2-4. Late one afternoon, David got up from a nap and was walking around on the flat roof of his palace. A beautiful young woman was down below in her courtyard, bathing as her religion required. David happened to see her, and he sent one of his servants to find out who she was.The servant came back and told David, “Her name is Bathsheba. She is the daughter of Eliam, and she is the wife of Uriah the Hittite.”David sent some messengers to bring her to his palace. She came to him, and he slept with her. Then she returned home.
13. David invited him for dinner. Uriah ate with David and drank so much that he got drunk, but he still did not go home. He went out and slept on his mat near the palace guards.
14. Early the next morning, David wrote a letter and told Uriah to deliver it to Joab.
15. The letter said: “Put Uriah on the front line where the fighting is the worst. Then pull the troops back from him, so that he will be wounded and die.”
16. Joab had been carefully watching the city of Rabbah, and he put Uriah in a place where he knew there were some of the enemy's best soldiers.
17. When the men of the city came out, they fought and killed some of David's soldiers—Uriah the Hittite was one of them.
18. Joab sent a messenger to tell David everything that was happening in the war.
19. He gave the messenger these orders:When you finish telling the king everything that has happened,
20. he may get angry and ask, “Why did you go so near the city to fight? Didn't you know they would shoot arrows from the wall?
21. Don't you know how Abimelech the son of Gideon was killed at Thebez? Didn't a woman kill him by dropping a large rock from the top of the city wall? Why did you go so close to the city walls?”Then you tell him, “One of your soldiers who was killed was Uriah the Hittite.”