Trouvé 88 Résultats pour: arrogance

  • And they pursued the sons of arrogance, and the work was prosperous in their hands. (1 Maccabees 2, 47)

  • Then the days drew near when Mattathias would die, and he said to his sons: “Now arrogance and chastisement have been strengthened, and it is a time of overturning and of the wrath of indignation. (1 Maccabees 2, 49)

  • They come to us with a contemptuous multitude and with arrogance, in order to destroy us, with our wives and our sons, and to despoil us. (1 Maccabees 3, 20)

  • Afflict those who, in their arrogance, are oppressing us and treating us abusively. (2 Maccabees 1, 28)

  • Therefore, when Antiochus had taken away from the temple one thousand eight hundred talents, he quickly returned to Antioch, thinking, in his arrogance, to navigate the earth, even by finding a passage leading across the open ocean: such was the elation of his mind. (2 Maccabees 5, 21)

  • But those who led him, and who were more mild a little before, were turned to anger because of the words spoken by him, which they considered to have been brought forth by way of arrogance. (2 Maccabees 6, 29)

  • Therefore, my brothers, having now sustained brief sorrow, have been brought under the covenant of eternal life. But, in truth, you, by the judgment of God, will be released into just punishment for your arrogance. (2 Maccabees 7, 36)

  • But, beyond this, being filled with arrogance, breathing fire with his soul against the Jews, and instructing the task to be accelerated, it happened that, as he was rushing on forcefully, he fell from the chariot, and his limbs were afflicted with a serious bruising of the body. (2 Maccabees 9, 7)

  • And he, being filled with arrogance beyond human means, seemed to himself to command even the waves of the sea and to weigh even the heights of the mountains in a balance. But now, humbled to the ground, he was carried on a stretcher, calling himself as a witness to the manifest virtue of God. (2 Maccabees 9, 8)

  • And so, from then on, being led away from his heavy arrogance by the admonishment of a divine plague, he began to come to an understanding of himself, with his pains increasing through every moment. (2 Maccabees 9, 11)

  • And Nicanor, being certainly lifted up with the greatest arrogance, had decided to establish a public monument of his victory over Judas. (2 Maccabees 15, 6)

  • The fear of the Lord hates evil. I detest arrogance, and pride, and every wicked way, and a mouth with a double tongue. (Proverbs 8, 13)


“Um dia você verá surgir o infalível triunfo da justiça Divina sobre a injustiça humana”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina