Löydetty 689 Tulokset: forty years in the wilderness
In truth, Serug lived for thirty years, and then he conceived Nahor. (Genesis 11, 22)
And after he conceived Nahor, Serug lived for two hundred years, and he conceived sons and daughters. (Genesis 11, 23)
And so Nahor lived for twenty-nine years, and then he conceived Terah. (Genesis 11, 24)
And after he conceived Terah, Nahor lived for one hundred and nineteen years, and he conceived sons and daughters. (Genesis 11, 25)
And Terah lived for seventy years, and then he conceived Abram, and Nahor, and Haran. (Genesis 11, 26)
And the days of Terah that passed were two hundred and five years, and then he died in Haran. (Genesis 11, 32)
And so Abram departed just as the Lord had instructed him, and Lot went with him. Abram was seventy-five years old when he departed from Haran. (Genesis 12, 4)
For they had served Chedorlaomer for twelve years, and in the thirteenth year they withdrew from him. (Genesis 14, 4)
and the Chorreans in the mountains of Seir, even to the plains of Paran, which is in wilderness. (Genesis 14, 6)
And the Lord responded by saying: “Take for me a cow of three years, and a she-goat of three years, and a ram of three years, also a turtle-dove and a pigeon.” (Genesis 15, 9)
And it was said to him: “Know beforehand that your future offspring will be sojourners in a land not their own, and they will subjugate them in servitude and afflict them for four hundred years. (Genesis 15, 13)
she took Hagar the Egyptian, her handmaid, ten years after they began to live in the land of Canaan, and she gave her to her husband as a wife. (Genesis 16, 3)