genesis 46:21 - The sons of Benjamin were Bela, Beker, Ashbel, Gera, Naaman, Ehi, Rosh, Muppim, Huppim and Ard.
  • Matthew 7:15 - “Watch out for false prophets. They come to you pretending to be sheep. But on the inside they are hungry wolves.
  • Philippians 3:5 - I was circumcised on the eighth day. I am part of the people of Israel. I am from the tribe of Benjamin. I am a pure Hebrew. As far as the law is concerned, I am a Pharisee.
  • 1 Samuel 17:1 - The Philistines gathered their army together for war. They came to Sokoh in Judah. They set up camp at Ephes Dammim. It was between Sokoh and Azekah.
  • 1 Samuel 17:2 - Saul and the army of Israel gathered together. They camped in the Valley of Elah. They lined up their men to fight against the Philistines.
  • 1 Samuel 17:3 - The Philistine army was camped on one hill. Israel’s army was on another. The valley was between them.
  • 1 Samuel 17:4 - A mighty hero named Goliath came out of the Philistine camp. He was from Gath. He was more than nine feet tall.
  • 1 Samuel 17:5 - He had a bronze helmet on his head. He wore bronze armor that weighed 125 pounds.
  • 1 Samuel 17:6 - On his legs he wore bronze guards. He carried a bronze javelin on his back.
  • 1 Samuel 17:7 - His spear was as big as a weaver’s rod. Its iron point weighed 15 pounds. The man who carried his shield walked along in front of him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:8 - Goliath stood there and shouted to the soldiers of Israel. He said, “Why do you come out and line up for battle? I’m a Philistine. You are servants of Saul. Choose one of your men. Have him come down and face me.
  • 1 Samuel 17:9 - If he’s able to fight and kill me, we’ll become your slaves. But if I win and kill him, you will become our slaves and serve us.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:10 - Goliath continued, “This day I dare the soldiers of Israel to send a man down to fight against me.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:11 - Saul and the whole army of Israel heard what the Philistine said. They were terrified.
  • 1 Samuel 17:12 - David was the son of an Ephrathite whose name was Jesse. Jesse was from Bethlehem in Judah and had eight sons. When Saul was king, Jesse was already very old.
  • 1 Samuel 17:13 - Jesse’s three oldest sons had followed Saul into battle. The oldest son was Eliab. The second was Abinadab. The third was Shammah.
  • 1 Samuel 17:14 - David was the youngest. The three oldest sons followed Saul.
  • 1 Samuel 17:15 - But David went back and forth from Saul’s camp to Bethlehem. He went to Bethlehem to take care of his father’s sheep.
  • 1 Samuel 17:16 - Every morning and evening Goliath came forward and stood there. He did it for 40 days.
  • 1 Samuel 17:17 - Jesse said to his son David, “Get at least half a bushel of grain that has been cooked. Also get ten loaves of bread. Take all of it to your brothers. Hurry to their camp.
  • 1 Samuel 17:18 - Take along these ten chunks of cheese to the commander of their military group. Find out how your brothers are doing. Bring me back some word about them.
  • 1 Samuel 17:19 - They are with Saul and all the men of Israel. They are in the Valley of Elah. They are fighting against the Philistines.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:20 - Early in the morning David left his father’s flock in the care of a shepherd. David loaded up the food and started out, just as Jesse had directed. David reached the camp as the army was going out to its battle positions. The soldiers were shouting the war cry.
  • 1 Samuel 17:21 - The Israelites and the Philistines were lining up their armies for battle. The armies were facing each other.
  • 1 Samuel 17:22 - David left what he had brought with the man who took care of the supplies. He ran to the battle lines and asked his brothers how they were.
  • 1 Samuel 17:23 - As David was talking with them, Goliath stepped forward from his line. Goliath was a mighty Philistine hero from Gath. He again dared someone to fight him, and David heard it.
  • 1 Samuel 17:24 - Whenever Israel’s army saw Goliath, all of them ran away from him. That’s because they were so afraid.
  • 1 Samuel 17:25 - The Israelites had been saying, “Just look at how this man keeps daring Israel to fight him! The king will make the man who kills Goliath very wealthy. The king will also give his own daughter to be that man’s wife. The king won’t require anyone in the man’s family to pay any taxes in Israel.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:26 - David spoke to the men standing near him. He asked them, “What will be done for the man who kills this Philistine? Goliath is bringing shame on Israel. What will be done for the one who removes it? This Philistine isn’t even circumcised. He dares the armies of the living God to fight him. Who does he think he is?”
  • 1 Samuel 17:27 - The men told David what Israel’s soldiers had been saying. The men told him what would be done for the man who killed Goliath.
  • 1 Samuel 17:28 - David’s oldest brother Eliab heard him speaking with the men. So Eliab became very angry with him. Eliab asked David, “Why have you come down here? Who is taking care of those few sheep in the desert for you? I know how proud you are. I know how evil your heart is. The only reason you came down here was to watch the battle.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:29 - “What have I done now?” said David. “Can’t I even speak?”
  • 1 Samuel 17:30 - Then he turned away to speak to some other men. He asked them the same question he had asked before. And they gave him the same answer.
  • 1 Samuel 17:31 - Someone heard what David said and reported it to Saul. So Saul sent for David.
  • 1 Samuel 17:32 - David said to Saul, “Don’t let anyone lose hope because of that Philistine. I’ll go out and fight him.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:33 - Saul replied, “You aren’t able to go out there and fight that Philistine. You are too young. He’s been a warrior ever since he was a boy.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:34 - But David said to Saul, “I’ve been taking care of my father’s sheep. Sometimes a lion or a bear would come and carry off a sheep from the flock.
  • 1 Samuel 17:35 - Then I would go after it and hit it. I would save the sheep it was carrying in its mouth. If it turned around to attack me, I would grab its hair. I would strike it down and kill it.
  • 1 Samuel 17:36 - In fact, I’ve killed both a lion and a bear. I’ll do the same thing to this Philistine. He isn’t even circumcised. He has dared the armies of the living God to fight him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:37 - The Lord saved me from the paw of the lion. He saved me from the paw of the bear. And he’ll save me from the powerful hand of this Philistine too.” Saul said to David, “Go. And may the Lord be with you.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:38 - Then Saul dressed David in his own military clothes. He put a coat of armor on him. He put a bronze helmet on his head.
  • 1 Samuel 17:39 - David put on Saul’s sword over his clothes. He walked around for a while in all that armor because he wasn’t used to it. “I can’t go out there in all this armor,” he said to Saul. “I’m not used to it.” So he took it off.
  • 1 Samuel 17:40 - Then David picked up his wooden staff. He went down to a stream and chose five smooth stones. He put them in the pocket of his shepherd’s bag. Then he took his sling in his hand and approached Goliath.
  • 1 Samuel 17:41 - At that same time, the Philistine kept coming closer to David. The man carrying Goliath’s shield walked along in front of him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:42 - Goliath looked David over. He saw how young he was. He also saw how healthy and handsome he was. And he hated him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:43 - He said to David, “Why are you coming at me with sticks? Do you think I’m only a dog?” The Philistine cursed David in the name of his gods.
  • 1 Samuel 17:44 - “Come over here,” he said. “I’ll feed your body to the birds and wild animals!”
  • 1 Samuel 17:45 - David said to Goliath, “You are coming to fight against me with a sword, a spear and a javelin. But I’m coming against you in the name of the Lord who rules over all. He is the God of the armies of Israel. He’s the one you have dared to fight against.
  • 1 Samuel 17:46 - This day the Lord will give me the victory over you. I’ll strike you down. I’ll cut your head off. This day I’ll feed the bodies of the Philistine army to the birds and wild animals. Then the whole world will know there is a God in Israel.
  • 1 Samuel 17:47 - The Lord doesn’t rescue people by using a sword or a spear. And everyone here will know it. The battle belongs to the Lord. He will hand all of you over to us.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:48 - As the Philistine moved closer to attack him, David ran quickly to the battle line to meet him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:49 - He reached into his bag. He took out a stone. He put it in his sling. He slung it at Goliath. The stone hit him on the forehead and sank into it. He fell to the ground on his face.
  • 1 Samuel 17:50 - So David won the fight against Goliath with a sling and a stone. He struck down the Philistine and killed him. He did it without even using a sword.
  • 1 Samuel 17:51 - David ran and stood over him. He picked up Goliath’s sword and cut off his head with it. The Philistines saw that their hero was dead. So they turned around and ran away.
  • 1 Samuel 17:52 - Then the men of Israel and Judah shouted and rushed forward. They chased the Philistines to the entrance of Gath. They chased them to the gates of Ekron. Bodies of dead Philistines were scattered all along the road to Gath and Ekron. That’s the road that leads to Shaaraim.
  • 1 Samuel 17:53 - Israel’s army returned from chasing the Philistines. They had taken everything from the Philistine camp.
  • 1 Samuel 17:54 - David picked up Goliath’s head. He brought it to Jerusalem. He put Goliath’s weapons in his own tent.
  • 1 Samuel 17:55 - Saul had been watching David as he went out to meet the Philistine. He spoke to Abner, the commander of the army. Saul said to him, “Abner, whose son is that young man?” Abner replied, “Your Majesty, I don’t know. And that’s just as sure as you are alive.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:56 - The king said, “Find out whose son that young man is.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:57 - After David killed Goliath, he returned to the camp. Then Abner brought him to Saul. David was still carrying Goliath’s head.
  • 1 Samuel 17:58 - “Young man, whose son are you?” Saul asked him. David said, “I’m the son of Jesse from Bethlehem.”
  • Matthew 10:16 - “I am sending you out like sheep among wolves. So be as wise as snakes and as harmless as doves.
  • Acts 20:29 - I know that after I leave, wild wolves will come in among you. They won’t spare any of the sheep.
  • Acts 8:3 - But Saul began to destroy the church. He went from house to house. He dragged away men and women and put them in prison.
  • 1 Samuel 14:1 - One day Jonathan, the son of Saul, spoke to the young man carrying his armor. “Come on,” he said. “Let’s go over to the Philistine army camp on the other side of the pass.” But he didn’t tell his father about it.
  • 1 Samuel 14:2 - Saul was staying just outside Gibeah. He was under a pomegranate tree in Migron. He had about 600 men with him.
  • 1 Samuel 14:3 - Ahijah was one of them. He was wearing a sacred linen apron. He was a son of Ichabod’s brother Ahitub. Ahitub was the son of Eli’s son Phinehas. Eli had been the Lord’s priest in Shiloh. No one was aware that Jonathan had left.
  • 1 Samuel 14:4 - Jonathan planned to go across the pass to reach the Philistine camp. But there was a cliff on each side of the pass. One cliff was called Bozez. The other was called Seneh.
  • 1 Samuel 14:5 - One cliff stood on the north side of the pass toward Mikmash. The other stood on the south side toward Geba.
  • 1 Samuel 14:6 - Jonathan spoke to the young man carrying his armor. He said, “Come on. Let’s go over to the camp of those fellows who aren’t circumcised. Perhaps the Lord will help us. If he does, it won’t matter how many or how few of us there are. That won’t keep the Lord from saving us.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:7 - “Go ahead,” the young man said. “Do everything you have in mind. I’m with you all the way.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:8 - Jonathan said, “Come on, then. We’ll go across the pass toward the Philistines and let them see us.
  • 1 Samuel 14:9 - Suppose they say to us, ‘Wait there until we come to you.’ Then we’ll stay where we are. We won’t go up to them.
  • 1 Samuel 14:10 - But suppose they say, ‘Come up to us.’ Then we’ll climb up. That will show us that the Lord has handed them over to us.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:11 - So Jonathan and the young man let the soldiers in the Philistine camp see them. “Look!” said the Philistines. “Some of the Hebrews are crawling out of the holes they were hiding in.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:12 - The men in the Philistine camp shouted to Jonathan and the young man carrying his armor. They said, “Come on up here. We’ll teach you a thing or two.” So Jonathan said to the young man, “Climb up after me. The Lord has handed them over to Israel.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:13 - Using his hands and feet, Jonathan climbed up. The young man was right behind him. Jonathan struck down the Philistines. The young man followed him and killed those who were still alive.
  • 1 Samuel 14:14 - In that first attack, Jonathan and the young man killed about 20 men. They did it in an area of about half an acre.
  • 1 Samuel 14:15 - Then panic struck the whole Philistine army. It struck those who were in the camp and those in the field. It struck those who were at the edge of the camp. It also struck those who were in the groups that had been sent out to attack Israel. The ground shook. It was a panic that God had sent.
  • Acts 9:1 - Meanwhile, Saul continued to oppose the Lord’s followers. He said they would be put to death. He went to the high priest.
  • Genesis 35:18 - But Rachel was dying. As she took her last breath, she named her son Ben-Oni. But his father named him Benjamin.
  • Ezekiel 22:27 - The officials in the land are like wolves that tear their food apart. They spill blood and kill people to get rich.
  • Judges 20:21 - The men of Benjamin came out of Gibeah. They killed 22,000 Israelites on the field of battle that day.
  • Judges 20:25 - The men of Benjamin came out from Gibeah to oppose them. That time they killed 18,000 more Israelites. All the men who died had been carrying swords.
逐节对照交叉引用
  • New International Reader's Version - “Benjamin is a hungry wolf. In the morning he eats what he has killed. In the evening he shares what he has stolen.”
  • 新标点和合本 - “便雅悯是个撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所夺的。”
  • 和合本2010(上帝版-简体) - 便雅悯是只抓撕掠物的狼, 早晨要吃他的猎物, 晚上要分他的掳物。”
  • 和合本2010(神版-简体) - 便雅悯是只抓撕掠物的狼, 早晨要吃他的猎物, 晚上要分他的掳物。”
  • 当代译本 - “便雅悯是匹贪婪的狼, 早晨吞吃猎物, 晚上瓜分战利品。”
  • 圣经新译本 - 便雅悯是只撕掠的豺狼, 早晨吞吃他的猎物, 晚上瓜分他的掳物。”
  • 中文标准译本 - 便雅悯是撕掠的狼, 早晨吞噬他的猎物, 晚上瓜分他的掠物。”
  • 现代标点和合本 - 便雅悯是个撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所夺的。”
  • 和合本(拼音版) - “便雅悯是个撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所夺的。”
  • New International Version - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; in the morning he devours the prey, in the evening he divides the plunder.”
  • English Standard Version - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf, in the morning devouring the prey and at evening dividing the spoil.”
  • New Living Translation - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf, devouring his enemies in the morning and dividing his plunder in the evening.”
  • The Message - Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; all morning he gorges on his kill, at evening divides up what’s left over.
  • Christian Standard Bible - Benjamin is a wolf; he tears his prey. In the morning he devours the prey, and in the evening he divides the plunder.”
  • New American Standard Bible - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; In the morning he devours the prey, And in the evening he divides the spoils.”
  • New King James Version - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; In the morning he shall devour the prey, And at night he shall divide the spoil.”
  • Amplified Bible - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; In the morning he devours the prey, And at night he divides the spoil.”
  • American Standard Version - Benjamin is a wolf that raveneth: In the morning he shall devour the prey, And at even he shall divide the spoil.
  • King James Version - Benjamin shall ravin as a wolf: in the morning he shall devour the prey, and at night he shall divide the spoil.
  • New English Translation - Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; in the morning devouring the prey, and in the evening dividing the plunder.”
  • World English Bible - “Benjamin is a ravenous wolf. In the morning he will devour the prey. At evening he will divide the plunder.”
  • 新標點和合本 - 便雅憫是個撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所奪的。」
  • 和合本2010(上帝版-繁體) - 便雅憫是隻抓撕掠物的狼, 早晨要吃他的獵物, 晚上要分他的擄物。」
  • 和合本2010(神版-繁體) - 便雅憫是隻抓撕掠物的狼, 早晨要吃他的獵物, 晚上要分他的擄物。」
  • 當代譯本 - 「便雅憫是匹貪婪的狼, 早晨吞吃獵物, 晚上瓜分戰利品。」
  • 聖經新譯本 - 便雅憫是隻撕掠的豺狼, 早晨吞吃他的獵物, 晚上瓜分他的擄物。”
  • 呂振中譯本 - 便雅憫 是肆行抓掠的豺狼, 早晨喫所掠奪的, 晚上分所擄獲的。』
  • 中文標準譯本 - 便雅憫是撕掠的狼, 早晨吞噬他的獵物, 晚上瓜分他的掠物。」
  • 現代標點和合本 - 便雅憫是個撕掠的狼, 早晨要吃他所抓的, 晚上要分他所奪的。」
  • 文理和合譯本 - 便雅憫如攫物之狼、朝吞所獲、夕分所奪、○
  • 文理委辦譯本 - 便雅憫如狼、斷傷牲畜、朝吞所獲、夕分所得。○
  • 施約瑟淺文理新舊約聖經 - 便雅憫 如狼攫物、朝吞所獲、夕分所奪、○
  • Nueva Versión Internacional - »Benjamín es un lobo rapaz que en la mañana devora la presa y en la tarde reparte los despojos».
  • 현대인의 성경 - “베냐민은 사나운 이리와 같아서 아침에는 원수를 삼키고 저녁에는 그 약탈물을 나누리라.”
  • Новый Русский Перевод - Вениамин – прожорливый волк; утром он пожирает добычу, вечером делит награбленное добро.
  • Восточный перевод - Вениамин – прожорливый волк; утром он пожирает добычу, вечером делит награбленное добро.
  • Восточный перевод, версия с «Аллахом» - Вениамин – прожорливый волк; утром он пожирает добычу, вечером делит награбленное добро.
  • Восточный перевод, версия для Таджикистана - Вениамин – прожорливый волк; утром он пожирает добычу, вечером делит награбленное добро.
  • La Bible du Semeur 2015 - Benjamin est semblable ╵à un loup qui déchire. Dès le matin, ╵il dévore sa proie, et sur le soir encore, ╵répartit le butin.
  • リビングバイブル - ベニヤミンはほえたける狼だ。明け方には敵を食い荒らし、夕べには戦利品を分け合う。」
  • Nova Versão Internacional - “Benjamim é um lobo predador; pela manhã devora a presa e à tarde divide o despojo”.
  • Hoffnung für alle - Benjamin gleicht einem reißenden Wolf, der morgens seine Feinde verschlingt und abends seine Beute teilt.«
  • Kinh Thánh Hiện Đại - Bên-gia-min là chó sói săn mồi, buổi sáng con tiêu diệt kẻ thù, đến chiều phân chia chiến lợi phẩm.”
