Fondare 121 Risultati per: addressed

  • When Peter saw the people he addressed them, 'Men of Israel, why are you so surprised at this? Why are you staring at us as though we had made this man walk by our own power or holiness? (Acts 3, 12)

  • Then Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, addressed them, 'Rulers of the people, and elders! (Acts 4, 8)

  • Then he addressed the Sanhedrin, 'Men of Israel, be careful how you deal with these people. (Acts 5, 35)

  • So the Twelve called a full meeting of the disciples and addressed them, 'It would not be right for us to neglect the word of God so as to give out food; (Acts 6, 2)

  • The eunuch addressed Philip and said, 'Tell me, is the prophet referring to himself or someone else?' (Acts 8, 34)

  • and asked for letters addressed to the synagogues in Damascus, that would authorise him to arrest and take to Jerusalem any followers of the Way, men or women, that he might find. (Acts 9, 2)

  • Then Peter addressed them, 'I now really understand', he said, 'that God has no favourites, (Acts 10, 34)

  • They addressed Barnabas as Zeus, and since Paul was the principal speaker they called him Hermes. (Acts 14, 12)

  • and after a long discussion, Peter stood up and addressed them. 'My brothers,' he said, 'you know perfectly well that in the early days God made his choice among you: the gentiles were to learn the good news from me and so become believers. (Acts 15, 7)

  • When they arrived he addressed these words to them: 'You know what my way of life has been ever since the first day I set foot among you in Asia, (Acts 20, 18)

  • for in it is revealed the saving justice of God: a justice based on faith and addressed to faith. As it says in scripture: Anyone who is upright through faith will live. (Romans 1, 17)

  • Now the promises were addressed to Abraham and to his progeny. The words were not and to his progenies in the plural, but in the singular; and to your progeny, which means Christ. (Galatians 3, 16)


“O passado não conta mais para o Senhor. O que conta é o presente e estar atento e pronto para reparar o que foi feito.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina