Prophecy in the Seventh-day Adventist Church and David: Difference between pages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
→‎References: adding lots more sources
 
m Reverted edits by 75.144.113.153 to last version by Fayenatic london (HG)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{This|the biblical king|David (disambiguation)}}
'''Seventh-day Adventists''' believe that [[Ellen G. White]], one of the church's co-founders, was a '''prophet''', understood today as an expression of the [[New Testament]] [[spiritual gift]] of [[prophecy]].<ref name="28F">{{cite web
[[Image:David and Goliath by Caravaggio.jpg|thumb|''[[David and Goliath (Caravaggio)|David and Goliath]]'', by [[Caravaggio]], c. 1599. [[Prado]], [[Madrid]]]]
| title = Fundamental Beliefs
'''David''' {{Hebrew Name|דָּוִד|Dawid|dɔwið}}, [[Arabic language|Arabic]]: داوود or داود, ''{{unicode|dawud}}'', "beloved"), was the second king of the united [[United Monarchy|Kingdom of Israel]] according to the [[Hebrew Bible]]/[[Old Testament]]. He is depicted as a righteous king — although not without fault — as well as an acclaimed warrior, musician and poet (he is traditionally credited with the authorship of many of the [[Psalms]]). The biblical chronology places his life c.1037 - 967 BC, his reign over [[Judah]] c.1007 - 1000 BC, and over Judah and Israel c.1000 - 967 BC.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.helium.com/items/816706-accomplishments-davidking-david-important|title=The accomplishments of King David|publisher=Helium inc.|author=S. L. Anderson|date=2002-2008|accessdate=2006-03-24}}</ref>
| publisher = Seventh-day Adventist Church
| url = http://www.adventist.org/beliefs/fundamental/index.html
| accessdate = 2008-10-01
}}</ref> However dozens of other [[Seventh-day Adventist Church|Seventh-day Adventists]] throughout the [[History of the Seventh-day Adventist Church|history of the church]] have not only claimed the gift of prophecy for themselves, but convinced at least some others as well.


There is little in the archaeological evidence to support the picture of David from the Bible, although there is reasonable evidence (the [[Tel Dan stele]]) that a king named David was regarded as the founder of the Judean royal dynasty by the 9th century BC. Nevertheless, his story has been of immense importance to later Jewish and Christian culture, and the Biblical history remains a compelling literary monument.
== History ==
Numerous Seventh-day Adventists have claimed the gift of prophecy throughout the history of the church.


{{TOClimit|limit=2}}
=== Ellen White ===
{{Main|inspiration of Ellen White}}
Adventists believe church co-founder [[Ellen G. White]] was a [[prophet]], understood today as the [[New Testament]] "[[spiritual gift|gift]] of [[prophecy]]".<ref>This terminology is used in the [[28 Fundamentals]], the official beliefs of Seventh-day Adventists. Also see for example, "[http://www.adventistbiblicalresearch.org/documents/Biblical%20Basis%20for%20Prophet.htm The Biblical Basis for a Modern Prophet]" by Frank B. Holbrook, [[Biblical Research Institute]], April 1982. Also [http://www.whiteestate.org/issues/Biblebasis.html appearing] on the White Estate website. "[http://www.whiteestate.org/issues/CanAllBeProphets.html Can All Be Prophets? Ellen G. White Statements That Bear on the Question]" by the White Estate, 1969</ref> White preferred to describe herself as a "messenger".<ref>{{cite journal
| last = White
| first = Ellen
| authorlink = Ellen G. White
| title = A Messenger
| journal = [[Adventist Review|Review and Herald]]
| volume = 83
| issue = 30
| pages = 8–9
| publisher = [[Review and Herald Publishing Association]]
| date = 1906-07-26
| url = http://www.adventistarchives.org/doc_info.asp?DocID=6916
| doi =
| id =
| format = [[DjVu]]
| accessdate = 2007-04-12
}}</ref>


==The biblical account of David==
Two members of the [[Millerism|Millerite movement]] (out of which Seventh-day Adventists emerged) claimed to have had visions prior to Ellen White – [[William Foy]] and [[Hazen Foss]].
[[Image:Gentile da Fabriano 026.jpg|left|280px|thumb|''Prophet David Mayes'', by [[Gentile da Fabriano]].]]
:''This section summarizes only a few major episodes from David's life, chosen on the basis of their fame and/or importance in later [[Christianity|Christian]] and Jewish culture.''<ref>For a more complete summary of all the episodes in the Saul/David story in Samuel (but excluding Chronicles), see [http://people.brandeis.edu/~buchsbau/MSGPAPERS/sumsam.pdf synopsis]</ref>


=== William Foy ===
=== David is chosen ===
God withdraws his favor from King [[Saul]] and sends the prophet [[Samuel]] to [[Jesse]], "for I have provided for myself a king among his sons." The choice falls upon David, the youngest son, who is guarding his father's sheep: "He was ruddy, and fine in appearance with handsome features. And the [[The LORD|LORD]] said [to Samuel], '[[anointing|Anoint]] him; for this is he.'"
[[Image:UnknownProphet.jpg|thumb|right]]
William Ellis Foy (1818–1893) was an African American [[Freewill Baptist]] minister and preacher in the Millerite movement, who claimed to receive four [[visions]] from 1842 (two visions) to 1844. A tall man, he was the first of three Millerites to claim visions around the time of the 1844 "[[Great Disappointment]]".


=== David plays the lyre before Saul ===
A common theme of his visions was that the [[Second Coming]] would come later than the Millerites expected. They inspired many people through the Great Disappointment when Jesus did not return as they had expected. Ellen White supported his visions.<ref>Ellen White, "[http://egwdatabase.whiteestate.org/nxt/gateway.dll/egw-comp/section12951.htm/book14069.htm/chapter14086.htm MR No. 1253 - William Foy Lectures in Beethoven Hall]" p95–97 of ''Manuscript Releases, Volume 17'', Hagerstown, Maryland: Review and Herald, 1987)</ref> They also concern the judgment, and rewards for the righteous.<ref>"[http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/RH/RH19871015-V164-42/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=16 The inside story about people and events that shaped our history]". ''[[Adventist Review]]'' 164:42 (October 15, 1987), p16</ref>
Saul is tormented by an evil spirit. His servants suggest he send for David, "skillful in playing [the [[harp]]], a man of valor, a man of war, prudent in speech, and a man of good presence; and the LORD is with him." So David enters Saul's service, and finds favour in his sight, "and whenever the evil spirit was upon Saul, David took the harp and played it with his hand; so Saul was refreshed, and was well, and the evil spirit departed from him." ({{bibleverse|1|Samuel|16:14-23|HE}})


=== David and Goliath ===
He claimed visions in January and February of 1842, told in his autobiographical ''The Christian Experience of William E. Foy'', published 1845.<ref>''The Christian Experience of William E. Foy Together with the Two Visions He Received in the Months of Jan. and Feb. 1842'' by Foy. Published by John and C. Henry Pearson in Portland, 1845. OCLC 76043021. Online [http://www.4hispeople.org/documents/William-Foy.pdf here]. It was republished by Andrews University Press as ''Christian Experience''; [http://www.andrews.edu/universitypress/catalog.cgi?key=184 publisher's page], [http://universitypress.andrews.edu/content/Christian%20Experience%20Excerpt.pdf sample]. (Berrien Springs, Michigan: Center for Adventist Research, 2005). ISBN 1883925525 ISBN 9781883925529. Apparently republished earlier in ''Early S.D.A. pamphlets'' by Joseph Bates, William Ellis Foy and others (Payson, Arizona: Leaves-of-Autumn Books, 1987)</ref> They were similar to those experienced by Ellen White.<ref>http://www.andrews.edu/universitypress/catalog.cgi?key=184</ref>


The [[Israelite]]s are facing the army of the [[Philistines]]. David, the youngest of the sons of Jesse, brings food to his brothers who are with Saul. He hears the Philistine champion, the giant [[Goliath]], challenge the Israelites to send their own champion to decide the outcome in single combat. David takes the challenge as an insult to the God of Israel and insists that he can defeat Goliath. Saul sends for him, and reluctantly allows him to make the attempt. David is indeed victorious, felling Goliath with a stone from his [[Sling (weapon)|sling]], at which the Philistines flee in terror and the Israelites win a great victory. David beheads Goliath with his own sword and brings it to Saul, who asks him whose son he is, and David replies, "I am the son of your servant Jesse the Bethlehemite". <ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv1Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=17&division=div1 1 Samuel 17]</ref>
Foy was reluctant to obey his commission to share the visions, yet did eventually. He never became a Seventh-day Adventist, and his subsequent history was unknown. [[John Norton Loughborough|J. N. Loughborough]]'s account<ref>''[http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/RP/RiseAndProgress/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=72 Rise and Progress of the Seventh-day Adventists]'' (DjVu), 1892, p70 onwards</ref> was simply repeated by later historians<ref>http://www.andrews.edu/~jmoon/Documents/CHIS_570/CHIS_570%20Lecture_Outline.pdf</ref> (e.g. ''Light Bearers'', 64) until [[Delbert Baker]]'s definitive 1987 biography ''The Unknown Prophet'' traced his subsequent history.<ref>{{cite book
| last = Baker
| first = Delbert
| authorlink = Delbert Baker
| title = The Unknown Prophet: The Story of William Ellis Foy
| publisher = Review and Herald
| date = 1987
| location = Washington, D.C.
| pages =
| url =
| isbn = 0828004013
}}</ref>


=== The enmity of Saul ===
See also.<ref>http://www.4hispeople.org/williamellisfoy.htm http://www.ellenwhiteexposed.com/refute9a.htm http://www.ellenwhiteexposed.com/rea/sop.htm</ref><ref>{{cite journal
| last = Poirier
| first = Tim
| authorlink =
| title = Black Forerunner to Ellen White: William E. Foy
| journal = [[Spectrum (magazine)|Spectrum]]
| volume = 17
| issue = 5
| pages = 23–28
| publisher = [[Adventist Forums]]
| location = [[Roseville, California|Roseville]], [[California]]
| issn = 0890-0264
| date = August 1987
| url = http://spectrummagazine.org/files/archive/archive16-20/17-5poirier.pdf
| format = [[Portable Document Format|PDF]]
| doi =
| id =
| accessdate = 2008-08-11
}} Includes the box "Questions and Answers About ''The Unknown Prophet'', William Foy" by [[Delbert Baker]], p24–25</ref><ref>{{cite journal
| last = Baker
| first = Delbert W.
| authorlink =
| title = William Foy: Messenger to the Advent Believers (The story of an unknown prophet)
| journal = [[Adventist Review]]
| volume = 165
| issue = 2
| pages = 1, 8–10
| publisher = [[Review and Herald Publishing Association|Review and Herald]]
| location = [[Washington, D.C.]]
| issn = 0161-1119
| date = 14 January 1988
| url = http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/RH/RH19880114-V165-02/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=8
| format = [[DjVu]]
| doi =
| id =
| accessdate = 2008-08-17
}} Download the free [http://www.adventistarchives.org/GetDjVuControl.asp DjVu Browser Plugin]</ref><ref>Gary Land, ''Historical Dictionary Of Seventh-day Adventists'', p104–05</ref><ref>"Early Visions: Foy-White Parallels" by Douglas Hackleman. ''Adventist Currents'', July 1984, p11</ref><ref>See also [http://jewel.andrews.edu:82/search/d?Foy articles] in the SDAPI</ref><ref>''William Ellis Foy'' by R. L. Potter, self published in 2004 apparently. OCLC 166253381</ref>


Saul makes David a commander over his armies and gives him his daughter [[Michal]] in marriage. David is successful in many battles, and the women say, "Saul has slain his thousands, and David his tens of thousands." David's popularity awakens Saul's fears - "What more can he have but the kingdom?" - and by various stratagems the king seeks David's death. But the plots of the jealous king all proved futile, and only endear the young hero the more to the people, and especially to Saul's son [[David and Jonathan|Jonathan]], one of those who love David. Warned by Jonathan of Saul's intention to kill him, David flees into the wilderness.<ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv1Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=18&division=div1 1 Samuel 18] and subsequent chapters of 1 Samuel.</ref>
=== Hazen Foss ===
Hazen Foss (1818–1893) was another Millerite who claimed to receive several visions. However he refused to proclaim them, and God told him he was "released" from that ministry, and the message given to Ellen White instead.<ref>''The Unknown Prophet'' p134–141</ref> He was Ellen White's brother-in-law. Adventists tend to believe the prophetic gift offered to these two men was instead passed on to White.<ref>{{cite journal
| last = Nix
| first = James R.
| authorlink = James R. Nix
| title = The third prophet spoke forth
| journal = [[Adventist Review]]
| volume = 163
| issue =
| pages = 22
| publisher = [[Review and Herald Publishing Association|Review and Herald]]
| location = [[Washington, D.C.]]
| issn = 0161-1119
| date = 4 December 1986
| url = http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/RH/RH19861204-V163-49/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=22
| format = [[DjVu]]
| doi =
| id =
| accessdate = 2008-04-15
}}</ref>


=== David in the wilderness ===
See also.<ref>"[http://whiteestate.org/books/pay/PAYaxA.html#sth8 Hazen Foss]", p486–89 of ''A Prophet Among You''. See also "[http://whiteestate.org/books/pay/PAYaxA.html#sth7 William Foy and Hazen Foss]" above</ref><ref>http://www.whiteestate.org/books/mol/Chapt3.html#William%20Foy%20and%20Hazen%20Foss from ''Messenger of the Lord''</ref><ref>See [http://jewel.andrews.edu:82/search/d?Foss+Hazen articles] in the SDAPI</ref><ref>http://www.truthorfables.com/Foss.htm http://www.ellenwhiteexposed.com/rea/sop.htm</ref>


In the wilderness David gathers a band of followers and becomes the champion of the oppressed while evading the pursuit of Saul. He accepts [[Ziklag]] as a fief from the Philistine king [[Achish]] of [[Gath (city)|Gath]], but continues to secretly champion the Israelites. Achish marches against Saul, but David is excused from the war on the accusation of the Philistine nobles that his loyalty to their cause cannot be trusted.
=== Early Adventists ===
Adventists believe [[Hiram Edson]] received a vision about the [[heavenly sanctuary]] or [[investigative judgment]] on October 23, 1844 – the day following the "[[Great Disappointment]]". He wrote,
:"...while passing through a large field I was stopped about midway of the field. Heaven seemed open to my view, and I saw distinctly and clearly..." Jesus as [[Kohen Gadol|High Priest]]<ref>Hiram Edson, from a manuscript fragment about his life and experiences; as quoted by [[Francis D. Nichol]] in ''The Midnight Cry'' (Washington: Review and Herald, 1945), 458</ref>


=== David is made king ===
[[Dorinda Baker]] was another purported visionary, associated with the [[Charismatic Adventism#Israel Dammon trial|Israel Dammon trial]]. [[E. J. Waggoner]] claimed "a [[revelation]] direct from heaven" at a campmeeting in [[Healdsburg, California|Healdsburg]], [[California]] in 1882. In the midst of another's sermon,
Saul and Jonathan are killed in a battle with the Philistines and David mourns their death.<ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv2Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=1&division=div1 2 Samuel 1]; the death of Saul and Jonathan is described in the closing chapter of 1 Samuel.</ref> Then David goes up to [[Hebron]], where he is anointed ([[messiah]]) king over [[Judah]]; in the north, Saul's son [[Ish-Bosheth]] is king over the tribes of [[Kingdom of Israel|Israel]].<ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv2Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=2&division=div1 2 Samuel 2:1-10]</ref> War ensues between Ish-Bosheth and David, and Ish-Bosheth is assassinated. The assassins bring forward the head of Ish-Bosheth to David hoping for reward, but David executes them for their crime against their king.<ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv2Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=4&division=div1 2 Samuel 4]</ref> Yet with the death of the son of Saul, the elders of Israel come to Hebron, and David is anointed King of Israel and Judah. Upon these events he is 30 years old.<ref name="autogenerated1">[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv2Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=5&division=div1 2 Samuel 5]</ref>
:"...an experience came to me that was the turning point in my life. Suddenly a light shone about me, and the tent seemed illumined, as though the sun were shining; I saw [[Christ]] crucified for me, and to me was revealed for the first time in my life the fact that God loved me, and that Christ gave Himself for me personally."<ref>E. J. Waggoner, ''The Everlasting Covenant'', v. As quoted in David P. McMahon. ''Ellet Joseph Waggoner: The Myth and the Man'' (Fallbrook, California: Verdict Publications, 1979). Chapter 2, "A Biographical Sketch" – [http://sdanet.org/atissue/books/mcmahon/waggoner-02.htm SDANet AtIssue version], [http://www.presenttruthmag.com/7dayadventist/Waggoner/2.html ''Present Truth Magazine'' version]. See also E. J. Waggoner, ''Confession of Faith'', p5–6; which was published posthumously</ref>


=== After 1888 ===
=== King David ===
David conquers the [[Jebusite]] fortress of [[Jerusalem]] and makes it his capital, "and Hiram king of Tyre sent messengers to David, and cedar trees, also carpenters and masons who built David a house." <ref name="autogenerated1" /> David brings the [[Ark of the Covenant]] to Jerusalem, intending to build a temple.<ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv2Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=6&division=div1 2 Samuel 6]</ref> God, speaking to the prophet [[Nathan (Prophet)|Nathan]], forbids it, saying the temple must wait for a future generation. But God makes a covenant with David, promising that he will establish the house of David eternally: "Your throne shall be established forever."<ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv2Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=7&division=div1 2 Samuel 7]</ref> Then David establishes a mighty empire, conquering [[Zobah]] and [[Aram]] (modern [[Syria]]), [[Edom]] and [[Moab]] (roughly modern [[Jordan]]), the lands of the Philistines, and much more.<ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv2Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=8&division=div1 2 Samuel 8] and subsequent chapters.</ref>
The [[1888 Minneapolis General Conference]] provided "impetus" to those radically seeking God's presence.


==== Anna Phillips ====
=== Bathsheba and Uriah the Hittite ===
[[Image:Lucas Cranach d. Ä. 005.jpg|250px|thumb|''David and Bathsheba'', by [[Lucas Cranach]], 1526.]]
For instance, [[W. W. Prescott]] supported the claimed new prophetess Anna Rice Phillips. From [[Ogden, Utah|Ogden]], [[Utah]], she first claimed visions in 1891, but Ellen White convinced the church she was sincere yet mistaken.<ref>''[[Seeking a Sanctuary]]'', 79</ref><ref>"[http://whiteestate.org/books/pay/PAYaxA.html#sth1 An Experience With a False Prophetess]" section, p469–71 of Appendix A in ''A Prophet Among You'' by T. Housel Jemison</ref><ref>[http://library.puc.edu/heritage/bib-arphilp.html Anna Rice Phillips, Battle Creek prophetess]: A bibliographical guide to sources in the Heritage Room, Pacific Union College Library. Gary W. Shearer. See also [http://jewel.andrews.edu:82/search/XAnna+Phillips SDAPI articles]</ref><ref name="America"/><ref>http://egwdatabase.whiteestate.org/nxt/gateway.dll/egw-comp/section00000.htm/book04611.htm/chapter04623.htm</ref>


David lies with [[Bathsheba]], the wife of [[Uriah the Hittite]]. Bathsheba becomes pregnant and David sends for Uriah, who is with the Israelite army at the siege of [[Rabbah]], that he might lie with her and so conceal the identity of the child's father. Uriah refuses to do so while his companions are in the field of battle and David sends Uriah back to [[Joab]], the commander, with a message instructing him to abandon Uriah on the battlefield, "that he may be struck down, and die." And so David marries Bathsheba and she bears his child, "but the thing that David had done displeased the LORD."<ref>{{kjv|2sam|11|2 Samuel 11}}</ref>
==== Others ====
By the 1890s, a "flood of volunteers" stepped forward, hoping to be the next prophet. However Ellen White usually responded to them that she had been given no "light" about the future prophetic gift.<ref>Chapter 5, "The Los Angeles Seventh-day Adventist Reform Church", p84-99 of Tarling</ref>


=== God's judgment on David ===
[[Anna Garmire]] from [[Petoskey, Michigan|Petoskey]], [[Michigan]] claimed visions as early as 1884. Ellen White rejected them. The Garmires influenced others in this way until as late as 1900.<ref name="America">''Adventism in America'' ed. Gary Land, p105–6. As quoted in ''Another Gospel'' by Ruth A. Tucker, p106</ref>


The prophet Nathan speaks out against David's sin, saying: "Why have you despised the word of God, to do what is evil in his sight? You have smitten Uriah the Hittite with the sword, and have taken his wife to be your wife." And although David repents, God "struck the child ... and it became sick ... [And] on the seventh day the child died." David then leaves his lamentations, dresses himself, and eats. His servants ask why he lamented when the baby was alive, but leaves off when it is dead, and David replies: "While the child was still alive, I fasted and wept; for I said, who knows whether YHWH will be gracious to me, that the child may live? But now he is dead, why should I fast? Can I bring him back again? I shall go to him, but he will not return to me."<ref>[http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Rsv2Sam.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=12&division=div1 2 Samuel 12]</ref>
[[Fannie Bolton|Fannie [Frances E.] Bolton]] (1859–1926), a former literary assistant to White, claimed visions around the end of the 1800s.<ref name="America"/><ref>Her apparently sole published article is a poem, "[http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/RH/RH1916-22/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=12 Comfort in the book]" (DjVu). ''Advent Review and Sabbath Herald'' v93 (4 May 1916), p12. She also composed hyms - http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/RH/RH19850613-V162-24/index.djvu. Ruybalid, M. Keith, "Our heritage of Adventist hymnody". ''Worker, Journal of Sabbath School Action'' 1982, v98, Dec 1, p6</ref>


=== Absalom ===
In the 19'00s, Mrs. Mackin claimed the gift of prophecy, and under her and her husband Ralph's influence, a young girl (a family friend) also prophesied.
David’s beloved son [[Absalom]] rebels against his father. The armies of Absalom and David come to battle in the [[Wood of Ephraim]], and Absalom is caught by his hair in the branches of an oak. David’s general Joab kills him as he hangs there. When the news of the victory is brought to David he does not rejoice, but is instead shaken with grief: “O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! Would I had died instead of you, O Absalom, my son, my son!”


=== After Ellen White ===
=== The Psalms of David ===
David is described as the author of the majority of the [[Psalms]]. One of the most famous is {{bibleverse||Psalm|51|JP}}, traditionally said to have been composed by David after Nathan upbraided him over Bathsheba and Uriah. Perhaps the best-known is [[Psalm 23]]:
Ellen White died in 1915. According to her son [[William C. White|Willie White]], subsequently "A dozen or more persons" claimed the gift, to succeed Ellen. He considered some "good-hearted but misguided", but others fanatical and who denounced those remaining unconvinced by their claims.<ref>W. C. White, ''Battle Creek Enquirer'' 25 July 1915. As quoted by Tarling</ref>
:
::1 The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.
::2 He maketh me to lie down in green pastures:
:::he leadeth me beside the still waters.
::3 He restoreth my soul:
:::he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake.
::4 Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
:::I will fear no evil: for thou art with me;
:::thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
::5 Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies:
:::thou anointest my head with oil;
:::my cup runneth over.
::6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life:
:::and I will dwell in the house of the LORD for ever."


==== Margaret Rowen ====
=== Reign of David ===
"Thus David the son of Jesse reigned over all Israel. The time that he reigned over Israel was forty years; he reigned seven years in Hebron, and thirty-three years in Jerusalem. Then he died in a good old age, full of days, riches, and honour; and [[Solomon]] his son reigned in his stead".<ref>{{bibleverse|1|Chronicles|29:26-28|HE}}</ref>
Margaret W. Rowen claimed to receive visions, and formed the short-lived Reformed Seventh-day Adventist Church.


== David in later Abrahamic tradition ==
She became an Adventist in 1912. She claimed to receive her first vision on June 22, 1916 which she shared with members of a prayer group at her South Side Los Angeles Church, gaining a small following. Several church leaders, especially Dr. Bert E. Fullmer, supported her. A periodical ''The Reform Advocate and Prayer Band Appeal'' was printed.<!-- Gardner says from 1922 to 1926, but this seems to contradict other accounts--> The [[Southern California Conference of Seventh-day Adventists|Southern California Conference]] investigated the claims, but was originally inconclusive.
=== David in Judaism ===
She authored ''A Stirring Message for the Time'' (Pasadena, California: The Grant Press, 1918). In 1918, [[A. G. Daniells]] reported the investigators had concluded her visions were not of heavenly origin. The following year Rowen, Fullmer, a physician, and at least two other ministers were disfellowshipped.
[[Image:Bathsheba solomon david.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Abishag, Bathsheba, Solomon, and [[Nathan (Prophet)|Nathan]] tend to aging David, c. 1435]]
David's reign represents the formation of a coherent [[Judaism|Jewish kingdom]] centered in [[Jerusalem]] and the institution of an eternal royal dynasty; the failure of this "eternal" Davidic dynasty after some four centuries led to the later elaboration of the concept of the [[Messiah]], at first a human descendant of David who would occupy the throne of a restored kingdom, later an apocalyptic figure who would usher in the end of time.


In modern Judaism David's descent from a convert ([[Book of Ruth|Ruth]]) is taken as proof of the importance of converts within Judaism. David is also viewed as a tragic figure; his acquisition of Bathsheba, and the loss of his son are viewed as his central tragedies.
In 1920, a false document was planted by Fullmer (under Rowen's directive) in the [[Ellen G. White Estate]] files in White's home. Dated 1911 and supposedly written by White, it announced Rowen as a succeeding prophetess. At its peak, the movement had around 1000 followers. Rowen gave several flase predictions. Fullmer authored ''Bearing Witness'' (Los Angeles: The Reform Press, 1923). In 1925, Fullmer admitted the fraudulent letter. In the March 1926 issue of the periodical, he presented his conclusion that Rowen was a fraud. In response, she conspired to murder him the following year, but was unsuccessful. She served a one-year sentence in the [[San Quentin State Prison]] in California, by which time her movement had fallen apart.<ref>"Reformed Seventh-day Adventist Church" in ''Historical Dictionary of Seventh-day Adventists'' by [[Gary Land]], p243</ref><ref>''[[Seeking a Sanctuary]]'', p203–4</ref><ref>Larry White, "[http://archives.llu.edu/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/advhert&CISOPTR=731&REC=11 Margaret W. Rowen, Prophetess of Reform and Doom]" ([[DjVu]]) ''[[Adventist Heritage]]'' '''6''':1 (Summer 1979), p28–40</ref><ref>"[http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,719789,00.html Day of Doom]".<!--Print version, for less advertising--> ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' 2 February 1925</ref><ref name="Douglass">{{cite book
| last = Douglass
| first = Herbert E.
| authorlink = Herbert E. Douglass
| title = Messenger of the Lord
| publisher = [[Pacific Press Publishing Association|Pacific Press]]
| year = 1998
| edition = 3rd edition
| location = Nampa, Idaho; Oshawa, Ontario, Canada
| url = http://www.whiteestate.org/books/mol/TOC.html
| chapter = Chapter 47: Messenger and Message Inseparable
| chapterurl = http://www.whiteestate.org/books/mol/Chapt47.html
| pages =
| isbn = 0-8163-1622-8
}}</ref><ref>''From the Wandering Jew to William F. Buckley, Jr.: On Science, Literature, and Religion'' by [[Martin Gardner]]. ([[Prometheus Books|Prometheus]], October 2000); ISBN 1573928526. See also "The Incredible Flimflams of Margaret Rowen" articles by Martin Gardner; part 1, "[http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-18300754.html Seventh-day Adventists and the Second Coming]" (subscription needed). ''[[Free Inquiry]]'' (22 March / Spring 1996). "[http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-19114356.html The Sad Saga of Dr. Bert Fullmer. (Supported Reform Seventh-Day Adventist Church)]" (subscription needed). ''Free Inquiry'' 22 September 1996</ref><ref>Lowell Tarling, ''The Edges of Seventh-day Adventism''</ref>


Many legends have grown around the figure of David. According to one Rabbinic tradition, David was raised as the illegitimate son of his father Jesse and spent his early years herding his father's sheep in the wilderness while his brothers were in school. Only at his anointing by Samuel - when the oil from Samuel's flask turned to diamonds and pearls - was David's true identity as Jesse's legal son revealed. David's piety was said to be so great that his prayers could bring down things from Heaven. His adultery with Bathsheba was only an opportunity to demonstrate the power of repentance and some [[Talmud|Talmudic authors]] stated that it was not adultery at all, quoting a supposed Jewish practice of divorce on the eve of battle to prevent the wives of the missing-in-action from becoming ''[[Agunah|agunot]]''. Furthermore, according to David's apologists, the death of Uriah was not to be considered murder, on the basis that Uriah had committed a capital offence by refusing to obey a direct command from the King.<ref>[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=82&letter=D#260 Jewish Encyclopedia, "David"]</ref>
==== Others ====
Numerous leaders of offshoot groups have also claimed the gift of prophecy, for example [[Victor Houteff]], founder of the [[Shepherd's Rod]] offshoot. [[Benjamin Roden]] was another, founder of the [[Branch Davidian]] offshoot of Shepherd's Rod,<ref>''The Branch Davidians of Waco'' by [[Kenneth Newport|Kenneth G. C. Newport]], 136</ref> whose wife [[Lois Roden]] succeeded him as prophetess, and claimed a vision about the feminity of the Holy Spirit. [[David Koresh]] considered himself the final prophet. He apparently saw himself as Ellen White's successor.<ref>"[http://www.atoday.com/content/koresh-ellen-white Koresh on Ellen White]" by Dennis Hokama. ''Adventist Today'' 1:1 (May–June 1993), p12. See also that [http://www.atoday.com/content/vol1-no1 entire issue]</ref>


According to [[midrashim]]<ref>Zohar Bereishis 91b</ref>, Adam gave up 70 years of his life for the life of David. Also, according to the Talmud Yerushalmi, David was born and died on the Jewish holiday of [[Shavuot]] (Feast of Weeks).
Another is [[France|French]] "visionary" [[Jeanine Sautron]].She claimed to see dreams and visions similar to those experienced by Ellen G. White. A radical offshoot was formed based on her volumes 'Dreams and Visions' that were published in audio cassette version and book format and publilshed in her native tongue of French and later translated into English and Spanish. The offshoot was originally called 'Seventh-Day<!-- need to check this spelling--> Adventist [[Remnant (Adventist)|The Remnant]]' but was later renamed '[[Laodicean Church|Laodicea]] The Remnant', in order to separate it's affiliation with the Seventh-day Adventist main body, and after the Adventist belief of the end times church mentioned in the biblical [[book of Revelation]].<ref name="Douglass"/><ref>''Jeanine Sautron: An Analysis of Her Writings'' by Vance Ferrell. (Pilgrims Books, 1993)</ref><ref>''Dreams and Visions'' by Jeanine Sautron. (Dreams and Visions Evangelistic Center, 1991)</ref><ref>''Studies in the Book of Revelation'' by Steve Moyise, p41</ref><ref>''[[Record (magazine)|Record]]'' v100 (16 September 1995), p4</ref>


=== David in Christianity ===
Amateur [[Archaeology|archaeologist]] [[Ron Wyatt]] claimed to meet "at least" an [[angel]], and another time four angels.<ref>''Ark of The Covenant'' by Jonathan Gray (Adelaide, South Australia: Jonathan Gray [or Ind Group Pty Ltd], 1997); ISBN 0646300733, p361–63, 588</ref><ref>''Holy Relics Or Revelation'' by Russell R. Standish, Lowell Scarbrough and Colin D Standish. (Hartland Publications, 1999). ISBN 0923309640. See for example chapter 25, "Other Deceptions", p127–135</ref><ref>http://www.ronwyatt.com/Transcript%20Ron%20Wyatt%20Interview%20Ark%20of%20the%20Covenant.htm</ref> Others have claimed to hear the voice of God, for example, [[Robert Brinsmead]]'s father Cedric claimed to hear voices saying, "Go north, young man." after which the family moved.<ref>http://www.bobbrinsmead.com/rdb.html</ref> Chinese Adventist [[David Lin]] claims his mother was told by a voice to go to [[Tianjin]].<ref>http://spectrummagazine.org/files/archive/archive21-25/21-5lin.pdf, p39. See [http://jewel.andrews.edu:82/search/XDavid+Lin Word search for "David Lin"] in the SDAPI</ref>
[[Image:Rey David por Pedro Berruguete.JPG|thumb|200px|King David by [[Pedro Berruguete]].]]


Originally an earthly king ruling by divine appointment ("the anointed one", as the title [[Messiah]] had it), the "son of David" became in the last two pre-Christian centuries the apocalyptic and heavenly "son of God" who would deliver Israel and usher in a new kingdom. This was the background to the concept of Messiahship in early Christianity, which interpreted the career of Jesus "by means of the titles and functions assigned to David in the mysticism of the Zion cult, in which he served as priest-king and in which he was the mediator between God and man."<ref>[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-1727/David "David"] article from ''Encyclopedia Britannica Online''</ref>
Author [[Herbert Douglass]] wrote in 1998, "At any given time in the last few decades, at least a dozen people around the world have convinced others that they have been given the gift of prophecy."<ref name="Douglass"/>


Christians have traditionally believed that the [[Old Testament prophecies]] foretold that the Messiah would be a descendant of David, and the Gospels of [[Gospel of Matthew|Matthew]] and [[Gospel of Luke|Luke]] therefore trace [[Jesus]]' lineage to David in fulfillment of this requirement.
== See also ==
* [[Inspiration of Ellen White]]
* [[Charismatic Adventism]]
* [[List of Christian mystics]]


"Incidents in the life of David [foreshadowed] the life of Christ; [[Bethlehem]] is the birthplace of both; the shepherd life of David points out Christ, [[The Good Shepherd (Christianity)|the Good Shepherd]]; the five stones chosen to slay Goliath are [[Typology (theology)|typical]] of the [[Holy Wounds|five wounds]]; the betrayal by his trusted counsellor, [[Ahitophel|Achitophel]], and the passage over the [[Kidron Valley|Cedron]] remind us of Christ's [[Passion (Christianity)|Sacred Passion]]. Many of the Davidic Psalms, as we learn from the New Testament, are clearly [[Typology (theology)|typical]] of the future [[Messias]]."<ref>John Corbett (1911) [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04642b.htm King David] ''[[The Catholic Encyclopedia]]'' (New York: Robert Appleton Company)</ref>
== References ==
{{reflist|2}}
* "Prophets, true and false" series by Arthur L. White in ''Advent Review and Sabbath Herald'' issues of 1967. Part 1, "A people sensitive to God's special leading" v144, Jun 8, p[1],4-5; part 2, "When Mrs. White was gone" v144, Jun 15, p6-8; part 3, "Testing later claims to special illumination" v144, Jun 22, p4-7; part 4, "What may we expect in days to come?" v144, Jun 29, p6-7
* "Prophets, true and false" by Angel Rodriguez. ''Adventist World'' 2005, v1, Sep, p38
* [[J. N. Loughborough]], "The prophetic gift in the gospel church" six part series republished in ''Our Firm Foundation'', 1998
* "How important is a personal revelation?" by Frank Holbrook. ''These Times'' v90 (November 1981), p28
* {{cite journal
| author = (Anonymous)
| title = A Prophet Among Us
| journal = [[Adventist Today]]
| volume = 12
| issue = 2
| pages = 20–21
| publisher = Adventist Today Foundation
| location = [[Loma Linda, California|Loma Linda]], [[California|CA]]
| issn = 1079-5499
| date = March–April 2004
| url = http://www.atoday.com/magazine/2004/03/prophet-among-us
| accessdate = 2008-10-10
}}
* "Crackpots, cults, and modern prophets" by [[George R. Knight]]. ''[[Signs of the Times]]'' 2002, v129, Jun, p20-21
* http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/MIN/MIN1986-06/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=3
* Richard Schwarz, ''[http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/LBTTR/LBTTR1979/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=455 Light Bearers to the Remnant]'' (DjVu), p455–56<!-- http://www.andrews.edu/library/car/collection/S/Schwarz,%20Richard.pdf Schwarz' manuscipt collection -->
* J. R. Spangler, "[http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/MIN/MIN1986-06/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=4 The Gift of Prophecy and 'Thought Voices']" (DjVu) ''Ministry'', v59 (June 1986), p4–7
* Roger W. Coon, ''Heralds of New Light'' (Nampa, Idaho: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1987), p24–26
* Roy C. Naden. "[http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/MIN/MIN1999-06/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=9 Contemporary manifestations of the prophecy gift]" (DjVu). ''[[Ministry (magazine)|Ministry]]'' v72 (June 1999), 9–14


