Löydetty 180 Tulokset: Mountains

  • The mountains skipped like rams, the hills like lambs. (Psalms 114, 4)

  • O mountains, that you skip like rams? O hills, like lambs? (Psalms 114, 6)

  • As the mountains are round about Jerusalem, so the LORD is round about his people, from this time forth and for evermore. (Psalms 125, 2)

  • It is like the dew of Hermon, which falls on the mountains of Zion! For there the LORD has commanded the blessing, life for evermore. (Psalms 133, 3)

  • Bow thy heavens, O LORD, and come down! Touch the mountains that they smoke! (Psalms 144, 5)

  • Mountains and all hills, fruit trees and all cedars! (Psalms 148, 9)

  • And they saw the sanctuary desolate, the altar profaned, and the gates burned. In the courts they saw bushes sprung up as in a thicket, or as on one of the mountains. They saw also the chambers of the priests in ruins. (1 Maccabees 4, 38)

  • and behold, the army of the foreigners met him in the plain; they had set an ambush against him in the mountains, but they themselves met him face to face. (1 Maccabees 11, 68)

  • But Judas Maccabeus, with about nine others, got away to the wilderness, and kept himself and his companions alive in the mountains as wild animals do; they continued to live on what grew wild, so that they might not share in the defilement. (2 Maccabees 5, 27)

  • Thus he who had just been thinking that he could command the waves of the sea, in his superhuman arrogance, and imagining that he could weigh the high mountains in a balance, was brought down to earth and carried in a litter, making the power of God manifest to all. (2 Maccabees 9, 8)

  • So the murderer and blasphemer, having endured the more intense suffering, such as he had inflicted on others, came to the end of his life by a most pitiable fate, among the mountains in a strange land. (2 Maccabees 9, 28)

  • And they celebrated it for eight days with rejoicing, in the manner of the feast of booths, remembering how not long before, during the feast of booths, they had been wandering in the mountains and caves like wild animals. (2 Maccabees 10, 6)


“A sua função é tirar e transportar as pedras, e arrancar os espinhos. Jesus é quem semeia, planta, cultiva e rega. Mas seu trabalho também é obra de Jesus. Sem Ele você nada pode fazer.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina