Breetai said:
That is true. That is also true.
Actually, I'm impressed that you've bothered to put some research into this. Since you seem to have done some homework, then I'm sure that you've looked up 1 Chronicles 20:5. It's the same story, except in this one, in the Hebrew, the word "brother" is there. That does make a bit of a contradiction between the two different passages. We can therefore conclude that the verse in 2 Samual was simply a copiest error. Elhanan killed Goliath's brother and David killed Goliath.
Thats one possibility but not the only possibility and there are several problems with it.
In the the version of the story where David is protrayed as the slayer of Goliath, after Goliath is killed, Sauls says:
Whose son is this youth? And Abner said, As thy soul liveth, O king, I cannot tell. And the king said, Inquire thou whose son the stripling is. (1 Sam. 17:55, 56)
If David had killed Goliath, Saul would have already known who he was since David was already a favorite in Sauls court as previously mentioned in the story:
And David came to Saul, and stood before him: and he loved him greatly; and he became his armourbearer. And Saul sent to Jesse, saying, Let David, I pray thee, stand before me; for he hath found favour in my sight. (1 Sam. 16:21-22.)
David even played the harp for Saul. Later in the story Saul himself sent David out to fight Goliath but then after Goliath is killed Saul doesnt know who David is.
How can that be?
Additionally David took Goliaths head to Saul in Jerusalem. But according to the Bible, Jerusalem was controled by the Jebusites and didnt come into Israelite hands until after Saul when David was king so Saul wouldnt have been in Jerusalem. So it sounds like David was already king when Goliath was killed, making it likely that somebody else battled with Goliath.
If that is not enough the David story says that Goliath was 10 feet tall (4 cubits and a span) - come on, 10 feet, really? Older DDS say that he was 6 foot 9 inches, still huge but believable.
Then there is the part of the story where David wants to marry Sauls daughter. Saul asks for a marriage present of one hundred Philistine foreskins, thinking that David will get killed in the process. David not only kills 100 hundred Philistines and desecrates their bodies by lopping off their foreskins, he goes one further and kills and mutilates another 100. Sounds like an exaggeration.
The hero being sent on impossible mission is a common motiff or ancient literature (Jason and the golden fleece, Perseus and the head of Medusa).
The slaying of Goliath is also remeniscent of another motiff, that is the slaying of giants by members of The Thirty. As it turns out, Elhanan was a member of the The Thirty. The Elhanan version seems truer to the story of The Thirty and even in the introduction verse to the story of The Thirty we are told that by then that David waxed faint, and had grown tired. Like he had been around for a while - as king.
If that is not enough, there is another hint that the David story is later borrowed from the earlier Elhanan story is that in the David account, the name Goliath occurs only twice. In I Samuel 17:23 it says:
And as he talked with them, behold, there came up the champion, the Philistine of Gath,
Goliath by name, out of the armies of the Philistines, and spake according to the same words: and David heard them.
Since Goliath had already been referred to as Goliath, it seems odd that it would be worded that way thus the suspicion is that the David angle was a later insertion. Of course there is a theory why David is alledged to have been incorrectly credited with the slaying but thats another story.
The point is that there is a contradiction but you cant easily explain it away as copyist error. I am posting on another thread that boasts how accurately OT manuscripts were copied and transmitted. Remember that older Hebrew manuscripts say nothing about the brother.
An interesting debate, whatever the correct version is.