Talált 4121 Eredmények: people of Israel

  • She must be a woman known for her good works -- whether she has brought up her children, been hospitable to strangers and washed the feet of God's holy people, helped people in hardship or been active in all kinds of good work. (1 Timothy 5, 10)

  • and then people condemn them for being unfaithful to their original promise. (1 Timothy 5, 12)

  • Besides, they learn how to be idle and go round from house to house; and then, not merely idle, they learn to be gossips and meddlers in other people's affairs and to say what should remain unsaid. (1 Timothy 5, 13)

  • The faults of some people are obvious long before they come to the reckoning, while others have faults that are not discovered until later. (1 Timothy 5, 24)

  • Similarly, the good that people do can be obvious; but even when it is not, it cannot remain hidden. (1 Timothy 5, 25)

  • and unending disputes by people who are depraved in mind and deprived of truth, and imagine that religion is a way of making a profit. (1 Timothy 6, 5)

  • People who long to be rich are a prey to trial; they get trapped into all sorts of foolish and harmful ambitions which plunge people into ruin and destruction. (1 Timothy 6, 9)

  • Pass on to reliable people what you have heard from me through many witnesses so that they in turn will be able to teach others. (2 Timothy 2, 2)

  • the men who have gone astray from the truth, claiming that the resurrection has already taken place. They are upsetting some people's faith. (2 Timothy 2, 18)

  • He must be gentle when he corrects people who oppose him, in the hope that God may give them a change of mind so that they recognise the truth (2 Timothy 2, 25)

  • People will be self-centred and avaricious, boastful, arrogant and rude; disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, irreligious; (2 Timothy 3, 2)

  • They will keep up the outward appearance of religion but will have rejected the inner power of it. Keep away from people like that. (2 Timothy 3, 5)


“A ingenuidade e’ uma virtude, mas apenas ate certo ponto; ela deve sempre ser acompanhada da prudência. A astúcia e a safadeza, por outro lado, são diabólicas e podem causar muito mal.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina