Encontrados 435 resultados para: Solomon's prayer

  • King Solomon had Hiram brought from Tyre. (1 Kings 7, 13)

  • He was a bronze worker, the son of a widow from the tribe of Naphtali; his father had been from Tyre. He was endowed with skill, understanding, and knowledge of how to produce any work in bronze. He came to King Solomon and did all his metal work. (1 Kings 7, 14)

  • When Hiram made the pots, shovels, and bowls, he therewith completed all his work for King Solomon in the temple of the LORD: (1 Kings 7, 40)

  • pots, shovels, and bowls. All these articles which Hiram made for King Solomon in the temple of the LORD were of burnished bronze. (1 Kings 7, 45)

  • Solomon did not weigh all the articles because they were so numerous; the weight of the bronze, therefore, was not determined. (1 Kings 7, 47)

  • Solomon had all the articles made for the interior of the temple of the LORD: the golden altar; the golden table on which the showbread lay; (1 Kings 7, 48)

  • When all the work undertaken by King Solomon in the temple of the LORD was completed, he brought in the dedicated offerings of his father David, putting the silver, gold, and other articles in the treasuries of the temple of the LORD. (1 Kings 7, 51)

  • At the order of Solomon, the elders of Israel and all the leaders of the tribes, the princes in the ancestral houses of the Israelites, came to King Solomon in Jerusalem, to bring up the ark of the LORD'S covenant from the city of David (which is Zion). (1 Kings 8, 1)

  • All the men of Israel assembled before King Solomon during the festival in the month of Ethanim (the seventh month). (1 Kings 8, 2)

  • King Solomon and the entire community of Israel present for the occasion sacrificed before the ark sheep and oxen too many to number or count. (1 Kings 8, 5)

  • Then Solomon said, "The LORD intends to dwell in the dark cloud; (1 Kings 8, 12)

  • Solomon stood before the altar of the LORD in the presence of the whole community of Israel, and stretching forth his hands toward heaven, (1 Kings 8, 22)


“Pobres e desafortunadas as almas que se envolvem no turbilhão de preocupações deste mundo. Quanto mais amam o mundo, mais suas paixões crescem, mais queimam de desejos, mais se tornam incapazes de atingir seus objetivos. E vêm, então, as inquietações, as impaciências e terríveis sofrimentos profundos, pois seus corações não palpitam com a caridade e o amor. Rezemos por essas almas desafortunadas e miseráveis, para que Jesus, em Sua infinita misericórdia, possa perdoá-las e conduzi-las a Ele.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina