Löydetty 45 Tulokset: Thinking

  • After each series of banquets, Job would send for his sons and daughters and have them purified. He would rise early in the morning, offer a holocaust for each of his children, thinking, "Perhaps they have sinned and blasphemed God in their hearts." This had been quite a routine for Job. (Job 1, 5)

  • The adulterer waits for dusk, thinking that no eye watches him. At night the thief walks about and puts a mask over his face, (Job 24, 15)

  • The people suffered this great defeat because the Jewish commanders did not listen to Judas and his brothers, thinking they themselves were capable of great deeds. (1 Maccabees 5, 61)

  • Maccabeus, thinking of the common good of all, accepted Lysias' offer of peace. And in fact, the king granted all the demands that Maccabeus had presented to Lysias in writing. (2 Maccabees 11, 15)

  • The pagans who had earlier escaped from Judea for fear of Judas, flocked in great number to Nicanor, thinking that the misfortunes and defeat of the Jews would mean victory for them. (2 Maccabees 14, 14)

  • If a man lives for many years, let him rejoice in them all, thinking that dark days will be many and all that comes after will be meaningless. (Ecclesiastes 11, 8)

  • Crooked thinking distances you from God, and his Omnipotence, put to the test, confounds the foolish. (Wisdom of Solomon 1, 3)

  • He has become a reproach to our way of thinking; even to meet him is burdensome to us. (Wisdom of Solomon 2, 14)

  • If they die young, it is without hope, and they cannot comfort themselves with thinking of the Judgment. (Wisdom of Solomon 3, 18)

  • Thinking it over and over makes my soul downcast. (Lamentations 3, 20)

  • And yet these thinking people are unable to abandon gods that are completely devoid of sense. (Baruch 6, 41)

  • The spirit of Yahweh seized me and said, "Speak! This is the word of Yahweh: I know what you have said, Israel! I know what you are thinking. (Ezekiel 11, 5)


“Deus quer que as suas misérias sejam o trono da Sua misericórdia.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina