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  1. David was able to bring the Jewish people to the highest point in their history. His last years, together with the first years of his son Solomon, mark the high point in Jewish history. The Temple enabled God’s Presence to exist in a tangible way it never had previously.

  2. Jun 25, 2009 · David was the first king in Jerusalem whose reign was later looked back on as a golden era. This article looks at his life and significance and the Psalms he is associated with.

    • David might not have killed Goliath. David is perhaps best known for fighting and killing the giant and Philistine champion Goliath with a slingshot — a suitably awesome feat for the future king of Israel — but the Bible betrays some doubt about who deserves the credit.
    • He was both hero and anti-hero. David, as depicted in the Hebrew Bible is, above all, a man of profound contradictions. He is described as “a man after God’s own heart” by one biblical author, and “a bloodstained fiend of hell” by another.
    • David was a stud. “David” means “beloved” — of both God and humankind, especially women. It was the latter who used to chant (much to the consternation of David’s predecessor King Saul): “Saul has slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands!”
    • David might have been bisexual. David has always been a focus of speculation when it comes to the love that “passes the love of women.” This is how the Bible characterizes the love between David and Jonathan, the son of the first king of Israel, Saul.
  3. 2 days ago · The star was almost universally adopted by Jews in the 19th-century as a striking and simple emblem of Judaism in imitation of the cross of Christianity. The yellow badge that Jews were forced to wear in Nazi-occupied Europe invested the Star of David with a symbolism indicating martyrdom and heroism.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DavidDavid - Wikipedia

    David is honored as an ideal king and the forefather of the future Hebrew Messiah in Jewish prophetic literature, and many psalms are attributed to him. David is also richly represented in post-biblical Jewish written and oral tradition and referenced in the New Testament.

  5. “And David dwelt in the stronghold [of Jerusalem] and called it the City of David” (2 Samuel 5:9). King David, the Yahwist Jerusalem soon became not only the political capital of Judah and Israel, but also the religious center of all Israel.