Fundar 163 Resultados para: lying tongue

  • Your words can bring you honor and dishonor; a man's tongue brings about his downfall. (Ecclesiasticus 5, 13)

  • Do not sin in big things nor in little things, and from being a friend do not turn into an enemy. An evil reputation brings in its train shame and disgrace; such is the lot of the sinner who is accustomed to lying. (Ecclesiasticus 5, 15)

  • Just as the wicked man inherits confusion and shame so will the sinner accustomed to lying. (Ecclesiasticus 6, 1)

  • A gentle word makes many friends, an agreeable tongue calls forth gracious replies. (Ecclesiasticus 6, 5)

  • He endowed them with knowledge; he gave them tongue and eyes, ears and a mind to think with. (Ecclesiasticus 17, 6)

  • Better to stumble on the ground than to make a slip with the tongue; this is how easily the wicked fall. (Ecclesiasticus 20, 18)

  • Lying is a shameful defect in a man; fools are used to it. (Ecclesiasticus 20, 24)

  • Habitual lying is detestable; disgrace never leaves the liar. (Ecclesiasticus 20, 26)

  • Who will put a guard on my mouth and effectively lock up my lips to prevent me from sinning and my tongue from hastening my ruin? (Ecclesiasticus 22, 27)

  • But the woman jealous of another woman brings heartbreak, her tongue lashes out at everyone. (Ecclesiasticus 26, 6)

  • Cursed be the gossiper with his spiteful tongue. He has destroyed many who lived peacefully. (Ecclesiasticus 28, 13)

  • The vicious tongue has demolished many and hounded them from nation to nation. It has ruined powerful cities and laid low great households. (Ecclesiasticus 28, 14)


“Não nos preocupemos quando Deus põe à prova a nossa fidelidade. Confiemo-nos à Sua vontade; é o que podemos fazer. Deus nos libertará, consolará e enorajará.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina