30 Free KJV Questions with Instant Answers | Judges 13โ16
Samson was set apart from birth for a holy purpose โ a Nazirite from the womb, filled with the Spirit of God, called to deliver Israel from the Philistines. He killed a lion with his bare hands, slew a thousand men with a jawbone, carried a city gate on his shoulders, and in his final moment of faith pulled down a temple on three thousand people. He was also betrayed by the woman he loved, blinded, and mocked. Do you know the full story? This quiz tests every detail from Judges 13โ16 in the King James Version.
Perfect for: Sunday School teachers, youth groups, Bible study groups, and anyone studying the book of Judges.
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Bible tabs make it effortless to flip to Judges 13, 14, 15, or 16 in seconds โ perfect for following Samson's story chapter by chapter.
Samson's story moves quickly through four dense chapters of Judges โ each chapter a different phase of his life. Whether you're teaching through Judges, preparing a lesson on Samson and Delilah, or checking your quiz answers, being able to flip directly to the right chapter without searching saves real time. These tabs have been a Sunday School teacher's staple for exactly this reason.
Samson's story occupies Judges 13โ16 and is one of the most dramatic and psychologically complex narratives in the entire Old Testament. This quiz tests whether you know the specifics beyond the famous haircut: which tribe he came from, his father's name, the riddle he posed at his wedding feast, the exact number of Philistines killed with the jawbone, the price paid to Delilah, how many times she asked before he told her the truth, and what Samson prayed in his final moment.
All 30 questions are drawn from Judges 13โ16 in the King James Version, with every answer referenced to a specific verse. Samson appears in Hebrews 11 alongside the great heroes of faith โ a reminder that God works through imperfect, complicated people who sometimes fail spectacularly and yet turn back to Him.
This quiz is excellent for Sunday School classes, teen Bible study groups, or anyone working through the book of Judges. The story of Samson contains material that resonates with every generation โ calling, compromise, the cost of misplaced trust, and the grace of God that doesn't abandon even those who have squandered their gifts.
Samson's life raises questions that never get old: What happens to a person of extraordinary gifts who consistently makes self-destructive choices? How does God work through someone like that? Is there grace even after the most catastrophic failure? Judges 13โ16 answers all of these โ not with easy comfort, but with honest, clear-eyed truth.
The story of Samson and Delilah is one of the Bible's most psychologically rich narratives. Delilah asked him the secret of his strength not once but four times. Three times he gave her a false answer and watched her betray him to the Philistines. And then he told her the truth anyway. The text doesn't explain why. It just shows us what happened โ and what it cost him.
Samson's final prayer is one of the most poignant moments in the Old Testament: 'O Lord GOD, remember me, I pray thee, and strengthen me, I pray thee, only this once' (Judges 16:28). He had lost everything โ his sight, his freedom, his dignity. But he hadn't lost the knowledge of who to turn to. And God heard him.
For young people especially, Samson's story is one of the most instructive in the Bible. His gifts were real, his calling was genuine, and his failures were entirely self-inflicted. The Nazirite vow wasn't a burden โ it was the source of his strength. Every time he compromised it, he moved further from what he was made to be. That's a pattern worth teaching.
Know the three parts of the Nazirite vow: No razor to touch his head. No wine or strong drink. No contact with a dead body (Judges 13:4โ5, Numbers 6:1โ8). Samson violated all three over his lifetime. The vow was the covenant of his calling, and its terms appear in quiz questions regularly.
Count the Philistine casualties precisely: Thirty men at Ashkelon (Judges 14:19). One thousand at Lehi with the jawbone (Judges 15:15). More at his death than in his entire life (Judges 16:30) โ the text says there were about three thousand people on the roof alone. These numbers are specific and commonly tested.
Know Delilah's persistence exactly: She asked four times total. First attempt: bind me with seven green withs. Second: bind me with new ropes. Third: weave my hair into a web. Fourth: the truth โ no razor has come on my head since birth. Get this sequence right.
Know the foxes detail: Three hundred foxes. Caught in pairs, tied tail to tail with a firebrand between each pair, then sent through the standing grain of the Philistines (Judges 15:4โ5). The specific number โ three hundred โ comes up in almost every quiz on Samson.
Note where Samson is buried: Between Zorah and Eshtaol, in the burying place of Manoah his father (Judges 16:31). This is where the Spirit of the LORD first began to move him (Judges 13:25). His story ends where it began.
How many questions are in the Samson quiz? 30 free multiple-choice questions covering Judges chapters 13 through 16, from the announcement of Samson's birth to his death in Dagon's temple.
What Bible translation is used? All questions and answers reference the King James Version (KJV).
Is this quiz suitable for teenagers? Yes โ the dramatic nature of Samson's story makes it one of the most engaging for teens. Medium difficulty.
How long does the quiz take? 10โ15 minutes, with instant feedback on every question.
Can I use this for a youth group? Absolutely โ free, no signup, works on any device. The Samson narrative generates excellent discussion for youth groups about calling, compromise, and redemption.
What should I study to score higher? Read Judges 13โ16 carefully. Pay close attention to the specific numbers (foxes, Philistines killed), the Nazirite vow details, the sequence of Delilah's requests, and Samson's final prayer.