Fondare 255 Risultati per: false worship

  • One loses his soul out of false shame; he loses himself for fear of what a foolish man thinks. (Ecclesiasticus 20, 22)

  • Out of false shame he wants to win a friend; he gets an enemy, in fact, for nothing. (Ecclesiasticus 20, 23)

  • Three things disturb me and a fourth frightens me: neighborhood gossip, a rioting mob, a false accusation, all these are worse than death. (Ecclesiasticus 26, 5)

  • The foolish are deceived by vain and false hopes; dreams give them wings. (Ecclesiasticus 34, 1)

  • What clean thing can come from what is unclean? What truth comes from what is false? (Ecclesiasticus 34, 4)

  • Then for a second time the people bowed in worship to receive the blessing of the Most High: (Ecclesiasticus 50, 21)

  • On that day, they will throw to the moles and to the bats their idols of silver and gold, which they made for themselves to worship. (Isaiah 2, 20)

  • Yahweh will reveal himself to the Egyptians. They will acknowledge him on that day and worship him with sacrifice and burnt offerings. They will make vows to Yahweh and perform them. (Isaiah 19, 21)

  • On that day there will be a highway from Egypt to Assyria. Assyrians will come to Egypt, and Egyptians to Assyria. Egyptians and Assyrians will worship together. (Isaiah 19, 23)

  • On that day a great trumpet will blow, and those who were perishing in the land of Assyria and those who were driven out to the land of Egypt will return to worship the Lord on the mountain in Jerusalem. (Isaiah 27, 13)

  • Yahweh has said; "These people approach me in words; they honor me with lip-service, while their hearts stay afar. The worship they offer me is useless, these are no more than traditions and human rules. (Isaiah 29, 13)

  • Yes, you may say to me: 'We rely on Yahweh our God.' But isn't he the one whose altars and high places Hezekiah removed when he commanded Judah and Jerusalem: You shall worship before this altar? (Isaiah 36, 7)


“A prática das bem-aventuranças não requer atos de heroísmo, mas a aceitação simples e humilde das várias provações pelas quais a pessoa passa.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina