Daily Breadcrumbs #navbar-iframe { display:block } function setAttributeOnload(object, attribute, val) { if(window.addEventListener) { window.addEventListener("load", function(){ object[attribute] = val; }, false); } else { window.attachEvent('onload', function(){ object[attribute] = val; }); } } Daily BreadcrumbsA secular humanist reads the BibleOther Sites of InterestBlogging the BibleJudaism 101 Previous Daily Breadcrumbs▼ 2008(82)▼ June(1)Daily Breadcrumbs on semi-permanent hiatus ► April(31)HiatusBreadcrumb: Don't piss off the heir-apparentBreadcrumb: We don't want his type round here1 Sam 28-31: So long, SaulBreadcrumb: Where'd my wife go?Breadcrumb: What, no trumpets?1 Sam 25-27: David: mob boss, ninja, or turncoat?Breadcrumb: The magic ephodBreadcrumb: He's mad!1 Sam 21-24: David on the runThank you to my readers (and a question)Breadcrumb: Play it again, SamBreadcrumb: The Bible's first homosexual lovers?1 Sam 18-20: How many times do I have to kill you,...Breadcrumb: Because once is never enoughBreadcrumb: David-vu1 Sam 15-17: Enter David, exit GoliathBreadcrumb: To heck with war, there's money to be ...Breadcrumb: It was good while it lasted1 Sam 13-14: Those crazy kidsBreadcrumb: Have I mentioned this is a bad idea?Breadcrumb: How many prophets *were* there?1 Sam 9-12: So far, so goodBreadcrumb: We want a king!Breadcrumb: When one door closes...1 Samuel 4-8: Hot potato!Breadcrumb: Are you deaf?Breadcrumb: Either way, it is bad for Hannah1 Samuel 1-3: A study in contrastsBreadcrumb: It's all in the detailsBreadcrumb: Gleaning can be a dangerous business ► March(25)Attention Montreal-based readers!Ruth 1-4: A welcome interludeFinal Reflections on JudgesBreadcrumb: This time, we'll be readyBreadcrumb: Who's the priest?Judges 19-21: And you thought Sodom and Gomorrah w...Breadcrumb: Home, by hook or by crookBreadcrumb: If I had an idolJudges 16-18: Please... with a cherry on top?Breadcrumb: What kind of a riddle is that?Breadcrumb: I don't believe youJudges 13-15: Something borrowed, something... red...An apologyBreadcrumb: Tongue twistersBreadcrumb: We had it first!Judges 8-9: Child SacrificeBreadcrumb: Bible ninjasBreadcrumb: Never send a boy to do a man's job ► February(25) ► 2007(154) ► September(22) ► August(3) ► July(1) ► June(20) ► May(23) ► April(21) ► March(22) ► February(23) ► January(19) ► 2006(59) ► December(28) ► November(16) ► October(7) ► September(8) The Girl Behind the BreadcrumbsJulieMontreal, Quebec, CanadaBorn and raised Jewish, with a healthy dose of education from a private Jewish school, I went on to do a liberal arts degree and a Master's in Medieval Studies. Consequently, I know far too much about far too many obscure topics. I began Daily Breadcrumbs to record my reflections as I read the entire Bible, start-to-finish, for the first time.View my complete profile Daily Breadcrumbs on semi-permanent hiatusHello, all my faithful readers. I know it's been longer than the two weeks I promised in my last post. In fact, I seem to have lost my motivation for Daily Breadcrumbs. I will continue to do my private readers, and I will occasionally update Daily Breadcrumbs if something particularly relevant strikes me. For the time being, though, I'm putting Daily Breadcrumbs on semi-permanent hiatus. Thank you all for your support and your comments.In the future, I may reincarnate Daily Breadcrumbs into a new blog, featuring Daily Breadcrumbs-type posts alongside more general thoughts on religion and culture. I will, of course, be sure to update you if this happens.Until then, happy readings.-- Julie, the girl behind the BreadcrumbsPosted byJulieat10:48 AM4comments HiatusFirst, a big thank you to all my readers. I appreciate the time you're devoting to reading along with me.However, my life has gotten quite hectic lately. I started a new job this week, and I'm trying to get myself used to the new schedule. Because of this, Daily Breadcrumbs is going on hiatus for a few weeks (or maybe longer) while I adjust. I hope to be back soon so we can delve into 2 Samuel and the world of King David and King Solomon.-- Julie, the girl behind the BreadcrumbsPosted byJulieat8:41 AM1 comments Breadcrumb: Don't piss off the heir-apparentWhen David and his men go back to Ziklag, the town granted to them by King Achish, they find that Amalekites have burned the buildings and run off with their wives. This cannot be tolerated. David takes 400 of his men in pursuit (200 were so weary they couldn't go with the main force). Thanks to a chance encounter with an Egyptian ex-slave of the Amalekites, David gets led straight to the revelling Amalek camp and slaughters them for a full 24 hours. He kills them all except for 400 camel-riders who flee, but it's enough to rescue all the spoils, the women, and the children. In the end, all the men get their loot back, and David even sends spoils to the elders of Judah because he wants to be in their good books. This is just as well, because Saul dies in the next chapter, leaving David the new king of Israel.Posted byJulieat7:24 AM0comments Breadcrumb: We don't want his type round hereIn 1 Sam. 29, the Philistines are gearing up for a massive offensive against the Israelites. In their ranks are David and his men, loyal followers (theoretically) of King Achish. However, the Philistine princes are getting a bit anxious. Isn't David an Israelite? Isn't he the very one from the songs that say, "David slew his 10,000s?" Is it really wise to keep him here? they ask. What if he turns traitor on us in the midst of the battle? So, even though Achish is perfectly willing to have David by his side -- he has been perfectly loyal until now -- he finally gives in to the will of his princes and sends David and his men back home. Because of this, we'll never know whether David really would have proved the princes right or not. Instead, he goes on to slaughter a bunch of Amalekites, which we'll talk about tomorrow.Posted byJulieat8:14 AM0comments 1 Sam 28-31: So long, Saul(Today's passage covers Saul consultation with a witch, David's destruction of some Amalekites, and Saul's death.)In these final chapters of 1 Sam., Saul finally loses it, both metaphorically and literally. First, he loses contact with God. We've known for some time that God has abandoned Saul in favour of David, but Saul finally acknowledges this in 1 Sam. 28. He acknowledges it, but he doesn't have to like it.In fact, he dislikes it so much that he breaks his own law and consults a witch. According to his own edict, any medium or spirit-summoner faced the death penalty. So when Saul and two of his servants, disguised, show up by night at a woman's door and ask her to summon a spirit, she understandably refuses. She thinks that he's just leading her on so that he can bring her before Saul and see her executed. (1 Sam. 28:5-9)Saul swears that she won't be hurt, and she finally relents. However, his disguise is for naught; when he asks to commune with Samuel's spirit, the woman immediately realizes he is Saul in disguise. Nonetheless, she summons Samuel's spirit for the king. (1 Sam. 28:10-12)What does Samuel (or rather, his spirit) think about all this? He's annoyed! To paraphrase, he says, "God isn't speaking to you anymore. What do you expect me to do? The kingdom will pass to David, and by tomorrow you and your sons will be dead and Israel will be given over to the Philistines." Then Samuel gives up the ghost for good, leaving Saul with nothing but a feeling of impending doom. (1 Sam. 28:13-19)The next day happens to take place in 1 Sam. 31. The huge