Print

Print


2 Samuel 21:1-14

Now there was a famine in the days of David for three years, year after
year; and David inquired of the LORD.  The LORD said, "There is bloodguilt
on Saul and on his house, because he put the Gibeonites to death."  So the
king called the Gibeonites and spoke to them. (Now the Gibeonites were not
of the people of Israel, but of the remnant of the Amorites; although the
people of Israel had sworn to spare them, Saul had tried to wipe them out
in his zeal for the people of Israel and Judah.)  David said to the
Gibeonites, "What shall I do for you?  How shall I make expiation, that
you may bless the heritage of the LORD?"  The Gibeonites said to him, "It
is not a matter of silver or gold between us and Saul or his house;
neither is it for us to put anyone to death in Israel."  He said, "What do
you say that I should do for you?"  They said to the king, "The man who
consumed us and planned to destroy us, so that we should have no place in
all the territory of Israel -- let seven of his sons be handed over to us,
and we will impale them before the LORD at Gibeon on the mountain of the
LORD."  The king said, "I will hand them over."

But the king spared Mephibosheth, the son of Saul's son Jonathan, because
of the oath of the LORD that was between them, between David and Jonathan
son of Saul.  The king took the two sons of Rizpah daughter of Aiah, whom
she bore to Saul, Armoni and Mephibosheth; and the five sons of Merab
daughter of Saul, whom she bore to Adriel son of Barzillai the
Meholathite; he gave them into the hands of the Gibeonites, and they
impaled them on the mountain before the LORD.  The seven of them perished
together. They were put to death in the first days of harvest, at the
beginning of barley harvest.

Then Rizpah the daughter of Aiah took sackcloth, and spread it on a rock
for herself, from the beginning of harvest until rain fell on them from
the heavens; she did not allow the birds of the air to come on the bodies
by day, or the wild animals by night.  When David was told what Rizpah
daughter of Aiah, the concubine of Saul, had done, David went and took the
bones of Saul and the bones of his son Jonathan from the people of
Jabesh-gilead, who had stolen them from the public square of Beth-shan,
where the Philistines had hung them up, on the day the Philistines killed
Saul on Gilboa.  He brought up from there the bones of Saul and the bones
of his son Jonathan; and they gathered the bones of those who had been
impaled.  They buried the bones of Saul and of his son Jonathan in the
land of Benjamin in Zela, in the tomb of his father Kish; they did all
that the king commanded.  After that, God heeded supplications for the
land.