  • พระคริสตธรรมคัมภีร์ไทย ฉบับอมตธรรมร่วมสมัย - “เบนยามินเป็นสุนัขป่าที่หิวโซ ในตอนเช้าเขาขย้ำเหยื่อ ในตอนเย็นเขาแบ่งของที่ยึดมาได้”
  • พระคัมภีร์ ฉบับแปลใหม่ - เบนยามิน​ฉีก​เนื้อ​กิน​อย่าง​สุนัข​ป่า เขา​เขมือบ​เหยื่อ​ใน​ยาม​เช้า และ​แบ่ง​ปัน​สิ่ง​ที่​ชิง​มา​ได้​ใน​ยาม​เย็น”
  • Ezekiel 22:25 - Ezekiel, the princes of the land are like a roaring lion that tears its food apart. They eat people up. They take treasures and other valuable things. They cause many women in the land to become widows.
  • 1 Samuel 11:4 - The messengers came to Gibeah of Saul. They reported to the people the terms Nahash had required. Then all the people wept out loud.
  • 1 Samuel 11:5 - Just then Saul was coming in from the fields. He was walking behind his oxen. He asked, “What’s wrong with everyone? Why are they weeping?” He was told what the men of Jabesh had said.
  • 1 Samuel 11:6 - When Saul heard their words, the Spirit of God came powerfully on him. He became very angry.
  • 1 Samuel 11:7 - He got a pair of oxen and cut them into pieces. He sent the pieces by messengers all through Israel. They announced, “You must follow Saul and Samuel. If you don’t, this is what will happen to your oxen.” The terror of the Lord fell on the people. So all of them came together with one purpose in mind.
  • 1 Samuel 11:8 - Saul brought his army together at Bezek. There were 300,000 men from Israel and 30,000 from Judah.
  • 1 Samuel 11:9 - The messengers who had come were told, “Go back and report to the men of Jabesh Gilead. Tell them, ‘By the hottest time of the day tomorrow, you will be rescued.’ ” The messengers went and reported it to the men of Jabesh. It made those men very happy.
  • 1 Samuel 11:10 - They said to the people of Ammon, “Tomorrow we’ll hand ourselves over to you. Then you can do to us whatever you like.”
  • 1 Samuel 11:11 - The next day Saul separated his men into three groups. While it was still dark, they broke into the camp of the Ammonite army. They kept killing the men of Ammon until the hottest time of the day. Those who got away were scattered. There weren’t two of them left together anywhere.
  • Deuteronomy 33:12 - Here’s what Moses said about Benjamin. “Let the one the Lord loves rest safely in him. The Lord guards him all day long. The one the Lord loves rests in his arms.”
  • Zephaniah 3:3 - Jerusalem’s officials are like roaring lions. Their rulers are like wolves that hunt in the evening. They don’t leave anything to eat in the morning.
  • Hosea 13:7 - So I will leap on them like a lion. I will hide and wait beside the road like a leopard.
  • Hosea 13:8 - I will attack them like a bear that is robbed of her cubs. I will rip them wide open. Like a lion I will eat them up. Like a wild animal I will tear them apart.
  • Judges 3:15 - Again the Israelites cried out to the Lord. Then he provided someone to save them. The man’s name was Ehud, the son of Gera. Ehud was left-handed. He was from the tribe of Benjamin. The Israelites sent Ehud to Eglon, the king of Moab. They sent him to give the king what he required them to bring him.
  • Judges 3:16 - Ehud had made a sword that had two edges. It was about a foot and a half long. He tied it to his right leg under his clothes.
  • Judges 3:17 - Eglon, the king of Moab, was a very fat man. Ehud gave him the gift he had brought.
  • Judges 3:18 - After that, Ehud sent away those who had carried it.
  • Judges 3:19 - When he came to the place where some statues of gods stood near Gilgal, Ehud went back to Eglon. He said, “Your Majesty, I have a secret message for you.” The king said to his attendants, “Leave us!” And all his attendants left him.
  • Judges 3:20 - Then Ehud approached him. King Eglon was sitting alone in the upstairs room of his palace. Ehud said, “I have a message from God for you.” So the king got up from his seat.
  • Judges 3:21 - Then Ehud reached out his left hand. He pulled out the sword tied to his right leg. He stuck it into the king’s stomach.
  • Judges 3:22 - Even the handle sank in after the blade. Eglon sagged and fell to the floor. Ehud didn’t pull out the sword. And the fat closed over it.
  • Judges 3:23 - Ehud went out to the porch. He shut the doors of the upstairs room behind him. Then he locked them.
  • Judges 3:24 - After he had gone, the servants came. They found the doors of the upstairs room locked. They said, “Eglon must be going to the toilet in the inside room of the palace.”
  • Judges 3:25 - They waited for a long time. They waited so long they became worried. But the king still didn’t open the doors of the room. So they took a key and unlocked them. There they saw their king. He had fallen to the floor and was dead.
  • Judges 3:26 - While Eglon’s servants had been waiting, Ehud had gotten away. He passed by the statues of gods and escaped to Seirah.
