Gefunden 134 Ergebnisse für: Gilead

  • As soon as the Israelites heard the news, they fell on them as one man and massacred them all the way to Choba. The men of Jerusalem and the entire mountain country also rallied to them, once they had been informed of the events in the enemy camp. Then the men of Gilead and Galilee attacked them on the flank and struck at them fiercely till they neared Damascus and its territory. (Judith 15, 5)

  • 'Mine is Gilead, mine Manasseh, Ephraim the helmet on my head, Judah my commander's baton, (Psalms 60, 7)

  • 'Mine is Gilead, mine Manasseh, Ephraim the helmet on my head, Judah my commander's baton, (Psalms 108, 8)

  • Next, the gentiles of Gilead banded together to destroy the Israelites living in their territory. The latter, however, took refuge in the fortress of Dathema, (1 Maccabees 5, 9)

  • Judas said to his brother Simon, 'Pick your men and go and relieve your countrymen in Galilee, while my brother Jonathan and I make our way into Gilead.' (1 Maccabees 5, 17)

  • Simon was allotted three thousand men for the expedition into Galilee, Judas eight thousand for Gilead. (1 Maccabees 5, 20)

  • where they encountered the Nabataeans, who gave them a friendly reception and told them everything that had been happening to their brothers in Gilead, (1 Maccabees 5, 25)

  • Others were blockaded in the other towns of Gilead, and the enemy planned to attack and capture these strongholds the very next day, and destroy all the people inside them on one day. (1 Maccabees 5, 27)

  • From there he moved on and took Chaspho, Maked, Bosor and the remaining towns of Gilead. (1 Maccabees 5, 36)

  • Next, Judas assembled all the Israelites living in Gilead, from the least to the greatest, with their wives, children and belongings, an enormous muster, to take them to Judaea. (1 Maccabees 5, 45)

  • While Judas and Jonathan were in Gilead and Simon his brother in Galilee outside Ptolemais, (1 Maccabees 5, 55)

  • Trypho organised his entire cavalry to go, but that night it snowed so heavily that he could not get through for the snow, so he left there and moved off into Gilead. (1 Maccabees 13, 22)


O maldito “eu” o mantém apegado à Terra e o impede de voar para Jesus. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina