1st Samuel Chapter 20 verse 20 Holy Bible

ASV 1stSamuel 20:20

And I will shoot three arrows on the side thereof, as though I shot at a mark.
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BBE 1stSamuel 20:20

And on the third day I will send arrows from my bow against its side as if at a mark.
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DARBY 1stSamuel 20:20

And I will shoot three arrows on the side of it, as though I shot at a mark.
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KJV 1stSamuel 20:20

And I will shoot three arrows on the side thereof, as though I shot at a mark.
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WBT 1stSamuel 20:20

And I will shoot three arrows on the side of it, as though I shot at a mark.
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WEB 1stSamuel 20:20

I will shoot three arrows on the side of it, as though I shot at a mark.
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YLT 1stSamuel 20:20

`And I shoot three of the arrows at the side, sending out for myself at a mark;
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerses 20-23. - The two friends now agree upon the sign. Jonathan was to shoot three arrows at this stone, Ezel, as his mark, and was then to send his servant to gather them up. When he bad gone some distance Jonathan was to shout to him, loud enough for David to hear. If Jonathan said that the arrows were on that side the mark, i.e. between it and Jonathan, David was to come forth boldly, as all was well. But if Jonathan said that the arrows were further on, then David must understand that he was to seek safety in flight. For there is peace to thee, and no hurt, the Hebrew has "there is peace to thee, and it is nothing," a simpler and more idiomatic rendering. As touching the matter, etc. Rather, "As for the word that we have spoken, I and thou, behold, Jehovah is between me and thee forever." The word was the bond and covenant by which they had pledged their truth to one another. Though separated, their love was to continue, and Jehovah was to be their eternal centre of union, and the witness to their covenant.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(20) I will shoot three arrows.--The two friends agree on a sign. It was a very simple one, and seems to speak of very early primitive times. Jonathan slightly varies from his original purpose. In 1Samuel 20:12 it seems as though he meant to have sent a special messenger had the news been good, but now the arrangement is that in either event he should come himself out from the city into the solitary valley where it was agreed David should remain in hiding by the stone "Ezel." Dean Payne Smith rather strangely conceives that the arrows of the "sign" were to be aimed at the stone Ezel, but the description points to the "mark" as situated on the side of "Ezel," in or behind which David was to be concealed.The prince agreed that after the feast he would leave the city, as though about to practise shooting at a mark, and that he would bring with him a servant--probably-one of his young armour-bearers--when, at the spot agreed upon in the neighbourhood of David's place of concealment near Ezel, he would post his servant in his place as marker, and then would shoot. After shooting, he would call out to his attendant, "the arrows are on this side of thee" (that is, between the mark and Jonathan himself), then David would know all was well; but if he cried "the arrows are beyond thee," that is, on the further side of the mark, David would understand that all was over, and that he must fly. Jonathan evidently took these precautions not knowing whether or no he would be accompanied by friends of his father from the city, in which case the "sign" agreed upon would be sufficient to tell David what had happened at the feast. As it turned out, Jonathan was able to escape observation, and to go alone with his servant to the place of meeting. He used the sign to attract his friend's attention, and then followed the last sorrowful parting, told in 1Samuel 20:41-42.