Löydetty 102 Tulokset: divine wrath

  • We are all agreed, presidents of the realm, magistrates, satraps, councillors and governors, that the king should issue an edict enforcing the following regulation: Whoever within the next thirty days prays to anyone, divine or human, other than to yourself, Your Majesty, is to be thrown into the lions' den. (Daniel 6, 8)

  • They then went to the king and reminded him of the royal edict, 'Have you not signed an edict forbidding anyone for the next thirty days to pray to anyone, divine or human, other than to yourself, Your Majesty, on pain of being thrown into the lions' den?' 'The decision stands' the king replied, ' as befits the law of the Medes and the Persians, which cannot be revoked.' (Daniel 6, 13)

  • 'The king will do as he pleases, growing more and more arrogant, considering himself greater than all the gods; he will utter incredible blasphemies against the God of gods, and he will thrive until the wrath reaches bursting point; for what has been decreed will certainly be fulfilled. (Daniel 11, 36)

  • The rulers of Judah act like men who move the boundary stone; I shall pour my wrath out on them like a flood. (Hosea 5, 10)

  • In my anger I gave you a king and in my wrath I have taken him away. (Hosea 13, 11)

  • Who knows? Perhaps God will change his mind and relent and renounce his burning wrath, so that we shall not perish.' (Jonah 3, 9)

  • Her leaders give verdicts for presents, her priests take a fee for their rulings, her prophets divine for money and yet they rely on Yahweh! 'Isn't Yahweh among us?' they say, 'No disaster is going to overtake us.' (Micah 3, 11)

  • Yahweh is a jealous and vengeful God, Yahweh takes vengeance, he is rich in wrath; Yahweh takes vengeance on his foes, he stores up fury for his enemies. (Nahum 1, 2)

  • His fury -- who can withstand it? Who can endure his burning wrath? His anger pours out like fire and the rocks break apart before him. (Nahum 1, 6)

  • Yahweh, I have heard of your renown; your work, Yahweh, inspires me with dread. Make it live again in our time, make it known in our time; in wrath remember mercy. (Habakkuk 3, 2)

  • and everyone believed in him; eminent citizens and ordinary people alike had declared, 'He is the divine power that is called Great.' (Acts 8, 10)

  • The God of our nation Israel chose our ancestors and made our people great when they were living in Egypt, a land not their own; then by divine power he led them out (Acts 13, 17)


“O amor e o temor devem sempre andar juntos. O temor sem amor torna-se covardia. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina