Passage
And when Delilah sawe that he had tolde her all his heart, she sent, and called for the Princes of ye Philistims, saying, Come vp once againe: for he hath shewed mee all his heart. Then the Princes of the Philistims came vp vnto her, and brought the money in their handes.
Nearby Context
Judges 16:16 And because shee was importunate vpon him with her wordes continually, and vexed him, his soule was pained vnto the death.
Judges 16:17 Therefore he tolde her all his heart, and said vnto her, There neuer came rasor vpon mine head: for I am a Nazarite vnto God from my mothers wombe: therefore if I bee shauen, my strength will goe from me, and I shalbe weake, and be like all other men.
Judges 16:18 And when Delilah sawe that he had tolde her all his heart, she sent, and called for the Princes of ye Philistims, saying, Come vp once againe: for he hath shewed mee all his heart. Then the Princes of the Philistims came vp vnto her, and brought the money in their handes.
Judges 16:19 And she made him sleepe vpon her knees, and she called a man, and made him to shaue off the seuen lockes of his head, and shee began to vexe him, and his strength was gone from him.
Judges 16:20 Then she said, The Philistims be vpon thee, Samson. And hee awoke out of his sleepe, and thought, I will go out now as at other times, and shake my selfe, but he knewe not that the Lord was departed from him.
Study Lenses
The verse centers on "called", "delilah", "sawe", "tolde", "heart", "sent", "princes", and "philistims". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "called" and "delilah", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 17's "Therefore he tolde her all his heart..." into verse 19's "And she made him sleepe vpon her...", so "called" and "delilah" belong inside that flow. In Judges context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "called" and "delilah" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.