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'''David and Jonathan''' were heroic figures of the [[ancient Israel|Kingdom of Israel]], whose [[intimate relationship]] was recorded favorably in the [[Old Testament]] [[books of Samuel]]. There is debate amongst religious scholars whether this relationship was [[platonic love|platonic]],
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[[Image:David and Jonathan.jpg|thumb|200px|right|''David and Jonathan:'' "La Somme le Roy," 1290 C.E.; French illuminated manuscript (detail); British Museum.]]
[[romantic love|romantic]] but chaste, or [[sexual love|sexual]].
 
  
==Story of David and Jonathan==
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'''David and Jonathan''' were heroic figures of the [[Kingdom of Israel]], whose relationship was recorded the [[Old Testament]] [[books of Samuel]]. Jonathan, the eldest son of King [[Saul]], was a military commander in his own right who won important battles against the [[Philistines]]. After David emerged on the scene as a mere boy who slew the Philistine champion [[Goliath]], Jonathan befriended David. Jonathan later protected David against Saul's fits of murderous [[jealousy]], saving his life on several occasions.
[[Image:Saul Throws Spear at David by George Tinworth.png|300px|thumbnail|right|"Saul Throws Spear at David" by [[George Tinworth]]]]
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David composed a psalm in honor of Saul and Jonathan after their deaths, in which he praised Jonathan's love as "surpassing that of women." There is, thus, debate among religious scholars as to whether this relationship was [[platonic love|platonic]] or [[sexual love|sexual]]. Some also suggest that the supposed accord between David and Jonathan was a literary device created by the biblical writers to strengthen the fragile unity between the northern tribes who had followed Saul and the tribe of Judah, which followed David and his lineage.
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Although David fought a civil war against Saul's son [[Ish-bosheth]], he spared Jonathan's son Mephi-bosheth, keeping him under house arrest in Jerusalem.
  
[[David]], a handsome, ruddy-cheeked youth and the youngest son of [[Jesse]], is brought before [[Saul the King|Saul]], the king of Israel, having slain the giant [[Philistine]] warrior [[Goliath]] with only a stone and [[sling (weapon)|sling]] ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|17:57|}}).
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==Jonathan, son of Saul==
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Jonathan was already a seasoned military leader when David was still a boy. During [[Saul]]'s campaign to consolidate his kingdom, he placed Jonathan in charge of 2,000 men at Gibeah while Saul led another 3,000 around [[Bethel]]. Jonathan's group led in attacking a Philistine encampment. Saul then mustered the Israelite tribesmen nationwide at [[Gilgal]] to deal with the expected Philistine counterstrike. With superior forces, including some 3,000 chariots against the still relatively primitive Israelite army, the Philistines forced the Hebrews on the defensive, and many troops began to desert.
  
Jonathan, the eldest son of Saul, is immediately struck with David on their first meeting: "When David had finished speaking to Saul, the soul of Jonathan was bound to the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul." ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|18:1|}}) That same day, "Jonathan made a covenant with David, because he [[love]]d him as his own soul" ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|18:3|}}). Jonathan removes and offers David the rich garments he is wearing, and shares with him his worldly possessions: "Jonathan stripped himself of the robe that he was wearing, and gave it to David, and his armour, and even his sword and his bow and his belt." ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|18:4|}})
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It was here, at Gilgal, that Saul made the fatal mistake of offering sacrifice to God before the arrival of the prophet [[Samuel]], prompting Samuel to declare that God had withdrawn his support of Saul as king. Only 600 men remained with Saul at the time. Saul and Jonathan, meanwhile prepared to meet the Philistines at Micmash. (1 Sam 3)
  
[[Image:Saul Tries to Kill David by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld.png|thumbnail|left|"Saul Tries to Kill David" by [[Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld]]]]
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Through a daring tactic, Jonathan and his armor-bearer alone then killed 20 Philistines, throwing the enemy army into disarray. Moreover, Jonathan's victory caused Hebrew mercenaries who had earlier joined the Philistines to change sides and fight for their fellow Israelites. In addition, the Hebrew soldiers who had deserted at Gilgal now rallied to Saul's and Jonathan's cause. The Philistines were consequently driven back past Beth Aven (1 Sam. 4).
  
The people of Israel openly accept David and sing of his praises, so much so that it draws the jealousy of Saul ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|18:5-9|}}). Saul tries repeatedly to kill David, but is each time unsuccessful, and David's reputation only grows with each attempt ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|18:24-25|}}). To get rid of David, Saul decides to offer him a daughter in marriage, requesting a hundred enemy [[foreskin]]s in lieu of a [[dowry]]—hoping David will be killed trying. David however returns with a trophy of two hundred foreskins and Saul has to fulfil his end of the bargain.
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However, during this time, Jonathan was out of communication with his father. He was thus unaware when Saul commanded a sacred fast for the army, with a penalty of death for any who did not observe it. When Jonathan inadvertently violated the fast by eating some wild honey, only the threat of mutiny by troops loyal to him prevented Saul from carrying out the death sentence on his son.
  
Learning of one of Saul's murder attempts, Jonathan warns David to hide because he "took great delight in
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Although Saul left off from pursuing the Philistines after this, he—and presumably Jonathan with him—fought ceaselessly against the Israelites' enemies on all sides, including the nations of [[Moab]], [[Ammon]], [[Edom]], the [[Amalekites]], and later battles against the Philistines.
David" ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|19:1-2|}}). David is forced to flee more of Saul's attempts to kill him
 
({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|19:1-20:1|}}). In a moment when they find themselves alone together, David says to Jonathan, "Your father knows well that you like me...." ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|20:3|}})
 
  
"Then Jonathan said to David, 'Whatever you say, I will do for you.' [...] ...Jonathan made a covenant with the house of David, saying, 'May the L<small>ORD</small> seek out the enemies of David.'  Jonathan made David swear again by his love for him; for he loved him as he loved his own life." ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|20:4|}}, {{bibleverse|1|Sam.|20:16-17|}})
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==Story of David and Jonathan==
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[[Image:Jonathan-with-David.jpg|thumb|250px|Jonathan (right) and David]]
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It was at one of these battles against the Philistines that David first appeared on the scene. A handsome, ruddy-cheeked youth and the youngest son of [[Jesse]], David was brought before [[Saul the King|Saul]] after having slain the giant [[Philistine]] champion [[Goliath]] with only a stone and [[sling (weapon)|sling]] (1 Sam. 17:57).
  
[[Image:Jonathan Embraces David from Caspar Luiken.jpg|thumbnail|Jonathan embraces David from
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Jonathan was immediately struck with David on their first meeting: "When David had finished speaking to Saul, Jonathan became one in spirit with David, and he loved him as himself" (1 Sam. 18:1). That same day, Jonathan made an unspecified "covenant" with David, removing the rich garments he wore and offering them to his new young friend, including even his sword and his bow (1 Sam. 18:4). David returned from this battle to songs of praise that gave him more credit than Saul for the victory. "Saul has killed his thousands," from the popular song, "and David his tens of thousands." This drew the violent jealousy of Saul, prompted by an "evil spirit from the Lord." On two occasions while Saul prophesied to the music of David's harp, Saul hurled his spear at David, but David eluded the attacks (1 Sam. 18:5-11).
Caspar Luiken's "Historiae Celebriores Veteris Testamenti Iconibus Representatae" (1712)]]
 
  
David agrees to hide, until Jonathan can confront his father and ascertain whether it is safe for David to stay ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|20:18-22|}}). Jonathan approaches his father to plead David's cause: "Then Saul's anger was kindled against Jonathan. He said to him, 'You son of a perverse, rebellious woman! Do I not know that you have chosen the son of Jesse to your own shame, and to the shame of your mother's nakedness?'" ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|20:30|}})
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As David grew into manhood, his reputation as a military commander grew even stronger. Saul now saw David as a serious threat and attempted several more times to do away with him. Promising David the hand of his royal daughter [[Michal]] in marriage, Saul required 100 enemy [[foreskin]]s in lieu of a [[dowry]], hoping David would be killed trying to obtain them (1 Sam. 18:24-25). David, however, returned with a trophy of double the number, and Saul had to fulfill his end of the bargain.
  
Jonathan is so grieved that he does not eat for days ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|20:34|}}). He goes to David at his hiding place to tell him that it is unsafe for him and he must leave. "...David rose from beside the stone heap and prostrated himself with his face to the ground. He bowed three times, and they kissed each other, and wept with each other; David wept the more. Then Jonathan said to David, 'Go in peace, since both of us have sworn in the name of the L<small>ORD</small>, saying, "The L<small>ORD</small> shall be between me and you, and between my descendants and your descendants, for ever."' He got up and left; and Jonathan went into the city." ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|20:41-42|}}).  
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Later, Saul ordered Jonathan to assassinate David, but Jonathan instead warned David to be on his guard. Jonathan then succeeded in dissuading the king from his plans, saying:
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<blockquote>
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Let not the king do wrong to his servant David; he has not wronged you, and what he has done has benefited you greatly. He took his life in his hands when he killed the Philistine. The Lord won a great victory for all Israel, and you saw it and were glad. Why then would you do wrong to an innocent man like David by killing him for no reason (1 Sam 9:4-6).</blockquote>
  
Saul continues to pursue David ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|21-23:14|}}); David and Jonathan renew their covenant together ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|23:15-18|}}); and eventually Saul and David reconcile ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|24:16-22|}}). When Jonathan is slain on Mt Gilboa by the Philistines ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|31:2|}}), David laments his death saying, "I am distressed for you, my brother Jonathan; greatly beloved were you to me; your love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women." ({{bibleverse|2|Sam.|1:26|}}).
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Brought to his senses by Jonathan's words, Saul swore an oath not to do further harm to David: "As surely as the Lord lives," he said, "David will not be put to death." The biblical writers, however, portray Saul as doomed to carry out his tragic fate, and the "evil spirit from the Lord" continued to harass him.
  
==Platonic interpretation==
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Saul thus continued to devise a way to do away with David, but this time it would be Michal who foiled her father's plans by warning David to escape through their bedroom window. After fleeing to Ramah, David consulted with Jonathan, who assured him that Saul had no further plans to kill him. David insisted, however, declaring that Saul was now keeping his plans secret because of Jonathan's closeness to David. The two men reaffirmed their covenant of love for each other, and Jonathan pledged to discover Saul's true plans with regard to David (1 Sam. 20:16-17).
Some scholars claim that the relationship between David and Jonathan, though strong and close, is ultimately a [[platonic love|platonic]] [[friendship]]. This interpretation views the covenant made between the two men as a political, rather than affectionate, commitment. Jonathan and David agree to look out for one another and care for each other's family should one of them perish (a promise which David keeps).
 
  
The books of Samuel document [[physical intimacy]] (hugging and kissing) between Jonathan and David, but do not explicitly indicate a sexual component. Kissing is, even in modern times, a common social custom between men in the Middle East for greetings or farewells, and does not necessarily indicate a physical relationship.
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Jonathan approached his father at a ceremonial dinner to plead David's cause. However Saul flared up in anger at Jonathan saying: "You son of a perverse and rebellious woman! Don't I know that you have sided with the son of Jesse to your own shame and to the shame of the mother who bore you? As long as the son of Jesse lives on this earth, neither you nor your kingdom will be established. Now send and bring him to me, for he must die!" This time, when Jonathan attempted to dissuade Saul from his rash course, the king hurled his spear at his son. Jonathan was so grieved that he did not eat for days (1 Sam. 20:30-34).
  
==Romantic interpretation==
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He then went to David at his hiding place to tell him that he must leave. "David rose from beside the stone heap and prostrated himself with his face to the ground. He bowed three times, and they kissed each other, and wept with each other; David wept the more. Then Jonathan said to David, 'Go in peace, since both of us have sworn in the name of the L<small>ORD</small>, saying, "The L<small>ORD</small> shall be between me and you, and between my descendants and your descendants, forever'" (1Sam. 20:41-42).
[[Image:Jonathan Lovingly Taketh His Leave of David by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld.jpg|250px|thumbnail|left|"Jonathan Lovingly Taketh His Leave of David" by [[Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld]]]]
 
  
Other scholars, however, interpret the love between David and Jonathan as more intimate than friendship.<ref> Boswell, John. ''Same-sex Unions in Premodern Europe.'' New York: Vintage, 1994. (pp. 135-137)</ref><ref> Halperin, David M. ''One Hundred Years of Homosexuality.'' New York: Routledge, 1990. (p. 83)</ref> This interpretation views the bonds the men shared as romantic love, regardless of whether or not the relationship was physically consummated. Jonathan and David cared deeply about each other in a way that was certainly more tender and intimate than a platonic friendship.
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David then became an outlaw and a fugitive, gathering a band of several hundred men loyal to him. Saul, still seeing him as a threat to the throne, continued to pursue David. Jonathan, however, again reiterated his covenant with David and even pledged to honor David as king, saying: "My father Saul will not lay a hand on you. You will be king over Israel, and I will be second to you. Even my father Saul knows this" (1 Sam. 23:15-18).
  
The relationship between the two men is addressed with the same words and emphasis as loving heterosexual relationships in the Hebrew Testament: ''e.g.'' 'ahavah or אהבה (see ''Strong's Concordance with Hebrew and Greek Lexicon,'' [http://blueletterbible.org/cgi-bin/words.pl?word=0160 Hebrew word #160]; {{bibleverse||Gen.|29:20|HE}}; {{bibleverse|2|Sam.|13:15|HE}}; {{bibleverse||Pro.|5:19|HE}}; {{bibleverse||Sgs.|2:4-7|HE}}; {{bibleverse||Sgs.|3:5-10|HE}}; {{bibleverse||Sgs.|5:8|HE}}) When they are alone together, David confides that he has "found grace in Jonathan's eyes," a phrase normally referring to Romantic or physical attraction. Throughout the passages, David and Jonathan consistently affirm and reaffirm their love and devotion to each other. Jonathan is willing to betray his father, family, wealth, and traditions for David.
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With no safe haven in Israelite territory, David eventually ended up working as a mercenary captain for the Philistine king [[Achish]]. Later, when Jonathan and Saul were slain on Mount Gilboa by the Philistines, however, David was not involved (1 Sam. 31:2). Hearing of their deaths, David composed a psalm of lamentation commemorating both of the fallen leaders:
  
The covenant made between the two men strengthens a romantic rather than political or platonic interpretation of their relationship. At their first meeting, Jonathan strips himself before the youth, handing him his clothing, remaining naked before him. When they first make their covenant, not long after their first meeting, the reason supplied is simply because Jonathan "loved [David] as his own soul." ({{bibleverse|1|Sam.|18:3|}}). Each time they reaffirm the covenant, love (though not necessarily sexual in nature) is the only justification provided. Additionally, it should be observed that the covenants and affectionate expressions were made in private, like a personal bond, rather than publicly as would a political bond.  
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:Saul and Jonathan—in life they were loved and gracious, and in death they were not parted.
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:They were swifter than eagles, they were stronger than lions.
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:O daughters of Israel, weep for Saul, who clothed you in scarlet and finery,
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:who adorned your garments with ornaments of gold...
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:I am distressed for you, my brother Jonathan;
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:greatly beloved were you to me;
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:your love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women" (2 Sam. 1:23-26).
  
The fact that David refers to Jonathan as "brother" does not necessarily signify a platonic relationship. "Brother" was often used as a term of romantic, even erotic, affection in some ancient Mediterranean societies, and the word "sister" is used many times in the bible to represent a bride or a loved woman. For instance, "brother" is used to indicate long-term homosexual relationships in the ''[[Satyricon]]'' (eg. 9, 10, 11, 13, 24, 25, 79, 80, 91, 97, 101, 127, 130, 133), in the poetry of [[Catullus]] (Poem No. 100) and [[Martial]] (ie. 2.4, 7.24, 10.65), and in [[Apuleius]]' ''[[The Golden Ass]]'' (8.7). "From the middle of the second millennium B.C.E. ... it became usual for commoner husbands [in parts of the Mediterranean] to call their wives 'sister'" when they were in fact not siblings<ref>M. K. Hopkins. (1983) "Brother-Sister Marriage in Roman Egypt." ''Comparative Studies in Society and History''. 22 (pg. 311)</ref>.
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With Jonathan dead, Saul's younger son [[Ish-bosheth]] succeeded him as king of Israel, while David reigned over the tribe of Judah at Hebron. A civil war of several years followed, which ended after Saul's military commander [[Abner]] went over to David's side and Ish-bosheth was soon assassinated, leaving David the unchallenged ruler of both Israel and Judah until the rebellion of his son [[Absalom]].
  
Although David was married, David himself articulates a distinction between his relationship with Jonathan and the bonds he shares with women. David is married to many women, one of whom is Jonathan's sister Michal, but the Bible does not mention David loving Michal (though it is stated that Michal loves David). He explicitly states, on hearing of Jonathan's death, that his love for Jonathan is greater than any bond he's experienced with women. Furthermore, social customs in the ancient Mediterranean basin, did not preclude extramarital homoerotic relationships. [[The Epic of Gilgamesh]], which predates the Books of Samuel, depicts a remarkably similar homoerotic relationship between [[Gilgamesh]] and [[Enkidu]].
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==Interpretation of their relationship==
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====Platonic====
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The traditional view is that Jonathan and [[David]] loved one another as brothers. Jonathan's "loving him as himself" refers simply to unselfish love, a commandment found in both the Old and the New Testaments: "Love your neighbor as yourself." The [[Book of Samuel]] indeed documents real affection and [[physical intimacy]] (hugging and kissing) between Jonathan and David, but this does not indicate a sexual component to their love. Even in modern times, kissing is a common social custom between men in the [[Middle East]] for greetings or farewells.
  
==Erotic interpretation==
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In rabbinical tradition, Jonathan's love for David is considered the archetype of disinterestedness (Ab. v. 17). Jonathan is ranked by Rabbi [[Judah the Saint]] among the great self-denying characters of Jewish history. However, an alternative rabbinical opinion held that his love for David was a result of his conviction that David's great popularity was certain to place David on the throne in the end (B. M. 85a). One tradition holds that Jonathan actually did not go far enough to support David, arguing that Jonathan shared in Saul's guilt for the slaughter of the priests of Nob (I Sam. 22: 18-19), which he could have prevented by providing David two loaves of bread (Sanh. 104a).
[[Image:David and Jonathan.jpg|thumb|250px|right|''David and Jonathan''<br/> The Biblical account of David and Jonathan has been read by some as the story of two [[lover]]s. <br/>"La Somme le Roy," 1290 C.E.; French illuminated ms (detail); British Museum]]
 
  
Though sex is never explicitly depicted, much of the Bible's sexual terminology is shrouded in euphemism. Numerous passages allude to a physically intimate relationship between the two men: Jonathan's disrobing, his "delighting much" in David, and the kissing before their departure. Saul accuses Jonathan of "confusing the nakedness of his mother" with David; the nakedness of one's parents is a common Biblical sexual allusion (e.g. {{bibleverse|Lev.||18:6-19|}};
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Jonathan's giving his royal clothes and arms to David at their first meeting is simply a recognition that David deserved them, since Jonathan himself had not dared to face the Philistine champion [[Goliath]], as David did. Moreover, by agreeing that David would be king and Jonathan his second-in-command, Jonathan can be seen to be insuring his own survival after Saul's death. In fact, their covenant stipulated that David should not exterminate Jonathan's posterity: "[[Yahweh|The Lord]] is witness between you and me, and between your descendants and my descendants forever" (1 Sam. 20:42).
{{bibleverse|Lev.||20:11|}},{{bibleverse|Lev.||20:17-21|}}; {{bibleverse|Ezek.||16:36-37|}}; {{bibleverse|Ezek||23:10|}}; {{bibleverse|Hab.||2:15|}}; etc.).
 
  
==Allusions to Jonathan and David==
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Literary critic [[Harold Bloom]] has argued that the biblical writers consciously created a pattern in which the elder "brother" of heir came to serve the younger, as part of a historiography justifying the kingship of [[Solomon]] over his elder brother [[Adonijah]].<ref>Bloom, 1990.</ref> David and Jonathan may thus be seen as an example of this pattern, in which the potential antagonists—unlike [[Cain and Abel]] or [[Esau]] and [[Jacob]]—never came to experience animosity.
{{Unreferencedsection|date=March 2008}}
 
The homoerotic interpretation can be found in later literature. For example, the anonymous ''Life of
 
''[[Edward II of England|Edward II]]'', ca. 1326 C.E., has: "Indeed I do remember to have heard that one man so loved another. Jonathan cherished David, [[Achilles]] loved [[Patroclus]]." We are also told that King Edward II wept for his dead lover [[Piers Gaveston]] as:"...David had mourned for Jonathan." The playwright [[Oscar Wilde]] invoked the example of David and Jonathan in defense of [[pederasty]].
 
  
In the works of [[Roger of Hoveden]], a twelfth century chronicler, it is described that "The King of France ([[Philip II Augustus]]) loved him ([[Richard the Lionheart]]) as his own soul."  This is an obvious reference to David and Jonathan, and there is substantial evidence to suggest that Richard and Philip were homosexual lovers in the 1180s.
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===Romantic and erotic===
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Some modern scholars, however, interpret the love between David and Jonathan as more intimate than mere friendship. This interpretation views the bonds the men shared as romantic love, regardless of whether it was physically consummated.<ref>David M. Halperin, 1990, p. 83.</ref> Each time they reaffirm their covenant, love is the only justification provided. Although both Jonathan and David were married to their own wives and Jonathan had sired at least one son, David explicitly stated, on hearing of Jonathan's death, that for him, Jonathan's love exceeded "that of women."
  
In [[Renaissance]] art, the figure of David took on a particular homoerotic charge, as can be seen in the colossal statue of [[Michelangelo's David|David]] by [[Michelangelo]] and in [[Donatello]]'s ''[[Donatello's David|David]]''. In many other works, such as the [[Chronology of works by Caravaggio|paintings]] of [[Caravaggio]], <ref>See [[David with the Head of Goliath (Vienna) (Caravaggio)]] and [[David with the Head of Goliath]]</ref> David is portrayed as a beautiful youth conquering a Goliath whose head is often the self-portrait of the artist, a coded expression of the artist's homoerotic attraction.
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Some commentators go further than to suggest a merely romantic relationship between Jonathan and David, arguing that it was a full fledged homosexual affair. For example, the anonymous ''Life of [[Edward II of England|Edward II]],'' c. 1326 C.E., has: "Indeed I do remember to have heard that one man so loved another. Jonathan cherished David, [[Achilles]] loved [[Patroclus]]." In [[Renaissance]] art, the figure of David is thought by some to have taken on a particular homo-erotic charge, as some see in the colossal statue of [[Michelangelo's David|David]] by [[Michelangelo]] and in [[Donatello]]'s ''[[Donatello's David|David]]''.  
  
The indie rock band [[Belle & Sebastian]]'s song "Jonathan David" interweaves references to the Biblical friends and/or lovers with what appears to be the "break-up" of two close male friends over a girl, with the strong suggestion that at least one of the two male friends is in love with his chum.
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[[Oscar Wilde]], at his 1895 [[sodomy]] trial, used the example of David and Jonathan as "the love that dare not speak its name." More recently, the Anglican [[bishop of Liverpool]], [[James Jones]], drew attention to the relationship between David and Jonathan by describing their friendship as: "Emotional, spiritual and even physical." He concluded by affirming: "(Here) is the Bible bearing witness to love between two people of the same gender."<ref>liverpool.anglican.org, [http://liverpool.anglican.org/people/bishops/jamesspeeches/0712_Lambeth_essay.htm Lambeth essay.] Retrieved June 10, 2008.</ref>
  
At his 1895 sodomy trial, [[Oscar Wilde]] uses the example of David and Jonathan as " 'the love that dare not speak its name,' such a great affection of an elder for a younger man as there was between David and Jonathan, such as Plato made the very basis of his philosophy, and such as you find in the sonnets of Michelangelo and Shakespeare. It is that deep, spiritual affection that is as pure as it is perfect. It dictates and pervades great works of art like those of Shakespeare and Michelangelo, and those two letters of mine, such as they are. It is in this century misunderstood, so much misunderstood that it may be described as the 'Love that dare not speak its name,' and on account of it I am placed where I am now. It is beautiful, it is fine, it is the noblest form of affection. There is nothing unnatural about it. It is intellectual, and it repeatedly exists between an elder and a younger man, when the elder man has intellect, and the younger man has all the joy, hope and glamour of life before him. That it should be so, the world does not understand. The world mocks at it and sometimes puts one in the pillory for it."
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==Critical view==
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Biblical scholarship has long recognized a concern in the narrative of the [[Books of Samuel]] to present David as the sole legitimate claimant to the throne of [[Israel]]. The story of Jonathan's unity with David—including his willingness to accept David rather than himself as king—is thus seen as a literary device showing that [[Saul]]'s heir-apparent recognized God's supposed plan to place David's line on the throne instead of Saul's. The story evolved in the context of the need to strengthen the fragile unity of the northern and southern tribes, which fractured several times during David's reign and was destroyed permanently in the time of his grandson [[Rehoboam]]. A similar motive is seen in what critics see as the "fiction" of David sparing Saul's life several times and his supposed outrage that anyone would dare to harm the "Lord's anointed."
  
In his [[Lambeth]] essay of December 2007, [[James Jones]] the [[Bishop of Liverpool]], drew particular attention to the relationship between David and Jonathan. Describing their friendship as: ''emotional, spiritual and even physical. There was between them a deep emotional bond that left David grief-stricken when Jonathan died. But not only were they emotionally bound to each other they expressed their love physically. Jonathan stripped off his clothes and dressed David in his own robe and armour. With the candour of the Eastern World that exposes the reserve of Western culture they kissed each other and wept openly with each other. This intimate relationship was sealed before God - it was not just a spiritual bond it became covenantal''. He concludes by affirming: Here ''is the Bible bearing witness to love between two people of the same gender''.<ref>http://liverpool.anglican.org/people/bishops/jamesspeeches/0712_Lambeth_essay.htm</ref>
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The story of Jonathan ceding his kingship to David, of course, could not be challenged, since Jonathan was killed at Gilboa, by the very [[Philistine]] enemy with whom David was then allied. In fact, the house of David continued to war against the house of Saul for several years, and several northern rebellions followed, even after the death of Jonathan's brother [[Ish-bosheth]].
  
==References==
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While this does not rule out the possibility of romantic or homosexual love between the David and Jonathan, this scenario—like the story of their supposed political union—is better seen as a product of contemporary ideological agendas than historical reality.
* ''Jonathan Loved David: Homosexuality in Biblical Times'' (ISBN 0-664-24185-9) by [[Tom Horner]], Ph.D. (pgs 15-39)
 
*  ''What the Bible Really Says About Homosexuality'' (ISBN 1-886360-09-X) by [[Daniel A. Helminiak]], Ph.D. (pgs 123-127)
 
*  ''Lord Given Lovers: The Holy Union of David & Jonathan'' (ISBN 0-595-29869-9) by [[Christopher Hubble]]. (entire)
 
* "The Significance of the Verb Love in the David-Jonathan Narratives in 1 Samuel" by [[J. A. Thompson]] from the ''Vestus Testamentum'' 24 (pgs 334-338)
 
  
==References==
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==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
  
===Romantic love expositions===
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==References==
*[[John Boswell]]'s ''Same-Sex Unions in Premodern Europe'' (pgs. 67-71)
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* Ackerman, Susan. ''When Heroes Love: The Ambiguity of Eros in the Stories of Gilgamesh and David''. New York: Columbia University Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0231132619
*Craig Williams' [[Yale University]] Ph.D. Dissertation ''Homosexuality and the Roman Man: A Study in the Cultural Construction of Sexuality'' (pg. 319).
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* Bloom, Harold, and David Rosenberg. ''The Book of J''. New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1990. ISBN 978-0802110503
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* Gordon, Andrew. ''Politics and Love: Reading and Re-Reading the Jonathan and David Story''. Thesis (Rab.)—Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, Brookdale Center, 2008.
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* Halperin, David M. ''One Hundred Years of Homosexuality.'' New York: Routledge, 1990.
 +
* Hubble, Christopher Amos. ''Lord Given Lovers: The Holy Union of David & Jonathan''. New York: iUniverse, 2003. ISBN 0595298699
 +
* Schecter, Stephen. ''David and Jonathan: An Epic Poem of Love and Power in Ancient Israel''. Robert Davies Multimedia Publishing, 1997. ISBN 1895854660
  
==See also==
 
*[[History of Early Christianity and Homosexuality]]
 
  
 
[[Category:religion]]
 
[[Category:religion]]
 
{{Credit|208546773}}
 
{{Credit|208546773}}

Latest revision as of 05:57, 9 July 2023


David and Jonathan: "La Somme le Roy," 1290 C.E.; French illuminated manuscript (detail); British Museum.

David and Jonathan were heroic figures of the Kingdom of Israel, whose relationship was recorded the Old Testament books of Samuel. Jonathan, the eldest son of King Saul, was a military commander in his own right who won important battles against the Philistines. After David emerged on the scene as a mere boy who slew the Philistine champion Goliath, Jonathan befriended David. Jonathan later protected David against Saul's fits of murderous jealousy, saving his life on several occasions.

David composed a psalm in honor of Saul and Jonathan after their deaths, in which he praised Jonathan's love as "surpassing that of women." There is, thus, debate among religious scholars as to whether this relationship was platonic or sexual. Some also suggest that the supposed accord between David and Jonathan was a literary device created by the biblical writers to strengthen the fragile unity between the northern tribes who had followed Saul and the tribe of Judah, which followed David and his lineage.

Although David fought a civil war against Saul's son Ish-bosheth, he spared Jonathan's son Mephi-bosheth, keeping him under house arrest in Jerusalem.

Jonathan, son of Saul

Jonathan was already a seasoned military leader when David was still a boy. During Saul's campaign to consolidate his kingdom, he placed Jonathan in charge of 2,000 men at Gibeah while Saul led another 3,000 around Bethel. Jonathan's group led in attacking a Philistine encampment. Saul then mustered the Israelite tribesmen nationwide at Gilgal to deal with the expected Philistine counterstrike. With superior forces, including some 3,000 chariots against the still relatively primitive Israelite army, the Philistines forced the Hebrews on the defensive, and many troops began to desert.

It was here, at Gilgal, that Saul made the fatal mistake of offering sacrifice to God before the arrival of the prophet Samuel, prompting Samuel to declare that God had withdrawn his support of Saul as king. Only 600 men remained with Saul at the time. Saul and Jonathan, meanwhile prepared to meet the Philistines at Micmash. (1 Sam 3)

Through a daring tactic, Jonathan and his armor-bearer alone then killed 20 Philistines, throwing the enemy army into disarray. Moreover, Jonathan's victory caused Hebrew mercenaries who had earlier joined the Philistines to change sides and fight for their fellow Israelites. In addition, the Hebrew soldiers who had deserted at Gilgal now rallied to Saul's and Jonathan's cause. The Philistines were consequently driven back past Beth Aven (1 Sam. 4).

However, during this time, Jonathan was out of communication with his father. He was thus unaware when Saul commanded a sacred fast for the army, with a penalty of death for any who did not observe it. When Jonathan inadvertently violated the fast by eating some wild honey, only the threat of mutiny by troops loyal to him prevented Saul from carrying out the death sentence on his son.

Although Saul left off from pursuing the Philistines after this, he—and presumably Jonathan with him—fought ceaselessly against the Israelites' enemies on all sides, including the nations of Moab, Ammon, Edom, the Amalekites, and later battles against the Philistines.

Story of David and Jonathan

Jonathan (right) and David

It was at one of these battles against the Philistines that David first appeared on the scene. A handsome, ruddy-cheeked youth and the youngest son of Jesse, David was brought before Saul after having slain the giant Philistine champion Goliath with only a stone and sling (1 Sam. 17:57).

Jonathan was immediately struck with David on their first meeting: "When David had finished speaking to Saul, Jonathan became one in spirit with David, and he loved him as himself" (1 Sam. 18:1). That same day, Jonathan made an unspecified "covenant" with David, removing the rich garments he wore and offering them to his new young friend, including even his sword and his bow (1 Sam. 18:4). David returned from this battle to songs of praise that gave him more credit than Saul for the victory. "Saul has killed his thousands," from the popular song, "and David his tens of thousands." This drew the violent jealousy of Saul, prompted by an "evil spirit from the Lord." On two occasions while Saul prophesied to the music of David's harp, Saul hurled his spear at David, but David eluded the attacks (1 Sam. 18:5-11).

As David grew into manhood, his reputation as a military commander grew even stronger. Saul now saw David as a serious threat and attempted several more times to do away with him. Promising David the hand of his royal daughter Michal in marriage, Saul required 100 enemy foreskins in lieu of a dowry, hoping David would be killed trying to obtain them (1 Sam. 18:24-25). David, however, returned with a trophy of double the number, and Saul had to fulfill his end of the bargain.

Later, Saul ordered Jonathan to assassinate David, but Jonathan instead warned David to be on his guard. Jonathan then succeeded in dissuading the king from his plans, saying:

Let not the king do wrong to his servant David; he has not wronged you, and what he has done has benefited you greatly. He took his life in his hands when he killed the Philistine. The Lord won a great victory for all Israel, and you saw it and were glad. Why then would you do wrong to an innocent man like David by killing him for no reason (1 Sam 9:4-6).

Brought to his senses by Jonathan's words, Saul swore an oath not to do further harm to David: "As surely as the Lord lives," he said, "David will not be put to death." The biblical writers, however, portray Saul as doomed to carry out his tragic fate, and the "evil spirit from the Lord" continued to harass him.

Saul thus continued to devise a way to do away with David, but this time it would be Michal who foiled her father's plans by warning David to escape through their bedroom window. After fleeing to Ramah, David consulted with Jonathan, who assured him that Saul had no further plans to kill him. David insisted, however, declaring that Saul was now keeping his plans secret because of Jonathan's closeness to David. The two men reaffirmed their covenant of love for each other, and Jonathan pledged to discover Saul's true plans with regard to David (1 Sam. 20:16-17).

Jonathan approached his father at a ceremonial dinner to plead David's cause. However Saul flared up in anger at Jonathan saying: "You son of a perverse and rebellious woman! Don't I know that you have sided with the son of Jesse to your own shame and to the shame of the mother who bore you? As long as the son of Jesse lives on this earth, neither you nor your kingdom will be established. Now send and bring him to me, for he must die!" This time, when Jonathan attempted to dissuade Saul from his rash course, the king hurled his spear at his son. Jonathan was so grieved that he did not eat for days (1 Sam. 20:30-34).

He then went to David at his hiding place to tell him that he must leave. "David rose from beside the stone heap and prostrated himself with his face to the ground. He bowed three times, and they kissed each other, and wept with each other; David wept the more. Then Jonathan said to David, 'Go in peace, since both of us have sworn in the name of the LORD, saying, "The LORD shall be between me and you, and between my descendants and your descendants, forever'" (1Sam. 20:41-42).

David then became an outlaw and a fugitive, gathering a band of several hundred men loyal to him. Saul, still seeing him as a threat to the throne, continued to pursue David. Jonathan, however, again reiterated his covenant with David and even pledged to honor David as king, saying: "My father Saul will not lay a hand on you. You will be king over Israel, and I will be second to you. Even my father Saul knows this" (1 Sam. 23:15-18).

With no safe haven in Israelite territory, David eventually ended up working as a mercenary captain for the Philistine king Achish. Later, when Jonathan and Saul were slain on Mount Gilboa by the Philistines, however, David was not involved (1 Sam. 31:2). Hearing of their deaths, David composed a psalm of lamentation commemorating both of the fallen leaders:

Saul and Jonathan—in life they were loved and gracious, and in death they were not parted.
They were swifter than eagles, they were stronger than lions.
O daughters of Israel, weep for Saul, who clothed you in scarlet and finery,
who adorned your garments with ornaments of gold...
I am distressed for you, my brother Jonathan;
greatly beloved were you to me;
your love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women" (2 Sam. 1:23-26).

With Jonathan dead, Saul's younger son Ish-bosheth succeeded him as king of Israel, while David reigned over the tribe of Judah at Hebron. A civil war of several years followed, which ended after Saul's military commander Abner went over to David's side and Ish-bosheth was soon assassinated, leaving David the unchallenged ruler of both Israel and Judah until the rebellion of his son Absalom.

Interpretation of their relationship

Platonic

The traditional view is that Jonathan and David loved one another as brothers. Jonathan's "loving him as himself" refers simply to unselfish love, a commandment found in both the Old and the New Testaments: "Love your neighbor as yourself." The Book of Samuel indeed documents real affection and physical intimacy (hugging and kissing) between Jonathan and David, but this does not indicate a sexual component to their love. Even in modern times, kissing is a common social custom between men in the Middle East for greetings or farewells.

In rabbinical tradition, Jonathan's love for David is considered the archetype of disinterestedness (Ab. v. 17). Jonathan is ranked by Rabbi Judah the Saint among the great self-denying characters of Jewish history. However, an alternative rabbinical opinion held that his love for David was a result of his conviction that David's great popularity was certain to place David on the throne in the end (B. M. 85a). One tradition holds that Jonathan actually did not go far enough to support David, arguing that Jonathan shared in Saul's guilt for the slaughter of the priests of Nob (I Sam. 22: 18-19), which he could have prevented by providing David two loaves of bread (Sanh. 104a).

Jonathan's giving his royal clothes and arms to David at their first meeting is simply a recognition that David deserved them, since Jonathan himself had not dared to face the Philistine champion Goliath, as David did. Moreover, by agreeing that David would be king and Jonathan his second-in-command, Jonathan can be seen to be insuring his own survival after Saul's death. In fact, their covenant stipulated that David should not exterminate Jonathan's posterity: "The Lord is witness between you and me, and between your descendants and my descendants forever" (1 Sam. 20:42).

Literary critic Harold Bloom has argued that the biblical writers consciously created a pattern in which the elder "brother" of heir came to serve the younger, as part of a historiography justifying the kingship of Solomon over his elder brother Adonijah.[1] David and Jonathan may thus be seen as an example of this pattern, in which the potential antagonists—unlike Cain and Abel or Esau and Jacob—never came to experience animosity.

Romantic and erotic

Some modern scholars, however, interpret the love between David and Jonathan as more intimate than mere friendship. This interpretation views the bonds the men shared as romantic love, regardless of whether it was physically consummated.[2] Each time they reaffirm their covenant, love is the only justification provided. Although both Jonathan and David were married to their own wives and Jonathan had sired at least one son, David explicitly stated, on hearing of Jonathan's death, that for him, Jonathan's love exceeded "that of women."

Some commentators go further than to suggest a merely romantic relationship between Jonathan and David, arguing that it was a full fledged homosexual affair. For example, the anonymous Life of Edward II, c. 1326 C.E., has: "Indeed I do remember to have heard that one man so loved another. Jonathan cherished David, Achilles loved Patroclus." In Renaissance art, the figure of David is thought by some to have taken on a particular homo-erotic charge, as some see in the colossal statue of David by Michelangelo and in Donatello's David.

Oscar Wilde, at his 1895 sodomy trial, used the example of David and Jonathan as "the love that dare not speak its name." More recently, the Anglican bishop of Liverpool, James Jones, drew attention to the relationship between David and Jonathan by describing their friendship as: "Emotional, spiritual and even physical." He concluded by affirming: "(Here) is the Bible bearing witness to love between two people of the same gender."[3]

Critical view

Biblical scholarship has long recognized a concern in the narrative of the Books of Samuel to present David as the sole legitimate claimant to the throne of Israel. The story of Jonathan's unity with David—including his willingness to accept David rather than himself as king—is thus seen as a literary device showing that Saul's heir-apparent recognized God's supposed plan to place David's line on the throne instead of Saul's. The story evolved in the context of the need to strengthen the fragile unity of the northern and southern tribes, which fractured several times during David's reign and was destroyed permanently in the time of his grandson Rehoboam. A similar motive is seen in what critics see as the "fiction" of David sparing Saul's life several times and his supposed outrage that anyone would dare to harm the "Lord's anointed."

The story of Jonathan ceding his kingship to David, of course, could not be challenged, since Jonathan was killed at Gilboa, by the very Philistine enemy with whom David was then allied. In fact, the house of David continued to war against the house of Saul for several years, and several northern rebellions followed, even after the death of Jonathan's brother Ish-bosheth.

While this does not rule out the possibility of romantic or homosexual love between the David and Jonathan, this scenario—like the story of their supposed political union—is better seen as a product of contemporary ideological agendas than historical reality.

Notes

  1. Bloom, 1990.
  2. David M. Halperin, 1990, p. 83.
  3. liverpool.anglican.org, Lambeth essay. Retrieved June 10, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ackerman, Susan. When Heroes Love: The Ambiguity of Eros in the Stories of Gilgamesh and David. New York: Columbia University Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0231132619
  • Bloom, Harold, and David Rosenberg. The Book of J. New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1990. ISBN 978-0802110503
  • Gordon, Andrew. Politics and Love: Reading and Re-Reading the Jonathan and David Story. Thesis (Rab.)—Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, Brookdale Center, 2008.
  • Halperin, David M. One Hundred Years of Homosexuality. New York: Routledge, 1990.
  • Hubble, Christopher Amos. Lord Given Lovers: The Holy Union of David & Jonathan. New York: iUniverse, 2003. ISBN 0595298699
  • Schecter, Stephen. David and Jonathan: An Epic Poem of Love and Power in Ancient Israel. Robert Davies Multimedia Publishing, 1997. ISBN 1895854660

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