Talált 635 Eredmények: work-women

  • We urged you when we were with you not to let anyone eat who refused to work. (2 Thessalonians 3, 10)

  • Now we hear that there are some of you who are living lives without any discipline, doing no work themselves but interfering with other people's. (2 Thessalonians 3, 11)

  • Similarly, women are to wear suitable clothes and to be dressed quietly and modestly, without braided hair or gold and jewellery or expensive clothes; (1 Timothy 2, 9)

  • their adornment is to do the good works that are proper for women who claim to be religious. (1 Timothy 2, 10)

  • Similarly, women must be respectable, not gossips, but sober and wholly reliable. (1 Timothy 3, 11)

  • older women as mothers and young women as sisters with all propriety. (1 Timothy 5, 2)

  • 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)

  • Elders who do their work well while they are in charge earn double reward, especially those who work hard at preaching and teaching. (1 Timothy 5, 17)

  • If someone holds himself aloof from these faults I speak of, he will be a vessel held in honour, dedicated and fit for the Master, ready for any good work. (2 Timothy 2, 21)

  • Of the same kind, too, are those men who insinuate themselves into families in order to get influence over silly women who are obsessed with their sins and follow one craze after another, (2 Timothy 3, 6)

  • This is how someone who is dedicated to God becomes fully equipped and ready for any good work. (2 Timothy 3, 17)

  • But you must keep steady all the time; put up with suffering; do the work of preaching the gospel; fulfil the service asked of you. (2 Timothy 4, 5)


“Há alegrias tão sublimes e dores tão profundas que não se consegue exprimir com palavras. O silêncio é o último recurso da alma, quando ela está inefavelmente feliz ou extremamente oprimida!” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina