Fundar 58 Resultados para: Cedar

  • Having finished building the Temple, he roofed the Temple with a coffered ceiling of cedar wood. (1 Kings 6, 9)

  • Round the outside of the Temple he then built the annex which was five cubits high and was joined to the Temple by cedar-wood beams. (1 Kings 6, 10)

  • He lined the inside of the Temple walls with panels of cedar wood-panelling them on the inside from the floor of the Temple to the beams of the ceiling -- and laid the floor of the Temple with juniper planks. (1 Kings 6, 15)

  • The twenty cubits measured from the end of the Temple he built of cedar planks from the floor to the beams, and this part was reserved as the Debir, the Holy of Holies. (1 Kings 6, 16)

  • There was cedar wood round the inside of the Temple, ornamentally carved with gourds and rosettes; all was cedar wood, with no stone showing. (1 Kings 6, 18)

  • The Debir was twenty cubits long, twenty cubits wide, and twenty high, and he overlaid it on the inside with pure gold. He made an altar of cedar wood (1 Kings 6, 20)

  • He built the wall of the inner court in three courses of dressed stone and one course of cedar beams. (1 Kings 6, 36)

  • He built the House of the Forest of Lebanon, a hundred cubits long, fifty cubits wide, and thirty cubits high, on four rows of cedar-wood pillars, (1 Kings 7, 2)

  • with lengths of cedar wood laid horizontally on the pillars. The upper part was panelled with cedar right down to the tie-beams on forty-five pillars, fifteen in each row. (1 Kings 7, 3)

  • He also made the Hall of the Throne where he used to dispense justice, that is, the Hall of Justice; it was panelled in cedar from floor to beams. (1 Kings 7, 7)

  • and, above these, special stones, cut to measure, and cedar wood- (1 Kings 7, 11)

  • and, on the outside, the great court had three courses of dressed stone round it and one course of cedar beams; so also had the inner court of the Temple of Yahweh and the vestibule of the Temple. (1 Kings 7, 12)


“Diante de Deus ajoelhe-se sempre.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina