Talált 368 Eredmények: defeat of the Amorite kings

  • By the same token, if the people had been allowed to eat some of the booty which they had captured from the enemy today, would not the defeat of the Philistines have been all the greater?' (1 Samuel 14, 30)

  • War broke out again and David sallied out to fight the Philistines; he inflicted a great defeat on them and they fled before him. (1 Samuel 19, 8)

  • So David and his men went to Keilah and fought the Philistines and carried off their cattle and inflicted a great defeat on them. Thus David saved the inhabitants of Keilah. (1 Samuel 23, 5)

  • That very day Achish gave him Ziklag; and this is why Ziklag has been the property of the kings of Judah to the present day. (1 Samuel 27, 6)

  • When you hear the sound of footsteps in the tops of the balsam trees, advance, for that will be Yahweh going out ahead of you to defeat the Philistine army.' (2 Samuel 5, 24)

  • When all Hadadezer's vassal kings saw that Israel had got the better of them, they made peace with the Israelites and became their subjects. The Aramaeans were afraid to give any more help to the Ammonites. (2 Samuel 10, 19)

  • At the turn of the year, at the time when kings go campaigning, David sent Joab and with him his guards and all Israel. They massacred the Ammonites and laid siege to Rabbah-of-the-Ammonites. David, however, remained in Jerusalem. (2 Samuel 11, 1)

  • There, the army of Israel was beaten by David's retainers; it was a great defeat that day, with twenty thousand casualties. (2 Samuel 18, 7)

  • For he was master of all Transeuphrates -- of all the kings of Transeuphrates from Tiphsah to Gaza -- and he enjoyed peace on all his frontiers. (1 Kings 5, 4)

  • Men from all nations came to hear Solomon's wisdom, and he received gifts from all the kings in the world, who had heard of his wisdom. (1 Kings 5, 14)

  • All those who survived of the Amorite, Hittite, Perizzite, Hivite and Jebusite peoples, who were not Israelites- (1 Kings 9, 20)

  • besides what tolls and foreign trade, as well as everything the Arab kings and the provincial governors brought in. (1 Kings 10, 15)


“O amor nada mais é do que o brilho de Deus nos homens”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina