Found 43 Results for: Haman

  • He told him everything that had happened, how Haman had promised to transfer silver into the king’s treasury for the death of the Jews. (Esther 7, 7)

  • “Remember,” he said, “the days of your lowliness, how you were nurtured as if in my hand, because Haman, who is second after the king, has spoken against us to death. (Esther 7, 10)

  • You know everything, and you know that it was not out of arrogance or indignation or some desire for glory that I did this, so that I refused to adore the very proud Haman. (Esther 7, 24)

  • and that I have not eaten at Haman’s table, nor has the king’s feasts pleased me, and that I have not drunk the wine of his libations, (Esther 8, 17)

  • But she responded, “If it pleases the king, I beg you to come with me today, and Haman with you, to the feast that I have prepared.” (Esther 9, 20)

  • And immediately the king said, “Call Haman quickly, so that he may obey Esther’s will. And so the king and Haman came to the feast, which the queen had prepared for them. (Esther 9, 21)

  • If I have found favor in the sight of the king, and if it pleases the king to give me what I ask, and to fulfill my petition, let the king and Haman come to the feast which I have prepared for them, and tomorrow I will open my mind to the king.” (Esther 9, 24)

  • And so Haman went out that day joyful and cheerful. And when he saw that Mordecai was sitting in front of the gate of the palace, and that he alone did not get up for him, but did not so much as move from the place where he sat, he was very indignant. (Esther 9, 25)

  • And immediately the king said, “Who is in the atrium?” For, you see, Haman was entering the inner atrium of the king’s house to suggest to the king that he should order Mordecai to be hanged on the gallows, which had been prepared for him. (Esther 10, 4)

  • The servants answered, “Haman is standing in the atrium.” And the king said, “Let him enter.” (Esther 10, 5)

  • And when he had entered, he said to him, “What ought to be done for the man whom the king wishes to honor?” But Haman, thinking in his heart and supposing that the king would honor no one else but himself, (Esther 10, 6)

  • And so Haman took the robe and the horse, and arraying Mordecai in the street of the city, and setting him on the horse, he went before him and cried out, “He is worthy of this honor, whom the king has decided to honor.” (Esther 10, 11)


“Devemos odiar os nossos pecados, visto que o amor ao Senhor significa paz”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina