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26 And Saul also went to his house at Gibeah, and the troops whose hearts[a] God had touched went with him. 27 However, some worthless men[b] said, “How can this man deliver us?” So they despised him and brought no gift to him, but he kept silent.[c]

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Footnotes

  1. 1 Samuel 10:26 Hebrew “heart”
  2. 1 Samuel 10:27 Literally “sons of wickedness”
  3. 1 Samuel 10:27 The Dead Sea Scrolls contained a nearly complete scroll of 1 and 2 Samuel, the oldest Hebrew manuscript extant. There is a story therein that provides a setting for the acts of Nahash in 1 Samuel 11, which otherwise seems to occur obtrusively. This story may be translated: “Now Nahash, king of the Ammonites, harshly tormented the Gadites and the Reubenites, and he gouged out all their right eyes, and struck terror and dread in Israel. No Israelite beyond the Jordan remained whose right eye was not gouged out by Nahash king of the Ammonites, except for seven thousand men who had fled from the Ammonites and entered Jabesh Gilead. About a month later …” This early text leaves off with 11:1 at this point