Gefunden 137 Ergebnisse für: Clothes

  • When these lepers reached the camp boundary, they went into a tent. They ate and drank; they took the silver, gold and clothes, and hid them there in the ground. They entered another tent and took whatever they found, and hid them in the same way. (2 Kings 7, 8)

  • They went as far as the Jordan, and all the way was littered with clothes and equipment which the Arameans had thrown away in their flight. The messengers returned and told this to the king. (2 Kings 7, 15)

  • The king was standing by the pillar, according to the custom, and the officers and the trumpeters were with him. The people were filled with joy and they were blowing trumpets. On seeing this, Athaliah tore her clothes and cried out, "Treason, treason!" (2 Kings 11, 14)

  • Then Eliakim with Shebna and Joah came to Hezekiah with their clothes torn and told him what the field commander had said. (2 Kings 18, 37)

  • When King Hezekiah heard this he tore his clothes, covered himself with sackcloth and went to the house of Yahweh. (2 Kings 19, 1)

  • When the king heard the contents of the book, he tore his clothes and (2 Kings 22, 11)

  • Hanun had David's servants seized, shaved their beards, cut their clothes half-way up to the hips and sent them away. (1 Chronicles 19, 4)

  • The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, "I will disguise myself as we go into battle, but I want you to wear your royal clothes." The king of Aram had given his chariot commanders the following order: "Do not attack anyone of whatever rank, except the king of Israel." When the chariot commanders saw Jehoshaphat, they thought he was the king of Israel. And they wheeled to the attack. But Jehoshaphat gave a shout and Yahweh came to his help, God rescued him and turned the attack away from him. The chariot commanders realized that he was not the king of Israel and called off their pursuit. By chance, however, one of the soldiers shot an arrow which struck the king of Israel between the joints of his armor. The king said to his charioteer, "Turn around and get me out of the battle; I have been hurt." But the battle grew fiercer so that they held the king upright in his chariot facing the Aramaeans until evening, and at sunset he died. (2 Chronicles 18, 29)

  • When she saw the king standing there at the entrance beside the pillar, with the captains and trumpeters at his side, and all the people from the countryside rejoicing and sounding trumpets, and the cantors with their musical instruments leading the hymns, Athaliah tore her clothes in distress and shouted, "Treason, treason!" (2 Chronicles 23, 13)

  • I remained seated and dismayed until the evening sacrifice; and then, at the time for the evening offering, I rose from my fasting, and with my clothes and mantle torn, I knelt down, spreading out my hands to Yahweh, my God. (Ezra 9, 5)

  • Yet my brothers, my men, the men of the guard who followed me, and I did not take off our clothes when we slept. Everyone kept his weapon with him. (Nehemiah 4, 17)

  • Forty years you cared for them in the desert and they lacked nothing, neither did their clothes wear out or their feet swell. (Nehemiah 9, 21)


“A pessoa que nunca medita é como alguém que nunca se olha no espelho e, assim, não se cuida e sai desarrumada. A pessoa que medita e dirige seus pensamentos a Deus, que é o espelho de sua alma, procura conhecer seus defeitos, tenta corrigi-los, modera seus impulsos e põe em ordem sua consciência.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina