Encontrados 1121 resultados para: Everlasting Father
Those who were not Jews rejoiced when they heard this and praised the message of the Lord, and all those destined for everlasting life believed in it. (Acts 13, 48)
Paul traveled on to Derbe and then to Lystra. A disciple named Timothy lived there, whose mother was a believer of Jewish origin but whose father was a Greek. (Acts 16, 1)
So he took him and, because of the Jews of that place who all knew that his father was a Greek, he circumcised him. (Acts 16, 3)
It so happened that his father was in bed with fever and dysentery. Paul went to see him; he prayed and laid his hands on him and healed him. (Acts 28, 8)
May God our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ, give you grace and peace. (Romans 1, 7)
He will give everlasting life to those who seek glory, honor and immortality and persevere in doing good. (Romans 2, 7)
Let us consider Abraham, our father in the flesh. What has he found? (Romans 4, 1)
He received the rite of circumcision as a sign of the righteousness given him through faith when he was still uncircumcised, that he might be the father of all those uncircumcised who come to faith and are made just. (Romans 4, 11)
And he was to be the father of the Jews, provided that besides being circumcised, they also imitate the faith Abraham showed before being circumcised. (Romans 4, 12)
For that reason, faith is the way and all is given by grace; and the promises of Abraham are fulfilled for all his descendants, not only for his children according to the Law, but also for all the others who have believed. Abraham is the father of all of us, (Romans 4, 16)
as it is written: I will make you father of many nations. He is our father in the eyes of Him who gives life to the dead, and calls the non-existent as if already existing, for this is the God in whom he believed. (Romans 4, 17)
Abraham believed and hoped against all expectation, thus becoming father of many nations, as he had been told: See how many will be your descendants. (Romans 4, 18)
