Fondare 634 Risultati per: temple money

  • By order of the king, fine, large blocks were quarried to give the temple a foundation of hewn stone. (1 Kings 5, 31)

  • Solomon's and Hiram's builders, along with the Gebalites, hewed them out, and prepared the wood and stones for building the temple. (1 Kings 5, 32)

  • In the four hundred and eightieth year from the departure of the Israelites from the land of Egypt, in the fourth year of Solomon's reign over Israel, in the month of Ziv, which is the second month, the construction of the temple of the LORD was begun. (1 Kings 6, 1)

  • The temple which King Solomon built for the LORD was sixty cubits long, twenty wide, and twenty-five high. (1 Kings 6, 2)

  • The porch in front of the temple was twenty cubits from side to side, along the width of the nave, and ten cubits deep in front of the temple. (1 Kings 6, 3)

  • Splayed windows with trellises were made for the temple, (1 Kings 6, 4)

  • and adjoining the wall of the temple, which enclosed the nave and the sanctuary, an annex of several stories was built. (1 Kings 6, 5)

  • Its lowest story was five cubits wide, the middle one six cubits wide, the third seven cubits wide, because there were offsets along the outside of the temple so that the beams would not be fastened into the walls of the temple. (1 Kings 6, 6)

  • (The temple was built of stone dressed at the quarry, so that no hammer, axe, or iron tool was to be heard in the temple during its construction.) (1 Kings 6, 7)

  • The entrance to the lowest floor of the annex was at the right side of the temple, and stairs with intermediate landings led up to the middle story and from the middle story to the third. (1 Kings 6, 8)

  • When the temple was built to its full height, it was roofed in with rafters and boards of cedar. (1 Kings 6, 9)

  • The annex, with its lowest story five cubits high, was built all along the outside of the temple, to which it was joined by cedar beams. (1 Kings 6, 10)


“Não se desencoraje, pois, se na alma existe o contínuo esforço de melhorar, no final o Senhor a premia fazendo nela florir, de repente, todas as virtudes como num jardim florido.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina