Talált 43 Eredmények: Hadad

  • Ben-hadad, king of Aram, gathered all his forces, and accompanied by thirty-two kings with horses and chariotry, proceeded to invest and attack Samaria. (1 Kings 20, 1)

  • and said to him, "This is Ben-hadad's message: 'Your silver and gold are mine, and your wives and your promising sons are mine.'" (1 Kings 20, 3)

  • But the couriers came again and said, "This is Ben-hadad's message: 'I sent you word to give me your silver and gold, your wives and your sons. (1 Kings 20, 5)

  • Accordingly he directed the couriers of Ben-hadad, "Say to my lord the king, 'I will do all that you demanded of your servant the first time. But this I cannot do.'" The couriers left and reported this. (1 Kings 20, 9)

  • Ben-hadad then sent him the message, "May the gods do thus and so to me if there is enough dust in Samaria to make handfuls for all my followers." (1 Kings 20, 10)

  • Ben-hadad was drinking in the pavilions with the kings when he heard this reply. "Prepare the assault," he commanded his servants; and they made ready to storm the city. (1 Kings 20, 12)

  • They marched out at noon, while Ben-hadad was drinking heavily in the pavilions with the thirty-two kings who were his allies. (1 Kings 20, 16)

  • When the retainers of the governors of the provinces marched out first, Ben-hadad received word that some men had marched out of Samaria. (1 Kings 20, 17)

  • each of them struck down his man. The Arameans fled with Israel pursuing them, while Ben-hadad, king of Aram, escaped on a chariot steed. (1 Kings 20, 20)

  • At the beginning of the year, Ben-hadad mobilized Aram and went up to Aphek to fight against Israel. (1 Kings 20, 26)

  • The survivors, twenty-seven thousand of them, fled into the city of Aphek, and there the wall collapsed. Ben-hadad, too, fled, and took refuge within the city, in an inside room. (1 Kings 20, 30)

  • So they dressed in sackcloth girded at the waist, and wearing cords around their heads, they went to the king of Israel. "Your servant Ben-hadad pleads for his life," they said. "Is he still alive?" the king asked. "He is my brother." (1 Kings 20, 32)


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