Encontrados 506 resultados para: called

  • Now you must send some men to Jaffa and fetch a man called Simon, known as Peter, (Acts 10, 5)

  • When the angel who said this had gone, Cornelius called two of the slaves and a devout soldier of his staff, (Acts 10, 7)

  • and when he found him he brought him to Antioch. And it happened that they stayed together in that church a whole year, instructing a large number of people. It was at Antioch that the disciples were first called 'Christians'. (Acts 11, 26)

  • He knocked at the outside door and a servant called Rhoda came to answer it. (Acts 12, 13)

  • In the church at Antioch the following were prophets and teachers: Barnabas, Simeon called Niger, and Lucius of Cyrene, Manaen, who had been brought up with Herod the tetrarch, and Saul. (Acts 13, 1)

  • One day while they were offering worship to the Lord and keeping a fast, the Holy Spirit said, 'I want Barnabas and Saul set apart for the work to which I have called them.' (Acts 13, 2)

  • They travelled the whole length of the island, and at Paphos they came in contact with a Jewish magician and false prophet called Bar-Jesus. (Acts 13, 6)

  • They addressed Barnabas as Zeus, and since Paul was the principal speaker they called him Hermes. (Acts 14, 12)

  • Then the rest of humanity, and of all the nations once called mine, will look for the Lord, says the Lord who made this (Acts 15, 17)

  • From there he went to Derbe, and then on to Lystra, where there was a disciple called Timothy, whose mother was Jewish and had become a believer; but his father was a Greek. (Acts 16, 1)

  • Once he had seen this vision we lost no time in arranging a passage to Macedonia, convinced that God had called us to bring them the good news. (Acts 16, 10)

  • One of these women was called Lydia, a woman from the town of Thyatira who was in the purple-dye trade, and who revered God. She listened to us, and the Lord opened her heart to accept what Paul was saying. (Acts 16, 14)


“O demônio é forte com quem o teme, mas é fraquíssimo com quem o despreza.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina