Found 440 Results for: Building the temple

  • And so, to prevent the lamp of God from going out, Samuel was sleeping in the temple of the Lord, where the ark of God was. (1 Samuel 3, 3)

  • And the Philistines took the ark of God, and carried it into the temple of Dagon. And they stationed it beside Dagon. (1 Samuel 5, 2)

  • Moreover, only the trunk of Dagon remained in its place. For this reason, the priests of Dagon, and all who enter his temple, do not tread upon the threshold of Dagon in Ashdod, even to this day. (1 Samuel 5, 5)

  • And they placed his armor in the temple of Ashtaroth. But his body they suspended on the wall of Bethshan. (1 Samuel 31, 10)

  • For David had proposed, on that day, a reward to him who had struck the Jebusites and who had reached to the gutters of the rooftops, and who had taken away the blind and the lame that hated the soul of David. Therefore, it is said in the proverb, “The blind and the lame shall not enter into the temple.” (2 Samuel 5, 8)

  • In my tribulation, I will call upon the Lord, and I will cry out to my God. And he will heed my voice from his temple, and my outcry will reach his ears. (2 Samuel 22, 7)

  • And so the kingdom was confirmed in the hand of Solomon, and he was joined with Pharaoh, the king of Egypt, by affinity. For he took his daughter, and he led her into the city of David, until he completed building his own house, and the house of the Lord, and the wall of Jerusalem all around. (1 Kings 3, 1)

  • But still the people immolated in the high places. For no temple had been built to the name of the Lord, even to that day. (1 Kings 3, 2)

  • For this reason, I intend to build a temple to the name of the Lord my God, just as the Lord spoke to my father David, saying: ‘Your son, whom I will set in your place, upon your throne, he himself shall build a house to my name.’ (1 Kings 5, 5)

  • And the king ordered them to bring great stones, precious stones, for the foundation of the temple, and to square them. (1 Kings 5, 17)

  • Now the house, which king Solomon was building to the Lord, was sixty cubits in length, and twenty cubits in width, and thirty cubits in height. (1 Kings 6, 2)

  • And a portico was before the temple, of twenty cubits in length, in accord with the measure of the width of the temple. And it had ten cubits of width before the face of the temple. (1 Kings 6, 3)


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