Talált 203 Eredmények: Unclean

  • Of every clean animal you must take seven pairs, a male and its female; of the unclean animals you must take one pair, a male and its female (Genesis 7, 2)

  • "or someone touches something unclean, whatever it may be -- the dead body of an unclean animal, wild or tame, or of one of the unclean reptiles -- and without realising it becomes unclean, he becomes answerable for it; (Leviticus 5, 2)

  • "or he touches some human uncleanness, whatever it may be, contact with which makes him unclean; he does not notice it, then, realising it later, he becomes answerable for it; (Leviticus 5, 3)

  • "Meat that has touched anything unclean cannot be eaten; it must be burnt. "Anyone clean may eat the meat, (Leviticus 7, 19)

  • but anyone unclean who eats the meat of a communion sacrifice offered to Yahweh will be outlawed from his people. (Leviticus 7, 20)

  • Furthermore, if anyone touches anything unclean, human or animal, or any foul thing, and then eats the meat of a communion sacrifice offered to Yahweh, that individual will be outlawed from his people." ' (Leviticus 7, 21)

  • And so shall it be also when you separate the sacred from the profane, the unclean from the clean, (Leviticus 10, 10)

  • The following, which either chew the cud or have a cloven hoof, are the ones that you may not eat: you will regard the camel as unclean, because though it is ruminant, it does not have a cloven hoof; (Leviticus 11, 4)

  • you will regard the coney as unclean, because though it is ruminant, it does not have a cloven hoof; (Leviticus 11, 5)

  • you will regard the hare as unclean, because though it is ruminant, it does not have a cloven hoof; (Leviticus 11, 6)

  • you will regard the pig as unclean, because though it has a cloven hoof, divided into two parts, it is not a ruminant. (Leviticus 11, 7)

  • You will not eat the meat of these or touch their dead bodies; you will regard them as unclean. (Leviticus 11, 8)


“Quanto maiores forem os dons, maior deve ser sua humildade, lembrando de que tudo lhe foi dado como empréstimo.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina