1 Chronicles 20:5 lists Lahmi the brother of Goliath. 2 Samuel 21:19 records the death of "the brother of Goliath," but does not give a name. There are no other mentions of brothers of Goliath in the KJV bible. Although, The Bible does speak about Goliath having four sons. (2 Samuel 21:22) "These four were born to the giant in Gath..."
Goliath had three brothers, that is why David took four smooth pebbles.
The Bible says that David collected five pebbles, but he used only one on Goliath, the theory is the four pe bbles were kept to use , in case Goliaths four brothers attacked him.
not sure might have made stone soup with them
See 2 Samuel 21:19-20. Some traditional commentaries say that the two verses are both talking about Goliath the Philistine, while others say that verse 20 is talking about one of Goliath's brothers. It is verse 20 which mentions the Philistine who had twenty-four fingers and toes, but does not name him explicitly.
I can find no info on a song or artist called Four brothers, however there is a folk group known as The Brothers Four. See www.brothersfour.com Also there was a movie in 05' called Four Brothers.
No david only killed Goliath ,with a pebble from his sling shot. But david did take four more pebbles maybe for the brothers but they ran away.
Well for one thing he was not afraid of Goliath. David had already killed a bear and a lion. He must have been a pretty good shot with that sling shot. Another thing, no one else wanted to do it.
(1 Sam 17:40) And he [David] took his staff [rod, (hand) staff] in his hand, and chose him [selected (indicating discernment)] five smooth stones out of the brook ...
just solve it, i did it four times.
The main point in my opinion is that when a man mocks God, he is destined for a fall. David was content in his victory, because he knew that God was fighting for him. So why five stones? Because Goliath had four brothers, who were giants also.
The Brothers Four was created in 1957.
This question relates to an interpretation as to why David chose 5 smooth stones when challenging Goliath (see 1 Samuel 17:40). However, there is no biblical basis for emphatically stating Goliath had 4 other brothers. It appears, below, that Goliath had at least 1 brother here: 2 Samuel 21:19 19And there was again a battle in Gob with the Philistines, where Elhanan the son of Jaareoregim, a Bethlehemite, slew the brother of Goliath the Gittite, the staff of whose spear was like a weaver's beam. In 2 Samuel 21, the term 'giants' comes from the Hebrew term 'Rephaim' who were a people living in Canaan who were noted for their large size (see Genesis 15:19-21; Numbers 13:33; and Deuteronomy 2:11).