Found 97 Results for: broke

  • Jehoram crossed to Zair, and with him all the chariots . . . Under cover of dark, he and his chariot commanders broke through the Edomites surrounding him; the people fled to their tents. (2 Kings 8, 21)

  • King Ahaz broke up the wheeled stands; removed the crosspieces and the basins from them, and took the bronze Sea off the oxen supporting it, and rested it on the stone pavement. (2 Kings 16, 17)

  • He abolished the high places, broke the pillars, cut down the sacred poles and smashed the bronze serpent which Moses had made; for up to that time the Israelites had offered sacrifices to it; it was called Nehushtan. (2 Kings 18, 4)

  • The king pulled down altars which the kings of Judah had built on the roof and those which Manasseh had built in the two courts of the Temple of Yahweh, and broke them to pieces on the spot, throwing their rubble into the Kidron valley. (2 Kings 23, 12)

  • The latter carried off all the treasures of the Temple of Yahweh and the treasures of the palace and broke up all the golden furnishings which Solomon king of Israel had made for the sanctuary of Yahweh, as Yahweh had foretold. (2 Kings 24, 13)

  • The Chaldaeans broke up the bronze pillars from the Temple of Yahweh, the wheeled stands and the bronze Sea, which were in the Temple of Yahweh, and took the bronze away to Babylon. (2 Kings 25, 13)

  • Because you were not there the first time, Yahweh our God broke out at us because we did not handle it properly.' (1 Chronicles 15, 13)

  • After this war broke out with the Philistines at Gezer. This was when Sibbecai of Hushah killed Sippai, one of the Rephaim, and the Philistines were subdued. (1 Chronicles 20, 4)

  • Again, war with the Philistines broke out, and Elhanan son of Jair killed Lahmi brother of Goliath of Gath, the shaft of whose spear was like a weaver's beam. (1 Chronicles 20, 5)

  • and reigned for three years in Jerusalem. His mother's name was Micaiah daughter of Uriel of Gibeah. When war broke out between Abijah and Jeroboam, (2 Chronicles 13, 2)

  • He abolished the foreign altars and the high places, broke the pillars, cut down the sacred poles, (2 Chronicles 14, 2)

  • for the chariot commanders, realising that he was not the king of Israel, broke off their pursuit. (2 Chronicles 18, 32)


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