  • Judges 3:27 - There in the hill country of Ephraim he blew a trumpet. Then he led the Israelites down from the hills.
  • Judges 3:28 - “Follow me,” Ehud ordered. “The Lord has handed your enemy Moab over to you.” So they followed him down. They took over the only places where people could go across the Jordan River to get to Moab. They didn’t let anyone go across.
  • Judges 3:29 - At that time they struck down about 10,000 men of Moab. All those men were strong and powerful. But not even one escaped.
  • Numbers 23:24 - The Israelites are going to wake up like a female lion. They are going to get up like a male lion. They are like a lion that won’t rest until it eats what it has caught. They are like a lion that won’t rest until it drinks the blood of what it has killed.”
  • Jeremiah 5:6 - So a lion from the forest will attack them. A wolf from the desert will destroy them. A leopard will hide and wait near their towns. It will tear to pieces anyone who dares to go out. Again and again they have refused to obey the Lord. They have turned away from him many times.
  • Genesis 46:21 - The sons of Benjamin were Bela, Beker, Ashbel, Gera, Naaman, Ehi, Rosh, Muppim, Huppim and Ard.
  • Matthew 7:15 - “Watch out for false prophets. They come to you pretending to be sheep. But on the inside they are hungry wolves.
  • Philippians 3:5 - I was circumcised on the eighth day. I am part of the people of Israel. I am from the tribe of Benjamin. I am a pure Hebrew. As far as the law is concerned, I am a Pharisee.
  • 1 Samuel 17:1 - The Philistines gathered their army together for war. They came to Sokoh in Judah. They set up camp at Ephes Dammim. It was between Sokoh and Azekah.
  • 1 Samuel 17:2 - Saul and the army of Israel gathered together. They camped in the Valley of Elah. They lined up their men to fight against the Philistines.
  • 1 Samuel 17:3 - The Philistine army was camped on one hill. Israel’s army was on another. The valley was between them.
  • 1 Samuel 17:4 - A mighty hero named Goliath came out of the Philistine camp. He was from Gath. He was more than nine feet tall.
  • 1 Samuel 17:5 - He had a bronze helmet on his head. He wore bronze armor that weighed 125 pounds.
  • 1 Samuel 17:6 - On his legs he wore bronze guards. He carried a bronze javelin on his back.
  • 1 Samuel 17:7 - His spear was as big as a weaver’s rod. Its iron point weighed 15 pounds. The man who carried his shield walked along in front of him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:8 - Goliath stood there and shouted to the soldiers of Israel. He said, “Why do you come out and line up for battle? I’m a Philistine. You are servants of Saul. Choose one of your men. Have him come down and face me.
  • 1 Samuel 17:9 - If he’s able to fight and kill me, we’ll become your slaves. But if I win and kill him, you will become our slaves and serve us.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:10 - Goliath continued, “This day I dare the soldiers of Israel to send a man down to fight against me.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:11 - Saul and the whole army of Israel heard what the Philistine said. They were terrified.
  • 1 Samuel 17:12 - David was the son of an Ephrathite whose name was Jesse. Jesse was from Bethlehem in Judah and had eight sons. When Saul was king, Jesse was already very old.
  • 1 Samuel 17:13 - Jesse’s three oldest sons had followed Saul into battle. The oldest son was Eliab. The second was Abinadab. The third was Shammah.
  • 1 Samuel 17:14 - David was the youngest. The three oldest sons followed Saul.
  • 1 Samuel 17:15 - But David went back and forth from Saul’s camp to Bethlehem. He went to Bethlehem to take care of his father’s sheep.
  • 1 Samuel 17:16 - Every morning and evening Goliath came forward and stood there. He did it for 40 days.
  • 1 Samuel 17:17 - Jesse said to his son David, “Get at least half a bushel of grain that has been cooked. Also get ten loaves of bread. Take all of it to your brothers. Hurry to their camp.
  • 1 Samuel 17:18 - Take along these ten chunks of cheese to the commander of their military group. Find out how your brothers are doing. Bring me back some word about them.
  • 1 Samuel 17:19 - They are with Saul and all the men of Israel. They are in the Valley of Elah. They are fighting against the Philistines.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:20 - Early in the morning David left his father’s flock in the care of a shepherd. David loaded up the food and started out, just as Jesse had directed. David reached the camp as the army was going out to its battle positions. The soldiers were shouting the war cry.
  • 1 Samuel 17:21 - The Israelites and the Philistines were lining up their armies for battle. The armies were facing each other.
  • 1 Samuel 17:22 - David left what he had brought with the man who took care of the supplies. He ran to the battle lines and asked his brothers how they were.
  • 1 Samuel 17:23 - As David was talking with them, Goliath stepped forward from his line. Goliath was a mighty Philistine hero from Gath. He again dared someone to fight him, and David heard it.
  • 1 Samuel 17:24 - Whenever Israel’s army saw Goliath, all of them ran away from him. That’s because they were so afraid.
  • 1 Samuel 17:25 - The Israelites had been saying, “Just look at how this man keeps daring Israel to fight him! The king will make the man who kills Goliath very wealthy. The king will also give his own daughter to be that man’s wife. The king won’t require anyone in the man’s family to pay any taxes in Israel.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:26 - David spoke to the men standing near him. He asked them, “What will be done for the man who kills this Philistine? Goliath is bringing shame on Israel. What will be done for the one who removes it? This Philistine isn’t even circumcised. He dares the armies of the living God to fight him. Who does he think he is?”
  • 1 Samuel 17:27 - The men told David what Israel’s soldiers had been saying. The men told him what would be done for the man who killed Goliath.
  • 1 Samuel 17:28 - David’s oldest brother Eliab heard him speaking with the men. So Eliab became very angry with him. Eliab asked David, “Why have you come down here? Who is taking care of those few sheep in the desert for you? I know how proud you are. I know how evil your heart is. The only reason you came down here was to watch the battle.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:29 - “What have I done now?” said David. “Can’t I even speak?”
  • 1 Samuel 17:30 - Then he turned away to speak to some other men. He asked them the same question he had asked before. And they gave him the same answer.
  • 1 Samuel 17:31 - Someone heard what David said and reported it to Saul. So Saul sent for David.
  • 1 Samuel 17:32 - David said to Saul, “Don’t let anyone lose hope because of that Philistine. I’ll go out and fight him.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:33 - Saul replied, “You aren’t able to go out there and fight that Philistine. You are too young. He’s been a warrior ever since he was a boy.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:34 - But David said to Saul, “I’ve been taking care of my father’s sheep. Sometimes a lion or a bear would come and carry off a sheep from the flock.
  • 1 Samuel 17:35 - Then I would go after it and hit it. I would save the sheep it was carrying in its mouth. If it turned around to attack me, I would grab its hair. I would strike it down and kill it.
  • 1 Samuel 17:36 - In fact, I’ve killed both a lion and a bear. I’ll do the same thing to this Philistine. He isn’t even circumcised. He has dared the armies of the living God to fight him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:37 - The Lord saved me from the paw of the lion. He saved me from the paw of the bear. And he’ll save me from the powerful hand of this Philistine too.” Saul said to David, “Go. And may the Lord be with you.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:38 - Then Saul dressed David in his own military clothes. He put a coat of armor on him. He put a bronze helmet on his head.
  • 1 Samuel 17:39 - David put on Saul’s sword over his clothes. He walked around for a while in all that armor because he wasn’t used to it. “I can’t go out there in all this armor,” he said to Saul. “I’m not used to it.” So he took it off.
  • 1 Samuel 17:40 - Then David picked up his wooden staff. He went down to a stream and chose five smooth stones. He put them in the pocket of his shepherd’s bag. Then he took his sling in his hand and approached Goliath.
  • 1 Samuel 17:41 - At that same time, the Philistine kept coming closer to David. The man carrying Goliath’s shield walked along in front of him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:42 - Goliath looked David over. He saw how young he was. He also saw how healthy and handsome he was. And he hated him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:43 - He said to David, “Why are you coming at me with sticks? Do you think I’m only a dog?” The Philistine cursed David in the name of his gods.
  • 1 Samuel 17:44 - “Come over here,” he said. “I’ll feed your body to the birds and wild animals!”
  • 1 Samuel 17:45 - David said to Goliath, “You are coming to fight against me with a sword, a spear and a javelin. But I’m coming against you in the name of the Lord who rules over all. He is the God of the armies of Israel. He’s the one you have dared to fight against.
  • 1 Samuel 17:46 - This day the Lord will give me the victory over you. I’ll strike you down. I’ll cut your head off. This day I’ll feed the bodies of the Philistine army to the birds and wild animals. Then the whole world will know there is a God in Israel.
  • 1 Samuel 17:47 - The Lord doesn’t rescue people by using a sword or a spear. And everyone here will know it. The battle belongs to the Lord. He will hand all of you over to us.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:48 - As the Philistine moved closer to attack him, David ran quickly to the battle line to meet him.
  • 1 Samuel 17:49 - He reached into his bag. He took out a stone. He put it in his sling. He slung it at Goliath. The stone hit him on the forehead and sank into it. He fell to the ground on his face.
  • 1 Samuel 17:50 - So David won the fight against Goliath with a sling and a stone. He struck down the Philistine and killed him. He did it without even using a sword.
  • 1 Samuel 17:51 - David ran and stood over him. He picked up Goliath’s sword and cut off his head with it. The Philistines saw that their hero was dead. So they turned around and ran away.
