2 Samuel 2:27

27 Et Joab dit: Dieu est vivant! si tu n'eusses parlé, dès le matin déjà le peuple se serait retiré, chacun de la poursuite de son frère.

2 Samuel 2:27 Meaning and Commentary

2 Samuel 2:27

And Joab said, as God liveth
Which was the form of an oath, swearing by the living God:

unless thou hadst spoken;
that is, these words in ( 2 Samuel 2:14 ) ; "let the young men arise and play", that he had not given the challenge to fight:

surely then in the morning the people had gone up everyone from
following his brother;
they would have gone away and never fought at all; they were not desirous of shedding their blood, and following after them to slay them: thus he lays the blame upon Abner, and makes him to be the cause and beginner of the war. Some render the particle by "if", and give the sense, that if he had spoken what he last did sooner, the people would long before this time have desisted from pursuing them; for it was not from a thirst after their blood, and a desire to luke vengeance on them, that they pursued them, but to bring them to submission, and lay down their arms; for they could not in honour retreat until they desired it; but the former sense seems best, and is the general sense of the Jewish commentators.

2 Samuel 2:27 In-Context

25 Et les Benjamites se rallièrent auprès d'Abner, et se rangèrent en un bataillon, et se tinrent sur le sommet d'un coteau.
26 Alors Abner cria à Joab, et dit: L'épée dévorera-t-elle sans cesse? Ne sais-tu pas bien qu'il y aura de l'amertume à la fin? et jusqu'à quand différeras-tu de dire au peuple qu'il cesse de poursuivre ses frères?
27 Et Joab dit: Dieu est vivant! si tu n'eusses parlé, dès le matin déjà le peuple se serait retiré, chacun de la poursuite de son frère.
28 Joab sonna donc de la trompette, et tout le peuple s'arrêta; et ils ne poursuivirent plus Israël et ne continuèrent plus à combattre.
29 Ainsi Abner et ses gens marchèrent toute cette nuit-là par la campagne, et passèrent le Jourdain, et traversèrent tout le Bithron, et arrivèrent à Mahanaïm.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.