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  • For before these days, Theudas stepped forward, asserting himself to be someone, and a number of men, about four hundred, joined with him. But he was killed, and all who believed in him were scattered, and they were reduced to nothing. (Acts 5, 36)

  • After this one, Judas the Galilean stepped forward, in the days of the enrollment, and he turned the people toward himself. But he also perished, and all of them, as many as had joined with him, were dispersed. (Acts 5, 37)

  • And calling in the Apostles, having beaten them, they warned them not to speak at all in the name of Jesus. And they dismissed them. (Acts 5, 40)

  • It is he whom our fathers were not willing to obey. Instead, they rejected him, and in their hearts they turned away toward Egypt, (Acts 7, 39)

  • But he, being filled with the Holy Spirit, and gazing intently toward heaven, saw the glory of God and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. And he said, “Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of man standing at the right hand of God.” (Acts 7, 55)

  • Then they, crying out with a loud voice, blocked their ears and, with one accord, rushed violently toward him. (Acts 7, 56)

  • Now an Angel of the Lord spoke to Philip, saying, “Rise up and go toward the south, to the way which descends from Jerusalem into Gaza, where there is a desert.” (Acts 8, 26)

  • But Paul said to them: “They have beaten us publicly, though we were not condemned. They have cast men who are Romans into prison. And now they would drive us away secretly? Not so. Instead, let them come forward, (Acts 16, 37)

  • So they dragged Alexander from the crowd, while the Jews were propelling him forward. And Alexander, gesturing with his hand for silence, wanted to give the people an explanation. (Acts 19, 33)

  • For you have brought forward these men, who are neither sacrilegious nor blasphemers against your goddess. (Acts 19, 37)

  • And a certain adolescent named Eutychus, sitting on the window sill, was being weighed down by a heavy drowsiness (for Paul was preaching at length). Then, as he went to sleep, he fell from the third floor room downward. And when he was lifted up, he was dead. (Acts 20, 9)

  • For he was afraid, lest perhaps the Jews might seize him and kill him, and that afterwards he would be falsely accused, as if he had accepted a bribe. And so he wrote a letter containing the following: (Acts 23, 25)


“O bem dura eternamente.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina