Found 61 Results for: Damascus

  • Then he went down into the plain of Damascus during the wheat harvest, and burned all their fields and destroyed their flocks and herds and sacked their cities and ravaged their lands and put to death all their young men with the edge of the sword. (Judith 2, 27)

  • And when the Israelites heard it, with one accord they fell upon the enemy, and cut them down as far as Choba. Those in Jerusalem and all the hill country also came, for they were told what had happened in the camp of the enemy; and those in Gilead and in Galilee outflanked them with great slaughter, even beyond Damascus and its borders. (Judith 15, 5)

  • Then the people of Gaza pleaded with Jonathan, and he made peace with them, and took the sons of their rulers as hostages and sent them to Jerusalem. And he passed through the country as far as Damascus. (1 Maccabees 11, 62)

  • Then he broke camp and went to Damascus, and marched through all that region. (1 Maccabees 12, 32)

  • Your neck is like an ivory tower. Your eyes are pools in Heshbon, by the gate of Bath-rab'bim. Your nose is like a tower of Lebanon, overlooking Damascus. (Song of Solomon 7, 4)

  • For the head of Syria is Damascus, and the head of Damascus is Rezin. (Within sixty-five years E'phraim will be broken to pieces so that it will no longer be a people.) (Isaiah 7, 8)

  • for before the child knows how to cry `My father' or `My mother,' the wealth of Damascus and the spoil of Sama'ria will be carried away before the king of Assyria." (Isaiah 8, 4)

  • Is not Calno like Car'chemish? Is not Hamath like Arpad? Is not Sama'ria like Damascus? (Isaiah 10, 9)

  • An oracle concerning Damascus. Behold, Damascus will cease to be a city, and will become a heap of ruins. (Isaiah 17, 1)

  • The fortress will disappear from E'phraim, and the kingdom from Damascus; and the remnant of Syria will be like the glory of the children of Israel, says the LORD of hosts. (Isaiah 17, 3)

  • Concerning Damascus. "Hamath and Arpad are confounded, for they have heard evil tidings; they melt in fear, they are troubled like the sea which cannot be quiet. (Jeremiah 49, 23)

  • Damascus has become feeble, she turned to flee, and panic seized her; anguish and sorrows have taken hold of her, as of a woman in travail. (Jeremiah 49, 24)


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