In the [[Middle Ages]], "[[Charlemagne]] thought of himself, and was viewed by his court scholars, as a 'new David'. [This was] not in itself a new idea, but [one whose] content and significance were greatly enlarged by him."<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=DhpKxQT8n74C&pg=PA101&lpg=PA101&dq=charlemagne+described+as+a+new+david&source=web&ots=vjwf-CjzXi&sig=52MXxWcu1a_gSiOTNycuSe8XTWc Oxford Illustrated History of Christianity],</ref> Charlemagne's iconographic linking of David to earthly kingship was reflected in later Medieval cathedral windows all over Europe thnrough the device of the [[Tree of Jesse]] its branches demonstrating how divine kingship descended from Jesse, through his son David, to Jesus.
== External links ==
* Searches for [http://jewel.andrews.edu:82/search?/dprophets "Prophets"] and [http://jewel.andrews.edu:82/search?/dprophecy "Prophecy"] in the [[Seventh-day Adventist Periodical Index]] (SDAPI)


[[Western Rite]] churches (Roman Catholic, Lutheran) celebrate his feast day on [[29 December]], Eastern-rite on 19 December.<ref>[http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/1229.shtml Saint of the Day] for [[December 29]] at St. Patrick Catholic Church, Washington, D.C.</ref> The [[Eastern Orthodox Church]] and [[Eastern Catholic Church]] celebrate the [[feast day]] of the "Holy Righteous Prophet and King David" on the Sunday of the Holy Forefathers (two Sundays before the [[Great Feast]] of the [[Christmas|Nativity of the Lord]]), when he is commemorated together with other [[geneology of Jesus|ancestors of Jesus]]. He is also commemorated on the Sunday after the Nativity, together with [[Saint Joseph|Joseph]] and [[James, the Brother of the Lord]].
[[Category:Prophecy|Seventh-day Adventist Church]]

[[Category:Charismatic and Pentecostal Christianity]]
=== David in Latter Day Saint Doctrine ===
[[Category:Seventh-day Adventist history]]
The [[Doctrine and Covenants]] of [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] cites David as one directed by God to practice [[polygamy]], but who sinned in committing adultery with Bathsheba and having Uriah killed:
[[Category:Seventh-day Adventist theology]]

:"Verily, thus saith the LORD ... David’s wives and concubines were given unto him of me, by the hand of Nathan, my servant, and others of the prophets who had the keys of this power; and in none of these things did he sin against me save in the case of Uriah and his wife; and, therefore he hath fallen from his exaltation."<ref>[http://scriptures.lds.org/en/dc/132/1,38-39#1 Doctrine and Covenants 132:1, 38-39] (see highlighted portions).</ref>

This clarifies the LDS doctrine that polygamy is only allowed as directed by the Lord, otherwise it is a grievous sin.<ref>[http://scriptures.lds.org/en/jacob/2/28-30#28 Book of Mormon, Jacob 2:28-30].</ref> The Church forbade polygamy in 1890, citing a revelation given to [[Wilford Woodruff]] at that time.<ref>[http://scriptures.lds.org/en/od/1 Doctrine and Covenants, Official Declaration—1]</ref>

=== David in Islam ===<!-- This section is linked from [[Christianity and Islam]] -->
David, known in the [[Islam]]ic tradition as Dawood ({{unicode|Dāwūd}}), is one of the [[prophets of Islam]], to whom the [[Zabur]] ([[Psalms]]) were revealed by [[God]] ([[Allah]]). [[Muslim]]s reject the Biblical portrayal of David as an adulterer and murderer (in association with the story of [[Uriah]] and [[Bathsheba]]). The rejection is based on the concept of [[ismah]], or the infallibility of the prophets. The concept is often associated with the [[Shia Islam|Shi'a]] branch of Islam.

According to some Islamic narrations [[David]] was not from [[Judah]] but was from [[Levi]] and [[Aron]] <ref>Behar al Anvar V:13 P:440, Tafseer Al-Qomi V:1 P:82, The story of Prophets of Jazayeri Page 331</ref> Dawood was in Taloot's ([[Saul the King|Saul]]'s) army.
[[Goliath]] appears in the Qur'an as [[Jalut]]; and like in Judaism, Jalut's slayer is Dawood:

:"And Dawood slew Jalut, and Allah gave him kingdom and wisdom,
:and taught him of what He pleased."<ref>Surah 1, ayah 251. Transl. [[Mohammed Habib Shakir|Shakir]]</ref>

==Historicity of David==

''See [[The Bible and history]] and [[dating the Bible]] for a more complete description of the general issues surrounding the Bible as a historical source.''

=== Archaeology ===
[[Image:Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn 030.jpg|thumb|left|300px|David and [[King Saul]], by [[Rembrandt]]. David plays the lyre (depicted here as a [[harp]]) to the king "tormented by an evil spirit"]]

An inscription found at [[Tel Dan Stele|Tel Dan]] and dated c.850-835 BC has been interpreted as containing the phrase 'House of David' (ביתדוד); the [[Mesha Stele]] from Moab, and from a similar time, may contain the same phrase; and [[Kenneth Kitchen]] has proposed that an inscription of c. 945 BC by the Egyptian Pharaoh [[Shoshenq I]] mentions "the highlands of David," but this has not been widely accepted.<ref>See, for example, ''The Tel Dan Inscription: A Reappraisal and a New Interpretation'' [Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2003], pp. 193-194. See also [http://www.bibleinterp.com/commentary/McKensie_020301.htm King David: A Biography] (Steven McKenzie, Associate Professor Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee): McKenzie discusses the background to his 2002 book of the same title (ISBN 978-0195132731). On the Shoshenq inscription, see K. A. Kitchen, "A Possible Mention of David in the Late Tenth Century B.C., and Deity *Dod as Dead as the Dodo?" ''Journal for the Study of the Old Testament'' 76 (1997): 29–44, especially 39–41.</ref> "If the reading of בית דוד [House of David] on the Tel Dan stele is correct, ... then we have solid evidence that a 9th-century Aramean king considered the founder of the Judean dynasty to be somebody named דוד" (David).<ref>[http://www.heardworld.com/higgaion/?m=200509&paged=2 Picking Abraham and Chosing David], Christopher Heard, Associate Professor of Religion at [[Pepperdine University]]. See also Israeli jounalist Daniel Gavron's ''[http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFAArchive/2000_2009/2003/9/King%20David%20and%20Jerusalem-%20Myth%20and%20Reality King David and Jerusalem - Myth and Reality]'' for a useful overview.</ref>

The Bronze and Iron Age remains of the [[City of David]]<ref>The original urban core of Jerusalem, identified with the reigns of David and Solomon.</ref> were investigated extensively in the 1970s and 1980s under the direction of [[Yigael Shiloh]] of [[Hebrew University]], but failed to discover significant evidence of occupation during the 10th century BC <ref>See [[David Ussishkin]], "Solomon's Jerusalem: The Text and the Facts on the Ground," in: A.G. Vaughn and A.E. Killebrew (eds.), ''Jerusalem in Bible and Archaeology: The First Temple Period'', (Society of Biblical Literature, Symposium Series, No. 18), Atlanta, 2003, pp. 103-115. See also Cahill, J., David's Jerusalem, Fiction or Reality? The Archaeological Evidence Proves It, and Steiner, M., David's Jerusalem, Fiction or Reality? It's Not There: Archaeology Proves a Negative, both in ''Biblical Archaeology Review'' 24/4, 1998 (the two scholars argue opposite sides of the case for a Jerusalem in keeping with the biblical portrayal).</ref> In 2005 [[Eilat Mazar]] found a [[Large Stone Structure]] which she claimed was David's Palace<ref>See [[Eilat Mazar]], "Did I find David's Temple?" in Biblical Archeology Review, Jan/Feb 2006</ref>, but the site is contaminated and impossible to date accurately. Elsewhere in the territory of biblical Judah and Israel, no royal inscriptions exist from the 10th century BCE, nor evidence of a royal bureaucracy (the equivalents of the [[LMLK seal]]<ref>LMLK:"Belonging to the king", or "for the king".</ref> attached to oil jars associated with the Judean royal bureaucracy of the late 8th century BC), nor the inscribed potshards which would provide evidence of widespread literacy. Surveys of surface finds aimed at tracing settlement patterns and population changes have shown that between the 16th and 8th centuries BC, a period which includes the biblical kingdoms of David and Solomon, the entire population of the hill country of Judah was no more than about 5,000 persons, most of them wandering pastoralists, with the entire urbanised area consisting of about twenty small villages.<ref>On settlement patterns in ancient Judah, see A. Ofer, "'All the Hill Country of Judah': From a Settlement Fringe to a Prosperous Monarchy," in I. Finkelstein and N. Na'aman, eds., ''From Nomadism to Monarchy'' (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1994), pp. 92-121; "The Judean Hills in the Biblical Period," Qadmoniot 115 (1998), 40-52 (Hebrew); "The Monarchic Period in the Judaean Highland," in A. Mazar, ed., ''Studies in the Archaeology of the Iron Age in Israel and Jordan'' (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2001), pp. 14-37.</ref>

While the Tel Dan stele is largely accepted as supporting the historical existence of a Judean royal dynasty tracing its descent from an individual named David <ref>Dever, William G., "What did the Bible writers know and when did they know it?" William B. Eerdmans Publ. Co., Cambridge UK, 2001</ref>, the interpretation of the archeological evidence on the extent and nature of Judah and Jerusalem in the 10th century BC is a matter of fierce debate. On one hand is the view of [[Israel Finkelstein]] and [[Ze'ev Herzog]] of [[Tel Aviv University]]. Finkelstein says in his ''[[The Bible Unearthed]]'' (2001): "[O]n the basis of archaeological surveys, Judah remained relatively empty of permanent population, quite isolated and very marginal right up to and past the presumed time of David and Solomon, with no major urban centers and with no pronounced hierarchy of hamlets, villages and towns."<ref>Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman, ''The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of its Sacred Texts'', p.132. See [http://www.theosophy-nw.org/theosnw/world/christ/xt-sbd2.htm this summary] of Finkelstein and Silberman's book.</ref> According to [[Ze'ev Herzog]] "the united monarchy of David and Solomon, which is described by the Bible as a regional power, was at most a small tribal kingdom". <ref>[http://mideastfacts.org/facts/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=32&Itemid=34 mideastfacts.org - Deconstructing the walls of Jericho<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>On the other is [[William G. Dever|William Dever]], in his ''[[What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?]],'' holds that the archaeological and anthropological evidence supports the broad biblical account of a Judean state in the 10th century BC.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=6-VxwC5rQtwC&pg=PA127&lpg=PA127&dq=dever+archaeologist&source=web&ots=hTb69Ntpq9&sig=6boKenG3GOaky3YTJDx5LKr851k#PPP1,M1 Dever, What Did the Biblical Writers Know...?]</ref>

=== The Bible and David's Reign ===
[[Image:David-icon.jpg|thumb|[[Russian icon|Russian]] [[icon]] of St. David, the Prophet and King, 18th century ([[Iconostasis]] of [[Kizhi]] [[monastery]], [[Karelia]], [[Russia]]).]]

The biblical evidence for David comes from three sources: the [[Psalms]], the [[book of Samuel]] (two books in the Christian tradition), and the [[book of Chronicles]] (also two books in the Christian tradition). Although almost half of the Psalms are headed "A Psalm of David", the headings are later additions, and the Hebrew preposition translated in English as "of" can also be translated as "for". "No psalm can be attributed to David with certainty, and aside from the headings, they contain no information about David's life that is useful for historical reconstruction."<ref>[http://www.bibleinterp.com/commentary/McKensie_020301.htm Steven McKenzie, Associate Professor Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee].</ref> Chronicles retells Samuel from a different theological vantage point, but contains little if any information not available in Samuel. The biblical evidence for David is therefore dependent almost exclusively on the material contained in the chapters from 1 Samuel 16 to 1 Kings 2.

The question of David's historicity therefore becomes the question of the date, textual integrity, authorship and reliability of 1st and 2nd Samuel. Since [[Martin Noth]] put forward his analysis of the [[Deuteronomistic History]] biblical scholars have accepted that these two books form part of a continuous history of Israel, compiled no earlier than the late 7th century BC, but incorporating earlier works and fragments. Samuel's account of David "seems to have undergone two separate acts of editorial slanting. The original writers show a strong bias against Saul, and in favour of David and Solomon. Many years later, the Deuteronomists edited the material in a manner that conveyed their religious message, inserting reports and anecdotes that strengthened their monotheistic doctrine. Some of the materials in Samuel I and II , notably the lists of officers, officials, and districts are believed to be very early, possibly even dating to the time of David or Solomon. These documents were probably in the hands of the Deuteronomists when they started to compile the material three centuries later."<ref>[http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFAArchive/2000_2009/2003/9/King%20David%20and%20Jerusalem-%20Myth%20and%20Reality "King David and Jerusalem: Myth and Reality", Israel Review of Arts and Letters, 2003], Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs.</ref>

Beyond this, the full range of possible interpretations is available, from the "maximalist" position of the late [[John Bright]], whose "History of Israel", dating largely from the 1950s, takes Samuel at face value, to the recent "minimalist" scholars such [[Thomas L. Thompson]], who measures Samuel against the archaeological evidence and concludes that "an independent history of Judea during the Iron I and Iron II periods [i.e., the period of David] has little room for historicizing readings of the stories of I-II Samuel and I Kings."<ref>[http://www.bibleinterp.com/articles/copenhagen.htm "A View from Copenhagen", Thomas L. Thompson, Professor of Old Testament, Copenhagen University].</ref> Within this gamut some interesting studies of David have been written. [[Baruch Halpern]] has pictured David as a lifelong vassal of [[Achish]], the Philistine king of Gath;<ref>Baruch Halpern, "David's Secret Demons", 2001.[http://www.bookreviews.org/pdf/1551_3721.pdf Review of Baruch Halpern's "David's Secret Demons"].</ref> [[Israel Finkelstein]] and [[Neil Asher Silberman]] have identified as the oldest and most reliable section of Samuel those chapters which describe David as the charismatic leader of a band of outlaws who captures Jerusalem and makes it his capital.<ref>Finkelstein and Silberman, "David and Solomon", 2006. See review[http://www.archaeology.org/0601/reviews/kings.html "Archaeology" magazine].</ref>

==David's family==
[[Image:Gustave dore bibel death of absalom.jpg|thumb|300px|The Death of Absalom (engraving from the [[Doré]] Bible).]]
David's father was [[Jesse]], the son of [[Obed]], son of [[Boaz]] of the tribe of [[Tribe of Judah|Judah]] and Ruth the [[Moab]]ite, whose story is told at length in the [[Book of Ruth]]. David's lineage is fully documented in {{bibleverse||Ruth|4:18-22|JP}}, (the "[[Pharez]]" that heads the line is Judah's son, {{bibleverse||Genesis|38:29|JP}}).

1 Chronicles 2 mentions David is the seventh son of Jesse, while 1 Samuel 16 & 17 call David the youngest son of eight total sons.

David had eight known wives, although he appears to have had children from other women as well:
* [[Michal]], the second daughter of [[King Saul]]
* [[Ahinoam]] of Jezreel
* [[Abigail]], previously wife of the evil [[Nabal]]
* [[Maachah]]
* [[Haggith]]
* [[Abital]]
* [[Eglah]]
* [[Bathsheba]], previously the wife of Uriah the Hittite
In his old age he took the beautiful [[Abishag]] into his bed for health reasons, "but the king knew her not (intimately)" ({{bibleverse|1|Kings|1:1-4|JP}}).

As given in {{bibleverse|1|Chronicles|3|JP}}, David had sons by various wives and [[concubine]]s; their names are not given in ''Chronicles''. By Bathsheba, his sons were:
* [[Shammua]]
* [[Shobab]]
* [[Nathan (son of David)|Nathan]]
* [[Solomon]]

His sons born in Hebron by other mothers included:
* [[Amnon]] was the progeny of David and [[Ahinoam]]
* [[Daniel (son of David)|Daniel]] was the progeny of David and [[Abigail]]
* [[Absalom]] was the progeny of David and [[Maachah]]
* [[Adonijah]] was the progeny of David and [[Haggith]]
* [[Shephatiah]] was the progeny of David and [[Abital]]
* [[Ithream]] was the progeny of David and [[Eglah]]

His sons born in Jerusalem by other mothers included:
* [[Ibhar]]
* [[Elishua]]
* [[Eliphelet]]
* [[Nogah]]
* [[Nepheg]]
* [[Japhia]]
* [[Elishama]]
* [[Eliada]]

According to {{bibleverse|2|Chronicles|11:18|JP}}, another son was born to David who is not mentioned in any of the genealogies:
* [[Jerimoth]]
And according to 2 Samuel 9 David adopts Johnathan's son [[Mephibosheth]] as his own.

David also had at least one daughter, [[Tamar]], progeny of David and Maachah and the full sister of Absalom, who is later raped by her brother Amnon, leading to Amnon's death.

===Relationship with Jonathan===

The intimate relationship between [[David and Jonathan]] is recorded favourably in the [[books of Samuel]]. There is debate amongst biblical scholars whether this relationship was platonic, romantic but chaste, or sexual.

== Claimed descendants of David ==

The following are some of the more notable persons who have [[List of Messiah claimants|claimed descent from the Biblical David]], or had it claimed on their behalf:
*[[Jesus of Nazareth]]
*[[Rabbi Akiba]], Akiba ben Josef, also known as Akiva (d. ''c.'' 135)
*[[Judah Loew]], Yehuda Loew ben Bezalel (''c.'' 1525, Prague; 22 August 1609 Prague), also known as "The Maharal of Prague".
*The [[Abravanel|Abravanel family]]
*The [[Bagratid dynasties]] of [[Armenia]] and [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], including the Russian general [[Pyotr Bagration]]
*The [[Baal Shem Tov]], and through him every [[Hassidic Judaism|Hassidic]] [[Rebbe]] descended from him
*[[Dov Ber of Mezeritch]]
*[[Eliezer Silver]]
*Rabbi [[Menachem Mendel Schneerson]], whose family is descended from [[Judah Loew]].
*[[Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia]]
*[[Sean Paul]]
*The [[Merovingian]] kings of the [[Franks]], via the [[Jesus bloodline]].

==Representation in art and literature==
[[Image:David von Michelangelo.jpg|thumb|250px|''[[David (Michelangelo)|David]]'', [[Michelangelo]], 1500-1504.]]

===Art===
Famous sculptures of David include (in chronological order) those by:
* [[Donatello]] (''c.'' 1430 - 1440), [[David (Donatello)|''David'' (Donatello)]]
* [[Andrea del Verrocchio]] (1476), [[David (Verrocchio)|''David'' (Verrocchio)]]
* [[Michelangelo]] (1504), [[David (Michelangelo)|''David'' (Michaelangelo)]]
* [[Gian Lorenzo Bernini]] (1624), [[David (Bernini)|''David'' (Bernini)]]
* [[Antonin Mercié]] (1873)

===Literature===
*[[Elmer Davis]]'s 1928 novel ''Giant Killer'' retells and embellishes the Biblical story of David, casting David as primarily a poet who managed always to find others to do the "dirty work" of heroism and kingship. In the novel, [[Elhanan]] in fact killed Goliath but David claimed the credit; and [[Joab]], David's cousin and general, took it upon himself to make many of the difficult decisions of war and statecraft when David vacillated or wrote poetry instead.
*[[Gladys Schmitt]] wrote a novel titled "David the King" in 1946 which proceeds as a richly embellished biography of David's entire life. The book took a risk, especially for its time, in portraying David's relationship with Jonathan as overtly [[homoerotic]], but was ultimately panned by critics as a bland rendition of the title character.
*In [[Thomas Burnett Swann]]'s Biblical [[fantasy]] [[novel]] ''How are the Mighty Fallen'' (1974) [[David and Jonathan]] are explicitly stated to be lovers. Moreover, Jonathan is a member of a winged semi-human race (possibly [[nephilim]]), one of several such races co-existing with humanity but often persecuted by it.
*[[Joseph Heller]], the author of ''[[Catch-22]]'', also wrote a novel based on David, ''[[God Knows (novel)|God Knows]]''. Told from the perspective of an aging David, the humanity &mdash; rather than the heroism &mdash; of various biblical characters are emphasized. The portrayal of David as a man of flaws such as greed, lust, selfishness, and his alienation from God, the falling apart of his family is a distinctly 20th century interpretation of the events told in the Bible.
*[[Juan Bosch]], Dominican political leader and writer, wrote "David: Biography of a King" (1966) a realistic approach to David's life and political career.
*[[Allan Massie]] wrote "King David" (1995), a novel about David's career which portrays the king's relationship to Jonathan and others as openly homosexual.
*[[Madeleine L'Engle]]'s novel ''[[Certain Women (novel)|Certain Women]]'' explores family, the Christian faith, and the nature of God through the story of King David's family and an analogous modern family's saga.<ref>Madeleine L'Engle, ''Certain Women'', ISBN 9780374120252</ref>

===Film===
*[[Gregory Peck]], played King David in the 1951 film ''[[David and Bathsheba]]'', directed by [[Henry King (director)|Henry King]]. [[Susan Hayward]] played Bathsheba and [[Raymond Massey]] played the prophet Nathan.
*[[Finlay Currie]], played an aged King David in the 1959 film ''[[Solomon and Sheba]]'', directed by [[King Vidor]]. [[Yul Brynner]] played Solomon and [[Gina Lollobrigida]] played the Queen of Sheba.
*[[Jeff Chandler]], played King David in the 1960 TV movie ''A Story of David'', directed by Bob McNaught. [[Basil Sydney]] played King Saul and [[Donald Pleasence]] played Nabal.
*[[Keith Michell]], played the older King David, and [[Timothy Bottoms]], played the younger King David in the 1976 TV [[miniseries]] ''The Story of David'', directed by David Lowell Rich and Alex Segal.
*[[Richard Gere]] portrayed King David in the 1985 film ''[[King David (film)|King David]]'' directed by [[Bruce Beresford]].
*[[Nathaniel Parker]] portrayed King David in the 1997 TV movie ''David''. It also starred [[Sheryl Lee]] as Bathsheba and [[Leonard Nimoy]] as Samuel.

===Music===
[[Arthur Honegger]]'s oratorio, ''Le Roi David'' ('King David'), with a libretto by Rene Morax, was composed in 1921 and instantly became a staple of the choral repertoire; it is still widely performed.

[[Leonard Cohen]]'s song "[[Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen song)|Hallelujah]]" has references to David ("there was a secret chord that David played and it pleased the Lord", "The baffled king composing Hallelujah") and Bathsheba ("you saw her bathing on the roof") in its opening verses.

[[Dead (Pixies song)|Dead]] by the [[Pixies]] is a retelling of David's adultery and repentance.

[[50 cent]]'s song "U Not Like Me" contains a reference to David ("My songs belong in the Bible with King David's") in its opening verse.

===Musical Theatre===
In 1997, lyricist Tim Rice (Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita) collaborated with Alan Menken to create a musical based on the Biblical tale of King David. Based on Biblical tales from the Books of Samuel and 1 Chronicles, as well as text from David's Psalms, a concert version, produced by Disney Theatrical Productions and André Djaoui and directed by Mike Ockrent, was presented as the inaugural production at Disney's newly-renovated New Amsterdam Theatre (the former home of the Ziegfeld Follies), playing for a nine-performance limited run in 1997. The cast included Roger Bart, Stephen Bogardus, Judy Kuhn, Alice Ripley, Martin Vidnovic, and Michael Goz, with Marcus Lovett in the title role. Though a Broadway run was scheduled, it was soon canceled and there have been no future arrangements to move the musical to the Broadway stage.

==See also==
{{portalpar|Saints|Gloriole.svg}}
*[[Alleged King David's Palace site|King David's Palace site]]
*[[King David's Tomb]]
*[[Tel Arad]]
*[[David and Jonathan]]

== Notes ==
(Note:Online Bible references are to the Revised Standard Version)
{{reflist|3}}

==References==
*Kirsch, Jonathan (2000) ''King David: the real life of the man who ruled Israel''. Ballantine. ISBN 0-345-43275-4.
*See also the entry "David" in ''[http://bible.crosswalk.com/Dictionaries/EastonBibleDictionary/ Easton's Bible Dictionary]''.
*Dever, William G. (2001) ''What did the Bible writers know and when did they know it?'' William B. Eerdmans Publ. Co., Cambridge UK.

==References to Daud (David) in the Qur'an==
*Appraisals for Daud: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=21&verseBegin=79&verseEnd=79 21:79], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=27&verseBegin=15&verseEnd=15 27:15], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=34&verseBegin=10&verseEnd=10 34:10], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=17&verseEnd=17 38:17], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=18&verseEnd=18 38:18], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=19&verseEnd=19 38:19], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=20&verseEnd=20 38:20], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=21&verseEnd=21 38:21], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=24&verseEnd=24 38:24], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=25&verseEnd=25 38:25], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=26&verseEnd=26 38:26]
*Daud's prophecy: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=2&verseBegin=251&verseEnd=251 2:251], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=6&verseBegin=84&verseEnd=84 6:84]
*Daud took care of his child: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=21&verseBegin=78&verseEnd=78 21:78], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=21&verseBegin=79&verseEnd=79 21:79]
*the Zabur: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=3&verseBegin=184&verseEnd=184 3:184], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=4&verseBegin=163&verseEnd=163 4:163], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=16&verseBegin=44&verseEnd=44 16:44], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=17&verseBegin=55&verseEnd=55 17:55], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=21&verseBegin=105&verseEnd=105 21:105]
*the Zabur was revealed to Daud: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=4&verseBegin=163&verseEnd=163 4:163], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=17&verseBegin=55&verseEnd=55 17:55]
*Daud as an example of a pious person: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=17&verseEnd=17 38:17]
*Daud's fight: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=21&verseEnd=21 38:21], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=22&verseEnd=22 38:22], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=23&verseEnd=23 38:23], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=24&verseEnd=24 38:24]
*Challenges for Daud: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=24&verseEnd=24 38:24]
*Daud's occupation: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=21&verseBegin=80&verseEnd=80 21:80], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=34&verseBegin=13&verseEnd=13 34:13]
*Daud's power: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=2&verseBegin=251&verseEnd=251 2:251], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=20&verseEnd=20 38:20]
*Daud's kingdom: [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=2&verseBegin=251&verseEnd=251 2:251], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=21&verseBegin=79&verseEnd=79 21:79], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=34&verseBegin=10&verseEnd=10 34:10], [http://www.submission.info/servlet/qtbrowse?pickthall=true&yusufali=true&shakir=true&arabic=true&chapter=38&verseBegin=26&verseEnd=26 38:26]

==External links==
{{commonscat|David}}
{{Wikiquote}}
*[http://www.balashon.com/2008/09/dod.html Etymology of "David"]
*[http://www.complete-bible-genealogy.com/names/david_593.htm Complete Bible Genealogy] David's family tree
*[http://www.feeljerusalem.com/jerusalem_mount_zion_compound.asp King David Tomb - Mount Zion - Jerusalem - Videos, Presentations, Photos] King David's Tomb in Jerusalem
*[http://www.davidicdynasty.org/ The Eternal House Of David Family Reunion]
*[http://thoughtcast.org/casts/poet-robert-pinsky-takes-on-king-david Poet Robert Pinsky Takes on King David] on [[Thoughtcast|ThoughtCast]]
*[http://ocafs.oca.org/FeastSaintsViewer.asp?SID=4&ID=1&FSID=86 Sunday after the Nativity: Commemoration of the Holy Righteous David the King, Joseph the Betrothed, and James the Brother of the Lord] Orthodox [[icon]] and [[synaxarion]]

{{start}}
{{s-hou|[[Davidic line|House of David]]|||||[[Tribe of Judah]]|name=David of the United Kingdom of Israel & Judah}}
{{s-reg|}}
{{s-new|reason=Rebellion from [[United Monarchy|Israel]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=[[Kingdom of Judah|King of Judah]]|years=<small>: </small>1007 BCE &ndash; 1005 BCE}}
{{s-aft|rows=2|after=[[Solomon]]}}
{{s-bef|before=[[Ish-bosheth]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=[[United Monarchy|King of the united kingdom<br>of Israel and Judah]]|years=<small>: </small>1005 BCE &ndash; 967 BCE}}
{{end}}

{{Adam to David}}
{{Prophets of the Tanakh}}

{{Prophets in the Qur'an|no}}
<!-- Don't need head category [[:Category:Prophets in Judaism]] or [[Category:Prophets in Christianity]], both hold sub-cat [[:category:Prophets of the Hebrew Bible]] which is in the template {{Prophets of the Tanakh}} -->

[[Category:11th century BC people]]
[[Category:10th century BC people]]
[[Category:Kings of ancient Israel]]
[[Category:Kings of ancient Judah]]
[[Category:Hebrew Bible people]]
[[Category:History of Jerusalem]]
[[Category:Shepherds]]
[[Category:Old Testament saints]]
[[Category:Jewish royalty]]
[[Category:Biblical murderers]]

[[ar:داود]]
[[az:Davud]]
[[be:Давыд, цар ізраільска-іудзейскі]]
[[br:David]]
[[ca:David]]
[[cs:David (král Izraele)]]
[[da:Kong David]]
[[de:David (Israel)]]
[[el:Δαβίδ]]
[[es:David]]
[[eo:Davido]]
[[fa:داوود]]
[[fr:David (Bible)]]
[[fur:Davide]]
[[gl:David]]
[[hak:Thai-ví-vòng]]
[[ko:다윗 왕]]
[[hr:Kralj David]]
[[id:Daud]]
[[it:Davide (Bibbia)]]
[[he:דוד]]
[[ku:Dawid]]
[[la:David (Rex)]]
[[lt:Dovydas]]
[[hu:Dávid király]]
[[ms:Nabi Daud a.s.]]
[[nl:Koning David]]
[[ja:ダビデ]]
[[no:David av Israel]]
[[nn:David I av Israel]]
[[pl:Dawid (król Izraela)]]
[[pt:David]]
[[ro:David (Israel)]]
[[ru:Давид]]
[[sq:Mbreti David]]
[[sr:Краљ Давид]]
[[fi:Daavid]]
[[sv:Kung David]]
[[tl:David]]
[[th:เดวิด]]
[[vi:David]]
[[tr:Davud]]
[[uk:Давид]]
[[ur:داؤد علیہ السلام]]
[[wo:Daawuda]]
[[yi:דוד המלך]]
[[zh:大衛]]

Revision as of 17:28, 10 October 2008

David and Goliath, by Caravaggio, c. 1599. Prado, Madrid

David Hebrew: דָּוִד, Modern: Dawid, Tiberian: dɔwið, Arabic: داوود or داود,

dawud, "beloved"), was the second king of the united Kingdom of Israel according to the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament. He is depicted as a righteous king — although not without fault — as well as an acclaimed warrior, musician and poet (he is traditionally credited with the authorship of many of the Psalms). The biblical chronology places his life c.1037 - 967 BC, his reign over Judah c.1007 - 1000 BC, and over Judah and Israel c.1000 - 967 BC.[1]

There is little in the archaeological evidence to support the picture of David from the Bible, although there is reasonable evidence (the Tel Dan stele) that a king named David was regarded as the founder of the Judean royal dynasty by the 9th century BC. Nevertheless, his story has been of immense importance to later Jewish and Christian culture, and the Biblical history remains a compelling literary monument.

The biblical account of David

Prophet David Mayes, by Gentile da Fabriano.
This section summarizes only a few major episodes from David's life, chosen on the basis of their fame and/or importance in later Christian and Jewish culture.[2]

David is chosen

God withdraws his favor from King Saul and sends the prophet Samuel to Jesse, "for I have provided for myself a king among his sons." The choice falls upon David, the youngest son, who is guarding his father's sheep: "He was ruddy, and fine in appearance with handsome features. And the LORD said [to Samuel], 'Anoint him; for this is he.'"

David plays the lyre before Saul

Saul is tormented by an evil spirit. His servants suggest he send for David, "skillful in playing [the harp], a man of valor, a man of war, prudent in speech, and a man of good presence; and the LORD is with him." So David enters Saul's service, and finds favour in his sight, "and whenever the evil spirit was upon Saul, David took the harp and played it with his hand; so Saul was refreshed, and was well, and the evil spirit departed from him." (1 Samuel 16:14–23)

David and Goliath

The Israelites are facing the army of the Philistines. David, the youngest of the sons of Jesse, brings food to his brothers who are with Saul. He hears the Philistine champion, the giant Goliath, challenge the Israelites to send their own champion to decide the outcome in single combat. David takes the challenge as an insult to the God of Israel and insists that he can defeat Goliath. Saul sends for him, and reluctantly allows him to make the attempt. David is indeed victorious, felling Goliath with a stone from his sling, at which the Philistines flee in terror and the Israelites win a great victory. David beheads Goliath with his own sword and brings it to Saul, who asks him whose son he is, and David replies, "I am the son of your servant Jesse the Bethlehemite". [3]

The enmity of Saul

Saul makes David a commander over his armies and gives him his daughter Michal in marriage. David is successful in many battles, and the women say, "Saul has slain his thousands, and David his tens of thousands." David's popularity awakens Saul's fears - "What more can he have but the kingdom?" - and by various stratagems the king seeks David's death. But the plots of the jealous king all proved futile, and only endear the young hero the more to the people, and especially to Saul's son Jonathan, one of those who love David. Warned by Jonathan of Saul's intention to kill him, David flees into the wilderness.[4]

David in the wilderness

In the wilderness David gathers a band of followers and becomes the champion of the oppressed while evading the pursuit of Saul. He accepts Ziklag as a fief from the Philistine king Achish of Gath, but continues to secretly champion the Israelites. Achish marches against Saul, but David is excused from the war on the accusation of the Philistine nobles that his loyalty to their cause cannot be trusted.

David is made king

Saul and Jonathan are killed in a battle with the Philistines and David mourns their death.[5] Then David goes up to Hebron, where he is anointed (messiah) king over Judah; in the north, Saul's son Ish-Bosheth is king over the tribes of Israel.[6] War ensues between Ish-Bosheth and David, and Ish-Bosheth is assassinated. The assassins bring forward the head of Ish-Bosheth to David hoping for reward, but David executes them for their crime against their king.[7] Yet with the death of the son of Saul, the elders of Israel come to Hebron, and David is anointed King of Israel and Judah. Upon these events he is 30 years old.[8]

King David

David conquers the Jebusite fortress of Jerusalem and makes it his capital, "and Hiram king of Tyre sent messengers to David, and cedar trees, also carpenters and masons who built David a house." [8] David brings the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem, intending to build a temple.[9] God, speaking to the prophet Nathan, forbids it, saying the temple must wait for a future generation. But God makes a covenant with David, promising that he will establish the house of David eternally: "Your throne shall be established forever."[10] Then David establishes a mighty empire, conquering Zobah and Aram (modern Syria), Edom and Moab (roughly modern Jordan), the lands of the Philistines, and much more.[11]

Bathsheba and Uriah the Hittite

David and Bathsheba, by Lucas Cranach, 1526.

David lies with Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah the Hittite. Bathsheba becomes pregnant and David sends for Uriah, who is with the Israelite army at the siege of Rabbah, that he might lie with her and so conceal the identity of the child's father. Uriah refuses to do so while his companions are in the field of battle and David sends Uriah back to Joab, the commander, with a message instructing him to abandon Uriah on the battlefield, "that he may be struck down, and die." And so David marries Bathsheba and she bears his child, "but the thing that David had done displeased the LORD."[12]

God's judgment on David

The prophet Nathan speaks out against David's sin, saying: "Why have you despised the word of God, to do what is evil in his sight? You have smitten Uriah the Hittite with the sword, and have taken his wife to be your wife." And although David repents, God "struck the child ... and it became sick ... [And] on the seventh day the child died." David then leaves his lamentations, dresses himself, and eats. His servants ask why he lamented when the baby was alive, but leaves off when it is dead, and David replies: "While the child was still alive, I fasted and wept; for I said, who knows whether YHWH will be gracious to me, that the child may live? But now he is dead, why should I fast? Can I bring him back again? I shall go to him, but he will not return to me."[13]

Absalom

David’s beloved son Absalom rebels against his father. The armies of Absalom and David come to battle in the Wood of Ephraim, and Absalom is caught by his hair in the branches of an oak. David’s general Joab kills him as he hangs there. When the news of the victory is brought to David he does not rejoice, but is instead shaken with grief: “O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! Would I had died instead of you, O Absalom, my son, my son!”

The Psalms of David

David is described as the author of the majority of the Psalms. One of the most famous is Psalm 51, traditionally said to have been composed by David after Nathan upbraided him over Bathsheba and Uriah. Perhaps the best-known is Psalm 23:

1 The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.
2 He maketh me to lie down in green pastures:
he leadeth me beside the still waters.
3 He restoreth my soul:
he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake.
4 Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil: for thou art with me;
thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
5 Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies:
thou anointest my head with oil;
my cup runneth over.
6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life:
and I will dwell in the house of the LORD for ever."

Reign of David

"Thus David the son of Jesse reigned over all Israel. The time that he reigned over Israel was forty years; he reigned seven years in Hebron, and thirty-three years in Jerusalem. Then he died in a good old age, full of days, riches, and honour; and Solomon his son reigned in his stead".[14]

David in later Abrahamic tradition

David in Judaism

Abishag, Bathsheba, Solomon, and Nathan tend to aging David, c. 1435

David's reign represents the formation of a coherent Jewish kingdom centered in Jerusalem and the institution of an eternal royal dynasty; the failure of this "eternal" Davidic dynasty after some four centuries led to the later elaboration of the concept of the Messiah, at first a human descendant of David who would occupy the throne of a restored kingdom, later an apocalyptic figure who would usher in the end of time.

In modern Judaism David's descent from a convert (Ruth) is taken as proof of the importance of converts within Judaism. David is also viewed as a tragic figure; his acquisition of Bathsheba, and the loss of his son are viewed as his central tragedies.

Many legends have grown around the figure of David. According to one Rabbinic tradition, David was raised as the illegitimate son of his father Jesse and spent his early years herding his father's sheep in the wilderness while his brothers were in school. Only at his anointing by Samuel - when the oil from Samuel's flask turned to diamonds and pearls - was David's true identity as Jesse's legal son revealed. David's piety was said to be so great that his prayers could bring down things from Heaven. His adultery with Bathsheba was only an opportunity to demonstrate the power of repentance and some Talmudic authors stated that it was not adultery at all, quoting a supposed Jewish practice of divorce on the eve of battle to prevent the wives of the missing-in-action from becoming agunot. Furthermore, according to David's apologists, the death of Uriah was not to be considered murder, on the basis that Uriah had committed a capital offence by refusing to obey a direct command from the King.[15]

According to midrashim[16], Adam gave up 70 years of his life for the life of David. Also, according to the Talmud Yerushalmi, David was born and died on the Jewish holiday of Shavuot (Feast of Weeks).

David in Christianity

King David by Pedro Berruguete.

Originally an earthly king ruling by divine appointment ("the anointed one", as the title Messiah had it), the "son of David" became in the last two pre-Christian centuries the apocalyptic and heavenly "son of God" who would deliver Israel and usher in a new kingdom. This was the background to the concept of Messiahship in early Christianity, which interpreted the career of Jesus "by means of the titles and functions assigned to David in the mysticism of the Zion cult, in which he served as priest-king and in which he was the mediator between God and man."[17]

Christians have traditionally believed that the Old Testament prophecies foretold that the Messiah would be a descendant of David, and the Gospels of Matthew and Luke therefore trace Jesus' lineage to David in fulfillment of this requirement.

"Incidents in the life of David [foreshadowed] the life of Christ; Bethlehem is the birthplace of both; the shepherd life of David points out Christ, the Good Shepherd; the five stones chosen to slay Goliath are typical of the five wounds; the betrayal by his trusted counsellor, Achitophel, and the passage over the Cedron remind us of Christ's Sacred Passion. Many of the Davidic Psalms, as we learn from the New Testament, are clearly typical of the future Messias."[18]

In the Middle Ages, "Charlemagne thought of himself, and was viewed by his court scholars, as a 'new David'. [This was] not in itself a new idea, but [one whose] content and significance were greatly enlarged by him."[19] Charlemagne's iconographic linking of David to earthly kingship was reflected in later Medieval cathedral windows all over Europe thnrough the device of the Tree of Jesse its branches demonstrating how divine kingship descended from Jesse, through his son David, to Jesus.

Western Rite churches (Roman Catholic, Lutheran) celebrate his feast day on 29 December, Eastern-rite on 19 December.[20] The Eastern Orthodox Church and Eastern Catholic Church celebrate the feast day of the "Holy Righteous Prophet and King David" on the Sunday of the Holy Forefathers (two Sundays before the Great Feast of the Nativity of the Lord), when he is commemorated together with other ancestors of Jesus. He is also commemorated on the Sunday after the Nativity, together with Joseph and James, the Brother of the Lord.

David in Latter Day Saint Doctrine

The Doctrine and Covenants of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints cites David as one directed by God to practice polygamy, but who sinned in committing adultery with Bathsheba and having Uriah killed:

"Verily, thus saith the LORD ... David’s wives and concubines were given unto him of me, by the hand of Nathan, my servant, and others of the prophets who had the keys of this power; and in none of these things did he sin against me save in the case of Uriah and his wife; and, therefore he hath fallen from his exaltation."[21]

This clarifies the LDS doctrine that polygamy is only allowed as directed by the Lord, otherwise it is a grievous sin.[22] The Church forbade polygamy in 1890, citing a revelation given to Wilford Woodruff at that time.[23]

David in Islam

David, known in the Islamic tradition as Dawood (

Dāwūd), is one of the prophets of Islam, to whom the Zabur (Psalms) were revealed by God (Allah). Muslims reject the Biblical portrayal of David as an adulterer and murderer (in association with the story of Uriah and Bathsheba). The rejection is based on the concept of ismah, or the infallibility of the prophets. The concept is often associated with the Shi'a branch of Islam.

According to some Islamic narrations David was not from Judah but was from Levi and Aron [24] Dawood was in Taloot's (Saul's) army.

Goliath appears in the Qur'an as Jalut; and like in Judaism, Jalut's slayer is Dawood:

"And Dawood slew Jalut, and Allah gave him kingdom and wisdom,
and taught him of what He pleased."[25]

Historicity of David

See The Bible and history and dating the Bible for a more complete description of the general issues surrounding the Bible as a historical source.

Archaeology

David and King Saul, by Rembrandt. David plays the lyre (depicted here as a harp) to the king "tormented by an evil spirit"

An inscription found at Tel Dan and dated c.850-835 BC has been interpreted as containing the phrase 'House of David' (ביתדוד); the Mesha Stele from Moab, and from a similar time, may contain the same phrase; and Kenneth Kitchen has proposed that an inscription of c. 945 BC by the Egyptian Pharaoh Shoshenq I mentions "the highlands of David," but this has not been widely accepted.[26] "If the reading of בית דוד [House of David] on the Tel Dan stele is correct, ... then we have solid evidence that a 9th-century Aramean king considered the founder of the Judean dynasty to be somebody named דוד" (David).[27]

The Bronze and Iron Age remains of the City of David[28] were investigated extensively in the 1970s and 1980s under the direction of Yigael Shiloh of Hebrew University, but failed to discover significant evidence of occupation during the 10th century BC [29] In 2005 Eilat Mazar found a Large Stone Structure which she claimed was David's Palace[30], but the site is contaminated and impossible to date accurately. Elsewhere in the territory of biblical Judah and Israel, no royal inscriptions exist from the 10th century BCE, nor evidence of a royal bureaucracy (the equivalents of the LMLK seal[31] attached to oil jars associated with the Judean royal bureaucracy of the late 8th century BC), nor the inscribed potshards which would provide evidence of widespread literacy. Surveys of surface finds aimed at tracing settlement patterns and population changes have shown that between the 16th and 8th centuries BC, a period which includes the biblical kingdoms of David and Solomon, the entire population of the hill country of Judah was no more than about 5,000 persons, most of them wandering pastoralists, with the entire urbanised area consisting of about twenty small villages.[32]

While the Tel Dan stele is largely accepted as supporting the historical existence of a Judean royal dynasty tracing its descent from an individual named David [33], the interpretation of the archeological evidence on the extent and nature of Judah and Jerusalem in the 10th century BC is a matter of fierce debate. On one hand is the view of Israel Finkelstein and Ze'ev Herzog of Tel Aviv University. Finkelstein says in his The Bible Unearthed (2001): "[O]n the basis of archaeological surveys, Judah remained relatively empty of permanent population, quite isolated and very marginal right up to and past the presumed time of David and Solomon, with no major urban centers and with no pronounced hierarchy of hamlets, villages and towns."[34] According to Ze'ev Herzog "the united monarchy of David and Solomon, which is described by the Bible as a regional power, was at most a small tribal kingdom". [35]On the other is William Dever, in his What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?, holds that the archaeological and anthropological evidence supports the broad biblical account of a Judean state in the 10th century BC.[36]

The Bible and David's Reign

Russian icon of St. David, the Prophet and King, 18th century (Iconostasis of Kizhi monastery, Karelia, Russia).

The biblical evidence for David comes from three sources: the Psalms, the book of Samuel (two books in the Christian tradition), and the book of Chronicles (also two books in the Christian tradition). Although almost half of the Psalms are headed "A Psalm of David", the headings are later additions, and the Hebrew preposition translated in English as "of" can also be translated as "for". "No psalm can be attributed to David with certainty, and aside from the headings, they contain no information about David's life that is useful for historical reconstruction."[37] Chronicles retells Samuel from a different theological vantage point, but contains little if any information not available in Samuel. The biblical evidence for David is therefore dependent almost exclusively on the material contained in the chapters from 1 Samuel 16 to 1 Kings 2.

The question of David's historicity therefore becomes the question of the date, textual integrity, authorship and reliability of 1st and 2nd Samuel. Since Martin Noth put forward his analysis of the Deuteronomistic History biblical scholars have accepted that these two books form part of a continuous history of Israel, compiled no earlier than the late 7th century BC, but incorporating earlier works and fragments. Samuel's account of David "seems to have undergone two separate acts of editorial slanting. The original writers show a strong bias against Saul, and in favour of David and Solomon. Many years later, the Deuteronomists edited the material in a manner that conveyed their religious message, inserting reports and anecdotes that strengthened their monotheistic doctrine. Some of the materials in Samuel I and II , notably the lists of officers, officials, and districts are believed to be very early, possibly even dating to the time of David or Solomon. These documents were probably in the hands of the Deuteronomists when they started to compile the material three centuries later."[38]

Beyond this, the full range of possible interpretations is available, from the "maximalist" position of the late John Bright, whose "History of Israel", dating largely from the 1950s, takes Samuel at face value, to the recent "minimalist" scholars such Thomas L. Thompson, who measures Samuel against the archaeological evidence and concludes that "an independent history of Judea during the Iron I and Iron II periods [i.e., the period of David] has little room for historicizing readings of the stories of I-II Samuel and I Kings."[39] Within this gamut some interesting studies of David have been written. Baruch Halpern has pictured David as a lifelong vassal of Achish, the Philistine king of Gath;[40] Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman have identified as the oldest and most reliable section of Samuel those chapters which describe David as the charismatic leader of a band of outlaws who captures Jerusalem and makes it his capital.[41]

David's family

The Death of Absalom (engraving from the Doré Bible).

David's father was Jesse, the son of Obed, son of Boaz of the tribe of Judah and Ruth the Moabite, whose story is told at length in the Book of Ruth. David's lineage is fully documented in Ruth 4:18–22, (the "Pharez" that heads the line is Judah's son, Genesis 38:29).

1 Chronicles 2 mentions David is the seventh son of Jesse, while 1 Samuel 16 & 17 call David the youngest son of eight total sons.

David had eight known wives, although he appears to have had children from other women as well:

In his old age he took the beautiful Abishag into his bed for health reasons, "but the king knew her not (intimately)" (1 Kings 1:1–4).

As given in 1 Chronicles 3, David had sons by various wives and concubines; their names are not given in Chronicles. By Bathsheba, his sons were:

His sons born in Hebron by other mothers included:

His sons born in Jerusalem by other mothers included:

According to 2 Chronicles 11:18, another son was born to David who is not mentioned in any of the genealogies:

And according to 2 Samuel 9 David adopts Johnathan's son Mephibosheth as his own.

David also had at least one daughter, Tamar, progeny of David and Maachah and the full sister of Absalom, who is later raped by her brother Amnon, leading to Amnon's death.

Relationship with Jonathan

The intimate relationship between David and Jonathan is recorded favourably in the books of Samuel. There is debate amongst biblical scholars whether this relationship was platonic, romantic but chaste, or sexual.

Claimed descendants of David

The following are some of the more notable persons who have claimed descent from the Biblical David, or had it claimed on their behalf:

Representation in art and literature

David, Michelangelo, 1500-1504.

Art

Famous sculptures of David include (in chronological order) those by:

Literature

  • Elmer Davis's 1928 novel Giant Killer retells and embellishes the Biblical story of David, casting David as primarily a poet who managed always to find others to do the "dirty work" of heroism and kingship. In the novel, Elhanan in fact killed Goliath but David claimed the credit; and Joab, David's cousin and general, took it upon himself to make many of the difficult decisions of war and statecraft when David vacillated or wrote poetry instead.
  • Gladys Schmitt wrote a novel titled "David the King" in 1946 which proceeds as a richly embellished biography of David's entire life. The book took a risk, especially for its time, in portraying David's relationship with Jonathan as overtly homoerotic, but was ultimately panned by critics as a bland rendition of the title character.
  • In Thomas Burnett Swann's Biblical fantasy novel How are the Mighty Fallen (1974) David and Jonathan are explicitly stated to be lovers. Moreover, Jonathan is a member of a winged semi-human race (possibly nephilim), one of several such races co-existing with humanity but often persecuted by it.
  • Joseph Heller, the author of Catch-22, also wrote a novel based on David, God Knows. Told from the perspective of an aging David, the humanity — rather than the heroism — of various biblical characters are emphasized. The portrayal of David as a man of flaws such as greed, lust, selfishness, and his alienation from God, the falling apart of his family is a distinctly 20th century interpretation of the events told in the Bible.
  • Juan Bosch, Dominican political leader and writer, wrote "David: Biography of a King" (1966) a realistic approach to David's life and political career.
  • Allan Massie wrote "King David" (1995), a novel about David's career which portrays the king's relationship to Jonathan and others as openly homosexual.
  • Madeleine L'Engle's novel Certain Women explores family, the Christian faith, and the nature of God through the story of King David's family and an analogous modern family's saga.[42]

Film

Music

Arthur Honegger's oratorio, Le Roi David ('King David'), with a libretto by Rene Morax, was composed in 1921 and instantly became a staple of the choral repertoire; it is still widely performed.

Leonard Cohen's song "Hallelujah" has references to David ("there was a secret chord that David played and it pleased the Lord", "The baffled king composing Hallelujah") and Bathsheba ("you saw her bathing on the roof") in its opening verses.

Dead by the Pixies is a retelling of David's adultery and repentance.

50 cent's song "U Not Like Me" contains a reference to David ("My songs belong in the Bible with King David's") in its opening verse.

Musical Theatre

In 1997, lyricist Tim Rice (Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita) collaborated with Alan Menken to create a musical based on the Biblical tale of King David. Based on Biblical tales from the Books of Samuel and 1 Chronicles, as well as text from David's Psalms, a concert version, produced by Disney Theatrical Productions and André Djaoui and directed by Mike Ockrent, was presented as the inaugural production at Disney's newly-renovated New Amsterdam Theatre (the former home of the Ziegfeld Follies), playing for a nine-performance limited run in 1997. The cast included Roger Bart, Stephen Bogardus, Judy Kuhn, Alice Ripley, Martin Vidnovic, and Michael Goz, with Marcus Lovett in the title role. Though a Broadway run was scheduled, it was soon canceled and there have been no future arrangements to move the musical to the Broadway stage.

See also

Notes

(Note:Online Bible references are to the Revised Standard Version)

  1. ^ S. L. Anderson (2002–2008). "The accomplishments of King David". Helium inc. Retrieved 2006-03-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  2. ^ For a more complete summary of all the episodes in the Saul/David story in Samuel (but excluding Chronicles), see synopsis
  3. ^ 1 Samuel 17
  4. ^ 1 Samuel 18 and subsequent chapters of 1 Samuel.
  5. ^ 2 Samuel 1; the death of Saul and Jonathan is described in the closing chapter of 1 Samuel.
  6. ^ 2 Samuel 2:1-10
  7. ^ 2 Samuel 4
  8. ^ a b 2 Samuel 5
  9. ^ 2 Samuel 6
  10. ^ 2 Samuel 7
  11. ^ 2 Samuel 8 and subsequent chapters.
  12. ^ samuel 11 2sam 11
  13. ^ 2 Samuel 12
  14. ^ 1 Chronicles 29:26–28
  15. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia, "David"
  16. ^ Zohar Bereishis 91b
  17. ^ "David" article from Encyclopedia Britannica Online
  18. ^ John Corbett (1911) King David The Catholic Encyclopedia (New York: Robert Appleton Company)
  19. ^ Oxford Illustrated History of Christianity,
  20. ^ Saint of the Day for December 29 at St. Patrick Catholic Church, Washington, D.C.
  21. ^ Doctrine and Covenants 132:1, 38-39 (see highlighted portions).
  22. ^ Book of Mormon, Jacob 2:28-30.
  23. ^ Doctrine and Covenants, Official Declaration—1
  24. ^ Behar al Anvar V:13 P:440, Tafseer Al-Qomi V:1 P:82, The story of Prophets of Jazayeri Page 331
  25. ^ Surah 1, ayah 251. Transl. Shakir
  26. ^ See, for example, The Tel Dan Inscription: A Reappraisal and a New Interpretation [Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2003], pp. 193-194. See also King David: A Biography (Steven McKenzie, Associate Professor Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee): McKenzie discusses the background to his 2002 book of the same title (ISBN 978-0195132731). On the Shoshenq inscription, see K. A. Kitchen, "A Possible Mention of David in the Late Tenth Century B.C., and Deity *Dod as Dead as the Dodo?" Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 76 (1997): 29–44, especially 39–41.
  27. ^ Picking Abraham and Chosing David, Christopher Heard, Associate Professor of Religion at Pepperdine University. See also Israeli jounalist Daniel Gavron's King David and Jerusalem - Myth and Reality for a useful overview.
  28. ^ The original urban core of Jerusalem, identified with the reigns of David and Solomon.
  29. ^ See David Ussishkin, "Solomon's Jerusalem: The Text and the Facts on the Ground," in: A.G. Vaughn and A.E. Killebrew (eds.), Jerusalem in Bible and Archaeology: The First Temple Period, (Society of Biblical Literature, Symposium Series, No. 18), Atlanta, 2003, pp. 103-115. See also Cahill, J., David's Jerusalem, Fiction or Reality? The Archaeological Evidence Proves It, and Steiner, M., David's Jerusalem, Fiction or Reality? It's Not There: Archaeology Proves a Negative, both in Biblical Archaeology Review 24/4, 1998 (the two scholars argue opposite sides of the case for a Jerusalem in keeping with the biblical portrayal).
  30. ^ See Eilat Mazar, "Did I find David's Temple?" in Biblical Archeology Review, Jan/Feb 2006
  31. ^ LMLK:"Belonging to the king", or "for the king".
  32. ^ On settlement patterns in ancient Judah, see A. Ofer, "'All the Hill Country of Judah': From a Settlement Fringe to a Prosperous Monarchy," in I. Finkelstein and N. Na'aman, eds., From Nomadism to Monarchy (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1994), pp. 92-121; "The Judean Hills in the Biblical Period," Qadmoniot 115 (1998), 40-52 (Hebrew); "The Monarchic Period in the Judaean Highland," in A. Mazar, ed., Studies in the Archaeology of the Iron Age in Israel and Jordan (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2001), pp. 14-37.
  33. ^ Dever, William G., "What did the Bible writers know and when did they know it?" William B. Eerdmans Publ. Co., Cambridge UK, 2001
  34. ^ Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman, The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of its Sacred Texts, p.132. See this summary of Finkelstein and Silberman's book.
  35. ^ mideastfacts.org - Deconstructing the walls of Jericho
  36. ^ Dever, What Did the Biblical Writers Know...?
  37. ^ Steven McKenzie, Associate Professor Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee.
  38. ^ "King David and Jerusalem: Myth and Reality", Israel Review of Arts and Letters, 2003, Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
  39. ^ "A View from Copenhagen", Thomas L. Thompson, Professor of Old Testament, Copenhagen University.
  40. ^ Baruch Halpern, "David's Secret Demons", 2001.Review of Baruch Halpern's "David's Secret Demons".
  41. ^ Finkelstein and Silberman, "David and Solomon", 2006. See review"Archaeology" magazine.
  42. ^ Madeleine L'Engle, Certain Women, ISBN 9780374120252

References

  • Kirsch, Jonathan (2000) King David: the real life of the man who ruled Israel. Ballantine. ISBN 0-345-43275-4.
  • See also the entry "David" in Easton's Bible Dictionary.
  • Dever, William G. (2001) What did the Bible writers know and when did they know it? William B. Eerdmans Publ. Co., Cambridge UK.

References to Daud (David) in the Qur'an

External links

David of the United Kingdom of Israel & Judah
Cadet branch of the Tribe of Judah
Regnal titles
New title
Rebellion from Israel
King of Judah
: 1007 BCE – 1005 BCE
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of the united kingdom
of Israel and Judah

: 1005 BCE – 967 BCE