  • 1 Samuel 17:52 - Then the men of Israel and Judah shouted and rushed forward. They chased the Philistines to the entrance of Gath. They chased them to the gates of Ekron. Bodies of dead Philistines were scattered all along the road to Gath and Ekron. That’s the road that leads to Shaaraim.
  • 1 Samuel 17:53 - Israel’s army returned from chasing the Philistines. They had taken everything from the Philistine camp.
  • 1 Samuel 17:54 - David picked up Goliath’s head. He brought it to Jerusalem. He put Goliath’s weapons in his own tent.
  • 1 Samuel 17:55 - Saul had been watching David as he went out to meet the Philistine. He spoke to Abner, the commander of the army. Saul said to him, “Abner, whose son is that young man?” Abner replied, “Your Majesty, I don’t know. And that’s just as sure as you are alive.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:56 - The king said, “Find out whose son that young man is.”
  • 1 Samuel 17:57 - After David killed Goliath, he returned to the camp. Then Abner brought him to Saul. David was still carrying Goliath’s head.
  • 1 Samuel 17:58 - “Young man, whose son are you?” Saul asked him. David said, “I’m the son of Jesse from Bethlehem.”
  • Matthew 10:16 - “I am sending you out like sheep among wolves. So be as wise as snakes and as harmless as doves.
  • Acts 20:29 - I know that after I leave, wild wolves will come in among you. They won’t spare any of the sheep.
  • Acts 8:3 - But Saul began to destroy the church. He went from house to house. He dragged away men and women and put them in prison.
  • 1 Samuel 14:1 - One day Jonathan, the son of Saul, spoke to the young man carrying his armor. “Come on,” he said. “Let’s go over to the Philistine army camp on the other side of the pass.” But he didn’t tell his father about it.
  • 1 Samuel 14:2 - Saul was staying just outside Gibeah. He was under a pomegranate tree in Migron. He had about 600 men with him.
  • 1 Samuel 14:3 - Ahijah was one of them. He was wearing a sacred linen apron. He was a son of Ichabod’s brother Ahitub. Ahitub was the son of Eli’s son Phinehas. Eli had been the Lord’s priest in Shiloh. No one was aware that Jonathan had left.
  • 1 Samuel 14:4 - Jonathan planned to go across the pass to reach the Philistine camp. But there was a cliff on each side of the pass. One cliff was called Bozez. The other was called Seneh.
  • 1 Samuel 14:5 - One cliff stood on the north side of the pass toward Mikmash. The other stood on the south side toward Geba.
  • 1 Samuel 14:6 - Jonathan spoke to the young man carrying his armor. He said, “Come on. Let’s go over to the camp of those fellows who aren’t circumcised. Perhaps the Lord will help us. If he does, it won’t matter how many or how few of us there are. That won’t keep the Lord from saving us.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:7 - “Go ahead,” the young man said. “Do everything you have in mind. I’m with you all the way.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:8 - Jonathan said, “Come on, then. We’ll go across the pass toward the Philistines and let them see us.
  • 1 Samuel 14:9 - Suppose they say to us, ‘Wait there until we come to you.’ Then we’ll stay where we are. We won’t go up to them.
  • 1 Samuel 14:10 - But suppose they say, ‘Come up to us.’ Then we’ll climb up. That will show us that the Lord has handed them over to us.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:11 - So Jonathan and the young man let the soldiers in the Philistine camp see them. “Look!” said the Philistines. “Some of the Hebrews are crawling out of the holes they were hiding in.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:12 - The men in the Philistine camp shouted to Jonathan and the young man carrying his armor. They said, “Come on up here. We’ll teach you a thing or two.” So Jonathan said to the young man, “Climb up after me. The Lord has handed them over to Israel.”
  • 1 Samuel 14:13 - Using his hands and feet, Jonathan climbed up. The young man was right behind him. Jonathan struck down the Philistines. The young man followed him and killed those who were still alive.
  • 1 Samuel 14:14 - In that first attack, Jonathan and the young man killed about 20 men. They did it in an area of about half an acre.
  • 1 Samuel 14:15 - Then panic struck the whole Philistine army. It struck those who were in the camp and those in the field. It struck those who were at the edge of the camp. It also struck those who were in the groups that had been sent out to attack Israel. The ground shook. It was a panic that God had sent.
  • Acts 9:1 - Meanwhile, Saul continued to oppose the Lord’s followers. He said they would be put to death. He went to the high priest.
  • Genesis 35:18 - But Rachel was dying. As she took her last breath, she named her son Ben-Oni. But his father named him Benjamin.
  • Ezekiel 22:27 - The officials in the land are like wolves that tear their food apart. They spill blood and kill people to get rich.
  • Judges 20:21 - The men of Benjamin came out of Gibeah. They killed 22,000 Israelites on the field of battle that day.
  • Judges 20:25 - The men of Benjamin came out from Gibeah to oppose them. That time they killed 18,000 more Israelites. All the men who died had been carrying swords.
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