Philistine army (less David and his men, who were sent back to Ziklag -- see tomorrow's Breadcrumb) lies on one side of the field, Saul's on the other. In short order, things turn out exactly as Samuel foresaw: the Philistines rout the Israelites and kill many of them, including Saul's sons, Jonathan, Abinadab, and Melchishua. Yes, the poster-child of the book, David's best friend and closest acquaintance, Jonathan dies in 1 Sam. 31:2.Saul himself is wounded by an arrow, and begs his armour-bearer to run him through before the Philistines get to him. The armour-bearer, stricken with fear, refuses, so Saul falls on his sword and dies. The armour-bearer, perhaps from shame and perhaps from fear, falls on his sword and dies, too.Now there's just a bit of mopping up to do. The Philistines behead and strip Saul's corpse and send it on display through the Philistine lands. They stick it, along with the bodies of his sons, on the wall of Bethshan. However, the valiant men of Jabesh Gilead, where Saul made his first and only really heroic stand (1 Sam. 11), rescue the bodies, burn them, and bury the bones before the Philistines can react.Thus ends Saul's story. 2 Sam features more about David and his lineage, since Saul's line has died out, just like God promised. In the end, Saul seems to have become ever more paranoid and crazy as his reign wore on, and perhaps it's for the best that the kingdom is passed to someone else.Posted byJulieat8:50 AM0comments Breadcrumb: Where'd my wife go?At the end of 1 Sam. 25, we find out that David has taken two new wives: Abigail (wife of the now-deceased Nabal), and Ahinoam of Jezreel. But what about David's first wife, Michal? We might recall that David married Michal, Saul's younger daughter, in 1 Sam. 18. But now it seems that Saul has voided the marriage and given Michal to Phalti, the son of Laish. We have no news about why the marriage was voided, though Saul's murderous jealousy of David might be some indication. Indeed, we don't even know how David reacted to the loss of his first wife. All we can hope is that the two new ones made up for the loss of the old one.Posted byJulieat8:13 AM0comments Breadcrumb: What, no trumpets?In 1 Sam. 25:1, we find out that Samuel died. And that's it, really. The people lamented him, buried him and Ramah, and moved on with their lives, all in the course of a single verse. Surely, the protagonist of the first half of the book, in fact it's namesake, deserves better than a single verse of mourning. And yet, that's all Samuel gets. At least it seems he died in his sleep, and not eviscerated by the Philistines.Posted byJulieat8:47 AM0comments 1 Sam 25-27: David: mob boss, ninja, or turncoat?(Today's passage covers David's racketeering in Carmel, another near-murder of Saul, and his defection to the Philistines.)In today's reading we get to see three sides of David, all of them ambiguous. Story #1 (1 Sam. 25): David is in Carmel with his men, who are starting to get hungry again. (Who would have thought you need to feed an army of 600?) David decides that Nabal, a rich local, is the perfect source of some food, and sends ten of his men to go up to Nabal and tell him so. They greet Nabal nicely enough before getting to the heart of the matter: "we didn't steal your food, so you should give it to us instead." It's a racketeering move if I've ever seen one.Nabal, somewhat hot-tempered to begin with, refuses. David prepares to march his men up to Carmel to take the food by force and kill all of Nabal's men, when word of the operation reaches Abigail, Nabal's wife. She packs up as much food as her donkey can carry, rushes out to meet David, and throws himself at his feet. She tells David that if he kills Nabal, he'll feel guilty about it later; why not take the food and call it a day?David agrees and leaves. When Nabal later finds out how close he was to being a pile of ground meat, he goes stone-cold and dies 10 days later. David picks up Abigail at the funeral and marries her. Yes, not only did he cause the death of her husband, he decided to take advantage of the widow.Story #2 (1 Sam. 26): This is a replay of 1 Sam. 24, when David spared Saul's life in a cave. This time, as Saul pursues him in the wilderness of Ziph, David has advance warning of the king's approach. He sneaks into camp at night, ignores his man-at-arm's encouragement to just kill the king and be done with it, and runs off with Saul's spear and water jug. How was David able to infiltrate a camp of 3,000 people? It seems God put everyone in a deep sleep (or maybe they were passed out from drinking). Or maybe David was a ninja. Who knows?The next morning, David climbs a hilltop and berates Abner, Saul's captain of the guard, for not protecting his king. Saul repents and promises not to hurt David -- yes, again -- and then leaves. Story #3 (1 Sam. 27): Knowing that it's only a matter of time before Saul forgets his promise, David makes his way to Gath, a Philistine city, and defects! Understand that David has spent most of his life fighting the Philistines, and has killed countless numbers of them over the course of the book. But now he's on their side (or at least, so he claims). During the 16 months he's there, he leads his men on raiding parties against just about everyone but the Israelites. King Achish thinks David is bound to be his servant forever because the Israelites can't stand him. How little he knows.So there you have it: David gets protection money from Nabal and marries his widow; slips into Saul's camp with no one the wiser; and seemingly joins forces with his mortal enemies, the Philistines. What's going on with David? I have no clue. On the other hand, it makes for interesting reading.Posted byJulieat9:27 AM0comments Breadcrumb: The magic ephodAs he runs away from Saul, one of David's companions is Abiathar, the son of priest Ahimelech (you might recall that Doeg killed his entire city on Saul's orders). When David wants to consult with God, he has Abiathar get his ephod, a priestly robe. When Abiathar's wearing the ephod, David can suddenly receive God's word -- in this case, that Saul is coming and the citizens of Keilah will give him up to the king. That knowledge lets David beat a hasty retreat. But we need to ask, what was it about the ephod that let Abiathar suddenly channel God? I can almost imagine Abiathar like the Greek Sibyl (the Greek oracle at Delphi), conveying God's word through the power of his magic tunic. It would make for great TV.Posted byJulieat9:29 AM0comments Breadcrumb: He's mad!Early on in our narrative, David runs away into the land of Gath. It turns out, though, that King Achish has heard of David's battle-prowess. David gets worried at this point, perhaps because he thinks Achish will see him as a potential rival. So when the servants drag him before the king, he pretends to be a madman, writing on doorposts and drooling into his beard. The king falls for it hook, line, and sinker, and asks his servants why they've brought yet another madman before him: "Am I so short of madmen that you have to bring this fellow here to carry on like this in front of me?" David gets away, and Achish loses the chance to kill the future king of Israel. Which just goes to show you, acting skills can save your life. (1 Sam. 21:10-15, NIV)Posted byJulieat10:34 AM0comments Older PostsSubscribe to:Posts (Atom)var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? 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+ data:i.expclass\47\76\n\74b:include data\75\47i\47 name\75\47toggle\47\76\74/b:include\76\n\74a class\75\47post-count-link\47 expr:href\75\47data:i.url\47\76\74data:i.name\76\74/data:i.name\76\74/a\76\n\74span class\75\47post-count\47 dir\75\47ltr\47\76(\74data:i.post-count\76\74/data:i.post-count\76)\74/span\76\n\74b:if cond\75\47data:i.data\47\76\n\74b:include data\75\47i.data\47 name\75\47interval\47\76\74/b:include\76\n\74/b:if\76\n\74b:if cond\75\47data:i.posts\47\76\n\74b:include data\75\47i.posts\47 name\75\47posts\47\76\74/b:include\76\n\74/b:if\76\n\74/li\76\n\74/ul\76\n\74/b:loop\076'}, 'toggle': {'varName': 'interval', 'template': '\74b:if cond\75\47data:interval.toggleId\47\76\n\74b:if cond\75\47data:interval.expclass \75\75 \46quot;expanded\46quot;\47\76\n\74a class\75\47toggle\47 expr:href\75\47data:widget.actionUrl + \46quot;\46amp;action\75toggle\46quot; + \46quot;\46amp;dir\75close\46amp;toggle\75\46quot; + data:interval.toggleId + \46quot;\46amp;toggleopen\75\46quot; + data:toggleopen\47\76\n\74span class\75\47zippy toggle-open\47\76\46#9660; \74/span\76\n\74/a\76\n\74b:else\76\74/b:else\76\n\74a class\75\47toggle\47 expr:href\75\47data:widget.actionUrl + \46quot;\46amp;action\75toggle\46quot; + \46quot;\46amp;dir\75open\46amp;toggle\75\46quot; + data:interval.toggleId + \46quot;\46amp;toggleopen\75\46quot; + data:toggleopen\47\76\n\74span class\75\47zippy\47\76\n\74b:if cond\75\47data:blog.languageDirection \75\75 \46quot;rtl\46quot;\47\76\n \46#9668;\n \74b:else\76\74/b:else\76\n \46#9658;\n \74/b:if\76\n\74/span\76\n\74/a\76\n\74/b:if\76\n\74/b:if\076'}, 'posts': {'varName': 'posts', 'template': '\74ul class\75\47posts\47\76\n\74b:loop values\75\47data:posts\47 var\75\47i\47\76\n\74li\76\74a expr:href\75\47data:i.url\47\76\74data:i.title\76\74/data:i.title\76\74/a\76\74/li\76\n\74/b:loop\76\n\74/ul\076'}}, document.getElementById('BlogArchive1'), {'languageDirection': 'ltr'}, 'displayModeFull'));_WidgetManager._RegisterWidget('_ProfileView', new _WidgetInfo('Profile1', 'sidebar',{'main': {'varName': '', 'template': '\74b:if cond\75\47data:title !\75 \46quot;\46quot;\47\76\n\74h2\76\74data:title\76\74/data:title\76\74/h2\76\n\74/b:if\76\n\74div class\75\47widget-content\47\76\n\74b:if cond\75\47data:team \75\75 \46quot;true\46quot;\47\76\n\74ul\76\n\74b:loop values\75\47data:authors\47 var\75\47i\47\76\n\74li\76\74a expr:href\75\47data:i.userUrl\47\76\74data:i.display-name\76\74/data:i.display-name\76\74/a\76\74/li\76\n\74/b:loop\76\n\74/ul\76\n\74b:else\76\74/b:else\76\n\74b:if cond\75\47data:photo.url !\75 \46quot;\46quot;\47\76\n\74a expr:href\75\47data:userUrl\47\76\74img class\75\47profile-img\47 expr:alt\75\47data:photo.alt\47 expr:height\75\47data:photo.height\47 expr:src\75\47data:photo.url\47 expr:width\75\47data:photo.width\47/\76\74/a\76\n\74/b:if\76\n\74dl class\75\47profile-datablock\47\76\n\74dt class\75\47profile-data\47\76\74data:displayname\76\74/data:displayname\76\74/dt\76\n\74b:if cond\75\47data:showlocation \75\75 \46quot;true\46quot;\47\76\n\74dd class\75\47profile-data\47\76\74data:location\76\74/data:location\76\74/dd\76\n\74/b:if\76\n\74b:if cond\75\47data:aboutme !\75 \46quot;\46quot;\47\76\74dd class\75\47profile-textblock\47\76\74data:aboutme\76\74/data:aboutme\76\74/dd\76\74/b:if\76\n\74/dl\76\n\74a class\75\47profile-link\47 expr:href\75\47data:userUrl\47\76\74data:viewProfileMsg\76\74/data:viewProfileMsg\76\74/a\76\n\74/b:if\76\n\74b:include name\75\47quickedit\47\76\74/b:include\76\n\74/div\076'}}, document.getElementById('Profile1'), {}, 'displayModeFull'));_WidgetManager._RegisterWidget('_HeaderView', new _WidgetInfo('Header1', 'header'));_WidgetManager._RegisterWidget('_NavbarView', new _WidgetInfo('Navbar1', 'navbar'));_WidgetManager._RegisterWidget('_BlogView', new _WidgetInfo('Blog1', 'main')); 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