Talált 73 Eredmények: Exile

  • Hanani, one of my brothers, came with some men from Judah. I asked them about the Jewish survivors who had returned from exile and about Jerusalem. (Nehemiah 1, 2)

  • God inspired in me the idea to assemble the leaders, the counselors and the people to take a census. I found the registry book of the census of those who had returned from exile in the beginning. I found the following written in it: (Nehemiah 7, 5)

  • These are the people of the province who returned from exile whom Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, had deported, but returned to Jerusalem and Judea, each to his city: (Nehemiah 7, 6)

  • The whole assembly of those who had returned from exile built huts and dwelt in them, a thing the Israelites had not done since the days of Joshua, son of Nun. And there was great rejoicing. (Nehemiah 8, 17)

  • since they had only recently returned from exile. The people of Judea had just come together and the new furnishings of the Altar and the Sanctuary had just been consecrated after being profaned. (Judith 4, 3)

  • Now that they have turned again to their God, they have returned from exile from the various places in which they had been scattered. They have retaken Jerusalem where their Sanctuary is and they have settled in the mountain region because it has remained deserted. (Judith 5, 19)

  • Your decrees are the theme of my song, in this my place of exile. (Psalms 119, 54)

  • May our cattle be strong and fruitful; and may there be an end to raids and exile, to cries of distress in our streets. (Psalms 144, 14)

  • And he, who had exiled so many from their own country, died in exile: for he went as far as Lacedemonia in the hope of finding protection there because of the kinship between that people and ours. (2 Maccabees 5, 9)

  • For they still remembered what they had seen in their exile: how the earth, in place of animals, had produced mosquitoes, and rivers, instead of providing fish, produced frogs. (Wisdom of Solomon 19, 10)

  • As for Jeroboam, son of Nebat, it was he who caused Israel to sin and taught Ephraim the way of evil. From then on their sins increased and later brought about their exile, (Ecclesiasticus 47, 24)

  • Thus my people will go into exile for want of understanding, their dignitaries dying of hunger, their masses parched with thirst. (Isaiah 5, 13)


“A caridade é o metro com o qual o Senhor nos julgará.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina