Löydetty 124 Tulokset: burning bush

  • May the Lord strike you with destitution, with fever and cold, with burning and heat, and with polluted air and rot, and may he pursue you until you perish. (Deuteronomy 28, 22)

  • and from the fruits of the earth with all its plenitude. May the blessing of him who appeared in the bush, settle upon the head of Joseph, and upon the top of the head of the Nazarite among his brothers. (Deuteronomy 33, 16)

  • And he acted in this manner for all his foreign wives, who were burning incense and immolating to their gods. (1 Kings 11, 8)

  • And behold, by the word of the Lord, a man of God went from Judah to Bethel, when Jeroboam was standing over the altar, and burning incense. (1 Kings 13, 1)

  • Yet truly, he did not take away the high places. For still the people were sacrificing and burning incense in the high places. (1 Kings 22, 44)

  • Yet still he did not take away the high places. For the people were still immolating, and burning incense, in the high places. (2 Kings 12, 3)

  • except for this alone: he did not take away the high places. For still the people were immolating, and burning incense, in the high places. (2 Kings 14, 4)

  • Yet truly, he did not demolish the high places. And still the people were sacrificing, and burning incense, in the high places. (2 Kings 15, 4)

  • Yet truly, he did not take away the high places. And still the people were immolating, and burning incense, in the high places. But he edified the gate of the house of the Lord to be very sublime. (2 Kings 15, 35)

  • Also, he was immolating victims, and burning incense, in the high places, and on the hills, and under every leafy tree. (2 Kings 16, 4)

  • And they were burning incense there, upon altars, in the manner of the nations that the Lord had removed from their face. And they did wicked deeds, provoking the Lord. (2 Kings 17, 11)

  • He destroyed the high places, and he crushed the statues, and he cut down the sacred groves. And he broke apart the bronze serpent, which Moses had made. For even until that time, the sons of Israel were burning incense to it. And he called its name Nehushtan. (2 Kings 18, 4)


“O meu passado, Senhor, à Tua misericórdia. O meu Presente, ao Teu amor. O meu futuro, à Tua Providência.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina