Fondare 167 Risultati per: Golden Table

  • Over the golden altar they shall spread a violet cloth, and cover this also with a covering of tahash skin. They shall then put the poles in place. (Numbers 4, 11)

  • At this Adonibezek said, "Seventy kings, with their thumbs and big toes cut off, used to pick up scraps under my table. As I have done, so has God repaid me." He was brought to Jerusalem, and there he died. (Judges 1, 7)

  • When asked further, "What guilt offering should be our amends to him?", they replied: "Five golden hemorrhoids and five golden mice to correspond to the number of Philistine lords, since the same plague has struck all of you and your lords. (1 Samuel 6, 4)

  • You shall next take the ark of the LORD and place it on the cart, putting in a box beside it the golden articles that you are offering, as amends for your guilt. Start it on its way, and let it go. (1 Samuel 6, 8)

  • Then they placed the ark of the LORD on the cart, along with the box containing the golden mice and the images of the hemorrhoids. (1 Samuel 6, 11)

  • The Levites, meanwhile, had taken down the ark of God and the box beside it, in which the golden articles were, and had placed them on the great stone. The men of Beth-shemesh also offered other holocausts and sacrifices to the LORD that day. (1 Samuel 6, 15)

  • The golden hemorrhoids the Philistines sent back as a guilt offering to the LORD were as follows: one for Ashdod, one for Gaza, one for Ashkelon, one for Gath, and one for Ekron. (1 Samuel 6, 17)

  • The golden mice, however, corresponded to the number of all the cities of the Philistines belonging to the five lords, including fortified cities and open villages. The large stone on which the ark of the LORD was placed is still in the field of Joshua the Beth-shemite at the present time. (1 Samuel 6, 18)

  • So David hid in the open country. On the day of the new moon, when the king sat at table to dine, (1 Samuel 20, 24)

  • On the next day, the second day of the month, David's place was vacant. Saul inquired of his son Jonathan, "Why has the son of Jesse not come to table yesterday or today?" (1 Samuel 20, 27)

  • 'Please let me go,' he begged, 'for we are to have a clan sacrifice in our city, and my brothers insist on my presence. Now, therefore, if you think well of me, give me leave to visit my brothers.' That is why he has not come to the king's table." (1 Samuel 20, 29)

  • Jonathan sprang up from the table in great anger and took no food that second day of the month, for he was grieved on David's account, since his father had railed against him. (1 Samuel 20, 34)


“A mansidão reprime a ira.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina