Found 154 Results for: bronze basin

  • "Now that you are returning to your own tents with great wealth, with very numerous livestock, with silver, gold, bronze and iron, and with a very large supply of clothing, divide these spoils of your enemies with your kinsmen there." (Joshua 22, 8)

  • But the Philistines seized him and gouged out his eyes. Then they brought him down to Gaza and bound him with bronze fetters, and he was put to grinding in the prison. (Judges 16, 21)

  • and would thrust it into the basin, kettle, caldron, or pot. Whatever the fork brought up, the priest would keep. That is how all the Israelites were treated who came to the sanctuary at Shiloh. (1 Samuel 2, 14)

  • He had a bronze helmet on his head and wore a bronze corselet of scale armor weighing five thousand shekels, (1 Samuel 17, 5)

  • and bronze greaves, and had a bronze scimitar slung from a baldric. (1 Samuel 17, 6)

  • Then Saul clothed David in his own tunic, putting a bronze helmet on his head and arming him with a coat of mail. (1 Samuel 17, 38)

  • From Tebah and Berothai, towns of Hadadezer, King David removed a very large quantity of bronze. (2 Samuel 8, 8)

  • he sent his son Hadoram to King David to greet him and to congratulate him for his victory over Hadadezer in battle, because Toi had been in many battles with Hadadezer. Hadoram also brought with him articles of silver, gold, and bronze. (2 Samuel 8, 10)

  • Dadu, one of the Rephaim, whose bronze spear weighed three hundred shekels, was about to take him captive. Dadu was girt with a new sword and planned to kill David, (2 Samuel 21, 16)

  • the son of Geber in Ramoth-gilead, having charge of the villages of Jair, son of Manasseh, in Gilead; and of the district of Argob in Bashan--sixty large walled cities with gates barred with bronze; (1 Kings 4, 13)

  • He was a bronze worker, the son of a widow from the tribe of Naphtali; his father had been from Tyre. He was endowed with skill, understanding, and knowledge of how to produce any work in bronze. He came to King Solomon and did all his metal work. (1 Kings 7, 14)

  • Two hollow bronze columns were cast, each eighteen cubits high and twelve cubits in circumference; their metal was of four fingers' thickness. (1 Kings 7, 15)


“Deus nunca me recusou um pedido”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina