Talált 232 Eredmények: feet

  • "From on high he sent fire down into my very frame; He spread a net for my feet, and overthrew me. He left me desolate, in pain all the day. (Lamentations 1, 13)

  • are their gods, set up in their houses; their eyes are full of dust from the feet of those who enter. (Baruch 6, 16)

  • Having no feet, they are carried on men's shoulders, displaying their shame to all; and those who worship them are put to confusion (Baruch 6, 25)

  • and their legs went straight down; the soles of their feet were round. They sparkled with a gleam like burnished bronze. (Ezekiel 1, 7)

  • As he spoke to me, spirit entered into me and set me on my feet, and I heard the one who was speaking (Ezekiel 2, 2)

  • but then spirit entered into me and set me on my feet, and he spoke with me. He said to me: Go shut yourself up in your house. (Ezekiel 3, 24)

  • Thus says the Lord GOD: Clap your hands, stamp your feet, and cry "Alas!" because of all the abominations of the house of Israel, for which they shall fall by the sword, by famine, and by pestilence. (Ezekiel 6, 11)

  • I clothed you with an embroidered gown, put sandals of fine leather on your feet; I gave you a fine linen sash and silk robes to wear. (Ezekiel 16, 10)

  • Groan in silence, make no lament for the dead, bind on your turban, put your sandals on your feet, do not cover your beard, and do not eat the customary bread. (Ezekiel 24, 17)

  • Your turbans shall remain on your heads, your sandals on your feet. You shall not mourn or weep, but you shall rot away because of your sins and groan one to another. (Ezekiel 24, 23)

  • For thus says the Lord GOD: Because you clapped your hands and stamped your feet, rejoicing most maliciously in your heart over the land of Israel, (Ezekiel 25, 6)

  • Son of man, utter a lament over Pharaoh, the king of Egypt, saying to him: Lion of the nations, you are destroyed. You were like a monster in the sea, spouting in your streams, Stirring the water with your feet and churning its streams. (Ezekiel 32, 2)


“O amor sem temor torna-se presunção.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina