Löydetty 70 Tulokset: Tax

  • You shall levy a tax for the LORD on the warriors who went out to combat: one out of every five hundred persons, oxen, asses and sheep (Numbers 31, 28)

  • of which six hundred and seventy-five fell as tax to the LORD; (Numbers 31, 37)

  • thirty-six thousand oxen, of which seventy-two fell as tax to the LORD; (Numbers 31, 38)

  • thirty thousand five hundred asses, of which sixty-one fell as tax to the LORD; (Numbers 31, 39)

  • and sixteen thousand persons, of whom thirty-two fell as tax to the LORD. (Numbers 31, 40)

  • The taxes contributed to the LORD, Moses gave to the priest Eleazar, as the LORD had commanded him. (Numbers 31, 41)

  • For the priests Joash made this rule: "All the funds for sacred purposes that are brought to the temple of the LORD--the census tax, personal redemption money, and whatever funds are freely brought to the temple of the LORD-- (2 Kings 12, 5)

  • Jehoiakim gave the silver and gold to Pharaoh, but taxed the land to raise the amount Pharaoh demanded. He exacted the silver and gold from the people of the land, from each proportionately, to pay Pharaoh Neco. (2 Kings 23, 35)

  • Then the king summoned Jehoiada, who was in charge, and said to him: "Why have you not required the Levites to bring in from Judah and Jerusalem the tax levied by Moses, the servant of the LORD, and by the assembly of Israel, for the tent of the testimony?" (2 Chronicles 24, 6)

  • They had it proclaimed throughout Judah and Jerusalem that the tax which Moses, the servant of God, had imposed on Israel in the desert should be brought to the LORD. (2 Chronicles 24, 9)

  • Again, in the time of Artaxerxes, Mithredath wrote in concert with Tabeel and the rest of his fellow officials to Artaxerxes, king of Persia. The document was written in Aramaic and was accompanied by a translation. (Aramaic:) (Ezra 4, 7)

  • Then Rehum, the governor, and Shimshai, the scribe, wrote the following letter against Jerusalem to King Artaxerxes: (Ezra 4, 8)


“O demônio é forte com quem o teme, mas é fraco com quem o despreza.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina