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Next in command[a] was Eleazar son of Dodo,[b] the son of Ahohi. He was one of the three warriors who were with David when they defied the Philistines who were assembled there for battle. When the men of Israel retreated,[c] 10 he stood his ground[d] and fought the Philistines until his hand grew so tired that it[e] seemed stuck to his sword. The Lord gave a great victory on that day. When the army returned to him, the only thing left to do was to plunder the corpses.

11 Next in command[f] was Shammah son of Agee the Hararite. When the Philistines assembled at Lehi,[g] where there happened to be an area of a field that was full of lentils, the army retreated before the Philistines.

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Footnotes

  1. 2 Samuel 23:9 tn Heb “after him.”
  2. 2 Samuel 23:9 tc This follows the Qere and many medieval Hebrew mss in reading דֹּדוֹ (dodo) rather than the Kethib of the MT דֹּדַי (doday; cf. ASV, NIV, NLT). But see 1 Chr 27:4.
  3. 2 Samuel 23:9 tn Heb “went up.”
  4. 2 Samuel 23:10 tn Heb “arose.”
  5. 2 Samuel 23:10 tn Heb “his hand.”
  6. 2 Samuel 23:11 tn Heb “after him.”
  7. 2 Samuel 23:11 tn The Hebrew text is difficult here. The MT reads לַחַיָּה (lachayyah), which implies a rare use of the word חַיָּה (chayyah). The word normally refers to an animal, but if the MT is accepted it would here have the sense of a troop or community of people. BDB 312 s.v. II. חַיָּה, for example, understands the similar reference in v. 13 to be to “a group of allied families, making a raid together.” But this works better in v. 13 than it does in v. 11, where the context seems to suggest a particular staging location for a military operation. (See 1 Chr 11:15.) It therefore seems best to understand the word in v. 11 as a place name with ה (he) directive. In that case the Masoretes mistook the word for the common term for an animal and then tried to make sense of it in this context.