Found 169 Results for: worship

  • But you must fear the LORD and worship him faithfully with your whole heart; keep in mind the great things he has done among you. (1 Samuel 12, 24)

  • Now forgive my sin, and return with me, that I may worship the LORD." (1 Samuel 15, 25)

  • But he answered: "I have sinned, yet honor me now before the elders of my people and before Israel. Return with me that I may worship the LORD your God." (1 Samuel 15, 30)

  • For while living in Geshur in Aram, your servant made this vow: 'If the LORD ever brings me back to Jerusalem, I will worship him in Hebron.'" (2 Samuel 15, 8)

  • When David reached the top, where men used to worship God, Hushai the Archite was there to meet him, with rent garments and dirt upon his head. (2 Samuel 15, 32)

  • But if you and your descendants ever withdraw from me, fail to keep the commandments and statutes which I set before you, and proceed to venerate and worship strange gods, (1 Kings 9, 6)

  • It was not enough for him to imitate the sins of Jeroboam, son of Nebat. He even married Jezebel, daughter of Ethbaal, king of the Sidonians, and went over to the veneration and worship of Baal. (1 Kings 16, 31)

  • But I trust the LORD will forgive your servant this: when my master enters the temple of Rimmon to worship there, then I, too, as his adjutant, must bow down in the temple of Rimmon. May the LORD forgive your servant this." (2 Kings 5, 18)

  • Thus Jehu rooted out the worship of Baal from Israel. (2 Kings 10, 28)

  • A report reached the king of Assyria: "The nations whom you deported and settled in the cities of Samaria do not know how to worship the God of the land, and he has sent lions among them that are killing them, since they do not know how to worship the God of the land." (2 Kings 17, 26)

  • The king of Assyria gave the order, "Send back one of the priests whom I deported, to go there and settle, to teach them how to worship the God of the land." (2 Kings 17, 27)

  • But, while venerating the LORD, they served their own gods, following the worship of the nations from among whom they had been deported. (2 Kings 17, 33)


“E’ na dor que o amor se torna mais forte.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina