Encontrados 849 resultados para: Temple Offerings
The Lord let Jehoiakim king of Judah fall into his power, as well as some of the vessels belonging to the Temple of God. These he took away to Shinar, putting the vessels into the treasury of his own gods. (Daniel 1, 2)
We now have no leader, no prophet, no prince, no burnt offering, no sacrifice, no oblation, no incense, no place where we can make offerings to you (Daniel 3, 38)
as burnt offerings of rams and bullocks, as thousands of fat lambs: such let our sacrifice be to you today, and may it please you that we follow you whole-heartedly, since those who trust in you will not be shamed. (Daniel 3, 40)
May you be blessed in the Temple of your sacred glory, exalted and glorified above all for ever: (Daniel 3, 53)
The gold and silver vessels taken from the sanctuary of the Temple of God in Jerusalem were brought in, and the king, his noblemen, his wives and the women who sang for him drank out of them. (Daniel 5, 3)
You have defied the Lord of heaven, you have had the vessels from his Temple brought to you, and you, your noblemen, your wives and the women singing for you have drunk your wine out of them. You have praised gods of gold and silver, of bronze and iron, of wood and stone, which can neither see, hear nor understand; but you have given no glory to the God in whose hands are your breath itself and all your fortunes. (Daniel 5, 23)
He will strike a firm alliance with many people for the space of a week; and for the space of one half-week he will put a stop to sacrifice and oblation, and on the wing of the Temple will be the appalling abomination until the end, until the doom assigned to the devastator.' (Daniel 9, 27)
There were seventy of these priests, to say nothing of their wives and children. The king went to the temple of Bel, taking Daniel with him. (Daniel 14, 10)
They were thinking -- hence their confidence -- of a secret entrance which they had made under the table, and by which they came in regularly and took the offerings away. (Daniel 14, 12)
Daniel made his servants bring ashes and spread them all over the temple floor, with no other witness than the king. They then left the building, shut the door and, sealing it with the king's seal, went away. (Daniel 14, 14)
The king had them put to death and handed Bel over to Daniel who destroyed both the idol and its temple. (Daniel 14, 22)
for faithful love is what pleases me, not sacrifice; knowledge of God, not burnt offerings. (Hosea 6, 6)
